2.4 When is a book
an " inspired " book ?
"Ye shall not add
unto the word which I command you, neither shall ye diminish
ought from it, that ye may keep the commandments of the LORD
your God."Deuteronomy 4:2
Adi ibn Hatim al-Tai'i was a Christian who
embraced Islam during the time of Muhammad (pbuh). One day, the
verse of the Qur'an, Al-Tawba(9):30-31 was recited before him: "And the Jews said: Ezra is the son of Allah, and the
Christians said: The Messiah is the son of Allah. That is their
saying with their [own] mouths. They imitate the saying of those
who disbelieved of old. Allah's curse be upon them. How deluded
are they! They took their rabbis and their monks as lords
besides Allah, and the Messiah son of Mary, but they were not
commanded but to worship One God. There is no God but Him. Be He
Glorified from all that they associate with Him!" When Adi
heard this verse, he commented: "O messenger of Allah, we did
not worship them." The prophet Muhammad (pbuh) replied: "Did
they not make matters lawful and unlawful for you?" (He was
referring to the power the monks and Rabbis gave themselves
because of their claimed divine inspiration to change laws and
regulations). Adi replied "Yes, they did!". Muhammad (pbuh)
said: "That, then, is the worshipping of them in association
with Allah."
If we were to ask a Christian layman: "Where
did the Bible in your hands come from?," they would more than
likely tell us "from God!"
If you were now to ask him: "How do you know
it is from God? He will reply, "He inspired it to many people
who then wrote it down and preserved it for us."
If we now ask: "Are all of these inspired
people prophets?" He will answer: "No, they include both
prophets and other faultless 'saints', etc.."
"So these prophets and 'saints' signed their
names to these documents?" we would ask. They would respond "No.
But the Church knows who wrote them, and when they were written,
and has irrefutable proof regarding this matter."
If we were to now ask: "would it be possible
for any unscrupulous person who had access to the Bible in the
past to modify it's books?" They would reply: "Of course not!
The church has told us that even the much older Old Testament
was preserved with such diligent guardianship that they even
counted and recorded every single word and every single letter
in it. Thus, the church has justly reassured us that these words
never have, and never could be, changed by mankind, even by
scribal error or by accident."
"Let us now ask a different question" we would
continue. "Are the 'New and Old Testaments' in your hands today
the same "New and Old Testaments" available to the apostles of
Jesus (pbuh) till the present day?" They would answer "Of
course! There has always been only one Bible!"
This is the general gist of any such
conversation that is held between a Muslim and a Christian
layman regarding their Bible, it's composition and preservation.
However, if we were to ask their SCHOLARS the same set of
questions we would be amazed to find a tremendous chasm in the
responses supplied by the Christian laypeople as compared to
their own Christian scholars. If we were to go to a Western
library and look up the history of the Bible as recorded by
their own eminent Christian scholars throughout the ages, we
would find that they tell us that the books of the "New
Testament" in our possession today were not officially approved
into the New Testament "canon" of "inspired" books until many
centuries after the departure of Jesus. Tens of
generations of Christians literally lived and died after the
departure of Jesus (pbuh) never having known nor seen such a
"New Testament" or "Bible" as the one in our possession today.
After the departure of Jesus (pbuh), the
apostles and many other people began to write "gospels." Each
one of these authors would travel to other lands and be followed
by a number of people who would adopt this man's gospel as his
"Bible." Now, even the unscrupulous began to write "gospels" and
to claim they were from a given apostle or that they themselves
were receiving divine inspiration. Many new and innovative
teachings began now to be introduced into the religion of Jesus
(pbuh). Enmity, hatred and war began to break out between these
groups. Each person claimed that they alone held the "true"
Gospel of Jesus (pbuh) and no one else. Their beliefs now ran
the gamut, from those who believed Jesus (pbuh) to be a mortal
messenger of God and nothing more, to those who claimed partial
divinity for Jesus (pbuh), to those who claimed Jesus (pbuh) to
be a true god, but independent of God himself, to those who
called for a "Trinity," to those who claimed that Mary (pbuh)
too was a god, to those who believed in two gods, one good and
the other evil. This is when the war of the gospels began.
Everyone now cursed and damned everyone else.
