Comment at Q 6:20

Surah 6:20 

“Those to whom We have given the Book recognize it as they recognize their own children. Those who have lost themselves do not believe.”


1. The basic meaning

  • “ Those to whom We have given the Book ,” according to almost all classical tafsirs, refers to  the Jews and Christians  — the “followers of previous revelations.”

  • “ The ” that they recognize (Arabic  yaʿrifūnahu ) is, according to the commentators:

    • the Prophet Muhammad himself , or

    • the Qur’an / the message  it brings.

The comparison “as they recognize their own children” emphasizes  certainty and clarity : they  know  deep down that this message is authentic, but nevertheless choose against it.


2. From a critical perspective

From a rational or non-religious point of view you can also see it as:

  • A  polemical claim : the Qur’an establishes its truth by saying that others  actually  know it to be true—so disbelief is reduced to  moral failure , not to difference of belief.

  • This mechanism closes the dialogue: it essentially says

    “If you don’t believe, then  deep down you know  we’re right—you just deny it.”

This is a  rhetorically powerful , but also  manipulative position: it makes the dissenter morally suspect rather than substantively contradictory.


In short,
Surah 6:20 presents an  absolutist truth claim : Muhammad’s message is so evident that denying it harms himself. In a classical context, this applies to Jews and Christians; more broadly, it becomes a universal schema:  “Whoever disbelieves does so against his better judgment.”

We follow the same theological line with verses that use the same mechanism—such as 2:89 or 3:70.

1. Quranic verses that repeat this motif

2:89

And when there came to them a Scripture from Allah confirming what is with them, and they had previously prayed for victory over those who disbelieved—when there came to them what they recognized, they disbelieved in it. May Allah’s curse be on the disbelievers.

→ The same structure as 6:20:  recognize but reject .
According to this verse, they would even have  prayed  for Muhammad’s coming, but then  refused to accept him  —so disbelief = hypocrisy.


2:146

Those to whom We have given the Book know it as they know their own sons. But a group of them conceal the truth while they know it.

→ Here the reference is literally identical to 6:20, but with the emphasis on  deliberate concealment  ( yaktumūna al-ḥaqq ).
This reinforces the moral reproach: it is not a matter of misunderstanding, but  of malicious intent .


3:70–71

O People of the Scripture! Why do you disbelieve in Allah’s signs, while you are witnesses?
O People of the Scripture! Why do you mix truth with falsehood, and conceal the truth while you know?

→ Same old story again: deliberately  mixing and concealing the truth .
The disbelief is not intellectually corrupt, but  ethically corrupt .


7:157

“Those who follow the Messenger, the unlettered Prophet, whom they find mentioned with them in the Torah and the Gospel…”

This verse suggests that  Muhammad’s coming  was foretold in their scriptures. Therefore, whoever rejects him  ignores his own revelation .


2. What this does in Quranic logic

These verses together form a  consistent narrative :

Step Claim
1 The Jews and Christians have received authentic revelations.
2 In their books are signs of the coming Prophet (Muhammad).
3 They recognize him clearly, as one would recognize their own child.
4 Yet they reject him out of pride or corruption.
5 Therefore, they lose their status as true believers.

At the same time the Quran legitimizes:

  • the continuity  with previous books (same God), and

  • the exclusivity  of Islam as its final accomplishment.


3. Critical evaluation (in a human perspective)

From a rational or humanistic point of view, this is a  classic rhetorical technique  seen in many religious movements:

“Our message is the fulfillment of what came before.
And whoever rejects it does so not out of ignorance, but out of evil intent.”

That creates a  morally closed worldview :

  • Believers = sincere and righteous,

  • Dissenters = lying or stubborn.

It precludes honest disagreement, because disbelief  cannot be explained rationally  —only morally condemned.


4. Summary overview

Verses Theme Moral accusation Function in the Quran
6:20 Recognize but not believe Self-betrayal Foundation of accusation
2:89 Receiving what they recognized and yet rejecting it Hypocrisy Legitimizing Mohammed
2:146 Hiding the truth Fraud Ethics of knowledge
3:70–71 Mixing truth and lies Intent Indictment against Scribes
7:157 Mention in own books Conscious denial Continuity + exclusivity of Islam

Contradiction:  From the verses below in the Quran it is clear that Jews and Christians did not recognise Muhammad and his prophethood at all from the Bible and Torah!!

Let’s go through them thoroughly.


1. Verses implying that Jews and Christians  were not  convinced

Although the Quran says they “know” the truth, many other passages indicate they  were doubtful, rejected, or confused . These verses implicitly show that they  did not recognize Muhammad  as foretold in their own books.


