STUDY QUESTIONS

HUMANITIES CORE COURSE

FALL QUARTER, WEEK 4

20-21 OCTOBER 2010

“Islam: The Covenant Corrected and Restored”

 

            There are no study questions of the usual sort accompanying the Week 4-2 lecture in this HCC segment. Instead, instructors and students are invited to continue the process of close reading of the Qur'an that was begun in the 4-2 lecture, turning their attention to passages that are included in the “Core Guide & Reader” but were not discussed during the lecture itself.

            During the lecture, your attention was drawn to how different parts of the several passages seemed intended for different parts of Prophet Muhammad's original audience. What you are now invited to do is to read the remaining passages with the same categories of original hearer in mind, asking yourself as you proceed which audience God seems to have in mind as speaks successive parts of his message/warning to Prophet Muhammad.

            To assist you, I have prepared the following shorthand notes. In these notes,  the adat numbers (verse numbers) that are grouped below each sura number (chapter number) are followed, respectively,  by one of the following audience-code numbers. When the applicability of the verse to the audience segment indicated seemed obvious, I offer no commentary. When it seemed necessary or useful, I have offered what I could.

 

Audience Code Numbers

P          Arab polytheists

C         Christians

J           Jews

S          Sabians

M         Muslims

A         Muslim apostates

R          rival prophets.

Note also as general features of the Qur’anic discourse:

G         Garden of Paradise

H         Hell     

 

SURA 2

 

114, J

116, C

118-119, J; against Jewish lamentation

122, 124, J; covenant abrogated

125-129, M; linking Abraham, Kaaba, and Muhammad

142, J, A

146, J, C

148, M; urging forbearance now, trusting in divine judgment/punishment at end time.

 

 

SURA 3

 

59, C

61, C, “lying”: innocent error a wobbly conception; usually error = lying, culpable

deception

65-68, 81-83, M: this is close to the core of Muslim revelation; the covenant that must

      be restored is the primeval covenant between the one God and the monotheist

      Abraham; as originally granted to Jews and Christians, later revelations did not

      undermine or contradict this one, but those later revelations and scriptures have

      been accidentally or wantonly corrupted since the time when they were given.

      “Back to Abraham” promises the needed restoration.

85-92, A

96-97, M; why the Kaaba is so supremely holy a structure; cf. 2:125-129

98-99, J & C

100-101, M & A

105, C; allusion to Christological controversies and Christian persecution of heretics

103-106, A

110, M, C, J; Muslim praised as virtuous, contrasted with People of Book

 

SURA 4

 

54, J; cf. 2, 118-119; formal lamentation is a part of Jewish religious practice.

56, H, more vividly evoked, in my opinion, than

57, G

101-104, P, clearly a reference to early persecution of Muslim believers by the

      polytheists of the dominant Qureish tribe of Mecca; Muhammad was of this

      tribe, and within it of the Banu Hashem clan, but they were initially the

      reason he and his followers fled to Medina in the famous Hijra.

108, 110, P; note a very fully developed view of divine omniscience, especially

      in judging human consciences and wrongdoing

123, C; the verse may not seem polemical, but in fact it is a rejection of the Christian

      notion that “Christ died for our sins”; in the Qur’an, no one can assume another’s

      guilt or be saved from punishment by another’s innocence. God sees all,

      and all will be requited individually each for his own merit or blame.

125, M; note the close linkage of submission to God, virtue in general, and Abraham,     

       God’s friend.

 

SURA 5

 

3, M, J; the eating of food offered in the course of slaughter to a pagan god or

      slaughtered upon a pagan altar was an issue for Christian Jews; it comes up in

      Paul (1 Corinthians 8:4-13). The Muslim dietary laws, rather than derived from

      the Jewish, reflect general near eastern dietary practice, differently wedding to

      religious belief in each case. God has “perfected” the Jewish practices for the

      Muslims

6, M, J; “perfect his blessings upon you”: again, ablutions are a part of standard

     Jewish practice; God wishes to “perfect” again, in this domain.

6, M, J; “treachery in all but a few of them. Overlook this and pardon them….”

     Jewish sinfulness means that the Jewish covenant has been abrogated, but Jews

     are welcome in the new people of God

14, C, “they too forgot”; oblivion and adulteration alternate as the charge against the

     People of the Book.

14, C: “we stirred up enmity among them”; fights among contending creeds, orthodoxy and heresy, are not mere human arguments; they are divine punishment

17, C; against the Incarnation

61-66, C & J; note how the two groups blend into one as “People of the Book”; how

     not all are treacherous, but most are: “some of them are on the right course, but

     many of them do evil.” The language is harsh, but note that Jews stand exactly

     equal to Christians; in context, since immunity could be had by the payment of

     a tax, this led to most of the world’s Jews choosing to live under Muslim rather

    Christian rule. Mutual Jewish-Christian hostility, again, is God’s punishment of

     both groups.

68, C, J. Without “that which has been sent down”—namely, the Qur’an—the

     earlier scriptures avail not.

69, C, J, S. With the Qur’an, their scriptures, and a good life, all “have nothing to

     fear or regret.” Note the expression “God and the Last Day” both here and at

     2:126. The shahada or declaration of faith does not include the Last Day as an

     article of faith, but references like these make it virtually such. Acceptance of

     Muhammad in the shahada as rasul, or messenger would include in principle, of

     course, the message he brings, in which the Last Day occurs with such extreme

     frequency.

 

SURA 6

 

74-83, M; discussed in class. The first of what I called “merit of Abraham” passages.

