My interest in Surah 4.157
was in a very real sense renewed after reading James R. White's, What Every Christian Needs To Know About the Qur'an. I have posted two installments of my review of the book (first;
second), and the second installment was on
chapter 6, a chapter which focused on Surah 4.156, 157 ("forty Arabic
words"). In that installment I stated, "Chapter 6 (pages 129-143)
is the most disappointing of the book", and then offered 4 reasons for
that conviction. I would now like to add yet one more: Mr. White's
interpretation of Surah 4.157 makes constructive dialogue between Christians
and Muslims virtually impossible. I say this, because if a Christian adopts
Mr. White's interpretation (and most do so), then only one conclusion can be
reached: Surah 4.157 is utterly false; and if a Muslim adopts the same
interpretation (and most do so), then only one conclusion can be reached: the
Bible on the issue of the crucifixion and death of Jesus is utterly false. When
conclusions of this nature are embraced, any possibility of constructive
dialogue vanishes. And further, any chance of objective reflection from either
side of the issue also vanishes; which in turn means that when competent
scholars present solid evidence such interpretations are severely flawed, they
are almost universally ignored. Fortunately, there are some Christians and
Muslims who are objective enough to recognize such flaws, and I am in debt to
these folk for my understanding of Surah 4.157—i.e. the Qur'an does not deny the
physical crucifixion and death of Jesus—which happens to be the most internally
consistent interpretation. I shall now turn to the Qur'an itself, and let it
speak to us on this issue:
It
is He who has sent down the Book to you. Some of its verses are clear [muh'kamātun] and precise in meaning
they are the basis of the Book while others are allegorical [mutashābihātun]. Those with deviation in
their hearts pursue the allegorical, so as to create dissension by seeking to
explain it: but no one knows its meaning except God. Those who are firmly
grounded in knowledge say, We believe in it: it is all from our Lord. But only
the wise take heed. (Surah 3.7 - Maulana Wahiduddin Khan)
Some
clear [muh'kamātun]
ayat:
Do
not say that those who are killed in Gods cause are dead; they are alive, but
you are not aware of it. (Surah 2.154 - Maulana Wahiduddin Khan)
God
said, O Jesus, I shall cause you to die and will raise you up to Me and shall
clear you [of the calumnies] of the disbelievers, and shall place those who follow
you above those who deny the truth, until the Day of Judgement; then to Me
shall all return and I will judge between you regarding your disputes. (Surah
3.55 - Maulana Wahiduddin Khan)
Do
not think of those who have been killed in Gods cause as dead. They are alive,
and well provided for by their Lord; (Surah 3.169 - Maulana Wahiduddin Khan)
I
told them only what You commanded me [Jesus] to, Worship God, my Lord and your
Lord. I was a witness to what they did as long as I remained among them, and
when You did cause me [Jesus] to die, You were the watcher over them. You are
the witness of all things, (Surah 5.117 - Maulana Wahiduddin Khan)
Blessed
was I on the day I was born, and blessed I shall be on the day I die and on the
day I am raised to life again. (Surah 19:33 - Maulana Wahiduddin Khan)
A
not so clear ayah (Dr. Joseph Cumming in his essay, "Did Jesus Die
on the Cross?"[link] lists no less than 10
differing interpretations of this ayah in the major tasfīr literature—i.e. commentary on the Qur'an):
For their
saying: “It is we who killed the Messiah Jesus son of Mary, the messenger of
God.” Nay, they did not kill him by crucifying him. They thought they did, and
those who affirm that are uncertain; they have no knowledge about it except by
speculation. In certainty they did not kill him because God raised him from
death up to Him. (Surah 4.157 - Dr. Suleiman Mourad)
If one
begins with the clear ayat in mind (the Qur'an refers to those who do so
as being, "firmly
grounded in knowledge"),
only one internally consistent interpretation of ayah 4.157 emerges:
Jesus' physical body was crucified and killed on the cross, but His soul/spirit
remained alive, and He was raised to the presence of God.
What
follows, is a partial list of books, essays and websites/blogs that support the
internally consistent interpretation of Surah 4.157:
Islamic
Studies scholars -
"Does the Qur'an Deny or Assert
Jesus' Crucifixion and Death?" (Paper presented in 2008 at the "The
Qur'an in Its Historical Context" conference, University of Notre
Dame; subsequently published 2011 in, The Qur'an in Its Historical
Context 2, pp. 347-355) - by Dr.