Christian sects butchered one-another right and left. There were
more great debates and councils than you could shake a stick at.
However, none of these groups had sufficient might to totally
dominate and silence the others for good. They needed an
undefeatable ally, so they began to look to the Roman empire for
support. The Roman empire was a pagan empire, however, it was
the dominant "superpower" of the time. Anyone who could enlist
it's aid would have an unconquerable ally at their side and
would themselves be undefeatable. On the Roman side, Emperor
Constantine was greatly troubled by the
swelling ranks of his Christian subjects and the great division
among their ranks which did not bode well for the continued
stability of his empire.
Most of these fringe sects now began to fade
into insignificance and the matter was now left between those
who believed in the Unity of God and those who believed in a
"Trinity." The Roman empire's support fluctuated between these
two groups for a long time until the Trinitarian's finally
gained the upper hand and all but wiped the Unitarians off the
face of the earth. They selected and collected the "truly
inspired" gospels into one volume which later became the "New
Testament." They burned all other gospels. Many sweeping
campaigns if "Inquisition" were launched. Everyone found
possessing any of these "false" Gospels was put to death and his
Gospel burned.
This state of affairs continued for many
centuries and many people were convicted of heresy and burned to
death at the stake for a great variety of reasons. Yet others
had their land and property confiscated and were imprisoned.
Physical torture was casually used in order to extract a
confession of guilt which would then be used to justify a
verdict of death by burning. Some of the methods used to extract
a confession of guilt were the stretching of limbs on the rack,
burning with live coals, and the strappado (a vertical rack).
Denial of the charges without counterproof or refusal to confess
resulted in the most severe punishments such as life
imprisonment or execution and total confiscation of property.
The number of those who fell victim to these inquisitions are
far to numerous to list here. Examples of these people include
the philosopher Giordano Bruno, Galileo, Joan of Arc, and the
religious order of knights called the Templars among countless
hundreds of thousands of others. If the Trinitarians did not
have the power to burn these people at the stake during their
lifetime, then they would exhume their bodies after their death
and burn them after their death (e.g. John Wycliffe). In the
end, over twelve million people were put to death by the Church
inquisitions (Apology for Muhammad and the Qur'an, John
Davenport).
The inquisitions reached their height around
the middle of the fifteenth century in a massive and vicious
persecution campaign the major targets of which were the
Marranos (converts from Judaism) and Moriscos (converts from
Islam), many of whom were suspected of secretly adhering to
their original faiths. When things began to quiet down a little,
the victor's historians and philosophers wrote their history
books explaining how they managed to overcome the wicked, to
defeat the blasphemers, and to burn the devils, sorcerers, and
witches at the stake. These are the books which have had the
greatest influence on the Western history books we have in our
hands today.
Whenever a scholar of Christianity would
stumble upon the truth and begin to write about it his works
would invariably be destroyed (e.g. Sir Isaac Newton,
the 16th century Spaniard Michael Servetus, etc.). In all cases,
it was recognized that there was no need to disprove the
author's evidence or refute it, rather, it was sufficient to
muzzle the opposition, burn their books, extract a confession
from them under duress, and expel them from society or kill
them.
Even the Popes themselves would sometimes
recognize the falsehood of the "Trinity" and the fact that it
was a later fabrication of mankind. One of these popes, Honorius,
was officially cursed forty eight years after his death by the
Synod which was held in Istanbul in 680 C.E.
Sometimes it is an individual's own silence
which proves to be the most deafening proclamation. As we saw in
the previous chapters, for the period of a century and more the
only "Scriptures" used by the first Jewish followers of Jesus
were the Greek Septuagint translations
(commonly designated LXX) of the Hebrew Old Testament, "the Law
and the Prophets", supplemented by various Jewish apocrypha and
the Sibylline Oracles
(150 BC to AD 180); these were the only
"authorities" appealed to by the early "Church Fathers" when
preaching their new faith. Nowhere do they quote the books which
we know today as the "New Testament."
