… If they turn away Allah will punish them with a painful punishment in this world and the hereafter
was originally:
… If they turn away Allah will punish them in this world.
I’ve made a close study of interpolations in the Greek NT texts. The same happened with the Koranic texts.
I am of the opinion that the Koran, more or less as it exist’s today, came into existence in the late 700s … and that what we have today was the work of a single individual
I see no reason for you to have quoted me to make this completely off-topic post. Perhaps you meant to post it in another thread, say in GD, but without quoting me?
Considering that the Bible says that Moses never made it to Israel, and that it says the Temple was built by Solomon, who is traditionally believed to have lived about four centuries after Moses, that’s quite a trick.
Probably insinuates that the parchment may not be genuine if the inhabitants of that region at that time could not afford the skins from which to make it. But I didn’t write that quote so I’m not sure.
So, to summarise, you’re leaving the thread you started:
Without responding to the rebuttal offered by several posters to your initial comments about the 95% spread;
Without responding to the contradiction by other posters of your factual assertion that there are variant versions of the Koran;
Without responding to the critique by other posters that there is no evidence to support your convoluted theory that Mohammed plagerised from an unknown Nestorian Christian document that his uncle had;
Without providing any authority in support of the assertion that the Koran was actually written in the late 700’s, instead of the broadly accepted date of the mid 600’s, except for your own personal theory;
Without providing any support for your assertion that Moses hid the Pentateuch in a temple that didn’t exist when he died, in a location which the Bible expressly states he never visited before his death.
So all we’re left with are your personal meanderings, suspicions and feelings, unsupported by any shred of factual evidence, other than your own personal prejudices.
I actually am of the opinion that the earliest Koranic writings were probably more benevolent and humane than what exists today. When the Arabians first moved out of their home territory they were apparently welcomed by the locals who had endured chaotic anarchy for some time because of the decades long warfare between the Persians and the Byzantines.
The Bible is riddled with interpolations. The Koran much less so. Those who had a hand in the subtle changes in the Koran’s text went about it a much more subtle way. There are also indications that in some cases interpolations were made by a person who didn’t fully grasp the meaning of what he was tampering with.
One thing people should know about me is that I’ve been associating with atheist Muslims for over 40 years - people from Egypt, Tunisia, Morroco, Iran, Yemen, Saudi Arabia, Iraq, Turkey, Indonesia, India, Malaysia, etc. Atheist Muslims are often very clear thinkers, especially the women.