thoughts on Surat An-Nisā' - 4:89
Reply #4 - October 05, 2014, 10:23 PM
My hypothesis (only a hypothesis mind).
Surat an-Nisaa, in the form we have it, is heavily modified to reflect the concerns of the decades following Mohammed's death.
Why, for example, is this Medinan surah counseling people to emigrate, and blasting those who don't? Emigrate where?
Why so much emphasis on people 'turning away,' and the believers splitting, and people being hypocrites?
IMO, the Surah reflects priestly arguments against those who would reject their position of authority in defining the "message" of the prophet which the believers (Arab speaking militants in the region of Palestine/Syria) are failing to properly heed.
So it is essentially a call to pull people into a religious militant movement, based on the prophet's message as recited to them (and allegedly his own words), not to fall away. This is all placed in Mohammed's mouth, after his death. In that sense, I would say these verses address 'apostasy,' but not apostasy in the strict sense we think of now -- more apostasy in the sense of failing to follow the political/religious faction left in Mohammed's wake, still focused on emigration and conquest consistent with the prophet's 'message,' now mediated by certain followers, and recorded by scribes for those purposes. (Interestingly this is essentially the same story that traditional Islam gives on compilation of the surah, except traditional Muslim scholars maintain that the followers -- companions -- and scribes 'got it right,' rather than as I would say 'made it up,' creating verses to address their very different current situation and needs, akin to what we have in the Gospels).
In other words, I think the verses are anachronistic, in the wake of the ongoing Arab conquests of the Levant ... NOT set within a context of Medina battling the Arab pagans and the Meccans! In that sense, they parallel the Gospels' relation to the initial Jesus movements, purporting to record the REAL teachings of Jesus and the REAL history, but in fact drafted to further specific positions of believing communities decades later.