Hamda in Bible

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SHI'ITE BELIEFS IN THE BIBLE

The London Lectures (2001-2002)

by Thomas McElwain

[Thomas McElwain is an American professor of Philosophy. He is well-known for his


conversion from Christianity to Shia Islam. He was in Ohio, USA.
Prof McElwain is fluent in many languages, including biblical Hebrew and Arabic.]

Lecture 1: Bible in a Nutshell


Lecture 2: Fragrance of Islam
Lecture 3: Family of Abraham: Social,Economic,Political and Religious Model
Lecture 4: Sacrifice of Abraham, What Is All the Fuss?
Lecture 5: Daniel: A Young Muslim Refugee and How He Coped
Lecture 6: Book of the Gospel Rediscovered
Lecture 7: Gospel: The Secret the Church Never Told
Lecture 8: Word Muhammad in the Bible
Lecture 9: Word Ali in the Bible
Lecture 10: Ghadeer in the Bible
Lecture 11: Hussein and Psalm 74

# Lecture 1 : The Bible in a Nutshell

The purpose of this lecture is to establish the fact that it is just as easy to prove Islam
using a proof-text method of appeal to the Bible as it is to prove any of the forms of
Christianity that use that method. It is not the intention to suggest that the proof-text
method is sufficient or even valid. In a systematic review such as this, it is necessary to
note all convolutions. The desire to show to what extent the Bible is the common
property of Middle Eastern religions, at least on some level, leads to the necessity of
approaching the text from a proof-text point of view as well as from more sophisticated
methods.

Before approaching the specifics, a pilot project that seeks to establish whether basic
Islamic issues are to be found in the Bible is in order. If they cannot be found, then it is
of no use to take the trouble of further examination. The specific issues chosen for this
task are those fundamentals known in Shia Islam as the roots of faith. We have already
examined the Sunnite pillars of faith in some detail. Rather that going into such detail at
this point for the roots according to Shia Islam, we shall merely make a brief mention of
each one. However, some of them are amplified by related issues that appear important
because of Christian doctrine.

These roots of faith are five. The first is the oneness of God. This is amplified here by
texts relating to the belief that God does not incarnate, that there is no salvation in the
son of man, and that God is changeless. The second root of faith is the justice of God.
The third root of faith is prophethood. This has already been examined in general in the
light of many texts above, but here the particular reference to Muhammad is mentioned.
This will form the focus of latter discussion as well. The principle of divine guidance is
the fourth root. This is amplified by a Biblical reference to the word Ali. The final
principle of faith is the Day of Judgment, which has also been dealt with in detail above,
but is here amplified by its relationship to the gospel or message of Jesus.

I have given a transliteration of the proof-texts underlining the significant portions. This
is especially necessary in the two or three cases in which I have radically disagreed with
the commonly used translations.

There is only one God.

Psalms 86:10 (Hebrew) atta Elohim levaddekha. For you are great, and do wondrous
things: you are God alone.

Isaiah 45:5 (Hebrew) ani YHWH we-en ‘odh zulathi en elohim: a-azerkha welo
yedha’tani. I am the LORD, and there is no other, there is no God beside me: I girded
you, though you have not known me.
That one God is just, and the only Saviour.

Isaiah 45:21 (Hebrew) Haggidhu wehaggishu af yiwwa’atzu yakhdaw: mi hishmia’ zoth


miqqedhem me-az higgidhah halo ani YHWH we-en odh elohim mibbal’adhi el tzaddiq
umoshia’ ayin zohathi. Tell it, and bring them near; indeed, let them take counsel
together: who has declared this from ancient time? who has told it from that time? have
not I the LORD? and there is no other God beside me; a just God and a Saviour; there is
none beside me.

God is not a man or the Son of man.

Numbers 23:19 (Hebrew) lo ish el wikhazzev uven adham weyithnetham: hahu amar
welo ya’ase wedhibber welo yeqimenna. God is not a man, that he should lie; neither the
son of man, that he should repent: has he said so, and shall he not do so? or has he
spoken, and shall he not make it good?

Notice that according to the text God is not a human being, not “the son of man,” not
any “person” or “persons” at all, not one person nor three persons.

The Son of man cannot save you.

Psalms 146:3 (Hebrew) al tivtkhu vindhivim: beven adham she-en lo theshu’a. Put not
your trust in princes, nor in the son of man, in whom there is no salvation.

God does not change.


pasa dosiv agayh kai pan dwrhma teleion anwyen estin katabainon apo tou patrov twn
fwtwn par w ouk eni parallagh h trophv aposkiasma James 1:17 (Greek) pasa dosis
agathe kai pan dorema teleion anothen estin katabainon apo tou patros ton foton par o
ouk eni parallage e tropes aposkiasma. Every good gift and every perfect gift is from
above, and comes down from the Father of lights, with whom is no variableness, neither
shadow of turning.

If God does not change, as this Bible passage and several others maintain, then God
does not incarnate, since incarnation requires change. God does not change into
anything, not even a man.

God reveals His message to humankind through His servants the prophets.

Amos 3:7 (Hebrew) ki lo ya’ase adhonay YHWH davar ki im gala sodho el ‘avdhaw
hannevi-im. Surely the Lord GOD will do nothing, but he will reveal his secret to his
servants the prophets.

Many people will not believe the message of God through Muhammad.

Psalm 106:24 (Hebrew) wayyim-asu be-eretz Hamda: lo he-eminu lidhvaro. Indeed they
despise the land of Muhammad, they do not believe his word.

The biased translator wishes to translate the name Muhammad, thus making “pleasant
land” instead of “the land of Muhammad.” But this is not possible, because the sentence
goes on to say “his word.” The possessive pronoun is masculine, showing Hamda to be a
proper masculine name, rather than a feminine common noun as the ending might
suggest. There are a number of such names in the Bible, feminine in form but masculine
in meaning.

God made Abraham a guide for all nations, in the following words spoken to him.

Genesis 12: 3 (Hebrew) wa-avarkha mevarakhekha umqallelkha a-or: wenivrekhu vekha


kol mishpekhoth ha-adhama. And I will bless them that bless you, and curse him that
curses you: and in you shall all families of the earth be blessed.

Moses prayed for a divinely appointed guide to come after him.

Numbers 27: 16 (Hebrew) Yifqodh YHWH Elohe harokhoth lekhol basar: ish ‘al ha’edha.
asher yetze lifnehem wa-asher yavo lifnehem wa-asher yotzi-em wa-asher yevi-em: welo
thiheye ‘adhath YHWH katz-tzon asher en lahem ro’e. Let the LORD, the God of the
spirits of all flesh, set a man over the congregation, 17 Which may go out before them,
and which may go in before them, and which may lead them out, and which may bring
them in; that the congregation of the LORD be not as sheep which have no shepherd.

The principle of a divinely appointed leader goes back earlier than Moses, but here we
see Moses praying on behalf of one such figure.

Moses invoked the name of Ali in speaking to the Pharaoh.

Exodus 8:5(9) (Hebrew) wayyomer Moshe lefar’o hithpa-er ‘Ali lemathay a’tir lekha
wela’avadhekha ul’ammekha lehakhrith hatzfarde’immimmekha umibbattekha raq
baye-or tish-sha-arna. And Moses said to Pharaoh, Glorify Ali: when shall I intreat for
you, and for your servants, and for your people, to destroy the frogs from you and your
houses, that they may remain in the river only?
The translation which says “Glory over me” simply does not make sense.

The people of Israel sang about Ali as they walked in the wilderness.

Numbers 21:17 (Hebrew) az yashir yisra-el eth hash-shira hazzoth ‘Ali ve-er ‘enu lah.
Then Israel sang this song, Ali (the Exalted one) is a well (of water); sing to it.

The translation that says “Rise up, O well” only fits a surealistic painting. In reality,
wells do not fly.

David prophesied the coming of Islam.

Psalms 29:11 YHWH ‘oz le’ammo yitten: YHWH yevarekh eth ‘ammo vash-shalom. The
LORD will give strength to his people; the LORD will bless his people with Islam.

The word Islam is cognate with the Hebrew word for “peace.” It is the proclamation of
reconciliation and peace, not only between God and humankind, but between one
nation and another, one family and another, one individual and another. It also
reconciles the opposing “parts” into which humankind would divide the impartial God
into the one true God without parts and without limitations. Islam, meaning peace, is
peace in every possible sense.

God will forgive those who pray towards His house, according to the petition of
Solomon.
1 Kings 8:30 (Hebrew) weshama’ta el tekhinnath ‘avdekha we’ammekha yisra-el asher
yithfallu el hammaqom hazze: we-atta tishma’ el meqom shivtekha el hash-shamayim
weshama’ta wesalakheta. And listen to the supplication of your servant, and of your
people Israel, when they shall pray toward this place: and hear in heaven your dwelling
place: and when you hear, forgive.

Forgiveness depends on the grace of the one true God alone, with nothing added, no
sacrifice human or otherwise. It is offered to those who turn in prostration toward Him,
repenting and asking forgiveness.

God will take vengeance on the wicked and reward His worshippers on the day of
judgement, as He promised Moses.

Deuteronomy 32:41-43 (Hebrew) im shannothi beraq kharbi wethokhez bemishpot


yadhi: ashiv naqam letzaray we limsan-ay ashallem. ashkir khitz-tzay middam wekharbi
tokhal basar: middam khalal weshivya merosh par’oth oyev. harninu ghoyim ‘ammo ki
dham ‘avadhaw yiqqom: wenaqam yashiv le’atzaw wekhifer adhamatho ‘ammo. 41 If I
whet my glittering sword, and mine hand take hold on judgment; I will render
vengeance to mine enemies, and will reward them that hate me. 42 I will make mine
arrows drunk with blood, and my sword shall devour flesh; and that with the blood of
the slain and of the captives, from the beginning of revenges upon the enemy. 43
Rejoice, O ye nations, with his people: for he will avenge the blood of his servants, and
will render vengeance to his adversaries, and will be merciful unto his land, and to his
people.

Of nearly one hundred texts mentioning the Gospel, only one actually tells us what the
message of the Gospel contains, the Gospel in a nutshell.
Revelation 14:6,7 kai eidon aggelon petomenon en mesouranhmati econta euaggelion
aiwnion euaggelisai touv kayhmenouv epi thv ghv kai epi pan eynov kai fulhn kai
glwssan kai laon. legwn en fwnh megalh fobhyhte ton yeon kai dote autw doxan oti
hlyen h wra thv krisewv autou kai proskunhsate tw poihsanti ton ouranon kai thn ghn
kai thn yalassan kai phgav udatwn. Revelation 14:6-7 (Greek) kai eidon angelon
petomenon en mesuranemati ekhonta evangelion aionion evangelisai tus kathemenus
epi tes ges kai epi pan ethnos kai fylen kai glossan kai laon: legon en fone megale
fobithete ton theon kai dote avto doksan oti elthen e ora tes kriseos avtu kai
proskynesate to poiesanti ton uranon kai ten gen kai ten thalassan kai pegas ydaton.
And I saw another angel fly in the midst of heaven, having the everlasting gospel to
preach unto them that dwell on the earth, and to every nation, and kindred, and tongue,
and people, Saying with a loud voice, Fear God, and give glory to him; for the hour of his
judgment is come: and worship him that made heaven, and earth, and the sea, and the
fountains of waters.

The Gospel in a nutshell is three commands: Fear God (that is, do as God commands
instead of conforming to what the neighbor thinks), glorify God (that is, recognize God
alone as the source of all good things and give thanks to Him), and pray to Him in
prostration. The Gospel gives two explanations for these commands: everyone is going
to be held accountable to God in the judgement, and God is deserving of worship and
obedience because He is the Creator of all things.

Obviously it is necessary to go beyond a mere proof-text method. However, the


experiment of proof-texting shows that Islam is clearly as capable of being established
on the basis of proof texts as any tradition that has ever appealed to texts as evidence of
its system of doctrine and practice.

# Lecture 2 : The Fragrance of Islam

Islam and Christianity have had a mottled history of confrontation. They are sister faiths
having roots in Middle Eastern monotheism and still have a great deal in common. Yet
they have been pitted against each other throughout the history of Islam since the
appearance of the prophet Muhammad (upon whom be peace) in the beginning of the
eighth century CE. The two faiths have been associated with opposing cultural, social
and political systems for over fourteen hundred years, and yet Muslims and Christians
have had enormous influences one on the other.
Although Islam can be more truthfully said to have been spread by the caravan than by
the sword, neither faith has been a stranger to violence. Yet the word Islam comes from
the same root as peace. Surely anyone claiming to be a Muslim who does not foster
peace is making a false claim. Much has been made of violent acts in recent times, but it
should be remembered that all of these are in the context of quarrels among wealthy oil
families, both Western and Middle Eastern. At times they are able to agree, despite their
differences of religion, and when they do not, religion is only a pretext. Christianity and
Islam share a belief in a figure known to the former as antichrist and to the latter as
dajjal. In Islamic belief, this figure has only one eye. Those who have only one eye, an
eye for oil, and no eye for social justice, morality and ethics other than to appeal to them
as a pretext for their own agenda, surely betray both Islam and Christianity.

The incident of the woman anointing the feet of Jesus with fine perfume brings to mind
a certain tradition often quoted by orientalists. It is said that the Prophet once said that
he had loved women, and that he had loved sweet odors, but that the solace of his soul
had been prayer. It is my purpose to open a few of the perfume bottles of Islam from the
Christian Scriptures themselves, so that the Christian can enjoy both the savour of
Christ who accepted the sinful woman and her gift as well as the faith of the last of the
prophets. At the same time, it should be remembered that Islam is not based on the
Bible, but on the holy Quran and the traditions of the prophet and his family.

Tawheed or the Unity of God

“Say, He, God, is one (alone). God, the needless, He does not beget nor is He begotten,
and there is none like Him, no not one.” Quran 112. This text is used by millions of
Muslims daily as a part of their prayers. It expresses the first and foremost principle of
Islam, the unity and uniqueness of God. In this matter, Islam contrasts with
Christianity, which acknowledges a trinity, or one god in three persons.

We find the Christian Scriptures wholly agreeing with this basic Islamic principle of
faith. In Deuteronomy 32:39 we find God Himself speaking “See now that I, even I, am
he, and there is no god with me.” In his prayer Nehemiah (9:6) confessed “Thou, even
thou, art Lord alone, thou hast made heaven, the heaven of heavens, with all their host,
the earth, and all things that are therein, the seas, and all that is therein, and thou
preservest them all; and the host of heaven worshippeth thee.” Jesus agrees that this is
the first principle of faith when he says in Mark 12:29 “The first of all the
commandments is Hear, O Israel; The Lord our God is one Lord.” St. Paul, apostle
beloved of Christians says in 1 Corinthians 8:6 “But to us there is but one God, the
Father, of whom are all things.”

The Justice of God

The second great principle of Islamic faith is the assurance that God is not arbitrary, but
essentially just. The justice of God is expressed in Quran 3:17 “God (Himself) witnesses
that there is no god but He, and (so do) the angels and those possessed of knowledge,
standing firm for justice, (there is) no god but He, the Mighty the Wise.” The same great
attribute is mentioned many times in the Bible. In Deuteronomy 32:4 we read “He is the
Rock, his work is perfect: for all his ways are judgement: a God of truth and without
iniquity, just and right is he.”

Muslims understand that God’s justice is essential and intrinsic. Justice is not a
separable attribute, nor even a part of God, but God’s very being. The unity of God
implies to the Muslim that God has no limits nor parts. Having no limits, there is no
limit to God’s perception and knowledge. Having no parts, God must be impartial. The
unity of God implies His intrinsic justice. He has all knowledge of every situation, and
being impartial, He is perfectly just.

The Apostleship

The third great principle of Islamic faith is apostleship. This is expressed in the holy
Quran 10:47. “And for every people (was sent) an apostle; and when came their apostle,
the matter between them was decided with equity and they shall not (in the least) be
done (any) injustice.” This text of the Quran notes that the justice of God requires Him
to reveal His will to all humankind. Therefore He has sent prophets to all nations. Islam
requires belief in all true prophets, both the prophet mentioned in the Bible and those
mentioned in the Quran. Muhammad is the last of the prophets sent by God. Thus
Quran 33:40 says “Muhammad is not the father of any of your men, but an Apostle of
God and the last of the prophets: And God is of all things ever the Knower.”

In the Christian Scriptures we find the same principles. In Amos 3:7 it says “Surely the
Lord will do nothing, but he revealeth his secret unto his servants the prophets.” The
question arises whether or not Muhammad is mentioned in the Bible. Many texts might
be applied to him, but several mention him by name. One of the most important of these
is Psalm 106:24, which says “They despise the land of Muhammad (Hebrew Hamda),
they believe not his word.” This is a Biblical prophecy indicating that when Muhammad
should come, many would find an excuse not to believe in him because of his country of
origin. Indeed, we find this to be the case.

Divine Guidance

The fourth great principle of Islamic faith is divine guidance. It is also a logical
deduction from the principle of the unity of God. The unity of God implies His justice.
God’s justice implies verbal revelation of His will, otherwise He would be unjust in
holding people accountable for their actions. But verbal revelation, the word of the
prophets, implies further guidance, guidance in action, guidance in flesh and blood. A
good illustration of this is an assembly kit. When you buy something that needs to be
assembled, there is always a printed instruction manual. Most of us have experienced
how confusing such manuals can be. If there is someone who has done it before to show
us how, we find the task much easier. The divine guide is one appointed by God to show
us how to implement the revealed will of God.

In any practical situation, there are matters about which we might have questions that
recourse to the Scriptures is insufficient. Even after reading the Bible and the Quran, we
are unsure what to do. The role of the divine guide is to show us what to do. The Arabic
word for the divine guide is Imam, although this is often used merely to refer to a simple
leader of prayer. The word leader in referring to the divine guide is much more than
that, however. The holy Quran mentions that God made Abraham not only a prophet,
but a leader or Imam for humankind, in Quran 2:125 “And remember when his Lord
tried Abraham with certain words then he fulfilled them: He said, Truly I make you an
Imam for humankind…”

The principle of divine guidance runs like a golden thread throughout the Christian
Scriptures as well. The necessity of divine guidance is expressed very neatly in the story
of Philip in Acts 8:30-31 “Philip ran thither to him, and heard him read the prophet
Esaias, and said, Understandest thou what thou readest? And he said, How can I, except
some man should guide me?” The statement of the Ethiopian shows clearly that the
writings of the prophets are not enough. There must also be a divine guide to implement
them in practice.

The leadership of Abraham continued through his descendants, finally coming to the
holy Prophet Muhammad, who passed it on to his cousin and son-in-law Ali ibn abi
Taleb. This was done publicly after the event of the Prophet’s last pilgrimage to Mecca.
The greater portion of the Muslims at the time were witnesses to the fact. At that time
Ali was appointed, and the appointment has gone down to eleven of his descendants, the
last of which is believed to be still living and ruling. The Bible also shows a number of
series of twelve leaders, such as the twelve patriarchal reigns in Genesis, the twelve sons
of Ishmael, the twelve sons of Jacob, the twelve judges of Israel, the twelve righteous
kings of Judah, and the twelve disciples of Christ.

The Day of Judgement

The differences between the Islamic and Christian concepts of the Day of Judgement are
difficult to find, and hardly to be understood by any but the specialist, so close are the
two faiths in this regard. This is the final great principle of Islamic faith, and it is
mentioned in many passages of the holy Quran, such as 99:6-8 “On that day people will
come out (from their graves) in (scattered) groups, to be shown their own deeds. Then
he who has done an atom-weight of good shall see it. And he who has done an atom-
weight of evil shall see it.” Jesus makes the same point in Matthew 12:36 “But I say unto
you, That ever idle word that men shall speak, they shall give account thereof in the day
of judgement.”

Thus there are five great principles of Islam. The unity of God implies His justice. The
justice of God implies the necessity of revelation. Revelation implies someone to
implement it. Finally, human beings are held responsible for how they relate to the
revelation of God’s will. Besides the five great principles of Islamic faith there are many
practices that logically proceed from them, as well as being expressed in revelation. Ten
of these are traditionally considered to be basic. These are daily prayer in prostration,
fasting during the month of Ramadhan, pilgrimage to the house of God in Mecca,
charity taken from one’s assets, charity taken from one’s profits, jihad or endeavour in
the way of God, enjoining good, opposing evil, respect for godly people, and avoidance
of wicked people.

Prayer in Prostration

Muslims are known particularly for their daily prayer in prostration. Therefore the holy
Quran (6:163) states “Say: Truly my prayer and my sacrifice, my life and my death, (are
all only) for God, the Lord of the worlds.” Actually Islamic prayer is better described in
the Bible than in the Quran. Every time and gesture of Islamic prayer in prostration is
mentioned in the Bible. Nearly every common phrase of the prayer is to be found in the
Psalms of David. It is one of the incongruities of reality that Muslims follow the Bible so
closely in their prayer, while Christians and Jews have developed extra-Biblical practices
of prayer. Yet the latter claim to base their practice on the Bible, whereas Muslims do
not. Muslims base their practice on the Quran and tradition. If anything can be said
about humankind, it is that we are irrational.

The example of Jesus praying in prostration is mentioned in Matthew 26:39 “And he


went a little farther, and fell on his face, and prayed.” Prayer as specific times in the day
is also mentioned in the Bible, Psalm 32:6 “For this shall every one that is godly pray
unto thee in a time when thou mayest be found.” Also Psalm 69:13 “But as for me, my
prayer is unto thee, O Lord, in an acceptable time.” The cry “Allahu akbar” is mentioned
as belonging to prayer in Psalm 35:27; 18:5,6; 30:8; 34:3; and 55:16. Standing, bowing,
kneeling, and prostrating are all gestures of prayer in the Psalms. Prayer towards the
house of God is commended in Psalm 5:7 “But as for me, I will come into thy house in
the multitude of thy mercy; and in thy fear will I worship toward thy holy temple.”

Islamic prayer brings the individual into paradise itself. When I began dialogue with
Muslims, one of the first things I was told was “If you only knew how sweet is prayer in
prostration, you would fight us to get it.” That is entirely true.

Fasting

In Quran 2:183 it says “O you who believe! Fasting has been ordained to you as it was
ordained to those before you so that you might guard yourself (against evil).”
Interestingly enough, fasting is not mentioned in the books of Moses except for the forty
day fast of Moses himself. A similar fast was performed by Jesus upon receiving the
Gospel, and by Muhammad as well. Yet we know that fasting in the ninth lunar month,
the month of Ramadhan, was practiced from early times, as the Quran indicates.
Evidence of this is in Jeremiah 36:9 “And it came to pass in the fifth year of Jehoiakim
the son of Josiah king of Judah, in the ninth month, that they proclaimed a fast before
the Lord to all the people in Jerusalem, and to all the people that came from the cities of
Judah unto Jerusalem.” We know that this was a common religious practice from the
fact that this king was not a righteous one. He did not proclaim anything good unless it
was an established practice.

The reason for fasting is to help us to guard ourselves against evil. That is, it fosters
doing the right thing. It makes us stop to reevaluate our lives and redetermine to act in
ethical, moral, and just ways.

Pilgrimage
It is incumbent on every Muslim to go to the house of God in Mecca at least once in a
lifetime if possible. It says in the Quran (22:27) “And proclaim to the people the
Pilgrimage! They will come to you on foot and on lean camel, coming from every remote
(high) way.”

Pilgrimage to Jerusalem is mentioned often in the Gospel in relation to Jesus. But Jesus
prophesies in John 4:21 that the time will come “when ye shall neither in this mountain,
nor yet at Jerusalem, worship the Father.” Muslims believe that the Pilgrimage to Mecca
refers back to the experience of Abraham, who rebuilt the house of God there, making it
a holy place down to our days as well. At the beginning of his ministry, Muhammad
continued the direction of prayer towards Jerusalem. It was only later that the prophecy
of Jesus was fulfilled, and Mecca rather than Mount Gerazim or Jerusalem, became the
proper place of pilgrimage and the right direction of prayer.

Charity

Charity is enjoined on Muslims in the holy Quran 2:43 “Establish the prayer and give
away the poor-rate and bow down (praying).” In the sermon on the mount Jesus begins
Matthew six with four verses enjoining charity. Charity has always been a primary
Christian duty, and in this the two faiths of Islam and Christianity are very much agreed.
In some sense we can take Matthew six as a summary of the teaching of Jesus. In
Matthew five Jesus merely establishes his adherence to the law. In Matthew seven he
describes the day of judgement. The meat of this sandwich is Matthew six, and the first
principle of Matthew six is alms in charity. It is interesting to note that the rest of the
chapter deals with prayer in prostration, fasting, and, in the last half, probably with
pilgrimage.

Holy War

There are four kinds of holy war in Islam: striving with the self, striving with one’s
wealth, striving with knowledge, and striving with the sword. These may well be in order
of importance, the last being the least. Therefore the Quran (9:41) says “Go forth (with)
light and heavy equipment and strive in the way of God with your property and your
selves, this is better for you, if you knew (it).”

Thus the principle of Islam is to struggle or strive, first of all with oneself to maintain
right, then with one’s wealth, intellectual capacity, and arms. Islam is not a pacifist
religion, but military action is carefully circumscribed. Unfortunately most of the
military action down through history has not been justifiable on Islamic principles. War
to enhance territory and wealth is not justifiable, and this is the general situation.
“Jehad should be exclusively in the way of the Lord and never for any territorial
ambition.” (Introduction to the Holy Quran, S. V. Mir Ahmed Ali, page 123a).

