Each of the three monotheistic religions possess its
own collection of Scriptures. For the faithful-be they
Jews, Christians or Muslims-these documents constitute
the foundation of their belief. For them they are the
material transcription of a divine Revelation; directly,
as in the case of Abraham and Moses, who received the
commandments from God Himself, or indirectly, as in the
case of Jesus and Muhammad, the first of whom stated that
he was speaking in the name of the Father, and the second
of whom transmitted to men the Revelation imparted to him
by Archangel Gabriel.
If we take into consideration the objective facts of
religious history, we must place the Old Testament, the
Gospels and the Qur'an on the same level as being
collections of written Revelation. Although this attitude
is in principle held by Muslims, the faithful in the West
under the predominantly Judeo-Christian influence refuse
to ascribe to the Qur'an the character of a book of
Revelation.
Such an attitude may be explained by the position each
religious community adopts towards the other two with
regard to the Scriptures.
Judaism has as its holy book the Hebraic Bible. This
differs from the Old Testament of the Christians in that
the latter have included several books which did not
exist in Hebrew. In practice, this divergence hardly
makes any difference to the doctrine. Judaism does not
however admit any revelation subsequent to its own.
Christianity has taken the Hebraic Bible for itself
and added a few supplements to it. It has not however
accepted all the published writings destined to make
known to men the Mission of Jesus. The Church has made
incisive cuts in the profusion of books relating the life
and teachings of Jesus. It has only preserved a limited
number of writings in the New Testament, the most
important of which are the four Canonic Gospels.
Christianity takes no account of any revelation
subsequent to Jesus and his Apostles. It therefore rules
out the Qur'an.
The Qur'anic Revelation appeared six centuries after
Jesus. It resumes numerous data found in the Hebraic
Bible and the Gospels since it quotes very frequently
from the 'Torah' [ What is meant by Torah are the first five books of
the Bible, in other words the Pentateuch of Moses
(Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers and Deuteronomy).] and the 'Gospels.' The Qur'an directs
all Muslims to believe in the Scriptures that precede it (sura 4, verse 136). It stresses the important position
occupied in the Revelation by God's emissaries, such as
Noah, Abraham, Moses, the Prophets and Jesus, to whom
they allocate a special position. His birth is described
in the Qur'an, and likewise in the Gospels, as a
supernatural event. Mary is also given a special place,
as indicated by the fact that sura 19 bears her name.
The above facts concerning Islam are not generally
known in the West. This is hardly surprising, when we
consider the way so many generations in the West were
instructed in the religious problems facing humanity and
the ignorance in which they were kept about anything
related to Islam. The use of such terms as 'Mohammedan
religion' and 'Mohammedans' has been instrumental-even to
the present day-in maintaining the false notion that
beliefs were involved that were spread by the work of man
among which God (in the Christian sense) had no place.
Many cultivated people today are interested in the
philosophical, social and political aspects of Islam, but
they do not pause to inquire about the Islamic Revelation
itself, as indeed they should.
In what contempt the Muslims are held by certain
Christian circles! I experienced this when I tried to
start an exchange of ideas arising from a comparative
analysis of Biblical and Qur'anic stories on the same
theme. I noted a systematic refusal, even for the
purposes of simple reflection, to take any account of
what the Qur'an had to say on the subject in hand. It is
as if a quote from the Qur'an were a reference to the
Devil!
A noticeable change seems however to be under way
these days at the highest levels of the Christian world.
The Office for Non-Christian Affairs at the Vatican has
produced a document result. from the Second Vatican
Council under the French title Orientations pour un
dialogue entre Chrétiens et Musulmans[Pub.
Ancora, Rome.].
(Orientations for a Dialogue between Christians and
Muslims), third French edition dated 1970, which bears
witness to the profound change in official attitude. Once
the document has invited the reader to clear away the
"out-dated image, inherited from the past, or
distorted by prejudice and slander" that Christians
have of Islam, the Vatican document proceeds to
"recognize the past injustice towards the Muslims
for which the West, with its Christian education, is to
blame". It also criticizes the misconceptions
Christians have been under concerning Muslim fatalism,
Islamic legalism, fanaticism, etc. It stresses belief in
unity of God and reminds us how surprised the audience
was at the Muslim University of Al Azhar, Cairo, when
Cardinal Koenig proclaimed this unity at the Great Mosque
during an official conference in March, 1969. It reminds
us also that the Vatican Office in 1967 invited
Christians to offer their best wishes to Muslims at the
end of the Fast of Ramadan with "genuine religious
worth".
