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Struggle and Conflict in Early Christianity Compared with Struggle and Conflict in Early Islam
D. STRUGGLE AND CONFLICT IN EARLY CHRISTIANITY COMPARED WITH STRUGGLE
AND CONFLICT IN EARLY ISLAM
In his short second chapter Dr. Bucaille focuses upon internal struggle
in the young Christian community, with the implication that this could
effect the validity of the Gospel message. His presentation can be
summarized as follows:
1. This struggle involved one group of Christians who followed the
doctrines of Paul and opposed another group called the Judeo-Christians
led by the Apostles Peter and John, along with James the brother of
Jesus.
2. Many of the Gospel-New Testament books were a result of this
struggle.
3. The Judeo-Christian group eventually lost out and their books
were called apocryphal and hidden or suppressed by the church.
Dr.
Bucaille elaborates on these three points with these words:
1. "From the time Jesus left earth (30 AD) until the second half of
the second century (150 AD), there was a struggle between two factions.
One was what one might call Pauline Christianity and the other
Judeo-Christianity. It was only very slowly that... Pauline
Christianity triumphed over Judeo-Christianity."
Next he claims,
"'Until 70 AD, Judeo-Christianity represents the majority of the
Church' and 'Paul remains an isolated case'. The head of the community
at that time was James, a relation of Jesus. With him were Peter (at
the beginning) and John. 'James may be considered to represent the
Judeo-Christian camp, which deliberately clung to Judaism as opposed to
Pauline Christianity."'
And again on the following page,
"Paul is the most controversial figure in Christianity. He was
considered to be a traitor to Jesus' thought by the latter's family and
by the apostles who had stayed in Jerusalem in the circle around James.
Paul created Christianity at the expense of those whom Jesus had
gathered around him to spread his teachings."
Thus Paul is considered a traitor to Jesus' thought, and from this
presentation a reader, not well instructed in the Bible and the facts
of the situation, is again given the impression that the Christians
have changed, altered, suppressed and hidden the true Gospel.
Dr. Bucaille's second point that many of the New Testament books were
the result of this struggle, is set forth in the following words,
2. "As far as the Gospels are concerned however, it is almost certain
that if this atmosphere of struggle between communities had not
existed, we would not have had the writings we possess today. They
appeared at a time of fierce struggle between the two communities.
These 'combat writings', as Father Kannengiesser calls them, emerged
from the multitude of writings on Jesus...
This then leads to his third point that,
3. "These texts constituted the 'Canon' which condemned and excluded
as unorthodox any other documents that were not suited to the line
adopted by the Church."
It is certainly true that some of the Gospel-New Testament books bear
the imprint of struggle, but two questions must be asked.
Is Dr. Bucaille correct in saying that this struggle was between Paul
and the other disciples of Jesus?
Does the existence of a struggle prove that the Gospel-New Testament
was not written by revelation?
WERE PETER, JOHN AND JAMES IN MAJOR DISAGREEMENT WITH PAUL?
The following passages from the Gospel-New Testament prove that these
men were friends and in complete doctrinal agreement.
A. Paul says in
his letter to the Galatians 2:1-2,9-10,
"Fourteen years later I went up again to Jerusalem, this time with
Barnabas...I went in response to a revelation and set before them the
Gospel that I preach among the uncircumcised (pagans)...for fear that I
was running or had run my race in vain.
"James (the brother of Jesus), Peter and John, those reputed to be
pillars, gave me and Barnabas the right hand of fellowship when they
recognized the grace given to me...All they asked was that we should
continue to remember the poor..."
B. In Acts 21:17-20, perhaps 5 years before his death, we read of
Paul's last voyage to Jerusalem. It says,
"When we arrived at Jerusalem, the brothers received us warmly. The
next day Paul and the rest of us went to see James (the brother of
Jesus), and all the elders were present. Paul greeted them and reported
in detail what God had done among the Gentiles through his ministry.
When they heard this they praised God..."
