Judaism and The Koran
Judaism and The Koran
Judaism and The Koran
By
the
Same Author
HEBREW
OF HIGHER LEARNING
HEBRAIC FOUNDATIONS
OF AMERICAN DEMOCRACY
NACHMAN KROCHMAL
AND THE GERMAN IDEALISTS
GINZEI RUSSIYAH
i*
r>w V
fArU.
~.
V-^'f ov
4
.,
U{^x
The Opening
(Al-Fdtifyah)
ABRAHAM
I.
KATSH
DIRECTOR
INSTITUTE OF HEBREW STUDIES
NEW YORK UNIVERSITY
A PERPETUA BOOK
A.
S.
INC.
1954, 1962,
BY ABRAHAM
PERPETUA EDITION
I.
KATSH
1962
TO MY WIFE
ESTELLE
AND OUR CHILDREN
ETHAN, SALEM AND ROCHELL;
nana
'tf
6403050
CONTENTS
page
Preface
189
List of Abbreviations
225
228
Transliteration of
Hebrew
Letters
228
229
Bibliography
INDICES
Koranic
247
Biblical
249
Targumim
251
Rabbinic
252
Authors
257
General
260
PREFACE
wish to express
Professor
my
exegetes*
gratitude to
my
late teacher
and
my
friend,
years at
Solomon
whom
true friends.
It is
a pleasure to acknowledge
my
indebtedness to Drs.
M. M.
PREFACE
For the
many courtesies
have received,
University
to
my
shall
always be grateful
for their
assistance, vision,
April, 1954
A.
I.
K.
which was published by the New York University Press in 1954 there
appeared also a revised edition in Hebrew, published by Kiryat Sefer in
Jerusalem in 1957.
I
am
grateful to
Thomas
ABRAHAM
March, 1962
I.
KATSH
FOREWORD
Abraham I. Katsh.
Even a cursory
Mohammed
works have been written on the Jewish background of various topics in the Koran. But Professor Katsh's study
undertakes to present a clear picture of Mohammed's indebtedness to
Judaism, a picture which could not be obtained from previous sporadic
number
of general
He
appreciated by them.
SOLOMON
L.
SKOSS
May
10,
1952
INTRODUCTION
Nature of Study
Ever
since
his book,
"Was
hat
Mohammed
aus
Smith, "teems with ideas, allusions, and even phraseology, drawn not
so much from the written as from the oral Jewish law, from the tra-
grew round
ditions that
Talmud)
the meeting
is
...
It (the
point of the three Monotheistic creeds of the
it,
it
world; and, even with the imperfect information that the Eastern
scholars have given respecting it, it has done much to throw light upon
them all. Mohammed was never backward to acknowledge the
intimate connection between his faith and that of the Jews. And in
more than one passage of the Koran he refers with equal respect to
their oral
and to
On the other hand, there are scholars like Brockelmann, who claim
that Muhammad's "acquaintanceship with biblical material was, to
be sure, extremely superficial and rich in errors. He may have owed
some of its (Koranic)
Haggadah, but more
1
Abraham
Geiger,
Was
Mohammed
hat
Bonn, 1833; translated into English by F. M. Young under the name Judaism
and Islam, Madras, 1898. The references here will be to the German original
(Leipzig, 1902 edition) unless otherwise indicated.
Nachrichten
iiber
ZDMG, LXX
Arabien,"
Mohammedanische Tradition
in Arabien zur Zeit
iiber
Mohammeds,
Cf. S. Krauss,
Berlin, 1910;
M. Maas,
"Talmudische
Rudolph Leszynsky,
1909, also Die Juden
und Koran,
Bibel
Leipzig,
1893.
a
R. B. Smith,
1889, p.
146;
cf,
Julian Obermann, "Islamic Origins," The Arab Heritage, ed. N. A. Paris, Princeton,
1944, pp. 58-120;
I.
Gastfreund,
Midrasch, Berlin,
1875; J. Earth, Midraschische Elemente, Berlin, 1903 and Studien zur Kritik
Heinrich Speyer,
"Von den
Leiden, 1893;
I.
J. J. Rivlin, Gesetz
biblischen Erzahlungen
und
im Koran,
"
KorrespondtnzUaU,
The
and Christian
ish
Carl Brockelmann, History of the Islamic Peoples, London, 1950, pp. 16-17;
cf.
Leipzig, 1924-32.
bekommen
hat,
we auch
seit
jtidischen Ursprungs,
waren doch
dem
New
York, 1933,
p. 205,
p. 66.
Cf.
H. P. Smith, The Bible and Islam, New York, 1897, p. 315; cf. R. Bell, The
Origin of Islam in its Christian Environment, London, 1926; E. Fritsch, Islam und
*
Christenthum
im
Mittelalter,
Breslau,
fiber eine
Christliche
Muhammad, London,
1927;
I'htgire,
Beyrouth, 1928.
Torrey, op.
in the
Koran,"
eit. t
HUCA,
"Jewish Proper
INTRODUCTION
The
who have
im
I.
im Koran,
Berlin, 1878;
and Beitr&ge
The
Zamakhshari,
alrTanzit
(ed.
Lees),
vols.,
Calcutta, 1856.
I
Mubammad
Cairo, 1331
II
ed.),
vols., Cairo,
1355 A.H.
Leyde, 1862-1908.
A.H.
cf.
BaitfSwi,
down
gradually
80;
p.
it
two verses
is
Sura
I,
sufficient for
Marraaduke
Pickthall,
essentially
14
known
cf.
last
a prayer.
It is
Muhammad's
find
more
them and
them
new
structure. rs
According to the Koran, Muhammad alone possessed a true understanding of God. He stated that he did not come to abrogate the Old
and New Testaments, but rather to fulfill the spirit and the letter of
the Book. He maintained that Abraham was neither a Jew nor a
Christian, but the true expounder of ethical monotheism, and that the
Koran, as revealed to him by Allah through the angel Gabriel, embodied the true revelation which the Jews and the Christians had
Tracing his genealogy to Abraham through his son
Ishmael, Muhammad claimed to be the rightful heir to Abraham's
failed to follow.
16
high rank.
'
A. Sprenger,
Mohammed und
"Mahomet
fut-il sincere,"
New York,
RSR,
der Koran,
Faith,
New
York, 1936, pp. 63-70; N6ldeke-Schwally, Geschichte des Qordns, Leipzig, 1909, Vol.
pp. 4-6;
W.
C. Klein
(tr.),
p. 13; J. Horovitz,
HUCA,
New Testament
Muhammedanism,"
in
I,
ERE # IX,
pp. 482
f.;
C. F. Gerock, Versuch
Bible
William Thomson,
XXXIX,
"Muhammad: His
Life
INTRODUCTION
accepted the Nazarene as the last of the Hebrew prophets. Himself he
considered the Messenger of God and "the Seal of all the Prophets."
He accused the Jews of deleting from the Bible predictions of his
advent. At the same time, however, he accepted most of the narratives
of the Bible.
Mubammad never intended to establish Islam as a new religion.
He considered himself the rightful custodian of the Book sent by Allah
to "confirm" the Scriptures. It is for this reason that in the beginning
he saw no difference between Judaism and Christianity and believed
that both Jews and Christians would welcome him. It is only later,
when he
made
their
centuries.
close relationship
Arabic sources abound in incidents attesting to the friendly relations between the Jews and the Arabs in the pre-Islamic period
li
"Commercial
relations
on a
go back to the days of Solomon; and many books of the Old Testament, particularly
Job and Proverbs, which are strongly marked by the presence of Arabic words,
show that the connexion was steadily maintained." Alfred Guillaume, "The Influence
of Judaism on Islam" in the Legacy of Israel, edited by Bevan and Singer, Oxford,
1928, p.
132.
f.;
W.
J.
Hirschberg,
in
the pre-Islamic
"We
may
gather
that the
"A
pp. 53-72.
proposito
di
cit. t
G. Levi Delia
Orientali,
XIII,
The southwestern
Jews
The Koran
Like the Torah in Judaism, the Koran" is considered the fountainhead of all knowledge dealing with human life. Furthermore, the
and
arrangement of the Suras, the nomenclature for the new religion,
the pillars of Islam seem to have Jewish backgrounds. The term
Koran is probably derived from the Hebrew and, like the Bible, it is
18
"Whole
tribes
Muhammad,"
Guillaume,
ibid., p.
1889, p.
154;
cf.
D.
S.
Margoliouth,
Israeliten
f.
f.;
*J.
"A
Finkel,
Israelitish
RisSla of
al-JShiz,"
"Old
Also,
on Arabia" in D, B. Macdonald
"Jewish, Christian and Samaritan Influences
Presentation Volume, Princeton, 1933, pp. 147-66; C. C. Torrey, op. tit., pp. 42-45;
A. Sprenger, Das Leben und die Lehre des Mohammed, Berlin, 1869, Vol. I, pp. 54-57;
Guatav Weil, The Bible, the Koran and the Talmud, New York, 1846, also Biblische
Leben Mohammeds nach MohamLegenden der Muselmanner, Leipzig, 1886, and Das
med
ibn Ishaq
I.
Goldziher,
Muhammedanische
I,
p. 143.
INTRODUCTION
known
'The Book/
as
The
The
is
built
Moslem
center upon five canonical obligations: the shahddah, or the affirmation that there is no God but
Allah and that Muhammad is His messenger; the observance of
prayer; the
and fasting
payment of zakah
in Ramadan. 22
pilgrimage to Mecca;
Sodom
eight times.
And
Jew, the Moslem believes that each individual is to follow a righteous path and secure atonement by improving
his conduct and by sincere repentance.
redemption.
like the
London,
1960, p. 125.
Mubammad
God to whom
revealed his will through the angel Gabriel. The latter is of the
same stature in the Koran as the angel Michael in the Bible. Scholars
have been puzzled by Muhammad's selection of Gabriel and have
indicated that in his break with the Jews he probably substituted
Gabriel for Michael. They claim that in Islam Gabriel is considered an
According to Islam,
is
the Apostle of
God
who
brings
them
prosperity and good tidings. Jewish tradition, however, does not substantiate this view. On the contrary, in numerous instances Gabriel
occupies a position almost similar to that of Michael. 24
To the writer, it appears that the primary reason for designating
all
prophets.*
Prayet
Every Moslem
Moslem custom
B. Sanh. 44b;
cf.
notes to 2:91.
op.
rit.,
2:125.
2:91.
* Brockelmann,
p. 39.
INTRODUCTION
adopted the
by Mohammed.
instituted
day
"and
It is
in the
week." 28
Prophet who
morning and two in the evening, in order not to make the burden
upon the congregation too onerous. The five daily prayers were
undoubtedly ordained by Muframmad as a result of this early Jewish
practice of gathering five times daily for prayer. 30
Among the Moslems, the hours of prayer are announced by a
crier (Mu'adhdhiri) from the tower of the mosque. Muhammad was
under the impression that the Jews used the blowing of the horn
(Shofar) for summoning the Jewish people to worship. For the Moslems, however, he ordained that a man sound the call for prayers. This
Moslem practice may be traced to an ancient custom followed in the
Temple in Jerusalem. According to a talmudic passage an appointed
crier used to announce: "Arise, ye priests to your service, ye Levites
to your platforms, and ye Israelites to your stands." 31 The crier's
voice was heard at a distance of three miles.
Muljammad chose Friday to take the place of the Jewish Sabbath
and the Christian Sunday. Now we know that the practice of the
Jews in Arabia was to begin the observance of the Sabbath early on
Friday. It is quite possible that Muhammad took this pattern as a
model for his day of rest, although the notion of a complete day of
rest was alien to him. Though he considered the day of rest as a
*
*
39
Vol.
tit.,
Bu., Vol.
p. 354.
I,
Louis A. Ginzberg,
I,
*z
p. 40.
Torrey, op.
New York,
1941,
p. 73.
Hirschberg, op.
Juifs,"
HUCA,
le ffadit" in
tit.
p. 197; cf.
Almsgiving
The
giving of alms
is
another fundamental
pillar of Islam.
The
Ifajj (Pilgrimage)
gogue
oped.
Ramadan
in
Judaism and
132-48.
(Hebrew), Magnes Anniversary Book, Jerusalem, 1938, pp.
2:193.
in
Islam"
INTRODUCTION
However, 'Ashura' has been retained as a voluntary fast and
observed not on the original tenth of Tishri but rather on the tenth
of the Moslem Mufcarram.
Ramadan has been held by scholars to be a Moslem counterpart of
the Christian Lent, but it also resembles the Jewish observance of the
month of 'Elul as a period of Teshubah or penitence. To this day,
pious Jews still keep the forty days from the beginning of 'Elul until
Yom Kippur as a season for fasting and prayer. The rabbinical
year.
is
that
it
commemorates the
forty
days which Moses spent on Mount Sinai before giving the Torah to
Israel. 34
Jihad
The duty
to conquer and,
once under
theory has gone so far as to define as ddr al-Isldm any area where at
least one Muslim custom is still observed." 35
Muhammad
and
in
is
2:179-181.
Grunebaum,
2:125, 187
op.
cti.,
p. 9.
God and
key to paradise
men.
fellow
is
The Koran
evidence in writing
is
required;
it is
assumed as
in
It
Moslems)
is
following
duty-bound not to engage in usury with a fellow bepermissible, however, in dealing with infidels (non-
Mufcammad
regarded
many
Jews as a
punishment from God and for that reason a Moslem is not obligated to
observe them. Thus, the Koran disregards the Jewish concept of a
day of rest, inheritance laws, and dietary laws, but prescribes the rite
of circumcision and prohibits the use of blood and of the meat of a
pig or of an animal that "dieth of itself" for culinary purposes.
The Koranic stories of the Creation, life in Paradise, the question
as to whether earth or heavens came first, the objection of the angels
to the creation of man, Adam's remarkable wisdom, Satan's rejection
of Adam, Adam and Eve in the garden of Eden, Adam's universal
lesson for repentance, stem from biblical and midrashic elements. The
stories about Israel's covenant with God, the travails in Egypt, the
miracles at the Red Sea, the making of the golden calf after Moses
went up the mountain, the Israelites' request to see God manifestly
in order to believe in Him, the restoration of the stricken dead to life,
the pillar of cloud, the manna and the quails, Moses' smiting of the
rock, the objection to the taste of the manna, the giving of the Torah
by "raising the mountain," the breakers of the Sabbath, the red heifer
these stories in the
Koran are
traceable to Jewish origins. Likewise, the concepts of ethical monotheism, the unity of God, prayer,
consideration for the underprivileged, reverence for parents, fasting,
all
penitence, the belief in angels, the stories about Abraham, the Patriarchs, Samuel, Saul, David, Solomon, the injunction of a pilgrimage
to Mecca, waging war against the enemy, the status of women,
of prophets, all
have
tradition*
Many
biblical stories
and sayings
(especially
INTRODUCTION
from the Pentateuch and the Psalms), intertwined with an inexhaustible amount of talmudic and midrashic tales, weave the structural
core of the Koran and its exegeses.
Our
that
the Arabian Jews were uncultured and ignorant and were severed
from traditional Judaism that had been flourishing in Palestine and
The abundance
in Babylonia.
of Jewish thought
From
unknown and
forgotten.
among
1
the Jews
is
well
were speaking Arabic, and likewise all the Jewish communities in those
lands were using the same tongue. Whatever commentaries they wrote
on the Bible, the Mishnah, and the Talmud, they wrote in Arabic, as
they similarly did with their other works, as well as with their Responsa,
for all the people understood that language/' 38 Works confined to the
came
to
Western
civilization filtered
through the
One
He
was
literary works.
und
die
INTRODUCTION
The
in
797
sole survivor of
A.D.
was the Jew Isaac, who was fluent in Hebrew and Arabic.
Another Jew, by the name of Joseph, who lived in Spain in the ninth
century, is said to have introduced to the Western world the system of
Arabic numerals which was used then in India. 48
One of the greatest physicians of this period was Isaac Israeli of alQayrawan (circa 855-955) known to the Western world as Isaac Judaeus. He distinguished himself by his treatises on fevers, and his work
as a physician was one of the Western lights of the Arabian period. He
A.D.),
an
first
as
oculist
He, with the aid of a Byzantine monk, translated into Arabic, Dioscorides' work on botany, which later was used extensively in medieval
45
Europe.
Medicine was part of the discipline of Jewish scholarship and most of
the rabbis pursued the medical profession.
of the
Hebrew
whole Arabic epoch and the Middle Ages was abu-'Imran Musa ibnMaymun (Hebrew-Mosheh ben-Maimon, known as Maimonides (11351204). He was an outstanding Talmudist and was equally at home in
Arabic and Hebrew. His chief philosophic work is known as "Dalalat
al-Ha'irin" (The Guide for the Perplexed), in which he endeavors to
harmonize the philosophy of Aristotle with Judaism. Of him Cassaubenus writes, "He treats religiously matters of religion, philosophically
all that pertains to
philosophy and divinely all that is Godly/' "The Guide
for the Perplexed' has been translated innumerable times into Hebrew,
Latin, German, Spanish and English. Both Albertus Magnus and Thomas
Aquinas lean so heavily on Gablrol and Maimonides that neither of
Har Friedenwald, The Jews And Medicine, Vol. I, The
1
iol!
John Hopkins
cit.,
p. 393.
Press,
He considered
To him
boundless lusts which undermine his health and to choose the right
manner of living. It helps to maintain the fitness of the body and
him
enables
historian of medicine, a contemporary of Maimonides, closes his biographical sketch of Maimonides with a poem by the poet Al-Said ibn-
Sina Almtilk
Galen's
art- heals
INTRODUCTION
49
professed
it
The Kalam
movement
50
which enirg'cd
soil
was the
middle of the 8th century in Babylonia rejecting the oral tradition and challenging the authority of the
Talmudists. It was at this time that the work "Kitab al-'Amanat Wai-
"Book
in the
still
work
of his
was
his
Siddur written
University
50 From Hebrew
Qara, Kara, to read or study the Scriptures,
'~
51 Tr.
Samuel
Rosenblatt, Yale University Press, If
by
in Arabic, presents
him as the
first
teacher
to Gabirol's teachings,
and
mands Gabirol
in the history of
how
among
Jerusalem, 1941.
58 Gabirdl's Isldh
al-Akhldg, has
York, 1901.
S. S.
Wise,
New
INTRODUCTION
Hebrew by Judah
lated into
fluence
upon
ibn Tibbon and Joseph Qimhi. His inChristian philosophy and theology was great, but greater
Moslem
philosophers were
philosophy took its shape and
Hebrew
kissed
it."
Having
received a well-rounded
education,
he became a
And though
literature.
ben Gershon, Moses Narbonne and others. The 14th century was the
Golden Age of Jewish scholasticism and though the following century
sees it in its decay, Ibn Rushd was still studied and commentaries were
55
still compiled
by Jewish scholars. This lasted until the end of the 16th
century when later Jewish philosophers such as Spinoza were no longer
in touch with medieval tradition. The study of the Arabic commentators
on Aristotle fell generally into disrepute -and even Arabic medical
writers ceased to have a strong influence in the European universities.
54 See H. Hirschfeld, ed. Kitdb
al-Khagari, New York, 1927.
65
Friedenwald nh.
rit.
nn
221
it
is
up Oriental
and development
of the great religions of the world and especially the Hebrew language.
In the field of Biblical exegesis, Arabic also exerted an influence
to Sa'adia,
explains
we
find that
difficult Biblical
Among
his translations
treatises
on astrology by
commentary
modern
investigator or student of
learn Arabic and Hebrew instead of Greek
that the
sources of what
tion.
came
to
57
The Reformation
attracted
many Jewish
Isaac Gabbai from Constantinople in 1625, Zaad Abraham from Morocco in 1626, Rabbi Moses from Poland in 1647, and others. These stu-
we
advancing Islamic studies. Horovitz also was for a time professor at the
Mohammedan
The
New
York, p. 101.
INTRODUCTION
trail
its
relation to
From
unmatched by European
tions
libraries.
his
were made. 68
Some
them
of Arabic linguistics.
universities, Oriental studies
field
tenstaedter, Gustave E.
The Hebrew
A new edition is now being published. Vol I has already appeared. Cf.
Scheiber's research at the Academy of Science in Budapest Hungary.
See also the writings of N. Wieder, Z. Werblowsky, J. Rosenblatt, A. J,
berg and others.
58
Sandor
Wizen*
L. Kopf,
J.
Blau,
M. Goshen,
S.
others. All of
linguistics.
America share
Arab
colleagues. Just
as they played a part in the days of yore as intermediaries in the transmission and unfolding of Islamic culture to the Latin world, so Jewish
Israel Life
and
Letters,
SURA
II
VERSES
That
1-2
is
is
in alms.
is
term signifying
of the
3
appears to emulate a Jewish pattern.
Muhammad
1
AH
in
considers the
is
knowledge
p. 12, translates
of all
the book"
is
erroneous, for
DWika
does not refer here to a remote thing, but indicates "the high estimation in which
as
the
is held"; Pickthall, Rodwell, and Wherry also translate Dhalika
Qur-an
"this".
*
oinn
Mikra' mpn.
-rnni
tnpo
o.
is
the
cf. his
(row), Gcschichte des Qordns, Gottingen, 1860, pp. 24-25;
Neue Beitrage zur semit. Sprachwissenschaft, Strassburg, 1910, p. 26, as well as
claims that the
Noldeke-Schwally, op. tit., Vol. I, pp. 31 f. Just as Judaism
Hebrew Shurah
Bible
so
too,
cf. Jallalein
Muhammad,
43:2-3);
mm rnn*
was written
in the
Baidawi 3:98; Zamakhshari 3:6. See also Arthur Jeffery, The Qur'&n
As Scripture, New York, 1952, pp. 9 f. and notes 2:48-50; 3:2 onfurqan.
3
that "the disfigurement of many Biblical names and
Hirschfeld
1926, p. 75;
conjectures
4,
pp. 560
f.
New
p. 400.
cf.
F. Buhl,
it
shall talk 6
daily, in the
2:171.
Synonyms
for the
Koran
between
mah
Life), 42:52;
na
nan on
nan naioa.
,-T*'D
I. e.
Mishnah Ab.
Num.
Rab., 3.
938,
B.
Ben
32a: "Prayer
is
more
efficacious
8:1:
3.
"Great
is
AJI
and Judaism,
is
tantamount to a confession of
SURA
VERSES
II
1-2
Shcma'," the Moslem in reciting the ShahOdah accepts the yoke of the
ill& 'lldhu
kingdom of Heaven, and in uttering the famous la il&h&
but Allah), he repeats the biblical phrases, "For
(there is no God
who is God, save the Lord,"" and "There is no God but the Lord.""
It is incumbent upon every Moslem to pray five times daily (at
13
Goldsunrise, mid-day, mid -afternoon, sunset and before retiring).
15
Rabbi
ziher 14 regards the five daily prayers as of Persian influence.
Simon Duran (1361-1444), who lived in Algiers, maintains that
Mufcammad borrowed the custom from the Jewish Day of Atonein their anxiety to surpass
the
ONE God of the whole world"; see also 21jl07: "Say, I am only
^J $ ^l Uit "j[ ^J, \**\ J*.
inspired that your God is one God,"
will yet
God,
be the
ijJU-
is
I,
p. 12,
J>* &\
VI
&
J*J
*i
&
411.
B. Ber. 13b;
cf.
"Israel,
g|
-.(a'
(aV ,n
n' ?; cf.
cit.,
God
Regarding the incorporeality of
29-31.
te
und Kultus,
J. E.,
Cf. E. Mittwoch,
Berlin, 1913, p. 9
"Islam," Vol.
(1901), p. 15.
und
6,
New
ff.
Zur
and A.
6:3;
tit.,
Wensinck,
J.
Mohammed
en de Joden
York,
p. 653;
Christlicher Gebetstypus
134;
Is.
(early afternoon);
in
p.
my r; and
2, p. 152.
Gebets
nV
tit.,
im Koran"
"Islamisme et Parsisme,"
p. 151;
in
Anton Baumstark,
16,
RHR, xliii
"Jfldischer
Berlin,
1927,
pp. 229-48.
of five daily prayers is regarded by
According to Pollack, the institution
iw D'on"D ovin anprn
Islam as an integral part of the Sunna. nfcwin IBDO i*in
uer nn!? n'ono nyornV wnV Vro
pVna nV'Dnn mrry n nun D^'ttn iV'Ki .-mmo
'' nan ,pVis .J .) .rtJion.
(a'^p 'y ,1'eri ,oVm ,0'anyn
'
S.
ow
upon
Mubammad
Jews
The
three times in the day: in the morning, at eventide, and in the night
a time better suited to the Bedouin travelling under the stars than to
the city-dweller/' 17
In addition to the four passages quoted by Torrey, we find several
other passages in the Koran which give indications of the practice of
five daily prayers. Thus, in 20:130 we read: "Bear patiently then
what they say, and celebrate the praises 18 of thy Lord before the rising
of the sun,
and before
its setting,
and at times
them; and at the ends of the day; haply thou mayest please (Him)."
Here Muljammad directs his followers to pray at sunrise, sunset and
"at the ends of the day," i. e., before retiring. 19 In 11 :116 Muhammad
also directs his followers, "And be thou steadfast in prayer at the two
>f
ends of the day, and the (former and latter) parts of the night.
"
Pickthall 20 renders the last phrase "and in some watches of the night,
whfcreas AH 21 translates it "in the first hours of the night." This
would add, immediately after sunset, another prayer to the three
prayers mentioned in 17:80, i. e., "from the declining of the sun until
the dusk of the night, and the reading of the dawn." In 24:57 the
Koran also talks about "the prayer of dawn, and when ye put off your
a separate service rather than as an extension of the Shafrarit. Compare, however,
Maimonides, Hilkot Tefillah, Ch. I., Halakah V, VI and B. Ber. 26 b. Rabbi Duran
(ibid., p.
(or) rnoix
17
o'0W urb
Torrey, op.
jpn
cit.,
nawm
Ramadan
is
cit.,
pp. 36
ff.
pp. 135-36.
mbnn Dnsoo;
Ps. 96:3:
mas
Marmaduke
p. 474;
cit.,
d.
p. 234.
Ali,
irr.
indicated.
Pickthall, op.
vm^DJ ^oa
f.
SURA
II
VERSES
1-2
and
clothes at noon,
The
rules
in general in
I si
5m
would indicate that the five daily prayers originated with Jewish practices. Thus, a Moslem, like a Jew, is encouraged to pray often and as
84
Prayers may be combined or curtailed
frequently as possible.
when one is on a journey or in time of danger. If one unwittingly
omits a prayer he may recite it when he becomes aware of the omis86
8
sion. * Prayers, too, must not be said in a loud voice nor in a whisper.
Nor may a drunken man pray. 87 Similarly, the rules with regard to
the
prayers pertaining to the congregation, such as reading from
Book, special prayers for the community, petitions for rain, etc., are
88
Some authorities even claim that
all traceable to Jewish practices.
Bu., Vol.
Cf
p.
I,
354:
ad. loc.
sunrise prayer,
According to Zamakhsharl and Baidawi, SjOiJI 5jl^ refers to the
whereas /<*M SjU^ refers to the prayers of mid-day, mid-afternoon, sunset
and before
1877, Vol.
retiring.
p. 204: "It
I,
Muhammad
(Arabic), Bulaq,
"
prayers
(K'n
,Yo niana
,D^nv
tioVn)
rwj
II,
-b
k>
"He who
\*\
"Frequent
utters prayers,
$Vl
l;
Yalkut
I,
p. 157:
seek a
way between
1:13):
from
B. Ber. 31b;
p. 144:
p. 181.
847.
s4:10;Bu., Vol.
17:111,
God"
I,
I,-
these."
in the Tefittah"
this (we learn), it is forbidden to raise one's voice
cf.
23:3,
"who
5:1,
"Be not
rash with thy mouth, and let not thy heart be hasty to utter a word before God;
few."
for God is in heaven, and thou upon earth; therefore let thy words be
forbidden to say the
*> 4:46.
Compare B. Ber. 31 b, "... a drunken person is
Tefillah."
Hirschberg, op.
cit.,
pp. 196-7:
nuina
w
vn
ma pi nssircn
mVnn njjn rm
nV'Bn
n^'unn -nToa 01
oi the rituals
in the
God
before his
rwyn^
mtan
,")mrt
oiV^
nV'an).
Mubammad
his followers for "reciting God's signs in the night-time" (3:109) recalls
to
calling
Mishnah Ben
prayer by a
a Jewish
Even the
may
person
special
praising
custom by which one man would assemble the entire congregation: o'jnD noy
(a'y ,D KDV) rviKDiD B^KD yotw i^ip mm laDioyo^ ^m0n DDJDH^ on^i aurnuy^
Hirschberg,
op.
cit.,
ibid., p.
p.
The saying
1:8.
of
'Amin at the
Hebrew
Ben-Zeeb,
I.
close
of
'Amen.
usage,
^*' has the same connotation as ]D. David Yellin, gikre Mikrcf,
Jerusalem, 1937, p. 33; and Is. 7:9; Ps. 44:14; 2:196. In Islam as in Judaism any
Similarly,
learned
man
good character
^x
uy>
*
of
Hirschberg,
w*
may
*>.
jji
ibid., p.
jjn^M
Smi)
mn H
p. 181:
air.
Wensinck,
J.
^je
jit,
If
4<
(1914), pp. 62
]n
IDIDD
O^WT
iaa
ff.
nn^ya rb ]nn
1*131
nn^ Dip.
^ap
from high noon
from sunrise to a third of the day; Minfrah
Shafrarit
to sunset; and Ma'arib
the entire night. Cf. Ps. 55:18; Talmud Yer. Ber. 4, 1;
(H
,1
31
Numbers Rab.
* During
Study of the
2,1.
(1946), 211-29
and Vol.
XXXVIII
Cf.
Solomon
(1948),
289-316;
of the
Zeitlin,
I.
"An
Historical
N.S., Vol.
XXXVI
SURA H
VERSES
1-2
34
prayer were recited in the Temple, which would indicate that regular
daily services were in existence during the greater part of the Second
Commonwealth. From the time of the destruction of the Temple, the
public recitation of the Shemone 'Esre (Eighteen Benedictions) or, as
they are also known, the Amidah became an important part of the
'
vogue much
in
It
earlier.
90 C. E.), of the Academy of Jabneh, who enacted that each worshipper should recite the Shemone 'Esre individually. In order not to
deviate from the original public recitation, he ruled that the Reader
should also repeat it in public. In the prayer book (Siddur), the Shema'
and the 'Amidah constitute the most important parts of the service,
while the other parts are mainly supplementary. The Shema is
composed of verses from the following passages of the Pentateuch:
Deuteronomy 6:4-9, dealing with the unity and love of God and
observance of the precepts; Deuteronomy 11:13-21, emphasizing reward for the fulfillment of the laws and punishment for their transgression and the duty of the teaching of the Torah to the children;
Numbers 15:37-41, embracing the law concerning the observance of
the %i%it (fringes on the garment) and an exhortation to submit to the
laws of God in remembrance of the Exodus. The Shemone 'Esre is
divided into three parts. The first three prayers contain praises of the
Lord; the twelve middle ones, petitions; and the last three, thanks to
1
we
In the Talmud,
find
is
nn
"\ovtb
(H ,n
rona
Ton mo)
-an*
(a'y ,n
j'D'oio
my itnp
,ia*ia
Dm nn rona ona
njioon onV
oyn n
icern.
ia
ynn' an .n'any
mana) oupn
Ibid., cf.
nnain
,1
*?v
yxa niVen.
,njyn
TOW
:M ,n
,Ton
n0.
nr
nan oViyn
ja
inrn
pm Tin
10
prayer. As for the Shaharit (morning prayer), all scholars agree that
in it the Ge'uttah is attached to the Shemone 'Esre. Therefore, according to the Babylonian Talmud, we have only three daily prayers.
However, Prof. Louis Ginzberg, in his monumental study on the
i.
e.,
between
rising
The hardship
usual time.
Shema
and once for the "prayer" (Shemone 'Esre), was eased by reciting the
Shema closer to sunrise, immediately before the "prayer" (Shemone
1
to the
Shemone
'Esre.
"
Ginzberg, op.
Shemone
cit.,
cit.,
Vol.
I,
in
64:
I,
pp. 68-75.
recall
some
Benedictions.
41
when
/. e.
Moslem
the days are short, the guhr and the *A$r prayers
Similarly
when the
I,
may be combined.
'Isha may be combined.
pp. 141-60.
Ginzberg, op.
tit.,
p. 63: cripjnm
wrai ID Vs pipiV
iVa % vb iiasn
an
SURA
The
VERSES
II
1-2
11
prayer.
may
44
tance/' 46
finds
numerous utterances
53
mow IDDI
Kin nonn
pn
rmnrr
no
pn onp
noxy rwoa
JDT
p^
nmo
,a
TO
/
raor
n^aiyi
'a
^^
JWrf,, p. 75.
ye love.
is
cit.,
p. 72.
what
God knows."
365:
"adaqah
46
"Ye cannot
3:86:
cf.
in alms, that
#*U*
J. J. Pool, Studies in
*1~**
Cf.
