WORD OF GOD
see also QUR'AN and JESUS
- conveyed into Mary, 
    an-Nisa' 4:171 
 
- read revelation. tradition is unrecited (read) revelation.
[Muhammad said:] "My sayings do not abrogate the word of God, but the Word of God can 
         abrogate my sayings." 
        		(Mishkat Book I, Chapter 6, quoted by AAAH, p.65)
 
 
- revealed in seven recensions, 
          (A Shorter Encyclopaedia of Islam, p.283). 
         All lost except 2. For other unofficial versions belonged to Abd 
         Allah b. Masud, Abu Musa, Abd Allah al Ashari and Mikdad b. Amr. 
         For variants, refer to Itiqan and Fihrist 
        		(ibid, p. 277)
 
- sea as ink exhausted before God's word is exhausted, 
    al-Kahf 18:109
 
- word from God, 
 Âl 'Imran 3:45; an-Nisa' 4:171.
 An explanation:
	`"The Word from Him" ie., the essence of the word, as one would say 
         of a brave man, "the essence of bravery or generosity itself" The 
         following traditions on the Messiah; so called because kept clear from 
         the taint of sin, or anointed with oil like other prophets or at his 
         birth, or touched by the wing of Gabriel when born, to avert tact of
         Satan. "Exalted in the world" by the rank and wonderful miracles and 
         vindication from the accusation of the Jews, and "in the world to 
         come" in virtue of his exalted place of God, intercession of his 
         people and heavenly graces. "The Word from Him," the pronoun (Him) 
         refers back to the "Word" just as the same pronoun "in his name" 
         refers to the Messiah. Why then the pronoun is not of the same gender 
         as "the Word" Because the person refered to is masculine. 
 (Fakhar al-Din Razi, quoted by W. Muir, 
        		Beacon of Truth, p.122, quoted by Abdul-Haqq, p.67)
 
         But Abdul-Haqq says: "he [Razi] goes easy with the grammer and 
         literal sense of the expression. Thus he refers the pronoun (Him 
         -- masculine in form) to "Word" (Kalima -- feminine in form). It 
         amounts to saying that the "Word was from the Word." To put it in 
         other words, "Jesus, as it were, is the father of Jesus." 
        		(Abdul-Haqq, p.67, explaining W.Muir, ibid, p.123)
 
         ``As opposed to the exegesis of Razi, another great commentator, Ibn 
         Hazam, recognizes the evident meaning of the expression under review. 
         He grants that Jesus Christ is the Word (Kalima) from God. But he 
         goes on to say that this Word is a created being, not divine -- a 
         position similar to the Arians. 
        		(Hirschfield, New Researches into the Composition and 
        		Exegesis of the Quran, London, 1902, p.16, quoted
        		by Abdul-Haqq, p.67)
 
 
- WORD OF GOD, 
    compare with 
	
	In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word
	was God. (John 1:1)
	 
	In the past God spoke to our forefathers through the prophets at many
	times and in various ways, but in these last days he has spoken to us 
	by his Son, whom he appointed heir of all things, and through whom he 
	made the universe. The Son is the radiance of God's glory and the 
	exact representation of his being, sustaining all things by his powerful 
	word. After he had provided purification for sins, he sat down at the 
	right hand of the Majesty in heaven. (Hebrews 1:1-3)
	 
         ``The Quran is the word of God, and is His inspired word and 
         revelation. It is a necessary attribute of Go. It is not God, but 
         still is inseparable from God. It is written in a volume, it is read 
         in a language, it is remembered in the heart, and its letters and its 
         vowel points, and its writing are all created, for they are the works 
         of men, but God's word is uncreated. Its words, its writing, its 
         letters, and its verses are for the necessities of man, for its 
         meaning is arrived at by their use, but the word of God is fixed in 
         the essence of God, and he who says that the word of God is created is 
         an infidel.''
        		(Abu Hanifa, Sunni Imam,  in Kitab al-Wasiyah, p.77, 
        		quoted by Abdul-Haqq, p.62)
		  
         ``The Quran, the Law, the Gospel and the Psalter are books sent by Him 
         to his apostles, and the Quran indeed is read with tongues, written in 
         books, and kept in hearts: yet as subsisting in the essence of God, it 
         doth not become liable to separation and division whilst it is 
         transferred into hearts and papers.''
        		(Al-Ghazzali: quoted from Al-Maqsud al-Asna, 
        		Hughes' Dictionary, p.146, quoted by Abdul-Haqq, p.62)
		  
         ``Whatever proofs of the doctrine may have been brought forward later 
         from the Quran itself, we can have no difficulty in recognizing that 
          it is plainly derived from the Christian Logos and that the Greek 
         Church, perhaps through John of Damascus, has again played a formative 
         part. So in correspondence with the heavenly and uncreated Logos in 
         the bosom of the Father, there stands the uncreated and eternal word 
         of God; to the earthly manifestation in Jesus corresponds the Quran, 
         the Word of God which we read and recite. 
        		(Muslim Theology and Jurisprudence and Constitutional 
        		Theory, pp.146-147, as quoted by Abdul-Haqq, p.63)
		  
         ``Whenever God says..."The Lord spoke to Moses..." You must not 
         imagine that the unbegotten God Himself came down or went up to any 
         place. For the ineffable  Father and the Lord neither has come to any 
         place, nor walks, nor sleeps, nor rises up, but remains in His own 
         place wherever that is, quick to behold, quick to hear, having neither 
         eyes nor ears, but being of indescribable might He see all things, and 
         none of us escapes His observation, and He is not moved or confined
         to a spot, or in the whole world, for He existed before the world was 
         made. How then could He talk with anyone, or be seen by anyone, or 
         appear in the smallest portion of the earth, was sent from Him?...
         Therefore neither Abraham, nor Isaac, nor Jacob, nor any other man 
         ever saw the Father and ineffable Lord of all...but [saw] Him who was 
         according to His will His Son Being God and the angel...because He 
         ministered to His will... who also was the fire when He conversed with 
         Moses from the bush.'' 
        		(Justin Martyr, Dialogue with Trypho, 
        		quoted by Abdul-Haqq, p.63)
 
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