C. Finally, in the second of the two letters which Peter himself wrote
we read these words,
"Bear in mind that our Lord's patience means salvation, just as our
dear brother Paul also wrote you with the wisdom that God gave to
him...His letters contain some things that are hard to understand,
which ignorant and unstable people distort, as they do the other
Scriptures, to their own destruction."
II Peter 3:15-16.
These verses show Paul traveling to Jerusalem to check whether his
preaching agrees with the preaching of Peter, John and James.
They show him having good relations with James at the end of his life.
They show that Peter calls Paul's letters "Scripture".
Galatians 2:11-16 does report a confrontation where Paul rebukes Peter,
but the last quotation above proves that they were later reconciled.
Why does Dr. Bucaille ignore these verses? If I omitted important
verses like these when quoting the Qur'an, would it not be changing the
context by suppression of evidence? It is as though I were to say that
there was great disagreement between Abu Bakr, Omar, and Othman, in
spite of evidence in the Hadith to the contrary.
There was a struggle. That is true. But the struggle was between Paul,
Peter, John and James on one side and the Jewish Christians on the
other.
THE EFFECT OF THE STRUGGLE ON THE GOSPEL-NEW TESTAMENT
The Book of Acts and Paul's letters show three levels of struggle.
First of all there was struggle between Paul and the pagan
idol-worshipers. According to Acts 19, when people accepted Christ as
Saviour because of Paul's preaching, they turned "from dead idols to
serve the living God" and stopped buying silver images. This made the
silversmiths in Ephesus so angry they went on a riot and forced Paul to
leave.
Secondly there was struggle between the Apostles and those Jews who did
not accept the Gospel. In Acts 12 it tells of killing James the brother
of John and putting Peter in Jail, and in Acts 14:19 we read,
"Then some Jews came from Antioch and Iconium and won the crowd over.
They stoned Paul and dragged him outside the city thinking he was
dead."
Thirdly there was struggle between Peter, John and Paul on one
side and the Jewish Christians on the other. It is this third type of
conflict about which Dr. Bucaille is concerned.
The reader may be asking himself by this time what is meant by the term
"Jewish Christian"? Were not Peter, James, John and all of Jesus'
disciples Jews who became Christians? What is the difference between
them and the other group called "Jewish Christians"?
WHAT DID THE JEWISH CHRISTIANS BELIEVE?
Contrary to all we might have imagined, we are astonished to find that
they believed the doctrinal Gospel.
Dr. Bucaille speaks of Cardinal Danilou's studies of the
Judeo-Christian writings several times in his book. On page 19 he
writes,
"Christianity, which was initially Judeo-Christianity, has been
carefully studied...by modern authors, such as Cardinal Danilou. Before
it was transformed under Paul's influence, Christianity accepted the
heritage of the Old Testament (Torah) without difficulty."
In another quotation on page 50 Bucaille writes,
"He (Cardinal Danilou) reviews past works, retraces Judeo-Christian
history and enables us to place the appearance of the Gospels in quite
a different context from the one that emerges on reading accounts
intended for mass publication."
These quotations give the impression that Danilou has demonstrated a
different Gospel in the Jewish Christian community, but when we turn to
Cardinal Danilou's own works we discover that his conclusions are
exactly the opposite.
At the end of his epic work, Thologie du Judo-Christianisme, in which
the Cardinal deals with every document which had been discovered up to
its publication in 1964, he says,
"The task which we set ourselves at the beginning of this volume was
to examine the documents which have come down to us from the Jewish
Christian period of the Early Church in order to draw...a picture of
the theology of Jewish Christianity... p 405.
"Its concern is with cosmic history, from the Beginning of things...to
the last infinite Heaven of God. The axis pinning together this
immeasurable sphere of things and events is the Incarnation, the
tabernacling in human flesh and season of the concealed glory of the
Son (Jesus). p 405.
"For them redemption was a cosmic matter; the action of the Word
(Jesus) extended through every region of the spiritual universe, from
Sheol (hell) to the seventh heaven, and touched every creature. The
cross, the instrument of redemption, is...the double axis of the
universe, transcending space by stretching out its arms to unite all
nations of men and by reaching up its head to join heaven and earth...
p 407.