Bu., Vol.
J>
Mohammedanism, Westminster,
I,
p.
J^.
historian Gibbon).
47
2:172, 255, 265 f 266; 3:86; 5:12; 24:22; 91:15. Cf. note 55.
48
no mercy"
49
f-*>i
Bu., Vol.
I,
p. 15.
M*
f-^X
Cf. o"iap
4-
I/
pn.
"
*
is like
90:14; 107:6;
the one
cf.:
who
Bu., Vol.
I,
God"
care of the
(Bu., Vol.
I,
widow
p. 485).
p. 11.
2:272, 275, 278; 3:86, 110; 4:9; 57:10-14; 58:14. Cf. Bu., Vol. IV, pp. 117, 128.
12
The Koranic
Jewish tradition. 55
Giving alms was prevalent among the Hebrews long before the
Mosaic laws of charity were promulgated. Jacob, following his famous
dream, vowed to give one- tenth of all his possessions to God: "I will
surely give the tenth unto thee" (Gen. 28:22). Moses later incorporated this principle into the biblical laws of charity (Deut. 14:22).
The one-tenth of all the produce was to be given to the members of
the tribe of Levi, who did not share in the tribal land division. Similar
provisions were made for the poor, the needy, the landless and the
foreigner (Lev. 19:9-10). According to Simeon the Just, "The world
is based upon three things: the Torah, divine service, and the practice
"
of kindliness. s6 The rabbis stipulate that "an individual's obligation to support charity
was
mercy
is
shown
him by Heaven." 60
to
cit. 9
I,
in
HUCA,
pp. 411-30.
p. 141,
205,
II, p.
and notes to
Mohammed
Cf. [B]
1:2.
(y ,ntn
,KDirun) rrtma
# B. B. B.
Wensinck,
J.
p. 114.
* Mishnah Ab.
*
A.
cf.
o^'Vn
lOa;
nmy
cf.
B. Git. 7a:
I,
;(a'y
,r
j'tw) ripi*
p. 365, that
171; cf.
2, p.
rwnjn VDSJD
rwy npixn
]D
Dnenon
man
ay
60
3:8.
B. Shab. 151b;
cf.
'DH
charity.
Mishnah Ab.
npiac nanyn
SURA
The attitude
of
VERSES
II
13
1-2
6*
are steadfast in prayer and give alms, then they are your brethren in
65 This
religion."
concept echoes the prayer of the Jew in the synagogue
is
JjU U
9:1
cf.
Bu., Vol.
05
4)1
S*lA Jl
01
01
*JpU
pioea i/w^an
(n'n ,a'B ,n'ayn
.
1*
p. 360:
4JUJi;
41
I,
cf.
I,
B. B. B. 9b -moa po.
p. 354:
prayers
^il
dUo)
and charity."
-u....<jJI
* OU
J\j
yiW
i?05fc
]n
1^10
4)1
nrp
J^j
m'n
j'Veao
onan
01
'J
14
VERSE
Verily, those
who
warn them or
if
misbelieve,
it is
will
if ye
not believe.
sunk
in error
and
who
"Verily, those
far
Baidawi, Vol.
I,
B. 'Erub. 19 a.
B.
Yom. 38
b.
p. 80.
who
err," 3:84.
SURA
VERSE
II
VERSE
15
God has set a seal upon their hearts and on their hearing;
and on
woe.
their eyes
is
is
grievous
Gaon (882-942
Sa'adia
to the similarity of the roots used in the Bible 6 and in the Koran, 7
and claims that the Koranic verse is almost an exact translation of
Isaiah 6:10. 8
1
Zamakhshari, Vol.
I,
p. 27:
U CJS OU
jUJI
fU*
^
Jl
Nj
JLfc,
1<J
6V
J>JI
HKjJi
J~J....
4JI
.iUj
4JI
JUJ
4^1
^Jl
Jl
JL-I
li
CJ5
ui
4i
*
A irpjv)
Kitab al-Amdndt
Cf
Jk)
U-
nrn oyn
wa'l-'itiqdddt, ed. S.
Beliefs
6
8
ypn.
"Make
their eyes."
5jv
is
di
a'
New
4, p.
160.
And
shut
f.
fat,
And make
VERSE
And when
12
is
not know.
The theory
that he
who
5:12).
We
Talmud
without understanding, That have eyes, and see not, that have ears,
and hear not." 4
B. So*. 3 a.
saying:
"No
p. 589n.
B.
*
Cf.
Yom.
Is.
3:11: iV
rwy VT
Vioj 3 jn
yv*b MB.
SURA
VERSE
II
VERSE
17
20
20
Who made
The concept
ascend from the ends of the earth' (Ps. 135:7), and in every place
where the King commands them, there they cause rain (to fall), and
But when
forthwith the earth becomes fruitful and yields produce
the Holy One, blessed be He, desires to bless the produce of the earth
and to give provision to the creatures, He opens the good treasuries in
f>a
heaven and sends rain upon the earth, namely, the fructifying rain
The phrase here, "make no peers for God," and the one in Sura
51:51, ilah akhar,* recall the Hebrew phrase 'Elohim 'afarim* used in
the Second Commandment (Exod. 20:3; Deut. 5:7).
The unity of God, which is a fundamental doctrine of Islam 5 as
.
reward
will
clearly stated in
n>py nn
n^N ^D n
Jen
will
rain
God
alone,
14:22: n!?n
CTMT
idols, is
capable of giving
refers onan
*n
^an to
mye used
Targum and
in the
nn^
*ODD
o^n
-no^n.
who claims that this word for idolatry is not found in rabbinic literature.
The Talmud states that three keys has God "retained in His own hands and not
entrusted to the hand of any messenger, namely, the Key of Rain, the Key of Childp. 55,
tit.,
birth,
God
that
alone sends
,v>pra
Dead"
is
An
expressed here by
identical
view
Muhammad.
XXXIII
(1943), # 3, p. 196.
j>T
A!!.
mn ow jmn.
onn OM^K.
o.
tit.,
p. 225.
18
Mu
'Adonai 'Efyad (the Lord is One), which is from the Shema'.i The
Koranic unity of God negates the idea of a plurality of gods and condemns the worship of the sun, the moon, and the stars. "And of His
signs are the night and the day, and the sun and the moon. Adore
ye not the sun, neither the moon; but adore God who created you,
The same admonition is found in
if it be Him ye serve" (41:37).
and hath gone and served other gods, and worDeut. (17:3): ".
shipped them, or the sun, or the moon, or any of the host of heaven,
.
which
Muframmad
Exact counterparts
for the
Malik-dl-mulk (Master
Cf. Id
iwom, I^D
Obermann,
.
,pmn
op.
^mr
"iv
,0'oViyn pan.
cit.,
p. 100.
,nri)bnai
Stfer Ye&rak, p.
cit.,
,oim
Kingdom).
is
(There
,mu
np
,)win
(cms
cf.
itta-'lldhu
HUCA,
Horovitz,
ai
O&ha
of the
^ina
.
ii3c
... nry
,wn
jr^y
saw
osn
]DW ,*w
10; Num. Rob. 14:10; ion Tin in no bv man.
.iniVyna
iioa)
iy
mo
,Vn n'apn^
,o'n^
pan
51-52;
SURA
II
VERSE
VERSE
But bear the glad
23
19
23
who
for Paradise
that of a material
is
world with gardens, rivers, fruits of various types, tastes and colors,
wives or perpetual virgins of constant purity, wherein the God-fearing
Moslem
mountain
meet
will
in battle
And
him
fins.
Zamakhshari, Vol.
mates" (S^fk*
p. 59.
I,
The "pure
This
is
clearly indicated
shall
be employed
enjoyment; they and their wives, in shade upon thrones, reclining; therein shall
a speech
they have fruits, and they shall have what they may call for. Peace!'
in
'
(36:55).
1882, Vol.
I,
p.
298 n;
cf.
Is.
Quoted by E. M. Wherry,
Yom.
Zamakhshari, Vol.
nmp
I,
p. 58.
n*
n*V
nnn
Also,
B. B. B.
life;
38b.
IIDD-IK
nmoi me -nm
I,
and
J.
Horovitz,
]nn
20
items in this poem were gathered from the Midrashim 5 and other
rabbinic sources. 6
Muhammad does not mention here the number and quality of the
rivers, but the idea is completed in 47:16 where he mentions four
They
rivers.
timm
Krnyr'a TD3
mo
nnwnaoi
wnoin
pT
JIDDIDK iirrop
-Taiai 'an
wvn
-ion
*oaa
*y jnnoo
mi
ppaDnoi
pmD
j'pnsm
I-ID,
D a
D ^
interpretation
)aa
is
based
Mishnah
oij
loc. %
00
]W man
]D
piD
loipo
This
niDn oipo.
IJQ
mm
ony
a^o DB;I
n*imn ]'0'3^Di r^yo DHian om O'DDD I^H rma DH^D!? pnxn aw) OHTII
D ^
nn ^r nnm ya-iN ncin^ im ]H^D DDI .vm ^ao im DBPD naa 'jn
a ncin i^
noxy
pnxi pn* ^ai ... ono o^pnxn OTW
'na
Tn
,K^
Cf. S. Lieberman,
nio!?y.
Jerusalem, 1935, p. 9;
('y
ia^
'
y ina ib
Dip
]D
nwaa nna
Hion ao aVa
('r ,'e
onia
nn
noW
.
]aa
-IDK
*]vrb
,on3p!?
.(42
nD3
-ID*D^
o^y
*D^
no
i^,
in it
promised to the pious,
are rivers of water without corruption, and rivers of milk, the taste whereof changes
i
47:16:
and
not,
clarified
"The
rivers
of
is
."
ran hv
'HI
PDDIDH ^r 'm
]"
*i
&"
'
H nnn3
n'apn
MGWJ,
*
"^
.(a
o ^ai na^
.nan oViy^
mm^
nair nrn.
Cf. B. B. B. 75a.
SURA
VERSE
II
VERSE
How
21
26
26
can ye disbelieve
He made you
The
God
we
He who
"Is not He
it is
and makes
kills
alive
."
find in 75:35:
comparable idea is
MI It also
blessed be He, restores the souls to the dead bodies
brings to mind the Jewish benediction, "Blessed art Thou, O Lord,
who revivest the dead," 2 and the biblical passages, "The Lord killeth,
and maketh alive; He bringeth down to the grave, and bringeth up"
(I Sam. 2:6) ... "I kill, and make alive; I have wounded, and I heal"
.
(D6ut. 32:39).
Talmud we
In the
4
that the dead will revive; but they turn to dust, and
Ye maintain
B. Sanh. 108a.
B. Ket. 8b. Cf. Bu., Vol.
II, p.
201.
65:
Zamakhshari, Vol.
Baitfawi,
Cf. Rashi to B. Sanh. 91a: oo:> HTTP nniiD HDODI T'XD Kin
ID iniKiab'
inim nr
6
tion,"
ad
^wr
I, p.
loc.
P'DI
iVis o^iyn
PDD
bs
m ]w
*DJ >K
mop
HJDDD
oDn
]D
OK n'apn D'K
.
"rVio Kin
iDyn.
New
Researches
revival of the
p. 43,
1
about "resurrec-
2:52, 53.
22
VERSE
27
This verse dealing with the creation recalls 50:38: "We did create
the heavens and the earth and what is between the two in six days
and no weariness touched us." In the latter verse, "heavens" precedes
"earth," whereas in our present text the order is reversed. In the
Talmud, too, there is a controversy between the school of Shammai
and that of Hillel, as to whether the heaven or the earth was created
The
first,
as
is
day that the Lord God made earth and heaven" (Gen. 2:4). Each
school sets forth arguments to substantiate its claim by logical reasoning. The Sages, however, hold that both, heaven and earth, were
created at the same time. They offer as evidence the Scriptural
verse: "Yea, My hand hath laid the foundation of the earth, And
My right hand hath spread out the heavens; When I call unto them,
They stand up together" (Is. 48:13). The Talmud then quotes Resh
Lavish "When they were created, He created heaven (first) and afterwards He created the earth; but when He stretched them forth He
stretched forth the earth (first), and afterwards He stretched forth
heaven." The Midrash cites the above legend and adds that the
controversy of the two schools lasted until the Shekinah rested on
them and they both agreed that heaven and earth were created
:
together.
Moslem commentators
B. #ag. 12a.
From
Is.
is
drawn
awn
as *V
D'ow
pro
PHI p*V
(fop
'y
.n'twru
nuji
n'apn
ma
nilvxn
rooo)
consult
Book
1923, p. 127.
I,
two
nmw
2,
om
tnaj nr
noVo.
om'3 nnnn
*?y
,"nB)
.(rT'B
jw omiw
1,
ny nrn lain
rwy no in
0'
o'D
iro'
rta'3
As
,mn
to
'1031
n^nn
p
DB^K
O3J
D'or,
SURA
VERSE
II
23
27
Israel's
sanctuary was later erected. This was in the form of a round rock
surrounded by smoke. Later on the smoke ascended upward and the
heavens emerged. Only then did the rock expand, and the earth
from the place of the sanctuary is also a rabbinic conception. Thus: "The world was created
(started) from Zion...;" and: "When the Holy One, blessed be
He, created the sea, it went on expanding, until the Holy One, blessed
be He, rebuked it and caused it to dry up." 5 The Talmud also adds
that the heavens were created from fire and water, rather than from
(started)
smoke. 6
the Garden of
the Garden of
Eden, the Garden of Resort, the Garden of Pleasure, and the Garden
of Paradise. 7 The Koranic idea that God "fashioned them seven
*
Zamakhshari, Vol.
p. 67:
I,
jPj....*U-JI
-U j^\
^jNl fj*
y ^ ^jVi
fJff
^-uiJI c~i
dJU-lj ol^-JI
oiU
jDLi-
At
OUuJl
ji>-j
p0orw -po^
^nnn ID imx nya-w^ ]KD!N IKD^ nnioi nuoo ^nno "rant n^' no .IN-O
nosna 'n
(a'y ,TDP mpD ,oimn) o^iyn nnnn n^DDi n^nn n'nr ]aD io^y n; and: no
rwn niVo o^iyn nn n'apn ia '121 pn
o^iyn ID "i^im ^nno mn D^DI nu^oo Vnno
ID
o*bn ir ma'B ^m -i^3 ^ w nnw WD1 maDD n'apn Vnnn
]a
nip no!?i
n'apn
63
'y
re B?ipo in
,pyr^y
.K
*Cf. B. Wag.
p. 270.
12a; V. Aptowitzer,
MGWJ
tfm. Rob.
B. Wag. 12a;
cf.
Gen. Rob. 4, 7;
12, 4.
yp-n
^a.
or
O|^*Ji
*\J^
**
^j-*^.
and
in
**,
*UJI
J* *jf
t>O
24
heavens" and that the latter were made out of one of them is also
"
Jewish. This tale is found in Midrash ha-Ne'elam: Rabbi Jofrannan
said: This Ra&a' (heaven) that was created on the second day (of
All the other heavens were made
creation) is the uppermost one
out of this one
The Scriptures call it both Rakia* and Shamayim
(Gen. 1:8) because Shamayim was made of Rafcia*. And that heaven
bore all the other heavens which came out of it. f>8
Innumerable references to the heavens are found in rabbinic
sources. Thus in Midrash 'Aseret Hadibrot we find: "God created the
"
heavens and he named the lowest one Wilon." 9 And elsewhere: Rabbi
Me'ir says: There are seven heavens' ;" 10 "Resh Lavish said: There
are seven heavens, named Wilon, Rafcia', Sheha&m, Zebul, Ma' on,
Makon and 'Arabot" 11 "Every seventh is loved by God. In the
.
loved: Heaven, Upper Heaven, Rafci'a, Shefya'Arabot, as the Psalmist (68:5) writes: 'Extol
is
We find
11:9.
The
found
latter idea is
in
Rashi
who
and hovers over the waters by the command of God Tia ioiy ma
noM>ai mn iT-o empn V* re ima cron
Vy ^moi (Rashi, Gen. 1:2).
in the air,
'
Geiger,
op.
<jJ*\J O]j**Ji
J.
Obermann,
1
op.
,n'ra
OWKI
f
op.
cit.,
p.
219.
p. 102.
mai
.nVyo^D Vxion
,icbiy
maw
n'apn
n'n
DD imrov o^ypirt niw ^D i^in p^pin imHi ,nVnna imai n'apn irsrw ,]wmn
y^pin inmr
cit.,
Hirschberg,
Cf.
(T
64-65;
pp.
tit.,
ro
o^yan
Quoted
own
amo) o^om
in Jellinek,
-nai ,nnann
mry
]D,
quoted
60 fi
,H
r-no) ID
^iar
o'pn
,r
in T.S., Vol.
]i^i
D n n
'
a:
nnmon nn
^03 ,ypnn
im
n'apn
p. 130.
If
n'apn
K-ia
ny
]^ua.
ypi
ji^i
]n
I!?H
|n
(D ,r^ r-nn).
B. Sag. 12b.
"
Holy Qur-&n,
p. 22).
Cf. Sa'adia
ifiam iAa*.
24,
where D'nya*
is
rendered
SURA n
VERSE
25
27
i
,ran D'TH).
,3
M
(?
,1
,i*'p
%DB?I
,n
Cf.
,^p
Lclab Tab
,310 imB?) ]n
nya
,m
no
'r
pm
Dip D
IDIK nry^n
DW
aon^ 10*00
*i .D'orn.
24.
%
i'y
'3
is
corrected to
(three heavens).
ynn
nVa ^DH
nnnn
^3.
is
recited:
n'waov nnnoa
]iom
26
VERSES
28-30
Rashi, on Gen. 1 :26, sums up the Midrashim and states that when
man was created God consulted the heavenly hosts in order to empha-
<4
Os)
in the
XXXI
(3),
"Muhammads
who
subjects to you th
that ye
may
may
sail
in the heavens
is
unto a people
man was
biblical
statement that
and
let
It is so stated in 45:11,
and over
cattle,
and what
who
reflect."
the earth
This idea
all
fish of
"God
it
may
is in
12:
gift
all
He
has
from Him;
is
air,
and God
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 creepeth upon
the earth
"
(Gen.
1:26-28).
man
nwna) MoVta
D&renbourg, Vol.
UK IDS
P ''jm
om
]epn
I,
ana
Vilna
1893.
I,
loc.\
.
edition:
See
also,
r'y
]v*
unwo
K^an0^. The
'*na
UD^2tt
latter echoes
governing: UD^xa
Completes
.,
ed.
Vol.
I,
p. 159n.
47,
like
lornro
no^ vhw
Rashi, ad.
Zohar
(ia ,K
Cf.
irnanup
PK
SURA
VERSES 28-30
II
27
jealousy among angels and man, and the earth would be jealous of
the heavens.
it. 5
his deeds?
pnm own
-|^D3
U^l
,nan JVPK-Q)
roK^oa HDN *b
,1DN 'DN
"1
be his deeds,
will
He
Thereupon
replied.
'-i
ann n
,p
-urn
!?
"10*01
,
-|^D3
wan
,n.
nnun nnum on
"ion
na
oy
(n ,n
6
4J
nDi
Tabari, Vol.
I,
lili
o3
r'no WJN
n'mK
nna^
n'apn HaB?
41!
b>
ny
no ,nep
^03 n'apn
nn
n?y3 iaa
]^HD
on
no^n
nyw
na> ^
IIDD
TM
DHDIH ono
n^m ma
MD no
'3e^
po
no
,n^-iK
rnn
no
-|Wm
(n
,pn
ib
oy I^H.
p. 157:
l^Lj
CJU ^feUI
UU UJ^
ona
pi::
]rno
i^
nan nnwna) on
UJWI
Kin
neny
Zamakhshari, Vol.
dllS
I,
p. 67:
0!
PU
Vl
CJIX
AJjl
/^S
1
4l
Jli
Jy oli..
is oi uu
28
of Moses' ascent to
of the Universe!
God
Thou
created,
is
given to
intellectual qualities
creation of
Whereupon
Moses had
man and not to the
.
man upon
earth.
for the
10
As
"We
"Who
Cf.
will
shall follow
[B]
obey
My
,1
laws,
your teaching."
if
Here
Muhammad
man?"
is
replaced by,
'Gn.
Rob.
Shim'oni, Vol.
17, 5;
II, $
2, 19.
404.
I,
JJ
p. 67:
*js\
SjjUJt
and
Is. 6:3;
SURA H
29
VERSES 28-30
The Midrash Lefcab Tob also states that the reason why God said,
"Let Us make man/' is that God does nothing without consulting
He
does not require their advice. Similarly, the Talmud states: "The Holy One, blessed be He, does nothing
"
without consulting His heavenly Court. ts
According to the Talmud, the Bible itself attests to the creation
of man by God alone without assistance. This is deduced from the
biblical verse:
"And God
created
(r
,n:n
,n
^
x*
nwu)
inx
IKTQD
*3K
110^
no no
-J^DJ
God
n'apn
]w
o0
DM K^K -an
mny
-uroai HOOTD.
UDD ppn
onoiK om
Ibid.
Tabari, Vol.
I,
p. 165:
*pw
(^D ,n-n) nian n? pn ,D*T nioxy I^K ]a^ ,oaipn i^ TITO ,onn nr on. However,
Targum Jonathan to Gen. 2:7 mentions three colors only, ivrn Dirw, poiD.
^ B. Sanh. 38a-38b: "Adam's trunk came from Babylon, his head from Ere?
Yisrael, his limbs from other lands, and his private parts, according to R. Aba,
from Afcra
Sanh. 4 9.
f
di
Agma." See
also [Z] i ,n
]mrD
30
VERSES
And He
31-32
Adam
taught
praise
1
Cf. 55:3:
in verse 31
op.
amc^
nonan rm
n*o
no
&
nr
no
n^ia
,r"'
The
the names
Tb,
those
names by
Adam called
the
heavenly
'n
n^ IDK
,nai
a'B na
naioa)
niD
f
ed.) a*'
,a
'D
no
,HHBDin)
'JN
mnan
D^nT); and:
imtp ]va ]n IK
,1
-JDP
nnw n
%
-ipn^?
nw
nr
-)!?
ia*D
no
nivn
nr\b
-ION
DTK
ib
py
-non nr TIP nr
no
JD.
According to Midrash
^ ]mo
^ iV
IJ;T
[Z] (n
IDK
DIM
rw&nn
Adam
ain
designated
^DD
DDHM
oaWo
HDK
]rb
mpn
i"n
Haas,
on^
,D'MD
no
ib
*JK
Lefcab
rwyi
n*
is
story
*ran
DIN topn^
(a
S.
cf.
nvin
no
Hebrew Ditrp;
biblical
p. 269; A. Jeffery,
cit.,
2
(i
plain speech.
nr^i ni
n'apn
^a by
mam
pnn
no ^'K
nnp^ nw
IDK
]n.
'a
in'3D^
Cf.
IKTI
INU
jij;i
ID
^ imo^ no ^ ID
nnn *a^D^
'n
no
p'aym
not*
am
n3
j^in cm
noi Tmn
n'apn io
ny
ia
nyra
nma
wi
also (Sch.
SURA
VERSES 31-32
II
3f
nay, moreover, are you able to stand up and call the names for all
the creatures which I have created? They stood up, but were unable
(to give the names). Forthwith Adam stood up and called the names
His creatures, as
for all
it is
said,
all
"
cattle'
(Gen. 2:20) .3
God
God
informed
secular
Adam
and
him
to
name
5
religious matters in this world.
P.R.E., p. 91.
<
Zamakhshari, Vol.
I,
<U!LPJ
32
VERSE
33
And when we
once about to take place in error, God frustrated the action. >>a
This claim of Geiger is refuted if we assume that the word sajada,
literally meaning "bow down'* (before him), does not refer to the
deification of man by the angels, but merely to tribute and honor.
Such an interpretation is actually given by Zamakhshari and Baitfawi,
agree that the command to the angels to "bow down before
Adam M is not to be understood as a command to adore or deify him. 3
who
worth mentioning that quite apart from the Moslem commentaries, Torrey recognizes that "the Koran does not speak of worshipping, however, but merely of approaching a personage of high rank
in a truly oriental way/' 4 To the interpretation of the Moslem commentators, the rabbis offer an abundance of parallels and counter5
We find in the Midrash: "On the day when the first man was
parts.
It is
Cf. 38:71-75
1938, pp. 84
a
and E.
J. Jurji,
f.
Geiger, op.
cit.,
p.
98 and
p.
77 (English edition).
He
(found in Zunz, "Die Gottesdienstlichen Vortrage der Juden," p. 291 n.) that shows
It is
of
in that worshipping
Zamakhshari, Vol.
.4J
"Diese Vorstellung
4*^1
*
is
4*rj
I,
p. 69:
O^jJj
Jf>
cit.,
aiyo^ rnron
,b
p. 71
rvnnrwn^
p. 224.
OiU!
(^tj)
J~*
\J3j
cit. 9
cit.,
p.
25
JUJ
4&SJI
n.,
inoip
Jewish tradition.
typisch christlich."
ATp-lj <Ju-ji
Torrey, op.
no*
is
cit.,
in
*?y
op OIK K-QJP
nv-inn
^3
imn
jr:>
SURA
4
created, as
it is said,
VERSE
II
In the day
33
33
created they
were prepared,' the Holy One, blessed be He, said to the ministering
angels: Come, let us descend and render loving service to the first
"*
man
That the angels adored Adam "save only Iblts," is also discussed
in the Talmud and other rabbinic sources. R. Judah says: "Adam
reclined in the Garden of Eden, whilst the ministering angels roasted
flesh and strained wine for him;" 7 thereupon the serpent 8 looked in,
saw him, and became envious of him. "In the hour when the Holy
One, blessed be He, created man, the ministering angels mistook him
for the Deity and wished to proclaim him as the Holy One. God
then made man to fall into a deep sleep, and all knew that he was
human." 10
nnina utna*
ny
o^
u^y
,'Jiyoe?
DipV')
aV
vzbn
'
noa
ninan
*?3
onto
mnn
'V
uyi re n
OIK
tins.
P.R.E., p. 89.
The Talmud,
Adam
to
Garden
in the
was
meat
from
e.
Satan;
cf.
p. 84.
Re the term
Kor.
Unt.,
87;
p.
also
diabolos; Shaifan
(ash-shait&n)
to Gen.
ibid.,
pp.
120
5,
f.;
cf.
A.
N.
Pollack,
... rrun.
cit.,
p.
130;
3:1: ]o
p. 179.
9
I,
15
)xn.
n'apn vrav
nya
rru
tupnn.
10
.n
nry no ...
,nan
nna
34
VERSE
34
And we
said, *O
However,
signifying bliss,
Rab.
p. 71; Gen.
term AJ^-
cit.,
and py p
17, 18;
is
in
,3'n J'ID.
py,
name
the proper
is
5, p. 84.
is
is
no doubt that
its
of a region
derivation
is
cit.,
Though the
is
also found
Neue Beitr&ge
any
,K'n
(n'h
quoted
*
-in?)
.,
p. 61.
in'K
men IN^O
*n pnn rpoVixi
I?TN GTKH
0m
pai mon
hy vnrmi
iVo
mn
i yin
^N'DDI
nr m,
Zamakhshari, Vol.
BaitfSwI,
6
rrn
ad
I,
p. 69:
loc.
on
0run
pna
'iyo at
SURA
VERSE
II
35
34
is
'o
tit.,
p. 100.
Tabari, Vol.
4J-I
CJtfj
I,
p. 181:
c>j>-
Ui
J>o
01
UfJju-i
4,1
i^JLI
Ui...
Jl
>
Jl
U
JU ^j
jj
i
ju
jJI
U dlx-
ju
oLij
JA Cj^l
,^-,1
isji
JU"
^>J
Jl
VI ...CJI
u^* Jj^.
^ii oir
JQJI
dJLL
JU
Sj^lSI
^waJ
jdl
01
O^jl
CJI C^J)
ISU
36
As
upon the
earth,
greatly multiply thy (woman's) pain and thy travail; in pain thou
shalt bring forth children
cursed is the ground for thy (man's)
.
sake; in
since
it is
written
He
said,
and I
(Gen. 3:16), which refers to the two drops of blood, one being that of
menstruation and the other that of virginity.""
According to Baitfawi, the prohibition to "draw near this tree" was
a means of precaution. For the proximity of a thing stirs up a desire
for it. 13 The Aggada, too, relates that when Adam told Eve that
SjJU*
JJ
jo!
CJI
v^l
rrn
* '131
(
Mtar
VyiJDD
.H'-IIB)
way ,py
.p nma
OJH GIT?
"Tabari, Vol.
I,
noV
Ji
^DD
*\h
h*
:IDH
'
DITJ;
IDHI o
:iV
,yoD.
HI^HI ]3a
Cf.
,D
'
nwu.
p. 182:
V
*
IDH -wpn
rm nnwna).
.a'a
xo
TITO PP nor
Jjj 4)
VI
T.
B. 'Erub. lOOb;
cf.
Bai<J&wi, Vol.
p. 20.
I,
i^^i
Uo)l
S.,
On
oi
Jp V
*LJ Ol^J
*lj>-
ou AI Jia...
Cj.UI
jdl
i^WI
writes:
Jjb)l
OUoi. j.
^OJI
^li
^Jl
JJUJ
OUIL- 4J
SURA
II
VERSE
37
34
God commanded
of
of the
whether
it
was permitted to
kill
a snake.
that "only an ox that killed (is tried) by twenty- three, but any other
animal or beast who killed, whoever is first to kill it acquires merit in
.^lj
Cf. 7:18, "but
* nan
vh
noo mi'
"IOH0
mott^ ronr
f
j iiK)
(H'D
o-wn Vy
vrn^
in
will
ye
I,
nVi
p,
21:
nm
loxy
AUJIjl
pwnn
jo nin
be of the unjust/'
iyan
imwn p
ny'M I^DH fyn
sBai(Jawi, Vol.
o*rfrn 'n
this tree or
JiJI
nina nr
pvmn DTH
noi n'apn i^
iniV
fpn
n.
4^
^11
j\
^kJ-1
^A
3y>JtJlj;
cf.
Zamakshari, ad he.
I<J
fig tree/*
As
Haggada
1948, p. 56.
* Tabarl,
XXI
4l
Vol. I f p. 181.
ff.
bei
was a
niW, HUCA,
38
without
18
na'py
...
trial).
>>x8
'ID
...
nwfo pa
]n ]H
:na
in
carcass of a snake
opinion
kill
is
that
it
was
op
in T.
and thus
woman
man
why
nw
the
should be eager to
fulfill
oroa
mm
his skin
S.,
wn wn. The
quoted
irno HM
n0Vn onpya
nar
rn tO'H
is
'n
Cf.
.":
nn
will
put
it is
stated that
snake/
ynaci
aio.
SURA
VERSE
II
VERSE
And Adam caught
35
words from
certain
He
39
35
his Lord,
and
He
is
easily turned.
The Arabic
3:19).
We
penalty for killing Abel, the latter replied that he had repented and
his punishment was mitigated. 5 Thereupon Adam realized the importance of repentance. 6 The Midrash also states that when Adam
violated the prohibition of eating from the forbidden fruit, he implored
God not to mete out the punishment of death on the very same day,
*i
having the same meaning as the Hebrew term nawn (repentance), from
Baicjawi, Vol.
JUb
p. 21.
I,
Jfj^l j*j
^V
*>dl
Cf.
in
of Forgiveness as
Phil.
01
^.j
.'Jl
-oU&l
4UMfc!
Jp
expressed
f jJl
in
the Qur'Sn,"
Society,
LXXXIII,
pp. 63-79.
3 N*?
on^
,o-rKn
^3n
bxN -urwai
TJDK nyra
]nn
n^
"i
ow
n'D-a
"i
oin
VK o'n^K
,nain nwy^
ID
,]
iaa
*nmn
'n
^ rm
naw
jwtnn oi8
-iD
nyj^
([B] ro ,nwKia
6
^ now
ID
-IDK
nma
unman) (a
.dnyn
,a"x
f
ID -nan 'n' n
o^nn)
'n^
nmn^
aio.
Cf. n
Vi^K io
,aio
,a'
by neon
nryj no
inw.
,nan
nria
nn
nna
]^p
40
but one thousand years hence (God's day), so that he would have
ample time to repent. 7
8
Tabarl and Zamakhshari relate that Adam pleaded with God:
"Didst Thou create me? Didst Thou imbue me with Thy spirit?
Didst Thou place mercy before anger?" Such a plea is, to our knowledge, not to be found in rabbinic sources. However, the idea that
God placed mercy before anger in His dealing with Adam is explicitly
mentioned in rabbinic sources where it is stated that the reason for
God's calling to Adam, "Where art thou?", was to place mercy before
judgment and thus induce Adam to repent. 9 Teaching Adam to
repent has influenced the whole world to learn the art of asking
forgiveness."
voo
mwy) ro ^a
Yy
,n"V i~i
quoted
Wunn
vbv
nr n'n
ivayn ioxy
in
o-nn
Tabari, Vol.
Jl
gtf
VJ
^1 JU J, JU
JU db^r
J.
187:
I, p.
Zamakhshari, Vol.
