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The Qur'an and historical criticism

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The Qur'an and historical criticism

Postby Spengler » Fri Sep 17, 2010 3:33 pm

The Qur'an and historical criticism on the Spengler Blog


by David Layman


In response to a well-known examination of the historical problems of The Koran, written before 9-11 by Toby Lester in The Atlantic, Seyyed Hossein Nasr said
The acceptance of the Koran as the word of God suggests that the so-called historical and textual study of the Koran is tantamount to questioning the historical existence of Jesus Christ, as some people in the West have claimed. The rules of biblical criticism do not apply to the Koran as God's revelation, because what corresponds to the Bible is the hadith collection, which comprises the words and deeds of the Prophet of Islam as the Bible comprises the words and deeds of Jesus Christ. Both the hadith books and the Bible were compiled after the revelation, whereas the Koran has existed in its present form from the very beginning of Islamic revelation. To claim that the so-called history of the Koran undermines or casts doubt on its being a divine revelation is not only to misunderstand the nature of the Koran but also to go against the historical evidence.

Even if it is true that the Qur'an in Islam is the very reality of revelation, analogous to Christ in Christianity, it does not follow that this immediate revelation is not open to historical criticism. "Christ" as a dogmatic symbol has a history. From the opening transformation of Jesus from Jewish messiah to the Christos of Pauline doctrine, to the complex theological formulations of the later ecumenical creeds, we can analyze the development of the symbol and root it in specific spiritual, liturgical, social, and political forces. The historian of Christian dogma, who is himself a Christian, can undertake this analysis without compromising his faith in the dogmatic symbol as fully and truly expressive of what is, for him, the "very reality of revelation."

In the same manner, the belief that the Qur'an is the "very reality of revelation" does not protect it from critical historical examination of how that revelation entered into human experience. As it affirms again and again, it enters experience as a book (al-kitab), and precisely as a book it can be analyzed even while (for a Muslim) maintaining its revelatory status.

Furthermore, the analogy between hadith and the Bible is seriously flawed. It is not true that the Bible came into existence after revelation. The entirety of the Jewish canon lay at hand before, what is for Christians, the revelation of God in Jesus Christ. Thus the whole of Jewish history, life, and their experience of God is part and parcel of that revelation. Only because the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob had already revealed himself to the Jews were the first Christians able to come to believe that the God revealed in the scriptures had also revealed himself in Jesus, now revealed as Christ. Furthermore, beyond the revelation of God in Jesus, the Christian scriptures continued as the unwinding epiphany of the "Christ event," the revelation of Jesus Christ in the first two or three generations of Christians ("Christ-ians"). That is why, once European scholarship discovered the historicity of knowledge, that Christians and Jews had to make use of historical criticism. Biblical revelation is neither simply a text nor an event. It is a history.

Even more so, Hadith and the Jewish-Christian scriptures have very different relationships to the sacred time they describe. The latter is doubly revelatory: presumptively inspired revelations, bearing the narrative of revelation. The texts not only point to revelation, but are themselves revelatory.

In contrast, ahadith are traditions about supposed events and practices in the early Muslim community. They are a body of sayings ("saying" = "hadith") about (1) how Muslims were living their lives and (2) supposed events in the sacred time, the time of revelation, of its prophet. But they lack the authority of scripture. Unlike the Qur'an, they do not claim inspiration. To the contrary, they are given an ostensibly historical context though the prefix of an "isnad" ("chain of transmission"), indicating they intend to project an aura of historicity, of being-in-the-world.

But what world are they in? If one reads the Qur'an and, say, the earliest collection of Hadith (by Bukhari) side by side, it is impossible to know if the two texts are talking about the same space and time. The Qur'an gives the sermons, prophetic exclamations, and religious poetry by a prophet; Hadith gives the social, moral, and legal reflections of a community. These reflections are embedded in brief narrative anecdotes, repeated again and again with slight variations and modification. For example, in Bukhari, Volume I, Book 10, Nos. 500 --576 talk about the times of prayers. They express legislative judgments about the times of prayer in different circumstances and in response to different problems.

Consequently, hadith are structurally parallel, not to Tanakh, but to the rabbinical traditions known as mishnah (plural, mishnayot). A mishnah is any rabbinical tradition not rooted in, or pointing to, a scriptural text. The collection par excellence of the mishnayot is The Mishnah of the Rabbi, Judah ha-Nasi ("the patriarch," circa 200 CE). So at the beginning of rabbinism, its traditions had to be linked back to scripture; it had to be demonstrated that those traditions were indeed grounded in scripture. Creating that linkage was the task of the next 300 years of rabbinic gemara ("commentary"), ending in the Bavli and Yerushalmi, the two Talmudim. Yet the rabbis knew that that linkage was a fiction, because they formulated the doctrine of "Dual Torah," as a way of of imputing the authority of the Written Torah to the Oral Torah of rabbinism.

