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Islamic Holy Books
2 reference results for: Islamic holy books
Wikipedia
The Islamic holy books are the records believed from Muslims that were dictated by God to prophets. They are the Suhuf-i-Ibrahim (commonly the Scrolls of Abraham), the (Tawrat (Torah)) ,the Zabur (commonly the Psalms), the Injil (commonly the Gospel), and the Qur'an.

The word"kutub" as per reference of Qurani ayat

The plural of word kitab is kutub which is also used by many scholars as previous scriptures. But as per text of Al-kitab, messenger from Allah recites purified pages, in the pages are kutub, this means "writing", Because pages contains writings and many pages form a book that is why here other than writing cannot be written. In the light of 98:2-3, H/K/Sabeeh has translated this word as writing كتب ", the term ("kutubehi") as per AL-kitab means his writing and not previous scriptures.

Other possible books or prophets

The Qur'an does not exclude the possibility that additional holy books were sent to other prophets, but does not mention many. It is standard Islamic belief that all holy scriptures except the Qur'an have been altered from their original forms over time. The Qur'an mentions other prophets or messengers like Abraham, Isaac, Ishmael, Lot, Jacob, Joseph, Job, David, Solomon, Moses, Aaron, Jonah, Elisha, Zachariah, John and Jesus.

The Qur'an's relationship to earlier books

Muslims believe in progressive revelation, that the revelation of God (Arabic: Allah) evolved with time and different groups of people. Thus, the Qur'an specified that the Injil abrogated the Tawrat and the Qur'an abrogated all the other books. . (It is silent in regard to the Zabur, but Muslims infer that the Zabur was abrogated by a successive revelation.. )

As an example, while the Qur'an acknowledges that the Torah prohibited working on the Sabbath, the Qur'an allows working and overrules it. In Muhammad's earlier years it was revealed to him, "O People of the Book! Ye have no ground to stand upon unless ye stand fast by the Torah, (and) the Gospel." Qur'an Surah 5.68. It was believed that their conversion to Islam would begin by devoutly following the earlier holy books.

Alteration of the holy books

Comparison of the Qur'an with the texts of the other holy books shows obvious disagreements: The Gospel (the Injil) disagrees with the Qur'an on whether Jesus is the Son of God and God incarnate, whether he died, and whether he is the way to the salvation of the soul. All three books are written from a human perspective while the Qur'an says they were revealed from God's perspective. Modern historians debate and question about the divine inspiration of all these books including the Quran. Believers of the three monotheistic religions believe that for each of them God is the inspiration behind the holy books.

The first known Muslim to recognize this was Ibn Hazm, vizier of Spain and writer against Christians. He concluded that because they were in disagreement, the Bible (containing the Torah, Zabur, and Injil) must be wrong. However, knowing that the Qur'an states "believe in what hath been revealed to thee and what (scripture) was revealed before thee (the Torah and the Injil)," Qur'an Surah 4.162, he concluded, "Therefore, the present text must have been falsified by the Christians after the time of Muhammad."

Some scholars, such as Al Ghazzali (?–1111 CE), disagreed. Ibn Kathir (1301–1372) wrote that the Jews did not alter the Torah, only their interpretation of the Torah:

The phrase "[they] displace words from (their) right places" means that they misinterpret them and understand them in a way that God did not intend, doing this deliberately and inventing lies against God.

For Muslims, in Deuteronomy 31:24-30 Moses predicted the corruption of the commandments by his own people after his death labeling them as stiff-necked and rebellious due to the horrible acts they committed during Moses' absence to meet God on Mount Sinai. This interpretation is not accepted by Christians or Jews. In other places Jesus condemned the act of the scribes and the Pharisees and accused them of hypocrisy and moral illnesses (see Luke 12:52, Luke 21:46-47.)

However, in the following 200 years, most scholars came to agree with Ibn Khazem, but they pushed the date of change earlier, before the time of Muhammad. Paul and Constantine were often blamed. In more modern times, the belief in such conspiracy has been downplayed and replaced with the idea that corruption came through many small changes by many copyists in the second and third centuries for the Injil. For Muslims, the changing of the Torah and Zabur was moved back to before the birth of Christianity and the earliest manuscripts known today. Currently, among Muslims, the alteration of the holy books is a virtually undisputed belief. Quran is not refferinf Taurat and injeel as previously revealed Books

What is At-taurah as per text of AL-kitab.

This Al-kitab has two types of ayats, one type is mohkumat i.e. ayats having orders of Allah, The ayats having orders of Allah are called ("hukum Allah") and this hukum Allah is in At-taurah of AL-kitabAt-taurah is with prophets which are in plural, All the prophets governed with At-taurah.

AL-Injeel as per Text of Qura'n given to Easa (pbuh).

The AL-Injeel given to Easa (pbuh) is verifying what is between in his two hands from At-taurat, this verification is the sermon and guidance for "mutaqeen" those who guard and not four Gospelsi.e. not referring to the revelation transmitted by "Islamic view of Jesus|Isa" (Jesus), and also doesn’t mean the scripture possessed and read by the Christian contemporaries of Mohammed (V, 51; VII, 156). The Qur'an refers to the message of Easa, the contents of the revelation contained in the Al-Injil transmitted by Easa (pbuh) are guidance and Sermon for those who guard, which are not referring to old or new testament as Injil of Easa (pbuh)..