I,
^j
(i
j^SUJ
Jtf
tf
dJL-^P
Jli
....Jj
ila-o
dlio-j
Jj
Jl
c->j
JB
Jl
J--J
Jl
*-J
J:
L.J
^->rf
J tf
l-
Ju
Je
...Ji
Kin
'
(i
rno
pn yir n'apn JK
aw ^m TIT i^ nnc
,H'a ,nai
10
laooi
mo
onpn
'31
w*
&
*py
H!?H
o'ornn
IDHM
mo
.([B]
*6n
'
'n
]n ... DTKH
iV nni>
10^0
W inora mini
mm na nan
^a nayna
inn nr
ar
Jtf
!?H
dJL^
'^H 'n
nawn ny*
,ynrn KDinjn)
nno n'apn
^?
we
(man
nawna no nvo
(twmn onn
iV
n'wna) nawn
Kin* iro*
Jli...
p. 70:
b.
oomn
^1
mpn
.
jnn
nnyi
pwnn
OTH
IDK IT.
Hn
iJDia
a"i
in
SURA
VERSES
II
VERSES
38
AND 44
41
38 and 44
rabbinic dictum:
Compare the
My
"And
My
will establish
covenant*
Me
My
its
is
similar idea
B. #ag. 3a.
5
precepts day and night, and be blessed by Him.
found in T abari, who also interprets the favors
Cf.
,rb
(a'y
OTIDB)
'roa rwoV
iV
noiu* .onain
nna
in
jn
See 3:111:
rp KpDB ,-]ryro "UDD) ...b omiD na TTID oiw moar
"What ye do of good surely God will not deny, for God knows those who fear."
and
([F]
Also 2:147.
9
(a'o
,r'D
3
Cf.
Cf.
WD rm
JK
vnD'pm
and
segullah
is
'niD'pm
*nna na
JK
'man
oman
as
'a
its
ma
"WK
Mishnah Ab.
3:18:
inna a^ny^
Vmr
nar.
O'a'an.
translated
,pnn ^a
Yerushalmi give
meaning "beloved,"
oyei .inoa nn
K'DDJ;
Vao
fyan.
(n ,D^
for
-jV
^Nprrr).
Onkelos
nna
mov
rtorp jan)
42
Egypt.
The Rashbam
offers
human
specific reason.
dear to
Me
He
yet you
thereby will you be more beloved to Me than
for
species
be to
shall
you
worship
Him/
iom -OTJ
Me
race to call
all
understand and to
in the name of the Lord and to
a kingdom of
human
rrtnjD
priests, to
'n
.I'ao*)) 'n
np^.
Tabari, Vol.
I,
^ on"m nan
.pan ^3 ^ 3 -IDNI
om
toe.; cf.
"
18
0'oyn hzb
(n ," nior
is
But Rabbi
a similar explanation. 7
-IPN
^3
irw
T3
p. 191:
Moshe Greenberg,
"Segulla,"
JAOS,
1952, Vol.
LXXI
(3),
pp. 172-
'"
ow
0^3
V rnn on
mpV
nior ,iniDo)
*?y
3'3n
mw
mm
Vs!?
Israel.
nrsn
(m3)
viann pon
'
oipo ^DD
(1951),
H^ID rnn
SURA
VERSE
II
VERSE
43
46
46
When we
wreak you
Muhammad
3
the slaughter of the Israelite children in order to bathe in their blood.
Zamakhshari, 3 Baitfawi and Tabari4 quote a tradition that the
Egyptian wise men foretold to Pharaoh that a male child would be
born that year who would inflict defeat upon him and crush his empire.
This caused Pharaoh to decree the death of all male children.
This tradition is well known in the Talmud, where it is related that
Pharaoh decreed the slaughter of all male children, because the
astrologers had warned him that a boy was soon to be born to the
Israelites who would overthrow him. 5
The Midrash also describes how Pharaoh's people "sought to
M
wreak the Israelites "evil and woe." "The taskmasters of Pharaoh
were beating the Israelites in order that they should make (for them)
the tale of bricks, and it is said, 'And the tale of the bricks, which
they did make heretofore, ye shall lay upon them
o'oys >np
ounn)
3
Zamakhshari, Vol.
I,
(Ex. 5:8).
mooi
-|^
onxo
'DIB-IH
now
*tb
p. 75:
4Jb
Cf
Baicjawi,
4
a4
/oc.
Tabari, Vol.
B. Sot. 12a;
I,
p.
208:
gty.1
cf.
OJj
[B] ra
The
loc.
Binpj N ? ON
^opo
,'H
mo
ISU
.aw
Ji^ *LJ
np!?
:Top on
^^O-
,nio
Jl
imna
no!?
nwa mm
44
Talmud
"Amram was
that
and divorced their wives. His daughter said to him, 'Father, thy
decree is more severe than Pharaoh's; because Pharaoh decreed only
against the males whereas thou hast decreed against the males and
females. Pharaoh only decreed concerning this world whereas thou
hast decreed concerning this world and the World to Come. In the
case of the wicked Pharaoh there is a doubt whether his decree will be
or not, whereas in thy case, though thou art righteous, it is
certain that thy decree will be fulfilled ... He arose and took his
wife back; and they all arose and took their wives back." 7
fulfilled
The
Mosaic
cf.
Geiger, op.
tit.,
pp. 153-54.
Deut. 29:1-5.
*
Israelites
in
were put to rigorous labor which crushed and shattered their bodies.
SURA
VERSE
II
VERSE
45
47
47
When we
Chapter
14, verses
Tabari writes that the Koran in using the word bikum implies
that the sea was divided 3 into twelve parts, a number equal to the
twelve tribes. This is found in the Mekilta Beshalafy.*
According to Zamakhshari, the
sea unless the tribes, separated
see each other while crossing. 5
Israelites refused
by the walls
of water,
to cross the
were able to
Tabari, Vol.
I,
[W]
I'B
p. 210:
l*
Cf. Zamakhshari, Vol.
yir
\tii
*\j>m
([W] M'D
I, p.
01
JT
75
<>.j
nWa .yom
Ja***
ttn^oo)
[&j
cjtf
1
apy 'oa
iy ow
Cf. Ps. 136:13: onnfr HID o' nrA as well as: (n'oo .H'-ne)
Zamakhshari, Vol.
ju
I,
y v bUw,i
p. 75:
jji
^-^J
yis
dlLj
46
That the Israelites agreed to cross the sea only provided Moses
met their conditions is also told in the Midrash. 6 According to Jewish
tradition, making the walls transparent so that the tribes could see
one another was one of the ten miracles performed at the Red Sea. 7
Jewish tradition also relates that Pharaoh sent along some Egyptians to see that Israel returned after three days. When the Egyptians
notified Pharaoh that Israel refused to return, Pharaoh mobilized his
army and
The Egyptians
side.
followed.
When
they were
all in
the midst of
the Sea, the waters began pouring back and drowned them all. 8
Tfabari relates that when all the Israelites entered the sea, Pharaoh
watched them from the shore while riding on a male horse. Then
Gabriel appeared on a female horse and when the male horse saw her,
he ran after her. Pharaoh's horse was followed by the other Egyptian horsemen and they all entered the sea. 9 This legend is found in
4JI
o'apj D'n
([W] TB
i
(a'y
n^ita
,oy
'*.~\yo -\y
,nV'3D
,nWa
may) K^
no nay
ioip
.Koinan)
p. 167.
*
[W]
I'B
nWa
Tabari, Vol.
,nV'3D;
I,
onV
cf.
p. 211:
B. Pes. 118b.
no
'yn
no
on
crn ^y
o'on wspi.
Vy irma
ram
Cf.
noy
nytpa
Grunbaum,
op.
tit.,
SURA
VERSE
II
47
47
God), and
(of
The
1:9).
it
10
is
mown
Dnxo^
no'D
(TMK emo)
(
[B] 3D
10
,"i">B
o*a
,n^a
P.R.E.,
nWa
runt? |ra
,2iD
(TMK
cf.
Grunbaum,
n ?^
1
nr
-naya abii
,N'TW)
(J'DJD
(
mo) imn
,154
op.
a/,
166;
p.
p. 17; r'D
pno
1^01
^TTD)
,n^a
(Kor.
pp.
,i"p
"
D'W
;^
nnb
nny
,o) now
:(r
([B] na ,YMD
Unt.,
H* n
-]i
mna
ypn
... HD^D
,3
%
]
^n
cit.,
-n; and
,ma npb.
also: no
-]^
[B] 3D
rrt>BQ
yin IDIH
won^ ]w^
mpn
iniNai (a
]^:DI .o^non
o^iy
nav;
f.)
np^).
see
ia^o
na
this
story
Islamic
IDD^I
o VID.
Zamakhshari, Vol.
I,
p. 75:
Vj
AJjAftl^J
dJ)
162;
]a
n'apn
Tan^
a/., p. 237)
influence.
p.
^ mu
Cf.
n'
,ai
23
?n'oyn
mot
nn^.
oy
?no
^D :IDHJ
nap3
IT D^
onoy ^Hnaa
tPTTD)
la
(I'D ,D
.on*o ^y
([W] TD
^WD
,*p
,^nan ^110;
11
roi
Dyaoi
331;
p.
^na&
DDI
'
nvy:
IHW
and Horovitz
See Ps.
136:15;
48
found in the Aggada The Israelites saw the Egyptians dead in order
that they should not say that the Egyptians escaped from the other
side of the sea just as the Israelites came out from this side. 13
The Koranic expression " while you looked on" recalls the fol"
lowing legend: Rabbi Simon said: On the fourth day the Israelites
The Egyptians were floating
encamped by the edge of the sea.
upon the surface of the waters, and a north wind went forth and cast
:
(ion
I'JD
onain
(WJ).
inni)
on
]D
by
p. 332.
Israelites
,DTID
onxon DN ^*n0* im
onn -p n? TXD on
M P.R.E.,
JD
SURA
II
VERSES 48-51
VERSES
49
48-51
When we
and
each other!'
kill
The Talmud
"When Moses
relates:
This
is
B. Shab. 89a;
Ka
1^1 ov
'JN
o'j?ai
Ka i'3 nona
K'aiany
ov
cf.
o'jmn
po^
,mD
pon
rwo rbyvs
~\rf?
,')
P.R.C., Vol.
mnon
II, p. 399.
ov ny
na 6i niy
no IT
nirvK
M jw
non
on^
vb
w 1*0
obiyn
pa^ winna
my
'i
rv'^y ovi
m aanyi
-pna
my
SO
the expected hour, the Israelites made the golden calf. This may be
the reason why Muhammad refers to the forty nights only, since it
was the fortieth night that caused Israel's sin. 4
The Midrash also relates that Moses "burnt the calf with fire,
and powdered
like the
.
Temper, were restrained from (doing harm to) Israel. But two
(angels) remained. Moses spake before the Holy One, blessed be He:
Sovereign of all the Universe! For the sake of the oath which Thou
didst swear unto them, keep back (the angel) Destruction from
and Destruction was kept back from Israel, as it is said,
Israel
'But he, being full of compassion, forgave their iniquity and destroyed
them not (Ps. 78:38). Moses spake before the Holy One, blessed
be He: Sovereign of all worlds! For the sake of Thy great and holy
Name, which Thou didst make known unto me, hold back from
What did Moses do? He
Israel (the angel called) Glow of Anger
dug into the earth in the possession of Gad, as (though for the foundation of) a large dwelling, and he buried Tierce Anger' in the earth, like
a man who is bound in the prison. Every time Israel sins it arises and
opens its mouth to bite with its breath, and to destroy Israel. Moses
pronounced against it the (divine) Name, and brought it back beneath
the earth. Therefore is its name called Peor (the one who opens)." 6
.
(I'D 'y
.jvpma ma*)
'in
'n
loc.,
onn TO a UK inn
-mo
'in
rrm
SURA
The Koranic
VERSES 48-51
II
51
Book
reference to the
Mosaic Revelation
deliverance (8:29),
Professor
Geiger, op.
p.
tit,,
55; Hirschfeld,
ERE,
Vol.
E.
X,
New
(Wien, 1885),
'
D.
S.
p.
.,
Mark
p. 499.
Margoliouth, op.
Baidawi, 3:2
JV
tit.,
p. 145.
y'-
I,
p. 24, in his
comment on
**
*
*!***
as a derivation from the verb (Jj*,
verse, explains the term <Jv*^
"to separate/' which denotes the Torah, since the Torah distinguishes
this
i. e.
truth
Many
of the sayings
of Psalms 104-8.
we have
my
14
and ideas
In another place in
in Suras
(j^^/*)
The
the righteous shall inherit the land, and dwell therein forever."
ZDMG,
11
LII, p. 133;
Horovitz,
Is.
6, p. 18,
Cf. Schwally,
60:21.
HUCA,
pp. 217-18,
It is possible
that
52
As
"and
kill
The Talmud 15
'Let
(then
making atonement 19
term furq&n from the word O'pnsV in the talmudic passage: O'pns^
(a'p ,D'JC ]'-nrtJD). Of interest is the phrase yautna 'l-furq&ni in 8:43 which
with the expression in the Targum
however,
See,
Rivlin,
J.
"jmipa
Sam.
11:13, KipiiD,
(dtf^l) ]pnBn"
mm
is
identical
meaning "deliverance."
in
Gotthold
Weil Jubilee
*!
-X ju\
*-
......
Zamakhshari, Vol.
I,
p. 75:
oi
M Baidawi,
Vol.
Yom.
66b.
B.
rt
BauJSwi, Vol.
f*
I,
p. 25:
I,
p. 25.
4<
Literally,
i on) ioxy
%
'kill
himself,' with
mo n^ no*.
Zamakhshari, Vol.
10
(a'y ,T
I,
p. 75,
*i
7.
U^
^:yn nn
rrm
rm
na?' no
SURA
VERSE
II
VERSE
S3
52
52
And when ye
said to Moses,
Moses! we will not
believe in thee until we see God manifestly/ and the
thunderbolt caught you while ye yet looked on. 1
This story
we
special light created for the vision of the prophets/ The phrase "They
saw the God of Israel" (Ex. 24:10) is explained by Abraham Ibn Ezra
to
in a vision." 5
of the
and 4:152.
about the
his vision
and
HM KB^
iVa'
&
'fin
died.
-\*
Then Moses
,orb
p D n
-i
mm
IK
interceded for
N) .'n o"nrt
>
ni p ^
God
"Muhammad
'
pp. 278
f.
nKiaj runoa.
B. Shab. 88b;
story:
maa
ni
cf.
Geiger, op.
pun vm
tit.,
i^ip iyori
iim
IKT
n"apn
54
According to Baitfawl and Zamakhshari, seventy 7 leaders requested of Moses to see God, otherwise they would not believe in
Him. This probably is based on the story in the Bible that seventy of
the elders of Israel saw the God of Israel: "Then went up Moses, and
Aaron, Nadab, and Abihu, and seventy of the elders of Israel; and they
saw the God of Israel
." (Exod. 24:9-10).
.
PKH -pno
nyw
nm
in
New
B'D
mm non
]now
p.
107
Koran
n^aai
n.,
"it
'n
umn p
*ro^ IHS
mm TD o^no ^aai
'
i^np
D^HD
]VD
I!?D.
However, Hirschfeld
is
the people
who
,ai
1948, Part
I,
pp. 286
in
I,
p. 76:
(!)
52.
whilst
Cf.
also
npb>;
and A.
S.
f.
Zamakhshari, Vol.
rm
to Qur'Sn
nn im^a
noy^ RD
n'apn 3D^D o'om Dn^y rwpa minn
D 1^0
ina
[W]
*?y
Researches...,
Muhammed
HUD
onoy -010
'n
SURA
VERSE
II
VERSE
Then we raised you up
55
S3
53
may
after
be grateful.
Talmud
in the
inter-
Torah
Tabari comments: After the seventy were restored to life, they
gazed at each other with amazement and said (to Moses): All your
requests from God are fulfilled pray that we too may become prophets. Moses implored God, whereupon they were inspired with prophecy. This is the meaning of the Koranic sentence: "Then we raised
cession of the
itself. 3
you up after your death." 4 This tradition about the seventy people
who became prophets probably has its origin in the biblical story
and took
(Num. 11:25) "and the Lord came down in the cloud,
of the spirit that was upon him, and put it upon the seventy elders ..."
According to Baio'awi, 5 they were punished because of their insistence on seeing God or comprehending Him in corporeal form, imagin.
Tafslr-i-Raufi,
B. Shab. 88b;
cf.
2:52 note 3;
sake
to turn
rtnp
106:8; "Nevertheless
"Had
,0'aB
see also
op.
tit.,
,nan
mop)
P
(i
,'
Part
Tabari, Vol.
He
lest
ryowi
p. 309.
He
maa
nana*
jnow
mm
imn
B ,naT naioa)
I, p.
I,
Vol.
cf.
tit.,
jnn
Vy onow
TO
n
rni iVip
nms
... n'apn
^m'
in the breach,
'Vo o'm
im
ia
onan
i!?w
Him
n'apn
]va
tioyV na
npa minn ^a
nma; and Jellinek,
on'Vy
nyv
69
I,
p. 224:
IJIU!
Referring to 2:52.
Jl
VI
ILi
4JLJ
-oil
'^o
^JU
CJI
56
God
ing that
possesses dimensions
and
comprehensible to the
human senses. He adds that some Moslem traditionalists
maintain
^^^
6
that a fire descended from heaven and killed them. This very same
idea is found in Maimon ides' Guide: "But the 'nobles of the Children
of Israel were impetuous, and allowed their thoughts to go unrestrained: what they perceived was but imperfect' '.
"They are
blamed for the nature of their perception, which was to a certain
a result which necessarily followed, from the fact
extent corporeal
that they ventured too far before being perfectly prepared. They
deserved to perish, but at the intercession of Moses this fate was
averted by God for the time. They were afterwards burnt at Taberah,
except Nadab and Abihu, who were burnt in the Tabernacle of the
7
congregation, according to what is stated by authentic tradition/'
is
Bai<jawi, Vol.
4Jtj
JW
fttiJI
I,
41
p. 25:
\jb
jU-Vlj
f4U
Ol^JLl
A>.
L*jyi
04 01
jU O.U
ijj
^UJI
Cf.
,m0D)
([W] n'oj; ,r
7 Moses
Maimonides,
oDn
r/wr
]D
nnrv
io<fe
nwy^ p-my
in
ijj ojj
jSLJi
J^lki
j,
^ o^JJ
JJ...5>^fl
/or
mn
Perplexed,
DMV oipon
tr.
by M.
'3fl!7
nh nn
Friedl2nder,
H^
n'apn
irn H^
i^ip
nn
dilij
a IBIW.
'Di
n^
TH
SURA
VERSE
II
VERSE
57
54
54
but
us,
it
was
Israelites.
The
cloud served as a
pillar of
4
intercepting the missiles.
The pillar of cloud (one of seven) that moved in front of Israel also
served to level hills 5 and to fill valleys so that Israel might have an
protection
by
6
easy road on which to travel.
Compare
Ps. 105:39-40,
They
"He
asked, and
He
brought quails,
And
fire to
give
in plenty
/. e.
(K'D ,n!?0a
*
also:
Cf.:
overlapped (D^PD).
KH^DD) noix
0n
miia
.n^n
^N-i0'
-rioy
mm hmw ?
rny
a^sn
"a
P?n
ano*
*b
po
inn
:o"-i2CDV
inborn pyn
vn
mm.
linn*
1*33*0
jn'a
p. 61.
(PI'DT TD1.
6
M.S.N.,
it raised,
and
p. 61:
"Every
it killed
."
58
them from
Jewish sources, which claim that "the Divine clouds of glory rubbed
the dirt from their garments and bleached them so that they looked
like new; and as the children grew, their garments grew with them." 15
to
or
"manna" and
B.
9
Yoma
for
75a-75b.
Zamakhshari, Vol.
I,
p. 77:
11
(i
M
*
,T
(T ,n
(j'nn
"quails"
cf.
Tabari, Vol.
,'jiyo
I,
jp 'y
,IIDK
mpi
.toso)
m ,spy
([W]
oipb')
-\rbov.
]m
j'xnao
vn 1133
'My
nonsn ]'3nr vn
p. 227:
JH ino
H'JipV
'T
SURA
VERSE
II
59
54
In discussing the manna, Zamakhshari and T abari quote a tradition to the effect that it was the kind of food called Taranjabln in
Persian. 16 In Jewish literature, the heretic I^iwi al-Balkhi, who lived
in the 9th century, expresses the
same
opinion.
17
Zamakhshari
18
11:31)
This
is
ip'n-w b-n
mnv no
quails.
comment
19
nrn jir^n
fc'ii
?]^13
vn
bi
-pbjw nrfca *b
Zamakhshari, Vol.
I,
p. 77:
Tabari,Vo!.I,p. 225:
_
' * *
(Jfc&*^ Jf
'
J.
cf.
Ul
* Zamakhshari,
'
Tabari, Vol.
Vol.
I,
I,
p. 77:
p. 226:
J0* (New
Series),
XXXVIII
#3, p. 18;
60
VERSE
When Moses,
57
and we said,
'Strike with thy staff the rock/ and from it burst forth
twelve springs; each man among them knew his drinking
place. 'Eat and drink of what God has provided, and
transgress not on the earth as evildoers.
1
In one place in the Bible, Moses was directed to strike the rock:
'And the people thirsted there for water; and the people mur-
and thy rod, wherewith thou smotest the river, take in thy
hand, and go. Behold, I will stand before thee there upon the rock
in Horeb; and thou shalt smite the rock, and there shall come water
of Israel;
out of
may
drink
"
Muframmad
uses the
first
version. 1
"He opened
They
ran, a
y*
JL&
Zamakhshari, Vol.
SjUJ^l
I,
p. 78:
yB V
<JI
jU
laP
bt oUp
SURA
II
VERSE
61
57
and whereas words are used when he is mature, so here, too, Moses
was directed to "strike" the rock when it was a small stone, but
im pp
oivam ,y^on
*?*
omm
ivam 'iw imn ivan ]0p m y^o rrrwo rnw& n'apn IDK "p ,nDo
(awn ton ,npn ,'nyotf enp^*) y^on h* email.
%
[13] p ,nWa ,aiD np^; cf. IDN n^nna ,nr^ n? ] on )r
n'apn ^ vmniNV *cV
way
b>3K ,-n*3
non |nnnn
(r
Dny
,nrV
,oman
nr
oon
|on
orA ion
naai OD
iKX 1 w laia
iaoo inxn
noH^v HD
nom
mn
.
on^
rnpn^
'a
cuuoiin
H^
Shu'aib
Horovitz,
6
^..^A; cf.
HUCA,
N6ldeke-Schwally
op.
cit.,
Vol.
If
p.
151
note 9;
p. 172.
Zamakhshari, Vol.
Jl
I,
p. 78:
>j
J>-
DjJjJyi
Ali!
,y
*T
Aia^l
A^
JJj
<JI
The rock could, however, be identified, and it was so pointed out to Moses
by God (Pcsi&a Num. 20). According to the Yalbuf (763), mentioned in footnote 3
^
of this verse,
it
in ftoreb
and
in the Wilderness
Thus, the Moslem idea of the rock having passed through many hands
have some relation to the rock carried around by Moses. Zamakhshari (ibid.)
of Zion.
may
(square),
flowed three springs, one for each tribe. The Israelites, he says, were 600,000 in
number, and camped on a plain twelve miles long.
jr
I
Yerushalmi where
in the place
of Israel occupied
it is
62
the rod, 8 The rod was one of the ten things created by God at twilight
on the eve of the Sabbath. 9
The reference here to " twelve springs" is probably based on the
story in the Aggada about the travels ^f the Israelites in the desert
when
rivers
tribe. 10
H'n
,I"JD
jvyatf). Cf. B.
Torah, V, Halakah
*
,n
HUH naD;
nmn^
3.
,nyw
H y
Israel.
,na
mpV';
cf.
,n
[F] n
pos
,n:nan
nn neo;
D'HDD.
Tianb
noo
D-TI
(D'D .ifnnjD).
10
nnan
Cf.
'D'D
Grunbaum,
vm m'
^?/>.
onoini
cit. t
p. 163.
ian
Vy onoiy D^H'W
,:
.(ian ron
,mpD
vn
a' 1
opDi
oip^)
loc.
noy^
D'aiyno iioa^
nano
na*a
,aiyD
-ixnn ^y^p
]ra
onrw
SURA
VERSE
II
VERSE
63
58
58
And when
had transgressed.
In the Yalfcut it is stated that the Israelites were afraid that the
manna would cause their intestines to burst, and kill them. 2 Com-
menting on the
41
Moses
first
manna
say: 'The manna tasted according to their fancy, but they saw only
manna, as it is said: Our soul is dried away, there is nothing at all
"
save this manna to look upon.' s
The Koranic expression, "Go down to Egypt," 6 is reminiscent of
'
unn^ UD-Q
Tabari, Vol.
I,
p.
-pna nsn^
pn Tny no
[F] rs
vn H^
o^n
131 *?&
K^K ub
]^H
OM
*l
JJli
ljla>-
onm
nw
irw>a nnyi
237:
Jli
Cf.
^n^
41*
on^ naiwo
irry jon ^
OIX^jt JU
jA
j*nn
n^a ^a
]'H
noa
on^rya
PDD).
M.S.N.,
AH,
op.
p. 68; cf.
cit.,
p.
36
B.
n.,
Yom.
75a.
"Go down
Egypt" as erroneous
the word fiyr is used here as a
to
11:35).
64
Moses' admonitions, where the great leader rebukes the Israelites for
their disobedience, and threatens: "And the Lord shall bring thee back
into Egypt in ships, by the way whereof I said unto thee: Thou shalt
see
it
As
no more again
"
.'
(Deut. 28:68).
Koranic verse,
the Israelites, during Moses first stay on Mount Sinai, called upon
their Elders to make a god for them. When the Elders refused, Israel
them outright; they also killed IJur, the prophet, son of Miriam,
8
for the same reason.
The Talmud comments on the biblical verse, "And when Aaron
saw this, he built an altar before it" (Exod. 32:5), as follows: "What
He saw Hur lying slain before him
did he (Aaron) actually see?
and said (to himself) if I do not obey them, they will now do unto me
as they did unto Hur, and so will be fulfilled (the fear of) the prophet,
Shall the priest and the prophet be slain in the sanctuary of God?"
killed
(Lam.
2:20).'
Geiger, op.
noK -p lyow
cit.,
p. 196,
JVD
"Was
DM^N
sich
laV
(p ,VD
,nai lanoa).
B. Sanh. 7a;
cf.
]nin
.
now
^D 03^
imnm
o^prn
ny
"ny
^K
^HI^
*D^ ]'D'yDD on
!?D
no
SURA
II
VERSE
VERSE
60
65
60
And when we
'If
"2
'tis
well;
if
not, there
be your burial/
Tabari calls attention to the fact that the word TUT, used here for
mountain, is of foreign (Syriac) origin. He states that some maintain
that this is the mountain Moses spoke from. 3 This is merely a further
illustration of the linguistic influence of Judaism on the Koran which
is evidenced by the Koranic usage of many biblical terms and names
such as: Saum (om fast); Sadaqah (Zedakah righteousness, charity); Malak (MaVak
Angel); Shaitan (Satan leader of the devils);
Kitab (Ketab Scriptures); Taurat (Torah Torah); Ifai (Ifay Liv-
shall
Zamakhshari, Vol.
,n)BDin)
because of the
^
p. 80:
lT
B. Shab. 88a;
n's nn
('y
I,
cf.
n^n^n
B?Kn.
As
yo
who
Tabari, Vol.
I,
p. 247:
Qayyum (J^ayyam
ing);
Jahannam (Gehinnom
Sabbath) Khafiah (Ifet sin)
hell); Din (Din
judgment); Jannah (Can 'Eden Paradise); Adam
(Adam Adam) Nulj, (Noafy Noah) Ibrahim (Abraham Abraham)
(Shabbat
Luf (Lot
Lot) Isma'll
Yishma'el
Ezra)/
('Ezra
Here
called
Mubammad
in the
Tura
^Horovitz,
1-kitab'
it is
Targumim. 5
HUCA,
im Kuran,"
pp. 145-87;
cf.
David Kuenstlinger,
in Rocznik Orientalistyczny,
Lw6w,
4I
'Kitab'
und
'ahlu
p.
Exod. 19:18.
282
f.;
pp. 112
See, however, A.
A. Geiger,
f.;
ZDMG,
Vol.
Hirschfeld, Beitrdge
XXI,
.,
uran,"
ibid.,
1916, Berlin, p.
pp. 58-67.
Noldeke-Schwally, op.
p. 38; Lidzbarski,
p. 688;
Wissenschaften
cit.,
Vol.
I,
Philologisch-
SURA
VERSE
II
VERSE
67
61
61
Then
is
Op.
no trace
s
He
cit.,
is
p. 68;
is
cit.,
p.
(p.
181) that
Hirschfeld, op.
cit.,
p. 108,
doubts whether
me
Muhammad knew
of this legend.
word
qird,
in question, qiradatan, [5
meaning an ape.
If
we
to
^-*]
is
to rest
difficult
The
is
'those
who go
(Mishnah
The words,
is,
Muhammed
too
far',
ground
Instead
and
Erflbin, 2:3)."
63
Hebrew
alcnt of the
ShabW
(Exod. 20:8).*
Muljammad, perhaps relying upon Ex. 16:4 considered only the Jews
to be obligated to observe the Sabbath as stated in Ex. 30:13, 17 XO and
in the Midrash." Though Muhammad chose Friday to take the place
of the Jewish Saturday and the Christian Sunday, yet this day on
which Moslems are allowed to work, unlike the Jewish Sabbath, is not
9
called the
day
"day
Dozy
p. 96.
(p.
names
of the week-days
from the Jews. The seventh day they call Sabt only. Cf. J. J. Rivlin, Gesetz im
Koran, p. 20 n,: "Es verdient immerhin Beachtung, dass der feierlichste Sabbat-
am
Freitag,
und zwar
Juden am frUhen Nachmittag, stattfindet. Vielleicht ist diese na rtap in der von
Becker Islam III 379, zitierten Tradition gemeint, in der M. sagt Vahle den Tag
"
p. 6.
*
nV OH
Cf.
(0V?
]yth.
mwar
ha
rmson
TID
twn
H'D
([W]
f
Cf. also: (a y n
*a
naerw
irxp
owaaai
o'ainaai
mina
]TTn) war
OJT
rn
ww
'a
Even
"]oy
.iBoon
mn
^mro nVi
20
nn
naw
o'lap;
K^I
*6.
i33
Vy o'D i-won
iip
mn
'any jw^ai
%
a .oiian 00 ty
ona^naa.
term
influenced
nn'o a^n
hinvb a ,o^iy
on IDKW
'w on
Cf, JWI'&M
*jj>.
K^ n^^i
p.
nVipr
f.
ft ,oma o^r
II
is
i J^
Hebrew
uraraa.
any.
was used
4**4*l
for Friday,
^ ji
which
was probably
tw Koran,
n.
(a*y ,?a niaia)
na
(congregation)
every Moslem
is
is
.o'aon)
any Dian ^y
'f
np^ oi^ A
ByK or nyao.
the term used for the sixth day of the week and
commanded by Mufcammad
to observe
it
(62:9).
Mubammad
SURA
VERSE
V
69
61
Iv
And on Sunday
drew them
It
is
the Israelites
18
out.
came
into
Moslem
tradition through
Karaite literature.
Halakah,
and
fish"
it is
Mubammad
may
not
that
cit.,
p. 196, cites
a Moslem tradition
commandment not
to engage in
war
on the Sabbath was given to the Jews alone. Cf. Geiger, op. cit., p. 53.
16
According to Moslem tradition each service must be preceded by a sermon
which is considered part of it. Cf. Bu., Vol. I, p. 233:
"
Wellhausen, Reste
.,Vol.
M a oJ3i^
pp. 27
18
11
in
Literatur
f.;
'
^,
cit.,
p. 133;
I.
Goldziher,
und Apologetische
Polemische
I,
in
Arabischer
3Vt. in
f.;
Sprache,
pnstn TDD
Mittwoch, op.
f.
BaidSwi, Vol.
IjUfiilj
All
I,
p. 26:
p^Ul
JUL
*A*
Jj
J^U J*
f J4
j c-Ji
19
a y
,r
tf
nar.
cit.,
70
may
20
Ibid., n'ai
ov -nyao
nw*
ns vb*
om
niciyi rrn
nmsD
J'DTIS
pn OHDIH
"
,^n) n^Vn hi ne&ip H'm or nyaD nnn^. It seems unlikely that the
Moslems were aware of the non-accepted opinion of the school of Shammai.
ai
(a'y
,\">
r\yo
SURA
VERSES 63-66
II
VERSES
71
63-66
p
RDBD ODD
([B] o'y
2
,1
B. Sot. 46a;
HDK^D i
(i ,K'a
mn
RPDS ,m>
[F] asp
-Trm
PDD
*ai
'JD
cf.
,mc
,Rina
DR j^oin ,nm
am
Rashi, ad
,npn ,nso:
Rnp'DD) D'DyD
loc.\
Mishnah, Par.
