Taḥrīf (Arabic: تحريف "change, corruption") is an Arabic term used by Muslims with regard to irrepairable changes Islamic tradition supposes Jews and Christians to have made to Biblical manuscripts, specifically those that make up the Tawrat (or Torah), Zabur (or Psalms) and Injil.
Traditional Muslim scholars,[1] based on Qur'anic and other traditions,[2] maintain that Jews and Christians have changed the word of God. Therefore it is a presupposition of the final outcome of biblical Textual Criticism to be failure of the text. Based on the current textual criticism consensus, the most reliable editions of these documents available are:
- the Biblia Hebraica Quinta - the Hebrew Bible (Tanakh), or Old Testament.
- the Novum Testamentum Graecae - the New Testament, a document either of or relating to the Injil.
These critical texts are continually drawing closer to the original texts. Before 1900, only 9 New Testament papyri manuscripts were known, in 1963 there were 76 papyri - while as of 2008 there is 124 papyri.
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Wed, 22 Jul 2009 08:02:58 GM
Ayr ca bir tak m kimseler gecerli olarak olu turulan elektronik sertifikalar taklit veya . tahrif. etmeye te ebbues edebileceklerdir. Bu itibarla, tamamen veya k smen sahte elektronik sertifikalar olu turan ve elektronik sertifikalar ...
