2. The Torah is generally taken to signify the first five books of the Old
Testament, and the Injil (Gospel), to mean the four Gospels of the New Testament,
even though those books form a part of it. This has sometimes caused people
to wonder if these books were indeed revealed by God. If they are accepted as
revealed, one may wonder if the Qur'an really verifies their contents as this
verse says. The fact is, however, that the Torah is not identical with the first
five books of the Old Testament even though those books form a part of the Torah.
Likewise, the Injil is not identical with the four Gospels of the New Testament.
The fact is that the Torah, in the Qur'anic usage, signifies the revelations
made to Moses (peace be on him), in about forty years, from the time he was
appointed a Prophet until his death. These include the Ten Commandments', which
were handed over to him inscribed on stone tablets. Moses took down the rest
of the revealed injunctions and handed over one copy to each of the twelve tribes
of Israel, and one copy to the Levites for safe keeping. It is this book which
was known as the Torah and it existed until the first destruction of Jerusalem.
The copy entrusted to the Levites was put beside the Ark of the Covenant along
with the Commandment tablets, and the Israelites knew it as the Torah. The Jews,
however, neglected the Book: during the reign of Josiah the King of Judah the
Temple of Solomon was under repair and the high priest, Hilkiah, chanced to
find the Book lying in the construction area. He gave it to the King's secretary,
Shaphan, who in turn took it to the King as if it were a strange find
(see 2 Kings 22: 8-13).
Hence, when the Babylonian King, Nebuchadnezzar, conquered Jerusalem and razed
it and the Temple of Solomon to the ground, the Israelites lost for ever the
few original copies of the Torah which they possessed, and which they had consigned
to obscurity. At the time of Ezra the priest, some Israelites returned from
captivity in Babylon, and when Jerusalem was rebuilt the entire history of Israel,
which now comprises the first seventeen books of the Old Testament, was recorded
by Ezra with the assistance of some other elders of the community. Four of these
books, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers and Deuteronomy, consist of a biographical
narrative of Moses. In this biography those verses of the Torah available to
Ezra and the other elders are also recorded and in the contexts in which they
were revealed. The present Torah, therefore, comprises those fragments of the
original book which are interspersed throughout the biography of Moses (composed
in the manner described above).
In locating these fragments of the original Torah there are certain expressions
which help us. These are interspersed between the different pieces of biographical
narration and usually open with words such as: 'Then the Lord said to Moses',
and 'Moses said, the Lord your God commands you.' These expressions, then, are
fragments of the original Torah. When the biographical narration re-commences,
however, we can be sure that the fragment of the true Torah has concluded. Wherever
authors and editors of the Bible have added anything of their own accord, by
way of either elaboration or elucidation, it has become very difficult for an
ordinary reader to distinguish the original from the explanatory additions.
Those with insight into Divine Scripture, however, do have the capacity to distinguish
between the original revealed fragments and the later, human interpolations.
It is these scattered fragments of the original revealed Book which the Qur'an
terms as the Torah, and it is these which it confirms. When these fragments
are compared with the Qur'an, there is no difference between the two as regards
the fundamental teachings. Whatever differences exist relate to legal matters
and are of secondary importance. Even today a careful reader can appreciate
that the Torah and the Qur'an have sprung from one and the same Divine source.
Likewise, Injil signifies the inspired orations and utterances of Jesus (peace
be on him), which he delivered during the last two or three years of his life
in his capacity as a Prophet. There are no certain means by which we can definitively
establish whether or not his statements were recorded during his lifetime. It
is possible that some people took notes of them and that some followers committed
them to memory. After a period of time, however, several treatises on the life
of Jesus were written. The authors of these treatises recorded, in connection
with the biographical account, those sayings of his which they had received
from the previous generation of co-religionists, in the form of either oral
traditions or written notes about events in his life. As a result the Gospels
of Matthew, Mark, Luke and John are not identical with the Injil. Rather, the
Injil consists of those statements by Jesus which form part of these Gospels.
Unfortunately we have no means of distinguishing the fragments of the original
Injil from the pieces written by the authors themselves. All we can say is that
only those sections explicitly attributed to Jesus, for example in statements
such as: 'And Jesus said' and 'And Jesus taught', constitute the true Injil.
It is the totality of such fragments which is designated as the Injil by the
Qur'an, and it is the teachings contained in these fragments that the Qur'an
confirms. If these fragments are put together and compared with the teachings
of the Qur'an one notices very few discrepancies between the two, and any discrepancies
that are found can be resolved easily by unbiased reflection.