errr improve on ur english.nd r u askin bcos u want pple to insult Christianity.anyways the final version of God's book has just arrived its called Heaven is so real.and that's the last book which will be written before Jesus comes
2007-06-11 21:03:31
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Allah did not speak directly to Muhammed, as he did to other prophets. Muhammed as I remember got his "revelation" from Gabriel.
And as far as I know the Quran was written by Men.
There is no valid proof for the Quran to be completed in Muhammed's time.
A manuscript analysis of the Qur'an does present us with unique problems not encountered with the Bible. While we can find multiple manuscripts for the Bible written 700-900 years earlier, at a time when durable paper was not even used, the manuscripts for the Qur'an within the century in which it was purported to have been compiled, the seventh century, simply do not exist. Prior to 750 A.D. (thus for 100 years after Muhammad's death) we have no verifiable Muslim documents which can give us a window into this formative period of Islam.
In fact the primary sources which we possess are from 150-300 years after the events which they describe, and therefore are quite distant from those events. For that reason they are, for all practical purposes, secondary sources, as they rely on other material, much of which no longer exists.
2007-06-12 04:18:16
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answer #2
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answered by Sternchen 5
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ISHAQ:166 “‘You have recited to the people that which I did not bring to you from Allah, and you have said that which He did not say to you.’ The Messenger was grieved and feared Allah greatly.
Sahih Bukhari V7, Bk 62, Nr 64
Aisha: that the Prophet married her when she was six years old and he had sex with her when she was just nine years old.
Sura 17:90
They say: "We will by no means believe in you until you cause a fountain to gush forth from the earth for us.,"…- Sura 17:93 Say: "Am I anything but only a man,- a messenger?"
Bukhari, Vol 2, No. 167 "The sun eclipsed and the prophet jumped up terrified that it might be the Hour (of Judgement)"
This powerless ‘prophet’ who fingered little girls, said the sun sets in a muddy spring, had incest with his own daughter-in-law and spoke up for the devil was startled by an eclipse!...why? because he knew in his heart that he will be doomed on judgement day for his blatant lies.
2007-06-13 03:56:42
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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I heard about a "new International version" that came in 2000. You make an excellent point. Christians have a hard time realizing reasoning must be done when chosing one's religion.
Quran will never be changed and it is the unedited book of God. Christians here can never make a good point against the noble Quran. Our power lies on the Quran.
2007-06-12 04:12:21
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answer #4
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answered by rEVOLution 3
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Where is that FINAL VERSION of the Quran now? Let's see if you can find that 1400 year old Quran. Certainly it would be guarded well by Islamic armies.
Any idea?
And how was that FINAL VERSION put together? By men?
Thanks for pointing out hypocricy. Please learn more facts about your own religion before you attack other religions with your sarcasm.
You can NOT prove the Quran is exactly the same as it was in the late 7th century any more than you can prove that all the Dead Sea Scroll scriptures are a conspiracy made by Jews to prove that Mohammad was WRONG about certain parts of the Bible being changed.
Think about it...and please...read the Scrolls. They tell you who was REALLY to be sacrificed by Abraham, and where.
2007-06-12 03:58:22
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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There will never be a final version of Bible because there are so many versions and its followers do not know exactly which one is genuine.The original Bible has been lost so it can not be compared to the existing versions which has been corrup
ted by dirty hands.Radicalsm is not the monopoly of muslims There are so many non muslim radicalists too. .Radicalist muslims are very very few and they were the victim of mis led knowledge of Islam..Sunni and Syiah followers are muslim
people.The difference is only a slight.or small.But American government (christians) assisted by Israel (jews) made them quarelling each other in Iraq. in order to weaken the islamic forces in the invaded country Iraq.
2007-06-12 04:26:46
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answer #6
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answered by ? 7
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Holy Quran is the last & final testment of God and is guide unto all mankind.
O People of the Book! there hath come to you Our Apostle revealing to you much that ye used to hide in the Book and passing over much (that is now unnecessary): There hath come to you from Allah a (new) Light and a perspicuous Book.
