The Idea
This idea is based on linking the Sword Verse and the opening of Surah al-Tawbah to a shift in the balance of power in favor of the Muslims at that stage. On the basis of this link, the verse is not understood as proving that Islam is a religion of violence, but as a discourse tied to a specific moment of power and conflict. The meaning here is more historical than a fixed description of the religion.
Concise Formulation
The Sword Verse: linked to the balance of power
Its Place in the Book’s Argument
This claim serves a fundamental aim in the book’s argument: preventing a single reading from being imposed on all of Islam through one verse. The book does not isolate the text from the moment of its emergence; rather, it connects it to shifts in military and social power. In this way, the interpretation of the verse becomes part of a broader critique of readings that turn the text into a slogan outside its context.
Why It Matters
The importance of this claim is that it confronts the quick generalization that makes one verse the key to understanding Islam as a whole. It also shows that Arkoun, in this book, views religious text as linked to the historical conditions of conflict. This is essential for understanding his method in resisting ready-made judgments.
Reading Questions
- Is the verse meant to be interpreted in light of historical power, or justified by it?
- How does this linkage prevent the text from being turned into evidence of a permanent nature?
Level of Documentation
Medium: the claim is constructed from more than one passage within the book’s material.