Ahadith operates in the same way. Their historicity is not evident. If one removes a hadith's isnad, it becomes a free-standing tradition about the practices and origins of Islam. It has to be reattached to the sacred time of revelation. That reattachment occurs through the Sirat Rasul Allah ("biography of the prophet of God"). It is noteworthy that the first collections of ahadith (circa 870, attributed to Bukhari and Muslim b. al-Hajjaj) do not occur until after the narrative of the Sirat is finalized by Ibn Hisham, (circa 830). (Remember that the traditional date for the death of Muhammad is 632.) The Sirah provided the tree on which the ornaments of the ahadith could be hung.

Yet the Sirah are also problematic: although they can be correlated to the Qur'an, that does not confirm their veracity, since the traditions that form the unitary narrative developed precisely to give the Qur'an a "back-story." To understand the chronological problem, imagine if everything we knew about George Washington and the creation of the United States were based on a text compiled in 2000. (Ibn Hisham did claim to have based his text on an earlier Sirat presented, possibly in lecture form, by Ibn Ishaq, who died sometime after 760. But we do not have that text for critical comparison.)

On one hand, Muslim apologists assert the absolute revealed status of the Qur'an, and its imperviousness to critical standards. However, this claim does not prove what Muslims want it to prove. If the Qur'an is simply a revealed text, outside of history, then that is all Muslims have: a text. If they try to give it a history, they can only do so through Hadith and Sirah. However, Hadith and Sira are not impervious to critical standards. To open up the latter to historical criticism is to open the entire can of worms.

Nasr asserts that the Qur'an "has existed in its present form from the very beginning of Islamic revelation." Now as a hermeneutical description, this statement is unexceptionable. If the Qur'an is simply and directly equated with revelation, then the formulation is a tautology: it has "existed" as such "from the beginning of Islamic revelation," because that is what Islamic revelation is: a book. However, if Nasr's claim is not taken as tautological, then something more must be shown: that the history (both of the life of the prophet, and of the development of traditions and practices) formulated in the ahadith and sirah are attached to "the very beginning of Islamic revelation."

And therein squirm the "worms."

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Re: The Qur'an and historical criticism

Postby potkas7 » Sat Sep 18, 2010 8:19 am

The Muslim claim is something more bold than that the Koran has existed since the beginning of Islamic revelation. It is that the Koran is Uncreated and is thus Co-Eternal with God, existing together with God since a time before time and written in Arabic upon a tablet in heaven. This, of course, makes Arabic the proto-sacred language, which would seem to be more a political claim than a religious one. But the meaning of language itself has a history and is worthy of study in its own right. It is in no way inappropriate or disrespectful of a religion to examine it's truth claims through the lens of Reason unless, of course, that religion expressly denies the existence of the faculty of Human Reason. Then the critical examination of scriptural issues may become problematic to the point of bloodshed.

History comes in two flavors: History as Science and History as Literature. History as science is about 'what really happened?' History as Literature examines 'what does it mean?' Both styles may contain real memories of past events but what is of most interest to those who study such things is why someone thought these particular events worthy of remembrance, and also worthy of making a conscious effort to preserve them for future generations. It should not be forgotten, however, that remembering is subject to a continuing process of interpretation and reinterpretation.

Christianity is, to a very large degree, Judaism examined under the microscope of pagan Greek philosophy. Islam too once trod on the path of Philosophy and Reason, but veered off into an intellectual dead end a thousand years ago. It is incumbent upon us all to help extricate it from that ditch, get it back on the road and give it proper directions as to which is the right path to take at the crossroads. We begin by challenging Islam to prove the validity of its truth claims rather than passively accepting their demand we take Islam's Traditional Account at face value.
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Re: The Qur'an and historical criticism

Postby Michael » Sat Sep 18, 2010 12:10 pm

Socrates: Writing, Phaedrus, has this strange quality, and is very like painting; for the creatures of painting stand like living beings, but if one asks them a question, they preserve a solemn silence. And so it is with [written] words; you might think they spoke as if they had intelligence, but if you question them, wishing to know about their sayings, they always say only one and the same thing. And every word, when [275e] once it is written, is bandied about, alike among those who understand and those who have no interest in it, and it knows not to whom to speak or not to speak; when ill-treated or unjustly reviled it always needs its father to help it; for it has no power to protect or help itself.