1:2.
nfcn
,nnin
ynr
w irw
'ii
ma
ow rVy pro.
lonyi
rm
pwnai
'->
|)nv
K^I ia -fay K^
^mo
n^ayn n
IPR
,npn
Dion JH
K*nn
Tyn
,Dimn;
rtay noi
'jpr
mini
72
pp. 82-83:
omrw
I,
Tabari, Vol.
I,
p.
258:
UJU
CJI
IT
&\>\
Jiil
4]
juiJl
>VI
JIS U
<J
JU*
UJI
Ull
fj
ai
jBj....
P!
^r
^....
ji
4j
ijiiyu....
^> Ui
l^jj
....uy
SURA
II
VERSES 63-66
73
Dama
name, did
in Askelon.
but as the key was lying under his father's pillow, he did
800,000
not trouble him. The following year the Holy One, blessed be He,
B. ^id.. 31a.
1 '
74
VERSE
69
they were
are some
them there are some that burst asunder and the water
issues out, and of them there are some that fall down
for fear of God but God is never careless of what ye do.
;
Compare: "Behold, I will stand before thee there upon the rock
in Horeb; and thou shalt smite the rock, and there shall come water
out of it, that the people may drink ..." (Exod. 17 :6) "And Moses and
Aaron gathered the assembly together before the rock, and he said
unto them: 'Hear now, ye rebels; are we to bring you forth water out
;
of this rock?'"
hardened"
(Num.
idea that the heart hardens as stone recalls Ezekiel: "And I will give
them one heart, and I will put a new spirit within you; and I will
remove the stony heart out of their flesh, and will give them a heart
of flesh" (Ezek. 11:19) .3
parallel to the Koranic idea that
man's heart
is
is
in Rashi's
Cf. 2:82,
"A new
cf.
put within you; and I will take away the stony heart out of your
Kjwn
give you a heart of flesh." Also, Targum, ad loc.: ]'pn
wm
ttuto.
P. R.
C., Vol.
new
spirit will I
flesh,
a^
rv
and
nanto
will
.
SURA
VERSE
II
VERSE
75
73
73
speech which he heard. It designated any and all who were not of the
Israelite race (as has already been said, and as is well known, Mohammed does not distinguish Christians from Israelites). The passage
2:73, which has made trouble for previous explanations of the problematic term, expresses the indignation and scorn with which the
had
in
him by means
of
some
tribes,
who
'scripture of their
own composition
to,
.IfJ
*
*
*
who
Jj-j^l,
i. e.
cit.,
'no iy;
p. 86:
I,
"gentile,
irby rmyo nn
inw) topon n
Zamakhshari, Vol.
p.
non-Jew or heathen."
49; Gastfreund, op.
cit. t
Part
I,
p. 12.
cit.,
p. 38.
76
Horovitz thinks that in this verse "it is possible that the word
might have been confused with the 'amme ha- are/ those among the
6
However, in 62:2 "Allah is
Jews who do not know the law."
praised for having raised up among the 'ummiyun' a prophet who was
one of their midst, and for this reason Mohammed calls himself *annabi al ummi in 7:156, 158, because he came from the ranks of the
7
Arabs, i. e., from one of the 'umm5t ha-'olam/ and not from Israel. ."
Mubammad "learned of the 'ummot haVolam' through the Jews in
Medina and formed the word 'ummi in accordance with this term/' 8
Thus it is possible that the term ummiyun here and in 7:156 9 is
derived from the Hebrew "Ummot ha'Olam." Muhammad in announcing himself "the seal of the prophets wished to indicate that
10
he is the "prophet unto all the nations/'
>
1 '
Horovitz,
HUCA,
Ibid., p. 190.
NSldeke-Schwally, op.
IO
them
Jer.
1:5,
in the
unto you
D"iab
p. 191.
As
cit.,
':;
cf.
all/
of
Him whose
If
pp. 159
7:156*
.
is
158,
f.,
HUCA,
"Whom
p.
223 and
3:4,75.
am
the apostle of
God
."
SURA
II
VERSE
VERSE
77
74
74
And
for
The Koranic
by the
reference to "a
latter. 4
Cf. 3:23.
('a
pis .nvny
,nypo)
enn
a''
oma
o'yan oovo;
cf.
2:160.
and consigns to
never extinguished fire those who misled others and caused them to sin, and those
who isolated themselves from the community (B. R. H. I7a).
The Talmud
78
VERSE
77
And when we
took 1 from the children of Israel a covenant, saying, 'Serve ye none but God, and to your two
parents show kindness, and to your kindred and the
orphans and the poor, and speak to men kindly, and be
steadfast in prayer, and give alms' and then ye turned
back, save a few of you, and swerved aside.
;
we may
words "not (to) bear sin" (Lev. 19:17). According to them even an
admonition to improve one's deeds should be uttered in a friendly
way. 5 Other parallels are found in Aboth: "and judge all men in the
scale of merit," 6 and in the Talmud, where it is stated that "addressing
words of comfort" is even higher than charity. 7
AH, Holy Qur-an p. 44, translates "we made a covenant with."
2
^*n0* *aa my ^a ^K
Rashi to Lev. 19:2: ^npna IT nano mmop no^o
na ]"i^n
3
mm
Ibid.-,
'sia
ant? JBD.
([B]
onmp
Iedftshah (holiness)
,onmp
,KDinan)
is
,NDimn)
498
P. H., p.
.
oana IDPD
v^a
^h.
*aNi
Vn
rnn
no0 ,^tnp^ n'apn IDN -p
,jvmjn nniw yop nnp rnso ,'DIXD.
-pano
3y^
i^'sm ^i:r
D'anip
rrsin
roim
1:6.
B. Shab. 127a;
hw
n.
cf.
H'n
nnann
maia.
^Mishnah Ab.,
7
nama
(a'y ,D ,a"a)
in
the Midrash, too, equates the precepts enumerated here to the ten
commandments
4
i^
]na
H^ ''DM ma*
;(a
fi
^o
o^as)
ms
o>
naoa oiKn ^a n
a'-nan)
oi^a i^
i^
jna
]na
ib
SURA
II
VERSE
79
77
fatherless,
"Learn to do
well;
Seek
justice, relieve
charity in Islam see notes to 2:1-2. 172, 211, 239, 240, 246, 272, 273, 280: 3:128.
VERSE
80
Those who have bought this worldly life with the Future,
the torment shall not be lightened from them nor shall
1
they be helped.
life
eternal
is
is
6
reserved) for receiving reward for (doing) them." A closer parallel
found in the Mishnah: "For in the hour of the departure of a man
(from the world), there accompany him neither gold nor silver, nor
." 7 The
precious stones nor pearls, but Torah and good deeds alone
Midrash also states that wealth is of no avail on the day of judgment
and only deeds of merit "shall come to meet thee there even before
thou hast arrived, for it is said, thy righteousness shall go before thee." 8
.
'
Cf. 3:14.
Bai#lwi, Vol.
I,
B. Shab. 33b.
B. Ber. 7a.
pnjv
p. 30:
ljf^\
K"rpoV hhn
b.
JP
LJoll
SL>Jl
-UK
ip
pixo -UN n
,on:n).
6
B. 'Erub. 22a.
Mishnah Ab.
Y^B
,K'TTD.
6:9.
Cf.
'All
anm
SURA
VERSE
II
VERSE
Moses came
up with the
The
to
81
86
86
calf
when God
"
told
Moses
me, nor hearken unto my voice; for they will say: The Lord hath not
"
(Exod. 4:1). It was then that God gave several
appeared unto thee'
if they
signs into the hands of Moses with the promise that: ".
will not believe thee, neither hearken to the voice of the first sign,
.
that they will believe the voice of the latter sign (ibid., verse 8).
The Midrash argues that Moses was wrong in assuming that Israel
not believe him, after God has said: "And they shall hearken to thy
voice" (Exod. 3:18). God, however, responded to Moses thinking
and gave the signs to him. 2
The Koranic verse also recalls the biblical statements: "And
the people believed" (Exod. 4:31) ... "And they believed in the Lord,
"and made it a molten
and in His servant Moses" (Exod. 14:31)
will
Moslem commentaries, 4
prophecy.
*
Cf. 3:184.
"jVipV
OB
,a
,n:n
won
mo*)
ib
inn
*tb ninin
Cf. 2:48-51.
]na
V0
wo
-01 nyp
nm
.^ iron* vb jm
ion nD
JJH
oilT
*
gnats, bringing
up the
Israelites.
Tabari, Vol.
I,
p. 317:
becoming
up the
are:
VERSE
87
And when we
Muframmad
would give them the Torah, they said: "We will do, and obey." 3 The
rendition in 285, "We will hear and obey," reverses the biblical statement, "We will do, and obey." 4 In Shabbath 88b the biblical expression is given special emphasis. 5 However, some noted Hebrew gram-
the
He
Ali's
Exod. 24:7,
He
will
"We
and
"And we
yopai n0ya,
command
will hear
"we
us in the future."
it,
will do,
is like
the
Hebrew uyoBn
and do
it/
and obey/'
however, impossible, since the true version did not suit his purposes at all. He
therefore replaced the faulty word by 'we obey/ placing this avowal into the
mouth
of
the Believers
who
and His
Messengers (we make no difference between any of His messengers) and they say:
We hear and obey" (2:285). However, in view of note 1, there is no need
to attribute a different
text.
Cf.
Horovitz,
HUCA,
p. 214.
5
oVo
Va^ "wn
nun
ow
i*a
yoi^
n0yj ^*n0
'i
own
IMDPIP ]iai
^y o^iy nno^i
ip
na
men no n^ noi ?
(n'y ,n'D na)
1
nna
]rx mai
)m^
'n
^HDI (n^ /
mn
'a
'a!?D
nr
SURA
VERSE
II
87
venizna'ah.
the calf
the calf
which they had made, and burnt it with fire, and ground it to powder,
and strewed it upon the water, and made the children of Israel drink
of it."
Jabari comments that they drank the water in which the ashes of
the burnt calf were mixed. In a more detailed explanation, fabarl
writes, that when Moses came and saw the Israelites assembled around
the calf, he burnt it, put the ashes into the water and commanded them
to drink it. 7 Those who participated in the making of the calf received
a sign of gold on their lips and in this way Moses was able to recognize
them. 8 The Talmud, too, states that they were tested by the drinking
of the water as was the So{ah. 9
Paris, 1893.
yoj
^ne"
8
is
^3 n
'33 *?y
b'opi
issi
I,
^NIP
H mp
Tabari, Vol.
Jl
yotw
'^*i
rwyj.
'pttw
wypnV
commentary on Song
tbnb nnsy
wnn
war
Exod.
*>-j
32:20:
and burnt
it
with
<4
'the
fire,
and ground
of
detect."
(N'y
S.
Ch.
,YD
-nai t>b)y rr
*\v\
r\vo
p'Voi Viop.
____
it
the
to powder,
effect
upon the
....
of Songs, 1:14,
p. 318:
JB
Cf.
(ed.),
in his Sefer
This
3'nntn
IBSIPD
Derenbourg
J.
guilty
calf
which
and strewed
they
it
had
made,
loc.,
p. 552n.
mr muy)
]iDna.
]piuV ^ psna
See also D'nsn, ad /oc., moioa
JVIBIDD
^-
84
VERSES
88-89
Say,
Mubammad
"Ye
for it is said:
nances, which
a
(Lev. 18:5). This
if
"
shall therefore
keep
man
is
My
statutes,
Here Mubammad
Levites and Israelites,' but 'a man.
accuses the Jews and the Christians of maintaining that they alone
are entitled to Paradise and of considering themselves specially
'priests,
favored by God. 3
pa WT
cbiy ?
B. B. K. 38a;
Cf. 3:59; 5:72.
cf.
o'pnx
0^3
nojn
B. Sanh. 59a.
noK3
Kan
o^nyfc
pVn
orb
v>
84
VERSES
88-89
Say,
Mubammad
"Ye
for it is said:
nances, which
a
(Lev. 18:5). This
if
"
shall therefore
keep
man
is
My
statutes,
Here Mubammad
Levites and Israelites,' but 'a man.
accuses the Jews and the Christians of maintaining that they alone
are entitled to Paradise and of considering themselves specially
'priests,
favored by God. 3
pa WT
cbiy ?
B. B. K. 38a;
Cf. 3:59; 5:72.
cf.
o'pnx
0^3
nojn
B. Sanh. 59a.
noK3
Kan
o^nyfc
pVn
orb
v>
SURA
II
VERSE
VERSE
85
91
91
1
Say "Who is an enemy to Gabriel?"
for
he hath revealed*
3
prosperity and plenty.
J*
or ID
in
mrv
'
in
the Bible,
not* na.
/. e.,
Baidawl, Vol.
the Koran.
I,
^J\, UP
JUi
^irw
p. 32:
Jji <>**..
..JL Ujj^
Jrf
4^X*
*JIS
JjJ
JUi
loc.
.,
Jesus.
I,
pp. 59-60.
1928, p. 392),
as they
Gabriel were the keepers of the Temple, which was indestructible as long
watched over
*
AH,
op.
it (ibid.).
cit.,
p.
I,
pp. 324
f.
86
Talmud
who
"hides
case
when he came
to
Zamakhsharl, Vol.
I,
Abraham
ono
On
n
8
tst,
Geiger, op.
cit.,
I,
"Und
pp. 13-14.
^naa
allerdings
so ist doch
p. 327.
B. B. B. 74b: *u DIDKD
iisnV MS
the
p. 92:
Cf Tabari, Vol.
6
to inform
is
ypnpa
^nnA
]nn
mo
oansr
]am ^naa.
selbst
Boten Gottes bloss die Bestrafung der Sunder obliegt und von ihm sogar an einer
andern Stelle des Talmud Sanh. 44 gesagt wird, er heisse poem 'Verstopfer' DBIMP
^Hir* hv QTvnny 'weil er verstopft die Siinden Israels', sie verwischt, also den
Israeliten
durchaus nicht
als
ibid., p. 14.
SURA
Sodom, 9 there
VERSE
II
87
91
1 '
He
of Israel. 11
known
also
is
who
a'y
nwia;
cf.
Cf.
"
,nan JYIDP.
,n*'E>
nwna
,rr
(a'y
'*
(,a
,i'a
nwia
in
'aaito Dip^ 1 )
DH ^*np*
Aruch Completum,
^nnaai
^wo.
ed. A.
Kohut, Vienna,
p. 434. Cf.
D'3^D
nan
33D -p D^H
ma^o "raaa vas^o
1KD3^
'1
n-nn %
naiDa)
'1
]lai ninn
"T
n"j?s na-i
r\vhv nam;
77a.
^KD'D
.a's
OWN
D'axa
v^y
.,
Ginzberg,
Yom.
.'oWn* main.
,ID
"D
ro
nnrV
N^NDPD
^naa
a^D*D
^a^D;
cf.
n'apn
noon ^y yo
mu
ov
nnp
,-ino
,a"D
nan
und Gabriel,"
MGWJ
,n!?"i
nrsVn VIID;
cf. S.
'f
M.
18
A. Horodetzky, "Michael
cit.,
Vol. V, p. 71.
p. 87:
88
hands and
his
feet,
Abraham during
the protector of
life. 23
charge of
'
it.
26
It
Ginzberg, op.
cit.,
I,
Ibid., p. 193.
Ibid., p. 198.
cf.
R. Margaliyuth,
32.
p.
f.;
New
(J.
,a
Cf. "(For)
]V*?y
to
York, 1918,
p. 400).
He was
also the
nnr).
Abraham
is
unique (TIT)
him who
'
is
unique (TFT)
Him who
Simon the
"
Thou
shalt be privileged
remarked:
Shilonite
is
"When
the
wicked
Nebuchadnezzar cast
Holy One, blessed be He, and said to Him: 'Sovereign of the Universe!
Let me go down and cool the furnace and save these righteous men from the fiery
rose before the
The
might
But
I,
the Prince of
fire, will
of the
it
it
without
for ever'
"
and
M Ginzberg,
op.
R. Margaliyuth, op.
s
it),
will
mxn
,KDimn.
cit.,
Vol. II, p. 331; Vol. Ill, pp. 440, 472; Vol. V, p. 415;
cit.,
p. 35.
Ibid., Vol.
p. 164.
cf.
SURA
VERSE
II
89
91
Israel, will
welcome them." 35
real reason for choosing
It appears, in
As
a8
**
in
Ginzberg, op.
uw^
UDDI
3*
(Y^n
3"
n
.
,3E>
.
ro-i
cit. f
rs ^nh
niDai
'aiyop
mpV
r\hmr\
oy IT
o^om nVmn
ran mop)
;*6 N'B
treats
Moses and
]wb> -QDI
psm IT rm nmi
HD 133 npya.
,n:n mo*.
,nmn:>
rAa
eip^O
DB
too,
P-DD rrm
Muhammad,
Jewish tradition,
,K
,'jiyo*
cnoBn
.
oa'prn
onoy
twaa IT a^
^inr*
ITW nya
VHTM
^nr
^ma nnrn.
TUD.
,mmD) mi
33
('y
34
B. Pes. 118b;
35
R. Margaliyuth, op.
.D'S
cf.
nyo
rwo^
b nmm
p. 44.
rrn
*D3
nun
-i
IDH.
90
Abraham
as well as Joseph 36 as teachers and great leaders. It is interesting that in the Mecca Suras, when Islam is still in the embryonic
stage, Gabriel is not mentioned at all. Only later in the Medina period,
when Muhammad
appear.
37
Mubammad,
Gabriel taught Joseph seventy languages (B. Sot. 36b). Similarly to Jewish
tradition,
knows
of Joseph's
Zamakhshari, (Vol.
p. 663)
I,
I**
states:
Mubammad was
thus
beautiful."
p. 107.
in the
that he refers
Cf. Schapiro,
I.,
p. 158
and Koranische
.,
Abraham and Moses are the most frequently mentioned biblical personages
Koran. Abraham is mentioned about seventy times, and Moses over one
cf.
ID
,rai
,K'B
"And
the Lord
knew
(n ,3'ojD ,rai
39
>a; Maimonides, rn
minn
,r'>
HID*
rrD^n;
whom
there hath not arisen a prophet since in Israel like unto Moses,
B'D ,rfraa
[W]
.anoajn
top'i
face to face"
^ inmaa
j'yo
See also
tojno rrrw
mop).
cEtT^ f
^'
33:4
Cf
'
^ ag
'
2:23: DnlnD
T nwl
Hirschfeld, op.
cit.,
p. 22,
a flame of
in
fire
."
Cf.
Reynold A. Nicholson, A Literary History of the Arabs, p. 147, and 16:121; 20:13.
* Exod. 3:1 nrv JKX n njn; cf. Nicholson, op. cit.,
pp. 147-62. A tradition
"
from the prophet states that
'God has never chosen a man to be a prophet, who
has not herded sheep', " Bu., 26:2; 60:29; 70:50, quoted by
W. Thomson,
op.
cit.,
p. 99.
42
Muljammad
p. 498):
Cf.
---Ps.
$O
^>w
106:23: ".
Had
J>-l
I,
UU...
Him
in
the
SURA
VERSE
II
91
91
first
Mubam-
neither a
breach
Vol.
.,
251
II, p.
13
.-]'!?
^p
onnyn
f.;
'b
Sprenger,
Das
Ada
179-181; 7:141
2:125,
Leben
Exod. 7:16:
." Cf.
D. Goitein,
The Qur'dn
443:60, 89.
XP
4l
432:101 (Alied.):
J^ Jj^J
20
p.
n. 37.
^J-
f**\*T
Bu., Vol.
Jalalain2:141:
I,
p. 6:
U-!
&l
tfl
^11
47
Cf. 2:129, 134; 3:60; 6:79; 16:121, 124; Gen. Rab. 14,6.
48
49
Abraham":
,n"B
nmnn
(J
D^iyn
,as
or);
^D ?
1
nai
Mishnah
wya
ICid.
iioabi
L?A
Cf.
,n
Islam
p.
I,
J^
p*U*
Maimonides, a'n
Cf.
A. Jeffery,
Cf.
45
sect of
Chief
p. 19.
(r
See also A.
Uj^j.
D'PHCT
.ooua
n^o minn ^D
B. Ber. 7b:
iip^ DT
rrn
^i
*?
essentially the
f^^mio.&*.
mvb a;
is
n^n
o^iyn n
omaK o^p
ira
oman
...
Hin
ira
n"apn
-ia
DVD
([W]
I'D ,nVB?a
,rrn KHDDD
nmnn
,nVoD)
^a
ni
npiac
A nawn
nnacon ba n
ira
'na
I'DHJTI
HDKW; and
92
VERSE
96
And
The story
Azael s
of
who in
men,
AH,
cit. f
op.
trial,"
Geiger, op.
p. 51, translates
"prophethood," viiU
Ibid., p. 52,
"a
were
Noah
the time of
for these
3*16^.,
4
of the
cit.,
i*.
Cf. Horovitz, Koranische Untersuchungen, p. 146.
pp. 105-6.
Schmhazai, Ouzza, et Azael," R.E.J., Vol. 60 (1910), pp. 201-3; L. Jung, "Fallen
Angels/' JQR N. S. (1926), 295-310; E. Littman, "Harut und Marut" in Festschrift
Friedrich Carl Andreas zur Vollendung des Siebzigsten Lebensjahres, Leipzig, 1916,
pp. 70
ff.;
I,
/.
"
'Sihon and
Og were
of Shamhazai' (one of the fallen angels referred to in Gen. 6:2, 4 as 'sons of God'
Geiger,
op.
^on
run no
ID^IJ;
'
,'h
'H
cit.,
D-IH
p.
105:
jis
noy TD axyno
n
nmaw
,u i^penoD
-pe^
wn
nrb
n'apn
mo
y'wn
ib
rvn
H^n
non
mr
VTD^H
rroap
najn
!?uDn
*?v
uui
rac^
o^iy
v*?y
*]DV
n % no o^iyi
in
noto
onV IDK
morn
SURA
The
VERSE
II
93
96
run
n nv
TD onoy nnrn
'm&rw ny i ? nyot?
1
*rN
'
~\w jntnpo UN
'
b mm* ^
*yD0n ID
-p
mom nman
ra rry
jna -VIBD'K
man
nnn nan
oy TITH
HDPI
IJTIN
rrvsrn ov
imn
Geiger, i6iJ., p. 107, claims that the similarity between the Koranic statement
full
Moslem
authors,
who, quite in harmony with the midrashic legend, speak in similar vein about these
angels. He quotes the following statement from Maracci, Prodromi IV, 82:
J^l
Ulfi
pf^
^jNI
Oij
ol5C>o
L^Jjil
cJjJ
(41
bsili
If>-j3
CJIT lJ b=M
jdl
*-^l>J
Si^JI
Zamakhshari, Vol.
Cf Baidawi, oJ
.
/oc.
I, p.
94:
!/'
f.,
and
HUCA,
pp. 164-
94
among the Jews, till God, say the Muhammadans, cleared that king
by the mouth of their prophet, declaring that Solomon was no
idolater." 9
He
sent Ashmedai, king of the evil spirits, who drove Solomon off the
throne, robbed him of his signet ring, and left Solomon wandering
about in punishment for his folly. Solomon thus went from town
town in Judah and Israel crying: "I, Solomon, have been king over
Israel and Jerusalem." 10
Another Jewish legend relates that Ashmedai was chained by
Benaiahu son of Jehoiada' at the request of King Solomon. Ashmedai
then demanded to be brought before the king and later challenged
Solomon to free him. When Solomon complied with his request,
Ashmedai hurled the king to a distance of four hundred parasangs.
Ashmedai meanwhile took possession of the king's throne, his household and also his wives. Finally he was detected and reported to the
religious authorities. Following the rumors about a wandering beggar
who claimed that he was the king of Israel, Solomon was finally
to
Wh^erry, op.
10
cit.,
p. 326,
ruariN rrrvD^o
noW mn
12
Kami NSDD nan jwao I'BHDI p:rmi ]>DID rai n mo'D nTta
rrrvD^D ITDTD p rnv men TBH to^o 'KIDPK rrm^ man Miby n ?an TP n T
KJHK o-Di o^'e 'DID hy imD mm rrrnnoiN^ KD^ya ^ai ^DD inn ]'ja rr
^H"w* ^y 3^o mn nn noip p npno noVp mop im nVnp w IDKI pm
1'DDyn jnnnKi Kirh
,K
xx
n^np omn).
B. Git. 68a-68b: 'n^m wvav KDH
n^ no
prrw
m^
wain ion no
SURA
VERSE
II
95%
96
demons
HTP
jrrrri
.
y-r
'Ten to^o
mn
iyn
n'ro
>n"
jryT K^
rv
jut
nw
n^ono
Kr'n
n^p^
KTW ^
ai
x^
irn, cf. B.
^Dt^n
|iri iin^a
,nno
nV)D Vy
WDD
jn'
in
onn ?
y-u
mm
rrrp
n^i n^ am ynrr p
!?D3
DT^
]nn^ no no^p ID
ryT
([M]
wan
^ya^o
iDBn
inraoa
HKD yan
12
mn
no
'aa:n o
Hp
noH D^H
into a
wnp
]'!?^
^yi
I^DI nna
rnn ^yi PT
n^n^
w omn).
2, 5.
967.
I,
no
^yi
in nna
yni iwrm
op
96
VERSE
101
The main
idea here that only God, the king of the universe, can
be of real help to man, abounds in the Bible and in the Aggada. The
Psalmist exclaims: "I will lift up mine eyes unto the mountains:
From whence shall my help come? My help cometh from the Lord,
Who made heaven and earth" (Ps. 121 :l-2). The Midrash commenting on this verse states that Israel well knows that help can come
from the Creator only. 1 Numerous references are found in the Bible
and the Midrash which portray God as the ruler of the heavens and
earth. Thus, in Deut. 10:14, "Behold, unto the
eth the heaven, and the heaven of heavens, the earth, with all that
therein is." Also, Ps. 89:12: "Thine are the heavens, Thine also
(Is. 43:11).'
(i
,"3p
SID
-inw)
pw
o'ow
my
nan
inj>
o'jnv
DDK
n'apn
-ION.
And whose
trust
the Lord
is."
is
the
man
SURA
VERSE
II
VERSE
97
102
102
Do
Muhammad, who,
Numbers
5:20-21) or as in
murmured
14:2-3:
"And
all
Moses and against Aaron; and the whole congregation said unto them: 'Would that we had died in the land of Egypt!
or would we had died in this wilderness! and wherefore doth the Lord
bring us into this land, to fall by the sword? Our wives and our little
M
ones will be a prey; were it not better for us to return into Egypt?
According to rabbinic lore the Israelites in the desert accused Moses
of exploiting them and waxing fat on the food and drink he took away
from them. 4 The Talmud also tells of the Korahites who questioned
Moses' morality, suspecting him of adultery with their wives. 5 There
is thus a similarity between the Koranic verse and the challenge of
Moses as described in the Bible.
against
Num.
B. Sanh. lla.
Gastfreund, op.
16.
cit.,
p. 19.
'K-nrr ID
^10
HPDD irwK n
'*mrr
wp
inm inn
bw
nofco
pnr
py-D vn rrpp
^io0 VK.
>rn
98
VERSE
God's
is
there
is
109
God's face;
verily,
knows.
The
make my bed
If I
Thou
art there.
If I
take the wings of the morning, and dwell in the uttermost parts of the
sea;
Even
hold
me"
there would
Thy hand
(Ps. 139:7-10).
Commenting
And Thy
lead me,
rron
jo
mn\
9
HMD nno*
my
H^I
oipi
DVD ^D-P
na
nyi* nn
naun
n*apn ^s^
(T ,0'^p
nnw) -paV mi^a 133 yiofi^ Tny HW. Cf. Deut. 29:28 irn^K
and (i ,a^r ,n:n naioa) nrstrn p n pta qipo ir.
,3i
m
mn^
IDK -p
SURA
VERSE
II
VERSE
99
111
111
The
Close parallels to this verse are: "By the word of the Lord were
the heavens made; And all the host of them by the breath of His
mouth M (Ps. 33:6) .... 'Tor He spoke, and it was; He commanded,
and it stood" (Ps. 33:9). According to the Talmud, the world was
created
by ten
The Midrash
sayings.
relates that:
blessed be He, spake one word and the heavens were created 2 as the
residence of the Throne of His Glory .... He blew with His mouth
and
life
all
." 3
(simultaneously)
In 50:38 Muljammad states: "We did create the heavens and the
earth and what is between the two in six days and no weariness touched
us." This idea that "no weariness touched" God in the creation of the
universe and that everything was achieved by the Word is also found
in the Midrash, 4
willed. 8
by wayir%ehS meaning
maN
,n
I,
even
My
also
P.R.E., p. 41.
John
Cf.
'n
Gen.
Rab.
3,2,
([W]
s
'*>
D*?iyn
II, p.
wjn D'DP
ru*
about the
mx
And
Word
nt^yon /y.
Arabic *Li
1313 nno
'n
JID'D
Foreien Vocabulary
..
to
n. 76.
-a
J. Z.
the world
1:3:
mn
ina
rmm
"m
the
loc.:
'31
VJD
Lauterbach),
came
into being
DBH
mma ^n
nnni.
vb a^nyn n
Ramban ad
As
(willed).
have
their host
all
it;
He by whose word
,10J73 D^DIP
Cf.
man upon
one utterance/'
n'apn N-Q
Kin 'D
rwn wn;
,i'
-IDNP -p-a.
62: ".
in
N*y
mn
mm
DJ?C3m ,1N-)331
1:3
also,
I,
nao;
3'y ,K'D
commanded." See
3
even
nnoKD rrwjn;
K-QJ
rhsn THD)
Cf. (noS
onyn
p-is)
pann hy
n'apn.
'Dn "&
.Tl
Cf.
HVn^
fralak,
see
]i3n
'181
rho.
A.
Jeffery,
100
VERSE
And when
Lord
his
118
tried
He
them,
said, 'Verily I will set thee as a high
priest for man.' Said he, 'And of my seed?' God said,
'My covenant touches not the evil-doers.'
fulfilled
1
The
My
voice, and kept My charge, My commandments, My statutes, and My
laws" (Gen. 26:5). The Mishnah states that: "With ten trials was
Abraham, our father, proved, and he stood (firm) in them all; to make
known how great was the love of Abraham, our father (peace be upon
him)."*
The
Abraham became a
story that
priest
Abraham
/. e.
." 3
may mean:
it
Holy Qur-an,
New
Imam
Mishnah Ab.
2:91,
s
B.
rm
iy
.
j"m).
and (n
who
,-|V -]!?
maa
(Bu., Vol.
nnaa
them
in
32b;
cf.
vbm
,I'DB
(i
,'Jijmr Bip^'
D'pnxn
onnan
and: vzb
oma 'ai
nn vbv
ovb
'JBD
DI
!?ia
.
Mubammad
nwia)
rrn
'a
tmo
]na topai
yaw
va
'J3
D'a^on
oj?
Isa. 41:8, II
'a
l^
in*
-|Va 'a
vw 'na
Chron. 20:7;
oma.
^ni pa
omaH.
maa
See also
rvn
oV
IDD
TO ...
iwtnn
nVna n:ina nia
... nvh
n'n K^I
Vi 'n
rrn ira
uanp anp
pw" m no
.Dm3V mom D
]'a
See also
0m
Va^>
,nan
trials
are enumerated:
all
OHBO iia in
iron
In his lifetime
p. 175).
5 :3. In Abot de R.
oo
(n'e
I,
rrn ns'
iiaa rrn
Ned.
is
(&'
Imam}
[of
(4)
sense
pattern, example;
said
'D
SURA
VERSE
II
VERSE
101
119
119
house 3 for those who make the circuit, for those who
pay devotions there, for those who bow down, and for
those too who adore !"
uttered
As to the
you eat
of
HUCA,
consult Horovitz,
Hebrew
oipo
Abraham and
nnwna
(Y'
,a"a.
Mubammad
anp "i
oniat*
rr&npD n*a
noa jno
i^y n^aiv
ma
nno^
pnr
n*
Palmer
0npm and
(p.
Compare,
Kaabah
also,
mpon VN na^m
(Deut. 26:2).
*
M. Grunbaum, Neue
Deut. 26:3, 4
tionship to
is
Beitrage
God;
cf. 'the
God
of
is
p.
104:
The
expression
'thy God'
Abraham*
in the Liturgy."
Targum Onkelos, Gen. 22:14: p,T *on " Dip now wnn *oriKa ]on oma ^xi
" Dip onian ]nn miea rin nova ion^ |aa ni jri^D.
