Wednesday, December 08, 2010

Grand Mufti of Saudi Arabia: Qur'an Is "Dominant" Over the Bible; "We Don't Need...Any Other Book"

Jihad Watch

Three Great Abrahamic Religions Update: "Grand Mufti of Saudi Arabia: Qur'an Is 'Dominant' Over the Bible; 'We Don't Need...Any Other Book,'" from Translating Jihad, December 7:

[...] Question: Is it permissible to use the stories of the prophets in the Gospels and in the Torah and other Israeli scriptures? Answer: Almighty God said: "These are the verses of the perspicuous book. We have sent it down as an Arabic Qur'an, in order that ye may learn wisdom. We do relate unto thee the most beautiful of stories, in that we reveal to thee this portion of the Qur'an. Before this, thou too was among those who knew it not" [Qur'an 12:1-3]. He (also) said: "Such are some of the stories of the unseen, which we have revealed unto thee: before this, neither thou nor thy people knew them" [Qur'an 11:49]. The stories in the Qur'an are more valuable than any others--we don't need the Torah, or Gospels, or any other book. We believe that truth was sent down to the prophets, but God has enriched us more with the Qur'an and its stories than with all the (other) books. This Qur'an is the true account: "This is the true account; there is no god but God" [Qur'an 3:62]. We should take the stories and understanding from this great book. Regarding the previous books, their role has ended, and there is no longer any place for them. Almighty God has gathered all of their meaning into the Qur'an. The Qur'an has become dominant over them, and a substitute for all of them. The Qur'an with its stories and knowledge are sufficient for us.
This flies in the face of what Muslim soothsayers and their apologists in the West are always telling us about a shared faith and values among the three great religions, who all revere the stories of the ancient prophets told in the Bible. The truth is, Muslims do believe in those old prophets, but they believe the Bible has been perverted by Jews and Christians. The Grand Mufti's comment about the Qur'an being the only book Muslims need also struck me. Could this be an explanation for why relatively few non-Islamic books are published in the Arab world, and very few books are translated from other languages into Arabic? Does this partly explain why nothing like the Renaissance ever happened in the Muslim world? If the Qur'an is all you need, then why waste time reading anything else? See the original Arabic here.

Question: Is it permissible to use the stories of the prophets in the Gospels and in the Torah and other Israeli scriptures?

Answer: Almighty God said: "These are the verses of the perspicuous book. We have sent it down as an Arabic Qur'an, in order that ye may learn wisdom. We do relate unto thee the most beautiful of stories, in that we reveal to thee this portion of the Qur'an. Before this, thou too was among those who knew it not" [Qur'an 12:1-3]. He (also) said: "Such are some of the stories of the unseen, which we have revealed unto thee: before this, neither thou nor thy people knew them" [Qur'an 11:49]. The stories in the Qur'an are more valuable than any others--we don't need the Torah, or Gospels, or any other book. We believe that truth was sent down to the prophets, but God has enriched us more with the Qur'an and its stories than with all the (other) books. This Qur'an is the true account: "This is the true account; there is no god but God" [Qur'an 3:62]. We should take the stories and understanding from this great book. Regarding the previous books, their role has ended, and there is no longer any place for them. Almighty God has gathered all of their meaning into the Qur'an. The Qur'an has become dominant over them, and a substitute for all of them. The Qur'an with its stories and knowledge are sufficient for us.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

What a Pompous Ass!

Even if all religions are fables, fairy tales and storys, Islam plagarized the Gospels and the Torah. Islam has no originality, it is a rewrite without valid, credible sources.

It is a fable about a creep who liked little girls and heard voices in a cave.