You back in the game Phill? Good stuff.
OK, there are different schools of thought. Some say the Qur'an is original whilst others (mainly Christian groups) say much of its teachings were plagiarised from the Bible. Fact is the Muslim holy book is a lot younger by about 6 or 7 hunderd years if memory serves by which time Christianity was well and truly up and running. This isn't opinion, it's fact.
My opinion is that it was understandable that Mohammad 'borrowed' stories from the region to suit his own agenda. Most modern Muslims don't actually believe their holy book was written by Allah. Examples include Mohammad's journey into heaven clearly taken from a similar Christian story, and there are many others. More accurately, Mohammad drew on local folklore in the region to serve as parables and fables. An example is the story of a hero whose name escapes me that matches almost exactly that of Alexander the Great, who actually DID exist. But there is little doubt (yes this is opinion based on timeline) that he drew from Christian tenets.
Others disagree and say there is no plagiarism, but the Qur'an does contain story lines that are remarkably similar to the Bible together with local folklore of the region and when you fit that with the chronology it's easy to see the conclusion.
OK, there are different schools of thought. Some say the Qur'an is original whilst others (mainly Christian groups) say much of its teachings were plagiarised from the Bible. Fact is the Muslim holy book is a lot younger by about 6 or 7 hunderd years if memory serves by which time Christianity was well and truly up and running. This isn't opinion, it's fact.
My opinion is that it was understandable that Mohammad 'borrowed' stories from the region to suit his own agenda. Most modern Muslims don't actually believe their holy book was written by Allah. Examples include Mohammad's journey into heaven clearly taken from a similar Christian story, and there are many others. More accurately, Mohammad drew on local folklore in the region to serve as parables and fables. An example is the story of a hero whose name escapes me that matches almost exactly that of Alexander the Great, who actually DID exist. But there is little doubt (yes this is opinion based on timeline) that he drew from Christian tenets.
Others disagree and say there is no plagiarism, but the Qur'an does contain story lines that are remarkably similar to the Bible together with local folklore of the region and when you fit that with the chronology it's easy to see the conclusion.