(a"y ,ao ,mana) rhs
s
Based on the
biblical
B. Sot. 10b;
inn I^DH
H we
cf.
rfcai
in
nm imn
r^a
21:33:
yw iaa DUD
iim roinn^i
onian a'Mi
102
The Talmud also states: " Whosoever has a fixed place for
7
According to
prayer has the God of Abraham as his helper/'
rabbis, "there was no
Lord,* until Abraham
his
the
man
'the place of
Abraham/
The above
>>I0
counterpart is
against his own will, exiled his servant-wife, Hagar, and their son
Ishmael. At first, Sarah did not allow Abraham to visit either his
wife or his son. After many years of pleading Sarah permitted Abraham such a visit on condition that he remain atop his camel. When
Abraham thus came to Ishmael's house, he was not in. Abraham
called to his daughter-in-law for a drink of water. She refused to
give it to him or even to look at him. She was beating the children
and cursing them as well as her husband, Ishmael. Abraham became
angry and left a message for his son saying: "An old man from the land
Canaan was here, and asked you to remove the main pillar of your
tent and to replace it by a good one." When Ishmael came home and
received the message he understood that his father had been to see him
and that he was mistreated by his wife. He, therefore, divorced his
wife, and married another one. Three years later, Abraham again,
of
under identical circumstances, set out to visit his son, and did not find
him home. Ishmael's wife came forth insisting that Abraham partake
of food and drink. He refused to get off the camel; the good woman
brought forth some food and Abraham ate and drank. Upon leaving,
pan* oip ]bx nno'Da KD^y
prur I^DI pruv v'3D
mm
B. Ber. 6 b.
B. Ber. 7 b.
10
Taffir-i-Raufi,
mm
pr ly
IDHI no
pmrm
OmaK pn
*
^2C1
nn
N^M
mm
pmvnan pn^DK
HHO ND^yi HmiK.
ID pyr
pin.
tit.,
p.
335
n.
proo
nnn pi
SURA
VERSE
II
103
119
a message for his son. "The pillar of your tent is very good,
keep it." Ishmael now knew that his wife treated her father-in-law
respectfully. He then took his whole family and returned to Abraham
and remained with him many days."
It is not unlikely that the Koranic verse has its antecedent in the
famous prayer of Solomon at the dedication of the Temple at Jerusalem (I Kings 8:22-53). Processions are not strange to either Judaism or Christianity. In the latter there is the practice of street
he
left
"and sanctify them to-day and tomorrow, and let them wash their
garments/ Similarly, the phrase, "a place of worship/' is comparable
to 1 Kings 8 :42-3 where it is stated that the Temple too was supposed
to be a place of worship, "when he shall come and pray toward this
house" .... "and that they may know that Thy name is called upon
this house which I have built/' 13
1
"
iV
jm
omaK "UMW
jmna
nn
*m
o'D'D
bKyDtp* !?n
|Vn
nan maion
am
!?j;D
ma
onaia
inv
-mm
IDI
n^nn
n^
onoy
H^ lA
o^pm
xm V^H
nrai
HD^JDI
|*H
nnxb
nai
nnom
m&
*?&
]3
'D
irm n^H
an
jpr
W^H nan
onnan
K^I
omaV
^ noun
Vnn
in' n
maa
TOM nuo
ny
i^
^nn
ID
oma
Hxm avn
bnnn ^H ^nn mio iDnm .D'Voan myiVi nin
hw*}
\>y
on DD
ns^y *a onS
o f n^
IDKI
nn n-ii
p iD3
nw>an no
IDKHI
Hiaai IDII^
^nyo
)*
ySW
b npm
IDK
npai
pnm
m^
mm
wwnn
irn*oV
K^0
mm inmfl
in
oipoa
DHIK
n^ IDHM
nn IDH nai
IT
-]V>i
nonm
rri>rmb
-inm
iHiaa
n^m
oyo
mn
f?
in^H
^aan
-JK
HHDD a
aw
V noun
13
na
iprn
nan
VK D'n^D yi
(
nK
-)!?n
nnora
-ram
'n
na'i
'n
in3pDi vaai
oan
,'
12
J3
Cf. E.
nn^on
n
D^D
^?H
ID
VKPDV inan
va
oy
naiB ns Vnna
n^rr
an
ra
raw.
now
Vnyov
Cf.
also:
4:5.
104
VERSE
When his Lord said to him,
am resigned unto the Lord of
125
'Be resigned* he said,
the worlds.'
'I
AH
Op.
T.
p. 55; cf.
cit.,
W.
M.
Gtbiete,
'
Lidzbarski, "Islam
(1922), pp. 85
f.;
und Salam,"
.,
Ch. Lyall,
JRAS
p. 54.
und verwandete
f.
cf.
f.;
Glaube
II, p.
Recht, Leipzig,
206,
1909,
f.
Grimme,
op.
cit., I,
M. Bravmann, "On
p. 16;
f.
LXIV, Louvain
f.
Cf. Tarbif,
name
*
God
of
nwVr
Talmud
is
Abraham's readiness
to sacrifice his
O'ttN..
M tforeb
,"]!?
life
"^ ,KDin3n.
SURA
Moslem
VERSE
II
105
125
1'
idea
is
"Abraham being
Jalalein, 2:141:
9
Cf.
of the
is
New
Shalom. 17
supreme
op.
10
(N'y
I,
pp. 876
Cf.
is
cit. t
is
M.
See also
p. 132.
"
faith."
God/'
Abraham.
is
f.;
all
man
Friedlander,
and H. A. Wolfson,
f.
mm
V -jVnnn a*na*r
omrm
nr
D'DD
Ynn
cf.
Maimonides,
nmay ma^n.
" Cf.
n'apn h'& ,onaN n^ono ion nn Q!?P iron nnwp mao n no n'apn
,o-a ID& mn Vion
Q'ya-mi DTIKD o-map onan poi nB>Wi D'jmMi O^HKD
iV
x^
TDIH
ama
mm
DISH ID*
na^nn
f*
-]W
mma ]Dm.
Cf.
my
nT
,I
tnp K^ n'apn
JH pi vnDM
S D ,nai nmoa)
nW
b'
o omsK
D^3n
DM^ KT
iV
nn
'a
TDK^;
cf.
IDK
ny
Gen, 15:6:
a.
59:23,
^%JI
...
^Sll
^*J.
ad
loc. t
nnoa abvn
v B. Shab. lOb:
Cf. Judg. 6:24,
D^wa,
mW
'n
HipM
'nav
Rashi, ad
loc.
oi^
]n0
OIH!? rnon.
106
The Koran
1'
2:123.
SURA
VERSE
II
VERSE
107
127
127
of thy fathers
one
Isaac,
resigned.
I may
tell
is
more descriptive
of Jacob's position
It repeats
apyn
irDatf
i ID Knorm
133 naa^
wona
inai apy
mm
pun
vnpy nn
y? P n ^
an
'
'"i
rs^
mn
J^n apy
pu
ann Ham
mna
IBUDHN
'
KP33 NX'p
nrum
IIQK
H p mo
'm^y nn wiDnm
mo
mm
]in^
narrn nw-rfr
>D:MVK
rr^
ID :pnrv
Kim inao
mn
yai apy
Jli
Baidawi, Vol.
UT
4jj
I, p.
>^
^iJL
IJu.
39:
J\
108
VERSE
.
But the
faith of
Abraham
129
the 'Hanlf, he was not of
the idolaters.'
In this verse as well as in 3:89; 4:124; 6:162; 16:121, 124, Mubammad refers to Abraham as fyanif (pi. bunafa'), whereas in 6:79; 10:105;
30:29, he claims himself to be one of the fyunafa' and requests his
1
the surrounding paganism." Nicholson suggests that it is "connected
9
with the Hebrew bdnef" (profane). However, Wellhausen thinks that
and regards it as a native
kavtif originally meant a Christian ascetic
Arab development. 3
In describing his condition when the angel appeared to him,
Mubammad used the word Tafyannuth.* Hirschfeld states: "The term
has caused the traditionalists some embarrassment. I. Ish. explains
it
by tabannuf
is
linguistic point of view, vis., that th and / interin Arabic. This remark is welcomed with satisfaction by
interesting
change
(to profess to
from a
and employed
character."
1
it
and sacred
Torrey, op.
tit.,
Nichplson, op.
*Reste...,
p. 87.
tit.,
II,
p. 149.
pp. 238
f.;
cf.
J.
1 f.,
who
II, p.
Cf. Faris-Glidden,
JAOS,
tit.,
p. 14;
D.
S.
Margoliouth,
JRAS,
Vocabulary
*
. . .,
pp. 112-15.
Hirschfeld,
New
Researches.
.,
p. 19 n.; cf.
des
SURA
VERSE
II
109
129
and 'Muslim',"
Bravmann,
op.
JRAS
cit. t
(1903), p. 772;
p. 40;
Charles Lyall,
.,
"The Words
Vol.
I,
pp. 45-134;
p. 342.
fc
<>-.
B. Tarn. 32b.
cf.
Hirschberg, op.
cit.,
'tfanif
pp. 211
f.
110
VERSE
136
The
them
'God's
is
He
guides
Say,
whom He
Mubammad
Qiblah
is
pp. 583
/.,
Grimme, Mohammed,
is
p. 45;
1934, pp. 31
3
5:48,
I,
pp. 87
f.
f.
Ajip
L-: f*.
Mubammad
I,
p. 131:
3:2;
Book
6
in truth ... to
is
Margoliouth, Relations
33:40,
.,
"He has
sent
down
to thee the
respectively."
p. 67.
Cf. 2:91.
*Jl>-.
J~~M
p. 70:
I,
3:61f.
9]. Rivlin,
"Mubammad
nw
*a
m pya
*?y
inn n0
10
Quoted by Geiger,
jl
A!***
^Jf^
op.
cit.,
.o^iyn hsh
imrrVp
insp^ra
in
Hamebofcek,"
irbp nvn^
.D'znj;^
rp^w
noio
loxy n
mn
run
p. 19:
^^ ^JlUi
C^J
jLiUvb
JA\
j>\*
LJ
SURA
VERSE
IX
136
111
please the Jews, instructed his followers to turn the qiblah to Jerusalem 11 rather than to Mecca, the place which the ancient Arabs had
always regarded as holy. Only later on, when he was convinced of his
failure to conciliate the Jews did Muhammad
change back to the
1*
original direction.
As
to the last phrase in the Koranic verse, "God's is the east and
the west
.," Jewish tradition abounds in references
praising the
15
universality of God.
.
11
Dan. 6:11;
cf.
Ben-Zeeb, op.
p. 29,
tit.,
I,
pp. 217,
314.
" The
Jews
to Jerusalem.
of Arabia
p. 68: iaj?
Tabari, Vol.
Cf.
Noldeke-Schwally,
I,
II,
12;
tit.,
n^?js>ci
nr *\rv.
'i
oa
p. 93:
Utt
-IHDD n
p.
IK a'ri
Bu., Vol.
apn
nrDn
D^DDH
n
n
pna
-VIBD nrn
mpon no
'n
^N-W>
mpo
n'apn no
Tina ^Venn ,-]Tj?a
Tnn
(no
.*ja^a
,T .aie
15
niaa
^^
^a
nm) n^o iom
innn iai^
nn Va
Vo.
And
cf.:
o'jinnm
uwby
^w
.
nn
]K
niVoi
ion
VERSE
137
against you.
The Arabs, no
less
also explain
climate. 8
Ik* j
Cf. 3:106.
Ali op.
f
cit.,
note 182.
p. 66,
Compare Deut.
Zamakhshari, Vol.
14:2
II, p.
44.
110:
cf.
A. Zifroni
o^nT nr
ed.,
mnK
8
is
Mishnah Ket.
the
first instance,
.
No
O^WT
(IB]
ysDKa
npon
,Q'rnp iMOimn).
y*DK3 .rrnw
man
ivai
3m
jnn
yxoia
336.
D^WTI
Cf.:
row
,o^ny
See also B. Sanh. 38a; B. Yom. 56b and Rashi to Ezek. 5:5
-pra.
SURA
II
VERSE
VERSE
113
144
144
tine,
(talpioth)
mouths
3
(piyyotK) turn."
Mishnah Ber. 28 b.
B. Ber. 30a.
114
VERSE
Remember me,
then, and I
1
do
not
misbelieve.
and
me,
147
will
4l
works that He hath done, His wonders, and the judgments of His
mouth" (1 Chron. 16:12). At Mount Sinai God speaks to Moses to
tell the children of Israel, "in every place where I cause My name to be
mentioned 3 I will come unto thee and bless thee" (Exod. 20:21).
The Talmud Yerushalmi 4 interprets the words, "I cause to be
6
mentioned, >>s as if they were written in the second person, i. e.
remembering God
a
*
/. e.
p.
19 n.;
cf.
Yn
,-r'D
rwpn
]iu
Brnimn DP Tarrfr.
ni3-n ,*D!WIT
mobn
.'DP
oipon
SURA
VERSE
II
VERSE
115
149
149
And
1
say not of those who are slain in God's way
(that they are) dead, but rather living; but ye do not
perceive.
similar statement
killed in the
commenting
found
is
in 3:163:
way of God
The Talmud,
too,
himself." 8
7. e.
Baitfawi, Vol.
(n'y
,3
B. Ber. 18a.
B. Sanh. 92a;
'obny
p.
^U ....
90:
(r
I,
?!
cf.
(a'y
zb^b o"ra
,r
by
OIK
r^in)
ny
Kin
]'N
*\?-\
*r*^
Ji
(J
rvD^o 'inn.
p"rao inv
jnn'Da o'pnx
o^ru; poiyp
n'n ^3
B. Tarn. 32a;
cf.
2:48-51 n. 14.
To
"
'kill
himself/
VERSES
154-55
similar
turn
is
all
am
'
"for
"
SURA
II
VERSES
VERSES
117
156^57
156-57
who
misbelieve and die while still in misbelief, on them is the curse of God, and of the angels, and
of mankind altogether; to dwell therein for aye; the
Verily, those
for
I,
even
I,
am
He,
And
there
is
and
I kill,
make
alive; I
worm
rebelled against
Me; For
their
shall
not
die,
3
of the righteous."
B. R. H. 16b.
Ibid., 17a.
118
VERSE
159
can understand.
The
lical
expression "the ship that runneth in the sea" recalls the bibexpression, "The way of a ship in the midst of the sea" (Prov.
works of the Lord, and His wonders in the deep;' .... "Let them
give thanks unto the Lord for His mercy, And for His wonderful works
men"
to the children of
The
!'
of the
power
of
the true
all
power, 3 "Because
therefore,
it 4
it is
was
put on a
level
phenomenon
,aio
of rainfall to divine
Cf.: m^ijND hy
(a ,D"'D
Shemone
,iruyD^ 'n
Vys VD
'Esre: T-noi
nnn
a'0o
nna nn
own; and compare Q'JDtn n n^no in the Prayer Book with the Koranic expression
"and the alternation of night and day." See also Is. 55:10-11, own TV -WKD o
on^i
jnr*? jnr
-WK
]jw nrrDxrn
m^ini
pn n
nnn DK
^ aw
vb
non
O'DPH
nm rrm p.
SURA
VERSE
II
VERSE
119
160
160
Yet there are some amongst mankind who take to themselves peers other than God; they love them as
they
should love God; while those who believe love God
more. O that those who are unjust could only see, when
they see the torment, that power
Verily, God is keen to torment.
Some
1
which
ship,'
may
is
altogether God's!
lead their
The
Judaism and
principle in
who
of wor-
The commandment
is
reminiscent of
God
is
a cardinal
by God
the world. Just as the waters of the rivers (are) the food of the waters
of the sea, so are (the sinners destined to be) fuel for Gehinnom." 6
He
coming and
punishment of
the sinners. Similarly to the Psalmist's expression that with God one
day means a thousand years: "For a thousand years in Thy sight are
but as yesterday when it is past, And as a watch in the night" (Ps.
AH,
.
op.
place.
cit.,
-prfcK
p. 73; cf.
" n
naruo
Torah, and
let
is
sure of
its
of the
"
in
irrfr
"
^tritf'
yap;
in the Siddur:
cf.
notes to 2:1-2.
Thy
Ben
Cf. B.
P.R.E., p. 63.
Thy Name"
lOb.
(.
rrn rarm).
120
90:4),
the
with thy Lord
is
similar idea
as a thousand years of
is
what ye number/' 7
"He governs
commentary on
shall it
Ps. 90:4.
SURA
VERSE
II
VERSE
121
167
167
Muhammad
what
sacrificed to idols,
that he
may
Cf. 3:87
"AH
made
unlawful to himself before that the law was revealed." Cf. 6:119; 16:115; 22:35-36.
8
i^3Kn *6 in
([W] a
*
ye
i^3n
ir
on^ IDIKI
,a'n
rrnn rnin
wo
n'rw TP^D
Referring to the biblical phrase in Deut. 14:4: "These are the beasts which
may
*
oDU3
^*ne^ on^ nmoi
eat."
II, p.
258:
*y.J
\J*\j\
^l
122
what he slaughters
is
invalid/
if
punishment/' 14
The Koranic idea that the forbidden food in the Mosaic law was
a punishment for the Jews for being rebellious, is undoubtedly of
Christian influence. St. Justin Martyr in his Dialogue with Trypho
writes that circumcision "is not essential for all men, but only for the
" IS
Jews, to
mark you off for the suffering you now so deservedly endure.
And he
Mishnah #ul.
,D
I
i^nn)
im
2:8 [D].
as follows:
mjfr IDHHT.
cit.,
pp. 197-8:
IM
n^ % 3K
.rmiDN rvtawDD
nnn
m'an
-ma I^DK 16
,-vrn
oniDHn n nono
iVVn
The
pig
"
6:146.
II
Ibid.; cf.
,)s
*DV
cit. t
navo)
nan
nnn nwD3
poo.
came
p. 26.
M In 6:146 the
prohibition
is
for that is
The
is
Leszynsky, op.
nr
D.
a horror
expression
the laws of
Compare
itself),
or an abomination that
j^ j
f
**\J*
recalls the
nmB
cf.
is
phrase
Yahuda,
* Torrey,
*
Inc.,
is
is
Cf. 6:147.
New York,
cit.,
pp. 151-52;
1948, p. 175.
cf. 3:87,
SURA
VERSE
II
123
167
kinds of meat, so that when you ate and drank you would keep God
16
before your eyes, for you have always been disposed to forget Him."
This idea, however, is in contradiction to the Midrash and other
rabbinic sources which emphasize that the prohibition was not a
punishment for misbehavior but rather a willingness on the part of the
17
Jews to indulge more in the precepts of the Lord.
Regarding the phrase, "consecrated to other than God,' Palmer
remarks that "At the time of slaughtering an animal the Muslims
always repeat the formula bismi'lldh, in the name of God." This is
similar to the talmudic law of pronouncing a benediction before the
18
This law extends to
slaughtering of an animal for food or sacrifice.
the pronouncement of a benediction before partaking of food. 19 In
20
must be careful that the
killing the animal the Moslem, like the Jew,
1
21
jugular vein of the throat be cut and not the spinal cord.
The expression Inna 'llaha ghafurun ralj/lm recalls the liturgical
expressions 'Adonai
and
molfiel wesoleafy
'El r alburn
wefyannun*
The
when
Talmud
writes: "It
Muhammad meant by
is,
16
D"mn
]*zv
Domain nnbnru
in
cit. t
v bz HN DD^
([B]
Cf.
I.
Festschrift
Steinschneider, op.
Moshe Zucker,
Vol.
XXXII,
p. 372;
p. 34.
:wy
*nnj
a*
anna,
Goldziher, "Uber
-00 on ?
1
mnoD
natpn
"imo
"iDKW
PTD
jrr^
rmsoi
DID^IDS
mm
]1K3
^DH rrn
orb
nnyo
nmn
'i
*?&
o^iy
*ro
-in
uvna n^nno
hy ^NIBP nojWDi
ip^n, in
PAAJR,
Vol.
XX
Palmer,
p. 21 n.; B. Ber.
^ B. Ber. 35a;
**
]i3m
iv P
aim ^K
*]*?
^i^a mn
.nViDi
jU-l
SlMlj
14,
mo
'n,
B. Pes. 64a.
^ Gen.
32:33:
>D nrn
18:14, n'n
22
Nu.
1;
Hirschfeld,
New
ovn n
yaj.
Researches
.,
p. 114.
^D; and
,mDia.
r'n ,n*D
20
cf.
1.
SlToJI.
Talmud Yerushalmi,
124
He made
vow
that
he were cured he would never eat the food he liked best and that 26
was what he liked most. Hence the prohibition of the sinew of the
27
The Koranic expression, "bring the law and recite it," rethigh.
calls the well-known talmudic phrase nete sefer wenefyeze.** It is not
unlikely that Muhammad used a common expression which prevailed
among the Jews in Medina, in order to show them that not only was
he well versed in the Torah but that he alone possessed the true
if
revelation. 29
J. e. 9
Baitfawi, Vol.
I,
p. 80:
ui
jru
.4JI
wo
'n'j;
B.
mm
3:106; 20:112; 75:16.
!^id.
30a,
inrjo'w
mm
nso
V->-l
n'j;
ilDi
cf.
B.
<L)lj
4JI
Shab. 49a,
SURA
II
VERSE
VERSE
125
172
172
who
The
fear.
and
their relation to
Judaism have
who
shall sojourn in
Thy
tabernacle?
Who shall
dwell
and worketh
righteousness, And speaketh truth in his heart; That hath no slander
upon his tongue, Nor doeth evil to his fellow, Nor taketh up a reproach
is despised, But he
against his neighbour; In whose eyes a vile person
honoureth them that fear the Lord;
He
'U*.^
pi,
2:74, 160.
2:28-30.
2:1, 48-51, 209; 3:2.
2:254; 3:75.
'2:1-2,211.
i
uprightly,
"2:1-2,211,273,280.
2:1-2, 239, 240; 3:7.
"2:1-2,211,273,280.
" 2:1-2, 87.
"Leading virtues." Cf. B. Mak. 24a.
own
money on
hurt,
interest,
126
Nor taketh a
shall never
be moved."
He
based them
all
on one
(Hab.
2:4)."'"
The Koranic
God abhors
SURA
II
VERSES
VERSES
127
173-75
173-75
O Ye who
made
who committed
Muhammad
This innovation by
the crime.
law
in
possible that Muhammad expresses here the biblical idea of "an eye
M
for an eye (Exod. 21:24 and Lev. 24:20), which is based on the principle that the punishment must be equal to the crime committed and
prohibits doing
Th.
W.
.,
Leiden-Leipzig, 1910,
p. 289.
2
is
osnn
ruro
n^
D?H
f^K
'ip
'
any^n 1*6
!?py^
'>
is
Kosno
VM
]*o
]KI
irtn
-D-ta
jy
that
is
to death/' Cf.
guilty of death; but he shall surely be put
Maimonides, Guide
Maimonides,
. .
Num.
35:33 and
ibid.,
in another
"injuries that cannot be reproduced exactly
by payment/' Cf
4:94.
128
VERSES
who
There
179-81
ye
believe!
is
1
accepted the Day of Atonement as a day of
fast. It was known as 'Ashura'* meaning the tenth day and corresponding to the Jewish Day of Atonement, which occurs on the
tenth of Tishri. Mubammad later3 substituted for it the month of
Ramadan, 4 and required every Moslem to fast a whole month.
At
first
Muhammad
is
He
or or iipy.
p.
498:
From
Hebrew
the
18:13.
p. 196;
tit.,
*
Geiger, op.
Cf.
Wensinck, op.
cit.,
cf.
Day
of
(op.
cit.,
p. 14),
Atonement:
Rashi
Hirschberg,
p. 179;
A. Sprenger, Das
Torrey, op.
cit.,
mo&pnD anntw
who
ton an
claims that
is still
Noldeke-Schwally, Vol.
cf.
p.
250;
p. 37.
Simon Duran
I,
Yom Kippur.
Tipy,
...
on Exod.
op.
cit.,
cit.,
p.
oniMn ov DHimn
p. 11;
Mubammad
rowm
and Duran,
^K
*D
substituted
omana
op.
cit.,
p. 14.
o^'n vn
looinpn "]3^}
niwo iruwn ^aipop nnv pioi iroiD Kin VI^K win D'D ny Vsa naiD nawnnp
mo\ See also Zohar (n'a
)
it
SURA
VERSES
129
17^-81
we have
po
ITOD
,m
man
is
nrrv ton tn
not broken. 14
nni rraK
nn
The
of Lev. 16:29
is
is
nsoa in*
inoi
-p.
According
forty nights."
Rivlin, op.
tit.,
(I'DD .H'TID)
M.
p. 15;
mnn
Plessner, "Ramatfan,"
his
./.,
Cf. 2:183
f.;
Bu., Vol.
I,
p.
"
aa
Hirschberg, op.
rm JTP
'D DISC
'D
tit.,
iy^ w
pi p^'om.
Wellhausen, Reste
f.;
pp. 189
p. 197:
Ramadan,'
2nd edition,
in
cit.,
,porfr
IPDN
pp. 125
if.;
-rrm
mpoo
F. (S. D.)
p. 97.
Bu., Vol.
Beitrage
x*
who
I,
p. 475.
p. 36.
is
"second Passover/'
'<Bu. Vol.
9
I,
'
nou;
p. 471:
cf.
biblical prescription in
Torrey, op.
"...
cit.,
p. 138; B.
Num.
Yom.
83b.
130
The Koranic
"God
desires for
you what
easy," recalls
"
the talmudic statement that the Sages declared not to trouble the
" rs
phrase,
is
community unduly.
The exact date on which the Koran was revealed is stated by
Mubammad to be in the month of Ramadan, in the Night of al16
Qadn 'The Night of Power is better than a thousand months! The
angels and the Spirit descend therein, by the permission of their Lord
with every bidding
1 '
(97:3-4).
.**
Re
IWIDD
an p
Cf.
DM.
]*K
and
lU'xn ^y PITH
1,4.
pp. 3-7.
cit.,
According to Jewish tradition, Moses received the second tablets from God
on Yom Kippur. Rashi to Exod. 31:18. Goitein, in his article on Ramadan in
xr
Der Islam, XVIII, calls attention to the parallelism between Muhammad's mission and the handing of the second tablets of the law to Moses on the tenth
month.
day
of the
first
a fast lasting
He
o'rm rn
Cf. oniN ^a
^m0
,OTM "n)
See also
'n
,1
'n
muya
uV
pi
,'y
no^i
B^
%
i^0H)
an
cf,
"nw or oy DV nnnw)
IDJ rrrw
D'Dy otK ^D
]*Dn!?
msa
n nna
rnpya
ypn
Day
irm
oVaaw )nn
a^iy^
moD^ oniDDn
of
Atonement.
on
jvjym
QV i3"m av
'n
omcon
Obermann,
op.
)^
cit.,
p. 91.
om .nawn
SURA
II
VERSE
VERSE
131
182
182
Him; He
and
will
(Is.
55 :6).'
'
132
VERSE
183
shall
afflict
your
Mu
days and not for the nights. This is contrary to talmudic law
which prohibits cohabitation on the eves of the fast days of Yom
Kippur and the Ninth of 'Ab, since the nights are counted as part of
for the
Muliammad
identifies
white."
Mishnah Yom.
Mishnah Ber.
8:1
1:2 [DJ.
SURA
VERSE
II
VERSE
133
185
185
They
will
1
is
3
pilgrimages and festivals.
.onyiD ?
^
.
Cf. [F]
'y
HT ny
mmV vm
,VOD 'nan
np'D
nnc ])nv
onyio!?
and [B]
"i
vw
nmo TT
134
VERSE
186
Zamakhshari, Vol.
I,
p. 132:
JU2,
Mishnah
Cf.
jl
JbuJt
2:187
and
}ni6
irar
pnH
H^r
iy
DO^IHD ^IH
Dbrn mo^n) i^3i non^o wy
oaij;aa
1,
ir
btnp
pnb
y^in 1
rbv
nvrDiD
K osnn
-fro inni o^vi^v
VMI^
pn
nn
SURA
VERSE
II
VERSE
135
187
187
That
is
(Num. 35:6).
The statement in 2:186, "fight in God's way," and the phrase here,
"kill them wherever you find them," may have their antecedents in
the biblical verses dealing with milfyemet mifwah* and milfyemet reshut*
which are found in Exod. 17:14-16 6 and in Deut. 20:1. 7
The Talmud states: "(A war) which is (designated) voluntary
and
according to the Rabbis is commanded according to R. Judah,
the Rabbis is
(a war) which is (designated) commanded according to
1
imnn
notes to 2:213.
cf.
pVoy nsr
TI -no p!?Dya
O'D-Y'
mm
nor!
nno
'3
oa^y
'3
noun
.'
mm
nt
mm
pn .own
,f' 1YID0).
nVK
(K ,s
m nno
mm
onan) onxo
*a
pan
ono
mn
nmi
136
to
The
B. Sot. *4b.
fight
against
biblical injunction
"When
it,
to in Yalkuf Shim'oni as
men
(Deut.
20:10),
is
referred
Cf. 22:76,
JL>-I
cit.,
pp. 136
London, 1919,
enters paradise,"
....J,
Jtt
jUll
op.
equal to jihad.
He
said,
ilpJl
is
God,"
J>-
4l
p. 89.
f.
cit.,
p. 65;
p. 9; cf.
H. U.
W.
II, p.
206:
"He who
dies in jihad
SURA
VERSE
II
VERSE
The
137
193
193
is (in)
The
thy males appear before the Lord thy God in the place
which He shall choose; on the feast of unleavened bread, and on the
feast of weeks, and on the feast of tabernacles; and they shall not
appear before the Lord empty; every man shall give as he is able,
according to the blessing of the Lord thy God which He hath given
a year shall
thee
all
(Deut. 16:16-17).
Shammai
In the
Talmud we
The
and the
of silver
festal sacrifice
two
"Beth
least) two
But Beth
one ma'ah
3
pieces of silver."
The Koran,
age:
"And proclaim
'
Hebrew
God 4 must be rendered at the pilgrimamongst men the Pilgrimage; let them come to
an offering to
an -
Cf J ud 21:19
-
new moon
Kin &s
of the twelfth
8:2
month
first
The
&ati
is
to be undertaken
Dhu'lfrijjah.
Cf.
138
you on foot and on every slim camel, from every deep pass, that they
may witness advantages for them, and may mention the name of
God for the stated days over what God has provided them with of
brute beasts, then eat thereof and feed the badly off, the poor"
(22:29) .5
prohibition against cohabitation during the days of the pilgrimage is not known in Jewish law. It is possible that the Koranic
6
prohibition against dealing with women, fornication and quarrel,
stem from the talmudic command, "a man should purify himself
for the festival." 7
In early days the ffajj was associated with great fairs. "These
fairs were probably the main thing to Muhammad's contemporaries,
as they still are to many Muslims. For the significance of the religious
ceremonies had even then lost its meaning for the people. The
following
be stated.
may
main part
of the
by
from sexual intercourse, wear holy clothing and stand before the
8
deity (<Jaij= VQ = stand) at the foot of a holy mountain."
The institution of ffajj has been serving as a major influence upon
Moslems congregating in Mecca from all over the world. Rjch and
poor fraternize in comity on the common ground of faith. Each pilgrim enters "the holy precincts as a mufyrim (wearing a seamless garment) and performs the seven-fold circumambulation of the Ka'bah
(fawaf) and the seven-fold course (sa'y) between the adjacent al-Safa
mound and the Marwah eminence lying opposite. The fyajj proper
begins with the march to 'Arafah, which lasts from the seventh to the
eighth of dhu-al-Hijjah. The halts (wuquf) take place at the outlying
sanctuaries of 'Arafah, namely, al-Muzdalifah and Mina. The stone-
Compare Exod. 34:23 and nmyo IT) TPJ> IT runns P' vhy *JN *mp nam ITT ^y
(n'n ,8*1) nnn 'D^nT no^n) -pn^n 'n nmaD rhy *JM mip.
6
C*l ....
Bu., Vol. I, p. 408: "They did not mix with them (wives)/*
*
Jl>-I
Jl
1
B. R. H. 16b,
^na
Wensinck, E.
I.
IDXJJ
inoV
o*i
)1
<JX
an.
cf.
B. Shab. 87a.
SURA
II
VERSE
139
193
way
to the valley of
Mina
Mina
at
a camel or of a
sheep or other horned domestic animal (Koran 22:34-37), which always
takes place on the tenth of dhu-al-Hijjah and is celebrated throughout
the Moslem world as 'Id al-Atffra (the festival of sacrifice), the whole
ceremony formally ends. After the shaving of the head the garment
119
(far am) is discarded and the ifyldl (secular condition) resumed.
Hitti, op.
cit.,
see Doz
Dozy, o.
op.
pp. 133-34.
cit.
cit.,
pp. 120
.
f.
sacrifice at
As to the Jewish
of
140
VERSE
196
remember your
rites,
fathers, or with
remember God
a keener memory
still.
Rivlin, op.
tit.,
1
Lit.
"Holy/
p. 109.
It is
cit.,
p.
109 n,
who
cit. 9
p. 78:
"Vor dem Ruk'u, sowievor und nach jedem Sudjud hat man ein Takbir auszusprechen. Das Kaddisch beginnt mit ^"Niv, was wortlich mit Takbir ubereinstimmt."
Cf. notes to 2:1-2, note 28; Ps. 89:53,
*
his prayer
nD0
pm
rr IDH; cf.
May
]D
zbiyh
mn *]m.
B. Ber. 16b:
"Rab on concluding
it
*3n),
Lord
(n*o ,Vp
6
o^nn)
rmWn pa
Quoted by Taylor,
SURA
II
VERSE
VERSE
206
141
206
What can
literature. 6
voenn HIDDS
/.