Suleiman A. Mourad
"The
Muslim Jesus: Dead or Alive?" (Bulletin of the School of
Oriental and African Studies 72, 2009, pp. 237-58.)- by Dr. Gabriel Said
Reynolds [link to online pdf copy]
“Towards an
Islamic Christology II”, The Muslim World, Vol. LXX, April 1980, #2, (p.
106) - by Dr. Mahmoud M. Ayoub
“The Crucifixion in the
Koran,” (Muslim World 13, 1923, pp. 242–58) - by E.E. Elder
Jesus In
the Qur'an (Oxford
University Press ed. 1977; Oneworld Publications ed. 1995, pp. 105-121) - by Dr. Geoffrey Parrinder
The
Crucifixion and the Qur'an (2009) - by Dr. Todd Lawson
NOTE: One
Islamic Studies scholar, Dr. Neal Robinson, was recently cited by a Muslim
apologist who posts under the name Ibn Anwar (thanks to Ken Temple for bringing
this to my attention). In the combox of a thread at Paul Williams' blog, Ibn
Anwar quoted the following from Dr. Robinson:
“The attempt of some Christian
apologists to circumvent the Qur’anic denial of the crucifixion is disingenuous
in the extreme.” (Robinson, N. (1991) Christ in Islam and Christianity: The
Representation of Jesus in the Qur’an and the Classical Muslim Commentaries.
London: Macmillan Press Ltd. p. 115). [Link
to Ibn Anwar's post]
The above quote from Dr. Robinson,
if read by itself, seems
to be denying any legitimacy to the interpretation of Surah 4.157 that I have
adopted. However, one must not read the quote in isolation. Earlier in the same
book, Dr. Robinson cited an early Muslim source which affirmed that it was
Jesus himself who was crucified on the cross, and then laid in the tomb:
Jesus’ humanity (nāsut)
was crucified and his hands were nailed to the cross. He was left there all
day, given vinegar to drink, and pierced with a lance. He was taken down from
the cross, wrapped in a shroud and laid in the tomb. Three days later he
appeared to the disciples and was recognized by them. When the news spread that
he had not been killed, the Jews opened up the tomb but did not find his mortal
remains (nāsut). (Christ In Islam and Christianity, pp. 56,
57.)
Even more important is the
following from Dr. Robinson's contribution on "Jesus" in Brill's, The
Encyclopaedia of the Qur'ān (2005, vol. 3, pp. 7-21):
[T]he Qur'anic teaching
about Jesus' death is certainly not clear-cut. Three things, however, may be
said with certainty. First, the Qur'an attaches no salvific importance to this
death. Second, it does not mention his resurrection on the third day and has no
need of it as proof of God's power to raise the dead. Third, although the Jews
thought they had killed Jesus, from God's viewpoint they did not kill or
crucify him. Beyond this is the realm of speculation. The classical
commentators generally begin with the questionable premise that Q 4.157-9 contains
an unambiguous denial of Jesus' death by crucifixion. They found confirmation
of this in the existence of traditional reports about a look-alike substitute
and hadiths about Jesus' future descent. Then they interpreted the other
Qur'anic references to Jesus' death in the light of their understanding of this
one passage. If, however, the other passages are examined without
presupposition and Q 4.157-159 is then interpreted in the light of them, it can
be read as a denial of the ultimate reality of Jesus' death rather than a
categorical denial that he died. (Cited in Dr. Todd Lawson's, The
Crucifixion and the Qur'an, pp. 23, 24.)
Websites
and blogs -
"DID
JESUS DIE ON THE CROSS?" (Evidence for God's Unchanging Word - link)
"What
does the Qur'an say about Jesus death?" (Antioch Believer - link)
"Never say die: The
death of Jesus in the Qur'an" (Religion at the margins - link)
"Did Jesus Die?"
(From the book, Jesus The Light And Fragrance of God, by M. N. Anderson
- link)
"Two
questions from a truth-seeking Muslim on the death of Jesus on the cross"
(A Christian Thinktank - link)
Grace
and peace,
David
P.S.
For all my threads on Surah 4.157 see THIS
LINK