Recent research suggests that Jesus was not the sweet and effeminate saviour that many
believe him to be, but a Zealot, establishing himself as the divinely appointed leader in
the face of the Roman occupation. Whether or not that be the case, Christianity was
spread throughout Europe by the sword and later throughout the world through colonial
occupation. The greatest holocaust, insofar as the numbers of victims is concerned, was
not the Jews in Europe in the 1940s, but the Indians in Mexico, of whom more than
twice as many died in only half the time, during the first few years of Christian conquest,
many of them being baptized against their will before being killed.

Islam is the faith of peace, and Muslims should invite Christians to join them in walking
the middle line, not declining war when it is necessary to defend peace and justice, but
fearlessly condemning the terrorism, violence, and oppression that is so visible in the
present world as a result of politico-economic conflict.

Enjoining the good and opposing evil

This practice of Islam is expressed in the holy Quran 3:109 “You are the best group that
has been brought forth for mankind: you enjoin goodness and you forbid evil, and you
believe in God; and if the people of the Book had (also) believed (similarly) it had surely
been better for them; of them (only some) are believers and most of them are perverse.”

The same principle is reiterated in Psalm 45:7 “Thou lovest righteousness, and hatest
wickedness: therefore God, thy God, hath anointed thee with the oil of gladness above
thy fellows.” It is said that all are responsible to foster good and oppose evil to the best
of their ability, if not by actions, then by words, and if not by words, then by thoughts.
According to Islam good is whatever is in accordance with revealed divine law, and evil
is anything that opposes it.

Respect for the godly and avoidance of the wicked

This Islamic principle is mentioned in the holy Quran 42:23 “That is of which God gives
the glad tidings to His servants who believe and do good deeds; Say: I demand not of
you any recompense for it (the toils of apostleship) but the love of (my) relatives, and
whosoever earns good, We increase for him good therein, truly God is Oft-Forgiving the
most Grateful (One).” Attachment to the godly refers to two groups: firstly to the worthy
descendants of the Prophet and specifically the divinely appointed guides, and secondly
to those who earn good, or by their behaviour show their attachment to the will of God.

The same principle is found in the Bible as well, for example, in Malachi 3:18 “Then
shall ye return, and discern between the righteous and the wicked, between him that
serveth God and him that serveth him not.” The idea is to put a distinction between
those who do right and those who do not. This is the basic criterion of distinguishing
between people, and it implies that other criteria are wrong. Thus we should not
distinguish between people on the basis of their wealth, race, appearance, or mental or
physical capacity. We should respect people uniquely for the degree to which they show
evidence of adherence to divine law and foster it. Attraction to celebrities is thus un-
Islamic.

Down through the centuries Islam has been taught with the fingers of the hand, to make
things simple and easy to remember. There are five basic principles and ten basic
practices. These constitute the basics of Islam, but there are many other matters of grave
importance, such as the many practices of purity, modesty, and justice. But these are all
implicit in the one great principle that God is one.

# Lecture 3 : The Family of Abraham: A Social, Economic, Political and Religious Model

1. Definitions and Goals.

The study to follow is based on the story of the family of Abraham as described in the
Biblical passage of Genesis 12-22. It is an uncritical contemplation of the Massoretic text
of the Genesis story in the Bible as it stands in the Hebrew. The question I pose is not
how the original narrator understood the matter of the family. Rather, I pose the
question of how a historically significant text, one attached to several great religious
traditions over more than a thousand years, can be understood in the light of the family
values of one of those traditions. This purpose would be gainsaid by appealing to
historical criticism, since it is the text as it stands, rather than its sources, which is of
relevance to the questions posed. Systematic investigation can be applied within those
parameters, and that is the purpose of the following essay.

After presenting the problem, the methodology will be simply to approach the texts
using the word family to see what narrations and actions impinge on its use in the text of
Genesis. To that extent analysis cannot differ from one observer to another. I have
divided this into two parts. The first is a general overview of the use of the word family
in the whole body of the Hebrew Bible. The second is a more specific investigation of
each passage in the story of Abraham in which the basic social elements of the family are
prominent. I shall go beyond this, however, to point out similarities and parallels with
Islamic values. From a scholarly point of view such parallels are either fortuitous, or
merely reflect the fact that Islam shares to some extent a common geographical and
cultural ethos with the Genesis record.

The family is the central subject of the two positive commands in the Decalogue (Exodus
20:1-17). The Sabbath commandment limits the authority of the parents on children, on
workers, and on domestic animals. The following commandment requires children to
honour their parents. These two commands, according to the Decalogue, comprise the
whole positive duty of humankind. The importance of the family is thus not only central
but vital.

The very first command of the Bible is in Genesis 1:28 “And God blessed them, and God
said unto them, Be fruitful, and multiply, and replenish the earth, and subdue it: and
have dominion over the fish of the sea, and over the fowl of the air, and over every living
thing that moveth upon the earth.” The command to reproduce according to this
passage is half of the duty of humankind, the other half being to have dominion. The
family is the centre of human responsibility before God.

The word generally translated family in Hebrew is mishpekhah, but occurs for the first
time in Genesis 8:19, where it is translated “kinds.” “Every beast, every creeping thing,
and every fowl, and whatsoever creepeth upon the earth, after their kinds, went forth
out of the ark.”

The translator is obviously ill at ease with the word family as applied to animals.
However, this is the first and defining occurrence of the word in the Scriptural canon.
The context gives two distinct connotations of the word. The first relates to the pair of
unclean animals taken into the ark, and the second relates to the group of seven clean
animals taken into the ark at the beginning of the flood. These two groups have
potentially changed during the time in the ark, and these changes have turned them into
“families.” The first change relates clearly to both groups, and this is reproduction. Both
groups have become families through reproduction, and the addition of offspring is a
binding and defining feature of the family. The second group, that of seven clean
animals, adds another feature besides descent in defining the family. This is the feature
of flocking, or cooperative life. These two features overlap and define the family as a
group of relatives who live in proximity and are mutually dependent on each other for a
livelihood.

The use made of the word mishpekhah in Jeremiah 15:3, where it is translated “kinds,”
is a single and unusual case. There even the sword is in a particular kind or family.
The next occurrence of the word mishpekhah is in Genesis 10:5, and is even more
illuminating as a defining text.“From these were parceled out the areas of the peoples in
their lands, each according to his language; according to their families in their peoples.”
This is the first text where the word family is applied to human beings. The context
defines the political and social geography of the whole world. The implied concept of
family thus pretends to be universal and normative. The text is most interesting in its
implications. It makes a common language the defining feature for ethnic groups. These
ethnic groups have defined areas of residence. Finally, the ethnic group consists of
smaller units, which are called families. These families are logically defined by Genesis 8
as biologically related people living in proximity and dependent on one another for their
livelihood.

What is outstanding here is that no other social or political groupings are acknowledged
in the whole world. There are only ethnic groups defined, not by political features, but
by residence and language. There is no implication of further cooperation within the
ethnic group as a whole. The real social, political, and economic unit is the extended
family. This textual intent could be either descriptive or proscriptive, but the context of
Genesis 10 would imply very strongly that it is proscriptive. It remains to be seen how
and to what extent this may be modified.

The other texts which affirm this concept of the family are Genesis 10:18, et al. 24:38, et
al. 36:40; Exodus 6:14, et al. Numbers 1:2, et al. 3:15, et al. 4:2, et al. 11:10; 26:5, et al.
27:1, et al. 33:54; 36:1; Deuteronomy 29:18(17); Joshua 6:23; 7:17; 13:15, et al. 15:1, et al.
16:5, et al. 17:2; 18:11, et al. 19:1, et al. 21:4, et al. Judges 1:25; 9:1; 1Samuel 9:21; 10:21;
18:18; 20:6, 29; 2Samuel 14:7; 16:5; Jeremiah 1:15; 2:4; 3:14; Amos 3:2; Nahum 3:4;
Zechariah 12:12, et al. 14:7; Psalm 22:27(28); 96:7; Job 31:34; 32:2; Ruth 2:1, et al.
Nehemiah 4:13(7); Esther 9:28; 1Chronicles 2:53, et al. 4:2, et al. 5:7; 5:19(4) et al 7:5;
16:28.

Since the family has such an important defining role in Scripture, it is therefore of prime
importance to take note of divine guidance in regard to the family. Much of revelation
deals with one or another aspect of the family, so that it is impossible to deal with all of
it in one study. Nevertheless, the main features become apparent as we contemplate the
life of one individual who has been for thousands of years the model of virtue for all
people. The Biblical prophet says in Isaiah 51:2 “Look unto Abraham your father, and
unto Sarah that bare you: for I called him alone, and blessed him, and increased him.”
We are always justified in beginning with the example of Abraham, for God says in
Quran 2:124 “And remember that Abraham was tried by his Lord with certain
Commands, which he fulfilled: He said: "I will make thee an Imam to the Nations." He
pleaded: "And also (Imams) from my offspring!" He answered: "But My Promise is not
within the reach of evildoers." And further in Quran 2:130 “And who turns away from
the religion of Abraham but such as debase their souls with folly? Him We chose and
rendered pure in this world: And he will be in the Hereafter in the ranks of the
Righteous.”

I have therefore chosen to examine some salient features of the main passages relating
to the family of Abraham as the story appears in Genesis 12 to 22. I take the passages in
order of appearance, and attempt to investigate them systematically. Beyond that,
however, I have addressed the text with certain questions in mind, which are reflected in
the various sections of the study below. For the purposes of this study, I have accepted
the Biblical text as it reads in the Massoretic Hebrew version without reference to
textual criticism.

2. A blessing for all families of the earth

Genesis12:1 “Now the LORD had said unto Abram, Get thee out of thy country, and from
thy kindred, and from thy father's house, unto a land that I will shew thee: 2 And I will
make of thee a great nation, and I will bless thee, and make thy name great; and thou
shalt be a blessing: 3 And I will bless them that bless thee, and curse him that curseth
thee: and in thee shall all families of the earth be blessed.”

This text establishes the principles of true faith, but beyond this it also establishes the
family as the basic social unit of existence. It does not recognise political entities as
such, but only the authority of the divinely appointed ruler in Abraham on one hand,
and all the families of the earth on the other. The act of blessing Abraham, and
consequently his divinely appointed descendants serving as prophets and guides,
implies the duty of submission to their authority. All families are thus directly under the
authority of Abraham or his duly commissioned successor to authority.

The social implications of this passage are enormous. The authority and submission
reigning between all families and the divinely appointed ruler ignores to extinction all
other attempts to control society. It undercuts the validity of all forms of government. It
opposes all seemingly natural social forces with a particular institutional control.
Finally, it raises the family as the only visible institution with divine approval, an
institution placed directly under the control of Abraham and his successors. This great
fact in practice means that care must be taken to walk the narrow line between the
social, political, economic and religious forces which would annihilate the family by
usurping the proper bases of sovereignty.

3. Taqiyya: preserving the family from the evils of society.

Genesis 12:10 “And there was a famine in the land: and Abram went down into Egypt to
sojourn there; for the famine was grievous in the land. 11 And it came to pass, when he
was come near to enter into Egypt, that he said unto Sarai his wife, Behold now, I know
that thou art a fair woman to look upon: 12 Therefore it shall come to pass, when the
Egyptians shall see thee, that they shall say, This is his wife: and they will kill me, but
they will save thee alive. 13 Say, I pray thee, thou art my sister: that it may be well with
me for thy sake; and my soul shall live because of thee.”

Preserving the right relationship between the family and divine authority sometimes
requires careful planning in how to relate to human authorities. The story of Abraham
instructing his wife to engage in taqiyya or dissembling is the model of reference for
such situations. It logically implies a number of things. It is necessary to foresee the
areas of conflict between divine law and human institutions. It is furthermore necessary
to form strategies for avoiding such conflict insofar as possible. Such strategies must
place adherence to divine law above openness to usurping authorities. The result may be
taqiyya, that is, dissembling the truth before officials when it is necessary to do so to
avoid compromising divine law.
Such a scenario is of course an extreme case. In most situations strategies can and must
be formed which permit an open relationship to non-Islamic government and society on
one hand, while providing for a family life within the parameters of divine law on the
other.

4. Compromise: preserving peace within the family.

Genesis13:8 “And Abram said unto Lot, Let there be no strife, I pray thee, between me
and thee, and between my herdmen and thy herdmen; for we be brethren. 9 Is not the
whole land before thee? separate thyself, I pray thee, from me: if thou wilt take the left
hand, then I will go to the right; or if thou depart to the right hand, then I will go to the
left.”

The experience of Abraham reported here notes that he was willing to suffer financial
loss or at least compromise his potential for profit in order to keep peace within the
family. The story indicates that he gave Lot the first choice for pasturage, and was left
with the least fertile areas.

The relevance of this matter goes far beyond the quality of family life as such to a well-
defined socio-economic policy. The logical implication of this episode in the life of
Abraham is that profits must be insinuated into the family context. The family as the
basic social unit is also the basic economic unit. Business which is divorced from the
family situation does not have a valid basis, and the concept of a professional life which
ignores the ramifications of the extended family is a non-scriptural idea. The purpose of
attaining wealth must be the maintenance and enhancing of the family and its welfare,
not the enhancement of a personal career. As we compare this to the economic trends in
recent decades, it appears that the acquisition of wealth has largely been deflected from
the family to broader social and political arenas on one hand, and to personal and
individualistic goals on the other. This tendency is highly questionable in principle, and
in practice appears to have weakened the role of the family. It has also created an
artificial problem of such magnitude that many are unable to see any alternative
structures, and this is the problem of the individual and society. A return to a Scriptural
notion of the family as the central element of society would not merely give answers to
such issues, but annihilate the very perceptional cadre which has produced them.

The family is made up not only of parents and small children, but of a wider lineage of
adults. The modern trend towards ignoring these ties in business and professional life
has clearly resulted in the breakdown of both the wider family and the relations between
parents and dependent children. The purpose of this breakdown, if it is a purposeful
phenomenon, is to facilitate invalid controls, both governmental and industrial, within
society. The result of the implementation of such invalid controls exacerbates the
tension between individual and society and thus creates a vicious circle.

A correction of this breakdown of the family will often entail compromise of the
potential for profit. Only a clear understanding of this can facilitate its implementation.
Although there will immediately arise on the part of the Westerner the criticism that
nepotism is unjust, the principle remains. A brother or cousin is a preferable business
partner than a stranger. This strengthens the family and weakens illicit forces.

This is perhaps one of the Scriptural, Islamic values most neglected by Muslim
immigrants in the West. Despite the fact that the rush to earn is often accompanied by a
very real economic support of the extended family remaining in the home country, there
is evidence that individualistic professional values acquired in the West are eroding both
the awareness of the Islamic principles involved and the will to incorporate the
extending family in one’s economy. This is only natural, since it is an unbalanced
situation which places the economic burden on one or a limited number of individuals.
The immigrant situation is intrinsically harmful to the family, and unless conscious
measures are taken to counteract this evil, it will eventually result in the loss of other
spiritual values.

5. Reproduction: a central reason for living in families.

Genesis 16:1 Now Sarai Abram's wife bare him no children: and she had an handmaid,
an Egyptian, whose name was Hagar. 2 And Sarai said unto Abram, Behold now, the
LORD hath restrained me from bearing: I pray thee, go in unto my maid; it may be that
I may obtain children by her. And Abram hearkened to the voice of Sarai.

The fundamental concern of Abraham as he appears in the Genesis story is his desire to
have children. This overrides all other interests. His interest is not informed by a
personal idiosyncrasy, but by the divine will itself. It is thus normative. Taking the
Abrahamic example, we should be more interested in making heirs than we are in
providing inheritance. Another clear contrast with the values of the present world we
live in arises here. The family is the only existing regenerative source of society. The
importance of propagation in the mind of both Abraham and his wife is such that they
are willing to compromise the peace of the family in order to accomplish it. Polygamy in
the Bible is first noted in an unrighteous society (Genesis 4:23). The first model of
marriage is monogamous (Genesis 2:23,24). Nor is there a command in Genesis to
engage in polygamy. However, the polygamy of Abraham is not stated to be outside the
divine will, and it never required repentance or atonement. It resulted in the divinely
willed birth of Ishmael, although it also resulted in a disruption of family peace.

Polygamy was practised by many of the righteous examples of the Bible, and although it
is the object of limiting legislation, it was never forbidden. The holy Quran limits the
number of wives to four, but under very severe restrictions. In view of all of the
circumstances, there is no evidence that we are justified in suggesting that Abraham
made a mistake in taking a second wife. The birth of Ishmael is clearly planned and
desired by both God and Abraham, to say nothing of Abraham’s first wife, Sarah, as
reported in Genesis.

The lesson to be learned from this is not freely to engage in polygamy, but to realise to
what extent reproduction is important to human society. We have only to refer to the
text in Genesis 1 quoted above to remind ourselves that reproduction is half of the whole
positive duty of humankind.

The question of polygamy is one of the most burning issues in the dialogue between
Islam and Christianity. It must be kept foremost in mind that the Bible and the Quran
are in clear agreement on this matter. The ideal is monogamous marriage, but polygamy
within certain constraints is not forbidden, and serves some very pragmatic needs.
Christianity in forbidding polygamy outright and absolutely, besides going beyond the
Scriptural limits, has not been able to produce an example of a society where the ideal of
monogamous marriage is thereby maintained in all its glory. On the contrary, Christian
societies have always been characterised by sexual excesses and social scandal. In
Islamic societies a reluctant loosening of the constraint of absolute monogamy may have
raised the status of women to some extent from the horrors of prostitution, but
unfortunately other social and economic factors have often in practice mitigated the
gains. Had Islam spread among less patriarchal peoples, its ideals might have shown
more successful examples in this matter.

From a purely logical point of view, given the command of Genesis 1, every normal,
healthy individual should have the right if not the obligation to marry and reproduce. In
a society where there is a specific percentage of more women than men, there should be
an equal percentage of occurrences of polygamy. However, where this is the case, the
preponderance of additional women generally occurs at a higher age. Correspondingly,
to be logical, the second wife should be noticeably older rather than younger. This might
not always serve the purpose of propagation, but it would serve the purpose of women’s
right to marry. Having said that, it is necessary to note that according to the Biblical
narrative polygamy in the case of Abraham was only tolerated as long as Sarah, the first
wife, tolerated it. Social issues aside, the choice devolves on those involved, not on
outsiders. Even under legal pressure to accept a polygamous relationship, the Bible
recognizes the right of the individual to refuse it, as in the case of the other redeemer of
Ruth (Ruth 4:6). Personal interests, specifically the desire to maintain a monogamous
family, may thus override polygamy even in the limited cases in which polygamy in the
levirate is prescribed by the Torah. Much could be said about the issue from the
individual and psychological point of view, and the evils of polygamy are obvious to
everyone. But in terms of society as a whole, the institution of polygamy is one of two
alternatives. Either polygamy must be accepted to a limited extent, or the institution of
celibate monasticism. If all men married, the need for polygamy would be greatly
reduced, if only by the fact that fewer women would be available. The present Western
standard of a growing singles society is completely unacceptable if for only one reason.
Social and political control of a society of singles is easier than that of families. Those
who have children naturally engage themselves in influencing society in favour of their
children’s safety and well-being. Those who do not have children are oftentimes more
inert in opposing oppression in the areas relating to education and the development of
children. While singles may be very active, even more active than married people, in
some social issues, their attention is more immediate, and the long-term direction of
social development, which depends on children, is neglected. The tendency in the West
is toward inhuman totalitarianism hidden beneath a plethora of immediate issues in
crises. One of the best ways of reversing that would be a social movement toward
marital commitment and the founding of families, even in some situations including
polygamy.

6. Circumcision: defining social boundaries.

Genesis 17:9 And God said unto Abraham, Thou shalt keep my covenant therefore, thou,
and thy seed after thee in their generations. 10 This is my covenant, which ye shall keep,
between me and you and thy seed after thee; Every man child among you shall be
circumcised.

At the time of the coming of the Gospel, Judaism was split on the question of whether a
convert or proselyte was required to be circumcised. This same question continued to
split the community of the followers of Jesus. The writings of St. Paul reflect that local
situation in many vehement expressions condemning the circumcision of adult
proselytes. The question of the circumcision of male children, however, is never
discussed in the New Testament epistles. The practice of the circumcision of children
remains valid and normative from its institution in the family of Abraham down to the
present day.

Circumcision was given to Abraham as a sign of his faithfulness in obedience to God. It


was to be an identifying mark through succeeding generations. The mark of
circumcision identified families into which marriage was possible or appropriate. It
continues to a large extent to inform modern society in the same way. Male circumcision
is one of the primary means parents have for the continued protection of their
daughters. Circumcision acts as a guardian in two ways. First of all it has an effect on
health and hygiene, both of the husband and wife. It is thus one of the most important
factors in family life. Furthermore, it represents the likelihood that one’s daughter who
has become a wife will be dealt with in terms of divine law rather than in terms of
economic or social competition, where the average status of women declines, if only
because of their biologically determined handicaps to engage in such competition for
survival, that is, the normal conditions of pregnancy and breast-feeding as well as the
average physical strength of women being less than that of men. Circumcision becomes
a sign of women’s rights under divine law, and thus has a very direct social significance.
Circumcision of males defines their family as a participant in society. Failure to
circumcise male children puts the family outside the pale of regulated society into the
state in which lawless competition determines all behaviour. This is basically the
situation resulting from Christian rejection of circumcision and its underlying
principles.

An implication of circumcision as the defining feature of social boundaries is the


suppression of the importance of other boundary-defining devices. Circumcision implies
the extension of social boundaries over racial, national, and sectarian limits, and creates
the umma or people of God. It aids the family in its confrontation with usurping social
and governmental agencies by creating a social grouping which ignores their hegemony.

7. Hospitality: the family meeting society.

Genesis 18:2 And he lift up his eyes and looked, and, lo, three men stood by him: and
when he saw them, he ran to meet them from the tent door, and bowed himself toward
the ground, 3 And said, My Lord, if now I have found favour in thy sight, pass not away,
I pray thee, from thy servant: 4 Let a little water, I pray you, be fetched, and wash your
feet, and rest yourselves under the tree: 5 And I will fetch a morsel of bread, and comfort
ye your hearts; after that ye shall pass on: for therefore are ye come to your servant. And
they said, So do, as thou hast said.

Quran 11:69 There came Our Messengers to Abraham with glad tidings. They said,
"Peace!" He answered, "Peace!" and hastened to entertain them with a roasted calf.

In the ideal society, where the family is the unit of religion and government, temporary
isolation from the extended family, because of travel or for other reasons, can create
situations of crisis in security. Non-scriptural forms of government and business, with
their peace-keeping forces and hostelries, can blind one to the divinely established
extended social role of the family. The family is the centre of hospitality, and hospitality
is a sacred duty for the preservation of peace and security. The breakdown of this
practice is one of the foremost sources of the excuse to engage in non-scriptural
governmental and business activities. Therefore the sacredness of hospitality cannot be
underestimated.

The example of Abraham was to feed and refresh travellers whom he did not know. Such
hospitality in this example is an activity in which the whole family shared. The provision
of the necessities of life falls on the family. But when one is separated from one’s family,
that provision must fall on other families. The only alternative is to provide other
institutions, and these have proved to be not only non-scriptural, but to have by and
large a detrimental effect on spiritual values. The loss of extended hospitality is related
to a consequent need for accommodation and food from institutions other than the
family. To the extent that these institutions are divorced from the family, they foster
isolation, unfavourable forms of entertainment, and eventually prostitution,
intoxication, and other excesses. At a certain point these excesses are perceived as a
problem in Western societies, but the root of the evil is never understood, and for this
reason the solutions are never effective. The trend can be effectively reversed by simply
reinstating the Scriptural value of hospitality as a central characteristic of the family.

8. Divine Guidance: confronting convention with obedience to God.

Genesis 22:1 And it came to pass after these things, that God did tempt Abraham, and
said unto him, Abraham: and he said, Behold, here I am. 2 And he said, Take now thy
son, thine only son Isaac, whom thou lovest, and get thee into the land of Moriah; and
offer him there for a burnt offering upon one of the mountains which I will tell thee of.

Quran 37:101 So We gave him the good news of a boy ready to suffer and forbear. 102
Then, when (the son) reached (the age of) (serious) work with him, he said: "O my son! I
see in vision that I offer thee in sacrifice: Now see what is thy view!" (The son) said: "O
my father! Do as thou art commanded: Thou will find me, if Allah so wills one practicing
Patience and Constancy!"
103 So when they had both submitted their wills (to Allah), and he had laid him
prostrate on his forehead (for sacrifice), 104 We called out to him, "O Abraham! 105
"Thou hast already fulfilled the vision!" --Thus indeed do We reward those who do right.
106 For this was obviously a trial-- 107 And We ransomed him with a momentous
sacrifice: 108 And We left (this blessing) for him among generations (to come) in later
times: 109 "Peace and salutation to Abraham!"

