Used by the Christian side to point to the opening command "say" as Allah instructing Muhammad to address the People of the Scripture, challenging the claim that the entire Qura...
Prophets and language of revelation
Claims
2
Moves
2
Evidence instances
5
Move edges
0
Claim
Quranic passages include commanded or reported speech, complicating the claim that every Quranic word is Allah speaking directly in one voice.
Uses speaker shifts and reported speech in the Quran against a simple verbatim-speech claim.
Moves
Challenges the claim that the Quran is entirely Allah's direct speech by citing commands to speak, quoted jinn, and speaker ambiguity in Surah 11.
- 1ChristianQuranObjectionPrimary Evidence
- 2ChristianQuranObjectionSupporting Evidence
Cited from the Christian perspective to challenge the claim that the Quran is entirely Allah's verbatim speech by pointing to a chapter that quotes the jinn.
- 3ChristianQuranObjectionContext
Used by the Christian side to introduce Surah 11 as Allah speaking, setting up a challenge to the claim that every Quranic word is verbatim divine speech.
- 4ChristianQuranObjectionPrimary Evidence
Used by the Christian side to argue that treating the Quran as Allah’s verbatim speech makes Allah appear to call himself a warner sent from Allah, while bracketed translator wo...
- No move edges yet. 1 move in this claim has no saved in-topic edge relationship.
Claim
Muhammad has authority to teach because he speaks from revelation rather than personal opinion.
The Muslim side grounds Muhammad’s authority in Qur’anic revelation.
Jan 10, 2025 - 1 move - 1 reference