Vincent J. Curtis
2 Sept 15
The Associated Press reported on 22 July 2015 that the Koran, Islam's Holiest book, may pre-date Mohammed, Islam's prophet. An extract from the report runs as follows:
"The
Times of London reported that radiocarbon dating carried out by experts at the
University of Oxford says the fragments were produced between the years 568
A.D. and 645 A.D. Muhammad is generally believed to have lived between 570 A.D.
and 632 A.D. The man known to Muslims as The Prophet is thought to have founded
Islam sometime after 610 A.D., with the first Muslim community established at
Medina, in present-day Saudi Arabia, in 622 A.D.
"This
gives more ground to what have been peripheral views of the Koran's genesis,
like that Muhammad and his early followers used a text that was already in existence
and shaped it to fit their own political and theological agenda, rather than
Muhammad receiving a revelation from heaven," Keith Small of Oxford's
Bodleian Library told the Times.
The
two sheets of Islam's holy book were discovered in a library at the University
of Birmingham in England, where they had been mistakenly bound in a Koran
dating to the seventh century. They were part of a collection of 3,000 Middle
Eastern texts gathered in Iraq in the 1920s."
"The first known formal text of the Koran was not assembled until 653 A.D. on the orders of Uthman, the third caliph, or leader of the Muslim community after Muhammad's death. Before that, however, fragments of the work had circulated through oral tradition, though parts of the work had also been written down on stones, leaves, parchment and bones. The fragments of the Birmingham Koran were written on either sheepskin or goatskin.
"The first known formal text of the Koran was not assembled until 653 A.D. on the orders of Uthman, the third caliph, or leader of the Muslim community after Muhammad's death. Before that, however, fragments of the work had circulated through oral tradition, though parts of the work had also been written down on stones, leaves, parchment and bones. The fragments of the Birmingham Koran were written on either sheepskin or goatskin.
Small
cautioned that the carbon dating was only done on the parchment in the
fragments, and not the actual ink, but added "If the dates apply to the
parchment and the ink, and the dates across the entire range apply, then the
Koran — or at least portions of it — predates Mohammed, and moves back the years
that an Arabic literary culture is in place well into the 500s."
The significance of such a discovery, if true, is shattering to the entire belief system of Islam. The belief system of Islam depends upon the Koran being revealed to Mohammed directly.
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