Naturally, if the "history" of the Trinitarian
Church regarding their chosen Gospels and what are claimed to be
the inspired writings of Jesus' first Apostles were true, and
these writings had indeed been accepted as authoritative at that
time, then they would have been the most precious and potent
documents of preaching for their doctrine. Undoubtedly, they
would have spoken of nothing else, but would have quoted them
and appealed to their authority at every turn as they have been
doing through the centuries since. But, for some 150 years,
little or nothing besides the Old Testament and these Oracles
were known or quoted. As said by the great critic, Solomon
Reinach,
"With the exception of Papias, who speaks
of a narrative by Mark, and a collection of sayings of Jesus, no
Christian writer of the first half of the second century (i.e.,
up to 150 C.E.) quotes the Gospels or their reputed authors."
Orpheus, Reinach, p. 218
But let us back up a little and study how and
when the "inspired" books of the Bible were incorporated into
the Christian "canon" of the Bible. We have already given a
brief introduction in section 1.2.5 onwards of how the current
Gospels of the Bible were introduced as "authentic." Let us now
have a very brief look at some of the details. The following was
obtained from the book "Izhar ul Haqq" among other references:
In the city of Nicea
(modern: Iznik, Turkey), in the year 325 AD, a great conference
of Christian theologians and religious scholars was convened
under the order of the Emperor Constantine to
examine and define the status of these countless Christian
Gospels. After a thorough investigation it was decided that the
Epistle of Jude was genuine and believable. The rest of our
current books of the Bible were declared doubtful. This was
explicitly mentioned by Saint Jerome in the introduction to his
book. St. Jerome, of course, was a Christian scholar and a great
philosopher. He was born in 340 AD He translated the Bible into
Latin. He was a famous bibliographer and wrote many books on the
Bible. Before the year 325 C.E., it is known that the Gospel of
Barnabas was accepted as canonical in
the churches of Alexandria. It is known to have been circulated
in the first two centuries after Christ (pbuh) from the writings
of Irenaeus (130-200AD). After this
council, four Gospels were selected out of a minimum of three
hundred available and the rest, including the Gospel of
Barnabas, were ordered utterly destroyed. All Gospels written in
Hebrew were also ordered destroyed.
In the year 364 AD, another council was held
in Laodicea for the same purpose. This conference of Christian
scholars and theologians not only confirmed the decision of the
council of Nicea regarding the
authenticity of the Epistle of Jude but also declared that the
following six books must also be added to the list of genuine
and believable books: The Book of Esther, The Epistle Of James,
The Second Epistle of Peter, The Second and Third Epistles of
John, The Epistle of Paul to the Hebrews. This conference
pronounced their decision to the public. The book of
Revelations, however, remained out of the list of the
acknowledged books in both the councils.
In 397 another great conference was held
called the Council of Carthage.
Augustine, the celebrated Christian
scholar, was among the one hundred and twenty six learned
participants. The members of this council confirmed the
decisions of the two previous Councils and also added the
following books to the list of the divine books: The Book of the
Songs of Solomon, The Book of Tobit, The Book of
Baruch, Ecclesiasticus, and The First and Second Books of
Maccabees.
At the same time the members of this council
decided that the book of Baruch was a part of the book of
Jeremiah because Baruch was the deputy of Jeremiah. Therefore
they did not include the name of this book separately in the
list.
Three more conferences were held after this in
Trullo, Florence and Trent
(1545-63). The members of these meetings confirmed the decision
of the Council of Carthage. The last
two councils, however, wrote the name of the book of Baruch
separately.
After these councils nearly all the books
which had previously been doubtful among Christians were now
included in the list of acknowledged books.
The status of these books remained unchanged
until the Protestant Reformation in the 16th century.
The Protestants repudiated the decisions of the councils and
declared that there are only 66 truly "inspired" books of God,
and not 73 as claimed by the Catholics. The following books were
to be rejected: The Book of Baruch, The Book of Tobit, The
Letter of Jude, The Songs of Solomon,
Ecclesiasticus, and The First and Second Books of Maccabees.
They excluded these books from the list of acknowledged books.
The Protestants also rejected the decision of
their forbears regarding some chapters of the book of Esther.
This book consists of 16 chapters. They decided that the first
nine chapters and three verses from chapter ten were to be
rejected. They based their decision on the following six
reasons:
1 These works were considered to be false even
in the original Hebrew and Chaldaean languages which were no
longer available.
2 The Jews did not acknowledge them as
revealed books.
3 All the Christians have not acknowledged
them as believable.
