Is every part of the quran written in first person from Allah?
Is every part of the Quran written in first person from Allah? How does that work? Was the voice of Allah heard all at once, or over a period of time? Was there just one person who heard it or many? Was it written down at the time, or much later? It is possible that someone could have altered or added some small passage to it?
2014-07-20T03:36:34Z
So is it written in first person, or does Arabic not have a first person?
2014-08-06T19:48:01Z
Not one person has answered the question.
jm2014-07-19T21:49:43Z
The words of the Quran were collected as they were revealed to the Prophet Muhammad, committed to memory by the early Muslims, and recorded in writing by scribes. As the Quran was being revealed, the Prophet Muhammad made special arrangements to ensure that it was written down. Although the Prophet Muhammad himself could neither read nor write, he dictated the verses orally and instructed scribes to mark down the revelation on whatever materials were available: tree branches, stones, leather, and bones. The scribes would then read their writing back to the Prophet, who would check it for mistakes. With each new verse that was revealed, the Prophet Muhammad also dictated its placement within the growing body of text.
The Quran was memorized by Muhammad; his followers wrote down the Quran IN MUHAMMAD'S LIFETIME in fragments. These were pieced together after Muhammad died. The Quran is the direct word of Allah, given through the archangel Gabriel. (THE SAME ANGEL THAT APPEARED TO MARY). The Quran has NEVER been changed from its original Arabic--the language of God. The Quran is exactly the same as it was 1400 years ago.
Christians have no problem believing that the archangel Gabriel (aka the Holy Spirit) appeared to Mary; why do they have a problem with Gabriel appearing to Muhammad?