Phaedrus: You are quite right about that, too


I attach the Greek, as it is a bit obscure in places and many translators, following Jowett, make a botch of it.

Σωκράτης
δεινὸν γάρ που, ὦ Φαῖδρε, τοῦτ᾽ ἔχει γραφή, καὶ ὡς ἀληθῶς ὅμοιον ζωγραφίᾳ. καὶ γὰρ τὰ ἐκείνης ἔκγονα ἕστηκε μὲν ὡς ζῶντα, ἐὰν δ᾽ ἀνέρῃ τι, σεμνῶς πάνυ σιγᾷ. ταὐτὸν δὲ καὶ οἱ λόγοι: δόξαις μὲν ἂν ὥς τι φρονοῦντας αὐτοὺς λέγειν, ἐὰν δέ τι ἔρῃ τῶν λεγομένων βουλόμενος μαθεῖν, ἕν τι σημαίνει μόνον ταὐτὸν ἀεί. ὅταν δὲ ἅπαξ [275 E] γραφῇ, κυλινδεῖται μὲν πανταχοῦ πᾶς λόγος ὁμοίως παρὰ τοῖς ἐπαΐουσιν, ὡς δ᾽ αὕτως παρ᾽ οἷς οὐδὲν προσήκει, καὶ οὐκ ἐπίσταται λέγειν οἷς δεῖ γε καὶ μή. πλημμελούμενος δὲ καὶ οὐκ ἐν δίκῃ λοιδορηθεὶς τοῦ πατρὸς ἀεὶ δεῖται βοηθοῦ: αὐτὸς γὰρ οὔτ᾽ ἀμύνασθαι οὔτε βοηθῆσαι δυνατὸς αὑτῷ.
Φαῖδρος
καὶ ταῦτά σοι ὀρθότατα εἴρηται.

And that is before we get down to discussing the nature of language itself.
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A Vigorous Objection Regarding Oral and Written Torah

Postby Spengler » Mon Sep 20, 2010 12:11 pm

From what evidence do we infer that the rabbis "knew" that the linkage between Oral and Written Torah was a "fiction?" The normative Jewish view is that the entirety of the Oral Torah was given in potentia at Mount Sinai, but that human engagement was required to bring it to realization. On this, see Rabbi Meir Soloveichik's remarkable article, "Torah and Incarnation," in the October issue of First Things (now in the hands of subscribers). Christians can best understand the Jewish concept of Torah by beginning with the concept of Incarnation and working backwards. The closest cognate to Torah learning is the Eucharist.

This unfortunate comment obscures the Jewish understanding of the revelation at Sinai: it is a moment in time, but an eternal moment, a moment that is recreated through all time as God "teaches Torah" to his people Israel. All Israel--generations dead, living, and yet to be born--gather at Mount Sinai, as the revelation continues through the Beit Midrash of the generations. And that is why the Torah is an entirely different entity than the Koran. Torah is the basis of covenant, an eternal divine-human partnership of teaching and learning.
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Re: A Vigorous Objection Regarding Oral and Written Torah

Postby Michael » Tue Sep 21, 2010 2:25 am

Spengler wrote:From what evidence do we infer that the rabbis "knew" that the linkage between Oral and Written Torah was a "fiction?" The normative Jewish view is that the entirety of the Oral Torah was given in potentia at Mount Sinai, but that human engagement was required to bring it to realization. On this, see Rabbi Meir Soloveichik's remarkable article, "Torah and Incarnation," in the October issue of First Things (now in the hands of subscribers). Christians can best understand the Jewish concept of Torah by beginning with the concept of Incarnation and working backwards. The closest cognate to Torah learning is the Eucharist.

This unfortunate comment obscures the Jewish understanding of the revelation at Sinai: it is a moment in time, but an eternal moment, a moment that is recreated through all time as God "teaches Torah" to his people Israel. All Israel--generations dead, living, and yet to be born--gather at Mount Sinai, as the revelation continues through the Beit Midrash of the generations. And that is why the Torah is an entirely different entity than the Koran. Torah is the basis of covenant, an eternal divine-human partnership of teaching and learning.

There is a close analogy here with the Catholic (and Orthodox) understanding of "Tradition," especially when one bears in mind that traditio in Latin (and παράδοσις in Greek) often has the active sense "a handing over," or "handing on." Hence, the claim that scripture must be read and interpreted "in the Church" (the covenant community). A revelation, intended for more than its immediate recipients ("you shall teach them to your children") presupposes a normative understanding to be taught and expounded. BXVi/Prof. Ratzinger has written a good deal on this, at various times.

Otherwise, Socrates's criticism in the Phaedrus that I cited earlier, seems inescapable
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