Wherewith Allah guideth all who seek His good pleasure to ways of peace and safety and leadeth them out of darkness by His Will unto the light guideth them to a Path that is Straight. (Holy Quran:5:15,16)
2007-06-12 04:14:53
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answer #7
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answered by Ismail Eliat 6
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i think i cut and pasted this for you before.
After Muhammad's death in A.D. 632, there was no collection of his revelations. Consequently, many of his followers tried to gather all the known revelations and write them down in codex form. Soon we had the codices of several scholars such as Ibn Mas'ud, Ubai b. Kab, Ali', Abu Bakr, al-Ash'ari, al-Aswad, and others. As Islam spread, we eventually had what became known as the Metropolitan Codices in the centers of Mecca, Medina, Damascus, Kufa, and Basra.As we saw earlier, Uthman tried to bring order to this chaotic situation by canonizing the Medinan Codex, copies of which were sent to all the metropolitan centers, with orders to destroy all the other codices. Uthman's codex was supposed to standardize the consonantal text; yet we find that many of the variant traditions of this consonantal text survived well into the fourth Islamic century.The problem was aggravated by the fact the consonantal text was unpointed, that is to say, the dots that distinguish, for example, a "b" from a "t," or a "th" were missing. Several other letters (f and q; j, h, and kh; s and d; r and z; s and sh; d and dh; t and z) were indistinguishable. As a result, a great many variant readings were possible according to the way the text was pointed (had dots added). The vowels presented an even worse problem. Originally, the Arabs had no signs for the short vowels—these were only introduced at a later date. The Arabic script is consonantal. Although the short vowels are sometimes omitted, they can be represented by orthographical signs placed above or below the letters—three signs in all, taking the form of a slightly slanting dash or a comma.After having settled the consonants, Muslims still had to decide what vowels to employ: using different vowels, of course, rendered different readings.This difficulty inevitably led to the growth of different centers with their own variant traditions of how the texts should be pointed and vowelized. Despite Uthman's order to destroy all texts other than his own, it is evident that the older codices survived. As Charles Adams 236 says, "It must be emphasized that far from there being a single text passed down inviolate from the time of Uthman's commission, literally thousands of variant readings of particular verses were known.... These variants affected even the Uthmanic codex, making it difficult to know what its true original form may have been." Some Muslims preferred codices other than the Uthmanic, for example, those of Ibn Masud, Ubayy ibn Kab, and Abu Musa.Eventually under the influence of the great Koranic scholar Ibn Mujahid (d. A.D. 935), there was a definite canonization of one system of consonants and a limit placed on the variations of vowels used in the text that resulted in acceptance of the systems of the seven: 1. Nafi of Medina (d. A.D. 785)
2. Ibn Kathir of Mecca (d. A.D. 737)
3. Ibn Amir of Damascus (d. A.D. 736)
4. Abu Amr of Basra (d. A.D. 770)
5. Asim of Kufa (d. A.D. 744)
6. Hamza of Kufa (d. A.D. 772)
7. Al-Kisai of Kufa (d. A.D. 804)
But other scholars accepted ten readings, and still others accepted fourteen readings. Even Ibn Mujahid's seven provided fourteen possibilities, since each of the seven was traced through two different transmitters, viz., 1. Nafi of Medina according to Warsh and Qalun
2. Ibn Kathir of Mecca according to al-Bazzi and Qunbul
3. Ibn Amir of Damascus according to Hisham and Ibn Dhakwan
4. Abu Amr of Basra according to al-Duri and al-Susi
5. Asim of Kufa according to Hafs and Abu Bakr
6. Hamza of Kufa according to Khalaf and Khallad
7. Al-Kisai of Kufa according to al-Duri and Abul Harith
ibn warraq, p.109.
2007-06-12 04:24:36
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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If you can read that thing with a straight face then you deserve the "final version". Seriously.
2007-06-12 04:10:48
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answer #9
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answered by Poop2Pie 3
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I heard a comic strip Quran is gonna be out soon by the same people who made the famous Mohammed cartoons.
Can't wait! I'm out of toilet reading material...
2007-06-12 04:03:27
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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