The story of Abraham sacrificing his eldest son has provided material for conflict
between the religious traditions, one side claiming that Isaac was the son named and the
other side claiming that Ishmael was the son of promise. Such controversy overlooks the
cultural context of the event as well as its implications. In order to see the social
implications of this event, it is necessary to review its cultural and religious milieu. The
sacrifice of children was widespread in ancient times and especially prevalent in
Canaanite religion. The substitutionary sacrifice of children in a rite of passage or
initiatory ritual has been just as widely spread. The Biblical text is permeated with the
typical phrases of such an initiatory ritual. It is clear that Abraham performed this rite
for each of the first-born sons of his wives, for both Ishmael and Isaac. What is of
particular importance is the fact that Abraham performed this rite while living among
people who actually killed their own children in sacrifice to Canaanite gods. He showed
his faith in being willing to flaunt social and religious convention. The sacrifice of
children was considered absolutely essential to the well-being of society in that part of
the Middle East at that time. By failing to kill his first-born children, Abraham opened
himself to violent criticism. His performance of a substitutionary rite probably did little
to allay that, although the rumour that the sacrifice was prevented by divine
intervention may have reduced the danger. But to the extent that their flaunting of
convention became known, the family of Abraham may have been exposed to outright
danger from an enraged populace. The social ramifications of Abraham’s faithfulness to
divine law when it ran contrary to popular custom are deep and significant.

The sacrifice of Abraham, both in the case of Isaac and that of Ishmael, has far-reaching
implications. Conformity to social conventions which are contrary to divine law is a
great temptation. It is easy to pretend that such conformity is necessary for the
preservation of peace. In the light of Abraham’s actions, it would appear that such
contentions are mere excuses for the desire to be like the ungodly. The Abrahamic
example informs us first of all that obedience to divine law is of more importance than
conformity in the name of peace. It is the only means of preserving the family in the face
of a challenging society. It is the only means of redeeming that challenging society and
bringing a sane influence to bear upon it.

The rite itself, however, raises other questions. The substitutionary, redemptive rite for
the first-born son of every woman does not have universal application. It is already
given a different configuration in the Mosaic ritual. It has been replaced in Islam with a
commemorative rite during the pilgrimage. This is an example of the shift in practice
which has taken place over the ages. All prophets have been given the same faith and
message, and to a great degree the same practices. But there is and has always been an
area in which practice varies. These variations can be seen in the writings of the
prophets, but they are most prominent in the application of divine law made by the
divinely appointed guides. As people are faced with the details of a particular situation,
the application of divine law may vary as it meets the practicalities of that situation.

Apparently in the time and place of Abraham, the redemptive rite served the purpose
best. In our own day, the commemorative rite is for our best good, and has therefore
been prescribed for us in the Quran. The example of Abraham is one of obedience in any
case, and his example inspires us to obey God rather than to conform to non-scriptural
practices in whatever place or time we live. This implies seeking and following divine
proof, adhering to the guidance of the divinely appointed for our own time. The fact that
this issue lies within the context of a matter which shows change down through the ages
is important. There is a temptation to consider that only the universally binding issues
are of importance. Abraham was faithful even in a matter of only temporary validity.
The implication is that the Scripturally-oriented family ought not to conform to non-
scriptural social mores even in matters which may seem of little importance.

9. Summary.

The description of the family of Abraham in the Book of Genesis is most thought-
provoking as it relates to the social issues of ancient as well as modern times. Several
issues and principles arise naturally from the text. The first is that the Scriptural
foundation of society, the family, escapes all social and political controls to be set
directly under the authority of the divinely appointed representative of God on earth.
The family has the duty to preserve itself from those influences in society which
countermand divine law even to the extent of engaging in dissimulation if necessary. On
the other hand, the family has the duty to compromise its potential for economic profit
if necessary in order to maintain its integrity and peace. The family as the sole
regenerative source of society has the duty of reproduction and may, according to
Scripture, even engage in polygamy if necessary to maintain itself as a moral influence
over and against social excesses. The family as the only truly valid unit of society
determines and defines social boundaries through the practice of the circumcision of
male children, thus creating a society based on divine law and the interests of the weak
over and against a society based on ruthless social and economic competition. The
central characteristic of the family, hospitality, when taken as a social institution, is one
of the foremost barriers to such social excesses as unfavourable entertainment,
prostitution, and intoxication. Finally, it is the duty of the family to maintain adherence
to divine law in the face of social pressures to conform to other standards.

While Islamic law is based on the Quran and the Sunna, an inspection of the Biblical
texts relating to Abraham prove to be vitally enlightening as a confirmation of the
abiding value of Islamic values on the role and influence of the family in society.

# Lecture 4 : The Sacrifice of Abraham, What Is All the Fuss?

There is a traditional approach to the problem of the sacrifice of Abraham of one of his
sons. Most commentators agree that the story represents a divine test, whereby
Abraham’s faithfulness was proven. The idea is that God gave him a command to
sacrifice his beloved son, and in showing himself willing to do so, he showed his
extraordinary faithfulness and obedience to God. Muslims, Jews and Christians agree on
this point.

The traditional point of contention is in that the Bible reports the sacrifice for Isaac,
whereas the Quran reports it for Ishmael. The result has been disagreement between
Muslims on one hand, and Christians and Jews on the other, on the question of which
son was supposed to be sacrificed as a test of obedience.

There are a few alternative suggestions, but the most novel one I have discovered is that
of Rabbi Ben-Yehuda. Rabbi Ben-Yehuda has suggested that Isaac was actually
sacrificed according to the story in Genesis 22, and later resurrected to marry Rebecca.
In this essay, I examine this theory in detail, and offer an anthropologically based
alternative. Ben-Yehuda’s evidence is carefully weighed here and found wanting. The
fact that Isaac is called Abraham’s only son suggests a different interpretation of the
events altogether, one which takes into account the rite of passage as an explanation of
redemption ritual for the first-born of every woman.

In The Institute of Judaic-Christian Researcher, Volume 1, November 1986, Rabbi E.


Ben-Yehuda published an article entitled The Sacrifice of Isaac. The author gives only
one stated purpose for the examination of this issue. “All Jewish responses have come
up short before the Christian claim that the enormity of the sacrifice of Jesus upon the
cross makes it absolutely necessary for all Jews to accept his Messianic role as well as
his divinity. The following dissertation tries to show that the Jews had an incident in
their history long predating the Passion which had a similar impact upon the Jewish
outlook” (page 1). The only stated motive is “coming to grips” with that issue.

The point of departure is the idea that there is a weakness in Jewish faith if there is no
sacrifice for sin by which God may grant grace to humankind. “Since sacrifices are no
longer offered in Judaism, where do you expect to find God’s grace?” (page 2). The rabbi
finds the missing foundation of grace in the binding of Isaac. “In the liturgy, again and
again we mention “the binding of Isaac” as a cause for God to automatically forgive the
sins of Isaac’s descendants” (page 2).

After this introduction, the rabbi finds the following evidence that Isaac was actually
sacrificed as reported in Genesis 22, and then later raised from the dead.

It is questionable that an omniscient God would need to “test” Abraham. The radical N-
S instead of N-S-H is the word actually used. Thus, the translation of “test” is a
misunderstanding of the text. It should rather be “banner” or “example”, instead of
“test” (page 2).
Why should the mere binding of Isaac be such an earth-shattering event as the Jewish
liturgy suggests? (page 2).

“Jewish commentary states ‘God Himself commanded the offering of Isaac – but would
Abraham allow a mere angel to countermand his Maker?’” “The commentary explains,
‘the angel spoke to Abraham and Abraham refused to stop, saying God commanded,
only He can stop me’” (page 2).

The command not to injure Isaac meant that he must be offered whole and uninjured
(page 3).

The words can be interpreted as ‘another ram’ or ‘an after-ram’ (page 3).

Tahat bno means under his son rather than instead of his son (page 3).

“This thing” and “you did not spare your son” in Genesis 22:15-17 indicate that Isaac was
sacrificed (page 3).

The text reports that both Abraham and Isaac went up, but that only Abraham returned
(page 3).

Abraham went directly to Be’er Sheva. Genesis 23:2 reports that Sarah died in Kirjath-
arba. Therefore Abraham could not face Sarah after sacrificing Isaac, and Sarah died of
sorrow upon hearing that Isaac was dead (page 3).
Genesis 23:2 reports that Abraham “came” to mourn for Sarah, but no mention is made
of Isaac (page 3).

Genesis 24 describes obtaining a wife “for Isaac”, that is, Abraham would raise up seed
in Isaac’s name. There is no input of Isaac, but Rebecca is asked if she would agree.
Rebecca was shocked to find Isaac alive, so she fell off her camel and covered her face
(page 3).

Isaac came from the way of the well lahay roi’, the well of Life of Him who sees me,
which is a reference to his having been resurrected (page 4).

The reference of resurrection in Jewish prayers is in the present (page 4).

Isaac was comforted after his mother’s death upon his marriage to Rebecca three years
after the event, showing that he had just learned of it when he was resurrected (page 4).

The Jewish practice of Kidush Hashem is based on the death and resurrection of Isaac
(page 4).

I shall examine each of these arguments in order.

It is questionable that an omniscient God would need to “test” Abraham. The radical N-
S instead of N-S-H is the word actually used. Thus, the translation of “test” is a
misunderstanding of the text. It should rather be “banner” or “example”, instead of
“test” (page 2).

The radical N-S-H is used 36 times in the Hebrew Scriptures almost always with the
clear sense of “putting to the test”. Examples are Exodus 15:25; 1Samuel 17:39 and
1Kings 10:1. Genesis 22:1 does not appear to depart from this clear usage. However, if
the text does in fact mean that God “made an example” of Abraham, rather than
“putting him to the test”, the result does not appreciably foster any particular
interpretation of the sacrifice of Isaac. It does not indicate that Isaac was therefore
actually sacrificed rather than merely bound to the altar.

Why should the mere binding of Isaac be such an earth-shattering event as the Jewish
liturgy suggests? (page 2).

If there is a continual reference to the binding of Isaac in Jewish literature, this does
support the rabbi’s contention that the experience of Isaac had a great impact on Jewish
faith. It does not follow that Isaac was actually sacrificed. It does not even thereby follow
that the belief that Isaac was sacrificed was ever widespread in Judaism. The liturgical
reference quoted notes “binding”, not actual sacrifice. As such, it speaks against the
rabbi’s premise.

“Jewish commentary states ‘God Himself commanded the offering of Isaac - but would
Abraham allow a mere angel to countermand his Maker?’” “The commentary explains,
‘the angel spoke to Abraham and Abraham refused to stop, saying God commanded,
only He can stop me.’” (page 2).
This argument is based on the conflict between the messages of Elohim God in Genesis
22:1-2 and of the angel of the Lord in Genesis 22:11-12. The implication is that Abraham
perceived these as two conflicting commands, originating in two different sources, and
chose to obey Elohim God as having greater authority than the angel of the Lord.

The problem with this interpretation is that there is no other precedent in the Hebrew
Scriptures for the angel of the Lord contradicting God. In fact, the angel of the Lord so
closely represents YHVH that he sometimes speaks in the first person I as YHVH, note
Genesis 16:10, and even me at the end of Genesis 22:12. The linguistic confusion
between the angel of the Lord and YHVH Himself is compounded in Genesis 18 where
the celestial figures are never called angels, but only men and YHVH, who behaves and
acts like a man. A case could be made, at least in Genesis 18 and Genesis 22:12, for
YHVH being an elliptical expression for angel of the Lord (YHVH). In Genesis 19 the
same figures are consistently called angels.

Genesis 22:12 maintains agreement between Elohim God and the angel of the Lord. It
states for I know that thou fearest God. In sum, the text gives no support for a conflict
between God and the angel of the Lord.

The command not to injure Isaac meant that he must be offered whole and uninjured
(page 3).

This argument accepts agreement between the angel of the Lord and God. The words of
the angel by this interpretation do not prohibit the sacrifice of Isaac, but rather prohibit
injuring Isaac before the sacrifice. The import of the words would thus be that Isaac
must be in perfect condition at the moment of the sacrifice.

Since this argument is in conflict with the third argument, one or the other
interpretation must be chosen. Both are not acceptable. If we accept two possible
interpretations of the first half of verse 12, the second half will clarify which of them is
valid. According to argument four, the meaning of the text would read thus: “Do not
injure Isaac, because the sacrifice must be unblemished: for now I know that thou
fearest God, seeing thou hast not withheld thy son, thine only son from me.” There is no
sense connection between the first and second half of the verse. According to the
traditional interpretation the sense of the text would read thus: “Do not injure Isaac or
carry out the sacrifice to completion: for now I know that thou fearest God, seeing thou
hast not withheld thy son, thine only son from me.” In this case, the text is coherent. The
first half interrupts the sacrifice, and the second half indicates that the test is finished,
since Abraham did not withhold his son.

The words can be interpreted as “another ram” or “an after-ram” (page 3). The
implication is that the ram is an additional sacrifice to the sacrifice of Isaac, since it is
“another” or “after”. The KJV translates “ahar/other/after” as “behind him” with the
pronoun in italics, indicating that it is added. The NIV leaves out the word altogether,
saying “there in a thicket he saw a ram caught by its horns.”

In this point the rabbi is right. The most linguistically logical understanding of the
words is another ram. It is also correct that Isaac is the only figure which could be the
first ram, since it has been made plain that no other animal was provided in Genesis
22:7. It does not follow, however, that Isaac was therefore sacrificed. It only follows that
he was a ram to be offered up. The ram caught in the bushes was another sacrificial
animal.

Tahat bno means “under” his son rather than “instead of” his son (page 3).

It is true that the word tahat means under. It is used as such in Genesis 1:7. However,
the word also means instead of, and is used as such in Genesis 2:21 “and he took one of
his ribs, and closed up the flesh instead thereof”. It would be nonsense to translate
under in this case. The word is used as instead of in Genesis 4:25; 30:15; Leviticus 14:42;
2Samuel 19:14. It is used as under in Genesis 7:19; Exodus 32:19; and possibly
1Chronicles 29:34. It is used in the sense of for the sake of in Exodus 21:26. It is used as
by means of in Psalm 66:17. It is used as whereas in Isaiah 60:15. Finally it is combined
with other particles for other meanings in the book of Jeremiah. The great variety of
meanings for the word, and the fact that it is used in the sense of under in a minority of
the biblical cases, speaks against the rabbi’s proposal. Finally, the sense of under makes
no sense at all. If the ram is sacrificed under Isaac, how was it placed, since Isaac was
already bound to the altar? If the ram is sacrificed under Isaac, then it seems that the
ram is not ahar/another/a second but the first. The translation of instead of is the only
translation that makes any linguistic sense at all.

“This thing” and “you did not spare your son” in Genesis 22:15-17 indicate that Isaac was
sacrificed (page 3).

The rabbi refers to the expression in Genesis 22:16 hast not withheld thy son to show
that Isaac was sacrificed. The same expression, loo chasakhtaa eth binkhaa, is found in
Genesis 22:12. In Genesis 22:12 Abraham had clearly not yet sacrificed Isaac, and yet he
had already fulfilled whatever it meant not to have withheld him. Since the expression
clearly does not refer to having carried out a burnt offering in Genesis 22:12, there is no
reason to suppose that it refers to having carried out a burnt offering in Genesis 22:16.

The text reports that both Abraham and Isaac went up in Genesis 22:8, but that only
Abraham returned in Genesis 22:19 (page 3).

The rabbi’s report of the text is exact. The fact, however, that both are mentioned on the
trip up, and only one on the trip down, does not mean that Isaac did not return. In
Genesis 12:14 it says that Abram was come into Egypt. It does not say that Sarai went
with him. In fact, the preceding verses show that Abram was afraid to take her with him
to Egypt. Using the rabbi’s method of interpretation, we might infer from this that at the
last moment they decided she should not go, rather than lie about their relationship.
Yet, despite the fact that the text states only that Abram went down to Egypt, lo and
behold, the same verse continues “the Egyptians beheld the woman that she was very
fair”. If it were not for verse seventeen, where Sarai’s name is mentioned, we might even
conclude, using the rabbi’s method of interpretation, that Abram had a different and
temporary wife for the trip to Egypt.

Genesis 22:19 concludes that they went together to Be’er Sheba. Although the young
men are also mentioned, we have as much right to conclude that Isaac went along as we
do to conclude that Sarai went down into Egypt in Genesis 12.

Abraham went directly to Be’er Sheva. Genesis 23:2 reports that Sarah died in Kirjath-
arba. Therefore Abraham could not face Sarah after sacrificing Isaac, and Sarah died of
sorrow upon hearing that Isaac was dead (page 3).

The rabbi suggests that Abraham went to Be’er Sheva instead of returning to Sarah. But
Genesis 21:33, only two verses before that command to sacrifice Isaac, Abraham is living
in Be’er Sheva. Although the text does not say so, it might not be too much to assume
that his wife Sarah was living there with him. Genesis 21:34 indicates that Abraham
lived in Be’er Sheva for a long time. The expression many days does not have the
connotation it does in English of only a few weeks. It is similar to the expression in
Psalm 23:6, translated by both the KJV and NIV as for ever. There is a break in the
narrative with Genesis 22:1, so it is possible to suggest that Abraham was living at that
time in parts unknown. But the fact that Genesis 22:19 says that he went to Be’er Sheva
suggests strongly that he started out from there, and that Sarah was waiting for him
there, unless indeed she was waiting with the young men. The text just does not mention
Sarah at all, and by the rabbi’s reasoning, as we shall see, that could very well mean she
was dead, and resurrected to die again in Genesis 23.

The best way to understand the text is to assume that Abraham and Sarah were living at
Be’er Sheva at least until the close of Genesis 22:19. There is another break in the
narrative at Genesis 22:20, which continues into the beginning of Genesis 23. There is
therefore no textual reason to assume that Abraham was avoiding Sarah.

Genesis 23:2 reports that Abraham “came” to mourn for Sarah, but no mention is made
of Isaac (page 3).

The rabbi suggests that Isaac must have been dead because he is not mentioned to have
been present at the funeral of his mother Sarah. Again, such a conclusion from what the
text does not say is unwarranted, as we have already seen. It is clear that Sarah went
down into Egypt, even though the text only said that it was Abraham who went down. It
is clear that Sarah was alive during the time of Genesis 22, even though it does not state
that she was present at so important a rite of passage as the sacrifice of her son Isaac. It
is also clear from the text that Isaac is alive at the death of his mother. He was still alive
in Genesis 22:12 and in Genesis 24:6.

Genesis 24 describes obtaining a wife “for Isaac”, that is, Abraham would raise up seed
in Isaac’s name. There is no input of Isaac, but Rebecca is asked if she would agree.
Rebecca was shocked to find Isaac alive, so she fell off her camel and covered her face
(page 3).

The rabbi’s first point is that Abraham should redeem Isaac, who was dead, by raising
up seed with a wife for Isaac. This argument is destroyed by the fact that in Genesis 24:6
Abraham commands the servant not to take his son Isaac back to the land of his
kindred. The implication is clearly that Isaac was alive and that the wife was for him
personally.
The rabbi’s second point is that there is no input from Isaac, while Rebecca’s opinion is
closely investigated. Therefore, Isaac is dead. However, there is no need to mention
Isaac’s input, since we can safely assume that at the ripe age of forty he was very willing
to marry. His input need be mentioned only in the contrary case. The close investigation
of Rebecca’s opinion is not in conflict with the practice of arranged marriages or with
Middle Eastern marriage standards. To think the contrary is merely a Western
prejudice.

The rabbi’s third point is that Rebecca’s behaviour in falling off the camel and veiling
herself indicates surprise at Isaac’s resurrection. Genesis 24:64 says that she alighted
from the camel. The root is N-P-L which indeed is commonly used in the sense of
falling. It is one of the two general words used for getting down from a mount or vehicle,
however. It is used as such in 2Kings 5:21 as well as Genesis 24:64. The rabbi’s
interpretation is neither linguistically natural nor necessary. The experience of a woman
falling from the height of a camel, which is much higher than a horse, would necessitate
much more than merely adjusting her veil. In the country areas of the Middle East today
it is still the practice for a woman to get down from a mount if she meets a man coming
toward her on the road. There is nothing in Rebecca’s behaviour to show surprise. On
the contrary, her behaviour is normal, which speaks against any surprise resurrection.

Isaac came from the way of the well lahay roi’, the well of Life of Him who sees me,
which is a reference to his having been resurrected (page 4).

The rabbi interprets Isaac coming from the way of the well lahay roi’ as evidence of his
having been resurrected. However, the words do not have this symbolic meaning in the
text. They refer to a literal well of water so named by Hagar in Genesis 16:13-14. The
meaning of God seeing is attached to the experience of Hagar, not to Isaac. It is not in
the least an evidence of Isaac’s having been resurrected.
The reference of resurrection in Jewish prayers is in the present (page 4).

The rabbi concludes that the reference in Jewish prayers to God raising the dead, since
it is couched in the present tense, whatever he means by that, since there is no present
tense in Hebrew, implies that God is already now a raiser of the dead. Since God is
already now a raiser of the dead, He must have resurrected Isaac. If we accept the
rabbi’s premise that God is already now a raiser of the dead, it does not imply that Isaac
is one of those raised. There are biblical references to other people who were raised from
the dead, namely the widow’s son at the time of Elijah (1Kings 17:17 ff), and the
Shunamite woman’s son at the time of Elisha (2Kings 4:8 ff). If the argument turns on
the time, based on the fact that there is no resurrection mentioned in Genesis before
Isaac, it also raises a theological issue of even greater moment. If God is supposed to
become a raiser of the dead at a certain moment, rather that be a raiser of the dead
essentially, then there is an implication of change in God as well as God being
subservient to time. The Rabbi’s presupposition is precisely that of secularism, which is
in fact a form of Christianity. It presupposes time and space to be absolute and in effect
a deity, so that even God is controlled thereby.

Although Jewish prayers may indicate something of importance in Jewish life, which
was the purpose of the rabbi’s study in the first place, they cannot provide evidence on
whether or not the text of Genesis actually reports a real sacrifice and resurrection or
not.

Isaac was comforted after his mother’s death upon his marriage to Rebecca three years
after the event, showing that he had just learned of it when he was resurrected (page 4).

It does not follow. It is certainly possible that Isaac might have mourned his mother for
as long as three years, to the extent that his marriage was a comfort to him. There is no
evidence for Isaac’s death and resurrection in this.
The Jewish practice of Kidush Hashem is based on the death and resurrection of Isaac
(page 4).

Although a belief in the death and resurrection of Isaac may have had an impact on
some Jews to inspire them to be faithful in martyrdom, that belief is hardly essential to
such faithfulness. Such faithfulness is not evidence either for belief in the death and
resurrection of Isaac, nor for the factuality of the event.

At this point it is possible to make a general evaluation of the study. The first problem is
the rabbi’s motive and premise. His motive is skewed, so his results cannot help but be
skewed. The only proper motive for studying the text is to find truth, the truth about
what was originally meant by the text and how that might apply to one’s own faith and
experience. The rabbi is not interested in finding the truth but, by his own words, he is
motivated by the desire to find Christian motifs in Judaism. He wants to find a
functional replacement for the death of Jesus on the cross as a channel of divine grace.
With this purpose in mind, he latches on to the sacrifice of Isaac.

The premise also remains undemonstrated. The premise is that faith in the martyred
and resurrected one will automatically make it possible for God to forgive sin. Although
this premise is accepted by Christianity, a Jewish scholar has the duty of demonstrating
its validity. The rabbi makes no attempt to do so. He merely accepts this Christian
viewpoint and begins from there. This is a serious methodological flaw.

There are several types of weaknesses in the rabbi’s argumentation. First of all, there are
several linguistic errors. It is as though the computer mindset has deprived researchers
of basic linguistic intelligence. To choose one meaning of a word and apply it across the
board constitutes a mechanical superficiality and lack of analytical integrity that would
have been unthinkable before the age of mechanical translators. Such methodology is
found in the rabbi’s way of handling the words tahat (instead of) and tippol (she got
down). His use of these words is outright error of translation.
There are other linguistic problems as well. Symbolic interpretation is unacceptable
when the text clearly has a literal meaning. The rabbi makes this mistake in dealing with
the expression well of lahay roi’. Another linguistic error is to give the same expression
in the same context two different meanings, unless the context requires it. The rabbi
does this with the expression hast not withheld thy son, which occurs twice in the
passage in question. Finally, the rabbi presents linguistic arguments that are not
relevant to the question as though they were, as in his treatment of the radical N-S-H.

There are errors of logic as well. The rabbi presents conflicting interpretations of the
meaning of Genesis 22:12 as evidence for the same interpretation of Isaac’s sacrifice.
This is logically impossible and greatly weakens his argument. The rabbi draws
unwarranted conclusions from things left unstated in the text: that Isaac did not return
with Abraham after the sacrifice, that Isaac did not attend his mother’s funeral, and that
Isaac was not involved in plans for his marriage. Argument based on nothing cannot be
worth more than zero. Finally, the rabbi makes mistakes in logic by drawing
unwarranted conclusions from statements in the text. He draws the conclusion that
Sarah was in Kirjath-arba when Abraham was in Be’er-Sheva on the basis of the fact that
she died there. The data in the text are insufficient to draw that conclusion.

The rabbi draws conclusions on mistaken cultural and psychological assumptions. He


errs in finding investigation of a woman’s feelings incongruous with arranged marriage.
He errs in thinking that Isaac would not mourn for his mother for up to three years.

