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Qur'anic Abrogation After Muhammad

The Eternal Flux
Buch | Hardcover
208 Seiten
2026
Routledge (Verlag)
978-1-041-05041-4 (ISBN)
CHF 249,95 inkl. MwSt
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Qur’anic Abrogation after Muhammad: The Eternal Flux presents a bold new interpretive framework for reconciling classical Qur’anic injunctions with the ethical imperatives of the modern world.

Challenging the notion of Islamic legal rigidity, this book introduces the paradigm of “Contemporary Abrogation” - a reformist approach that emerges not in opposition to Islamic tradition, but from within its foundational hermeneutics. Drawing on Sunni and Shiʿi jurisprudential sources, the study reveals how the classical understanding of the Qurʾān’s legal audience was historically limited to the Prophet’s contemporaries, making modern application conditional and situational. By tracing the evolution of this legal reasoning and demonstrating its limitations in the contemporary era, the book argues for the ethical and juridical legitimacy of suspending certain scriptural rulings - particularly in areas such as criminal law, gender norms, and interfaith relations - without abandoning the classical tradition. The result is a powerful case for internal reform grounded in centuries of Islamic linguistic and legal scholarship.

This book will appeal to scholars and students of Islamic studies, Qur’anic interpretation, legal theory, and ethics, as well as to readers engaged in contemporary debates on religious reform, tradition, and modernity in the Muslim world.

Javad Fakhkhar Toosi is an Islamic scholar and qualified jurist (Mujtahid) trained in the seminary; holder of a distinguished PhD degree, with 35 years of teaching and research experience in Islamic studies; author of 8 books in Arabic and Persian, and dozens of articles in English and Arabic.

Contents

Acknowledgments

Chapter 1. Introduction
Prologue
Pivoting to Abrogation
Legitimacy Through Tradition
Methodology and Objectives
A Roadmap of the Study
The Scholarly Context

Chapter 2. Preliminary Topics
Where the Words Begin
Abrogation in the Dictionary and Terminology

- Abrogation as Removal (Rafʿ)

- Abrogation as Transformation (Tabdīl)

- Abrogation as an explanatory Statement (Bayān)

The Pillars of Abrogation
The Possibility of Abrogation
Abrogation’s Subject
The Philosophy of Abrogation

- Abrogation, Leniency, and Stringency

- Impossibility of Reconciliation as a Prerequisite

Abrogation Conditions

- Revelation, Not Reason

- The chronological succession

- Equal or Greater Authority

- Irreconcilable Incompatibility

- Reliable Tradition

- What Is Not a Condition for Abrogation

The Sources of the Abrogator

- Abrogation by Analogy (Qiyās)

- Abrogation by Consensus (Ijmāʿ)

Types of Abrogatior

- Abrogation of the Qur'an by the Qur'an and the Sunnah by the Sunnah

- Qur'an abrogation by the Sunnah

- Abrogating the Sunnah by the Qur'an

Types of Abrogation

- Abrogation of Both Recitation and Ruling

- Abrogation of the Ruling but not the Recitation and Abrogation of the Recitation but not the Ruling

- Abrogation by Supplementing a Divine Text (Naṣṣ)

- Total and Partial Abrogation

Identifying the Abrogator and Abrogated

Abrogation and Related Concepts

- Abrogation and Specification (takhṣīṣ)

- Abrogation and Al-Badāʾ

Chapter 3. The Doorway to the Contemporary Abrogation of the Qur’an
Where the Words Begin
The Linguistic Theory

- Historical Background

- The Foundations of Theory

- The Nature of Theory

- Implications and Practicality

- The Principle of Universality in Islamic Rulings

The Nexus between the Linguistic Theory and Contemporary Qur'anic Abrogation

- Model 1: Abrogation of the Qur'an through the Lens of Categorical Incoherence

- Model 2: Abrogation through the Defeasibility of the Principle of Universality

Chapter 4. Battle of Theories
Where the Words Begin
The Supremacy of Abrogation over Traditional Modalities of Change