Such preliminary steps towards a closer relationship
between the Roman Catholic Curia and Islam have been
followed by various manifestations and consolidated by
encounters between the two. There has been, however,
little publicity accorded to events of such great
importance in the western world, where they took place
and where there are ample means of communication in the
form of press, radio and television.
The newspapers gave little coverage to the official
visit of Cardinal Pignedoli, the President of the Vatican
Office of Non-Christian Affairs, on 24th April, 1974, to
King Faisal of Saudi Arabia. The French newspaper Le
Monde on 25th April, 1974, dealt with it in a few
lines. What momentous news they contain, however, when we
read how the Cardinal conveyed to the Sovereign a message
from Pope Paul VI expressing "the regards of His
Holiness, moved by a profound belief in the unification
of Islamic and Christian worlds in the worship of a
single God, to His Majesty King Faisal as supreme head of
the Islamic world". Six months later, in October
1974, the Pope received the official visit to the Vatican
of the Grand Ulema of Saudi Arabia. It occasioned a
dialogue between Christians and Muslims on the
"Cultural Rights of Man in Islam". The Vatican
newspaper, Observatore Romano, on 26th October,
1974, reported this historic event in a front page story
that took up more space than the report on the closing
day of the meeting held by the Synod of Bishops in Rome.
The Grand Ulema of Saudi Arabia were afterwards
received by the Ecumenical Council of Churches of Geneva
and by the Lord Bishop of Strasbourg, His Grace Elchinger. The Bishop invited them to join in midday
prayer before him in his cathedral. The fact that the
event Was reported seems to be more on account of its
unusual nature than because of its considerable religious
significance. At all events, among those whom I
questioned about this religious manifestation, there were
very few who replied that they were aware of it.
The open-minded attitude Pope Paul VI has towards
Islam will certainly become a milestone in the relations
between the two religions. He himself Mid that he was
"moved by a profound belief in the unification of
the Islamic and Christian worlds in the worship of a
single God". This reminder of the sentiments of the
head of the Catholic Church concerning Muslims is indeed
necessary. Far too many Christians, brought up in a
spirit of open hostility, are against any reflection
about Islam on principle. The Vatican document notes this
with regret. It is on account of this that they remain
totally ignorant of what Islam is in reality, and retain
notions about the Islamic Revelation which are entirely
mistaken.
Nevertheless, when studying an aspect of the
Revelation of a monotheistic religion, it seems quite in
order to compare what the other two have to say on the
same subject. A comprehensive study of a problem is more
interesting than a compartmentalized one. The
confrontation between certain subjects dealt with in the
Scriptures and the facts of 20th century science will
therefore, in this work, include all three religions. In
addition it will be useful to realize that the three
religions should form a tighter block by virtue of their
closer relationship at a time when they are all
threatened by the onslaught of materialism. The notion
that science and religion are incompatible is as equally
prevalent in countries under the Judeo-Christian
influence as in the world of Islam-especially in
scientific circles. If this question were to be dealt
with comprehensively, a series of lengthy exposes would
be necessary. In this work, I intend to tackle only one
aspect of it: the examination of the Scriptures
themselves in the light of modern scientific knowledge.
Before proceeding with our task, we must ask a
fundamental question: How authentic are today's texts? It
is a question which entails an examination of the
circumstances surrounding their composition and the way
in which they have come down to us.
In the West the critical study of the Scriptures is
something quite recent. For hundreds of years people were
content to accept the Bible-both Old and New
Testaments-as it was. A reading produced nothing more
than remarks vindicating it. It would have been a sin to
level the slightest criticism at it. The clergy were
priviledged in that they were easily able to have a
comprehensive knowledge of the Bible, while the majority
of laymen heard only selected readings as part of a
sermon or the liturgy.