There are at least two more fatal flaws in the rabbi’s study. The first is the dependence
on a conflict between Elohim God and the angel of the Lord. There is no precedent for
this in Scripture, the text does not require it, and it raises problematic theological issues
for which the rabbi makes no account. The idea of a conflict between Elohim God and
the angel of the Lord is totally unacceptable on the basis of the biblical text.
The second fatal flaw is the rabbi’s failure to consider texts which clearly speak against
the death and resurrection of Isaac. Among these is Genesis 24:6, which states Isaac to
be alive at a point when according to the theory he had not yet been resurrected.

The study is also flawed by the failure to consider texts in the passage which actually do
present problems. The most obvious of these are Genesis 22:2 and Genesis 22:16, where
Isaac is called the only son of Abraham. There was never a time when Isaac was
Abraham’s only son. This is the one feature of the story which most obviously demands
attention, and we may thank Rabbi Ben-Yehuda for raising the issue.

The rest of this study will re-examine the biblical text, but with the motive of explaining
what appear to be inconsistencies in it. The basic assumption is that the Masoretic Text
of the Hebrew Bible, at least insofar as Genesis 22 is concerned, is consistent and can be
successfully harmonised with itself.

In Genesis 22:2 (and in Genesis 22:16), Isaac is called the only son of Abraham. This is
inconsistent with the report in the Masoretic Text of Genesis 16:15 which states that
Hagar bore Abram a son called Ishmael. In Genesis 17:17-19, it is apparent that Ishmael
was alive before the birth of Isaac. Genesis 21:2-3 reports the birth of Isaac after the
circumcision of Ishmael at the age of thirteen (Genesis 17:25). Finally, Genesis 25:9
reports Ishmael to be alive after the events in Genesis 22. Isaac was not, therefore,
according to the text the only son of Abraham at the time of the events in Genesis 22 or
at any time previous to them.

There are other problems with the story besides the textual one. Judaism generally
interprets the story as a revelation to Abraham that God does not accept human
sacrifice. The Christian interpretation of the story generally emphasises the lesson of
obedience. The Christian is thus faced with a theological conflict in the command to
offer the son as a burnt offering. Such a command conflicts with the commandment in
Exodus 20:13, Thou shalt not kill. Although theologians may well resolve the issue
somehow in their own minds, most Christians are left in a quandary. They cannot
understand how God could command anyone actually to kill his own child.
If we understand the story as it generally is – that God actually commanded Abraham to
kill his own child – then there are some narrative problems with the story as it appears
in the Bible. The conversation in Genesis 22:7-8 does not fit into the course of events in
which Abraham intended actually to kill Isaac. Isaac asks where the lamb is, as though a
lamb were going to be offered and not himself. Abraham answers as though a lamb were
going to be offered and not Isaac. Furthermore, there is no evidence to follow that
Abraham informed Isaac later of the true character of the sacrifice, yet Isaac is a willing
and knowing participant throughout.

What the Bible actually describes is an event in which a father takes his son, goes to a
secluded place in a totally male group which is left to guard, further secludes himself
with his son, performs a mock sacrifice of the son, then sacrifices an animal as a burnt
offering, and returns apparently without the son.

Throughout the process, Isaac is called the only son. He is so called nowhere else in the
Genesis recital. This factor is unique to this event. The event consists of sacrificial
actions and a series of statements or questions and responses. The text presents itself as
consistent, despite the incongruity of some of the speeches. The text ignores the
theological problems of divine temptation and human sacrifice, as though these were
not issues.

At this point we have exhausted the biblical information. It is necessary to look for
explanatory material outside the text itself. There are several factors to look for. If
possible, we should find examples of mock sacrifices of young men by their fathers or
other authorities followed by a replacement sacrifice of an animal. These sacrificial
events should include a series of speeches which might ignore the factual situation.

In 1909, A. van Gennep identified precisely this type of situation in his book Les rites de
passage. The rite of passage of this type is performed on boys of a certain age, although
there are similar rites in some societies dealing with girls as well. The rite always
includes set speeches in what is called an initiatory structure. There is a mock killing of
the youth, a replacement animal sacrifice, and a mock resurrection of the youth. There is
often a period of seclusion for the youth or especially seclusion from the opposite sex. At
the end of the rite, the youth has passed from childhood to adulthood, and may marry
and carry out other adult behaviour; or he passes from one status to another in his adult
life.

Although the liturgy or ritual of the rite of passage is usually found in non-literate
societies, there are examples of texts with an initiatory structure in the various classical
religious texts of the world. One of these is the first section of the Kathopanishad, one of
the Vedic Upanishads known in classical Hindu Scriptures. There are certainly more
precedents for initiatory structure in ancient religious texts from around the world, and
there is no reason at all why we should not expect to find one in the Bible. It is clear that
the story of the sacrifice of Isaac contains all the essentials of such a sacrificial ritual.

If the story is reporting a rite of passage liturgy, the speeches are set speeches relating to
the ritual. They are certainly presented as having occurred on a particular time in a
particular place with specific individuals involved, but they must be understood to have
occurred in the case of every young man in the given culture when appropriate.

The rite begins with the instigation of God, who calls Abraham in Genesis 22:1. The
response of God in verse 2 is also couched in the traditional phrases of the ritual. This
explains why Isaac is consistently called the only son here. It is a part of the ritual. It is
possible that the ritual is in reference to the first-born of every woman. The marking of
the first-born is a consistent feature through much of the Bible. The consecration of the
first-born of every woman is described first in Exodus 13 and in later passages. The
expression would generally hold true, and would only fail in the situation of polygamy,
as in the case of Abraham. Yet even in the case of polygamy, the same ritual words
would be attached to the sacrificial event, since the same traditional liturgy or
appropriate words for the sacrifice would always be used.

The common traits of a rite of passage fit into the Genesis story like this. The all-male
group leaves on a three-day trek (Gen. 22:3,4). Those not actively participating are left
to wait and guard (Gen. 22:5). Most rites of passage include such ritual paraphernalia as
wood for an offering, fire, and a weapon (Gen. 22:6). Most rites of passage include a
standardised text of speeches and responses between the officiant and the initiate (Gen.
22:7,8). Most rites of passage include sacrificial preparations and a mock sacrifice of the
initiate in which he is bound or locked in a dark enclosure (Gen. 22:9-10). Most rites of
passage include a substitution sacrifice which is found in a series of speeches,
substituted for the initiate, and sacrificed (Gen. 22:11-13). Many rites of passage include
the naming of the place or the renaming of the initiate or, more rarely, the officiant
(Gen. 22:14). Most initiatory rites of passage end with a blessing on the initiate, an
instatement into adulthood or the appropriate status (Gen. 22:15-18). Some rites of
passage end with the youth being required to find his own way home, to demonstrate his
newly gained status (Gen. 22:19).

The text of Genesis 22 has been examined from the point of view of an initiatory
structure as a rite of passage. No inconsistencies with this theory of interpretation were
found in the biblical text.

The reinterpretation of the text as a rite of passage provides a means of accounting for
most of the potential inconsistencies of Genesis 22. The incongruities of the speeches,
with the glaring inconsistency of calling Isaac Abraham’s only son, are seen to be
completely consistent with a rite of passage. The theological inconsistency of
commanding a human sacrifice disappears. The temptation of God is reduced to the
requirement of redeeming the first-born of every woman, or expressing that Abraham is
a model for future generations.

The question may be raised whether we have the right to interpret the text as an
initiatory structure since there is nothing in the text which says it is such. One might
raise a stronger case against another interpretation. To interpret the text otherwise
would leave us with the problems mentioned above, some of which are crucial and some
of which are glaringly apparent. We are justified in accepting an initiatory explanation
for more reasons than that it is so wide-spread throughout the world in many cultures in
Australia, Asia, Africa and America. The fact that initiatory structures are found in other
religious texts, such as the Kathopanishad, although certainly suggestive, does not impel
us to accept it in the case of a biblical text. We are justified in accepting the initiatory
interpretation because the redemption of the first-born is commanded in Exodus 13 and
described and alluded to many times. Anything that is commanded and alluded to must
also have a practice. It is the practice that is described in Genesis 22.

It must be mentioned that this text, the Sacrifice of Isaac, has had a great impact on
religious experience. The misconception that God might tell someone to engage in
human sacrifice has opened the way for criticism of religion altogether on one hand, and
to extreme cases of unstable practice on the other. Within Judaism, it appears that the
moral of the story is that God taught Abraham in a graphic way that He did not accept
human sacrifice. It was so graphic because the practice of human sacrifice in Canaan
might otherwise have influenced Abraham and his descendants.

Christianity has seen the moral of the story to be that Abraham’s obedience is an
example for all to follow. Both Judaism and Christianity have used the story as a source
of criticism of Islam. The Quran (33:103-106) reports the same events for Ishmael
instead of for Isaac. The Muslim commentator might refer to the “only son” in Genesis
22:2 as a remnant of the true text referring to Ishmael, who was the only one who was
ever the only son of Abraham in real life. Such a commentator would suggest that the
text was corrupted by the Jews to tell about Isaac instead.

In an initiatory scenario, the facts would have been different. Both Ishmael and Isaac,
both being first-born of their mothers, would have had to be redeemed. The initiatory
redemption, the substitutionary sacrifice was performed for both of them. In the end,
the biblical text is coherent, and the Bible and the Quran are both right. Everyone is
disarmed and we are all faced with living together in peace. Can we rise to that
challenge?

# Lecture 5 : Daniel: A Young Muslim Refugee and How He Coped

It is not an anachronism to call Daniel as Muslim. This is not merely true because the
holy Quran refers to Biblical figures as Muslims. Nor is it merely a recognition of the fact
that Daniel’s tomb continues to exist in Iran and is still the site of devotional visits by
Muslims. I use the word to refer to someone who intends to submit entirely to the will of
God, and this is, in my opinion, the only valid usage of the word. All people, no matter
what religious community or organization lays claim to their allegience, are Muslims, if
their intention is to submit their lives, belief, and behaviour to the will of the one true
God, Creator of all things.

The experience of Daniel as described in the book of the Bible that bears his name is
surely a prime example of such submission. On more than one occasion he and his
companions are reported to have risked their lives by disobeying the king in order to be
faithful to their commitment to the will of God. I shall examine three of those occasions
here, since they particularly deal with issues of interest to Muslims.

1. The Permitted Diet

The first narrative is found in Daniel 1:1-20.

1 In the third year of the reign of Jehoiakim king of Judah came Nebuchadnezzar king of
Babylon unto Jerusalem, and besieged it. 2 And the Lord gave Jehoiakim king of Judah
into his hand, with part of the vessels of the house of God: which he carried into the land
of Shinar to the house of his god; and he brought the vessels into the treasure house of
his god. 3 And the king spake unto Ashpenaz the master of his eunuchs, that he should
bring certain of the children of Israel, and of the king's seed, and of the princes; 4
Children in whom was no blemish, but well favoured, and skilful in all wisdom, and
cunning in knowledge, and understanding science, and such as had ability in them to
stand in the king's palace, and whom they might teach the learning and the tongue of
the Chaldeans. 5 And the king appointed them a daily provision of the king's meat, and
of the wine which he drank: so nourishing them three years, that at the end thereof they
might stand before the king. 6 Now among these were of the children of Judah, Daniel,
Hananiah, Mishael, and Azariah: 7 Unto whom the prince of the eunuchs gave names:
for he gave unto Daniel the name of Belteshazzar; and to Hananiah, of Shadrach; and to
Mishael, of Meshach; and to Azariah, of Abednego.

8 But Daniel purposed in his heart that he would not defile himself with the portion of
the king's meat, nor with the wine which he drank: therefore he requested of the prince
of the eunuchs that he might not defile himself. 9 Now God had brought Daniel into
favour and tender love with the prince of the eunuchs. 10 And the prince of the eunuchs
said unto Daniel, I fear my lord the king, who hath appointed your meat and your drink:
for why should he see your faces worse liking than the children which are of your sort?
then shall ye make me endanger my head to the king. 11 Then said Daniel to Melzar,
whom the prince of the eunuchs had set over Daniel, Hananiah, Mishael, and Azariah,
12 Prove thy servants, I beseech thee, ten days; and let them give us pulse to eat, and
water to drink. 13 Then let our countenances be looked upon before thee, and the
countenance of the children that eat of the portion of the king's meat: and as thou seest,
deal with thy servants. 14 So he consented to them in this matter, and proved them ten
days. 15 And at the end of ten days their countenances appeared fairer and fatter in flesh
than all the children which did eat the portion of the king's meat. 16 Thus Melzar took
away the portion of their meat, and the wine that they should drink; and gave them
pulse.

17 As for these four children, God gave them knowledge and skill in all learning and
wisdom: and Daniel had understanding in all visions and dreams. 18 Now at the end of
the days that the king had said he should bring them in, then the prince of the eunuchs
brought them in before Nebuchadnezzar. 19 And the king communed with them; and
among them all was found none like Daniel, Hananiah, Mishael, and Azariah: therefore
stood they before the king. 20 And in all matters of wisdom and understanding, that the
king enquired of them, he found them ten times better than all the magicians and
astrologers that were in all his realm.

The first thing to note about this story is that the young people were captives. They were
separated from their families, whose fate is unknown to us and perhaps to the young
people themselves. There is every possibility that they had died in the siege or in the
battle of Jerusalem. So the young people were not only captives, but possibly orphans as
well. Furthermore, they had gone through the ordeal of becoming eunuchs, which was
not only humiliating to the highest degree, but definitely life-threatening. It had been
impressed upon them that the reason they had suffered all of these things was because
their religion and culture were inferior to those of their captors.

On the other hand, these young people were selected for the highest possible honours.
Their success in the reconditioning and education being offered them depended on strict
submission, but was potentially a road to the greatest honours. So both their suffering
and the honours placed before them provided the highest possible incentives for
relinquishing the principles of their childhood faith.

The story describes their refusal to eat food that was forbidden by divine law. The divine
law of Leviticus 11 and Deuteronomy 14 is essentially the same as that of Shia Islam.
Sunni Islam differs from it in admitting all sea creatures, and Judaism differs from it in
forbidding the mixing of milk and meat. This is the law to which Daniel and his friends
were faithful.

The four young men were most diplomatic in approaching the matter. The text,
however, notes that Daniel purposed in his heart. This means that he would refuse to eat
forbidden foods at any cost, even at the cost of his life. The officer himself even feared
for his life. The text seems to indicate a miraculous intervention in favour of the young
men, although the debilitating effects of rich foods and alcohol on the other students
may have contributed to the relative excellence of the four young men as well. Whatever
the cause, the text clearly fosters absolute faithfulness. Liberal scholars indeed place its
writing in the post-exilic period, which was an era of profound contemplation of these
issues in the face of Hellenizing persecution of faithful Jews.

The word “pulse” here refers to a bland, meatless diet, apparently the simple peasant
diet that was generally available, probably made up of coarse barley bread and lentils. It
was certainly not interesting, varied, or attractive to young people. But it was the only
alternative to the court diet, which consisted of fine foods containing flesh from animals
that were slaughtered without draining the blood according to divine law, and species of
animals that were forbidden by divine law. Some have considered Daniel to represent a
vegetarian faction within Israelite religion at the time, but this is not justifiable. The
reason they were reduced to eating the simplest vegetarian food was because acceptable
flesh foods were unavailable. There was no one even qualified to slaughter them
properly.

The position of the four young men is an extreme example of what Muslim immigrants
as well as those born in non-Muslim societies have to face. There is suffering on one
hand, the punishment dealt out by society for non-conformity to non-Islamic customs.
On the other hand, there is every inducement to seduce Muslim children to be unfaithful
to Islamic (and thereby Biblical) principles by reaching for achievements offered in non-
Muslim societies. Although it is not likely that any Muslims in non-Muslim countries
actually face death for refusing to eat non-halal meat, still the pressures to do so are
sufficient to induce many to conform. A review of the experiences of Daniel might make
such people pause to think about their behaviour and the reasons for it.

2. Idolatry

The second story is found in Daniel 3:1-27.

1 Nebuchadnezzar the king made an image of gold, whose height was threescore cubits,
and the breadth thereof six cubits: he set it up in the plain of Dura, in the province of
Babylon. 2 Then Nebuchadnezzar the king sent to gather together the princes, the
governors, and the captains, the judges, the treasurers, the counsellors, the sheriffs, and
all the rulers of the provinces, to come to the dedication of the image which
Nebuchadnezzar the king had set up. 3 Then the princes, the governors, and captains,
the judges, the treasurers, the counsellors, the sheriffs, and all the rulers of the
provinces, were gathered together unto the dedication of the image that
Nebuchadnezzar the king had set up; and they stood before the image that
Nebuchadnezzar had set up. 4 Then an herald cried aloud, To you it is commanded, O
people, nations, and languages, 5 That at what time ye hear the sound of the cornet,
flute, harp, sackbut, psaltery, dulcimer, and all kinds of musick, ye fall down and
worship the golden image that Nebuchadnezzar the king hath set up: 6 And whoso
falleth not down and worshippeth shall the same hour be cast into the midst of a
burning fiery furnace. 7 Therefore at that time, when all the people heard the sound of
the cornet, flute, harp, sackbut, psaltery, and all kinds of musick, all the people, the
nations, and the languages, fell down and worshipped the golden image that
Nebuchadnezzar the king had set up.

8 Wherefore at that time certain Chaldeans came near, and accused the Jews. 9 They
spake and said to the king Nebuchadnezzar, O king, live for ever. 10 Thou, O king, hast
made a decree, that every man that shall hear the sound of the cornet, flute, harp,
sackbut, psaltery, and dulcimer, and all kinds of musick, shall fall down and worship the
golden image: 11 And whoso falleth not down and worshippeth, that he should be cast
into the midst of a burning fiery furnace. 12 There are certain Jews whom thou hast set
over the affairs of the province of Babylon, Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego; these
men, O king, have not regarded thee: they serve not thy gods, nor worship the golden
image which thou hast set up. 13 Then Nebuchadnezzar in his rage and fury commanded
to bring Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego. Then they brought these men before the
king. 14 Nebuchadnezzar spake and said unto them, Is it true, O Shadrach, Meshach,
and Abednego, do not ye serve my gods, nor worship the golden image which I have set
up? 15 Now if ye be ready that at what time ye hear the sound of the cornet, flute, harp,
sackbut, psaltery, and dulcimer, and all kinds of musick, ye fall down and worship the
image which I have made; well: but if ye worship not, ye shall be cast the same hour into
the midst of a burning fiery furnace; and who is that God that shall deliver you out of my
hands? 16 Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego, answered and said to the king, O
Nebuchadnezzar, we are not careful to answer thee in this matter. 17 If it be so, our God
whom we serve is able to deliver us from the burning fiery furnace, and he will deliver us
out of thine hand, O king. 18 But if not, be it known unto thee, O king, that we will not
serve thy gods, nor worship the golden image which thou hast set up.

19 Then was Nebuchadnezzar full of fury, and the form of his visage was changed
against Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego: therefore he spake, and commanded that
they should heat the furnace one seven times more than it was wont to be heated. 20
And he commanded the most mighty men that were in his army to bind Shadrach,
Meshach, and Abednego, and to cast them into the burning fiery furnace. 21 Then these
men were bound in their coats, their hosen, and their hats, and their other garments,
and were cast into the midst of the burning fiery furnace. 22 Therefore because the
king's commandment was urgent, and the furnace exceeding hot, the flame of the fire
slew those men that took up Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego. 23 And these three
men, Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego, fell down bound into the midst of the burning
fiery furnace. 24 Then Nebuchadnezzar the king was astonied, and rose up in haste, and
spake, and said unto his counsellors, Did not we cast three men bound into the midst of
the fire? They answered and said unto the king, True, O king. 25 He answered and said,
Lo, I see four men loose, walking in the midst of the fire, and they have no hurt; and the
form of the fourth is like the Son of God. 26 Then Nebuchadnezzar came near to the
mouth of the burning fiery furnace, and spake, and said, Shadrach, Meshach, and
Abednego, ye servants of the most high God, come forth, and come hither. Then
Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego, came forth of the midst of the fire. 27 And the
princes, governors, and captains, and the king's counsellors, being gathered together,
saw these men, upon whose bodies the fire had no power, nor was an hair of their head
singed, neither were their coats changed, nor the smell of fire had passed on them.
This story refers to a time when the companions of Daniel were no longer youths, but
mature functionaries in Babylon. The significance of the story lies in the fact that they
are clearly able to survive in the pagan or secular state and still be true to their
childhood faith. This one exceptional event merely confirms this. The story states the
deliverance to be miraculous, however, indicating that their success was dependant on
more than mere luck, diplomacy and skill.

The first think that will strike the Muslim reader is the king’s reference to one like the
Son of God. It is interesting that this is the only reference to the Son of God in the
Hebrew Scriptures, although the Greek New Testament includes it a number of times in
a number of ways. It is notable that the concept of the Son of God, insofar as Scripture
goes, was invented by a pagan king while engaging in idolatrous worship. That ought to
give pause for reflection.

The most obvious issue in this story is the issue of prostration in worship to the image of
an idol. There is a secondary issue that is not quite so obvious, and that is the role of
music. Music is almost universally a vehicle for worship. There are many reasons for
this. One is that music creates unified action, making concerted congregational liturgy
possible with a minimum of directions. Another reason is that music transmits a
common emotion or purpose to the group directly without appeal to reason and the act
of decision. In this case it is clear that music is being used for even more sinister
purposes and in even more manipulative ways.

An examination of the musical terms found in Daniel three gives indication of this
misuse of music. The word translated “psaltery” in verses 5, 7, and 15 above is
sumponyah and appears to be based on the Greek word meaning “to sound together”
from which we also have the English symphony. The ancient use of sounding tones
together to produce certain effects by their intervals is widespread and well-known to
musicologists. The art was highly developed by the Sumerians, from whom it was
inherited by the Babylonians. It is conceivable that the Babylonians could produce
intervals of sound that effected prostration on the crowds of people. In other words, they
were forced to fall down by the sound of the music itself. In that case, we are justified in
seeing the intention of the text to report a miracle in that the three men were able to
resist the effects of the music and remain upright before the golden image. It is very
possible that this miracle was seen to have reinforced their intention to faithfulness even
in the face of threatened death.

The connection between idolatry and music is one often overlooked, but one that is
clearly consonant with Islamic thought. Music in non-Islamic societies that has the
reputation of being secular is not thereby divorced from idolatry. It is not the repute of
the music that is significant, but the very character of the music. Mass contemporary
concerts are characterized by stereotyped bahviour particular to those events, behaviour
that is a forced form of idolatry in the guise of swaying, raising the hands, hysterical
shouting, and swooning. None of these behaviour patterns occur normally without the
stimulation of the required music. Research has shown such music to be not only
associated with chemical addiction, but to be an addiction in itself. But research is
hardly needed to demonstrate the fact, as every observer and every participant is able to
satisfy him or herself of the fact directly.

The story of Daniel’s three friends is a vivid reminder not only of the Islamic principle of
avoiding idolatry in all forms, but of the Islamic warning against the misuse of music.
Muslims living both in supposed Muslim societies and those living in other societies are
all susceptible to the detrimental effects of music. The witness of the book of Daniel is
that such music in itself constitutes idolatry, and as such in Islamic terms is shirk.

3. Prayer in Prostration

The third story of the book of Daniel that is highly relevant to Muslim life is the famous
story of Daniel in the lions’ den as reported in Daniel 6.

1 It pleased Darius to set over the kingdom an hundred and twenty princes, which
should be over the whole kingdom; 2 And over these three presidents; of whom Daniel
was first: that the princes might give accounts unto them, and the king should have no
damage. 3 Then this Daniel was preferred above the presidents and princes, because an
excellent spirit was in him; and the king thought to set him over the whole realm. 4
Then the presidents and princes sought to find occasion against Daniel concerning the
kingdom; but they could find none occasion nor fault; forasmuch as he was faithful,
neither was there any error or fault found in him. 5 Then said these men, We shall not
find any occasion against this Daniel, except we find it against him concerning the law of
his God.

6 Then these presidents and princes assembled together to the king, and said thus unto
him, King Darius, live for ever. 7 All the presidents of the kingdom, the governors, and
the princes, the counsellors, and the captains, have consulted together to establish a
royal statute, and to make a firm decree, that whosoever shall ask a petition of any God
or man for thirty days, save of thee, O king, he shall be cast into the den of lions. 8 Now,
O king, establish the decree, and sign the writing, that it be not changed, according to
the law of the Medes and Persians, which altereth not. 9 Wherefore king Darius signed
the writing and the decree. 10 Now when Daniel knew that the writing was signed, he
went into his house; and his windows being open in his chamber toward Jerusalem, he
kneeled upon his knees three times a day, and prayed, and gave thanks before his God,
as he did aforetime.

