@MasterMaliq@H1dd3nH4nd Have you ever forgiven someone?
For example you are a baker and someone who is hungry steals a bread? Who pays the price for forgiveness?
Always the one doing the forgiving.
@P0eMPieDinges 8/8
Luxenberg’s Syro-Aramaic reading reveals the Quran’s deep roots in the shared Abrahamic tradition. It is not “alternative” — it is the historically and philologically superior understanding. Essential for serious study of scripture. Thoughts?
@P0eMPieDinges 7/8
Son’s consent + journey together + binding on the wood + divine intervention + ram as ransom. The early Quran arose in a Syriac/Aramaic Christian liturgical world. The Syro-Aramaic layer is the correct, coherent original — later Arabized with diacritics.
@SapirAnalytics@PhDniX@BahaddouAhmed@KhalilAndani@Lasermazer And in the year 600 there were already a lot of Bibles. So if you believe you get a new-final- revelation from God, would you not write it down directly in a book and keep it intact, copy it and spread it?
Then where are those copies?
@PhDniX@BahaddouAhmed@KhalilAndani@Lasermazer Modern scholars (Michele Amari, William de Slane, and François Déroche) consider this attribution spurious—a later addition. Reasons include:The script and ink of the note appear more recent (possibly 16th–17th century).
The formula in the note has Shiite connotations.