Raised to the level of a specialized study, textual
criticism has been valuable in uncovering and
disseminating problems which are often very serious. How
disappointing it is therefore to read works of a
so-called critical nature which, when faced with very
real problems of interpretation, merely provide passages
of an apologetical nature by means of which the author
contrives to hide his dilemma. Whoever retains his
objective judgment and power of thought at such a moment
will not find the improbabilities and contradictions any
the less persistent. One can only regret an attitude
which, in the face of all logical reason, upholds certain
passages in the Biblical Scriptures even though they are
riddled with errors. It can exercise an extremely
damaging influence upon the cultivated mind with regard
to belief in God. Experience shows however that even if
the few are able to distinguish fallacies of this kind,
the vast majority of Christians have never taken any
account of such incompatibilities with their secular
knowledge, even though they are often very elementary.
Islam has something relatively comparable to the
Gospels in some of the Hadiths. These are the collected
sayings of Muhammad and stories of his deeds. The Gospels
are nothing other than this for Jesus. Some of the
collections of Hadiths were written decades after the
death of Muhammad, just as the Gospels were written
decades after Jesus. In both cases they bear human
witness to events in the past. We shall see how, contrary
to what many people think, the authors of the four
Canonic Gospels were not the witnesses of the events they
relate. The same is true of the Hadiths referred to at
the end of this book.
Here the comparison must end because even if the
authenticity of such-and-such a Hadith has been discussed
and is still under discussion, in the early centuries of
the Church the problem of the vast number of Gospels was
definitively decided. Only four of them were proclaimed
official, or canonic, in spite of the many points on
which they do not agree, and order was given for the rest
to be concealed; hence the term 'Apocrypha'.
Another fundamental difference in the Scriptures of
Christianity and Islam is the fact that Christianity does
not have a text which is both revealed and written down.
Islam, however, has the Qur'an which fits this
description.
The Qur'an is the expression of the Revelation made to
Muhammad by the Archangel Gabriel, which was immediately
taken down, and was memorized and recited by the faithful
in their prayers, especially during the month of Ramadan.
Muhammad himself arranged it into suras, and these were
collected soon after the death of the Prophet, to form,
under the rule of Caliph Uthman (12 to 24 years after the
Prophet's death), the text we know today.
In contrast to this, the Christian Revelation is based
on numerous indirect human accounts. We do not in fact
have an eyewitness account from the life of Jesus,
contrary to what many Christians imagine. The question of
the authenticity of the Christian and Islamic texts has
thus now been formulated.
The confrontation between the texts of the Scriptures
and scientific data has always provided man with food for
thought.
It was at first held that corroboration between the
scriptures and science was a necessary element to the
authenticity of the sacred text. Saint Augustine, in
letter No. 82, which we shall quote later on, formally
established this principle. As science progressed however
it became clear that there were discrepancies between
Biblical Scripture and science. It was therefore decided
that comparison would no longer be made. Thus a situation
arose which today, we are forced to admit, puts Biblical
exegetes and scientists in opposition to one another. We
cannot, after all, accept a divine Revelation making
statements which are totally inaccurate. There was only
one way of logically reconciling the two; it lay in not
considering a passage containing unacceptable scientific
data to be genuine. This solution was not adopted.
Instead, the integrity of the text was stubbornly
maintained and experts were obliged to adopt a position
on the truth of the Biblical Scriptures which, for the
scientist, is hardly tenable.
Like Saint Augustine for the Bible, Islam has always
assumed that the data contained in the Holy Scriptures
were in agreement with scientific fact. A modern
examination of the Islamic Revelation has not caused a
change in this position. As we shall see later on, the
Qur'an deals with many subjects of interest to science,
far more in fact than the Bible. There is no comparison
between the limited number of Biblical statements which
lead to a confrontation With science, and the profusion
of subjects mentioned in the Qur'an that are of a
scientific nature. None of the latter can be contested
from a scientific point of view. this is the basic fact
that emerges from our study. We shall see at the end of
this work that such is not the case for the Hadiths.
These are collections of the Prophet's sayings, set aside
from the Qur'anic Revelation, certain of which are
scientifically unacceptable. The Hadiths in question have
been under study in accordance with the strict principles
of the Qur'an which dictate that science and reason
should always be referred to, if necessary to deprive
them of any authenticity.
