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Comments on Mahmoud Ayoub's essay "'Uzayr in the Qur'an and Muslim Tradition"
Comments on Mahmoud Ayoub's essay
'Uzayr in the Qur'an and Muslim Tradition*
Ernest Hahn
In the following brief statement point two is especially related to the article under
consideration. The other two points, though raised by the author and peripheral to the
main argument of the article, are cogent for anyone seriously concerned with
Christian-Muslim relations.
1. The author accepts the traditional Muslim understanding that 'Uzayr is the Biblical
Ezra. In establishing a context for the Quranic verse 9:30: "And the Jews say: Ezra
is the son of Allah ...", the author first notes the nature of Muhammad's attitude
towards the People of the Book (the Jews and the Christians). He writes:
Muhammad's attitude toward the People of the Book, and notably the Jews, was
ambivalent, and remained so in spite of the sharp conflicts between the two communities
in Madina. This ambivalence, moreover, tended to be benign. The Qur'an generally
distinguishes between the Jews (al-Yahud) of Madina and the children of Israel. ...
(p. 3)
True, the Qur'an generally distinguishes between the Jews of Madina and the children
of Israel. But only between the Jews of Madina? What about the Jews outside Madina?
Likewise, no doubt, Muhammad's attitude towards the People of the Book (Jews and
Christians) was ambivalent. But could not, should not, Ayoub have mentioned the Qur'an's
ambivalence also? The reason for stating this is the assumption of some Muslims and
Christians that the Qur'an measures what Muslim attitudes towards the Jews and the
Christians are, could be or should be, and the consequently unfortunate tendency among
both Muslims and Christians at times to become selective in their citations of Quranic
passages referring to the Christians and the Jews, whether in approving or condemning
one or both of these communities. Some presentations read as if the Qur'an has only
nasty things to say about Christians and Jews. Other presentations would suggest that
the Qur'an instructs Muslims to view Christians and Jews, or at least Christians, as
their good friends. In fact the Qur'an speaks favorably and unfavorably about Jews and
Christians, its judgements upon both generally becoming harsher as time moves on —
this despite Ayoub's statement about Muhammad's ambivalence towards the People of the Book
"tending to be benign".
Briefly, Muslims and Christians should act according to the Golden Rule when citing
their own and other' Scriptures.
2. The Quranic verse that especially concerns us here ("The Jews say: Ezra is
the Son of God ...") and the Qur'an's recognition that the blasphemous
confession calls for a militant response from God and the Muslim community, as the
surrounding verses indicate, is a case in point of the Qur'an's growing harsher judgement
upon the People of the Book. (Surah 9 is considered by Muslims to be one of the latest
surahs.) A similar judgement is made in the same verse against the Christians who speak
about Jesus as the Son of God. In Quranic and traditional Islamic understanding both
Jews and Christians are therefore guilty of the unforgivable sin, i.e., calling someone
the son of God and, hence, associating someone with God.
Muslims, of course, had no trouble in demonstrating that Christians everywhere
confessed Jesus as the Son of God, whatever the designation meant to them or to Muslims.
But they have had a problem in demonstrating that Jews have spoken of Ezra as the Son
of God. And hence Ayoub's article in reviewing this difficulty.
Ayoub does recognize the problem and even connects it with two other statements which
the Qur'an attributes to the Jews and which according to Ayoub, like 9:30 "cannot
be historically substantiated" (p. 5): "Allah, forsooth, is poor, and we are
rich!" (3:181); "The Jews say: Allah's hand is fettered. ..." (5:64).
His article covers an impressive number of references to Uzayr (Ezra) in both
Sunni and Shi'i commentaries, noting indeed "the early realization by Muslim
traditionists and heresiographers that this claim (that Ezra is the son of God) has no
basis in the Jewish scriptures or tradition" (p. 10). For him, as for some others
who have grappled with the issue, the easiest solution to the problem is to claim that
"The Jews said ..." need not refer to all Jews. (A. Yusuf Ali's commentary
on this passage, p. 448, does not really reflect such problems at all!)
Whether or not the confession of Ezra as son of God can legitimately be limited to
one or a few Jews (9:30; 5:64), Ayoub does note how the Quranic verse (9:30) has offered
"Muslim polemicists a good prooftext for attributing to both Jews and Christians,
their chief rivals, one major and unforgivable sin" (p. 15). Moreover, the article
tends to leave one wondering if Ayoub himself is sure about this limitation. In any case,
the questions about the correctness of the text; the possibility that it may mislead its
readers; the suggestion, assuming the validity of the limitation, that the limitation
could be more correctly and clearly indicated in the Qur'an do not arise. He does,
however, note the comment on the subject by the famous Qur'an commentator, al-Razi (whom
in general he appears to highly respect) as simply polemical: "The fact that the Jews
deny such a belief proves nothing because God's report concerning them is more true (than
their denial)" (p. 12).
3. No doubt, point 2 above is the heart of Mahmoud Ayoub's article. Yet he does make a
statement, while discussing "The Children of Israel and the Jews in the Qur'an",
on the subject of tahrif (alteration or corruption of the Bible) which will summon
sufficient interest among Muslims, Christians and others concerned with the need for a
more objective reading of the Bible by Muslims to warrant singling it out here:
Contrary to the general Islamic view, the Qur'an does not accuse Jews and Christians
of altering the text of their scriptures, but rather of altering the truth which those
scriptures contain. The people do this by concealing some of the sacred texts, by
misapplying their precepts, or by "altering words from their right position"
(4:26; 5:13, 41; see also 2:75). However, this refers more to interpretation than to
actual addition or deletion of words from the sacred books. The problem of alteration
(tahrif) needs further study. (p. 5)
Does the problem of alteration need further study? There is little purpose in
modifying Ayoub's suggestion by noting that other competent Muslim scholars in
the past have made the same observations about tahrif, and that some Christians
familiar with the issue of tahrif have wondered whether Muslims, even while
charging the People of the Book with "wholesale tahrif", themselves
commit tahrif against the Qur'an.
So when Ayoub suggests that Muslims review this subject, we can only applaud and ask
that he would assist. In fact, we may even be grateful that he has had the courage to
raise this subject also. For many a Muslim controversialist will not be happy to be
questioned by other Muslims about "the general Islamic view" (see above quote)
of tahrif, his trump card, against the People of the Book, or possibly even to be
dispossessed of it. He finds it more convenient in dealing with the Jews and Christians
to assume that they are "People of the Corrupted Book" and to ignore what the
Qur'an plainly means when it designates them as "The People of the Book".
Reference
* Studies in Islamic and Judaic Traditions, ed. W.M. Brenner and S.D. Ricks,
The University of Denver, 1986, pp. 3-18.
Articles by Dr. Ernest Hahn
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