In a recent conversation with Bill Warner, I understood something about the Quran I have never considered before: That the Quran might be coded.
I told him when I first tried to read the Quran, I found it almost impossible. And I'm a good reader. My reading comprehension has been tested and it is very high. Yet I found my standard Quran confusing and frustrating to read.
Bill said, "That's because it's in code."
The message is scrambled, just as military communications are sent in code in times of war. Or, as Bill put it, "the text was randomized."
Whether it was done intentionally or not, the message written in the Quran has been significantly garbled, and that discourages almost all non-Muslims and a significant percentage of Muslims from reading it.
Non-Muslims are almost entirely in the dark about the political duties incumbent on every Muslim revealed in the Quran, even though any normal bookstore in the Western world sells numerous copies translated into English. And most Muslims must rely on their imams to tell them what Islam is about, which explains much of the Muslim confusion about their own religion.
In what way is the message scrambled? First, the chapters are published out of order in every standard Quran. Rather than printing them using the chronological order in which they were revealed, the 114 chapters (suras) of the Quran are arranged using a baffling method: They're arranged in order from the longest chapter to the shortest. That's the traditional order.
In addition, each chapter seems randomly ordered. Most chapters are a collection of many different topics, and often one topic ends and an unrelated topic begins abruptly.
When you read a standard Quran straight through like a normal book, the message is disjointed and the story jumps around and seems contradictory. One very important consequence of this curious disorder is that it hides the clear progression from Mohammad's semi-tolerance of non-Muslims to his violent hatred toward them.
The second way the message has been made difficult to decipher is by the principle of abrogation, which means that some later chapters (suras) contain passages that override passages from earlier chapters. Because the chapters are not published in chronological order, this means that hardly anyone who reads the Quran knows which passages are abrogated and which are not.
Out of the 114 chapters, only 43 are not affected by abrogation. The majority of the chapters of the Quran cannot be taken at face value.
The third way the Quran has been put into code is by putting the key somewhere else. Much of the Quran cannot be understood without being familiar with the life of Mohammad (by reading the Sira and the Hadith). These are primarily about Mohammad — what he said and did.
In other words, the Quran — the source book, the single most important holy book in Islam — can't be understood without the key, and the key can only be found somewhere else, which is similar to one of the ways a message can be written in code: Put the key to understanding the message somewhere else besides including it in the message.
The doctrines of Islam divide the world into the realm of Islam and the realm of war (which is the realm of non-Muslims; that is, the realm of the not-yet-subjugated). In this permanent state of war, unsubjugated non-Muslims are "the enemy," so it would make sense to try to conceal the goals, plans, and methods of Islam from non-Muslims.
It also keeps ordinary Muslims — the soldiers of Allah — on a need-to-know basis, since they also find it difficult to understand the Quran. So the only ones who really know what's going on are the imams and the scholars. They're the ones calling the shots.
Their soldiers are out there defending Islam without knowing much about it. You'll see them all the time on web sites saying, "No, you have it all wrong." A Muslim commented this morning on a post saying, "I think you all have read the wrong Quran. Mohammad never said to beat your wife." The very next post quoted six different versions of the Quran's sura 4, verse 34, all of which said to beat your wife.
I have said it so many times, you're probably sick of hearing it: The most important thing non-Muslims can do to stop the advance of the third jihad is to get every non-Muslim we know to read the Quran. And ideally, to read one of the unscrambled versions: A Simple Quran or An Abridged Koran. Bill Warner not only put the chapters in order and wrote in modern English, he put the key back in, so the Quran is actually comprehensible on its own.
The reason I hammer on this is that once you know what the Quran says, you are immune to the propaganda and disinformation coming at you from orthodox Muslims and blind multiculturalists. You know better. And you can help your fellow non-Muslims know better too.
And with your new found clarity, it is fairly easy to know which politicians and which policy decisions will be helpful and which will be counterproductive.
If the Quran wasn't put in code deliberately, it has been a tremendously fortuitous accident which has served the goals of Islam very well throughout history. You and I can now help overturn this historical trend. Read the Quran and convince every non-Muslim you know to read it.
I can agree with you that there certainly are radical imams who wage a war against kuffirs. But that somebody deliberately encoded the quran sounds like a conspiracy theory. Who should have done this? And who is telling the imams what the right message is? Would love to hear your view on this.
ReplyDeleteI don't believe it was done on purpose. I think it has served the purpose of spreading Islam very well, however.
ReplyDeleteIf you study the book, you can learn what it says. Nobody has to tell the imams. If you personally will study it, and put it in chronological order, you will be able to figure out what the message is. But if you read it casually. If you thumb through it, reading passages, it would take you a very long time (if ever) to figure out what the overall message is, and if you didn't know the chapters were not arranged in chronological order, I don't know if you'd ever be able to figure it out.
But imams learn about the chronological order early, and they spend plenty of time studying the Quran, so they know well what it says and what it means.
It is also possible that the text is garbled because they are a bunch of morons. Placing the longest verses to the shortest, just gives the monkeys the quickest way to reach the short ones, more within their intelligence capabilities. Or their attention spans.
ReplyDeleteThey are like a swarm of mindless wasps, taking over the world by pure population factor.
I've read somewhere the reason the Koran was written this was was to make it easier to recite. Starting with the Longer verses, once they are through the beginning its all repitition.
ReplyDeleteThe Koran was also re-written at one point by a caliph who then ordered all previous copies destroyed. It is quite possible the "coding" part was done at this time. The coding would have given power to Imams who would be more easily controlled by the Caliph. In other words, someone re-ordered it so it would have more military style organization.
Great work on the site!