The Deception of Selective Emphasis

The Quran is a complete, interconnected revelation. With 6,346 verses, any serious interpretation must consider its guidance in full. When someone emphasizes a handful of verses while suppressing those that clarify, qualify, or even limit them, they are not upholding the Quran—they are distorting it. This is the deception of selective emphasis: weaponizing isolated verses … Continue reading The Deception of Selective Emphasis

Strawmaning Opposition = Bearing False Witness

The Quranic standard of truth is not limited to accurate speech—it demands just representation. To speak the truth is not only to avoid lying, but to avoid distortion, omission, exaggeration, and selective framing. A believer is called not only to be truthful, but to be fair—and especially when fairness is difficult. [4:135] O you who believe, … Continue reading Strawmaning Opposition = Bearing False Witness

Charitable Patience

Among the Quran’s most profound moral teachings is that believers are not merely called to be just—they are called to be better than just. While divine law permits retaliation in proportion to harm, God invites the faithful to something greater: restraint, forgiveness, and moral generosity. [16:126] And if you punish, you shall inflict an equivalent punishment. … Continue reading Charitable Patience

The Omission of “The Prophets” (Al-Anbyã’) in Sura 21

Sura 21 of the Quran is titled Al-Anbiyā’ ( الأنبياء )—“The Prophets”—yet nowhere within its 112 verses does this word, nor any of its derivatives, appear. This is no oversight. God's speech is renowned for its precision and literary design; titles are never arbitrary. So why would an entire chapter be named “The Prophets” while … Continue reading The Omission of “The Prophets” (Al-Anbyã’) in Sura 21