11 Then these men assembled, and found Daniel praying and making supplication
before his God. 12 Then they came near, and spake before the king concerning the king's
decree; Hast thou not signed a decree, that every man that shall ask a petition of any
God or man within thirty days, save of thee, O king, shall be cast into the den of lions?
The king answered and said, The thing is true, according to the law of the Medes and
Persians, which altereth not. 13 Then answered they and said before the king, That
Daniel, which is of the children of the captivity of Judah, regardeth not thee, O king, nor
the decree that thou hast signed, but maketh his petition three times a day. 14 Then the
king, when he heard these words, was sore displeased with himself, and set his heart on
Daniel to deliver him: and he laboured till the going down of the sun to deliver him. 15
Then these men assembled unto the king, and said unto the king, Know, O king, that the
law of the Medes and Persians is, That no decree nor statute which the king establisheth
may be changed. 16 Then the king commanded, and they brought Daniel, and cast him
into the den of lions. Now the king spake and said unto Daniel, Thy God whom thou
servest continually, he will deliver thee. 17 And a stone was brought, and laid upon the
mouth of the den; and the king sealed it with his own signet, and with the signet of his
lords; that the purpose might not be changed concerning Daniel.
18 Then the king went to his palace, and passed the night fasting: neither were
instruments of musick brought before him: and his sleep went from him. 19 Then the
king arose very early in the morning, and went in haste unto the den of lions. 20 And
when he came to the den, he cried with a lamentable voice unto Daniel: and the king
spake and said to Daniel, O Daniel, servant of the living God, is thy God, whom thou
servest continually, able to deliver thee from the lions? 21 Then said Daniel unto the
king, O king, live for ever. 22 My God hath sent his angel, and hath shut the lions'
mouths, that they have not hurt me: forasmuch as before him innocency was found in
me; and also before thee, O king, have I done no hurt.

The story is of a time far later than our first meeting with Daniel as a youth. This is
significant, for it shows that Daniel retained the forms of worship and the principles of
faith that he had attained as a child throughout a long and brilliant diplomatic career in
a heathen court. Even if he had retained these as a fresh youth, one might have expected
him to conform over time and with maturity. But we find that he has not done so.

There are several points of particular significance here. The first is Daniel’s obvious
belief that public prayer in prostration towards the holy city three times a day was
obligatory. If he had not thought it obligatory, he would certainly have discontinued it
for the mere thirty days of the prohibition. It was thus more than his stated custom. It
was the expression of his deep religious belief.

Besides the obligation of the prayer, we need to note the obligatory elements of the
prayer as well. First, it is addressed to God alone. Secondly, it takes place at regular daily
intervals, which are specifically early morning, afternoon, and evening. Thirdly, it
includes the physical posture of prostration. Fourthly, it takes place in a specific
direction, that is, the city of Jerusalem. The place of sacrifice and worship was moved to
Jerusalem at the time of David where it remained until the time of Muhammad.
Jerusalem was the focus of prayer or the kibla of Daniel’s time. It is necessary to note
that the temple of Jerusalem had been destroyed probably at the time when Daniel was
taken captive. We thus find Daniel praying in the direction of a pile of rubble for seventy
years or so. We find him doing so even at the risk of his life. One is overcome with awe
before faith of this magnitude, but the implications are devastating for contemporary
behaviour. One wonders by what right have the people of any religious tradition paying
lipservice to the Bible relinquished the practice of daily, regular prayer in prostration
towards the holy city. This one narrative alone identifies the Bible as the book of those
who pray daily in prostration and of no other people.

Although all three of these narratives from the book of Daniel make strong appeal to
miraculous divine intervention, they also raise a very relevant issue. That issue is the
possibility of maintaining a pure and active faith and practice within a hostile
environment. This is precisely what Muslims are called upon to do, not only in Western
societies but oftentimes under the neo-colonial regimes of the Middle East and other
parts of the world. The book of Daniel is a strong witness that this is not only possible,
but that it is the only right alternative.

Two factors are involved in the process, and it is not my intention to proclaim them as
the right way for Muslims to go. Nevertheless, they arise naturally from the text. The
first is the attitude of courtesy and diplomacy on the part of the four men in every
situation. That is, the do not rise up in rebellion. They do not start revolutions in Iraq or
Iran. They deal with the existing powers in ways that are open to them. Secondly, they
make no compromise whatsoever with their belief and practice. The result is polite
insubordination. It is effective because they are willing to lay their lives on the line.

It appears clear that the book of Daniel is a Biblical text containing issues of the highest
relevance specifically to Muslims. It thus shows the Bible to be much the property of
Muslims, much more so than the property of the religious traditions that actually claim
it, but which deny in practice the sacred duties expressed in its pages. Beyond this, the
book of Daniel appears to be worthy of further, more detailed study for the
contemplation of strategies for dealing with these issues that continue to be relevant in
the contemporary world. A two-pronged approach, on one hand using valid means of
action and avoiding violence, and on the other absolute adherence to Islamic principle
and practice, might be far more productive than the perpetration of such tragedies as
the events of 11 September 2001.

# Lecture 6 : The Book of the Gospel Rediscovered


Wherever I go to lecture I hear one question first of all: “What is the true Gospel of
Jesus?” There is always someone who wants to know whether the book of the Gospel has
been irretrievably lost, or whether it is to be found among the apocryphal gospels not
included by the Church fathers in the canon of the New Testament. I have invariably had
to answer that unfortunately all of the books which claim to be the Gospel of Jesus
contain passages that are clearly corruptions of the original text, so that even if we could
point to one or another book as that received by Jesus as the Gospel, it would not be
perfectly intact. This is an area in which historical criticism has serve us well.

The canonical gospels, or the books in the Christian Bible which are called gospels, do
not claim to be the message of God sent down to Jesus. They do not correspond to what
the holy Quran calls the Injil or Gospel, nor is such a document mentioned in them.
They bear the title in Greek, evangelion, from which comes the Arabic word Injil, but
they do not claim to be divine messages as such. Rather, they are collections of stories
about what Jesus did and said. As such, they are much more in the character of Islamic
hadith literature than they are in the character of a revealed book as Muslims think of it.
Some of the gospels not included in the Bible are collections of sayings, but even these
generally remind us more of ahadith than of the holy Quran or the Hebrew prophetic
writings. None of the so-called gospels even claims to be a book sent down from God to
Jesus. All of them claim to be the work of one author-witness, not always an eye-
witness, but historical criticism leads us to doubt even that in most cases.

Much has been written about the value and validity of the Gospels, both canonical and
apocryphal, that we have in our possession. This scholarship might make us turn our
sights towards other sources, such as new archeological finds, in our search for the Injil
mentioned in the holy Quran. So far little in that way has turned up. The Qumran texts,
to cite the most popular source, might contain some passages worthy of examination by
the criteria presented below, but do not provide us with a book that in itself could be
considered the lost Gospel of Jesus.

There is another possibility. It may be that the true Gospel, the book of revelation sent
down to Jesus lies buried, not in a cave or under debris of dust and stones, but under the
encrusted additions to one or another of the Gospels we possess. The possibility that the
true Gospel might be a portion, rather than the whole, of any one of the candidates,
seems to have escaped the notice of most seekers.
An examination of the extant Gospels may well bring to light such a document, a book
which can be truly considered the revelation once sent down to Jesus the Messiah.
Before beginning such an examination, however, it is necessary to lay down some
criteria by which we might recognize a book of revelation. I offer the following criteria.

1) The Gospel might exist as fragments of the original, part of which has been lost and
part of which may have been preserved imperfectly.

2) A book of revelation will be couched mainly in words that can best be ascribed to God
Himself, rather than to the prophet.

3) A book of revelation will be highly relevant to the specific religious problems of the
time. It will point out innovations as false, and call people to return to forgotten or
neglected principles in earlier revelation.

4) A book of revelation will not conflict with the basic principles of faith declared in
earlier revelations.

Thus there are considerations of the state of the document, style of speech, relevance,
and consistency. By applying these four criteria, there is every likelihood that if any
portion of the true Gospel of Jesus remains hidden within the extant gospels, we shall be
able to identify it. The criteria are precise enough to distinguish the true Gospel from
other material.

Although the material at first appears rather abundant, the second criterion, that of
style, requires us to examine only the discourses, and to chose among them those which
are couched in words that might best be ascribed to God rather than the prophet. Such
an exercise immediately excludes the bulk of material. Some passages in the apocryphal
gospels might require further examination, but among the canonical Gospels only the
following remains as a candidate after applying the criterion of style: Matthew 23. The
contents of this passage are found scattered through discourses in Luke 11-13, but far
more fragmented than in Matthew 23. This suggests that other parts of Jesus’s
discourses may also be quoted from the original Gospel, without this being apparent.
The passage in Matthew 23, however, is clearly one which demands closer examination.

The criterion of style is difficult to apply in detail, because the Gospel must have been
originally given in Hebrew or possibly Aramaic, while it has come down to us in Greek.
The original language is lacking altogether, although the Syriac versions may come
closer to it than the Greek ones, despite the fact that they are probably further
translations from the Greek.

The first stylistic criterion is the ascription of speech to God. The whole passage is
consistent with this beginning with verse two and ending with verse 35. Verse 36 begins
with the words “Truly I say to you” and this may mark the point at which Jesus speaks
with his own words.Verses 37 and 38 are therefore ambiguous as to whether they form a
part of the divine revelation or constitute the commentary attached to the revelation by
the prophet. Verse 39 includes the expression “you shall not see me,” with the word
“me” clearly referring to the speaker, that is, the prophet himself. Thus verse 39 forms
the last possible limit of the divine revelation. We can conclude that at least verses 2-35
may form the text of the Injil sent down to Jesus or a part of it.

A second stylistic criterion might be whether the text shows any likeness to earlier texts
of revelation. In terms of length, it is short, but within the bounds of known texts of
revelation. The book of the prophet Obadiah consists of only 21 verses, and several
others are not much longer. On that basis, the passage in question could actually be the
entire text of the Injil, or the greater part of it. As it stands it forms a coherent whole.
Most prophetic writings echo something of the revelation to Moses. The greater portion
of Matthew 23 consists of woes. Woes are known as a literary device in several prophets
and are one of the most prevalent forms of Hebrew prophetic utterance. The canonical
paradigm is in Deuteronomy 27:15-26, but the form is otherwise common. Jesus
himself, like other prophets before him, uses the device in his own words in Luke 6:24-
26.
In sum, the criterion of style, based on literary form, length of the document, and
ascribability of the speech to God, is consonant with the theory that Matthew 23 is a text
of divine revelation.

The third criterion is that of relevance. The times of Jesus gave evidence of very
particular problems. These were based on the ways in which the various sects of
Judaism, faced with Roman rule, sought to accommodate the principles of their faith in
view of survival. Two issues were crucial: first, to minimize the principle of divinely
appointed leadership which might be seen as a threat to Roman power, and second, to
circumvent any practices which might conflict with Roman life. Finally, we should
expect to find a condemnation of any who engaged in these two forms of
accommodation to Rome. In brief, we should expect Jesus to point out 1) a weakened
reliance on divinely appointed leadership which might be a threat to Roman rule, 2)
specific features of neglecting the law or misapplying it, and 3) condemnation for such.
An examination of the text of Matthew 23 reveals that every verse falls into one of these
three categories. The text is thus established as relevant to the times, and therefore
consonant with the theory that it is a text of divine revelation.

The fourth criterion is whether or not the text conflicts with earlier revelation. An
examination of the passage does not reveal any point which is in conflict with the earlier
extant revelation as we have it in the Hebrew writings. Several passages of the law are
cited and commented upon in ways consonant with the Hebrew prophets, namely, in
terms of justice. The final criterion is satisfied in this. However, the unicity of God is the
central issue of revelation, and it is also explicitly maintained in verse 9. The passage
can thus be seen not to conflict with earlier revelation, but rather to agree with it in both
content and spirit, and to cite it in several matters.

On the basis of all four criteria, it is possible to say that Matthew 23:2-35 is a likely
candidate as the Injil of Jesus referred to by the holy Quran, or a portion of it. The rest
of the canonical gospel material is largely of the character of hadith or tradition, and
describes more or less accurately, to the extent one can rely on the opinion of
researchers, the words and actions of Jesus.
The True Book of the Gospel: Matthew 23

1 Then Jesus spoke to the multitude, and to his disciples, 2 And said, The scribes and the
Pharisees sit in Moses' place: 3 So everything they tell you to observe, observe and do;
but do not follow their example, because they do not act as they speak. 4 For they
mandate heavy burdens and hard to carry, and lay them on men's shoulders; but they
themselves will not move them with one of their fingers.

The Beginning of the discourse establishes the theme of divine guidance and its misuse.
The reference to Moses’ seat reveals this clearly. Those who have usurped this
appointment are called scribes and Pharisees. The scribes probably relate specifically to
the Saduccees, who were the official guardians of the faith, collaborators with Rome.
They limited the application of the law to its narrowest sense, thus minimizing any
conflict with the ruling power. The Pharisees dispensed with the need for divine
guidance by laying down scholarly principles of interpretation. This rejection of the
divinely appointed leader made it possible to apply the law, through rabbinical
interpretation, to a broader segment of life without becoming a threat to Roman
hegemony.

In verse three the Gospel recognizes that these two sects maintain the law in some
sense, so that when they say that the law must be upheld, they are correct and may be
followed. However, their own behaviour is not according to the law, at least in that they
ignore divine guidance or the divinely appointed leadership.

This seems to be a citation of the prophet Malachi 2:7,8. For the priest’s lips should keep
knowledge, and they should seek the law at his mouth: for he is the messenger of the
Lord of hosts. But you are departed out of the way, you have caused many to stumble at
the law; you have corrupted the covenant of Levi, says the Lord of hosts. This text is
relevant to the situation, but more importantly situates this passage as a continuation of
Malachi, that is, as a prophecy which logically follows the book of Malachi. The book of
Malachi is the last book of prophets, and in the Christian Scriptures immediately
precedes the Gospel of Matthew.

There is some textual variation in verse four in regard to heavy burdens, but it does not
modify the meaning. Verse four adds that their interpretation, which ignores divine
guidance, is actually more difficult to observe than verdicts made under divine
appointment. That is, qiyas or rabbinical method, is a burdensome approach and turns
divine law into a harsh system difficult to carry out.

5 But everything they do, they do to be seen by others: they make their phylacteries
broad, and enlarge the borders of their garments, 6 And love the highest places at feasts,
and the chief seats in the synagogues, 7 And greetings in the markets, and for people to
call them, Rabbi, Rabbi.

This text points out that the rabbinical method of attaining a verdict, or the use of qiyas,
leads to action which may be termed mura’i, or action performed for the purpose of
being seen and respected by others. Two examples of this are given in making
phylacteries large, and lengthening the fringes on their garments. The enlarged
phylacteries and the extravagantly long garment fringes have become standard in
modern Jewish practice, so that they are no longer a sign of mura’i action. The size of
these no longer varies. It does not appear that phylacteries and fringes as such are
condemned here. Both are based on Mosaic law, but it seems that the phylacteries arose
through a misapprehension of Deuteronomy 6:8. Once Hebrew lost its character as the
spoken language of the people rabbis often erred in misplaced concreteness. The
abstract meaning of the terms of Deuteronomy 6:8 are implicit from Exodus 13:9, where
the same expressions are applied to unleavened bread, which cannot be placed between
the eyes or worn on the hand.

By the same token, fringes refer in Mosaic law to the tied ends of the woof of a woven
outer cloak in one piece, corresponding to a modern blanket. The application of such to
an undergarment has no prophetic justification. Thus both practices as a form of
spiritual show are irrelevant to modern life, but specifically relevant to first century
Palestine.
The expressions of these verses make no comment on the validity of using phylacteries
and fringes as such, or attending feasts, synagogues, and markets. The comment is
purely in reference to seeking admiration and status. The use of the term rabbi is dealt
with in the next verse.

8 But you, do not be called Rabbi: for your Master is one, even Christ; and all of you are
brothers.

The use of the term rabbi is forbidden on the basis that it conflicts with the authority of
the Messiah. The text here concentrates on the aspect of Jewish accommodation to
Rome which denigrates divine guidance, that is, the divinely appointed leader.

9 And call no one on earth your father: for your Father, who is in heaven, is one.

This text continues the argument against the proliferation of religious authorities to the
detriment of the authority of the divinely appointed. It does not refer to the physical,
biological relationship, but to the use of the word father as a term of respect for those in
authority. At the same time the text affirms the unicity of God. The reference is oblique,
because the unicity of God was never questioned in the context of Jesus and first century
Judaism. There is no need to belabour it.

10 Do not be called masters either: for your Master, even Christ, is one.

Here the text reaffirms the divine appointment of leadership. The reaffirmation takes
the local situation into account. This was the principle that first century Judaism,
particularly its leadership, denied.
11 But the one who is greatest among you shall be your servant. 12 And whoever exalts
himself shall be humbled; and whoever humbles himself shall be exalted.

Status-oriented Roman society had had an effect on Jewish society. The text here
attempts to reverse that.

13 But woe to you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! Because you shut people out of the
kingdom of heaven: for you do not go into it yourselves, neither do you let those enter it
who want to go in.

Here begin the woes, or condemnations. It has been established that the major sects and
leadership of first century Judaism had accommodated to Rome by denigrating the role
of the divinely appointed leader and by adopting illicit ways of interpreting and applying
the law. These are condemned, with the series of woes following. As compared to the
New Testament generally, this chapter is particularly well preserved. In some
manuscripts, however, this and the following verse are reversed.

14 Woe to you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! Because you eat up widows' houses,
and make long prayer for a pretence: therefore you shall receive the greater
condemnation.

The social concern here is typical of the Hebrew prophetic utterance, and another
evidence that this passage may be the lost Gospel of Jesus.

15 Woe to you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! Because you go across sea and land to
make one convert, and when he is made, you make him twice the child of hell as you
yourselves.

Unlike today, first century Judaism was a proselytizing faith. The matter dealt with here
is the fact that the proselyte would be unaware that changes had taken place in the faith
through accommodation to Rome, and thus would be more likely to embrace the wrong
system whole-heartedly. The convert is more enthusiastic than one born in the faith.

16 Woe to you, blind guides, who say, Whoever swears by the temple, it is nothing; but
whoever swears by the gold of the temple, he is responsible. 17 Fools and blind ones:
which is greater, the gold, or the temple that sanctifies the gold? 18 And, Whoever
swears by the altar, it is nothing; but whoever swears by the gift that is on it, he is
responsible. 19 Fools and blind ones: which is greater, the gift, or the altar that sanctifies
the gift? 20 Whoever therefore swears by the altar, swears by it, and by everything on it.
21 And whoever swears by the temple, swears by it, and by the one him that dwells in it.
22 And the one that swears by heaven, swears by the throne of God, and by the one who
sit on it.

This is a reference to the kind of misapplication of the law which arises through the use
of a false method of attaining a verdict. Application by the divinely appointed leader is
always just, but application by the machinations of a scholar will provide means of
circumventing the law for those who look up to his expertise. The relationship which
automatically arises between a scholar and an authority demanding a verdict from him
is a corrupting one. The specific matter here is the formulation of a legal oath, with the
specification that a formal error relieves the client of responsibility. The practice thus
would be to include a formal error whenever one wished to give the impression of
making an oath, yet with the intention of disregarding it. The obvious injustice of such
an action cannot be missed by the poorest observer, yet all non-imamic law is based on
such circumvention. The common term is loophole.

The word “fools” in verse 19 is missing in some manuscripts.


23 Woe to you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! Because you pay tithe of mint and
anise and cummin, and have omitted the weightier matters of the law, judgment, mercy,
and faith: you should have done these, and not have left the other undone. 24 Blind
guides, who strain at a gnat, and swallow a camel.

Here the text reverts again to the typical social concern to be found in the Hebrew
prophets. Again, this is evidence that this passage belongs to the same tradition as the
Hebrew prophets in contrast to the rest of the material in the Gospel of Matthew. The
clear implication is that this is a part of the book called Injil in the holy Quran and sent
down to Jesus.

25 Woe to you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! Because you make the outside of the
cup and the platter clean, but inside they are full of extortion and excess. 26 Blind
Pharisee, first clean what is inside the cup and platter,so that the outside of them may be
clean also. 27 Woe to you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! Because you are like white-
washed sepulchres, which indeed appear beautiful on the outside, but inside are full of
dead men's bones, and of all uncleanness. 28 Even so you also outwardly appear
righteous to people, but inside you are full of hypocrisy and iniquity.

These condemnations turn on the matter of hypocrisy. The implication is that false
methods of attaining verdicts, methods invented for the purpose of accommodating with
Rome for survival, lead to hypocrisy if only because the verdicts so obtained do not
correspond with the real needs of humankind, as do those attained through the
intervention of a duly appointed divine representative. Justice cannot be attained or
maintained except by following the divinely given process of prophecy and divine
guidance.

29 Woe to you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! because you build the tombs of the
prophets, and garnish the sepulchres of the righteous, 30 And say, If we had been in the
days of our fathers, we would not have participated with them in taking the blood of the
prophets. 31 So you are witnesses about yourselves, that you are the children of those
who killed the prophets. 32 Fill up then the measure of your fathers. 33 Serpents,
generation of vipers, how can you escape the damnation of hell?
The awfulness of these final woes perhaps goes beyond the expressions of the Hebrew
prophets themselves, but is a logical continuation of them. The question of how to
escape damnation is answered in the following verse, which is to follow the prophets,
the divine guides (sophos), and scribes or transmitters of the written law.

Jesus does not condemn building the tombs of the prophets and garnishing their
sepulchres as such, any more than he condemns paying tithes. What he condemns is the
hypocrisy of doing so while failing to follow the prophets. This is therefore an oblique
justification for caring for and visiting the tombs of the prophets and divine guides (the
righteous), a practice which has given rise to some division in Islam.

34 So see, I send to you prophets, and wise men, and scribes: and some of them you will
kill and crucify; and some of them you will beat in your synagogues, and persecute them
from city to city:

The way of salvation is clearly given: it is to follow the instruction of the prophets,
submit to the authority of the divinely appointed leaders (sophos), and follow those who
transmit the written law. This is followed by the prophecy that the first century Jews will
fail to do this, and rather participate in the destruction of those sent to them by God.

35 That upon you may come all the righteous blood shed upon the earth, from the blood
of righteous Abel to the blood of Zacharias son of Barachias, whom you killed between
the temple and the altar.

This prophecy probably refers to the destruction of Jerusalem in 70 A.D., although the
whole condemnation is addressed not to the Jewish people but to their leaders.
Nevertheless, the innocent died with the guilty.
36 Truly I say to you, All these things shall come upon this generation.

Here no doubt begins Jesus’s commentary on the Gospel. He notes that it will be
fulfilled on the contemporary generation, which we see to be historically accurate. The
attempted collaboration with Rome did not succeed, partly because of the irritation to
the Romans caused by the Zealots and partly because of the perfidity of the Sadduccees.
The Pharisees survived to bring rabbinical method to a point of perfection. Rabbinical
method cannot be treated with the same condemnation as it is here, for it is no longer an
attempt to accommodate to Rome, but has become crystalized into a religious system in
its own right. It must be judged in part today for other features: 1) the misapplication of
certain features of law, 2) failure to recognize the Messiah, 3) failure to recognize the
final prophet, and 4) failure to integrate divine guidance into the establishment of right
practice. These obviously have their roots in the original accommodation to Rome. This
should have been avoided (hindsight is unfortunately more clear-sighted than foresight)
by recourse to taqiyya or disimulation following the example of Abraham, rather than
any form of accommodation with Rome.

It ought to be pointed out that if this is the Gospel or Injil more or less as Jesus received
it, there are vast implications for Christianity. First of all, the Gospel relates primarily to
the specific problems within first century Judaism. It does not support or imply the
establishment of a system of faith distinct from first century Judaism, not to mention
the faith implicit in the Hebrew Scriptures now contained in Christian Bibles. The
content of the Gospel emphatically opposes all accommodation with Rome.
Unfortunately, Christianity as a historical phenomenon is hardly anything but an
accommodation to Rome. The Gospel text does not support the doctrine of the Trinity.
Rather, it opposes it with the clear presupposition of the unicity of God. The Gospel text
does not support the atonement for sin on the cross. Rather, it states categorically that
salvation is the product of obedience to divine law as transmitted through the prophets,
the divinely appointed leaders, and those who transmit the written law. Finally, there is
no justification for the establishment of any such institution as the Christian Church has
become. On the contrary, the authority of divine guidance in the divinely appointed
leader is maintained throughout. If the Gospel contains strong language in
condemnation of the Jewish leadership in the first century, its implied condemnation of
the Christian establishment is devastating.
Despite the fact that the text relates clearly to a particular time and place with its
particular problems, it can still serve as a witness of what has always been the right way.
First, there is a strong witness of the unicity of God in verse 9. Social concerns imply
divine justice time and again. Then the principle of prophecy is strongly expressed. The
need for adherence to the divinely appointed leader is a central issue. Finally, human
responsibility is maintained even in the face of oppression and the temptation to
accommodate for survival in a world without respect for divine law. All comes to a head
in the proclamation of divine judgment. These five great principles of true faith are the
core of the Gospel.

# Lecture 7 : The Gospel: The Secret the Church Never Told

The Christian Church has been claiming to represent the Gospel of Jesus Christ for
centuries. The amazing fact is that Christians never actually tell anybody what the
Gospel is according to their own sacred book, the New Testament. Any Christian can tell
you what the Gospel is, if you ask him. But the answer is invariably different from the
answer given by the New Testament itself.

What is the big secret the Church is keeping under cover, and why do they not want you
to know about it? You are about to find out what the big secret is, but the reason the
Church has been hiding the facts is something only Christian leaders can explain.

