Journal of Religion and the Contemporary World

Journal of Religion and the Contemporary World

Examining the Views of the Comprehensiveness of the Holy Quran, Especially in Sharia, with a Look at the Views of Sadegh Balaid in the Book Al-Quran and Sharia

Document Type : Original Article

Authors
1 Assistant Professor, Department of Theology, Mofid University, Qom, Iran.
2 Master Student of Quranic Sciences, Mofid University, Qom, Iran.
Abstract
The issue of the "comprehensiveness of the Qur'an", which has become doubly important in our time, has long been cited by Islamic thinkers as one of the miraculous aspects of the Qur'an; However, this term is an emerging word and has been mentioned in the works of its predecessors with titles such as sciences derived from the Qur'an. In principle, the comprehensiveness of the Qur'an in the scope of guiding and meeting human needs is not a difference between Shiites and Sunnis; But in the examples, the quality and scope of the comprehensiveness of the Qur'an and the rulings are many differences that can not be easily ignored. In this article, while examining the two views of maximum and minimum and applying Sadegh Balaid's theories with these views, the originality and superiority of the moderate view is revealed.
In the maximum view, the Holy Quran is comprehensive and complete of all divine and human knowledge and subjects. On the other hand, it is a view that considers the concepts and teachings of the Qur'an as individual and related to the afterlife of human beings, and has even given a minimal opinion on jurisprudential issues. This view is endorsed by Sadegh Balaid, a professor at the University of Tunisia, in his book, The Qur'an and Sharia.
Keywords

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