Ijtihād, synthesis, modernity and renewal: al-Bayḍāwī’s "Anwār al-Tanzīl wa-Asrār al-Taʾwīl" in hermeneutical tradition

Main Article Content

Gibril Fouad Haddad

Abstract

Among the major exegeses of the Qur’ān none has received more attention on the part of Muslim teachers and scholars as the tafsīr by the elusive Turco-Perso- Arab Shāfiʿī-Ashʿarī- Sufi savant of Shīrāz and Azerbaijan, Nāṣir al-Dīn al-Bayḍāwī (d. 685?/1286?), Anwār al-Tanzīl wa-Asrār al-Ta’wīl (The Lights of Revelation and the Secrets of Interpretation). It contains such a consummate analysis of the Quranic use of Arabic grammar and style that it is viewed as the foremost demonstration of the linguistic, rhetorical and semantic inimitability (iʿjāz) of the Qurʾān in Sunni literature. Its success crowns al-Bayḍāwī’s intent to pour out into his last work the quintessence of his skills and scholarly experience into the service of the Qur’ān. This paper shows some of the ways in which al-Bayḍāwī set the standard in the genre—just as he had done in other fields with his opera magna in legal theory, credal doctrine and sacred law—and was able, for seven centuries since his Tafsīr first came out, to revive and boost the relationship of the community of Islam with its most fundamental text.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Article Details

Section
Research Article (English)