B. Suk. lib.
made
e.
"in the
shadow
of
This view
The
In the
Cf. D
>*
,J.
who
maintains: "they
(ibid).
'jay.
opinions of Rabbi Eliezer and Rabbi Akiba are reversed in the Sifra.
latter,
,a'py
^*
is
&
([W]
a cloud,"
TIDK ,tnDD) vn
nuon
wpy
"i
,vn 000
"clouds of
glory/
142
VERSE
209
Men
Zamakhshari, Vol.
I,
p. 143:
OU
4*1
Cf. Baicjawi,
ad
loc.
"
Compare Mishnah Aboth 5:2: (There were) ten generations from Adam to
Noah, in order to make known how long-extended is long-suffering with him; for
all
See
of the flood."
rnny,
He brought upon
1, 1; cf.
23,
6;
compare
also
Maimonides,
Gen. 4:26.
o>axj?n rno
n*o
Din mop
rm
*op^> i^nn
]wh :^mn
SURA
VERSE
II
VERSE
143
211
211
They
'
The
2
1
place of charity in Islam is discussed in 2:1-2 and elsewhere.
In Jewish tradition the laws pertaining to obligatory "alms," i. e.
the one-tenth of the yearly produce and the unharvested edges of the
$adaqah, 4
*Cf. notes on 2:172, 246, 272, 273, 280; 3:128 and T. H. Weir,
E.
/.,
3
springs or in
one-tenth
I,
is
Uj
."
f.
p.
what
"adaka,"
and
"When
Q^P
<L)\T
dj*d\ J
ji
*UUi
is
all
is
it
unto the
Vol.
D-np
pp. 359
f.
I,
pp. 149
f.;
T.
Maimonides,
anpnp
ton
W.
Al-Ghazali, Ibyd
Juynboll, op.
n^n) npisi
cit.,
'Ulum al-Din
pp. 109
nuno nu^n:
^33
f.
nr
nn
10*61
144
." 7 The
quired for) his use, and then he is given a wife in marriage
rabbis add: "You are commanded to maintain him and supply him
even with a horse and a servant (if he were used to such luxuries), but
.
rich/' 8
Regarding "the son of the road, Jewish tradition, too, puts great
stress on the obligation to take care of the wanderer and to provide
him with board and lodging as well as an escort in case of danger. 9
B. Ket. 67b. According to the Bible, the giving of npix approximates a loan
"He that is gracious unto the poor lendeth unto the Lord, And his good
deed will He repay unto him." Prov. 19:17; cf. Lev. R. 34, IS; B. B. B. 9b. The
Koran, too, states: "Verily, those who give in charity, men and women, who have
it shall be doubled for them, and for them is a generous
lent to God a goodly loan,
to God.
hire" (57:17).
Sifre
Cf. B.
to
Deut.
21:7:
imrom
imrm
*6i
rrnV
nbQ
imnoDi ir-rV
SURA
II
VERSE
VERSE
213
145
213
They
will
The Talmud
of idolatry
and
incest
of
may
B. Shab. 19a.
B. Sanh. 74a.
[DJ.
146
VERSE
216
They
will
them both
is
is
and
sin
The
its
Lev. 10:9.
for
.n
^DKH
rmnn)
4:46.
6
7
(a'y
,3
p. 182 n.
uno nnp
,3*'
,ro
mn nn
]na
pins nn
Cf.
,m
[B]
ny
pn
^y I^-QD VK.
nn
no^w nnna
]"n
nyiv naH
it
0333 on Kin
o^n
nmni
p. 152.
]w.
-]b
oipo ^oa.
,-in
cit.,
nu)
(*y
]"
Jerusalem, 1929,
-UDD.
pbro KXID nn
Zion, V, 209-10
^oa
glad the
life
."
cit..
SURA
II
VERSE
VERSE
147
220
220
Wed
Compare: Ezra 9:13-14: "And after all that is come upon us for
our evil deeds, and for our great guilt, seeing that Thou our God hast
us such
punished us less than our iniquities deserve, and hast given
a remnant, shall we again break Thy commandments, and make
not
marriages with the people that do these abominations? wouldest
Thou be angry with us till Thou hadst consumed us, so that there
should be no remnant, nor any to escape?"
The Mishnah prohibits inter-marriage with Nethinim for all time,
1
2
Accordingly, "a female
whether they be males or females.
3
Nethinah (is prohibited) to an Israelite and a daughter of an Israelite
.
to a Nethin."'
rabbis interpret Lev. 18:21, "And thou shalt not give any
.," to mean "an Israelite
of thy seed to set them apart to Molech
who has intercourse with a Cuthean woman and begets from her a
The
Mishnah Yeb.
3
"Who
is
f.).
78b.
types."
4
Mishnah Yeb.
B. Meg. 25a;
20a.
cf.
18:21
148
VERSE
222
4
They
will
1 '
will greatly
'I
woman
'Tabari, Vol.
II,
II, p. 97.
217:
Adam
mv
woman
195,
yr vb.
"And thou
who
The biblical
claim that
prohibition
Muhammad
is
in
is
shalt
impure
agreement
prohibited actual
Compare Tabari
(ibid.)
and
V
"
*0S.J"
:npn vh.
SURA
II
VERSE
149
222
their periods.""
10
Cf. Rashi,
Compare Ibn
ad
loc.:
Ezra, ad
B. Nid. 63b.
rwn K^K
loc.,
HTTJ pt
om?m;
also,
Onkelos, ad
loc.,
ISO
VERSE
223
woman
with
is
tilled)."
Talmud: "Esther
The comparison
of a
Similarly,
"plowing" is well
in
The
7
expression here,fa'atu fyarthakum (so come into your tillage),
recalls the biblical phrase: "... go in, I pray thee, unto my hand-
16:2).
B. Sanh. 74b.
D. H.
tiller,
Semitica, Vol.
1913, p. 241.
1: yaa
rnye
p. 33; cf.
p. 307; S.
honor of
*
I,
*a
aatfo
hy
pon.
nr
inoK DK a .nna.
B. Ket. 16a.
p^
yii.
Cf.
Gen.
(a'V ,D on-w)
10
Ibid.
16:4, nan
*?
n^a mnain.
inwo nwp^ nm O-KW no
an
pi
py
SURA
Some
II
VERSE
151
223
Hadlth.
woman's
will,"
in
"Bu., Vol.
Ill, p. 430:
1928, p. 54
" B.
f.
Ifid. 41a.
152
VERSE
Make
clear
224
not
God
and
fear
God
for
Almost
commandments
all
in
except for just cause;" 3 and "draw not near to the wealth of the
orphan."
The Koranic phrase, "Make not God the butt of your oaths,"
is comparable to the biblical: "Thou shalt not take the name of the
Lord thy God in vain" (Exod. 20 :7). 4 Muhammad likewise commands
his followers not to invoke the name of God in a false oath.
The phrase, "Make peace amongst men," seems to be a replica of
the statement in Sifre that peace is essential for the dead as well as for
the living. 5
1
*wn
vb .mnn K^
.*]*on
n0N norm
*b
-pN
iva
.ijn
on^ mnnpn vh
mo
"ronn
l^Jl
Exod. 20:20,
Similarly,
*n
]wyr\
b.
]iyw
t6i ]IHT
,ip0
**
<&\
-pan m* -QD
*b
mrp *6
-]h
ly
^4i ^J
!?.
mrr
-]'n^
^DS ^h rwyn *b
ienp^ rapn or n
.
*as
nayn
is
JJI,
Cf.
tit.,
2:172.
comparable
^ m
**"''
H!?.
p.
^y
-nsr
iynn
J^>-
19:43
to
is
"Thou
128
p.
"Be merciful
to
men."
3
Cf PDJ
.
rnps; also,
am
cf.
man
live
by them), Lev.
18:5.
In Judaism
B. Ket. 5a.
4
[D].
SURA
II
VERSE
VERSE
153
226
226
Those who swear off from their women, they must wait
four months; but if they break their vow God is forgiving
and merciful.
The
may
husband
have no
intercourse with his wife,, the School of Shammai say: (She may consent) for two weeks. And the School of Hillel say: For one week
(only). Disciples (of the Sages) may continue absent for thirty days
against the will (of their wives) while they occupy themselves in the
." x If the man overstudy of the Law; and labourers for one week
steps the time limit, he is obliged either to grant his wife a divorce or
revoke his vow. 2 This is in line with Baitfawi's comment on the second
.
3
part of the verse: "they retract their oaths by revoking it."
The expression, "those who swear off from their women," recalls
the biblical phrase in Deut. 24:1, "if she find no favour in his eyes/' 4
Mishnah Ket.
B. Ket. 61b.
5:6 (D).
154
VERSE
228
Divorced
and
has
it is
wise.
This verse and verse 233 are similar to the talmudic laws. According to the rabbis, a divorced woman is not allowed to be married
within ninety days of the date of the divorce. This is done in order
to ascertain pregnancy, since it is presumed to take three months 1 to
detect pregnancy, 3 The Mishnah, too, states: "widows may not
"3
(again) be betrothed or married before three months have passed
.
Though
38:24:
B. Nid. 8b.
11:230,
wo
es heisst, der
"And
Mann
it
came
Geiger,
diirfe,
after ..."
er die Frau
ist
sie
geheirathet
cit.,
months
nachdem
verstossen,
op.
in
1 ff.,"
p. 196.
It is
list
whom
marriage
is
not permitted according to the Koran (4:26-27) tallies with the list enumerated
in Lev. 18:6-18; 20:11-21. Mubammad, however, unlike the biblical law, disallows
marriage with a niece. Cf. R. Roberts, The Social Laws of the Qordn, London, 1925,
p. 14; Torrey, op.
4
cit.,
p. 149.
*]DM
ntznjno.
bill
of divorce'* (2:229), as
rwo rwuno
na'roa
stitutional Theory,
f.
SURA
II
VERSE
VERSE
155
233
233
child.
no crime
do doth
look.
his (child's)
weaning
B. Ket. 59b.
is
in
Compare Josephus,
two years/'
Antiquities, 2, 9;
and
31:13,
"and
156
VERSE
239
The Koranic
salah*
God"
recalls the
may
mood." 6
midst of the
the prayer one
congregation stands twenty-five degrees higher than
7
the Talmud
performs in his house or in the market place." Similarly,
states: "A man's prayer is heard (by God) only in the Synagogue
How do you know that the Holy One, blessed be He, is to be found
in the Synagogue? For it is said: God standeth in the congregation
that if ten people pray
of God (Ps. 82:1). And how do you know
For it is said God
together, the Divine Presence is with them?
standeth in the congregation of God (and a congregation consists of
in the
not
less
than ten)." 8
nixo o"pV;
which
(prayer),
TefiUa
cf.
God
WB
"to judge",
The Hebrew,
is
taken as
UI.
op.
tit.,
p. 138n.;
and 2:229-30
UJL
r^'sna
44b:
B. Sanh.
p. 93;
ioxy
pon
Mittwoch, op.
Vs.
cit.,
See,
also,
Geiger,
tit.,
pp. 99
jJU
cf.
f.
Mishnah Ber.
Taylor, op.
tit.,
*o naia -pno
28 to 2:1-2.
onVona DMID n'apn ]'H D'HDin ona rn iV'BNi Ton nyotw iiaxn
,nVn ma^n ,nprnn T ,0'aD-i) luxn DJ; ioxp )nV mn nnx na'oV o'a
B. Ber. 6a;
n'
5:1:
cf.:
cit.,
p. 81.
SURA
VERSE
II
VERSE
And
157
240
240
if
ye
fear,
similar verse
found
is
in 3:188:
and sitting or lying on their sides, and reflect on the creation of the
heavens and the earth," to which Baitfawi comments that Muhammad
directed his followers to pray in
any
depending
That
their strength.
"That
is,
if
in
time of need. 8
10:13.
a
Baitfawi, Vol.
I,
p. 93:
jli
('y
Mishnah Ber.
Cf.
B. Ber. 30a.
>n
4:102:
come short
JlpUi
4:5 [DJ.
^moan nu
.(a'y
,n':>
mxp
rvD-n HMD)
n^un
^sno
HIDD oipoa
in the earth, it is
p,
tit.,
pa
faces
up
VT mpo VT pni^
D*D ih
fK
wash your
faces,
down
to the ankles.
And
I,
p.
*D.
to prayer
Bu., Vol.
cf.
if
"O ye who
believe!
when ye
rise
Such a practice was prescribed in Exod. 30:19 for Aartm and his sons
to "wash their hands and their feet thereat.' The Talmud refers t0 this practice
selves/
158
VERSE
244
thanks.
Ezekiel 1 relates that the spirit of God had placed him in a valley
that was filled with human bones, all very dry and numerous. Then
the word of God came forth asking: Can these bones return to life?
Ezekiel replied: Thou, Lord, thou knowest. God said: Prophesy over
these bones, in the name of God, that He will enclose them with
veins, flesh and skin, and the spirit of life, that they all come back
life.
and a very large army arose, standing upon their feet. God
then said to Ezekiel: These bones are the children of Israel. They
had said: Our hopes are lost, our bones are dried up. 2
spirit,
as
rVm VT amp
(B.
Yom.
30b).
and
hands and
his left
on
feet simultaneously,
R. Jose son of Judah said: He places both his hands on each other and on
his two feet lying on each other, and sanctifies them." See also Rivlin, op. cit.,
hand).
p. 90.
'
ni.ni
Ezek. 37:1-14;
Cf. B. Shab.
cf.
cit.,
p.
190n:
"Audi
by ^pnv
rrniw D'no
AH im Namen des
J^
SURA
VERSE
II
VERSE
Who
159
246
246
is
Abu Bakr
Islam and
When
good loan.
if
He
is
is
between
off
your
head/ Then Pinlias complained to the Prophet, claiming that he had
not said it. Then this text was revealed which gave its meaning, that
it is not hidden from God, and that He has prepared punishment for
them on account of it. 2
Talmudic law, too, reacts to people who are critical of the law of
us,
The rabbis say "... The critic (of Judaism) may bring against
you the argument, 'If your God loves the poor, why does He not
support them?' If so, answer him, 'So that through them we may be
charity.
(Num.
*
11:23).
Baitfawl, Vol.
I,
p. 92:
U
Jl
4l
J^j
Jl
*lii
>*i
Cf.
M.C.B.
p. 128.
dii^ C-ij^J
AJ1
UiJ
AjpJb
0^1
J^Jlj
CJj^
LXJ
AJU
JJ
U
U
i^
VjJ
Jl
Jlj
160
Akiba answered
an earthly king
was angry with his son, and put him in prison and ordered that no
food nor drink should be given to him, and someone went and gave
him food and drink. If the king heard of it, would he not send him a
the children of Israel are Servants' (Lev. 25:55). R.
him: 'I will illustrate by another parable. Suppose
And we
present?
it is
to the
"3
6
emphasized the importance of righteousness in helping the poor and
the needy. This is clear from other verses: "Verily, those who give in
it shall
charity, men and women, who have lent to God a godly loan,
be doubled for them, and for them is a generous hire" (57 :17). Similar
words are also found in 64:17; 73:21 and in 30:38, ".
but what ye
these it is who shall gain
put out in alms, desiring the face of God
.
double."'
In Sura 3:177
This
Muhammad
in
will write
all
Thy
children of
Thy
B. B. B. lOa.
Cf.
A*
7
down," 8
tions
"We
also states:
JU*
cf.
cit. t
Cf.:
Own nn
pp. 212
f.
is
p.
where he mistakenly
16,
fettered'."
ouiB D"n
-mra
Righteousness/'
HUCA,
of
. .
-iDDa
1:3^0 ir
uaro
ou
oral juro*
rwn
SURA
VERSES 247-48
II
VERSES
161
247-48
Muhammad
(I
10:1).
4
Regarding the birth of Samuel, Tabari relates an interesting
'
In Arabic, Taldt
Tabari, Vol.
II,
Oj
pp. 357
Gustav Weil,
f.;
7,
pp. 192-208.
*Bai<JawI, Vol.
I,
p. 61:
Cf Zamakhshari, ad
.
<
Ji
Tabari, Vol.
ljU
a*
II, p.
JiJ*-*
loc.
j'
Oj*+
j'
*ji
354:
SjJI
Ju
OlO *~ OjUli
LJ
51^1
jA.
f.
162
prophet who would lead them to victory. In the struggle with the
Amalekites the tribe of Levi, which was the tribe of prophets, was,
however, completely annihilated save for one pregnant woman. The
Israelites took the woman and locked her up in a convent, so that in
case she gave birth to a girl they would exchange the child for a boy.
The woman prayed to God to grant her a son. Her plea was fulfilled,
and she named the boy Simeon. When Simeon grew up, she sent him
to study in the sanctuary where he also rendered services to an old
man. When the boy reached maturity, the angel Gabriel called him
one night. The boy, who slept in the same place with the old man,
inquired of the latter if he had called him. The old man replied in the
negative and ordered the boy to lie down again. This was repeated
On
boy
This story
Moslem
is
Jl
obi
cJir
.....
*
JUi
&
Tjt
uu....^
iJb Sl-j
JL)I
pVJLi
Ji
j^UJI
^Ui
JjUJt,
JUS....N
iLji JI
lp;i
vil
JUi
J1JW0.
From
Zamakhshari, Vol.
Cf.
I,
Griinbaum,
Noldeke-Schwally, op.
ctt.,
p.
Tabari, Vol.
II, p. 354.
op.
Vol.
tit.,
I,
pp.
p. 184.
185-87;
I,
p. 61:
Horovitz,
HUCA,
pp. 162-63;
SURA
II
163
VERSES 247-48
shoulders above the people."' This has its origin in the Bible (I Sam.
of Israel a goodlier
9:2): "and there was not among the children
he was higher than
person than he: from his shoulders and upward
of the people."
Tabarl also relates that
any
God
had
appointed king.
11
Moslem commentators
me
354
II, p.
ju
">
355
IMi
jio
UN
JU
4J>
0/d
^U
o\
y>o
pm
,?
nfcrrp)
oipoa nrsn
au
nmn
p"rx nn VK; B.
nvyw yo nrsn
nn K^I ann
oipoa
Yom. 22b;
pm nrjw
nm
Va now rpV
(o'' -a'a
IVDW
">
164
VERSE
Then
said to
249
The
them
their prophet,
sign of his kingthe
ark with the
shall
to
that there
come
you
shechina in it from your Lord, and the relics of what the
dom
is
Moslem
is
'
here,
'shall
come
to
Hebrew ran
4i
expression
Similarly, the
term *~>~"
is
"He
that
identical
nrDtf.
Zamakhshari, Vol.
I,
p. 166.
Zamakhshari, Vol.
i)j*^S~i
The
you
or Aramaic Krna'n.
oO
I,
to verse 247,
people.
p. 166:
JJI^I
J*
*LJI
^-j*
0\T JJj
SURA
VERSE
II
165
249
thence to Esau, his first born. Rebecca, Esau's mother, thus became
the custodian of these clothes. When Esau sold his birth-right to
Jacob, Rebecca rightly assumed that the clothes thereafter belonged
to Jacob, and she instructed him to wear them when he went to secure
the blessing from his father. 6
and non-Jewish
sources. 10
As
np^i
(Too
mm
UDD
,K"-ne)
nniM.
As
Moslem
for
nn
wy
"NamrQd," El,
f.;
Les Origines des Ltgendes Musulmanes, Paris, 1933, pp. 31-35. Cf. notes to 2:260.
*
maa nn prmn OIK
mV
rmro nia vt
nvb poo no ]va
oViy
.
,rm naioa)
,T'B
apy
omaV
avb.
Cf. 2:118.
Exod. 16:33-34.
Exod.
*
O'n
17:5.
Zamakhshari, Vol.
10
Dov
11
p-wa onoan
Heller,
,n's ,noio
"
o'D^ion
ma
166.
'oVenr -noVn).
mmV na
10:33).
I, p.
ia
rn nsnoa onoy
HJC'
nr
]n
(Sifre
on Num.
166
tablets.
ites,
of Eli,
Philistines,
vnr iron
nap rrw
nr
Cf.
who took
iDina
.
ijnD
mim rmnn
^nma nno
11,10.
Sam., chapters
IS
captured the ark.
3, 4, 5.
nivrw nrm
-moa
*o' ay
nmnn nrrrw
jno
nr
rn nunn
SURA
II
VERSE
VERSE
And when
167
250
250
will try
and
their enemies. 1
The Koranic story of Saul is confused with the biblical story about
Gideon, who camped with his forces beside 'En-harod (the well of
"
Harod) (Judg. 7:1), where God said to Gideon: The people are yet
too many; bring them down unto the water, and I will try them for
thee there; and it shall be, that of whom I say unto thee: This shall go
with thee, the same shall go with thee; and of whomsoever I say unto
thee This shall not go with thee, the same shall not go/ So he brought
down the people unto the water; and the Lord said unto Gideon:
:
Every one that lappeth of the water with his tongue, as a dog lappeth,
him shalt thou set by himself; likewise every one that boweth down
upon his knees to drink/ And the number of them that lapped, putting
their hand to their mouth, was three hundred men; but all the rest of
the people bowed down upon their knees to drink water. And the
Lord said unto Gideon: 'By the three hundred men that lapped will
I save you, and deliver the Midianites into thy hand; and let all the
"
(Judg. 7:4-7).
people go every man unto his place'
Tabari's statement that the soldiers were tried because they
complained that there was no water to drink, is undoubtedly a
"
reference to the Israelites' complaint in the desert: Wherefore the
Tabari, Vol.
Ji
U
S
II,
pp. 369-70:
as,*Jli
jft
OjJU*
& f*
4J1
pjJ
0\
jUi
j&.
ICi
SI
J15
JB
168
And Moses
'
Cf.
Hans
v. Mlik's
may drink.'
me? wherefore do
v.
Karobatek, pp. 63
f.
SURA
II
VERSE
VERSE
169
251
251
And
Mubammad
God"
(I
Sam.
17:36).'
Cf. P. Jensen,
die David-Sage," in
Der Islam
170
VERSE
253
This story
the biblical
is
related in detail
narrative:
i.
e.,
was the one who brought Goliath's head, and then David came
Philistine's head.*
commenting on
his
way
to
kill
it
i.
e.
Tabari, Vol.
U!/....4Sj
cf.
II, p.
375:
4^0
01
2:251.
Ahi
oi
oUUi OjJU*
Zamakhshari, Vol.
I,
Ui
jU^I ab
.OjJU-
II, p.
**-y
jjlJb
*l>-
4i^
b Jd
375:
j>^ Jl...JUi
*Ibid.
I,
p. 107,
cit.,
p. 192.
"^ 05 j
^i
dlil
Jli
Mas'udi, Vol.
J\i...
p. 168:
JT
Tabari, Vol.
Jl
A)
SURA
VERSE
II
171
253
upon the place and tarried there all night, because the sun was
7
set; and he took one of the stones of the place, and put it under his
head, and lay down in that place to sleep." Rashi, commenting on the
lighted
The legend
Mas'udi
is
found
in
nrm
TO
]an
rrr >Vy
nw
M>D
is
related that
David
mpon
wm^
KT
mow nn wm
npn IDH
it
inn.
rrr
pn*
Cf., also:
a'ao
apy^
i^D'3
won
aon
oinn)
maw n^WV
(rap roi
"The
^NIDP ,^iyo
nWi ]in
o^a
rnop^no rn
"came
of their
own
172
VERSE
254
Koran
only ones who spoke with God, whereas his reference to Jesus is in
connection with the miracles he performed. 3 Elsewhere 4 we have
shown that to Muhammad, Abraham and Moses were the two great
leaders
who
This view is
God has chosen Adam, and Noah, and Abraham's people, and Imr^n's
."
people above the world
It seems that here, too, Muhammad is under the influence of
.
hoch
op.
Reste
p. 205:
"Nowhere
in the
Koran
among
Ibid.:
Baicjawl, Vol.
42:91.
<
gestellt wird,"
quoted in Torrey,
p. 75.
Maryam
3
fiber alle
cit.,
*
2:125.
I,
p. 63:
is
SURA
VERSE
II
173
254
The
(n ,3*DD
,nm mop)
rrn n0o
W irmna
prophets.
all
8
prophets, and conclude
all
prophets looked into a dim glass (imagining like Isaiah that they saw the Deity),
M
Noldeke-Schwally, op.
iyow
,K"D ,n3i
8
f.;
n^n
mi
mpn
n^o
(n ,VttD ,n:n
ros
116-1 15 iry^
DD
!?n
'n
^ip
yarn
'3
^ino TISDH
IHID
un HMD) mn^
n3nD
,^pDa K^H
np^),
;r
,3'DD
in
cit.,
Vol.
I,
]hv owajn
pp. 159
f.
n'3ia I'K
vtprrnn
mw WK D'K'iMn ^y
u ]m
YH
174
VERSE
256
no god but He, the living, the selfsubsistent. Slumber takes Him not, nor sleep. His is
what is in the heavens and what is in the earth. Who
God, there
is
am
Compare
is
none
else,
My
blessed be He,
is
One and
there
My
is
animate nor His serving angels know His whereabouts. He is all over." 1
The Koranic idea that the intercessor requires the sanction of the
Lord is to be found in Jewish lore. According to the Aggada, God
revealed to Abraham his intention to destroy Sodom in order to
2
provoke him to intercede.
Similarly,
to
rm^
pn
rnjnv
]*K
nvnm
iDipo Kin
Kin
p*n
jn^y
10^ ama*
V>nnn
'as^
TD
*JK
j'jnv ID
naaa
w K^I niion
o^non
I'D'yaoi
j'KBin
D'DN^DH
iV
VKI inK
inipo Kin
K!?I
nmanp prap
-j^
jnn
no
DI .D^DKI
ona
'>
inn
laa
^y i3D*BKi
iVw
pao -jVonw
^aso
.'^
nn^an ]io^pn ID
pyso "]^on
TD
ntPoV n'apn
IDK
r\Dh iio^pa
*|a
.1
SURA
II
VERSE
VERSE
Do you
who
175
260
260
disputed with
Abraham
about
unjust folk.
callest
176
my
'Now, therefore,
lord
God
"Do you
not know
that I am the Lord of the Universe, the creation, the sun and the
God then endowed Abraham with wisdom and he spoke
moon?"
up: "Naturally the sun always rises in the East and sets in the West.
If you are the creator of the universe, command the sun tomorrow to
rise in the west and to set in the east, only then will I testify to your
the
of the universe." 1
lordship
replied:
." a
"Then the
left
nn nw
D'PDD nr
onaia T^DH rm
man
i^v T^P
*b
JJH
OKI
]'
V3>^ D-QN n
nrn
nt^yoa
jnv nn
n'apn
ai
IB^K
oan
nma
)Via ]K2cv
mmo n2cr nonn
ny
]n3
mn
D*WK
'3
mo3
ia
omaV
pn
"i
Tnoa
('r
,a
'
n3
,o'"noi
omDD
^3ai
eip^
,B'DD
rneaV
o ,40
J
und
ana
nayn K^
vn
ona
no^i Diayn
^laon
^D
ama ^
2cn
IDKI
oma^
nra
nonn
wn
vm
is^aw
omaK
v^n
rnsa
!?y
o^D^Dn DHIK
^iion
Unt.
.,
n*a).
p. 40:
"Die erste
Ort nennt. A.
'rvbvb rwy
Hi 1 ! run
na
mn
on^y n ai
m^rom D'aaiam naa^m nonm o^yon
IDH^I
non
im^ ro
^a >n^
..
o^iy bv 13H3D -|Von 'an
anyoa nypwi
nnn Dyon ^a ]nnw ^a Tyo *3H *)to nnroa ypm aiyoo
.
rfrn
'!?D DTKH
iiran
-moA
-iD*n
pp. 214-15.
I,
Miiller,
ZDMG
eingefiihrt mit
wahrend
XLII, 80 hat
sie
die zweite
alam tara
ila
erzShlten Episode herleiten wollen, M. Schreiner ib. 436 aus der GeM
schichte des #5ni ha-me'aggel (Ta'amt 23a).
See also notes to 2:261, 262.
buch
5,
ff.,
SURA
II
VERSE
VERSE
177
261
261
was desolate
and turned over on its roofs, and said, 'How will God
revive this after its death?' And God made him die for
a hundred years, then He raised him, and said, How
it
a
to Nehemiah 2:13:
According to Geiger, this Koranic story refers
"And I went out by night by the valley gate, even toward the dragon's
viewed the walls of Jerusalem, which
well, and to the dung gate, and
fire."
were broken down, and the gates thereof were consumed with
There is, however, a closer resemblance between the Koranic story
"R.
and the legend in the Talmud about tfoni, the Circle-drawer:
man ( tfoni) was throughout the whole
said: This
righteous
Johanan
A Song of Ascents,
of his life troubled about the meaning of the verse,
When the Lord brought back those that returned to Zion, we were like unto
continuthem that dream (Ps. 126:1). Is it possible for a man to dream
he was journeying on the road and
ously for seventy years? One day
does it
he saw a man planting a carob tree; he asked him, How long
take (for this tree) to bear fruit? The man replied: Seventy years.
He then further asked him: Are you certain that you will live another
I found (ready grown) carob trees
seventy years? The man replied:
renders *>,j "a town."
"Noch eine andere Erzahlung beziehen die arabischen
Geiger, op. tit., p. 192:
Versicherung, auf Esra ... wo von Einem
Ausleger, nach Maracci's (Prod. IV, 85)
an ihre Belebung
erzahlt wird, er sei vor einer zerstorten Stadt vorubergegangen,
dann nach 100 Jahren wieder aufleben und
zweifelnd; Gott aber Hess ihn sterben,
1
AH,
op.
tit.,
p. 122,
und
sein
Trank
dem
ist iiber
Ritte,
Tag
sich aufgehalten zu
gegangen,
Mar.
Mann
bekannte:
von
2:12ff.),
178
v
in the world; as
these for
my
my
am
for
Thereupon he exclaimed:
his grandson.
seventy years
The
clothe
phrase,
how we
words
B. Ta'an. 23a.
scatter
slept
in Ezekiel,
."*
"And
them with
It is clear that
dry bones
Chapter
37,
in the valley. 4
SURA
II
VERSE
VERSE
179
262
262
them
This story, hinging upon the narrative in Genesis 15:11-18, probably springs from a Jewish legend which runs as follows: "But though
he believed the promise given him with full and abiding faith, Abraham
desired to know by what merit of theirs his descendants would maintain themselves. Therefore, God bade him bring a sacrifice of an
heifer of three years old, a she-goat of three years old, a ram of three
years old, a turtle dove and a young pigeon, thus indicating to Abraham the various sacrifices that should be brought in the Temple to
atone for the sins of Israel. 'But what will become of my descendants
after the Temple is destroyed?' asked Abraham. God replied and said
'If they read the order of sacrifices, as they will be stated in the
Scriptures, I will account it to them as if they had offered the sacrifices
and I will forgive their sins.' God then revealed to Abraham the
course of Israel's history in connection with the other nations on earth.
:
became
Commentary.
them."
found
The
in
idea that
God
Sa'adia Gaon's
Midrash Hagadol 16, 17: *?D n b npn '* o'nan n"nn inmn *|N "wnn jan
ma nr proi onann rm hm .a-ian onw an ,pai6i lire ? p*a onn ^y tryn
a*n now* in ? ia^m imai vn -nwn jrv^y TV*
!?K aw ]m D-a* on
1
inn
cf.
a*' -IDINI ,u
naw
'n
nn
ibid.,
note 124.
who
]vai
650 f.;
180
Geiger believes that this verse shows that Mubammad, in identifying himself with Abraham,* presents the latter not only as one who
preached against idolatry, but also as the expounder of the doctrine
of the Resurrection of the dead. Not certain about this doctrine, 4
Cf % notes to
Baidawi, Vol.
Jtt
.oil
I,
p. 65:
*U.|
JU c~.lj
4)
^
ijj*J
JL
Cf. Geiger,
had
said:
o/>. cit.,
'I
p. 125,
make
alive
Ul
JU*
>T
and
kill'
(11.260),
ij^J
is
Jli
l^o*
Jl
.>-
J!
JJ
Nimrod
is
On
nnn
oa
SURA
VERSE
II
VERSE
181
271
271
sin,
but
for
God
Zamakhshari, Vol.
I,
p. 177:
fiw
4i!lj]...-o\iJU*JI
Cf
Baicjawl,
ad
loc.
Cf. 2:265:
a dry morsel and quietness therewith, Than a house full of feasting with strife"
(Prov. 17:1); "Better is a handful of quietness, Than both the hands full of labor
is
and
striving after
wind" (Ecc.
4:6).
oi^tf np-ren
6
and
n^yo rvm
(a"y ,D
,3':i).
4
Ta an.
B.