Most Christians one meets contend that the most important thing to know is the Gospel.
Yet when one asks them what the Gospel is, the answer vary. The more liturgical types
tend to say that the Gospel is the written portion of the Bible which describes the life
and death of Jesus on earth. This is a good answer as far as it goes, for each of the four
canonical Biblical books referred to as the Gospel contain the word in their title, to
evangelion, in Greek. But these titles have all been added by a late hand. The more
evangelical types answer something on the following order: “The Gospel is the good
news that Jesus died to atone for our sins on the cross so that we might be saved
through faith in Him.”
I followed the advice of my evangelical friends and took a look at the Greek Scriptures,
the central Christian source of faith and practice, to see what the Bible says the Gospel
is. All of the passages quoted in this study are from the book called the New Testament.
If the Gospel is a particular message, the New Testament ought to be very clear about
exactly what that message is. I was not surprised to find that the word Gospel appears
nearly a hundred times in the King James Version of the New Testament to translate the
Greek word to evangelion, a word often translated into common speech as the “good
news.” I was surprised to find that the word is almost always used in a sentence which
presupposes that the reader already knows what the good news is. The context may say
something about the Gospel, about its power or glory or even affliction. It may say
something, and most generally does, about the preaching of the gospel, by whom and
where and under what circumstances. The texts which mention the Gospel without
defining it clearly, without telling what the message actually is, are the following:
Matthew 4:23; 9:35; 11:5; 26:13; Mark 1:1; 8:35; 10:29; 13:10; 14:9; Luke 4:18; 7:22; 9:6;
20:1; Acts 8:25; 14:7; 14:21; 15:7; 16:10; Romans 1:9; 1:15; 10:15; 10:16; 11:28; 15:16;
15:19; 15:20; 15:29; 1 Corinthians 4:15; 9:12; 9:14; 9:16; 9:17; 9:18; 9:23; 15:1; 2
Corinthians 2:12; 4:3; 4:4; 8:18; 9:13; 10:14; 10:16; 11:4; 11:7; Galatians 2:5; 2:14; 4:13;
Ephesians 6:15; 6:19; Philippians 1:5; 1:7; 1:12; 1:17; 2:22; 4:3; 4:15; 1 Thessalonians 2:2;
2:4; 2:8; 2:9; 3:2 1; Timothy 1:11; 2 Timothy 1:8; Philemon 1:13; Hebrews 4:2; 1 Peter
1:12; 4:6; 4:17. Anyone can examine these texts personally, but without finding anything
in the text or context to indicate exactly what the message of the Gospel is, exactly what
the apostles or Jesus were preaching as the Gospel. This leaves us with a mere handful
of texts which reveal anything about the Gospel at all. It is fairly easy to review them and
summarize the information they contain.

The first text is in Mark 1:14,15 “Now after that John was put in prison, Jesus came into
Galilee, preaching the gospel of the kingdom of God, And saying, The time is fulfilled,
and the kingdom of God is at hand: repent ye, and believe the gospel.” Mark 1:14 says
that Jesus came preaching the Gospel. Verse 15 tells what Jesus actually said when he
preached the Gospel.

So we can take Mark 1:15 as a summary of the Gospel as Jesus preached it. It contains
two items of news or information, and two commands. The first item of information is
that the time is fulfilled, that is, that the predicted time of some prophecy had come to a
terminus. The second item of information is that the kingdom of God is near. These two
pieces of information were very apt for the time and place. They are not universal or
eternal messages. They relate specifically to the hopes of the Jews in Palestine at that
period of the Roman Empire. The clear implication is that the prophecies gave a specific
time for God to set up a kingdom or reign on earth, and that reign should penetrate the
Roman empire at the time and place at which Jesus appeared as Messiah. The Gospel
portrayed here as information is very local in character.

The two commands given in function of that information are a bit more universal in
scope. The first command is to repent. The second is to believe the Gospel, that is, the
message that God’s kingdom was about to penetrate the Roman Empire. The word
translated “repent” is metanoeite which comes from metanous. Just as metaphysics goes
beyond the physical to the matters of the mind, this “metanoia” goes beyond the matters
of the mind. In other words, Jesus appears to be telling the people not to be deceived by
what they see and think, but to go beyond that to realize something that their minds
could not tell them, that what he is saying is true, that God is about to set up His
kingdom. The clear inference is that despite the situation and what it seems to be, they
owe their ultimate allegiance to God.

The next text is in Mark 16:15,16. “And he said unto them, Go ye into all the world, and
preach the gospel to every creature. He that believeth and is baptized shall be saved; but
he that believeth not shall be damned.” This text does not give more detail about the
content of the message at all. It refers to the delivering of the message, and the results of
it. Some will believe and be saved, and others will not believe, and be damned. That is,
some will realize that they owe ultimate allegiance to God, and believing that, they may
be saved. Others will deny obedience to the sovereignty of God, and consequently will be
lost. An interesting point is that baptism is mentioned along with belief as one of the
requisites for being saved. Baptism is not very well defined in the New Testament either.
It arose out of the Jewish practices of ablutions, in two contexts. The one was conversion
to Judaism, and the other was the baptism of repentance, such as that represented by
John. The baptism which came into use among the early followers of Jesus doubtlessly
included those characteristics, and apparently more as well. But whatever it meant, it
was clearly within a purity code with a practice of ablutions. Furthermore, whatever it
meant, it was not a part of the proclamation of the Gospel, but a result and response to
it, one coupled with belief in the sovereignty or “kingdom” of God.

Baptism is the first matter that is associated with the Gospel in this text, but it is not the
only one. If it is intrinsic to the Gospel proclamation itself, then the issues in the
following texts are as well. That is, if we accept baptism as a part of the Gospel message,
then we must accept casting out devils, speaking in tongues, handling serpents, drinking
poison without being hurt, and healing the sick by laying on hands. Mark 16:17-18. “And
these signs shall follow them that believe; In my name shall they cast out devils; they
shall speak with new tongues; They shall take up serpents; and if they drink any deadly
thing, it shall not hurt them; they shall lay hands on the sick, and they shall recover.”
There are episodes described in the four Gospels and in the Book of Acts which describe
all of these events as taking place. But they are not essentially and intrinsically the
message of the Gospel. The Gospel is not the good news that people will start picking up
snakes.

The context of the preaching of the Gospel is described with colorful detail, but the
actual content of the message is given only briefly and rarely. Nevertheless, an
occasional word can shed light on the nature of the Gospel message. Such is found in
Acts 20:24 “But none of these things move me, neither count I my life dear unto myself,
so that I might finish my course with joy, and the ministry, which I have received of the
Lord Jesus, to testify the gospel of the grace of God.” Here the sentence ends with what
could be stated in ordinary speech as “the good news of the gift of God.” This text does
not tell what that gift is. If we ponder it in the light of Mark 1:15, it suggests that the gift
of God is the replacement of human despotism with the rule of God. But the text does
not state this.

It is significant that the Gospels and the Book of Acts do not give direct information on
what the Gospel is except in Mark 1:15. We are completely dependent on that one text to
know what the Gospel is. At this point we turn to the epistles. There is only one relevant
text in the epistles written by a man who actually knew and heard Jesus proclaiming the
Gospel. That is 1 Peter 1:25 “But the word of the Lord endureth for ever. And this is the
word which by the gospel is preached unto you.” The enlightening bit of information
given here is that the Gospel is preached or proclaimed by means of the “word of the
Lord.” In the context, the word of the Lord can only refer to the Hebrew Scriptures, and
to nothing else. At this point we are justified in affirming that the Gospel is the message
that God is sovereign, that is, that allegiance and obedience are due to Him, even in so
despotic a society as the Roman empire, and that this message is proclaimed by the use
of the Hebrew Scriptures.
Having got a clear idea from those witnesses of the Gospel who claim to have heard it
directly from the mouth of Jesus, we can now turn to the epistles of Paul. The writings of
St. Paul, according to St. Peter, are difficult to understand. Furthermore, he is not a
direct witness. Rather, he claims to be a witness on the basis of a vision long after the
disappearance of Jesus. He never knew Jesus personally. He claimed to have met Jesus
on the road to Damascus, and on the basis of that visionary experience, he made several
assumptions. First of all, it is clear that he assumed that Jesus had been killed. He had
this merely on hearsay. He was not there to see it happen, and cannot therefore be a
valid witness of the fact. Secondly, having seen Jesus in vision, he assumed that he had
been resurrected from the dead. St. Paul had belonged to the sect of Pharisees, who were
criticized by the Saduccees among the Jews for believing in the resurrection from the
dead. Paul latched on to this visionary experience to begin to proclaim the resurrection.
He went around stirring up controversy among Jews over the question of the
resurrection and for this he was finally imprisoned and sent to Rome for trial. St. Paul’s
proclamation of the Gospel is submerged in this course of events in his personal life. The
story is found not only in his epistles, especially the beginning of Galatians, but also in
the last half of the Book of Acts.

The first text of relevance is Romans 1:1 “Paul, a servant of Jesus Christ, called to be an
apostle, separated unto the gospel of God, (Which he had promised afore by his
prophets in the holy scriptures.)” At this point Paul’s concept of the Gospel overlaps
completely with what we have seen among the eye-witnesses. But Paul goes on to add
his own cogitations and understanding of the Gospel in verses three and four.
“Concerning his Son Jesus Christ our Lord, which was made of the seed of David
according to the flesh; And declared to be the Son of God with power, according to the
spirit of holiness, by the resurrection from the dead:” What he says here may very well
be true, but it is an addition determined by his personal experience, and not a part of the
Gospel as proclaimed by Jesus and his eye-witness apostles. It is missing in Mark 1:15,
the only expression of the content of the Gospel to be found overtly stated by the
evangelists. It has more to do with Paul’s confrontation with the Saduccees about the
resurrection than it does with what we find Jesus actually saying in Mark 1:15. St. Paul
repeats this allegation on one other occasion. 2 Timothy 2:8 “Remember that Jesus
Christ of the seed of David was raised from the dead according to my gospel.” Here he
admits that this clause is a part of “my” Gospel, not necessarily a part of the original.

Now whether or not we can accept what Paul says about the resurrection as true, there is
one thing that is of primary importance. What is the result or response of Paul’s Gospel?
It is found in verse 5 “By whom we have received grace and apostleship, for obedience to
the faith among all nations, for his name.” Paul’s Son of God and resurrection theme,
arising from his sectarian experience as a Jew, is a parenthesis which does not effect the
core of his Gospel. He has clearly repeated the apostolic Gospel in verses one and two,
which is the proclamation of the sovereignty of God even in the Roman empire. The
result of that proclamation, even after Paul’s discursus into Jewish sectarian conflict is
still the same as that of the other apostles: grace for obedience to the faith. St. Paul,
despite his personal distraction and despite not being a direct eye-witness to the
proclamation of the Gospel, still preserves the apostolic proclamation of the sovereignty
of God and the good news of grace for obedience even under Rome.

Paul’s input is truly illuminating. In Romans 1:16 “For I am not ashamed of the gospel of
Christ: for it is the power of God unto salvation to every one that believeth; to the Jew
first, and also to the Greek.” He gives us two new pieces of information here. The first is
that the Gospel contains power. That is, it is not merely the proclamation that people
ought and must obey God rather than Caesar no matter what the consequences. It is also
a gift of power, that is, the possibility to put into practice obedience to God despite the
human institutions which oppose it. Thank God for Paul, for it is only at this point that
we can see why the Gospel is actually good news. News of the duty of civil disobedience
is not good news unless there is a guarantee that it can be more or less successfully
carried out. St. Paul reiterates this in Romans 16:25 “Now to him that is of power to
stablish you according to my gospel, and the preaching of Jesus Christ, according to the
revelation of the mystery, which was kept secret since the world began.” St. Paul returns
to this subject in another epistle 1 Thessalonians 1:5 “For our gospel came not unto you
in word only, but also in power, and in the Holy Ghost, and in much assurance; as ye
know what manner of men we were among you for your sake.” The second bit of
information is that the kingdom of God, that is, submission to the sovereignty of God, is
not for Jews only, but for others as well. The kingdom of God is at least as universal as
the Roman empire.

In the next Pauline text there is another new bit of information. Romans 2:16 “In the
day when God shall judge the secrets of men by Jesus Christ according to my gospel.”
Here Paul does not go into the detail of what he sees as Jesus’s role in judgment, but he
does point out that a proclamation of the judgment of God is a part of the Gospel which
he preaches. This was implicit in Jesus’s proclamation in Mark 1:15, but not stated. The
sovereignty of God implies the duty of obedience, and the duty of obedience implies
accountability. Paul is thus consistent in the application of the primitive Gospel.
In another Pauline epistle we find Paul affirming the distinction we made between
baptism and the Gospel on the basis of Mark 16. 1 Corinthians 1:17 “For Christ sent me
not to baptize, but to preach the gospel: not with wisdom of words, lest the cross of
Christ should be made of none effect.” He does not go into detail here on what he means
by the cross of Christ. The point he is trying to make, however, has to do with the
rhetorical principles he finds most effective in preaching the Gospel. He does not rely on
wisdom of words. This may be a reference to Hellenistic philosophy. If so, this may be
an indication of agreement with Peter, that the Gospel is to be preached through the
medium of the Hebrew Scriptures.

Paul’s proclamation of the Gospel, as we have seen, is characterized by two things. First,
he is highly personal, mixing his Jewish sectarian conflicts into his proclamation.
Second, he is deeply astute in bringing out the very real implications of the Gospel in
terms of divine power and judgment. This could only put him in a position in which he
was misunderstood by some and definitely in conflict with others. Much in the Book of
Acts and the Pauline epistles bears this out. One indication is his reference to multiple
gospels in Galatians 1:6-9 “I marvel that ye are so soon removed from him that called
you into the grace of Christ unto another gospel: Which is not another; but there be
some that trouble you, and would pervert the gospel of Christ. But though we, or an
angel from heaven, preach any other gospel unto you than that which we have preached
unto you, let him be accursed. As we said before, so say I now again, If any man preach
any other gospel unto you than that ye have received, let him be accursed.” Paul indeed
found areas of confrontation, and this was inevitable. It is not certain, however, that
there were real disagreements at that point among the followers of Jesus on the content
of the Gospel.

Paul follows this tirade with a description of his visionary experience. Strangely enough,
he appeals to the visionary experience as a better guarantee of validity than eye-witness
report. Galatians 1:11; 2:1-2 “But I certify you, brethren, that the gospel which was
preached of me is not after man. And I went up by revelation, and communicated unto
them that gospel which I preach among the Gentiles, but privately to them which were
of reputation, lest by any means I should run, or had run, in vain.”
There is a text to follow which is susceptible to misunderstanding. Galatians 2:7 “But
contrariwise, when they saw that the gospel of the uncircumcision was committed unto
me, as the gospel of the circumcision was unto Peter.” The careless reader may think
that this refers to the two gospels noted earlier, and that one of the gospels included the
rite of circumcision and the other rejected it. That is not the import of the sentence.
Rather, it merely divides the territory of proclamation. Peter is given the proclamation
to Jewish people, and Paul is sent with the good news to non-Jewish people. The
messages are ostensibly the same.

Paul, being sent to the non-Jews, is more fully aware than others of the universal
character of the Gospel message. He thus gives an interesting bit of information about
the very content of the Gospel. The Gospel includes the message that all nations will be
blessed in Abraham. Galatians 3:8 “And the scripture, foreseeing that God would justify
the heathen through faith, preached before the gospel unto Abraham, saying, In thee
shall all nations be blessed.” The idea is that, rather than God’s kingdom being limited
to Jews, it is promised from the beginning to be on the basis of the faith of Abraham,
and for all nations. Again, thank God for St. Paul. This information would otherwise
have been missing from the New Testament. It constitutes a reaffirmation that the
Gospel is a recalling to the faith of Abraham and is for all nations. St. Paul affirms this
universality in Ephesians 3:6 “That the Gentiles should be fellowheirs, and of the same
body, and partakers of his promise in Christ by the gospel.”

St. Paul mentions the word Gospel again in Ephesians 1:13 “In whom ye also trusted,
after that ye heard the word of truth, the gospel of your salvation: in whom also after
that ye believed, ye were sealed with that holy Spirit of promise.” This text is less rich in
information than in promise. Paul here enlarges upon the theme of power to accomplish
the Gospel in the use of the words “sealed with that holy Spirit of promise.” This
expression no doubt reflects St. Paul’s awareness of the very real and practical
difficulties of obedience to God in a despotic regime. He also affirms Peter’s statement
that the Gospel is to be proclaimed by the medium of the Hebrew Scriptures or the
“word of truth.”

Much has been made in some circles about the Gospel being the good news of salvation
without good works, or the works of the law. Much of the discussion is based on the
expressions of St. Paul. The subject is far too complex to discuss here, but it is clear that
Paul does not envision a salvation without good works. The first reason is a logical one.
Paul’s concept of the Gospel does not depart from that of the apostles, and he more
clearly than any other introduces the accountability of judgment in the Gospel itself. The
second reason is that Paul actually states in connection with the Gospel, that right
behavior is necessary. Behavior is what the old word “conversation” means as used in
the following text. Philippians 1:27 “Only let your conversation be as it becometh the
gospel of Christ: that whether I come and see you, or else be absent, I may hear of your
affairs, that ye stand fast in one spirit, with one mind striving together for the faith of
the gospel.”

St. Paul refers to judgment in connection with the Gospel in a very positive sense in
Colossians 1:5 “For the hope which is laid up for you in heaven, whereof ye heard before
in the word of the truth of the gospel.” This hope is reiterated in Colossians 1:23 “If ye
continue in the faith grounded and settled, and be not moved away from the hope of the
gospel, which ye have heard, and which was preached to every creature which is under
heaven; whereof I Paul am made a minister.” Here Paul repeats the Abrahamic
universality.

This contrast of hope and damnation, so reminiscent not only of Jesus’s words on many
occasions but of the many similar expressions in the Quran, come up again and again in
the brief, early epistles of Paul to the Thessalonians. 2 Thessalonians 1:8 “In flaming fire
taking vengeance on them that know not God, and that obey not the gospel of our Lord
Jesus Christ.” 2 Thessalonians 2:14 “Whereunto he called you by our gospel, to the
obtaining of the glory of our Lord Jesus Christ.”

It is probably in this context of judgment that we should read St. Paul’s words to
Timothy. 2 Timothy 1:10 “But is now made manifest by the appearing of our Saviour
Jesus Christ, who hath abolished death, and hath brought life and immortality to light
through the gospel.” Paul has noted the role of Jesus in the judgment without defining it
in the context of the Gospel as such. His expressions here apparently mean that Jesus in
mediating the Gospel to humankind, played a key role in abolishing death and bringing
life and immortality in the context of the judgment.
We have noted how St. Paul was an ambiguous character. For the most part he
illuminated the expression of the Gospel which had been left far from clear in other
parts of the New Testament. Yet, not being an eye-witness, he was also more impressed
with events outside the life and teaching of the real, historical Jesus, and this left a mark
on his understanding. We can now go back to the two remaining passages written or
reported by people who knew Jesus personally.

Jesus makes a reference to the Gospel in an extended passage in Matthew 24:4-28. The
passage is an answer to a question about the time of the destruction of Jerusalem and
the end of the world. He prophesies that the Gospel should be preached to the whole
world, and reiterates that the Gospel is “of the kingdom”, that is, relating to the message
of God’s sovereignty. Matthew 24:14 And this gospel of the kingdom shall be preached
in all the world for a witness unto all nations; and then shall the end come.

The truly defining text on the Gospel does not appear until the end of the book, as
though the New Testament writers were holding this big secret until the end. The final
mention of the word to evangelion, the Gospel is found in Revelation 14:6-7 “And I saw
another angel fly in the midst of heaven, having the everlasting gospel to preach unto
them that dwell on the earth, and to every nation, and kindred, and tongue, and people,
Saying with a loud voice, Fear God, and give glory to him; for the hour of his judgment is
come: and worship him that made heaven, and earth, and the sea, and the fountains of
waters.” Although much information has been gleaned about the Gospel from the New
Testament texts, only this one along with Mark 1:15 actually gives anything like a
comprehensive view of the content of the Gospel message. It is interesting to note that
this is the only text that gives real detail about the content. It is just as interesting to see
that there is not the slightest mention or reference to the proclamation of a vicarious
sacrifice for sin on a cross or anywhere else. That message, true or not, is not a part of
the New Testament Gospel. If it is a part of any gospel, it must be a part of one of those
other gospels St. Paul referred to as being accurst.

First of all, this Gospel is termed the eternal Gospel. It is stripped of any local aspects
that might have been attached to the Gospel as reported by the evangelists and apostles
about Jesus’s time. This definition of the Gospel is at the heart of the Apocalypse of St.
John, a book that has baffled commentators for centuries and been the subject of the
most varied interpretations of its obscure symbols and cryptic expressions. But these
two verses are as clear, understandable, and bereft of any vestige of obscure symbolism
as is possible. The real, true, eternal Gospel is expressed here in one brief verse which
cannot be misunderstood by any human being who has acquired the capacity to use
human language. The Gospel of Revelation 14:7, the only expression of the Gospel that
exists in the Bible besides Mark 1:15, and the only detailed expression of the Gospel to
be found in the Bible, contains three brief commands: fear God, give glory to God, and
worship God.

These commands may seem somewhat imprecise at first glance. However, they contain
some rather precise implications. The fear of God does not refer to terror or horror.
Rather, it refers to those influences which we experience as exterior to ourselves but
which determine our behavior and choices. These influences are those of authority and
those of peers. By accommodating our behavior to the demands of ungodly government
and ungodly neighbors, we relinquish the fear of God. On the contrary, by taking the
divine opinion into consideration instead of the opinion of peers, we can acknowledge
divine law. This is what is meant by fearing God. To fear God is to recognize the very
principles expressed in the Gospel as found in Mark 1:15.

The meaning of giving God glory is somewhat easier to grasp without explanation. It
means quite literally to include as a central part of the liturgical act to glorify God
verbally in an expression such as subhan Allah, glory to God. It has a meaning in terms
of attitude, however, as well. Just as human institutions and individuals can steal the
fear of God by demanding conformity, they can steal the glory of God by demanding
recognition and credit. To give God glory implies recognizing God as the source of all
good things. For this reason many people answer expressions of gratitude by saying
“Thanks be to God.”

The third imperative is proskyneesate, which is translated “worship.” The actual


meaning of the Greek word, however, is to fall down in prostration. It is reliance on
another gospel to suggest that mental recognition of God’s authority relieves us of the
responsibility to carry out what many might consider mere forms of no intrinsic value.
Whether or not there is intrinsic value in the formal gestures of prayer, there is most
certainly intrinsic value in the obedience which carrying them out entails. Of the three
commands included in the Biblical definition of the Gospel, and there are only three,
one is the command to pray in prostration. Any concept of the Gospel that ignores the
practice of prayer in prostration is a non-Biblical one. There are so few defining
expressions of the Gospel in the Bible that it is impossible to ignore any of them and
remain within a Biblical framework.

Besides the three imperatives that make up the Gospel, there is an explanatory phrase
for why we should fear God and give God glory. The explanation is that we are facing
judgement. This explanation is the logical one for the first two imperatives. The
realization of impending judgment should have the power to free us from peer pressure
and reliance on human authorities. In a similar way, and more positively, the fact that
God is our judge should encourage us to remember to give God recognition and credit
for all good things.

Finally, there is an explanatory phrase for the third imperative, again one which is
supremely logical in view of the command to pray in prostration. The explanation is
simply that God has created all things. This is the one great defining aspect separating
God from all other things. There is only one Creator and all other things are His
creations. This is the Gospel definition of God, which is no definition in terms of
limitation at all, but the recognition that as Creator and Sovereign, He cannot be defined
or limited by any created thing.

A careful review of the Biblical references to the Gospel dispels the first impression that
the New Testament fails to give a clear exposition of its character and content. Although
the texts that are truly defining are few in number, they are clear and unequivocal. The
Gospel is simply a call to recognize God alone as Creator and Sovereign Judge, and to
order our behavior in view of that realization, without reference to creed, priest, church
or sacraments. There is another word for religion that consists in the submission of the
individual to God. That word is Islam.

# Lecture 8 : The Word Muhammad in the Bible

This brief study seeks to answer the simple question of whether or not the Hebrew Bible
refers to the word Muhammad, or more specifically to one of its Hebrew cognates, as a
proper name. The usefulness of such a task is clear. If such a usage can be attested, the
many descriptive passages that some scholars have appealed to in reference either to the
prophet or the Mahdi of that name (upon whom be peace) gain in validity.

The larger problem set forth behind this study is whether the Bible contains material in
reference to the figures of the prophet or the Mahdi in Islamic thought. Obviously the
Bible has been interpreted in specific ways by Jewish, Christian and other scholars in
reference to the Messiah, Elijah, or another awaited prophet, and these traditional ways
of applying the Scriptures may conflict with Islamic interpretations related to the
prophet or Mahdi. This is especially likely to be the case, since many of the possible
candidates are passages already understood in Messianic terms. Jewish and Christian
understanding differs, sometimes applying a passage to the awaited Messiah on one
hand and to Jesus on the other. To attempt to bring a further figure into this complex
adds to the confusion. It is therefore essential to approach the matter systematically.