4 Jerome said that these books were not
reliable and were insufficient to prove and support the
doctrines of the faith.
5 Klaus has openly said that these books were
recited but not in every place.
6 Eusebius specifically said in section 22 of
his fourth book that these books have been tampered with, and
changed. In particular the Second Book of Maccabees.
It now becomes apparent that books which had
been lost in the original and which only existed in translation
were erroneously acknowledged by thousands of theologians as
divine revelation. This state of affairs leads a non-Christian
reader to distrust the unanimous decisions of Christian scholars
of both the Catholic and the Protestant persuasions. The
followers of Catholic faith still believe in these books in
blind pursuance of their forebears.
It is a prerequisite of believing in a certain
book as divinely revealed that it is proved through infallible
arguments that the book in question was revealed through a
prophet and that it has been conveyed to us precisely in the
same order without any change through an uninterrupted chain of
narrators. It is not at all sufficient to attribute a book to a
certain prophet on the basis of suppositions and conjectures.
Unsupported assertions made by one or a few sects of people
should not be, and cannot be, accepted in this connection.
We have already seen how Catholic and
Protestant scholars differ on the question of the authenticity
of some of these books. There are yet more books of the Bible
which have been rejected by Christians. They include the Book of
Revelation, the Book of Genesis, the Book of Ascension, the Book
of Mysteries, the Book of Testament and the Book of Confession
which are all ascribed to the Prophet Moses.
Similarly a fourth Book of Ezra is claimed to be from the
Prophet Ezra and a book concerning Isaiah's ascension and
revelation are ascribed to him. In addition to the known book of
Jeremiah, there is another book attributed to him. There are
numerous sayings which are claimed to be from the Prophet
Habakkuk. There are many songs which are said to be from the
Prophet Solomon. There are more than 70 books,
other than the present ones, of the new Testament, which are
ascribed to Jesus, Mary, the apostles, and their disciples. In
this day and age, some Christian scholars are even making the
case for the authenticity of the Gospel of Thomas as the "fifth"
Gospel (see "The Five Gospels," written
over six years by 24 Christian scholars from some of the USA and
Canada's most prestigious universities)
The Christians of this age have claimed that
these books are false and forgeries. The Greek Church, Catholic
church and the Protestant Church are unanimous on this point.
Similarly the Greek Church claims that the third book of Ezra is
a part of the Old Testament and believes it to have been written
by the Prophet Ezra while the Protestant and Catholic Churches
have declared it false and fabricated.
Groliers encyclopedia says under the heading
"New Testament, canon":
"The process by which the canon of the New
Testament was formed began in the 2d century, probably with a
collection of ten letters of Paul. Toward the end of that
century, Irenaeus argued for the unique authority of the portion
of the Canon called the Gospels. Acceptance of the other books
came gradually. The church in Egypt used more than
the present 27 books, and the Syriac-speaking churches fewer.
The question of an official canon became urgent during the 4th
century. It was mainly through the influence of Athanasius,
bishop of Alexandria, and because Jerome included the 27 books
in his Latin version of the Bible called the Vulgate, that the
present canon came to be accepted.."
Notice, as mentioned in the previous chapters,
how the writings of Paul were the first to be accepted by the
Trinitarian church. All other gospels were then either accepted
or destroyed based upon their conformance to the teachings of
Paul.
As mentioned previously, Lobegott Friedrich
Konstantin Von Tischendorf
was one of the most eminent conservative Biblical scholars of
the nineteenth century. One of his greatest lifelong
achievements was his discovery of one of the oldest known
Biblical manuscripts know to mankind, the "Codex Sinaiticus,"
with the monks of Saint Catherine's Monastery
in Mount Sinai. In this oldest known copy of the Bible known to
humanity we find contained two gospels which would later be
discarded by a more enlightened generation. They are "The
Epistle of Barnabas" (not to be confused with the Gospel of
Barnabas), and "The Shepherd of Hermas."
Today, of course, neither of these two books is to be found in
our modern Bibles. As also seen in section 1.2, many later
"insertions" of the church were exposed through the study of
this manuscript. However, following in the tradition of true
conservative Christian scholars before him, Tischendorf managed
to apply 12,000 "corrections" to this manuscript's 110,000 lines
before he was through "transcribing" it (see "secrets of Mount
Sinai", James Bentley, Doubleday, NY, 1986, p. 95)
We have already seen in chapter one how "St.