These reflections on the scientifically acceptable or
unacceptable nature of a certain Scripture need some
explanation. It must be stressed that when scientific
data are discussed here, what is meant is data definitely
established. This consideration rules out any explanatory
theories, once useful in illuminating a phenomenon and
easily dispensed with to make way for further
explanations more in keeping with scientific progress.
What I intend to consider here are incontrovertible facts
and even if science can only provide incomplete data,
they will nevertheless be sufficiently well established
to be used Without fear of error.
Scientists do not, for example, have even an
approximate date for man's appearance on Earth. They have
however discovered remains of human works which we can
situate beyond a shadow of a doubt at before the tenth
millenium B.C. Hence we cannot consider the Biblical
reality on this subject to be compatible with science. In
the Biblical text of Genesis, the dates and genealogies
given would place man's origins (i.e. the creation of
Adam) at roughly thirty-seven centuries B.C. In the
future, science may be able to provide us with data that
are more precise than our present calculations, but we
may rest assured that it will never tell us that man
first appeared on Earth 6,786 years ago, as does the
Hebraic calendar for 1976. The Biblical data concerning
the antiquity of man are therefore inaccurate.
This confrontation with science excludes all religious
problems in the true sense of the word. Science does not,
for example, have any explanation of the process whereby
God manifested Himself to Moses. The same may be said for
the mystery surrounding the manner in which Jesus was
born in the absence of a biological father. The
Scriptures moreover give no material explanation of such
data. This present study is concerned With what the
Scriptures tell us about extremely varied natural
phenomena, which they surround to a lesser or greater
extent with commentaries and explanations. With this in
mind, we must note the contrast between the rich
abundance of information on a given subject in the
Qur'anic Revelation and the modesty of the other two
revelations on the same subject.
It was in a totally objective spirit, and without any
preconceived ideas that I first examined the Qur'anic
Revelation. I was looking for the degree of compatibility
between the Qur'anic text and the data of modern science.
I knew from translations that the Qur'an often made
allusion to all sorts of natural phenomena, but I had
only a summary knowledge of it. It was only when I
examined the text very closely in Arabic that I kept a
list of them at the end of which I had to acknowledge the
evidence in front of me: the Qur'an did not contain a
single statement that was assailable from a modern
scientific point of view.
I repeated the same test for the Old Testament and the
Gospels, always preserving the same objective outlook. In
the former I did not even have to go beyond the first
book, Genesis, to find statements totally out of keeping
With the cast-iron facts of modern science.
On opening the Gospels, one is immediately confronted
with a serious problem. On the first page we find the
genealogy of Jesus, but Matthew's text is in evident
contradiction to Luke's on the same question. There is a
further problem in that the latter's data on the
antiquity of man on Earth are incompatible with modern
knowledge.
The existence of these contradictions, improbabilities
and incompatibilities does not seem to me to detract from
the belief in God. They involve only man's
responsibility. No one can say what the original texts
might have been, or identify imaginative editing,
deliberate manipulations of them by men, or unintentional
modification of the Scriptures. What strikes us today.
when we realize Biblical contradictions and
incompatibilities with well-established scientific data,
is how specialists studying the texts either pretend to
be unaware of them, or else draw attention to these
defects then try to camouflage them with dialectic
acrobatics. When we come to the Gospels according to
Matthew and John, I shall provide examples of this
brilliant use of apologetical turns of phrase by eminent
experts in exegesis. Often the attempt to camouflage an
improbability or a contradiction, prudishly called a
'difficulty', is successful. This explains why so many
Christians are unaware of the serious defects contained
in the Old Testament and the Gospels. The reader will
find precise examples of these in the first and second
parts of this work.
In the third part, there is the illustration of an
unusual application of science to a holy Scripture, the
contribution of modern secular knowledge to a better
understanding of certain verses in the Qur'an which until
now have remained enigmatic, if not incomprehensible. Why
should we be surprised at this when we know that, for
Islam, religion and science have always been considered
twin sisters? From the very beginning, Islam directed
people to cultivate science; the application of this
precept brought with it the prodigious strides in science
taken during the great era of Islamic civilization, from
which, before the Renaissance, the West itself benefited.
In the confrontation between the Scriptures and science a
high point of understanding has been reached owing to the
light thrown on Qur'anic passages by modern scientific
knowledge. Previously these passages were obscure owning
to the non-availability of knowledge which could help
interpret them.
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