The first step in approaching this problem ought not to be to propose such new
interpretations of old and controversial texts. That task should be relegated to a later
stage altogether. Rather, the first step is to note whether the names of the prophet and
Mahdi are used in the Hebrew Scriptures in some cognate form, and whether these are
associated with factors suggesting the Islamic figures as the terminus of such prophetic
expressions. The second step is to examine the functions of the Mahdi in comparison
with the body of Biblical Scripture in order to identify parallels. Obviously such parallels
will be more convincing to the skeptic once a clear reference to a specific name can be
produced.

Among the many names of the Prophet and the Mahdi is of course Muhammad. This is
the name most likely to be evident in the Bible, and must therefore be examined first.
On the other hand, this name is ambiguous, since it refers not only to the Mahdi, but to
other Imams as well. It will thus be necessary in this study to find a Hebrew cognate,
show that it is used as a specific name, and find factors that point directly to the prophet
and the Mahdi. Unless this can be achieved, further examination of the Bible will be
largely fruitless in regard to this subject. Without a demonstration that this name has
significance among the prophecies of prophets to come and the end-time, functional
descriptions, the application of texts already applied to other messianic figures, will
continue to have little force outside Islam.
The Hebrew cognate of the root from which the name Muhammad is derived is hmd,
which means “to desire, pamper.” The Arabic connotation of “to praise” is not found in
modern Hebrew. The noun form is a feminine with the common feminine suffix added.
It is used twelve times in the Hebrew Scriptures, four of which appear in the construct.
There is no problem with the use of this word as a masculine proper name, as there are
many examples of seemingly feminine forms being included in a masculine name, and
vice versa.

The first task is to establish whether or not this word is used as a proper name in the
Hebrew Scriptures. We can immediately dispense with the occurrence of the word in the
construct in Daniel 11:37, where it is translated “the desire” of women. It is clearly and
unequivocally used as a proper name in Psalm 106:24. Yea, they despised the pleasant
land, they believed not his word.

By leaving the word untranslated, we get the following rendering of the verse. Yea, they
despised the land of Hamda, they believed not his word. The final half of the verse
includes the possessive suffix “his,” which needs an antecedent. The nearest possible
antecedent is the enigmatic Hamda. Unless this word is conceived as a masculine proper
name, there is no natural antecedent for the possessive. The fact that Hamda is the only
possible antecedent for the masculine possessive that follows shows that it must be seen
as a masculine proper noun rather than a feminine common noun.

It remains to understand to whom this verse refers. Seen in terms of the Islamic concept
of the Mahdi, the verse makes little sense. On the other hand, seen in terms of the
prophet of Islam, Muhammad, it makes a good deal of sense. It can easily be understood
as referring to the fact that when the prophet Muhammad came, many people did not
believe his word, because they despised his origins in Arabia. Of course the context of
the verse is a reference to the Exodus, so the primary application of the name should
normally be a person involved at that time. None can be found. Even if one could be
found, the secondary application of the prophecy would clearly refer to the Prophet.

It is clear that the word Hamda is used at least once in the Hebrew Scriptures to refer to
a human being, and that reference contains a significant parallel to the life of the
prophet Muhammad. It remains to be seen whether there are other references to the
word Hamda that can or must be seen as a proper name, and whether any of these refer
either to the prophet Muhammad or to Muhammad al-Mahdi.

There is an ambiguous reference to the death of Jehoram in 2 Chronicles 21:20 that


applies the word Hamda to the king. 2 Chronicles 21:20 ‘Thirty and two years old was he
when he began to reign, and he reigned in Jerusalem eight years, and departed without
being desired. Howbeit they buried him in the city of David, but not in the sepulchres of
the kings.’ The word Hamda is translated here as “desired.” This translation is slightly
distorted, since the noun substantive is used without an adjectival positioning. However,
the translation is certainly possible. If the word is meant to be a proper name, the
relevance is great. The implication would be that at the time every king of Judah was
evaluated as to whether he fitted the criteria of the awaited Hamda. The name itself
suggests this awaiting, that the people knew that Hamda was coming and longed for or
desired him. The king is buried with the nostalgic remark that he did not turn out to be
Hamda. In this case there is no contextual evidence pointing out whether the prophet or
the Mahdi is meant.

An occurrence of the word in the construct in the same sense, in reference to the
anointing of Saul as king, is found in 1 Samuel 9:20. Here the king is called the desire or
Hamda of Israel. The expression is put to Saul in a future sense, thus showing it to be in
the context of a messianic hope.

Another appearance of the word comes in 2 Chronicles 32:27 ‘And Hezekiah had
exceeding much riches and honour: and he made himself treasuries for silver, and for
gold, and for precious stones, and for spices, and for shields, and for all manner of
pleasant jewels.’

The translation of “pleasant” is a little forced here, but possible despite its slightly
enigmatic character. The translation of keley as “jewels” is rather interpretive, since the
word has a broad range of meanings more clearly related to utensils and tools. Coming
after “shields,” another translation would appear in order. It is possible that there was at
the time an expression “instruments of Hamda” which had a meaning not now known,
but referred to the awaited and desired one. That this is the case is suggested by the
repetition of the expression in Jeremiah 25:34 Howl, ye shepherds, and cry, and wallow
yourselves in the ashes, ye principal of the flock: for the days of your slaughter and of
your dispersions are accomplished, and ye shall fall like a pleasant vessel.

The same expression appears, this time translated vessel instead of jewels. It could just
as well be understood as “instruments of Hamda.” That this is a technical term the
meaning of which has been lost is clouded by the fact that it is arbitrarily translated with
a different expression nearly every time it occurs. A similar usage for the word in the
construct, and in reference to the vessels of the temple, is found in 2 Chronicles 36:10.
Another example is Nahum 2:9 ‘Take ye the spoil of silver, take the spoil of gold: for
there is none end of the store and glory out of all the pleasant furniture.’ The exact word
keley, which was “jewels” and “vessel” before, is arbitrarily ‘furniture’ here. There is
finally a second verse in which the expression is translated ‘pleasant vessels.’ Hosea
13:15 Thou he be fruitful among his brethren, an east wind shall come, the wind of the
LORD shall come up from the wilderness, and his spring shall become dry, and his
fountain shall be dried up: he shall spoil the treasure of all pleasant vessels.

The fact that fully half of the passages containing the term Hamda pair it with keley goes
far toward confirming the theory that this is a lexicalized expression. Whatever
‘instruments of Hamda’ are, they make it clear that Hamda was a figure that was desired
and awaited and had captured the minds of the populace to such an extent that the
name appeared as an expression referring to some kind of instruments, whether the
unlikely jewels or vessels or furniture of some kind, or something else, is meant.

Another idiom, less relevant to the present question, uses the plural of the word,
hamdoth. It is translated several ways, but generally means ‘desired, precious, beloved.’
It appears in 2 Chronicles 20:25 with keley, referring perhaps to precious stones.
Perhaps the use of the plural distinguishes it from the idiomatic expression in the
singular examined above. It occurs with other words in Daniel 10:10,11,19; 11:43.

We have seen that one passage (Psalm 106:24) demands the interpretation of Hamda as
a proper name. 2 Chronicles 21:20 permits the interpretation of Hamda as a proper
name, but does not require it grammatically. It may require it semantically. If so, it and
like references intimate a prophetic expectation attached to kings. The other passages
suggest a technical term inspired by the hold this awaited one had on the popular
imagination. The remaining two passages are in the same category as 2 Chronicles
21:20, which could be translated as a proper name or as a common noun, although their
semantic weight falls on the side of a proper name as well.

The following text using the word Hamda is Jeremiah 3:19 ‘But I said, How shall I put
thee among the children, and give thee the land of Hamda, a goodly heritage of the hosts
of nations? and I said, Thou shalt call me, My father; and shalt not turn away from me.’

These words are addressed to the people of Judah. Because of their behavior, God asks
how He can count them as sons and allow them to live in the land of Hamda. He
answers that He can do so if they acknowledge Him as father and if they do not turn
away from Him, that is, if they repent. The context is that of impending deportation,
which does in fact take place, since the people do not repent. The figure of speech, sons
and father, in relation to God implies a relationship of obedience, as a child to its father.
This is the required relationship between God and humankind. Humankind is obliged to
obey God or suffer the consequences. The Jews of the time, through failure to obey God,
were deported to Babylon first and finally under protest from Jeremiah, to Egypt. Thus
they lost the right to live in the land of Hamda and take their place among the sons of
God, that is, those obedient to Him. The context makes it clear that the land of Hamda is
the land promised to Abraham and his descendants. The fact that the expression
parallels that of Psalm 106:24 might lead us to consider this also to be a proper name,
although the context here does not require it.

Does this text have any eschatological implications, that is, can it be applied to the figure
of the Mahdi? The text clearly applies primarily to the time of the prophet Jeremiah. The
reaction of Judah to Jeremiah’s prophecy was failure to repent with the result of
deportation. The final portion of the text seems to indicate that the Jews would respond
by repenting, which we see that they did not do at the time of Jeremiah. There is
therefore every reason to give the text an eschatological application. Applied in an
eschatological way, the implication is that the Jews are given a chance to repent and
thus take their place among the nations who are obedient to God. This is consonant with
the eschatological hope and the figure of the Mahdi, who should fill the earth with
justice. In this sense, the land of Hamda must be the whole earth to be inhabited by
those who respond with repentance to the call of the Mahdi, here referred to by his
primary name of Muhammad or Hamda.

The reference to the land of Hamda has an eschatological application here. This means
that we may justified in attributing an eschatological application to Psalm 106:24 as
well, since the expression is the same. Psalm 106:24, which is the vital text to show that
Hamda is a personal masculine name in the Hebrew Scriptures, ought then to have a
dual application, that is, to both the prophet Muhammad and the Mahdi.

The land of Hamda is also mentioned in Zechariah 7:14 ‘But I scattered them with a
whirlwind among all the nations whom they knew not. Thus the land was desolate after
them, that no man passed through nor returned: for they had laid desolate the land of
Hamda.’

This text seems to refer to the diaspora of the Jews among all nations. The last half of
the text is enigmatic and suggestive. The first desolation of the land is the desolation of
having lost its population. That no man passed through nor returned refers specifically
that no Jews were living or traveling there. The last clause is introduced with the
Hebrew copula we-, but the authorized translator interprets it correctly as an
explanatory attachment, giving the cause of what went before. The Jews had not laid any
physical land desolate. ‘Laying the land of Hamda desolate’ must be understood in a
figurative sense. To give a literal sense to this clause would be redundancy on the level of
saying that water is wet because it is wet.

The expression ‘land of Hamda’ is used three times in Scripture, which is a great
proportion of the whole corpus. It has almost as great a claim to lexicalization as the
expression “instruments of Hamda.” But its meaning is far clearer. Several levels of
meaning appear. The bottom layer is a reference to the land promised to Abraham in
Genesis 12:1-3. The promise that in Abraham all families of the earth should be blessed
already at the beginning takes on an eschatological perspective that has not gone
unnoticed by non-Muslim scholars. The ‘land of Hamda’ is the heritage of Abraham in
its eschatological sense. Laying the land of Hamda desolate implies spoiling the
covenant of Abraham, that is, basically introducing injustice. The prophets are clear in
their denouncing of Israel for injustice to the weak, and this is one of the foundations for
the exile. This is repeated for the diaspora, as prophesied by Zechariah.

All of this affirms the application of the expression ‘land of Hamda’ in an eschatological
sense and by the same token to the figure of the Mahdi.

In sum, all of the texts are potentially examples of the use of the word Hamda as a
masculine personal name. One of these, Psalm 106:24, requires this interpretation, and
the others, within their context, are best understood by appeal to this usage. Thus the
Biblical usage of this word can be seen to be uniform and consistent. Psalm 106:24 is
also unique in that it must be applied primarily to the prophet Muhammad. Its
eschatological implications are dependent on the lexicalization of the expression ‘land of
Hamda.’ A dual application may be seen in all of the other texts as well, although most
of them show a clear reference to eschatology, and by implication the possibility of
perceiving in them a reference to the Mahdi.

There is an occurrence of the word Hamda in the construct in Haggai 2:7ff ‘And I will
shake all nations, and the Hamda of all nations shall come: and I will fill this house with
glory, saith the LORD of hosts. The silver is mine, and the gold is mine, saith the LORD
of hosts. The glory of this latter house shall be greater than of the former, saith the
LORD of hosts: and in this place will I give Islam [shalom], saith the LORD of hosts.’

This particular usage, with the construct, speaks against interpreting the word Hamda
in this case as a proper name. However, the text is late, and the lexicalized expressions
might have become so ingrained that the proper name had become synonymous with an
awaited figure. Perhaps a middle ground translation of the term would best express the
meaning of the text: ‘the desired one of all nations.’ The reconstructed temple did not
last to see a messianic figure at all. It was desecrated, reconsecrated, and renovated
beyond recognition by Herod. So neither Jesus nor Muhammad the prophet could fulfill
literally the first promise. A literal fulfillment would have to be sought in the Maccabean
period. Given the vocabulary, the night ascent of Muhammad is as good a fulfillment of
this prophecy as any history has to offer. The translation of shalom as Islam rather than
the generalized term “peace” is predicated on the tone of the sentence, which is specific.
The grace of a particular event is implied.

There is a single occurrence of an interesting form of the word including the participial
prefix as in Arabic, and what appears to be a plural suffix in form. This is mahamadim in
Song of Solomon 5:16. This cannot be a plural, however, since the referent is clearly
stated to be masculine singular in the preceding words. Song of Solomon 5:16 ‘His
mouth is most sweet: yea, he is altogether lovely (Hebrew: Mahamadim). This is my
beloved, and this is my friend, O daughters of Jerusalem.’

At this point it may seem surprising to what extent these texts actually express details in
the ministries of the prophet Muhammad and the Mahdi. However detailed these
references may be, an examination of the texts referring not to the primary name, but to
other epithets and their surrounding ideas, is likely to show an array of detail of
convincing proportions, especially considering that the word Hamda is used as a proper
name with eschatological connotations.

# Lecture 9 : The Word ‘Ali in the Bible

The word Ali is used 226 times in the Hebrew scriptures. The following study examines
all of these occurrences at least briefly. The Massoretic text of the Hebrew Bible is the
source, but I have ignored the Massoretic pointing of the word Ali, rather examining
each context for clues to which pointing and consequently which meaning of the word is
to be preferred.

Most of the time the word Ali is a preposition, either with or without the first person
singular pronominal suffix. The first occurrence with the pronominal suffix is in Genesis
20:9 Then Abimelech called Abraham, and said unto him, What hast thou done unto us?
and what have I offended thee, that thou hast brought on me and on my kingdom a great
sin? thou hast done deeds unto me that ought not to be done. The following texts, the
great preponderance of passages including the word Ali, seem to have the same
meaning, that is, “upon me” or something similar. Genesis 27:12; 13; 30:28; 33:13;
34:12; 34:30; 42:36; 48:7; 50:20, Numbers 11:11; 14:35; 22:30; Judges 7:2; 19:20; 20:5;
1 Samuel 17:35; 21:15; 22:8,13; 23:21; 2 Samuel 1:9; 3:8; 14:9; 15:33; 19:38; 1 Kings 2:4;
14:2; 22:8,18; 2 Kings 16:7; 18:14; 1 Chronicles 22:8; 2 Chronicles 18:7; 18:17; 36:23;
Ezra 1:2; 7:28; Nehemiah 2:8; 2:18; 6:12; 13:22; Esther 4:16; Job 7:12; 7:20; 9:11; 10:1;
13:13,26; 16:9,10,13,14,15; 19:5,6; 19:11; 19:12; 21:27; 29:13; 30:1,12,15,16; 31:38; 33:10;
Psalm 3:1(2); 3:6(7); 13:2(3); 13:6(7); 16:6; 17:9; 22:13; 27:2,3; 31:13; 32:4,5; 35:15;
35:21; 35:16,26; 38:2(3); 38:16(17); 40:7,12; 41:7; 41:9(10); 41:11; 42:4(5); 42:5(6);
42:7(8); 42:11(12); 43:5; 54:3(5); 55:3(4); 55:4(5); 55:12(13); 56:5(6); 59:3(4); 60:8;
69:9(10); 69:15(16); 86:14; 88:7(8); 88:16(17); 88:17(18); 92:11(12); 109:2; 109:5;
116:12; 119:69; 139:5; 142:7(8); 143:4; Proverbs 7:14; Ecclesiastes 2:17; Song of Solomon
2:4; Isaiah 1:14; 61:1; Jeremiah 8:18; 11:19; 12:8,11; 15:16; 18:23; 49:11; Lamentations
1:15; 3:5,20,61,62; Ezekiel 3:22; 8:1; 11:5; 35:13; 37:1; 40:1; Daniel 4:34; 4:36; 7:28;
10:8; 10:16; Hosea 7:13; Hosea 11:8; Joel 3(4):4; Jonah 2:3(4); 2:7(8); and Malachi 3:13.

The first occurrence of the word as a preposition without suffix is in Genesis 49:17,
which is a poetic passage. Indeed, the form is typical of poetic style. Genesis 49:17 Dan
shall be a serpent by the way, an adder in the path, that biteth the horse heels, so that
his rider shall fall backward. Similarly the word appears to be used as a simple
preposition without suffix in Genesis 49:22; Deuteronomy 32:2; Job 6:5; 8:9; 9:26;
15:27; 18:10; 20:4; 29:3,4; 30:4; 33:15; 36:28; 38:24; 41:30; Psalm 49:11; 50:5,16;
92:3(4); 94:20; 108:9(10); 131:2; 142:3(4); Proverbs 8:2; 30:19; Isaiah 18:4;
Lamentations 4:5; and Micah 5:(6)7.

In 1 Samuel 1-4 is found the story of the house of Eli. The name is also mentioned in 1
Samuel 14:3; 1 Kings 2:27; This proper name of the high priest and judge of Israel before
Samuel is written Ali. The pointing with the long e merely reflects the more complex
vowel system of Hebrew as compared to Arabic. Arabic cognates with a appear in
Hebrew with either a or e, and often preferably e. The segholate character of Hebrew
thus clouds the fact that the name is precisely the same as the Arabic c Ali. There are
some striking parallels as well as direct contrasts between the Biblical Eli and Imam Ali.
The first Ali had two unrighteous sons who led the people into disaster. The second one
had two sons who became righteous leaders. There is a parallel between the two figures
from a historical perspective as well. The Samaritans claim that Eli caused the rift
between Samaritans and Jews by his false claim to the priesthood. The division between
Shia and Sunnite Islam surrounds the claims of the figure of Imam Ali.

The first clear passage in which the word must be translated as the imperative singular
of the verb “to go up” is in 1 Samuel 25:35 So David received of her hand that which she
had brought him, and said unto her, Go up in peace to thine house; see, I have
hearkened to thy voice, and have accepted thy person. Similarly the word occurs in
Isaiah 21:2; 40:9; Jeremiah 22:20; and 46:11.

The word appears with the meaning of “leaves of” in Nehemiah 8:15 And that they
should publish and proclaim in all their cities, and in Jerusalem, saying, Go forth unto
the mount, and fetch olive branches, and pine branches, and myrtle branches, and palm
branches, and branches of thick trees, to make booths, as it is written.

The first text that requires reevaluation is Exodus 8:(5)9.

And Moses said unto Pharaoh, Glory over me: when shall I intreat for thee, and for thy
servants, and for thy people, to destroy the frogs from thee and thy houses, that they
may remain in the river only?

It is not likely that anyone would pretend that the phrase “glory over me” makes any
sense at all. The assumption of the translator is that the word here is the preposition
with the pronominal suffix, which is of course the dominant usage of the word in the
Torah, especially in the prose passages. There seems to be no questioning of the
preposition and suffix themselves, while the hesitancy about how to understand the verb
placed with the preposition and suffix is of longstanding debate, going back to the
Septuagint (LXX) underlying the Vulgata expression constitue mihi, appoint me (a
time). Reference to the Masoretic text has led most translators to reject the Septuagint
and Vulgata alternative for something presumably based on the Hebrew text, whether or
not it makes sense.

Those translators requiring meaning in their translation have tended to read an


unwarranted expression into the Hebrew in the sense of “do me the honor to...” an
interpretation that goes back at least to Luther. Wavering between sense and nonsense
is illustrated by the Webster original, which was “Glory over me” and the revised
Webster which is “Command me,” apparently accepting the LXX over the Masoretic
text. In sum, three alternatives are to be found in the more commonly known
translations. The first follows the LXX-Vulgata tradition. The second tries to make sense
of the Hebrew Massoretic text by attributing unattested meanings to the preceding verb.
The third translates the Massoretic verb correctly, producing nonsense in the word Ali
by insisting that it is a preposition with suffix.

An alternative is to accept the Massoretic verb as it stands and attribute a non-


prepositional meaning to the word cly. The choices are one of the verb forms “to rise,” or
one of the proper or common noun meanings. The position requires the latter, rather
than the imperative verb. The choices are thus basically “glorify my leaf,” “glorify a
pestle or pistil” or “glorify Ali.” The common nouns do not make sense, and the second
meaning is not even attested in Scriptural Hebrew. An Arab will immediately suggest a
reference to the Deity, as “exalted.” This word, however, in the Hebrew text, would
consist in an Arabicism. We are thus left with the enigmatic “glorify Ali,” in reference to
an unknown named figure, or reference to God under the term, something that appears
to be more or less without precedent in Biblical Hebrew. The reflexive sense of the verb
could be thought to imply the necessity of a preposition before the object. However, the
lack of the preposition is almost the rule in poetic passages, and is not lacking in the
Torah as well. Thus these two alternatives are otherwise perfectly feasible.

The rest of the texts must be examined in the light to two questions. The first is whether
or not the word should be translated as one of the common alternatives noted above (as
a preposition, a preposition with the suffix, the verb imperative, or as “leaves of” or
“pestle.”). Once these meanings are eliminated, we are left with the alternatives of
Exodus 8:(5)9. The second task is to determine whether the text refers to Imam Ali or
some other figure.

There is nothing in Exodus 8:(5)9 to indicate whether a human or divine figure is


meant. The Muslim reader will immediately doubt whether the word is an epithet of
God, since it is generally used so in the holy Quran. The translators of the Bible,
however, have generally neglected that possibility, probably from hesitance to impose an
Arabicism on the Biblical Hebrew text rather than bias. We can only hope to answer the
question by an examination of all of the texts. Failing that, recourse to extra-biblical
sources will be necessary
Such texts as Numbers 11:13 and 14:27 could conceivably be translated Ali as well as a
form of interjection, something on the order of “ya Ali!” Numbers 11:13 Whence should I
have flesh to give unto all this people? for they weep unto me, saying, Give us flesh, that
we may eat.

Numbers 14:27 How long (shall I bear with) this evil congregation, which murmur
against me? I have heard the murmurings of the children of Israel, which they murmur
against me. The second occurrence, however, in Numbers 14:27 can only be translated
as in the Authorized Version. Even without this evidence, however, the structure of the
sentences makes the authorized translation preferable.

The structure of Numbers 14:29 is neutral, and would actually as such allow the
translation with Ali as easily as “against me.” The witness of verse 27, however, speaks
against Ali as the better alternative. Numbers 14:29 Your carcases shall fall in this
wilderness; and all that were numbered of you, according to your whole number, from
twenty years old and upward, which have murmured against me.

Numbers 21:17 is the second text that translators have been willing to leave in a form
void of meaning, in the figure of the flying well. It is doubly troublesome in lacking an
explanatory context.

Numbers 21:17 Then Israel sang this song, Spring up, O well; sing ye unto it. The
authorized translator writes words more appropriate to Alice in Wonderland than to
scriptural translation. Most others do little better. Douay, Darby, The Jewish
Publication Society Bible, The Twenty-first Century King James, Green’s Literal
Translation, The Modern King James Version, The New King James Version, la Bible
nouvelle edition de Geneve, the Webster and most other are satisfied with this
interpretation. The Bible in Basic English tries to avoid the problem of the flying well by
replacing it with the obedient well that comes when called: Then Israel gave voice to this
song: Come up, O water-spring, let us make a song to it. Other translators have
recognized the problem and tried to make sense of it by referring to the springing up of
the water from a fountain. Among these are Finnish translation of 1938, the Swedish
translation of 1917, and la nuova Diodati 1991. These are roughly “surge out, o well!”
English translators are willing to depend on the ambiguity of the word “spring” in
English. A few translators assume a preposition between the verb and the noun, thus
making the noun the direction of movement rather than the vocative. This relieves us of
the rather forced speech to a well. Among these are the redivierte Schlachter Bibel 1951
Da sang Israel dieses Lied: «Kommt zum Brunnen! Singt von ihm! It is rare to find help
from the LXX in this dilemma, but perhaps Luther’s original is such an example Da sang
Israel dieses Lied, und sangen umeinander über dem Brunnen. The translators in the
revision of Luther have succumbed to the general fascination with nonsense. Even the
Vulgata is surprisingly interpretive with the LXX with tunc cecinit Israhel carmen istud
ascendat puteus concinebant. Young makes a novel contribution by rejecting the
Masoretic pointing of the word, thus changing it from an imperative to the preposition.
(Young’s literal translation. Then singeth Israel this song, concerning the well--they
have answered to it. In so doing, Young is the only translator to write a grammatically
sensible translation. However, by doing so, he suppresses the song itself, thus raising
the issue of what “this” can possibly refer to. In sum, almost every possible configuration
has been tried. The implication is that no translator actually knows what the verse
means.