Paul" all but totally obliterated the religion of Jesus (pbuh)
based upon the authority of his alleged "visions". We then saw
how his teachings were based more upon his personal philosophy
and beliefs than any attempt to cite words or actions of Jesus (pbuh)
himself (e.g. Galatians 2). We further saw how his followers
slaughtered all Christians who would not forsake the teachings
of the apostles for his teachings and how he was later made the
"majority author" of the Bible and countless authentic gospels
were burned and labeled apocrypha by his followers. Remember,
"St. Paul" is claimed to be the author of Romans, 1 and 2
Corinthians, Galatians, Ephesians, Phillippians, Colossians, 1
and 2 Thessalonians, 1 and 2 Timothy, Titus, Philemon, and
Hebrews.
"All the evidence indicates that the words
of Jesus were authoritative in the Church from the first, and
this makes it the more remarkable that such scanty attention is
paid to the words or works of Jesus in the earliest Christian
writings, Paul's letters, the later Epistles, Hebrews,
Revelation, and even Acts have little to report about them...
Papias (ca. AD 130), the first person to actually name a written
gospel, illustrates the point. Even though he defends Mark's
gospel (Euseb. Hist. III.xxxix.15-16), and had himself appended
a collection of Jesus tradition to his 'Interpretation of the
Oracles of the Lord' (Euseb. Hist. III.xxxix.2-3), his own clear
preference was for the oral tradition concerning Jesus, and the
glimpses that Eusebius provides of Papias' Jesus tradition give
no hint of his dependence on Mark. Neither do the more frequent
citations of Jesus in the APOSTOLIC FATHERS, largely 'synoptic'
in character show much dependence on our written gospels"
The Interpreter's Dictionary of the Bible,
Supplementary Volume, p. 137
The Interpreter's Dictionary of the Bible
contains much more revealing information in this regard, far too
much to reproduce here. The reader is strongly encouraged to
locate a copy in their local library and read the details.
The popularly accepted dates for the
authorship of the current books of the Bible are approximately
as follows:
Approx. AD Event / Document
----------------------------------------------------------------
30 Crucifixion (Ascension) of Jesus
50 First Epistle of Paul
62 Last Epistle of Paul
65-70 Mark's Gospel
70 Epistle to Hebrews
80 Luke's Gospel
85-90 Matthew's Gospel
90 Acts
90-100 John's Gospel and First Epistle
95-100 Revelation
100 I & II Timothy and Titus
Uncertainty about James I & II, Peter, John
and Jude does not allow historians to estimate their origin
dates. (See "The Early Church And The New Testament," Irene
Allen, 1953). We begin to see the degree to which our current
religion of "Christianity" is based more on the teachings and
writings of Paul than anything else. The Gospels which are
popularly believed to have been written first were in actuality
written long after the writings of Paul. Now Christian scholars
are even beginning to uncover extensive evidence that these
Gospels were not even written by their claimed authors. The more
Christian scholars study the Bible, the more it becomes
painfully apparent that what is popularly referred to today as
"Christianity" should more appropriately be named "Paulanity."
As mentioned in section 2.1, even when a book
is claimed to be truly "inspired" we still find that the Church
cannot say with 100% assuredness who wrote this "inspired" book.
As mentioned there, the authors of the RSV Bible by Collins say
that the author of "Kings" is "Unknown," the book of Isaiah is
"Mainly credited to Isaiah. Parts may have been written by
others." Ecclesiastics: "Author. Doubtful, but commonly assigned
to Solomon." Ruth: "Author. Not
definitely known, perhaps Samuel." and on and on. Is this how a
truly unbiased mind defines "inspired by God"? You be the judge.
"Verily, those who conceal that which Allah
has sent down of the Book and purchase a small gain therewith,
they eat into their bellies nothing but fire. Allah will not
speak to them on the Day of Resurrection, nor will He purify
them, and theirs will be a painful torment. Those are they who
purchase error at the price of guidance, and torment at the
price of pardon. What boldness (they show) for the Fire!"
The noble Qur'an, Al-Baqarah(2):174-175
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