84-89, M; biblical names are multiplied in random order, all regarded as prophets

89, “a lesson for all people”; Islam is potentially a universal religion, paralleling

     Christianity

91, A, J, C

92, M, J, C; “confirm what came before it.” A crucial point: Islam is in its way a kind

     of non-Christian Protestantism, evoking the practice of Abraham as normative in

     the way that the Protestants invoked the practice of the early church as normative.

     For both, what lies between represents corruption both in the transmission of

     God’s word and in the moral lives of those who should be its conscientious

     Custodians

93, R

94, C, P; Jesus is celebrated as intercessor before God, but tribal gods were

     commonly understood to have a one-to-one, god-to-tribe relationship and

     protective duties, especially in time of danger throughout the ancient near

     east. The universality of this understanding faded under Hellenism, whose

     pantheon included, most notably, no God of Greece. The gods related to

     humans collectively, and the relationship was not one of protection. Judaism

     was close to unique in retaining the old sense of covenant relationship with

     its god. The Arab tribes of the interior may also have carried forward the

     older theology.

101, C. When God is celebrated for anything other than giving the Qur’an and

     for reward and punishment at the Last Day, it is typically as the Lord of Nature.

 

SURA 9

 

28, C. This is the origin of the ban, still in effect, upon Christian entry into the Hijaz.

29, J,C. “God and the Last Day” again; “payment of the tax”—see Abdel Haleem’s

     note: the jizya seems also to have been, functionally, a kind of substitute form of

     acknowledgement of the superiority of the Qur’an as revelation.

30, J “Ezra is the Son of God”; Ezra was not treated in Rabbinic Judaism as Jesus in

     Christianity. However, as we shall see in our next class, he was a key figure in

     linking the rabbis’ radical changes in Judaism to the authority of Moses by a

    chain of oral tradition, the “oral law.”

31, J, C. Jewish and Christian error is not infrequently associated with Jewish and

     Christian vice; conversely, Mullim truth with Muslim virtue.

35, H; again, more vividly portrayed than G

 

SURA 19

 

“In the name of God the Lord of Mercy, the Giver of Mercy”—the phrase opens every Sura.

 

1-26, M, a rather close and laudatory retelling of Luke 1.

      Note that God freely acknowledges that he has brought about virgin birth in the past. The Qur’anic retelling introduces an emphasis never much practiced in Christian New Testament commentary, by which Elizabeth’s conception of John the Baptist is miraculous in just the same way that Sarah’s of Isaac was, while Mary’s of Jesus is miraculous in another way. This juxtaposition could underscore my contention in the Christianity readings that it is miraculous birth, rather than the virginal state, that is of religious significance. Note, however, that the retelling makes no reference to John as the future Baptizer.

27-33, M, Jesus, though not divine, clearly has miraculous powers even from birth.

      Like all other biblical figures, he is a prophet.

35, C

37, C; “factions,” again, God’s punishment for the error/sin of belief in Incarnation

41-50, M; discussed in class, second “merit of Abraham passage.”

56, M. “Idris” is biblical Enoch, of whom Genesis says that he “did not see death,”

    and who later became the vehicle for apocalyptic speculation

 

 

SURA 22

 

18, P

19-22, H

23-24, G

27, M; one of the Five Pillars: Haj

36, “those who do not ask as well as those who do”: Zakat, almsgiving, another of the

     Five pillars. Generosity, largesse, is probably second to faith in the frequency of

     its mention among the virtues.

37, J, C “neither their meat nor their blood that reaches God but your piety”: the point is, against ancient Jewish practice and later Christian understandings of the meaning of the crucifixion, that the killing of an animal or a human for that matter does not placate or, in and of itself, even please God. That is not its point. Piety is its point, and generosity—the sharing of the meat—is inherent in piety.

 

SURA 37

 

11-39, P. In general, neither the Jews nor, certainly, the Christians had to be

     persuaded that there would be a Last Day. See Matthew 25, with strong

     elements of structural similarity to this scene, though the criteria for

     salvation and damnation are different. It was the Arab polytheists who

     carried forward the more primitive near eastern notion that the vague

     personal afterlife was not a place of reward or punishment, merely of

     diminution down to near absence, and that one’s real afterlife was through

     and only through one’s offspring. In a sense, the tribal polytheists had to

     get” this much of the late Jewish and early Christian vision to hear God’s

     Revelation through Muhammad at full strength.

 

83-113, M third “merit of Abraham” passage; discussed in lecture; note the far

     greater sense of partnership and shared merit between God and his (here

     unnamed) son.

 

SURA 38

 

17-26, M. Read II Samuel 12. This episode combines elements from it to make a

     general didactic or moralistic point (26): “Do not follow your desires, lest they

     divert you from God’s path: those who wander from His path will have a

     painful torment because they ignore the Day of Reckoning.

30 ff. M. In later Jewish folklore, as here, Solomon’s wisdom became sorcery.

41 ff. M. The biblical Job is celebrated for his patience, as also, in general, in

     Christianity. The starkness of his confrontation with God, God’s wager

     with the Devil: all this is passed over in silence. Cf. my comment in lecture

     that the figures of Jewish and Christian scripture are more uniformly honored

     in the Qur’an than in the Bible itself.

65, M,J,C. “I am only here to give warning.” For Christians with only a qualified

     belief in Christ’s divinity (miraculous, yes; divine, no), this element in the

     promulgation of the Qur’an was potentially of great importance. There was

     nothing new to believe; there was only the purification of truths already accepted.

69, M,J,C. “I have no knowledge…” Same point.

82, “Iblis said….” Indirectly, an assertion that Muslims, less messed with by the

     great demon Iblis are the most virtuous of men.