"Here, so early as in some instances even to go behind the New
Testament, (He means be earlier than the written Gospel),
we find still the divine preexistent Christ---Name, Son and Word...
We find the divine Person of the Holy Spirit...
we find the virginitas in partu (virgin birth)...
and the elaborate doctrine of the church (the Christian Nation of
believers)...
These, and other instances...leave little room to doubt that IN ALL
MAJOR FEATURES THE CHRISTIAN FAITH IN ITS MOST ARCHAIC EXPRESSION WAS
EVEN THEN WHAT IT ALWAYS HAS BEEN. p 408. (capitals mine)
Not only does Cardinal Danilou show that the Jewish Christians had the
same beliefs about God and Jesus as Paul, but there are at least ten
places in his book where he quotes from Paul to illustrate the Jewish
Christian beliefs.
THE DISAGREEMENT BETWEEN THE APOSTLES AND THE JEWISH CHRISTIANS
If this struggle was not because of disagreement concerning belief in
Jesus as savior, what could be the cause of so much division? According
to the Gospel-New Testament the struggle started when some of the pagan
idol-worshipers became Christians.
Then the question was raised as to whether, in addition to accepting
Christ as Saviour, they had to be circumcised and keep the religious
ceremonies of the Torah? Or stated differently, do you have to also
become a Jew and be circumcised in order to be a complete Christian?
From this we get the term JEWISH-Christians.
Paul said, "Jesus has paid for every one of our sins as a free
gift---by grace. Period!"
The Judeo-Christians said, "It is true that Jesus paid for our sins,
but one must also obey the law". Their teaching is described in Acts
15:1 as follows,
"Some men came down from Judea to Antioch and were teaching the
(Christian) brothers: 'Unless you are circumcised, according to the
custom taught by Moses, you cannot be saved (even though you have
accepted Jesus, the Messiah, as Saviour)."'
Because of this disagreement, Paul and Barnabas traveled to Jerusalem
to discuss the question with the other Apostles.
In the discussion which followed Peter answered the Jewish-Christians
with these words,
"Why do you try to test God by putting on the necks of the disciples a
yoke (the Torah) that neither we nor our fathers have been able to bear
(to keep completely)? "No! We believe it is through the grace of our
Lord Jesus that we (Jews) are saved, just as they (the pagans) are."
Acts 15:11.
We might paraphrase this as Peter saying, "No, we Jews were not saved
by being Jews. We were saved by accepting Christ and becoming
Christians. Therefore it is unnecessary for pagans who turn to Christ
to become Jews." And that was the final decision of the meeting.
Christians who believed from pagan religions did not have to be
circumcised.
The complete discussion is found in the Gospel-New Testament in Paul's
letter to the Galatians and the Book of Acts, Chapters 10-15 and shows
that James, the brother of Jesus, and Peter were there and agreed with
Paul. The JEWISH-Christians refused to accept this decision and
considering Paul responsible for it, they persecuted him as the main
leader.
ISLAM AND THE PREVIOUS REVELATIONS
This question of the relation between Islam and the previous
revelations does not seem to have come up among the early Muslims, and
I am not sure why it didn't. Theoretically one could say, that unless
the Qur'an abrogated a command found in the Torah or the Gospel, that
command or teaching should still be binding on the Muslims.
For example why don't Muslims circumcise their sons on the 8th day as
God commanded Abraham in Genesis 17:9-12 which reads,
"Then God said to Abraham,..'This is my covenant with you and your
descendants after you, the covenant you are to keep: every male among
you shall be circumcised. You are to undergo circumcision, and it will
be the sign of the covenant between me and you. For the generations to
come every male among you who is eight days old must be circumcised,
including those born in your household or bought with money.
The Qur'an emphasizes that it is going back to the true religion of
Abraham. Yet Muslims usually circumcise their sons when older, between
three and six years of age, which seems to be disobeying God's
straight, clear command ordering Abraham to do it on the 8th day.
Anyway, if we imagine two groups of Muslims arguing with each
other---one saying, "we must circumcise on the 8th day as God told
Abraham"---and the other saying, "No, that is no longer necessary":
that is an imperfect example of the struggle in the early church. It is
imperfect because the disagreement in the early church was much more
basic.
