English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

i seriously want to know... who wrote it?

2006-08-28 14:46:49 · 17 answers · asked by miss2sexc 4 in Society & Culture Religion & Spirituality

17 answers

It was written by men that were not inspired by God, mostly after Mohammed's death. Keep in mind, it is NOT a valid book of scriptures, only a book that has unfortunately deceived millions. I'm not bashing anyone or anything, though. Only saying the truth. The only way ANYONE can get to heaven is through Jesus Christ. As He said,

John 14:6
Jesus answered, "I am the way and the truth and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me.


God bless!

2006-08-28 14:56:09 · answer #1 · answered by eefen 4 · 0 2

The Prophet was a successful merchant. The "Muslim scholars" who fabricated the illiteracy lie forgot that there were no numbers during the Prophet's time; the letters of the alphabet were used as numbers. As a merchant dealing with numbers every day, the Prophet had to know the alphabet, from one to one-thousand.

The Quran tells us that Muhammad wrote down the Quran - Muhammad's contemporaries are quoted as saying, "These are tales from the past that he wrote down. They are being dictated to him day and night" (25:5). You cannot "dictate" to an illiterate person. The Prophet's enemies who accuse him of illiteracy abuse Verse 29:48, which relates specifically to previous scriptures.

On the 27th night of Ramadan 13 B.H. (Before Hijerah), Muhammad the soul, the real person, not the body, was summoned to the highest universe and the Quran was given to him (2:97, 17:1, 44:3, 53:1-18, 97:1-5). Subsequently, the angel Gabriel helped Muhammad release a few verses of the Quran at a time, from the soul to Muhammad's memory. The Prophet wrote down and memorized the verses just released into his mind. When the Prophet died, he left the complete Quran written down with his own hand in the chronological order of revelation, along with specific instructions as to where to place every verse. The divine instructions recorded by the Prophet were designed to put the Quran together into the final format intended for God's Final Testament to the world (75:17). The early Muslims did not get around to putting the Quran together until the time of Khalifa Rashed `Uthmaan.

2006-08-29 01:42:41 · answer #2 · answered by Nazneen K 2 · 0 0

This is a Verse from the Holy Quran where Mohammed is advised by Allah to answer the disbelievers

When Our Clear Signs are recited to them, those who do not expect to meet Us say, 'Bring a Qur'an other than this one or change it.' Say: 'It is not for me to change it of my own accord. I follow nothing except what is revealed to me. I fear, were I to disobey my Lord, the punishment of a Dreadful Day.' (10:15)

Visit this site which mention Many of the Miracles of the Holy Quran

http://www.harunyahya.com/miracles_of_the_quran_01.php

Allah Says in the Quran

Its collection and recitation are Our affair. (75:17)

(Quran was written by the people at the time Mohammed was alive, however later after the death, it was formally published with all copies perfectly same to avoid any distortion of Allah's words)

2006-08-28 22:02:03 · answer #3 · answered by Mmmmm 2 · 2 0

It was conveyed by ArchAngel Gabriel, the same angel who had conveyed God's revelations to his earlier prophets, including Abraham, Moses and Jesus. Prphet Muhammad received this first revelation at the age of 40 in 610 A.D.



The prophet received the revelations on various matters, ideas, knowledge, elucidation, instructions, advice and guidance over 23 years. Sometimes the Prphet received a single verse, sometimes a few verses together and sometimes an entire chapter. God says: "We have rehearsed the Quran to thee (O Muhammad) in slow, well-arranged stages gradually." (25:32)



Upon receiving each revelation, the Prophet asked any one of his companions who could read and write to record it. This was done by the Prophet reciting the revelation he had received from God and a scribe taking it down. After the scribe had taken down what had been dictated to him (on the writing material of those days), the Prophet asked the scribe to read allowed what he had recorded - to make sure that he had recorded correctly what had been dictated to him.



The Qur'an is present in a living language, Arabic. Over 200 million speak the Arabic language. It is therefore very easy to check the contents of the original Arabic of the Qur'an. The Bible was written in ancient Hebrew, Aramaic, and Koine Greek. These are all dead languages, which we no longer have the complete meanings of.



The Qur'an has always been in the possession of the people, as there is no clergy in Islam. The Bible on the other hand, until recently, has always been in the possession of the Church. It has been shaped, modified, and passed on by Church Authority.



There is not even one word of difference between two Arabic Qur'ans, anywhere in the world. There has been no disagreements in history among Muslims as to what should and should not be in the Qur'an. However, in the case of the Bible, even the most ancient manuscripts conflict with one another so that no two are identical. Footnotes in all modern versions of the Bible prove this fact.

