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Scholarship in “Plain English”: Joseph Lowry on Law and Commandment in Sūrat al-An‘ām

By Cem Tecimer

Abstract: Joseph Lowry on Islamic Legal Minimalism: Lowry, in line with his other work focusing on how the Qur’ān does not read as a detailed legislative text, draws attention to the fact that the Qur’ān does not often purport to normatively interfere in human affairs. Lowry conceptualizes this phenomenon as legal minimalism deployed in the Book, citing various verses as evidence.

Source: When Less is More: Law and Commandment in Sūrat al-An‘ām 9(2) Journal of Qur’anic Studies 22-42 (2011)

Summary:

In this article, Lowry focuses on certain verses of the Qurʾān, namely 6:136-153, to show that this part of the Qur’ān at least espouses a concept of legal minimalism. The verses concerned essentially start with a critical description of practices in force in other communities, followed by a more lenient and less regulatory framework offered by the Qurʾān in support of Lowry’s claim that the Qurʾān espouses legal minimalism. (See, in the same vein, his Reading the Qur’an as a Law Book Yale Law School Occasional Papers, Paper 13 (2015), in which Lowry argues that the Qur’an cannot be read as a law book.)

Lowry examines theses verses in five sections:

One way of looking at these verses is to situate them within a broader framework of the sūra (chapter) in which they exist: one that starts with Abraham’s discovery of a single god, then stipulates general dietary laws, and only then incorporates the subject matter of the verses discussed above come. Another way of understanding the verses is to see them (esp. verses 141 and 151-153) as Medinan (from a period of more detailed laws that followed Muḥammad’s establishment of a policy over which he ruled), in contrast to the rest of Chapter 6, which is generally seen as Meccan. The fact that verses 151-153 in particular are Medinan can be construed as a deliberate move to supersede the Meccan practices with a lenient alternative. In other words, as a matter of intertextual interpretation, when we situate the commands in verses 151-153 in the broader domain of Qurʾānic commands (such as those contained in Sūrahs 2, 4, 7, 17, and 60), Sūrah 6 is the most minimalist of them all (p. 36; for a table contrasting the various commands, see p. 33).

The logic of unburdening the Qurʾānic community is a pervasive one, Lowry concludes, that easily be observed throughout Q 6:136-153. Moreover, the theme may well have been the basis for the phenomena of abrogation (naskh), takhfīf (alleviation of burden), and rukhsa (“a lenient modification of a pre-existing norm”) (p. 37). However, other legally maximalist stipulations in the Qurʾānic text must have prevailed at one point in time, contributing to the formation of the legally maximalist body of law called Islamic law (p. 37).

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