B. B. B. 9b.
9a:
'
oVwT
npi^n
10, 2: y-i
^aa ^a
prn
nan
vm
np-ren
*3yo
OIK pn
fc^i.
myo ^ H^DD
182
VERSE
272
similar idea
is
Talmud which
states that he
who
and
oi
Maimonides,
it is
written,
in secret
:14).
in his
gift
of the
numer-
ous talmudic precepts "an ethical ladder of eight successive rungs (of
charity). The first and highest level was helping the poor man to
sustain himself/' 3
punishment
of
Gehinnom." 5
B. B. B. 9b:
np-tx jrmn nr
A. A. Neuman, op.
pU
tf
B. B. B. lOa:
cit.,
Vol.
J^i
cm) *n nno
II, p. 170.
ma
DK
SURA
VERSE
II
VERSE
273
183
273
for yourselves,
God's face.
it is
The
I
I
for
teaches that even transgressors who have no other merits but that of
3
giving charity, are privileged to face the Shekinah (the Spirit of the
Ps. 17:15.
'
(no
np-rx.
nro
,?>
,310
Cf. notes
'3D
184
VERSES
Those who devour usury
276-77
shall
not
rise again,
save as he
whom
riseth
are the fellows of the Fire, and they shall dwell therein
for aye. God shall blot out usury, but shall make alms-
God
loves not
sinful misbe-
any
liever.
1
Similarly to the biblical statement, the
it
to usury that
with
may
it
God
."
Koran
also states,
"And
(31
:39).
Moslem. Also, the term usury applies not only to money transactions
but to any barter or business transaction where profit results. 3
The same
upon
idea
is
"Thou
money,
interest of victuals,
it"(Deut. 23:20-21).*
The
My
with thee, thou shalt not be to him as a creditor; neither shall ye lay upon him
interest."
1
cit.,
for usury
p. 148.
is r iba
^J j\
SURA
VERSES
II
276-77
185
4
stock and Moses a fool."* "Usury is like the
sting of a serpent."
"A man should rather sell his daughter than borrow on
usury."*
IBID jvana
minn
rnDn
]^iy
no^n)
f
(n'n ,n D
6
(3
,^
'
^D
TTD
rvm
no
*3>y
nia KD*
MI
umo
n^n K^
i^nmo
ir^n ID
nw
yiv rrn
^K
inoini
WD wo
^yn n
nwan vb
,y^D.
.
,na-i
(a'y
rrwo n^nn nV
mo)
vnn^inVi
o^iyiw nn'aym
nppi
myin ^D n
oin
wy
HK
i^iia
n3n -\n
ow
VERSE
And
280
down"
(Deut. 24:10-13).
2
According to Rashi, assisting the poor is obligatory and a poor
man should get preference in assistance over one who is better off. 3
Nor should the poor man be treated in a slighting manner. 4 Rather
should the creditor put himself in the position of the needy. 5 When
the debt falls due, the creditor must not insist on the pledge and
should evince special consideration and kindness. 6
The rabbis insisted that if a creditor sees the debtor approaching,
he should cross to the other side of the street in order not to cause
him embarrassment. 7
'
'
OKI
mbn
*\DD
ON
'3D fin.
Ibid.: I^KD
ay.
rwn^m
jvra
ruo
ia
aimn K^P.
im^n K^.
verse 25: mbn rm PSPDDP
*?& iV
)w
yir nn
DM nprna uyrmn
b>
Dn *b noi^D
6
Ibid.,
ir^i ]Drn
7
rtan jw^
^ ,^ann ban DK
yao^D.
(a'y ,ny
fc6
,KyxD
aa)
nayV TIDW
iV
^H
ynn
nao
nana
nipiab
I^D no
DH
ai
SURA
VERSE
II
VERSE
187
282
282
shall
be
in full
to their testimony.
2
According to Moslem commentators, the Koranic expression,
"from amongst their men/' 3 refers to the faithful and excludes
disbelievers
and
This
slaves. 4
in
is
Deut. 19:15:
mi
Dip*
any
&w
182:
"Non-Jews and
*D
^y;
cf.
Zamakhshari, Vol.
p.
I,
witnesses."
<Tabari, Vol.
Ill, p. 75:
Maimonides, K'n
,D'D
nny;
cf.
B. Sanh. 9b:
."
".
AJX
4)U
he
is
a wicked
man
Ul
(and
188
VERSE
God
286
but forgive
and pardon
us,
us,
us.
idea that
God
does not
is
capacity
earned
.,"
from Chidden
who
O, Lord,
31
B. B.
(n'y
could stand?"
.rwina man)
Km
iniquities,
79b.
Ps. 19:13;
*a0
4
If
Ps. 130:3;
cf.,
no
,D* ,3iB
inw:
py
-IDK
JT
>o
.pnajn KJVW.
Sabbath Prayer Book.
KH rrV
cf.
KBIT DIK OH
mir
:b noK
nnnn
rrj
nn no TH^ n'apn
i^
ion
SURA
III
VERSE
He
The terms
19:21).
Psalms, the prophecy of Isaiah and other prophecies, but not the
7
Gospel.
Since
Muhammad
To
term Torah embraced not only the Pentateuch and the whole Bible 8
1
Cf. 2:1-2.
Cf
J j\,
ro in hy mrr ITI.
oya lyn
and elsewhere.
2:3
m.
Geiger, op.
haben
cit.,
p.
44:
"
.
will
jiidischen
Geiger,
Prodromi,
I,
ibid.,
Cf. Horovitz,
8
(-|'jn)
45 n.
(quoting
p, 5 ):
OlJI
%i.
p.
Uj UAI
HUCA.,
o'aiwi
p. 194.
OM
,min.
191
Elhelim, from
Maracc.
192
10
"
Ali, op.
tit.,
p.
140 n.
Ibid.
"Ibid.
*
London, 1885,
s. v.
Injil, p.
211;
this
and
Jeffery,
P.
SURA
VERSE 4
III
VERSE
193
i,
be
in the world,
it
writes: "Nothing,
universal or particular, faith
or unbelief.
The
God
but
everybody and
sees
everything.
As to the phrase,
knew thee
(Jer. 1:5).
together in
me
that
made me
you
in the
womb
1 '
knit
fashions
as
my
reins;
in
He
pleases/
saith the Lord that made thee, and formed thee
"Before I formed thee in the belly
(Is. 44:2).
compare: "Thus
from the womb"
I
"who
Thou
hast
"Did not He
Similarly, the Talmud states: "... Come and observe how the
capacity of human beings falls short of the capacity of the Holy One,
blessed be He.
It is in
And
that
is
what Hannah
said
There
holy as the Lord, for there is none beside Thee, neither is there
(rock) like
Cf.
our God"
BaitfSwi, Vol.
.yr
ji
M.C.B.
p. 3.
rrm
I,
(I
Sam.
is
none
any %ur
2:2).*
p. 70:
uu
Uj*
or
oir
j\
nan
n'apn
)nt
jnoiN D'ytmrw
n'apm spy >n!?N ia* K^I rv n*rv vb noun orrVy non in pi .HKT *6i b ino ouy
nn*n hz in nmop -m hsh DUD ton ^n 'in yo^ *6n IHH yoian obnyap cryen onV IOIK
-
(D y ,JVPN-Q
mm)
rb
pm
,nwn-^-i qoiD
.
*ar
nyoa?
w TJD^
- urno)
ry.
ynn
nnnn
Cf. (a'y
n^a ^sn
^3.
r'D
.
,HDV) oViy
nioiVyn
194
man. 7
'Gen. 2:7-8,
DIKH HK
ir IH;
B.
Yoma
85a:
Tnjn
SURA
VERSE
III
VERSE
He
it is
who has
195
to
comparable
Similarly the expression, "they are
is
5
the mother of the Book," 4 recalls the talmudic 'Em Lamifrra'. As for
7
6
the word "decisive," compare the Talmud: "Mifcra is determinant."
Palmer, ad
loc., i. e.
cit.,
p. 215;
I.
it.
#704,
s
pp. 188f.
B. Sanh. 4a:
"
miDD^ ON .Nnpo ?
ON.
*. e. the reading
'Mibra has a mother,' or these in preference to Mifra
vocalization has an
of the sacred text according to the Jere np, the established
the
hence well-founded, as distinct from the Masorah (miDD),
authentic
origin,
p. 10, n. 4.
mioo ? ON \
1
196
VERSE
'O Lord! pervert not our hearts again when Thou hast
guided them, and grant us mercy from Thee, for Thou
art He who grants. O Lord Thou shalt gather together
man unto the day wherein is no doubt. Verily, God
will not depart from His promise.'
!
The
first
The
idea in the second part of this Koranic verse that God will
"gather together men unto the day" is also expressed in the Talmud:
"In times to come, the Holy One, blessed be He, will take a scroll of
the Law in His embrace and proclaim: 'Let him who has occupied
himself herewith, come and take his reward.' Thereupon all the
nations will crowd together in confusion, as it is said: All the nations
are gathered together, etc. (Is. 43:9). The Holy One, blessed be He,
will then say to them: 'Come not before Me in confusion, but let each
"
nation come in with its scribes.' 3
D.P.B., p. 115.
B. 'A. Z. 2a-2b.
SURA
III
VERSE
VERSE
197
Verily, those
The
nea
'
'
OTI!?^ jn
R"?I
B. Sanh. 104a.
'
me'
ms
K"?
Q'n
rw O'^'XD
ma*
I'M
lino.
V'ro 'TO
]'K1
198
VERSE
came
of Israel, let
He said
my
people go'
Lord.
up with
and to do likewise
." x
cf.
2:46-47.
SURA
VERSE
III
VERSE
11
199
11
'Ye have had a sign in the two parties who met; one
party fighting in the way of God, the other misbelieving;
these saw twice the same number as themselves to the
eyesight, for God aids with His help those whom He
pleases'.
Moslem
Muhammad,
men
in that battle. 3
Gamzu
they found that it was full of earth. The king thereupon desired to
put them all to death saying, The Jews are mocking me. Nahum
then exclaimed, This is also for the best. Whereupon Elijah appeared
in the guise of one of them (Romans) and remarked, Perhaps this is
Baicjawl, Vol.
I, p.
Bai<Jawi, Vol.
I,
71,
*<
p. 71:
JJl
Cf. M.C.B., p. 9.
Wherry,
op.
cit.,
vol. II, p. 7 n,
cf.
3:160
200
some
Abraham,
for
one province which (the emperor had hitherto) not been able to conquer but when they tried some of this earth (against it) they were
able to conquer it. Then they took him (Nahum) to the royal treasury
and filled his bag with precious stones and pearls and sent him back
with great honour. When on his return journey he again spent the
night in the same inn he was asked, What did you take (to the king)
that they showed you such great honour? He replied, I brought
thither what I had taken from here. (The innkeepers) thereupon
razed the inn to the ground and took of the earth to the king and
they said to him, The earth that was brought to you belonged to us.
They tested it and it was not found to be (effective) and the innkeepers were thereupon put to death.'
f
upon the verse 'and Jacob sent messengers (Gen. 32:4), who
6
according to the Midrash were real angels.
In the battle against Sisera, Deborah sang: "They fought from
1
built
heaven, The stars in their courses fought against Sisera" (Judg. 5:20).
This poetic conception of the heavenly help extended to Deborah
against an enemy who possessed nine hundred iron chariots, has been
taken literally by some commentators. 7
Similarly, we find in 2 Kings 19:35: "And it came to pass that night,
that the angel of the Lord went forth, and smote in the camp of the
Assyrians a hundred fourscore and five thousand and when men arose
18
early in the morning, behold, they were all dead corpses/
;
B. Ta'an. 2 la.
,nVm
T ,YJJD
(Ibid.)
cf.
mm imy.
8
OVID
Cf.
o'Tifl
Is.
37:36:
o^a
mm.
npM IDWI
mm
SURA
III
VERSE
VERSE
201
12
12
is
Muhammad
condemns those who seek these possessions but fail to attain the bliss
which is with God. 1 This view is in harmony with the view expressed
in the Talmud by Rabbi Simeon ben Yoljai who, upon seeing people
"
'All what they made they made for
engaged in worldly affairs said:
themselves; they built market-places,
to rejuvenate themselves; bridges, to
Another Talmudic source gives a
blessed be He, will then say to them:
them/
similar idea: "The Holy One,
'Wherewith have you occupied
levy
tolls for
Lord of the Universe, we have established many market-places, we have erected many baths, we have
accumulated much gold and silver, and all this we did only for the
yourselves?'
They
sake of Israel, that they might (have leisure) for occupying themselves
with the study of the Torah.' The Holy One, blessed be He, will say
in reply: 'You foolish ones among peoples, all that which you have
done, you have only done to satisfy your own desires. You have established market-places to place courtesans therein; baths to revel in
them'.
And 'this' is nought else than the Torah: And this is the Law
.
BaicJSwi, Vol.
I,
p. 71:
OlJUM
oJLXP
U JIJUJ JP
.4JUII
B. Shab. 33b.
B. A. Z. 2b.
and
3:80.
4>Ui
They
will
202
VERSE
13
may
.
(33 ,1).
run oViyn
"n ^DD
an o^ijn rrn
mp
nrm njw
SURA
VERSES
III
VERSES
203
25-26
25-26
Thou
givest the
to
majesty; for all that is in the heaven and in the earth is Thine; Thine
is the kingdom, O Lord, and Thou art exalted as head above all. Both
riches and honour come of Thee, and Thou rulest over all; and in
Thy hand
is
words: "He raiseth up the poor out of the dust, He lifteth up the
needy from the dung-hill, To make them sit with princes, And inherit
the throne of glory; For the pillars of the earth are the Lord's, And
He hath set the world upon them" (I Sam. 2:8).'
2
According to the Talmud: "Even a waterman is appointed from
heaven/' 3
Zamakhshari comments that some books render the Koranic
expression "Lord of the kingdom" as "God is the king of kings/'
meaning the hearts of the kings are in his hands. 4 This view cor-
Lord
."
"Quite a menial
B. Ber. 58a:
is
rrattn
pn
office."
n^ uo
Zamakhshari, Vol.
iijLJl
obw
K'D
I,
turna
wn
i^'Jsm.
p. 194:
t^Jli
fJJUl
dJiU
4ttl
til
in the
hand
of the
204
VERSE
28
The day
the Mishnah:
"He
testify against him, for it is said: For the stone shall cry out of the wall,
and the beam out of timber shall answer it" (Hab. 2:ll). a
B. gag. 16a.
SURA
III
VERSE
VERSE
205
35
35
said,
He was
wondered
(Gen. 18:12.) The biblical story stresses the fact that Sarah
how she could give birth at a time when she and Abraham had "waxed
old." The Koran, however, relates this story to Abraham, and as such
antecedent in the Talmud.
the day
Referring to the biblical story, the Talmud relates: "On
that Abraham weaned his son Isaac, he made a great banquet, and
all
all the peoples of the world derided him ... He went and invited
the great men of the age, and our mother Sarah invited their wives.
Each one brought her child with her, but not the wet nurse, and a
it
may have
its
miracle happened unto our mother Sarah, her breasts opened like
two fountains and she suckled them all. Yet they still scoffed,
birth at the age of ninety,
saying, 'Granted that Sarah could give
could Abraham beget (child) at the age of hundred?' Immediately
whereupon
'
/.
Baidiwi, Vol.
B. B.
M.
87a.
I,
p. 75:
tit..
Vol. II, p. 16 n.
206
VERSE
But they (the Jews) were
for
God
is
47
crafty,
crafty,
whence
not expected." 1
A parallel thought is expressed in the Midrash. Joseph's brothers
said: Let's go and kill him, and the Holy Spirit 2 said: We shall see
chief
it is
whose word will stand, Mine or yours. 3 God knows man's thoughts
and metes out punishment accordingly. 4
Baicjawi, Vol.
I,
p. 76:
Bnpn rm.
IH
loiy
,wn
-ft
osW
IK.
4
(tf'y
JK
yir
IDIH
IK Dip*
nm
D
,innroi
-ia-r
SURA
III
VERSE
VERSE
207
61
61
The
which
other, to say: ".
3 since
the Lord swore unto our fathers to give us/'
he, too, was con4
sidered spiritually a descendant of Abraham. Similarly, the Mishnah
fruits
was
to Jerusalem,
entitled, like
any
disciples of
and a lowly
soul/' 6
states that
Exod. 23:19.
omaa;
Cf.
/. e.
cf.
yan
Talmud Yerushalmi
Bik.
1,
3;
Mn
to the
TH I'm
-ip'y
(H
,n'
onarw
n'apn ID ...
mo
,nan nanoa)
nn
.
nam
*aa
^y
VKIV^D ^n
twira.
is
also called
208
VERSE
Those who
71
little
sell
"And
these are they that have no share in the world to come: he that
says that there is no resurrection of the dead prescribed in the Law,
and (he that says) the Law is not from Heaven, and an Epicurean if a
(3^; cf.
Mishnah Sanh.
Hebrew
p^n.
SURA
III
VERSE
VERSE
209
75
75
Bai^awi comments that "God took the covenant from the Prophets
and their peoples and then made the mention of the Prophets serve
for the mention of the peoples as well." Other commentators, however,
state that "the meaning is 'the children of the prophets', with omission
of the
word
Baitfawi adds that the Jews claimed that they had a better
right to be prophets than Muhammad, since they were the true people
of the Book, and prophets came from them only. 3
The Talmud states that on Mount Sinai God revealed himself
not only to the unborn prophets but to the coming generations
of Israel."
as
Similarly, the Midrash says: "The voice of the first (commandment) went forth and the heavens and earth quaked thereat,
and the waters and rivers fled (dried up), and the mountains and hills
were moved, and all the trees fell prostrate, and the dead who were in
Sheol revived and stood on their feet till the end of all the generations,
and those (also) in the future who will be created, until the end of
all the generations, there they stood with them on Mount Sinai." 5
well. 4
Ali translates
BaicJSwI, Vol.
I,
cit.,
p. 167.
p. 79:
JJj
Ibid.:
UM
ju~
j,
i^jij
jji
ojiji
....L-
yir
yir
o^i
cf.: [Z]
a ,Ts Knooin
:a"j7 ,10
o'nos)
210
VERSE
84
who
err.
recalls the
cf. 2:5,
SURA
III
VERSE
VERSE
211
85
85
Verily, those
them
is
and
be as an unclean
thing; their silver and their gold shall not be able to deliver them in
the day of the wrath of the Lord; they shall not satisfy their souls,
neither fill their bowels; because it hath been the stumblingblock
of their iniquity" (Ezek. 7:19). "Neither their silver nor their gold
shall be able to deliver them In the day of the Lord's wrath; But the
whole earth shall be devoured by the fire of His jealousy; For He will
make an end, yea, a terrible end, Of all them that dwell in the earth ff
(Zeph. 1:18).
The same
idea
is
me
imprisons
for ever,
nay more, when there are two ways before me, one leading
to Paradise and the other to Gehinnom, and I do not know by which
I shall be taken, shall I not weep?" 3
money
Num.
Sifre
nw
22:18.
Cf.
on Deut. 32:39:
Kings
B. Ber. 28b;
7:21.
cf. 3:8, 84,
172.
ib crania
IN o^iyap
JIDD
Va
ib
212
VERSE
106
Here
Muhammad
shows
why
his people 3
AH,
ibid.,
renders
and
it
"what
is
tit.,
p. 174.
right."
who
of brides." 4
originally
ym
,'nyw
eip^') ,nVa
noam.
nr
BO nwy nryV
Israel,
'an -OM
SURA
III
VERSE
VERSE
213
114
114
O ye who believe!
This parallels the several Mosaic warnings against intimate relations with the idolaters of Canaan. The natives of the land of Canaan
such as sacrificing their own
performed many abominable deeds,
children and indulging excessively in sensual pleasures with near of kin.
Israel was not to learn such abominations or else they would, like those
1
natives, be expelled from the Promised Land.
lest
The Biblical admonition is: "They shall not dwell in thy land
for
they make thee sin against Me, for thou wilt serve their gods
they will be a snare unto thee" (Exod. 23:33). A similar warning in the
book
of
Deuteronomy attempts
of the idolaters
who
offer
Gods (Deut.
to
The reason
not housing
the idolaters is given in Deut. 20:18, "that they teach you not to do
after all their abominations, which they have done unto their gods,
fices to their
and so ye
'
12:30-31).
Cf. 16:77.
rawna jnnn vn
ow mo^
nn.
for
214
VERSE
127
And
reported to have had the Paradise indiscovered there were seven houses and each was one
He
is
M.
&
<
,I"D .n'tfioa
,onmDi omjDD
B. Ta'an. lOa;
cf. (n'y
Y*
ip^
o'noa)
;a
mi
pya
,a'D
OWD in
pi
]n DMWD inn
crtnyi.
p. 146.
VERSE
SURA HI
VERSE
215
128
128
in
There are
Hebrew
in
literature
1
in
B. Suk. 49b.
B. B. B. 9a.
(K'PI
,K'B
4
Cf.:
,nD ,'D^WT
Baidawi, Vol.
I,
-mv
Tio^n)
rf
.np-nen
mm to JTOWD to TJ
p
p. 85:
--^
4-15
B. 'Erub. 65b.
nV'DJi
ra'an.
Mishnah Ab.
anon
niVip*
ij+*
<J^
*jr+
*>*
U?
216
7
passion and thou wilt not sin."
anger, he
money
who
"He who
him as an
idolater, because
>8
As for the Koranic expression, "and those who pardon men," the
Talmud too, states that the rabbis taught: "Those who are insulted
but do not
B. Ber. 29a;
cf.
B. Rosh H. 17a.
moan
SURA
III
VERSE
VERSE
217
138
138
what
if
he die or
is killed, will
ye retreat
This idea is also found in the Targum which states that idolaters
1
hurt themselves rather than God.
nVV
Targum Onkelos, Deut. 32:5: ... Nniye& inViT'Tina
ad loc.: omo trn vrrwrw nnrwm vn va (DDIO va) :n'V 6i pnV
'
lin ? ilran.
iV'a
Cf. Rashi,
218
VERSE
139
Basing their reasoning on Ps. 37:23 and Prov, 20:24, 3 the rabbis, too,
maintained: "No man bruises his finger here on earth unless it was
decreed against him in heaven." 4 In Ps. 39:5 David exclaims: "Lord
make me to know mine end, And the measure of my days, what it is\
"
'Let me know how frail I am*
To this the rabbis comment that when
David learned that he would die on the Sabbath, he requested God
to let him die on the first of the week or on the eve of the Sabbath.
"
Said God
'For a day in thy courts is better than a thousand' (Ps. 84 :1 1)
better is to Me the one day that thou sittest and engagest in learning
than the thousand burnt-offerings which thy son Solomon is destined
:
to sacrifice before
The Talmud
on
Me on
the altar."*
New
Year, one for the thoroughly wicked, one for the thoroughly
righteous, and one for the intermediate. The thoroughly righteous
are forthwith inscribed definitively in the book of life; the thoroughly
wicked are forthwith inscribed definitively in the book of death; the
^^
doom of the intermediate is suspended from New Year till the Day of
Atonement; if they deserve well, they are inscribed in the book of life;
6
if they do not deserve well, they are inscribed in the book of death."
1
BaicJSwi, Vol.
"It
"A man's
B. Shab. 30b.
is
of the
I,
p. 87:
j ^ JJb
j>-
lJj^ <^.
"Now, every Sabbath day he (David) would sit and study all day. On the
day that his soul was to be at rest
e., depart from this world), the Angel of death
stood before him but could not prevail against him, because learning did not cease
*
Cf.:
(*".
from
his
there
had repose,"
B. Rosh H. 16b. There is a
studies)
6
and
it
his soul
He
Angel of death
(David) went out to see: as he was
his house; so the
ibid.
parallel
in
heaven
SURA
VERSE
III
219
139
and
visit
many
by
who
is
to perish
by water, who
fire,"'
mentioned
in the
Talmud and
the
Moslem book
of records.
ye
of men's breasts/
*
"
ff.;
220
VERSE
154
"The Lord
is
for
me;
will
(Jer. 17:5).
B. Men. 29a.
is
showered on
SURA
III
VERSE
VERSE
221
159
159
Or when an accident
A counterpart is found
sufferings visit him, let
B. Bcr. Sa.
in the
Talmud:
him examine
"If a
his conduct.'
painful
222
VERSES
172-73
versity,
them
it is
(ibid. 11:3)."*
'
Lit., ''furnishes
"An attempt
B. Shab. 88b.
it
may
why
the wicked
SURA HI
VERSE
223
179
n
VERSE
179
God
devours.'
2
1
Tabari, Zamakhshari and BaitfSwi rightly explain this to mean
that the Israelites considered it a sign of the prophet's truth when a
fire
instances
by a heavenly
fire
in rabbinic lore.
is
discussed in detail
'
LJU
>-
tf
&\
0\
i^UJi
Sj^cJl
0Jt#
UU
J*J-JI^.1
now
ch.
7.
mvh
4
H00
six
n.
D'Dtfn ]D
HIT
O'DJJD
^D^D
miv
nenn vn
times as a good
omen and
six times as
Cf. V. Aptowitzer,
schen, Christlichen
fire
came
a bad omen:
H^y.
nViyn
nm
ono
it,"
0N
loc.
der
und Mohammedanischen
Hellenisti-
224
VERSE
191
similar utterance
is
found
the Talmud:
in
"Now,
let
that wicked
man (Balaam)
world to
come'); but if not (i. e., If I die a violent death), then, behold I go
3
unto my people (ibid. 24:14) (i. e. into the Gehenna)."
In 6:95 Muhammad states: "Verily, God it is who cleaves out the
grain and the datestone; He brings forth the living from the dead,
death)],
my
last
end
be
will
like his
(i. e.
'I
and
it is
He who
is
Talmud:
"Queen Cleopatra4 asked R. Meir, 'I know that the dead will re.*
But when they arise, shall they arise nude or in their garvive
He replied, Thou mayest deduce by an a fortiori argument
ments?'
(the answer) from a wheat grain. If a grain of wheat, which is buried
naked, sprouteth forth in many robes, how much more so the righteous,
.
who
Cf. 2:149.
'
B. Sanh. 105a.
Geiger, op.
<
p. 78:
Ifc*
Oj^
J^l
4^1?
vl^ u-Jl
jl.
Not of 'Anthony and Cleopatra' fame. Cf W. Bacher, Die Agada der Tannaiten,
.
Strassburg, 1890,
*
cit.,
"6
II, p. 68.
"And they
forth out of the city (Jerusalem) like the grass of the earth."
B. Sanh. 90b.
LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS
3*-rw
ina
A A SOR
Aboth.
Ab.
A. H.
After Hi'jrah (June 20, 622 C. E.)The American Journal of Semitic Languages and Literatures.
AJSLL
Ant.
Antiquities.
'Arakin.
'Ar.
'A. Z.
B.
'Abodah Zarah.
Babylonian Talmud.
(B)
Buber
edition.
Bulletin of the
BASOR
B. B.
Baba Bathra.
B. C. E.
Before the Common Era.
Ber.
Berakoth.
Bik.
Bikkurim.
B. I.
Baba Iama.
B. M.
Baba Me?i'a.
Bu.
al-Bukhari.
C. E.
Common
Chron.
II Chron.
I
(D)
Dan.
Deut.
D.P.B.
Ecc.
Era.
Chronicles I.
Chronicles II.
Deuteronomy.
The Authorized Daily Prayer Book, by
Ecclesiastes.
'Erubin.
Ex. or Exod.
Exodus.
Ezekiel.
Ezek.
(F)
Gen.
Git-
Friedman
edition.
Genesis.
Gittin.
225
J.
H. Hertz.
226
Hag.
Haggai*
Hagigah.
ftorayoth.
Hosea.
Hos.
HTR
HUCA
tful.
tfullin.
J. C.
Islamic Culture.
Isaiah.
Isa.
JAOS
JBL
J. E.
Jer.
Josh.
JQR
JRAS
JSOR
Jeremiah.
Joshua.
Jewish Quarterly Review.
Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society.
Journal of the Society of Oriental Research.
Judges.
Judg.
JZWL
Ket.
Ketuboth.
Kid.
Kiddushin.
giryath Sefer.
5.
Lev.
lit.
und Leben.
Leviticus,
literally.
Nlunk edition.
(M)
Moses ben Maimon (1135-1204).
Maimonides
Makkoth.
Mak.
Chrestomathia Baidawiana, tr. by D. S. Margoliouth.
M.C.B.
Megillah.
Meg.
Men.
Menaboth.
MGWJ Monatschrift fur Geschichte und Wissenschaft des Judentums.
Midrash Sifre on Numbers (English translation).
M.S.N.
Nedarim.
Nehemiah.
Niddah.
Ned.
Neh.
Nid.
N.S.
New
Series.
Nu. or Num.
OLZ
Numbers.
O. S.
PAAJR
Par.
Proceedings of American
Parah.
Pes.
Pesafcim.
PJS.
Research.
J.
LIST
P.R.E.
Prov.
PirlA
De Rabbi EUezer
OF ABBREVIATIONS
227
(English translation).
Proverbs.
Psalms.
Ps.
K'VTD
R
Rab.
Ramban
RSR
I
Sam.
Sam.
II
Sanh.
S.
Samuel I.
Samuel II.
Sanhedrin.
Soncino Chumash.
Schechter edition.
Ch.
(Sch.)
commentator
(c.
1475-1550).
Shabbath.
Shab.
Sheb.
Shebu.
Shebi'ith.
Shebu'oth.
SHEI
Shelf.
Sot-
So^ah.
ST
Summa
Suk.
Theologica.
Sukkah.
Ta'an.
Ta'anith.
Tamid.
Tarn.
Toh.
Tohoroth.
translation.
tr.
Torah Shlemah.
T. S.
Weiss Edition.
(W)
Yebamoth.
Yeb.
Yom.
Yoma.
Zuckermandel
(Z)
ZA W
ZDMG
Zeb.
Zech.
Zeph.
ZNW
edition.
Zeitschrift
Zebafrim.
Zechariah.
Zephaniah.
Zeitschrift fur die neutestamentliche Wissenschaft und die Kunde der alteren
Kirche.
ZSVG
und verwandete
Gebiete.
by
were
left
228
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the
69-81.
Zohar, 3
ZUNZ,
a.
L.,
ed.,
Frankfurt
INDICES
Note;
The numbers
A.
in
2:1-2 (3)
2:4 (18)
2:5 (14)
(16)
(18)
(17)
(19)
(21)
(21)
(22)
(26)
(30)
(30)
(32)
(34)
(39)
(41)
(43)
(45)
2:12
2:19
2:20
2:23
2:26
2:26
2:27
2:28
2:31
2:32
2:33
2:34
2:35
2:38
2:46
2:47
2:48
2:49
2:50
2:51
2:52
2:53
2:54
2:57
2:58
2:60
2:61
2:63
2:69
2:73
2:74
2:77
2:80
2:82
2:86
2:87
2:88
'
(81 n.)
(81 n.)
(81 n.)
(53)
(55)
(57, 64 n.)
(60)
(63)
(65, 82 n.)
(67)
(71)
(74)
(75)
(77)
(78)
(80)
(74 n.)
(81)
(50
n., 82)
(84)
2:91 (85)
2:96 (92)
2:101 (96)
2:102 (97)
2:103 (4 n.)
2:106
2:109
2:111
118
119
123
125
127
129
136
137
144
147
149
154
156
159
160
161
167
171
172
173
179
(105 n.)
184
185
186
187
193
2:196
2:206
2:209
2:211
2:213
2:216
2:217
2:220
2:222
2:223
2:224
2:226
2:228
2:229
2:233
(130
(98)
(99)
(100, 104 n.)
(101, 104 n.)
(105 n.)
(91 n., 104)
(107)
(108)
(110)
(112)
(113)
(41 n 42 n., 114)
(115)
(116)
(117)
(118)
(77 n., 119)
(77 n.)
(121)
(4n.)
(133)
(134)
(135)
(137)
(140)
(141)
(142)
(143)
(145)
(146)
(12 n.)
(147)
(148)
(ISO)
(152)
(153)
(154)
(156
n.)
(155)
247
2:239 (156)
2:240 (157)
2:244 (158)
2:246 (159)
2:247 (161)
2:249 (164)
2:250 (167)
2:251 (169)
2:253 (170)
2:254 (90 n., 172)
2:255 (11 n.)
2:256 (98 n., 174)
2:257 (17 n.)
2:260 (175)
2:261 (177)
2:262 (172)
2:266 (11 n.)
2:271 (181)
2:272 (11 n., 182)
2:273 (108 n., 183)
2:275 (11 n., 13 n.)
2:276-7 (184)
2:278 (11 n.)
2:280 (108 n.,
2:282 (187)
2:285 (82 n., 110 n.)
2:286 (188)
3:2 (110 n., 191)
3:3 (19 n.)
3:4 (193)
3:5 (195)
3:7 (196)
3:8 (197)
3:9 (198)
3:11 (199)
3:12 (16, 201)
3:13 (202)
248
3:47 (206)
3:54 (84 n.)
3:60 (91 n.)
3:61 (207)
3:71 (208)
3:75 (209)
3:78 (105 n., llOn., 172)
3:84 (14, 210)
3:85 (211)
3:86 (11 n.)
3:87 (123)
3:89 (108)
3:106 (124 n., 212)
3:108 (63 n.)
3:109 (109)
3:110 (11 n.)
3:111 (41 n.)
3:114 (113)
3:127 (19 n., 214, 220 n.)