There is a construction that is completely normal and understandable in Hebrew,


whereby Ali is the subject and the well the predicate: Ali is a well. It is not clear,
however, to whom this proper name refers.

It is possible, but not necessary, to translate Ali as a proper name in Numbers 24:6.

The Authorized Version is As the valleys are they spread forth, as gardens by the river's
side, as the trees of lign aloes which the LORD hath planted, and as cedar trees beside
the waters. All translators seem to accept the interpretation “by the river.” Furthermore,
it parallels what follows, “beside the waters.” Semantically and syntactically there seems
to be no better alternative. If one understands Ali as a proper name here, the translation
might read (following the Authorized Version otherwise): Ali is like the valleys that
spread forth, like gardens, a river: as the trees... No linguistic arguments favour this
interpretation. However, its position so close to Numbers 21:17, the similar references to
water (well, river), and the further consideration that almost the entire book of Numbers
contemplates the question of leadership authority, are factors that speak in favour of Ali
as a proper name in this text also.

Deuteronomy 17:14 also deserves attention. The Authorised Version has this as When
thou art come unto the land which the LORD thy God giveth thee, and shalt possess it,
and shalt dwell therein, and shalt say, I will set a king over me, like as all the nations
that are about me... The significant phrase is “a king over me” or Ali melekh. If Ali were
an epithet (exalted), it should come after the word “king” rather than before it. As it
stands, it could be translated “I will set Ali king like all the peoples that are around me.”

This implies that the personage of Ali is king of all the peoples around. The Authorised
Version also has hermeneutical problems. The actual narrative relative to the
establishment of kingship in Israel is found in 1 Samuel, and is clearly ill-advised. It
requires the establishment of the unacceptable monarchy of Saul as a bridge to the
acceptable dynasty of David. The critical study of Deuteronomy would date it as a later
text, in which case there would be no problem. As it stands, the acceptability (with
reservations) of the monarchy in Deuteronomy conflicts with the policy of Samuel.
Probably the verse should stand as interpreted by the Authorised Version, whatever the
hermeneutical problems may be.

In 1 Chronicles 28:19 there is an occurrence of the word that could well be translated as
an epithet. The Authorised Version has this as All (this, said David,) the LORD made me
understand in writing by his hand upon me, even all the works of this pattern. The
relevant phrase is “miyyadh YHWH Ali.” The translator has rearranged the words in
translation probably because he does not, on the basis of philological reasons, accept the
possibility of understanding Ali as an epithet. A Quranic translator would have thought
of this alternative first and perhaps have ignored the other altogether, but would at the
same time lay himself open to charges of Arabicism. Many translators have noticed the
awkwardness of including “upon me” in the text, and have merely disregarded it, as does
the American Standard Version: All this, (said David,) have I been made to understand
in writing from the hand of Jehovah, even all the works of this pattern. Others
reinterpret it as a preposition with an eliptical object as does the Revised Standard
Version All this he made clear by the writing from the hand of the LORD concerning it,
all the work to be done according to the plan. In the latter Ali is translated with some
imagination as “concerning it.”

The more straightforward translation would be “The whole in writing from the hand of
YHWH Ali made clear...” This could be understood as “He made clear the whole in
writing by the hand of YHWH Ali.” The interpretation “Ali made clear the whole in
writing by the hand of YHWH” ignores Hebrew syntax. Ali must therefore refer to God
in this text. The concrete meanings of the words should probably give way to their more
abstract meanings, thus “The whole by decree from the authority of YHWH Ali made
clear...” If this is an acceptable interpretation, it would provide a Hebrew precedent for
the use of the word as an epithet, the exalted, as in Arabic.

A strange syntactical configuration is one found in Nehemiah 5:7. The Authorised


Version has this as Then I consulted with myself, and I rebuked the nobles, and the
rulers, and said unto them, Ye exact usury, every one of his brother. And I set a great
assembly against them. The relevant phrase is “with myself” which seems to translate
libbi Ali. The full phrase is “my heart reigned Ali. The word is syntactically in the
position of a prepositional phrase. This is the only occurrence of the expression in the
Scriptures, and it may well not mean “I consulted with myself.” It would seem more
likely to suggest that his heart, the seat of his cogitations, reigned over him, thus
influencing him to act as follows. In any case no reference to a proper name can be
inferred.

Much of the Book of Job is ambiguous, but the word Ali appears in such a context only
once, in Job 29:7. The Authorised Version has it When I went out to the gate through
the city, when I prepared my seat in the street! No translators seem to see real
alternatives to this interpretation. Several Spanish translations disregard the
prepositional meaning and read “judicial” or something similar for Ali. Another
adjectival alternative might be “leafy,” but neither of these is relevant to the proper
name Ali.

Psalm 7:8(9) has an interesting case. The Authorized Version renders this The LORD
shall judge the people: judge me, O LORD, according to my righteousness, and
according to mine integrity (that is) in me. There is no reason whatsover to add “that is”
to the text. The final word is just as clearly a vocative as is the word YHWH at the pausal
midpoint of the verse. The two words parallel each other. In this case the word Ali most
readily relates to God, and is thus possibly a second precedent for the epithet. On the
other hand, there is no reason to prohibit addressing a human figure in the second
clause, that is, appealing to Ali as judge.

An interesting expression appears in Psalm 42:6(7). This is rendered in the Authorised


Version as O my God, my soul is cast down within me: therefore will I remember thee
from the land of Jordan, and of the Hermonites, from the hill Mizar. The relevant
phrase is ali nafshi. There are several cases when the preposition occurs before a noun
with the same suffix, and these are merely circumlocutions expressing possession. The
same structure appears here. However, it appears ambiguously, since Ali appears
between Elohay and nafshi, and could stand as easily with one as the other. The
expression could be interpreted as “my God exalted.” In this case Ali would be an epithet
referring to God, either as a proper name or as an attribute, but again an Arabicism
unrecognized by Biblical scholars.

Another case of possible reference to God may be seen in Psalm 56:12(13). The
Authorised Version gives Thy vows (are) upon me, O God: I will render praises unto
thee. A more straightforward interpretation would render both words at the beginning
as vocatives, thus Ali Elohim. This interpretation would require the third word, “thy
vows,” to go with the rest of the sentence. The midpoint pausal does not exclude that
possibility. The translation would then read “O exalted God, (by) thy vows will I render
praises unto thee.” Again, this would require the acceptance of an Arabicism.

Psalm 57:2(3) presents another possibility of a vocative parallel. The Authorised Version
gives I will cry unto God most high; unto God that performeth (all things) for me. Here
again the Quranic translator would immediately see two parallel epithets after the word
El. Many verses of the Quran terminate in precisely this way. Thus we should read “I will
cry unto God most high; unto God Accomplisher, Exalted.” This is especially interesting,
since it uses the expanded word from the same root as Ali, celyon. This form of the word
Ali is the one generally used in Hebrew in reference to God.
Psalm 86:13 is ambiguous, and could be translated in either of two ways. The
Authorized Version gives For great (is) thy mercy toward me: and thou hast delivered
my soul from the lowest hell. The alternative would be “For great (is) thy mercy, O Ali...”
In this case the name again would refer again to God.

There is a final verse in Ezekiel 3:14 where the word could just as well be translated as
an epithet of God. The Authorised Version gives So the spirit lifted me up, and took me
away, and I went in bitterness, in the heat of my spirit; but the hand of the LORD was
strong upon me. The alternative translation would be “...the hand of the LORD exalted
was strong.”

The texts examined may be placed in several groups. The first includes cases of
ambiguity which do not contribute toward finding the word Ali used as a proper name
or epithet. The second includes cases of ambiguity in which the word Ali could just as
well be translated as a proper name or epithet, but in which cases the translators have
never chosen to do so. The third group includes cases of ambiguity in which the word Ali
could best be translated as a proper name or epithet, but in which cases the translators
have sought awkward alternatives, often adding words not found in the original.

The texts remain troublesome. There are texts that can clearly best be translated as
referring to a proper name or epithet. These suggest that others, ambiguous ones, might
also best be interpreted in this way. As we examine these to determine whether the
name Ali (or the Hebrew segholate form Eli) is meant, we see that some of these, if they
are interpreted as epithets or proper nouns, must refer to God. In that case, an
Arabicism produces a parallel term to the common Hebrew term Elyon.

Nevertheless, there are two considerations to note. The first is that several of the
ambiguous names, notably those in the Torah, associate the name Ali with a source of
water. This brings to mind Quranic associations, specifically the pool of Kauthar and the
role given to Ali in that regard. While it is not possible to state that the word Ali in the
Hebrew Scriptures is used in a prophetic sense in regard to Ali, there are passages that
seem to be evocative of that. They are ambiguous, and perhaps refer to God, but the
possibility remains that they are faint intimations, or perhaps more than faint
intimations of a promised figure to come.

The second consideration is that non-Muslim Biblical scholars have not taken note of
the fact that the epithet Ali as applied to God in the Quran has striking parallels in the
Hebrew Scriptures, not only in the Psalms but in several other passages. This failure is
only to be expected, since it requires the acceptance of an Arabicism. The positive result
of this study is to show that the Hebrew Scriptures and the holy Quran are perhaps
closer to each other in expression than has generally been acknowledged. In any case,
either the acceptance of the term as meaning “exalted” on one hand, or as a proper name
on the other, seems to be the best way of accommodating those texts of Scripture that
until now have been glossed over with translations having little or no meaning. Either
solution brings the Bible closer into accord with Islam.

# Lecture 10 : Ghadeer in the Bible

The word ghadeer in the Bible appears as the Hebrew word for wall or fence. As such, it
is generally proper to translate it. However, the wall or fence is often used is a most
suggestive and even clearly symbolic way, and with only three or four exceptions seems
highly significant to the events known as Al-Ghadeer in Islamic tradition.

The first occurrence of the word is in the story of Balaam, the ancient Persian prophet,
in Numbers 22. This prophet was asked to curse the people of God, and instead of
refusing to do so, he inquired of God whether he might do so or not, hoping that God
would give him permission of take the reward offered for doing so. He set out against
God’s command, at which point Numbers 22:24 says “the angel of YHWH stood in a
path of the vineyards, a wall (ghadeer) on this side, and a wall (ghadeer) on that side.”
Balaam did not see the angel, but his donkey, in seeking to turn aside, crushed his foot
against the wall. Since that occasion, ghadeer has been a symbol of the wall by which
God reveals the right way, and the wall against which those who choose not to be rightly
guided bruise their ankles. Another text using the word as a fence or wall to show the
right path is Job 19:8.

The word is used again in reference to the descendants of Simeon, who destroyed the
last of the Amelekites at the command of God. It says in 1 Chronicles 4:39,40 that “they
went to the entrance of Gedor, even unto the east side of the valley, to seek pasture for
their flocks. 40 And they found fat pasture and good, and the land was wide, and quiet,
and peaceable; for they of Ham had dwelt there of old.” The Massoretic scribes have
arbitrarily vocalized the word as Ghedor, but the word in the original text is precisely the
same as that of Numbers 22. This passage suggests a further symbolism for the word
Ghadeer. It is an unexpected source of well-being and felicity. Pasture for the flocks is
already well-known in the Hebrew Scriptures in connection with divine guidance, as
seen in the famous Psalm 23.

The word Ghadeer is vocalized as such in Ezra 9:9. “For we were bondmen; yet our God
hath not forsaken us in our bondage, but hath extended mercy unto us in the sight of the
kings of Persia, to give us a reviving, to set up the house of our God, and to repair the
desolations thereof, and to give us a wall in Judah and in Jerusalem.” The building of a
wall in this text has its literal sense, but the expressions, especially here, are heavily
weighted with symbolism. This is intimated by the use of the expression “to give.” The
literal wall of Jerusalem was build with human hands, but the ghadeer itself was
something given by God. What was given was a re-establishing of the center of faith and
authority. It must be noted that the ghadeer in this situation was contested by the
Samaritans. From an Islamic point of view, although in some aspects there is more in
common with Samaritanism than Judaism, this ghadeer appears to be correct and
justified. The Samaritans did not accept some of the prophets mentioned in the Quran,
whom the Jews of the time did accept. It was this ghadeer in Jerusalem and Judah that
differentiated between the divinely established authority and the unacceptable authority
of the Samaritans. There is thus a perfect parallel between the ghadeer of Ezra and that
known from Islamic tradition. This text also mentions the Persian connection already
noted in Numbers 22.

There are two prophetic passages of import in regard to the word ghadeer. The first is in
the context of fasting in Isaiah 58:12. The relevant expression is “repairer of the breach.”
The word is pointed as godeer, that is, a participle, thus meaning “the one who is fencing
up the breach.” It might just as well be a construct of ghadeer, thus meaning “the
fencing up of the breach.” In any case, it refers to a human figure. Up to verse five, the
prophet’s words apply to the people, who fail to serve God properly by fulfilling the
forms of fasting but continue to act unjustly. The pronoun “you” changes to the singular
in verse 7, after which the human figure of the ghadeer is described. These words apply
most specifically to Imam Ali, who was appointed at Al-Ghadeer.
Isaiah 58:7 “Is it not to deal thy bread to the hungry, and that thou bring the poor that
are cast out to thy house? when thou seest the naked, that thou cover him; and that thou
hide not thyself from thine own flesh? 8 Then shall thy light break forth as the morning,
and thine health shall spring forth speedily: and thy righteousness shall go before thee;
the glory of the LORD shall be thy rereward. 9 Then shalt thou call, and the LORD shall
answer; thou shalt cry, and he shall say, Here I am. If thou take away from the midst of
thee the yoke, the putting forth of the finger, and speaking vanity; 10 And if thou draw
out thy soul to the hungry, and satisfy the afflicted soul; then shall thy light rise in
obscurity, and thy darkness be as the noonday: 11 And the LORD shall guide thee
continually, and satisfy thy soul in drought, and make fat thy bones: and thou shalt be
like a watered garden, and like a spring of water, whose waters fail not. 12 And they that
shall be of thee shall build the old waste places: thou shalt raise up the foundations of
many generations; and thou shalt be called, The repairer of the breach, The restorer of
paths to dwell in.”

The many expressions of this passage all fit the character and actions of Imam Ali very
well. There are many narrations referring to the Imam feeding the hungry. He also
functioned to lift the burdens of the people, and dispelling backbiting and falsehood. But
the text emphasizes the direct divine guidance that was given to the Imam.

The two passages in Ezekiel give quite a different message. They focus on the failure of
Israel to fulfill their God-given role of leadership in propagating monotheism in the
world. Ezekiel 13:5 “Ye have not gone up into the gaps, neither made up the hedge for
the house of Israel to stand in the battle in the day of the LORD.” This brings up the
context of the need for the proclamation of Al-Ghadeer. Both Jews and Christians
eventually failed to carry out the divine mandate. Therefore it was necessary to correct
their failures through the revelation of the Quran, and the establishment of a “fence” or
ghadeer to preserve divine law for the world. The text notes that the house of Israel will
have to answer for the failure in the day of judgement.

This failure is even more clearly pinpointed in Ezekiel 22:30 “And I sought for a man
among them, that should make up the hedge, and stand in the gap before me for the
land, that I should not destroy it: but I found none.” The Imamate comes into its own
specifically with Imam Ali at the proclamation of Al-Ghadeer.
Psalm 62 is one of the Imamic Psalms, having twelve verses. The word ghadeer appears
in the third verse, the one in any series of twelve usually evoking the experiences of
Imam Husseyn. The entire Psalm dears with the issue of divine authority. But verse 3
touches on the question of accepting, or in this case, not accepting the man established
by God to represent His authority on earth. Psalm 62:3(4) “How long will ye imagine
mischief against a man? ye shall be slain all of you: as a bowing wall shall ye be, and as a
tottering fence.” Here ghadeer is translated as “fence.” The word “ish” or “man” as used
in the Psalms often has Imamic implications, as is clearly seen in Psalm 1:1. The
implication is that those who should imagine mischief against “a man” or the Imam and
who should kill him, will in the same way also be slain themselves. The Imam is equated
directly here with the ghadeer or fence that indicates the right path.

This warning against those who break the covenant of ghadeer is repeated in
Ecclesiastes 10:8 ”He that diggeth a pit shall fall into it; and whoso breaketh an hedge, a
serpent shall bite him.” The prophet promises that whoever breaks ghadeer will be
bitten by a serpent. The preceding reference to a pit of course primarily means the
setting of a trap for another. However, the whole verse has an eschatological tone,
suggesting either punishment in the grave for failure to recognize the Imam or
punishment in the judgement.

# Lecture 11 : Hussein and Psalm 74

The word Hoosen is found in Exodus 25:7; 28:4,15,22,23,24,26,28,29,30; 29:5; 35:9,27;


39:8,9,15,16,17,19,21; and Leviticus 8:8. In every case it refers to the article of clothing
worn by the ministering high priest on his chest, and containing twelve stones engraved
with the names of the twelve tribes and the Urim and Thummim, oracular stones used
to ascertain the divine will. No other word is used in the Hebrew Scriptures from the
same root at all. The word is therefore quite different from Hamda and Ali, the former of
which appears clearly as the name of an awaited prophet in Hebrew Scripture, and the
latter of which can also best be translated as sometimes referring to a divinely appointed
human figure.

The use of the word to refer to a symbol of the priest’s bearing the names of the people
before God is of course tempting. The feelings it may evoke in relationship to the
grandson of the prophet, the Imam Hussein, are deep, but hardly convincing to the
researcher or skeptic.

One must admit the total lack of linguistic evidence for the names Hasan and Hussein
(both of the same root) in the Hebrew Scriptures. Furthermore, the many references
that speak to the Muslim mind about Hussein are already co-opted by Christians in
reference to Jesus, or by Jews in reference to the awaited Messiah. Among these are the
famous Isaiah 53 so often used by Christians as a prophecy of the crucifixion, but which
seems so clearly to parallel the experiences of the martyred Hussein.

There are other texts, less often noted by non-Muslims, that by their content lend
themselves to application to the Imam. Among the best-known of these is Jeremiah
46:6,10. “Let not the swift flee away, nor the mighty man escape; they shall stumble, and
fall toward the north by the river Euphrates…. For this is the day of the Lord GOD of
hosts, a day of vengeance, that he may avenge him of his adversaries: and the sword
shall devour, and it shall be satiate and made drunk with their blood: for the Lord GOD
of hosts hath a sacrifice in the north country by the river Euphrates.” The implication,
from the Islamic point of view, is that this is a promise that God will avenge the attack
on His beloved Hussein and his companions at Karbela, on the Euphrates River. Despite
the striking parallel of such passages to the events, there are many barriers to their
acceptance as evidence of Biblical support for Islam. The liberal denial of prophecy
altogether aside, the psychological resistance to such an interpretation is prodigious.

The purpose of this study is to investigate the possibilities of more objective evidence.
The weakness of linguistic evidence does not mitigate structural evidence. Obviously
structural evidence in itself is insufficient, but it provides a schema that greatly
strengthens the objectivity of the evidence of content and context. What must be
examined is the many series of twelve that exist in the Bible for evidence of
characteristics for each of the twelve slots in the series, and whether or not those
characteristics parallel those of the twelve Shia Imams and correspondingly of Imam
Hussein in particular. These series are specifically the twelve reigning patriarchs of the
Book of Genesis, the twelve sons of Ishmael, the twelve sons of Jacob, the twelve judges
of the Book of Judges, the twelve righteous kings of Judah, and the twelve apostles of
Jesus. Aside from series of human figures, there are many series of twelve to be found in
the Bible. Among these are passages containing twelve sections, and passages
containing twelve references to a particular word. The former type is particularly
fruitful. There are a number of such passages in the Book of Psalms, including many
Psalms of twelve verses each, and most notably the series of twelve Psalms entitled
Psalms of Asaph. A careful comparison of the twelve Psalms of Asaph to the names of
the twelve sons of Ishmael, which give the clues to the characteristics of each of the
twelve slots, shows that these Psalms reflect the character of each of the twelve Imams.

We shall focus specifically on Psalm 74, which is, within this schema, prophetic of the
martyrdom of Imam Hussein. It is the third of the Psalms of Asaph.

1 Maschil of Asaph. O God, why hast thou cast us off for ever? why doth thine anger
smoke against the sheep of thy pasture?

The maschil is a didactic Psalm, one for instruction. The instruction is not necessarily in
the wisdom genre, nor even law. It can be instruction in prophecy in the sense of future
events. The content of this Psalm appears strange as a subject of instruction, since it is
couched in words of appeal to God to intervene in a difficult situation. In fact, this
appeal to intervene is the anguish the Psalmist feels as he contemplates the future event
about which he is instructing.

The word Asaph means a convener or collector, and is probably a title conferred on the
one who convened the liturgical choir established by David, noted in 1 Chronicles 6:39.
This may have been taken as a personal name, or having been born to the post may have
been given a name appropriate to his activity.

As the prophet contemplates the tragedy of Karbela, he exclaims these words in anguish.
It is possible that David wrote this Psalm, although many researchers suggest that it was
written by Asaph. It is also possible that David was an ancestor of Imam Hussein
through a marriage contracted when he was a refugee among the Arab Kedarites, from
whom the prophet Muhammad is descended. Whether or not the prophet sees Imam
Hussein as a son, his anguish is similar to that of those who are horrified in all
generations by the suffering he went through. The Hebrew expression does not imply
that God is the originator of the tragedy or that it is a punishment. Such expressions in
Hebrew merely refer to God’s sovereignty as a basis for making an appeal for help.

2 Remember thy congregation, which thou hast purchased of old; the rod of thine
inheritance, which thou hast redeemed; this mount Zion, wherein thou hast dwelt.

Verses 2 and 3 begin by giving a pre-Islamic context. The appeal is for God, at the event
of Karbela, to remember the great things He did in ancient times to save His faithful
people. The text, being didactic, uses the supplication language to insist on the need for
divine deliverance. The rod of inheritance suggests that Imam Hussein is descended
from David. Redemption does not imply saving from sin, but that the person involved is
especially beloved by God. The reference to Mount Zion is probably specific, although
the word itself could refer to any fortress. However, it is more likely that we should see
here the idea that the place of the martyrdom of Imam Hussein thereby gains the same
sanctity, at least in some sense, as the house of God, which at the time of David was
Quds or Jerusalem.

3 Lift up thy feet unto the perpetual desolations; even all that the enemy hath done
wickedly in the sanctuary.

The expression “lift you your feet” is again an appeal to save, but as a didactic Psalm its
main import is to describe the situation as hopeless without divine intervention. The
expression “perpetual desolations” aptly describes the tragedy of Karbela. The Psalmist
draws the divine attention to what the enemy has done to the “holy ones,” and by so
doing draws the attention of the listener as well.

4 Thine enemies roar in the midst of thy congregations; they set up their ensigns for
signs.
Verse four refers to the great tumult of enemies brought against the congregation of
Hussein. It mentions the ensigns or banners that they raised against him.

5 A man was famous according as he had lifted up axes upon the thick trees.

6 But now they break down the carved work thereof at once with axes and hammers.

Verses five and six refer graphically to the mutilation of the bodies at Karbela. It uses a
continuation of the temple figures of the preceding verses. It is not unknown to compare
people to trees, especially wooden embellishments in the temple. The sanctuary or
temple or house of God is made up of the “people of the house.” By defacing the people
of the house, the enemy was effectively carving up the house of God itself.

7 They have cast fire into thy sanctuary, they have defiled by casting down the dwelling
place of thy name to the ground.

Verse seven is a graphic description of the vandalizing of the camp of Hussein.

8 They said in their hearts, Let us destroy them together: they have burned up all the
synagogues of God in the land.

Verse eight is a prophecy of the fact that the enemies of the Imam had firmly decided to
destroy him and his companions altogether. The prophecy continues by saying that in so
doing they had effectively, from their own point of view, destroyed every place of prayer
on earth. This is an extension of the figures in verse six.
9 We see not our signs: there is no more any prophet: neither is there among us any that
knoweth how long.

Verse ten is a lament referring to three aspects of Karbela. At that point the banners of
the Imam were not to be seen flying. Secondly, there was no prophet. Thirdly, there was
none among us “that knoweth how long.” That is, the man of knowledge, the Imam, had
been martyred. The verse begins with the fact that the colors were not flying, and
mournfully goes on to the fact that the prophet was no longer. Furthermore, the last
living one of the holy house that the prophet had gathered under his mantle was dead.
There was no longer anyone to know how long.

10 O God, how long shall the adversary reproach? shall the enemy blaspheme thy name
for ever?

Verses ten and eleven refer to the condition of enemy dominance over the imamate. This
began effectively with the martyrdom of Imam Hussein and will end at the return of the
Mahdi. The condition is one of blasphemy. Usurper rule is blasphemous, since no
matter what position a ruler takes on the matter of the oneness of God, if he takes power
for himself without divine authority, his action is blasphemous. This is the condition of
all rulership that does not acknowledge the imamate.

11 Why withdrawest thou thy hand, even thy right hand? pluck it out of thy bosom.

Verse eleven uses rhetorical question and an imperative appeal to continue the prophecy
in this didactic Psalm. There are two possible implications in this context. For God to
pluck His hand out of His bosom means the rectification of what happened in Karbela. It
may refer only to the return of the Mahdi. On the other hand, it could well refer to the
resurrection and reappearance of Imam Hussein.
[ Recommended reading: "Islam in the Bible" (London 1998).]

--
Posted by UK at 03:54
Labels: mcelwain

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