Information AboutTawrat |
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Tawrat ('''Tawrah''' or '''Taurat''', word Torah (also known as the " Five Books Of Moses " or the "Pentateuch") which Muslims believe was a Holy Book Of Islam given by Allah to Musa ( Moses ). Some theorize that the Tawrat may refer to the entire Tanach or Old Testament . Muslims believe that the Tawrat has undergone " Tahrif ", that is, the meaning or words were distorted, passages were suppressed, others added, etc. TAWRAT IN THE QUR'AN Actual quotations from the Torah in the Qur'an are very few and inexact.An example is 5:45 where it says:
This could be a quote from Exodus 21:24-25:
According to 7:157 in both the Indjil and the Tawrat there is written about Muhammed:
Most Muslims point at Deuteronomy 18:18 as a text in the Torah (Tawrat), 'the law', where it says:
The Tawrat is also mentioned in 5:110. The Tawrat was known by Jesus.
Some quotations are taken from other books of the Hebrew Bible. An example of this is 48:29 where it says:
This could be a quote from Psalm 1:3, 72:16 or 92:14:
Some other quotations are from the Mishna . An example of this is 5:32 where it says
This could be a quote from Sanhedrin 4:5 These quotes suggest that the word had the wide meaning of the whole corpus of Jewish Scriptures, as Torah in ancient Jewish literature itself , but only late Muslim authors differentiate explicitly between "the wider and the specific meaning" of Tawrat. THE TAWRAT IN THE HADITH Because he believed the Qur'an replaced it, Muhammad did not teach from the Torah and the Qur'an says very little about it. He did say that Musa ( Moses ) was one of the few Prophets to receive a revelation directly from God, that is, without an intervening Angel . On one occasion, some Jews wanted Muhammad to decide how to deal with their brethren who had committed Adultery . Abu-Dawud records in Book 38 Number 4434:
SEMANTICS There is some ambiguity among English speaking Muslims on the use of ''Tawrat'' versus ''Torah''. The Arabic of the Qur'an and Hadith have only one word, ''Tawrat''. ''Torah'' is natively a Hebrew word. Generally, in English as well, they are used interchangeably. However, some Muslims prefer to reserve ''Tawrat'' to refer only to the original revelation of Allah to Musa which was later supposedly corrupted. They use ''Torah'' to refer to the current, supposedly corrupted text. There is also ambiguity as to whether the Qur'an uses ''Tawrat'' only referring to the five books of Moses, the entire Tanach, or both. ''Torah'' in Hebrew can refer to either. This comes because the Qur'an often lists the holy books as the Tawrat, Injil , and Qur'an, discluding the Zabur (the Psalms ), possibly because the Psalms are part of the Tanach. Moreover, a Muslim scholar seemed to reference Isaiah (a book of the Tanach), saying it was from the Tawrat. {Link without Title} This meaning is uncommon as most Muslims think it only refers to the five books of Moses. SEE ALSO EXTERNAL LINKS
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