Are we saved by our efforts in keeping the Law found in the Torah (or
in the Qur'an)?
Or are we saved uniquely and solely by the grace and mercy of God who
paid for all our sins in Christ?
APOCRYPHAL BOOKS
Finally, we must consider Dr. Bucaille's third point concerning the
rejected documents which are usually referred to as apocryphal. This
word comes from the Greek "apokryphos" which means "hidden". Dr.
Bucaille claims that these documents were called "apocrypha" because
the church hid them. In a note on page 51 he says,
"One could note here that all these writings were later to be classed
as apocrypha, i.e. they had to be concealed by the victorious
church..."
Dr. Bucaille is right that the original Greek root meaning of the word
"apocryphal" is "hidden", but again he has refused to limit himself
to those meanings of a word which can be established by usage.
In the 1st and 2nd century AD, the word "apokryphos" (secret) was
used by a group of men called Gnostics for their own works. For
example, one of their books is called the Apocryphon of John or the
Secret of John. The Gnostics claimed to have "apocryphal" or secret
knowledge which others did not have, and salvation was to be found in
the form of knowledge coming from the gnostic revealer---usually
Jesus---though other revealers were also named.
In contrast to both Christianity and Islam, Gnostic works ridicule the
"creator god" as blind and unaware of another higher, purely
spiritual deity. In the Apocryphon of John, for example, the creator
God is said to be weak and "impious in his madness...for he said, 'I
am God and there is no other God beside me' (reference to Isaiah 46:9),
for he is ignorant of his strength, the place from which he had
come".
Later in the fourth century the word was used to refer to books not
publicly read in churches. It meant apocryphal in the modern sense
(i.e. fictitious) only by implication, as when the church historian
Eusebius speaks of some of "the so-called secret (apocryphal) books"
as forgeries composed by heretics.
There is not the least bit of evidence for Dr. Bucaille's statement
that these books were called "apocryphal" because the church hid
them.
EXAMPLES OF JEWISH CHRISTIAN APOCRYPHAL WORKS
At this point it may be helpful to point out that because a book was
declared apocryphal by the church does not mean that it agreed with the
doctrines of Islam. This is simply not the case.
A Jewish Christian "Gospel of Peter", which claimed clearly that Jesus
is the Divine Word of God who died on the cross for our sins, was
rejected by the church because, first of all, it was not written by
Peter, and secondly it denied Jesus' true humanity saying that when he
was on the cross he felt no pain. Danilou says of this false gospel
that "its purpose is to throw into bold relief the divine character of
the person of Christ." Certainly Islam would not be sympathetic to
this!
There was an "Acts of Paul" which agrees completely with the
Christian doctrine of Jesus' death for our sins, but it also says that
"you shall have no part in the resurrection unless you remain chaste
and defile not the flesh", which to them meant no sexual intercourse
even for married people. The church rejected it because this is against
Christian teaching (as it is also against Quranic teaching), and its
author, who admitted that his work was a forgery was removed as a
church leader for this lie. This prohibition of sexual relations even
in marriage is also found in the Judeo-Christian books---The Gospel of
Thomas and the Gospel of the Egyptians.
Finally, I will mention the Judeo-Christian Epistle of Barnabas which
was written about 120 AD. This work was very highly respected by many
second and third century Christians and the teaching which it contains
about Christ is orthodox, but it was declared apocryphal. Why? First,
there was no proof that it was written by Barnabas, and secondly it
attributes the Law of Moses to the wiles of a demon, a statement which
contradicts Jesus' words and which contradicts the Qur'an too.
Everyone of these Jewish-Christian works is mentioned by Bucaille and
quoted by Danilou. It is clear from these examples that although most
of these apocryphal books had considerable orthodox doctrine about
Christ, they were excluded from being read in churches because they
taught false doctrine and were not written on the authority of the
apostles of Jesus.