3:128 (215)
3:130 (19 n. 214 n.)
3:137 (4 n.)
3:138 (217)
3:139 (218)
3:148 (219 n.)
3:154 (220)
3:159 (221)
3:163 (115, 220 n.)
3:169 (7 n.)
3:172 (213 n., 222)
3:175 (214 n.)
3:177 (63 n., 159)
3:179 (223)
3:183 (213 n., 220 n.)
3:184 (81 n.)
3:188 <157)
3:191 (224)
3:197 (19 n.)
4:9 (11 n.)
4:10 (7 n.)
4:26-27 (154 n.)
4:46 (7 n., 146 n.)
4:94 (127 n.)
4:102 (157 n.)
4:124 (108)
4:153 (67 n.)
4:159 (122 n.)
4:175 (4 n.)
5:4 (121)
5:7 (122 n.)
5:8 (157 n.)
5:12 (11 n.)
5:48 (4 n., 110 n.)
5:69 (160 n.)
5:72 (84 n.)
6:79 (91 n., 108)
6:95 (224)
6:119 (121 n.)
6:146 (122 n.)
6:147 (122 n.)
f
6:162 (108)
7:18 (37 n.)
7:22 (33 n.)
7:138 (129 n.)
7:141 (91 n.)
7:156 (4 n., 76
7:158 (91 n.)
7:163 (67 n.)
8:29 (51)
8:42 (13 n.)
8:43 (52 n.)
8:56 (47 n.)
9:11 (13 n.)
9:73 (19 n.)
10:90-2 (47 n.)
10:105 (108)
11:19 (23 n.)
11:73 (100 n.)
11:100 (47 n.)
11:116 (6. 7)
13:29 (5 n.)
n.)
15:9 (4 n.)
15:53 (100 n.)
16:115 (121 n.)
16:119 (122 n.)
16:121 (90 n.)
16:124 (91 n.)
16:125 (67 n.)
17:23-41 (152)
17:36 (11 n.)
17:80 (6, 7)
17:83 (4 n.)
17:84 (4 n.)
17:111 (7 n.)
18:2 (4 n.)
18:107 (34 n.)
19:43 (152 n.)
20:13 (90 n.)
20:14 (156 n.)
20:30 (7)
20:112 (3 n., 124
20:130 (6)
20:132 (6 n.)
21:49 (51)
21:69-70 (175)
21:105 (51 n.)
21:107 (5 n.)
22:29 (138)
22:35 (121 n.)
22:46 (119)
22:76 (136 n.)
23:3 (7 n.)
23:17 (23 n.)
24:21 (11 n.)
24:57 (6)
25:1 (4n.. 51)
26:79-84 (10 n.)
26:192 (4 n.)
29:14-25 (175)
30:29 (109)
30:38 (160)
31:13 (155 n.)
31:39(184)
32:4 (120 n.)
33:40 (90 n., 110 n.)
35:55 (19 n.)
37:29 (51 n.)
37:81-89 (175)
37:99-113 (100 n.)
38:71-75 (32 n.)
42:5 (3 n.)
42:52 (4 n.)
43:2-3 (3 n.)
44:2 (130 n.)
45:11-12 (26 n.)
45:15 (212 n.)
46:16 (20)
50:25 (152 n.)
50:38 (6, 22, 99 n.)
51:50 (110 n.)
51:57 (17)
53:3 (30 n.)
53:45 (21)
57:10-14 (11 n.)
57:17 (144, 160)
58:14 (11 n.)
59:23 (105 n.)
60:2 (136 n.)
62:2 (76 n.)
64:17 (160)
68:32 (34)
69:34 (11 n.)
72:13 (4 n.)
73:21, 30 (160)
74:2 (110 n.)
75:16 (124 n.)
75:35 (21)
76:8(11
n.)
n.)
76:25 (6)
77:41 (19 n.)
78:3 (18)
78:12 (23 n.)
78:31-35 (19 n.)
79:30 (23)
88:5-14 (19 n.)
88:21-22 (110 n.)
89:17 (11 n.)
90:15 (11 n.)
91:15 (11 n.)
93:8 (11 n.)
93:9 (11 n.)
93:11 (4 n.)
94:14(11
n.)
96:1 (18)
97:1 (130 n.)
97:3-4 (130
n.)
98:7 (34)
107:2 (11 n.)
107:6 (11 n.)
112:1 (5 n., 18)
249
INDICES
B.
in talmudic sources)
(does not include biblical verses quoted
GENESIS
1:1 (22)
1:8(22)
1:14 (133 n.)
1:26-30 (26 n.)
1:27 (29 n.)
2:4 (22)
2:7-8(194n.)
2:16-18 (34 n.)
2:19 (194 n.)
3:1 (33 n.)
3:2 (148)
3:5 (38 n.)
9:9-11 (12)
10:9 (146 n.)
ll:43(16n.)
15:13 (148)
15:19-30 (148 n.)
15:31(149)
16:29 (129 n., 132)
18:5 (84, 152 n.)
18:6-18 (154
18:19 (148)
5:1 (3 n.)
EXODUS
1:15-22(43,44)
n.)
n.)
18:21 (147)
19:2 (78)
19:17 (78)
3:1-2 (90
LEVITICUS
17:6(74)
17:14-16 (135)
18:13 (129 n.)
19:5 (41)
NUMBERS
19:5,6(112)
19:10
19:18
19:20
19:21
(103)
(66 n.)
(191)
(191)
20:2-18 (152 n.)
20:3 (17, 79)
20:7 (152)
20:8 (68)
5:12 (16)
20:12 (79)
20:20 (152 n.)
20:21 (114)
21:14(135)
21:24(127)
22:24 (184 n., 186)
23:1 (187 n.)
23:14-17 (137)
23:19 (207 n.)
23:25 (79)
23:33 (213)
24:7 (82 n.)
20:7-8 (60)
20:10 (74)
22:18 (211 n.)
35:6 (135)
35:31 (127 n.)
35:33 (127 n.)
DEUTERONOMY
24:9-10 (54)
24:10 (53)
24:18 (49)
30:1 (50)
30:13, 17 (68)
30:19 (157 n.)
31:18 (130 n.)
32:1 (49)
32:4 (81)
32:5 (64)
32:20 (50, 83)
34:21 (150)
34:23 (138 n.)
34:28 (41 n., 129
11:25 (55)
11:31 (59)
11:35 (63 n.)
12:6 (53)
14:2-3 (97)
14:19-20 (116)
15:37-41 (9 n.)
18:14 (123 n.)
19:2 (71 n.)
nj
6:4-9 (9)
250
6:5 (119)
6:7 (10 n.)
7:11 (80)
8:2 (58 n.)
9:9-11 (41 n.)
9:25-26 (156
10:3-5 (165)
10:12 (119 n.)
7:1 (167)
7:4-7 (167)
11:13-21 (9)
12:30-31 (213)
13:2-13 (135 n.)
14:2 (112 n.)
14:4 (121 n.)
14:21 (121)
14:22 (12)
17:16-17 (94)
19:15 (187)
20:1 (135 n.)
20:10 (136 n.)
20:10-14 (134 n.)
20:18 (213)
21:1-9 (71)
23:20-21 (184)
24:1 (153)
n.)
26:12-14 (79)
26:18 (41 n.)
27:6 (104)
27:15-26 (116)
28:12 (17 n.)
28:15-66 (116)
28:39 (146 n.)
28:68 (64)
29:1-5 (44 n.)
29:2 (44 n.)
29:5 (146 n.)
29:28 (98 n.)
32:39 (21, 117)
34:10 (90 n.)
JOSHUA
f.
(147 n.)
JUDGES
5:20 (200 n.)
6:24 (105 n.)
SAMUEL
KINGS
15:11 (79)
16:16-17 (137)
17:3 (18)
24:10-13 (186
1:13 (7 n.)
2:6 (21)
2:8 (203)
9:2 (163)
9:21 (163)
10:1 (161)
15:9 (163 n.)
17:36 (169)
22:32 (5 n.)
14:28-29 (79)
15:7-8 (143)
9:3
SAMUEL
n.)
2:28 (135)
7:21 (211 n.)
8:2 (137 n.)
8:22-53 (103)
8:42-3 (103)
II
5:21 (16)
5:24 (17 n.)
12:1 (80)
13:23 (14)
14:22 (17 n., 118)
17:5 (220)
17:7 (96 n.)
EZEKIEL
5:5 (112 n.)
7:19 (211)
11:19 (74)
16:60 (41 n.)
HOSEA
13:4 (5 n.)
AMOS
9:2-3, 6 (98 n.)
KINGS
ZEPHANIAH
ISAIAH
1:11 (125 n., 126)
1:17 (79 n.)
3:10 (19 n.)
3:11 (16 n.)
4:6 (58 n.)
6:3 (5 n.)
6:10 (15)
7:9 (8n.)
8:10 (206)
JEREMIAH
1:5 (76 n., 193)
5:3 (74 n.)
1:18 (211)
3:9 (4n.)
HAGGAI
2:23 (90 n.)
ZECHARIAH
7:12 (74 n.)
8:19 (129 n.)
14:9 (4 n.)
PSALMS
2:196 (8 n.)
7:15-16 (188)
15:5 (184 n.)
17:15 (183 n.)
18:32 (5)
19:13 (188 n.)
22:11 (193 n.)
24:1 (96 n.)
30:1 (101 n.)
32:10 (220)
33:6 (99)
33:9 (99)
33:15 (194 n.)
37:23 (218)
39:5 (218)
40:32 (5)
INDICES
136:13 (45 n.)
136:15 (47 n.)
138:4 (5 n.)
139:7-10 (98)
139:13 (193)
145:18-19 (131
42:2 (119)
44:14 (8 n.)
49:6-18 (197)
50:12 (96 n.)
55:18 (8 n.)
68:5 (24)
68:20 (6 n.)
72:16 (224 n.)
78:4 (6 n.)
ECCLESIASTES
4:6 (181 n.)
5:1 (7 n.)
n.)
DANIEL
PROVERBS
86:5 (116)
89:12 (96)
89:53 (140 n.)
96:3 (6 n.)
96:4 (119)
98:2 (5)
104:8 (51 n.)
104:19 (133 n.)
105:2 (6 n.)
105:5 (114)
105:8 (41 n.)
105:39-40 (57 n.)
105:41 (60 n.)
106:8 (55 n.)
106:23 (55 n.,- 90 n.)
106:48 (140 n.)
107:23 (118)
118:6 (220)
121:1-2 (96)
130:3 (188 n.)
135:7 (17 n.)
C.
251
6:22 (4)
15:17 (181 n.)
17:1 (181 n.)
19:17 (L44 n.)
19:21 (206)
20:24 (218 n.)
21:1 (203)
EZRA
9:13-14 (147)
NEHEMIAH
21:30(206)
28:8 (184 n.)
30:19 (118)
2:13 (177)
CHRONICLES
JOB
16:12 (114)
31:15 (193)
29:11-12 (203)
SONG OF SONGS
II
CHRONICLES
4:12 (150)
TARGUM ON^ELOS
Gen. 22:14 (101
n.)
n.)
n.)
n.)
TARGUM JONATHAN
OR YERUSHALMI
TARGUM KOHELET
1:12 (95 n.)
9:7 (20 n.)
n.)
Num.
Gen.
Gen.
Gen.
Gen.
TARGUM SHENI ON
ESTHER
l:3(95n.)
252
D.
MISHNAH
MISHNAH YEB.
MISHNAH BER.
MISHNAH KET.
5:6 (153 n.)
13:11 (112 n.)
MISHNAH
MISHNAH YOM.
Sot-
83a (122
83b (137
MISHNAH
n.)
4:14 (91
MISHNAH AB.
ID.
n.)
n.)
MISHNAH
MISHNAH SANH.
MISHNAH SUK.
67a (135
MISHNAH TAM.
MISHNAH MEG.
MISHNAH SHEB.
3:10 (152
MISHNAH HAG.
2a (137
n.)
5:1 (8n.)
n.)
MISHNAH PAR.
MISHNAH 'Eou.
2:10 (77 n.)
n.)*
2.
Suk.
TOSEFTA
3, 11
(62 n.)
3.
TALMUD YERUSHALMI
Sanh.
8,
4 (29
n.)
INDICES
4.
TALMUD BABLI
BER.
3b
4b
PES.
7b (123 n.)
38b (41 n.)
50a (115 n.)
54a (62 n.)
64a (123 n.)
66b (209 n., 216
94a (214 n.)
118b(46n.)
(7 n.)
(9 n.)
5a (221
6a (156
lOa (193
n.)
157
n.,
n.)
n.)
10b(119n.)
13b (5
n.)
157
n.,
156
n.,
n.)
'
33a(8n., 118)
35a
40a
50b
58a
60b
(123
(146
(146
(203
(194
n.)
n.)
n.)
n.)
n.)
3a
5a
12a
12b
14a
16a
(41 n.)
(182 n.)
(19 n., 22 n., 23 n.)
(24 n., 55)
(34 n.)
(204 n.)
YEB.
49b (173
YOM.
28b (211)
29a (216 n.)
30a (113, 146
253
n.)
KET.
5a
8b
16a
50a
59b
60a
61a
61b
(152 n.)
(21 n.)
(150 n.)
(13 n.)
(155 n.)
(155 n.)
(149 n.)
(153 n.)
67b (12 n., 144 n.)
68a (12
n.)
NED.
n.)
SUK.
SHAB.
6b
13b
17b
19a
23b
30b
33b
39a
49a
87b
88a
20b (150
2a (58
(148 n.)
(69 n.)
(145 n.)
lib (141
49b (12
215
19a (14
n.)
R. H.
n.)
3a (16 n.)
lla (43 n.)
12a (44 n.)
12a-12b (44 n.)
35b (213 n.)
44b (136 n.)
TA'AN.
n.,
2a
7a
9a
lOa
14b
(17 n.)
(4 n.)
(181 n.)
(214 n.)
(130 n.)
2 la (200 n.)
23a (178 n.)
31a (20 n.)
'ERUB.
MEG.
n.)
54b (4 n.)
55b (62 n.)
65a (157 n.)
65b (215 n.)
lOOb (36 n.)
SOT-
n.)
n.,
(57 n.)
(218)
(201)
(209 n.)
(124 n.)
(223 n.)
(65, 82 n.)
88a-89b (28 n.)
88b (53 n., 55 n., 158
216 n., 222 n.)
n.)
n.)
(195 n.)
16a (4
17b (8
GIT.
7a (12 n.)
7b (12 n.)
21b (154 n.)
KID.
30a
31a
40b
41a
(124 n.)
(73 n.)
(222 n.)
(151 n.)
n.)
n.)
79a (130
79b (188
n.)
n.)
254
B.
M.
9b (12
121b (42
n.,
n.)
n.)
SANH.
4a (195 n.)
5b (62 n.)
7a (64 n.)
9b (187 n.)
15b (38 n.)
20b (135 n., 136
36a-36b (29 n.)
37a (29 n.)
38a (112 n.)
38b (28 n.)
42b (7 n.)
44b (156 n.)
58b (68 n.)
59b (33 n.)
n.)
5.
by chapter)
148
11*) A-X
(37 n.,
1-2 (41 n.)
1-8 (4n.)
12 (30 n.)
13 ( 78 n.)
27 (47 n.)
31 (99 n.)
33 (46 n., 100
37 (24 n.)
1
MIDRASH RABBOTH
25 (91 n.)
130 (174 n.)
147 (22 n.)
n.)
by chapter and
paragraph)
(cited
MEKILTA
GEN. RABBA
(cited
by Parashah and
section)
BESHALAH
n.)
AGGADATH BERESHITH
(includes MIDRASH TEMURAH and MASEKETH 'A?i-
4
6
10
60
by page)
8 (188 n.)
9 (193 n., 219 n.)
11 (206 n.)
15 (50 n.)
(45
(57
(46
(99
(90
58
n.,
n.)
n.)
n.,
47
n.,
91
n.)
n.)
n.)
3,
4,
5,
6,
8,
8,
8,
13,
2 (99 n.)
7 (23 n.)
7 (37 n.)
1
(133 n.)
3-4 (27
6 (33
n.)
n.)
7 (29 n.)
3 (20 n.)
13, 6 (142 n.)
(91 n.)
KI TIS'A
LUTH)
(cited
MIDRASHIM
(68 n.)
19,
YITHRO
5 (65 n.)
9 (54 n.)
20,
21,
22,
26,
30 n., 31 n.)
(3n.)
(36 n.)
6 (36 n.)
10 (36 n.)
6 (40 n.)
12 (39 n.)
7 (92 n.)
INDICES
46,
49,
50,
74,
78,
98,
4 (100
n.)
n.)
2 (87 n.)
4 (200 n.)
1 (87 n.)
4 (107 n.)
23 (176
EXOD. RABBA
1,
1,
1,
2,
3,
18,
29,
29,
31,
42,
42,
42,
28 (89
n.)
31 (89 n.)
34 (43 n.)
8 (89 n.)
IS (81 n.)
5 (87 n., 89 n.)
3 (55 n., 56 n.)
9 (130 n.)
13 (185 n.)
7 (173 n.)
8 (90 n., 173 n.)
10 (174 n.)
LEV. RABBA
1,
1,
10,
15,
16,
34,
14 (73 n.)
15 (73 n., 90 n.)
5 (4 n., 39 n.)
2 (73 n.)
2 (173 n.)
15 (144 n., 160 n.)
NUM. RABBA
3, 6 (4 n.)
14, 22 (4 n.)
4, 6 (165 n.)
8, 1 (207 n.)
10, 3 (55 n.)
12,4 (23
n.,
98
n.,
Ill n.)
17 (64 n.)
19, 3 (30 n.)
19, 4 (71 n.)
15,,
DEUT. RABBA
2, 32 (25 n.)
8, 1 (4 n.)
3 (91 n.)
5 (100 n.)
3,
6 (87
3,
n.)
LAM. RABBA
2: 3 (87 n.)
255
256
PESETA ZUTUTA
(cited
by biblical chapter
and verse)
Num.
ch.
ch.
ch.
ch.
ch.
ch.
ch.
ch.
ch.
ch.
by chapter and
4, 7 (115 n.)
11, 10 (166 n.)
331 (47
332 (48
section)
vol.
vol.
I,
IS (33 n.)
I,
20 (20
n.,
214
n.)
John l:3,99n.
160n., 193n.;
Hashanah,
Yom
n.)
Luke, 85n.
Mahzor, Rosh
n.)
6.
Can
30
34
40
41
329-30 (45)
and
section or Parashah and
by
n.)
11 (29 n.)
13 (34 n.)
14 (36 n.)
24 (165 n.)
89 (33 n.)
91 (31 n.)
198 (180 n.)
198-9 (179 n.)
204-5 (74 n.)
324-5 (209 n.)
325 (53 n.)
section)
(cited
n.)
(103 n.)
(80 n.)
(62 n.)
(89 n.)
41 (99 n.)
63 (119 n.)
8 (100
10 (22
13n.,
25n.,
148n.,
179n.,
180n.
Tosafoth, 65n.
Tur 'Oreh ffayim, 128n.
Yalkut Reubeni, 87 n.
Yoreh De'ah, 121n., 123n., 145n., 148n.
Zohar, 26n., 34n., 87n., 88n., 128n.
INDICES
E.
257
INDEX OF AUTHORS
Eisenstein, J. D. 88n.
Elbogen, L, 8n.
Enelow, H. E., 173n., 179n.
f
173n.
N. A.,
Finkel,
B
Bacher, W., 224n.,
Baitfawi, xiv n., 3n., 7n., 14n., 21n., 32n.
34n., 36n., 37n., 39n., 43n., 49n., Sin.
52n., S4n., 55n., 56n., 69n., 80n., 81n.
8Sn. 91n., 93n., lOln., 105n., 107n.
llOn.,
157n.
115n.,
124n.,
153n.,
159n., 161n., 162n., 163n., 172n., 180n.
181n.,
193n.,
199n., 201n., 205n.
206n., 209n., 215n., 218n., 223n.
xiiin., 108n.
J., xviii n.
Bamberger, B.
J.,
92n.
Ben-Zeeb,
Ghazali-al, 143n.
Ginzberg, Louis A., xxi, 33n., 34n., 37n.
85n., 87n., 88n., 89n., 171n.
Goitein, S. D., 91n., 129n., 130n.
Goldziher, L, xviii n., xx, S, 5n., 68n.,
69n., 123n.
Greenberg, Moshe, 42n.
Grimme, Hubert, lOln., 104n. llOn.
Eliezer, 104n.
xiiin., 8n., llln.
I.,
Griinbaum, M.,
lOOn.,
136n.,
llln.,
138n.,
Ben Yehuda,
123n.,
143n.,
128n.,
151n.,
129n.,
152n.,
H
Haas,
D
Danzig, Abraham, 128n.
Delia Vida, G. Levi, xvii n.
DSrenbourg, J., 83n.
157n.
xiii n.,
Hitti, Philip
K. xix
f
n. f 136n., 139n.
258
Horodetzky, S. A., 87n.
Horovitz, H. S., 223n.
Horovitz,
Hughes, Th.
P., 192n.
207n.
Mzik, Hans
v.,
168n.
Nathan ben
Jehiel, 87n.
A., 12n., 182n.
Nicholson, R. A., xviin., 17n., 90n., 108n.
Nicomedia, E., 70n.
Noldecke-Schwally, xvi n., 3n., 5n., 12n.,
Newman, A.
192n.
128n.
109n., 129n.
O
Obermann,
Julian,
xiii n.,
18n.,
24n.,
130n.
K
Katsh, Abraham
Klein,
W.
I.,
xiv.
C., xvi n.
H., xiv
Landau, E., 103n.
Lammens,
n.,
Poznanski,
xvi n.
S.,
ISOn.
n., 122n.
Lichtenstadter, Use, xviii n.
Lidzbarski, Mark, 51n., 66n., 104n.
Lieberman, S., 20n.
Liebreich, L. J., 8n.
Littman, E., 92n.
Lyall, Ch., 104n., 109n.
Meier),
42n.,
82n., 83n.
M
Maas, M., xiii n.
Macdonald, D. B., xvi, 26n., 154n.
Maimonides, Moses, 6n., 34n., 56,
Nafcman), 42n.,
99n.
62n.,
INDICES
122n., 128n., 129n.,
152n., 156n., 158n.
Roberts, R., 154n.
130n.,
259
140n.,
Rodwell, J. M. 3n M 75.
Rosenblatt, Samuel, 153n.
Rosenthal, Franz, 12n.
Rosenthal, Judah, 37n. 59n.
Rudolph, William, 156n.
f
W
Walker, John, xvi
n.
Weber,
O., ISOn.
Weil, G., xxii n.
127n., 141.
129n., 172n.
Wensinck, A.
Yahuda, A.
Yahya, 94n.
122n.
Zamakhshari, xvn.,
221n.
Zeitlin, Solomon, 8n., 137n.
Zifroni, A., 112n.
260
F.
GENERAL INDEX
Aramaic,
Ashmedai, 94
'Ashura', xxii-xxiii, 128-29, 128n., 130n.
'Asr, 5n., lOn.
Assyrians, 200.
Day
Atonement,
of.
See
Yom Kippur.
'Azael, 92.
Azariah, 88n.
30n., 32-33,
33n., 34-38, 39-40, 41n., 61, 66, 142,
142n., 164-65, 164n., 172.
Baal, 223.
Babel, 28.
Babylon, 92.
Babylonia, xxv.
Badr, battle of, 199.
Bahira, 90n.
Bait Allah, lOln.
Balaam, 224.
Abijah, 92n.
'Abdamut, 19.
Akiba, Rabbi, 38, 141n., 160.
Alexander the Great, xiv.
'Aliyy, 18.
Bayan,
Amos,
al-,
4n.
Bible,
xiii,
xxii, xxiv,
118.
41.
Anger, 215-16.
Animals, dead, 121, 122.
Animals, naming of, 30-31, 30n.; snares
for, 69-70.
Annunciation, 85n.
Apes, 67, 67n.
Bismflldh, 123.
xvi.
xix,
97, 112, 172, 209, 217, 223.
Apostle,
Cain, 39.
Call to prayer, xxi, 8.
Canaan. See Palestine.
Charity, xix, xxii, xxiii,
Apocrypha,
3-188.
Bethel, lOln.
Amram, 44.
'Am segullah,
n.,
Bari', 18.
8,
Book, The,
Burhan,
al-,
4n.
3, 11-13, lln.,
12n., 13n., 65, 78, 79, 79n., 125, 126,
128, 138, 143-44, 143n., 144n., 15960, 181, 181n., 182, 183, 186, 215, 215n.
INDICES
Children of Israel, 41, 45, 49, 57, 63, 67,
77, 78, 81, 82, 209. See Jews.
Christian influence, xlii-xiv, xiv n., xvi,
xvii,
xxii,
xviii,
Church,
xxii.
Circumcision, xyii
Cloud. See
Pillar.
261
51, 153.
9,
14, 15,
19, 19n., 21, 22, 27, 29, 31, 32, 34, 35,
36, 37, 39, 40, 43, 45, 52, 54, 55, 56,
58, 59, 65, 72, 81, 81n., 85, 86, 93, 101,
112, 142, 148, 148n., 161, 165, 171,
187, 191, 192, 199, 223.
Covenant, xxiv, 41, 65, 77, 78, 82, 100,
101, 116, 125, 134, 159, 160, 208, 209,
209n., 223.
Cow. See Heifer.
101,
157,
174, 193,
Ddr
Ddr
al-Islam, xxiii.
David, xix, xxiv, 66, 69, 98, 114, 125,
169, 170-71, 218, 218n.
"Day of Assembly," 68, 69.
Day of Atonement. See Yarn Kippur.
Day of rest, xxi-xxii, xxiv, 68.
Deborah, 200.
Debtor(s), 187.
Decalogue, 17, 19, 99n., 152.
Devil, 181.
Dhalika 'l-Kitab, 3n.
137n., 138, 139.
Dhu-al-Hijjah,
xviii.
Dm,
xix.
Drunkenness,
7,
7n.
bones, valley
Earth, creation
Eden, xxiv,
129,
Gehinnom,
God,
Dry
Free
al-barb, xxiii.
Dhu Nuwas,
Fajr, 5n.
Fall of Adam, xix.
214.
262
Golden
calf, xxiv,
83n.
Goliath, 169-70.
Gospel, xiv, 191, 192.
Gdyim, 75.
Great Assembly,
8.
Habakkuk,
126.
151.
Hadith,
Hagar, 102.
Haggadah,
InjU, 192.
Insan, 30n.
xiii,
96, 174.
Jabneh, Academy
HaUel, 123.
tfamld, 18.
Hananiah, 88n.
Hdnef, 108.
Ifanlf, 108-9.
Hannah, 203.
tfaqq, al-, 4n.
Ha-Rabm&n,
18.
erusalem, xxii,
Hebrew language,
religious.
Htjrah, 110-11.
Hillel, 22, 70, 137, 153.
Hiwi al-Balkhi,
59.
Huda,
al-,
4n.
Hur, 64.
Iblts,
of, 9.
Judaism,
Kaabah,
Imfim, 140.
Kalnr, 18.
man,
xix.
Immortality, xix.
Imran, 172.
Incorporeality of God, 5n., 55-56.
Infidels. See Misbelievers.
Inheritance laws, xxiv.
101, 138.
263
INDICES
Kharijites, xxiii.
Korahites,,97.
xiii, xiv, xv, xv n., xvi, xvii, xviii,
xx, xxi, xxiv, xxv, 3-4, 3n., 5n., 6,
13, 13n., 15, 17, 18, 19n., 20, 21, 23,
32, 32n. t 34n., 37, 45, 47, 49, 50,
Sin., 54n., 55, 57, 58, 60, 63, 64,
65-66, 67n., 74, 77, 80, 81, 82, 82n., 83,
85, 90, 91, 95, 97, lOln., 105, 106, 111,
114, 115, 116, 118n., 121, 122, 124,
126, 130, 131, 132, 135, 137, 141,
143, 146, 148, 152, 156, 160, 167, 172,
174, 176, 182, 184, 187, 188, 194, 195,
196, 203, 205, 208, 210, 214, 216, 222;
Koran,
xix,
II,
25,
51,
Leviathan, 19.
Levites, xxi, 79, 83n., 84, 123, 143n.
Logos, 99n.
Lot, xix, 66.
Makon,
lOln.
Malik, 18.
Malik-al-mulk, 18.
Mann, 58n.
Manna, xxiv, 57-58, 57n., 58n., 59, 63,
165.
136n.
Marwah,
Mary,
138.
172, 172n.
Masorah, 195n.
Mas'udi, 170, 171.
Meat, 20, 33, 33n., 58, 121-24.
Mecca, xix, xx, xxiv, 90, 101, lOln., 110,
Muhammad.
Monotheism,
133.
Mortification, 52, 52n., 115, 115n.
Moses, xix, xx, xxiii, xxiv, 4n., 12, 28,
42n., 43, 45, 46, 49-51, 53, 53n., 54,
55, 55n., 56, 60-62, 63-64, 66, 71, 72,
74, 81, 81n., 82, 83, 88-89, 90, 90n.,
91, 97, llOn., 114, 121, 129n., 130n.,
161, 162, 164, 165, 168, 172, 173, 173n.,
174, 182, 185, 186, 19J, 191n., 198,
201.
Moses Haddarshan, 32n.
Moslem usages, xix, xx-xxv, 4-8, 10n.,
1 1-13. See Islam.
Moslems, 212.
Mosque(s), xxi, xxii, 111, 113, 132, 135,
145.
Muhammad,
Mubarram,
xxiii.
Mufrrim, 138.
Melek, 18.
Menstruation, 36, 148^-49, 148n.
Nadab,
xiii,
Midianites, 167.
Mibra', 3n., 195, 195n.
Milhemet mipwah, 135.
Milfremet reshut, 135.
See
Molech, 147.
Mu'adhdhin, xxi.
Muhaimin, al-, 4n.
24.
Martyr(s),
Mohammed.
Moon's phases,
3.
Makam,
al-,
138.
54, 56.
Nahum
of Gamzu, 199-200.
Nebat, 117.
Nebuchadnezzar, 88n.
'Nephilim', 92n.
Nethinim, 147.
New Testament, xvi,
pel.
264
Noah,
xix,
66,
92,
142,
142n.,
165,
172.
N&r,
Ms,
al-,
4n.
18.
af, 127.
iraish, 199.
Mahkimot, 195.
Prayer shawl
(Talllt), 8.
Punishment
188.
Purification, 157, 157n., 158n.
Rabb, 18.
Rabb al-'&lamln,
Rahim, 18.
Rahmah, al-, 4n.
Rahman, 18.
Rain,
7, 17,
1
24.
Rakia
Ramadan,
,
18.
xix,
xxii-xxiii,
6n.,
128-29,
Riba, 184n.
Ribbon ha-'Olamin, 18.
Rivers of Paradise, 19-20, 20n.
Rock, Moses', xxiv, 60-62, 60n., 61n.,
74, 81n.
Rod, Moses', 60, 61, 62, 81, 81n., 165.
Aboth.
Schools xxv.
"Sealofallthe Prophets, "xvii, 76,90, 110.
Seal of Prophecy, 90n.
265
INDICES
Second Commandment, 17, 53,
Second Commonwealth, 8n., 9.
"Second Passover," 129n.
79.
Seven Sleepers,
xiv.
xix, 4-5.
Shaharit, 5n., 8, 18, 18n.
Shahadah,
Shehakim, 24.
Shekinah, 22, 53, 107, 164, 183.
129n., 179.
100, 165.
Shema',
4,
Ship(s), 118.
Shofar, xxi.
Siddur. See Prayer Book.
Sidra, 3n.
'Sihon, 92n.
Simeon, 161, 162.
Virginity, 150.
134, 135-36, 136n., 145, 161.
Water, 20, 20n., 60-62, 60n., 61n., 62,
War,
74, 167-68.
Wealth,
xix,
103, 218.
Wilon, 24.
Wives,
Women,
86.
201.
Sorcery, 92-93.
Sotah, 83.
Wubuf,
138.
Sperm, 21.
Stone-throwing ceremony, 138-39.
Yemen,
xviii.
Taberah, 56.
Tabernacle, 56, 166.
Tablets of Moses, 130n., 165-66.
4n.
Tahannuth, 108.
TaUit, 8.
TalQt, See Saul.
Tamil, al-, 4n.
Tadhkira,
al-,
76.
222, 224.
Solomon,
Umml, 75-76.
Ummot ha'Olam,
Veil, xvii n.
Sin, 16, 16n., 37, 49, 50, 52, 60, 63, 66,
77n., 86, 86n., 110, 117, 122, 140, 145,
179, 188, 193, 198, 209, 210, 213, 216,
Sodom,
Temple,
Shem,
129n.
24.
Shammai,
Wet,
Terah, 175-76.
Teshubah, xxiii.
Shabbat, 68.
Shabta, 68.
Shamayim,
Taranjabtn, 59.
Taurat, 65, 191-92. See Torah.
Tavaf, 138.
Zabah,
Zelota, 156.
Zion, 23, 177.
Zur, 193.