See also

References

Wikipedia
The Islamic holy books are the records believed from Muslims that were dictated by God to prophets. They are the Suhuf-i-Ibrahim (commonly the Scrolls of Abraham), the (Tawrat (Torah)) ,the Zabur (commonly the Psalms), the Injil (commonly the Gospel), and the Qur'an.

The word"kutub" as per reference of Qurani ayat

The plural of word kitab is kutub which is also used by many scholars as previous scriptures. But as per text of Al-kitab, messenger from Allah recites purified pages, in the pages are kutub, this means "writing", Because pages contains writings and many pages form a book that is why here other than writing cannot be written. In the light of 98:2-3, H/K/Sabeeh has translated this word as writing كتب ", the term ("kutubehi") as per AL-kitab means his writing and not previous scriptures.

Other possible books or prophets

The Qur'an does not exclude the possibility that additional holy books were sent to other prophets, but does not mention many. It is standard Islamic belief that all holy scriptures except the Qur'an have been altered from their original forms over time. The Qur'an mentions other prophets or messengers like Abraham, Isaac, Ishmael, Lot, Jacob, Joseph, Job, David, Solomon, Moses, Aaron, Jonah, Elisha, Zachariah, John and Jesus.

The Qur'an's relationship to earlier books

Muslims believe in progressive revelation, that the revelation of God (Arabic: Allah) evolved with time and different groups of people. Thus, the Qur'an specified that the Injil abrogated the Tawrat and the Qur'an abrogated all the other books. . (It is silent in regard to the Zabur, but Muslims infer that the Zabur was abrogated by a successive revelation.. )

As an example, while the Qur'an acknowledges that the Torah prohibited working on the Sabbath, the Qur'an allows working and overrules it. In Muhammad's earlier years it was revealed to him, "O People of the Book! Ye have no ground to stand upon unless ye stand fast by the Torah, (and) the Gospel." Qur'an Surah 5.68. It was believed that their conversion to Islam would begin by devoutly following the earlier holy books.

Alteration of the holy books

Comparison of the Qur'an with the texts of the other holy books shows obvious disagreements: The Gospel (the Injil) disagrees with the Qur'an on whether Jesus is the Son of God and God incarnate, whether he died, and whether he is the way to the salvation of the soul. All three books are written from a human perspective while the Qur'an says they were revealed from God's perspective. Modern historians debate and question about the divine inspiration of all these books including the Quran. Believers of the three monotheistic religions believe that for each of them God is the inspiration behind the holy books.

The first known Muslim to recognize this was Ibn Hazm, vizier of Spain and writer against Christians. He concluded that because they were in disagreement, the Bible (containing the Torah, Zabur, and Injil) must be wrong. However, knowing that the Qur'an states "believe in what hath been revealed to thee and what (scripture) was revealed before thee (the Torah and the Injil)," Qur'an Surah 4.162, he concluded, "Therefore, the present text must have been falsified by the Christians after the time of Muhammad."

Some scholars, such as Al Ghazzali (?–1111 CE), disagreed. Ibn Kathir (1301–1372) wrote that the Jews did not alter the Torah, only their interpretation of the Torah:

The phrase "[they] displace words from (their) right places" means that they misinterpret them and understand them in a way that God did not intend, doing this deliberately and inventing lies against God.

For Muslims, in Deuteronomy 31:24-30 Moses predicted the corruption of the commandments by his own people after his death labeling them as stiff-necked and rebellious due to the horrible acts they committed during Moses' absence to meet God on Mount Sinai. This interpretation is not accepted by Christians or Jews. In other places Jesus condemned the act of the scribes and the Pharisees and accused them of hypocrisy and moral illnesses (see Luke 12:52, Luke 21:46-47.)

However, in the following 200 years, most scholars came to agree with Ibn Khazem, but they pushed the date of change earlier, before the time of Muhammad. Paul and Constantine were often blamed. In more modern times, the belief in such conspiracy has been downplayed and replaced with the idea that corruption came through many small changes by many copyists in the second and third centuries for the Injil. For Muslims, the changing of the Torah and Zabur was moved back to before the birth of Christianity and the earliest manuscripts known today. Currently, among Muslims, the alteration of the holy books is a virtually undisputed belief. Quran is not refferinf Taurat and injeel as previously revealed Books

What is At-taurah as per text of AL-kitab.

This Al-kitab has two types of ayats, one type is mohkumat i.e. ayats having orders of Allah, The ayats having orders of Allah are called ("hukum Allah") and this hukum Allah is in At-taurah of AL-kitabAt-taurah is with prophets which are in plural, All the prophets governed with At-taurah.

AL-Injeel as per Text of Qura'n given to Easa (pbuh).

The AL-Injeel given to Easa (pbuh) is verifying what is between in his two hands from At-taurat, this verification is the sermon and guidance for "mutaqeen" those who guard and not four Gospelsi.e. not referring to the revelation transmitted by "Islamic view of Jesus|Isa" (Jesus), and also doesn’t mean the scripture possessed and read by the Christian contemporaries of Mohammed (V, 51; VII, 156). The Qur'an refers to the message of Easa, the contents of the revelation contained in the Al-Injil transmitted by Easa (pbuh) are guidance and Sermon for those who guard, which are not referring to old or new testament as Injil of Easa (pbuh)..

See also

References

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