WEAK HADITHS
Have you Muslims not had the same problem with your Hadith? We learned
in Chapter II of Section Two that Bukhari started with 600,000 and
judged that only 2,762 were "strong", or authentic. When a hadith is
declared weak, are you not saying, "We don't really believe that this
was said by Muhammad or one of the original companions"? The doctrine
in it might be correct but you doubt that it is authentic. This is
exactly what we Christians mean when we use the words "apocryphal" or
"uncanonical".
CONCLUSION
Examination of Dr. Bucaille's three points has shown them to be
invalid. There is no evidence that the struggles of the 1st century AD
limited the ability of God's Holy Spirit to guide his Prophets and
Apostles in any way. After all He is God Almighty, Maker of heaven and
earth. What man shall alter His will or His Word?
Furthermore Dr. Bucaille's thesis contradicts the Qur'an. We saw in
Section Two, Chapter I that the Qur'an says in the Sura of the Battle
Array (Al-Saff) 61:14 from 3 AH that,
"...a portion of the Children of Israel believed (in Jesus), and a
portion disbelieved: but We gave power to those who believed, against
their enemies, and they became the ones that prevailed."
Moreover, we saw in the Sura of Iron (Al-Hadid) 57:27 from 8 AH that
there were true Christian believers present when monasticism started in
300 AD, long after Jewish Christianity had disappeared, Therefore
according to the Qur'an the Christianity which prevailed could not have
been changed by any type of struggle in the 1st century as Dr. Bucaille
has suggested.
STRUGGLE DURING THE GIVING OF THE QUR'AN
If we are to take seriously the idea that struggle and conflict can
falsify revelation, what about the Qur'an? When the Qur'an was given,
was there not struggle between the Muslims and the Meccans? Was there
not struggle between the Muslims and the Jews? Was there not struggle
between Muhammad and others who claimed to be Muslims and even
prophets? The answer to all three of these questions is "yes"!
Is this struggle with the Meccans not mentioned in the Qur'an? What of
the Sura of the Family of `Imran (Ali `Imran) 3:123 which refers to the
battle fought with the Meccans at Badr?
"God had helped you at Badr, when you were a contemptible little
force. Then fear God; thus may you show gratitude."
And in the same Sura 3:140-180, the Prophet rebukes and encourages the
believers in relation to what happened at the battle of Uhud. And what
of Muhammad's struggle with the Jews? In Chapter I of Section Two we
looked at nearly 40 passages given because of the struggle between the
Muslims and the Jews. One example from the late Meccan Sura of the
Cattle (Al-An`am) 6:124, is enough. There we read about the Jew's
request for a sign in these words,
"When there comes to them a sign
they say, 'We shall not believe until we receive one like those
received by God's apostles.' "
The third type of struggle, between Muhammad and others who also
claimed to be Muslims, is even somewhat parallel to the struggle in the
early church with the Jewish Christians. As an example we shall
consider Musailama who headed an embassy sent by his tribe to see
Muhammad in 9 AH and professed Islam. The next year he claimed also to
be a prophet of the One True God and began to publish written
revelations in imitation of the Qur'an. Abu `l-Faraj has preserved this
example,
"Now has God been gracious unto her that was with child, and has
brought forth from her the soul which runs between the peritoneum and
the bowels."
He even wrote to Muhammad starting the letter with the
words, "From Musailama, the Apostle of God, to Muhammad, the Apostle
of God". Muhammad answered calling him "Musailama, the Liar".
Even so Musailama continued to increase in importance and was only
stopped when he was killed during the defeat of his army by General
Khalid in 11 AH, one year after Muhammad's death.
Does that mean that the Qur'an was changed because of this struggle, or
that revelation was broken and crooked because of it? No Muslim would
admit to that. In fact the Qur'an says just the opposite! It says that
there was conflict and struggle every time a prophet was sent to a
people, whether it was Moses with Bani Israel or Salih with the
Thamud.
STRUGGLE IN ISLAM AFTER MUHAMMAD'S DEATH
Musailama was not the only person to claim prophethood. During the
period immediately after Muhammad's death, three false prophets and a
prophetess gathered increasing numbers around their standards. In the
north, east and south of the Peninsula, tribe after tribe, apostasized
from the newly-adopted creed, and Medina itself was attacked. This is
the very period during which Abu Bakr ordered Zaid ibn Thabit to make
the first collection of the Qur'an.
