Description
Book SynopsisFrom the first centuries of Islam to well into the Middle Ages, Jews and Christians produced hundreds of manuscripts containing portions of the Bible in Arabic. Until recently, however, these translations remained largely neglected by Biblical scholars and historians. In telling the story of the Bible in Arabic, this book casts light on a crucial t
Trade Review"[M]eticulous but eminently lucid."--Eric Ormsby, Literary Review "Griffith offers an exhaustive yet engaging discussion of the history of translations of the Bible."--Choice "This book by Sidney Griffith is of great value to whoever is interested in the complex issue of relationship between Hebrew-Christian Scriptures and Muslim ones... Griffith depicts in a synthetic but very valuable way the relationship between respective Scriptures, mirror of relationships between respective communities."--Valentino Cottini, Islamochristiana "Griffith's book is a welcome introduction to the field and is written in an accessible style, directed to a broad audience... The Bible in Arabic will hopefully inspire much needed further research."--Ronny Vollandt, Islam and Christian-Muslim Relations "The Bible in Arabic is an important contribution not only as a corrective to inter-religious debate in the twenty-first century, but also because it succeeds it drawing the Bible into a dialectical tradition of exchange that has become severely hampered by dominant discourses on identity politics that fill the spectrum between cultural clash and calls for tolerance."--Rana Issa, SCTIW Review "The Bible in Arabic: The Scriptures of the People of the Book in the Language of Islam ... marks a high point in the author's academic scholarship. This comprehensive exploration demonstrates his ability not only as a biblical scholar but also as an adroit historian of religion, able to apply an advanced hermeneutic approach to the primary sources."--S.M. Hadi Gerami, Al-Bayan "There is no other book that offers so much on the general subject of the Bible in Arabic in so slim a volume and with so many potential avenues for future research. Enough work still remains for a host of scholars in preparing editions and studies of the texts touched on here and those still in manuscript, but Griffith's book will remain a worthy guide well into the execution of that forthcoming scholarly enterprise."--Adam Carter McCollum, Journal of the American Oriental Society
Table of ContentsList of Illustrations ix Preface xi Introduction 1 Chapter I: The Bible in Pre-Islamic Arabia 7 Chapter II: The Bible in the Arabic Qur'a'n 54 Chapter III: The Earliest Translations of the Bible into Arabic 97 Chapter IV: Christian Translations of the Bible into Arabic 127 Chapter V: Jewish Translations of the Bible into Arabic 155 Chapter VI: Muslims and the Bible in Arabic 175 Chapter VII: Intertwined Scriptures 204 Bibliography 217 Index 247