Elias wants to read Judas by Jeff Loveness

Judas by Jeff Loveness
Judas confronts Jesus in the pits of Hell.
Your local bird-shaped person that loves getting lost down rabbit holes.
2.5/5 indicates an average book.
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Judas confronts Jesus in the pits of Hell.
This is a religious-leaning account of the prophet that does well at maintaining accuracy with historical sources. Jebara does not state explicitly that he's coming at it from a religious angle, but after he touches on his background it is very clear what frame of reference the book is assuming. The sourcing from traditional Islamic scholarship is clearly mentioned and transparent insofar as the process of Islamic scholarship allows (the author explains that there's not as clear-cut of a relationship of provenance that would make sense to someone not trained as a scholar), which allows you to best understand how the scholarship was woven to give this account.
I don't think the fact that this portrait is more religious in its framing is a bad thing - I think this interpretation gives a lot of meaning to the accounts of Muhammad that remain. The portrait that Jebara presents is intimate …
This is a religious-leaning account of the prophet that does well at maintaining accuracy with historical sources. Jebara does not state explicitly that he's coming at it from a religious angle, but after he touches on his background it is very clear what frame of reference the book is assuming. The sourcing from traditional Islamic scholarship is clearly mentioned and transparent insofar as the process of Islamic scholarship allows (the author explains that there's not as clear-cut of a relationship of provenance that would make sense to someone not trained as a scholar), which allows you to best understand how the scholarship was woven to give this account.
I don't think the fact that this portrait is more religious in its framing is a bad thing - I think this interpretation gives a lot of meaning to the accounts of Muhammad that remain. The portrait that Jebara presents is intimate and clearly focused on the messages of blossoming that Jebara has decided to highlight in the Qur'an's multi-layered Quranic Arabic.
As an atheistic individual interested in religions in an anthropological sense, I almost always desire to peer beneath the belief in a divine creator to get at the principles of life that the religion desires to impart and how that affected its followers. This account offers a lot in the way of that, situating Muhammad among the people he preached to and how his word had far-reaching affects. It also muses on what the motivation behind the creation of the principles of blossoming were. Of course the narrative occasionally implies that polytheism inherently results in stagnation, but I think there was also a lot of reasoning about how stagnation happened in a couple of the mentioned societies that was not simply "they were polytheist" which I appreciate.
In summary, this novel has beautifully flowing prose and offers a lot of interesting ideas to mull over. Fully worth a read, just like the novel Jebara published after this: "The Life of the Qur'an."
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A six-year-old cries in his mother’s arms as she draws her last breaths to urge him: “Muhammad, be a world-changer!” …
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This was an absolute joy to read. As someone coming in with virtually zero knowledge of the Quran, this novel was perfectly accessible and broadened my understanding of the Quran and Islam. It also filled in some knowledge gaps I had regarding the innovations of the Islamic golden age.
I think my personal favorite section in the book was discussing the evolution of the way the Quran's message was interpreted after Muhammad died. I had very little knowledge on when and how the additional texts had come into being (most notably the Hadith), so the book filling in the gap so elegantly was delightful. The historical discussion of the early years of the Sunni and Shia divide was also fascinating.
... followers of the Qur'an for the first time became "Muslims" in formal contrast to Jews and Christians, whereas previously there has been fluidity of identity where someone born Jewish or Christian could be a follower of the Qur'an without feeling they had converted to a new religion.
— Life of the Qur'an by Mohamad Jebara (Page 182)
??? Not doubting the author, I'm just genuinely surprised by this. Religion never fails to surprise me