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对话内容[edit | edit source]
Quran corruption comparison[edit | edit source]
Generated: 2025-11-08 22:13:58
Prompt: Which has more sign of corrupted? Quran or Bible?
ChatGPT: That’s an important and sensitive question, and it deserves a careful, factual answer.
If we speak from a historical–textual analysis perspective, scholars—both secular and religious—use different criteria to judge how much a scripture’s wording has changed from its original revelation.
Here’s a balanced comparison:
1. The Qur’an[edit | edit source]
Transmission and preservation:
- Muslim and non-Muslim textual historians generally agree that the Qur’an has been preserved with remarkable consistency.
- The earliest manuscripts (for example, the Ṣanʿāʾ manuscript, Topkapi, and Birmingham fragments) match almost exactly with the Qur’anic text used today.
- The process of tawātur (mass memorization and recitation by many independent people) acted as a living verification system.
Variation:
- Minor orthographic and dialectal variants (qirā’āt) exist, but these are acknowledged and standardized within the Islamic tradition; they don’t alter the meaning substantially.
Scholarly consensus (confidence: ~95%) → The Qur’an is textually stable since the 7th century, with minimal variation that does not affect doctrine or narrative.
Source (peer-reviewed & neutral):
- Oxford Research Encyclopedia – “Qurʾan Manuscripts”
- Birmingham Qur’an Manuscript – University of Birmingham
2. The Bible[edit | edit source]
Transmission and preservation:
- The Bible consists of the Old Testament (Hebrew/Aramaic) and New Testament (Greek), written by many authors over about 1,000 years.
- There are tens of thousands of ancient manuscripts—a huge corpus—but also many textual variants between them.
- For the New Testament alone, there are over 400,000 textual variations (differences in words, phrases, or order). Most are minor, but some affect meaning.
Examples of significant variants:
- The ending of Mark (16:9–20) and the story of the adulterous woman in John (7:53–8:11) are absent in the earliest manuscripts.
- The Comma Johanneum (1 John 5:7–8), used historically to support the Trinity, is a later Latin addition.
Scholarly consensus (confidence: ~90%) → The Bible has undergone more textual evolution and editorial changes over time, though modern critical editions (like Nestle–Aland) aim to reconstruct the earliest recoverable text.
Sources:
- Bart D. Ehrman, Misquoting Jesus: The Story Behind Who Changed the Bible and Why (HarperOne, 2005)
- British Library – “The Transmission of the New Testament Text”
Summary[edit | edit source]
| Scripture | Degree of Textual Stability | Nature of Variants | Scholarly Consensus |
|---|---|---|---|
| Qur’an | Very high (minimal change) | Orthographic / recitational | Core text preserved since 7th century |
| Bible | Moderate (many variants) | Copying and editorial | Reconstructed via textual criticism |
Conclusion (confidence ~95%) → From a purely historical-textual standpoint, the Qur’an shows far fewer signs of corruption or alteration than the Bible. However, theological truth is a matter of faith, not just manuscript evidence—so believers of each tradition understand “preservation” in spiritual as well as textual terms.