The preservation of the scripture of Islam -- the Holy Qur'an -- is unique among world religions. No other religion has a scripture which is both as old and as well-preserved as the one possessed by Muslims today. Even scholars who are hostile to Islam admit that the Qur'an that exists today is exactly the same as the one that existed in the time of the Prophet Muhammad



The scriptures of other religions are made up of writings that were not considered to be scripture until many years after they were written - the letters of (St.) Paul are a good example of this.



The Qur'an also remained pure and authentic because unlike other scriptures, it was written down and memorized in the lifetime of the prophet that it was revealed to.



It was only natural for Almighty God to preserve the scripture revealed to Prophet Muhammad, because he was the last Prophet and Final Messenger of God.



It has always amazed people to find out that the entire Qur'an was not only memorized word-for-word by hundreds of the companions of Prophet Muhammad, but that it has been memorized verbatim by thousands upon thousands of people until this very day in its original language of Arabic. It was only natural for Almighty God to preserve the scripture revealed to Prophet Muhammad, because he was the last Prophet and Final Messenger of God.

2006-08-28 22:55:05 · answer #4 · answered by BeHappy 5 · 0 0

Muslims today are committed to the idea that there was one original Qur'an which was compiled without any mistakes, omissions or additions. Yet, Islamic history shows that perhaps four to seven different versions of the Qur'an emerged. One of Mohammed’s successors, Caliph Uthman, was shocked by this fact. He assigned a committee of three people to construct a standardized version of the Qur'an. Then Muslim leaders tried to burn all other versions of the Qur'an (Sahih Bukhari, Vol. 6, p. 479).

The most respected Hadith records that even Uthman’s standardized copy had to be corrected. One of the committee members, Zaid, related how they realized that a verse was missing. They searched and found it with a man named Khuzaima-bin-Thabit al Ansari. Tradition says that the passage which was added to the standardized version is found in chapter thirty-three, verse twenty-three of the modern Qur'an (Sahih Bukhari, Vol. 6, p. 479). Even with the addition of that passage, there are less reliable Islamic traditions which report that verses were left out of the Uthman standardized Qur'an. It was reported that Mohammed recited verses for the Qur'an that commanded stoning of adulterers (Ibn Ishaq, Sirat Rasulullah, p. 684). This teaching is not found in the Qur'an today.

The possibility of missing verses, which command stoning of adulterers, is supported by Islamic practice. From the very foundation of Islam, adulterers have always been stoned, yet Uthman’s standardized Qur'an demands that adulterers be whipped with one hundred lashes (24:2).

The vast majority of Muslims are strongly offended by scholars who suggest that the Qur'an was edited, changed or was in any way different from the original pronouncements of Allah through Mohammed. They believe that the burned Qur'ans had only minor differences and that the standard copy, blessed by Caliph Uthman, was made by devout followers of Mohammed who had memorized the verses with unerring perfection. They would reject the traditions that imply any deficiencies in the Qur'an as unreliable Islamic history. They revere the Qur'an as the perfect word of Allah and resist critical scholarly inquiry into imperfections in the text.

2006-08-28 21:57:05 · answer #5 · answered by JasonLee 3 · 1 1

Mohammed as told to him by "god".
Yes, we believe in god & know that mohammed was a prophet of god,not god himself.
If only people would actually try to get a few basic beleifs of islam (muslims) there wouldn't be idiots talking rubbish.
I do not mean u in the above comment.
May allah bless u & protect u from harm.
Allah akbar

2006-08-28 22:32:20 · answer #6 · answered by aussie fallen angel 1 · 0 0

the companions did but it was memorized for years before it was written in a book.
it was revealed through angel Gabriel over a 23 years period verse by verse to the holy Prophet.

2006-08-28 21:52:17 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

Mohammed

2006-08-28 21:49:54 · answer #8 · answered by Shano3651 3 · 0 3

Mohammad didn't write it his friends did...as soon as he had a revelation he shared it and his friends immediately wrote it down

2006-08-29 18:07:37 · answer #9 · answered by Darkness 5 · 0 0

Non-Muslim answer: Muhammad.

Muslim answer: Allah handed the qur'an down verse by verse to Muhammad who memorized them and recited them to his people.

(Qur'an literally means, the recitation)

2006-08-28 21:50:30 · answer #10 · answered by John S 4 · 3 0

fedest.com, questions and answers