If Dr. Bucaille's theories are correct concerning the Gospel, then we
must assume that all these false prophets, wars, and rebellions must
have in some way affected the collection of the Qur'an. Furthermore, we
ought to regret the disappearance of the words of Musailama and the
other prophets, words which were declared apocryphal by the Muslim
Nation, "although (they were) of historical interest".
In the succeeding years there were other struggles. The second Khalifa,
Omar, was assassinated by a Persian slave, Firoz, in 23 AH., and less
than 25 years after Muhammad's death, in 35 AH, unhappy Muslims entered
the headquarters of Othman, the 3rd Khalifa, and mortally wounded him.
Ali, the Prophet's son-in-law, was named successor, but there was much
opposition to this action. Aisha, the widow of the prophet, along with
2 men named Talha and Zubair, eventually gathered forces in an attempt
to overthrow him. In October 656 AD/35 AH, Ali marched out of Medina
leading, for the first time, a Muslim Army to put down a civil
insurrection raised by brother Muslims. Some months later he defeated
the triumvirate at the "Battle of the Camel". Talha and Zubair were
killed and Aisha was sent back to Mecca.
Some of the emotional weight of this struggle can, perhaps, be realized
when we understand who these people were in relation to Muhammad.
Ali was a cousin of Muhammad who adopted him as his son. He was one of
the first believers and married Fatima, Muhammad's daughter.
Zubair was also a cousin of Muhammad, one of the first to believe, and
one of the ten, called al-`Ashara al-Mubashshara, to whom the Prophet
promised sure entry into Paradise.
Talha, a grand-nephew of Abu Bakr the first Khalifa, was a
distinguished Companion (term for those who saw Muhammad with their own
eyes, embraced Islam, and accompanied him). He saved the life of
Muhammad at the battle of Uhud and was also included in the list of
al-`Ashara al-Mubashshara, who were promised paradise.
Ali, himself, was then murdered in 661 AD/40 AH, by one of the
Kharijites a group of Muslims who had revolted against him.
This bit of history demonstrates the struggles and conflicts in the
early Islamic political situation. But, Shiite claims aside, is any
Muslim willing to say that these struggles caused a change in the
Qur'an? Certainly not! Such a conclusion would be considered
ridiculous.
On what basis, therefore, shall Dr. Bucaille or anyone else say that
the Holy Spirit could not guide Paul, or Peter, or James, even while
they were in the midst of struggle and controversy?
SUMMARY AND CONCLUSION CONCERNING THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE QUR'AN
We have now made a fairly complete study of the historical development
of the Qur'an. We started with the first preaching of Muhammad l3 years
before the Hejira and followed through to one of the oldest copies of
the Qur'an from about 150 AH. To see this progression in the
development of the Qur'an easily, it is summarized in Diagram 3.
Diagram 3 --- THE HISTORICAL DEVELOPMENT OF THE QURAN
Having considered all this information, it seems correct to summarize
Muslim beliefs about the collection and transmission of the Qur'an in
the following statements.
Even though you do not have the original copy of the Qur'an in your
hands, you BELIEVE that Zaid and Omar gathered the Qur'an as it was
given.
You BELIEVE that if something was missed when Othman burned the
original copies, or even if Omar and `Ubai were right about the verse
of stoning and the two extra Suras, it doesn't make a difference to any
basic Islamic doctrine.
You BELIEVE that those who copied the Qur'an did it carefully; and that
when errors were made because the scribes were human, they could be
controlled by comparison with other copies.
You BELIEVE that the Hadith gathered by Muslim and Bukhari describing
the life of Muhammad and the collection of the Qur'an are essentially
true and to be relied upon.
You BELIEVE that those original Muslims would not have given of their
money and their time and even been ready to die for something that they
knew to be a lie.
In summary, YOU BELIEVE that the evidence in favor of the reliable
transmission of the Qur'an is so great you ARE SURE that you can use it
with complete confidence?
Continue with Part E. and F.
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