- The Limits of Traditional Tools

- The Modes of Altering Sharia Rulings in Sunni Jurisprudence

- The Modes of Altering Sharia Rulings in Shia Jurisprudence

The Superiority of Abrogation over Modern Theories

- The Contextualist Paradigm

- The Harmonization Paradigm

Beyond the Rivals: On the Superiority of the theory of Contemporary Abrogation over Competing Theories of Naskh

- Maḥmūd Mahmoud Mohammed Taha and his theory of Abrogation by Meccan verses

- Mohsen Kadivar and his Theory of Rational Abrogation

Chapter 5. From Premise to Prooftext: The Application of Contemporary Abrogation to Qur’anic Verses
Introduction to the Chapter
The Verses Resolvable Only Through Contemporary Abrogation

- The Chapter on Jihād (Armed Struggle)

Verse 9:123 (The Verse of Fighting Those Near)

- Chapter on Al-Dayn (Debt)

Verse 2: 282 (The Verse of Debt)

- Chapter on Legal Incapacity (al-Ḥajr)

Verse 16:75 (The Parable of the Slave)

- Chapter on Marriage (al-Nikāḥ)

Verse 4: 3 and Legal Endorsement of Polygyny

Verses 23:5-6 and Sexual Relations with Female Slaves

Verse 4:25 and Marriage with Enslaved Women

Verse 2:221, Interfaith Marriage, and Doctrinal Discrimination

Verse 4:34, Male Supremacy, and Wife-Beating

Verse 2:228 and the Assertion of Male Superiority

- Chapter on Inheritance (Al-Irth)

Verse 4:11: Gender-Based Discrimination in Inheritance Shares

Verse 4:12: Disparity in Inheritance Between Spouses

Verse 4:176: Discrimination in Inheritance Shares between Brother and Sister

- Chapter on Fixed Punishments (Ḥudūd)

Verse 24:2: Flogging as Punishment for Fornication

Verse 24:4 (Flogging for False Accusation)

Verse 5:38 (Amputation as a Penalty for Theft)

Verse 5:33 (Amputation and Crucifixion for Armed Insurrection)

Verse 2:178 (The Injunction on Retribution “Qiṣāṣ”)

The Verses Addressable through Classical Methods and the Theory of Contemporary Abrogation

- Chapter of Al-Ṭahārah

Verse 9:28 : In Tension with Human Dignity, Diversity, and Equality

- Chapter of Jihād

Verse 2:191: The Command to Kill the Disbelievers

Verse 8:65: An Exhortation to Warfare

Verse 9: 73: Command to Fight the Disbelievers and Deal Harshly with Them

Verse 4: 141: Inequality between Muslims and Non-Muslims

Verse 9: 29: Command to Fight the People of the Book and Impose Humiliating Tribute

Verses 47: 4: Command to Execute Prisoners of War

Verse and 8: 67: Command to Execute Prisoners of War

- Chapter al-bayʿ wa-al-tijārah

Verse 2: 47: Prohibition of Usury

- Chapter Al-Nikāḥ

Verse 2: 223: Gender Discrimination through the Portrayal of Female Possession

Verse 24: 31: Mandate of Ḥijāb and Gender-Based Inequality in Dress Autonomy

Chapter 6. Challenges and Implications of Contemporary Abrogation
Introduction
The First Objection: Incompatibility with Classical Principles of Naskh
The Second Objection: The Problem of Ijmāʿ
The Third Objection: The Challenge of Ḥadīth
The Fourth Objection: The Objection from Classical Silence
The Consequences of the Theory of Temporal

Chapter 7. Conclusion

Bibliography

Erscheint lt. Verlag 9.7.2026
Reihe/Serie Routledge Studies in Islamic Philosophy
Verlagsort London
Sprache englisch
Maße 156 x 234 mm
Themenwelt Geisteswissenschaften Philosophie Östliche Philosophie
Geisteswissenschaften Religion / Theologie Islam
ISBN-10 1-041-05041-0 / 1041050410
ISBN-13 978-1-041-05041-4 / 9781041050414
Zustand Neuware
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