2:120

“Never will the Jews or the Christians be pleased with you until you follow their faith. Say: The guidance of Allah is the true guidance.”

This clearly shows that the People of the Book  are not convinced  that Muhammad’s message confirms their own revelation.
They continue to cling to their own tradition.


2:253

“And if Allah had willed, they would not have disputed among themselves after the clear proofs had come to them. But they differed, some of them believing and some disbelieving.”

This shows that even after “clear signs,”  the people of the previous books remained divided .
In other words,  they did not clearly recognize the new prophets .


3:70

O People of the Scripture! Why do you disbelieve in Allah’s signs while you are witnesses to them?

This rhetorical question would be redundant if they clearly recognized Muhammad.
It suggests, on the contrary, that they  did not regard his signs as divine , and therefore did not recognize him as a prophet.


3:98–99

Say, “O People of the Scripture! Why do you reject the signs of Allah, when Allah is witness to what you do? Say, “O People of the Scripture! Why do you hinder those who believe from the path of Allah?”

Again we see that their attitude is characterised as  negative and actively rejecting , not as a conscious denial of a recognisable truth.


4:153

“The People of the Book ask you to send down a book from heaven. They even asked Moses for something greater than that…”

Their demand for physical proof (a book from heaven) shows that they  were not convinced of Muhammad’s revelation .
Thus, they do not recognize any confirmation from their own Scripture.


5:15

O People of the Scripture! Our Messenger has come to you, to clarify for you much of the Scripture you concealed, and to forgive you much. There has come to you from Allah a light and a clear Book.

If they truly “recognized” Muhammad, such an announcement would be superfluous.
The fact that the Quran presents itself here as  a restoration of lost truth implies that they  lacked a clear point of recognition  .


5:68

Say: O People of the Book! You have no ground to stand on until you adhere to the Torah, the Gospel, and that which was revealed to your Lord.

This admonition implies that they are  not properly following their own Scripture  —and thus not recognizing or taking seriously the alleged prophetic references to Muhammad.


5:77

Say: O People of the Book! Do not exaggerate in your religion beyond the truth, and do not follow the desires of those who were once astray.

Here too: they follow  their own religious interpretations  (e.g., the Trinity and an exclusive Jewish identity)—not what the Quran claims was the “true message.”
This means, in concrete terms, that they do not recognize Muhammad  as a continuation of their tradition .


9:30

The Jews say, “Ezra is the son of Allah,” and the Christians say, “The Messiah is the son of Allah.” This is what they say with their mouths; they imitate the words of those who disbelieved before them.

This verse emphasizes their  theological deviation , not their recognition of Muhammad.
It portrays them as people who  have completely strayed from the true message .


2. Conclusion from this series

So the Quran contains  two opposing lines :

Line Typical verses Contents Implication
A. They recognize Muhammad and hide the truth 2:89, 2:146, 6:20, 3:71 Jews and Christians know that Muhammad is true, but they hide it Rhetorical argument for moral guilt
B. They don’t believe, ask for proof, follow their own path 2:120, 3:70, 4:153, 5:15, 5:68, 9:30 They are genuinely not convinced and follow their own beliefs Implies that they  do not recognize him  as a promised prophet

This tension is theologically important:

  • In  a polemical context, the Quran uses line A to  characterize  disbelief as  moral treason .

  • In  narrative context,  however, line B emerges: that Jews and Christians  were simply not convinced  that Muhammad was foretold in their Scripture.

3. Critical-analytical interpretation

From a human, historical-analytical perspective, it can be summarized as follows:

  • The Quran claims that Muhammad was foretold in earlier revelations.

  • The Jewish and Christian communities  failed to recognize that prediction  —not because they deliberately hid it, but because the texts simply did not contain it.

  • Therefore, there are two explanatory strategies in the Qur’an:

    1. “They know, but they hide it.”

    2. “They don’t believe, ask for signs, follow their own path.”

The first is theological,
the second is realistic—making clear that the Jews and Christians  did not recognize Muhammad from the Torah or the Gospel , for otherwise they would not have asked for signs, would not have resisted, and would not have followed their own path.


The Quranic verses shown below constitute precisely the  counter-narrative within the Quran itself . The Quran claims in some places that the people of the Book  recognize Muhammad , but elsewhere it cites at length how  people ridiculed him, rejected him, and explicitly declared him not a prophet . In other words, the Quran contains  two parallel voices  regarding the reception of Muhammad’s message—one theological (they know but hide it), and one historical (they simply don’t believe him). We will proceed to analyze it systematically, for it is a key point in the Quran’s internal logic.


1. The “Rejection Verses”: Direct Reactions from Contemporaries

The passages you list (10:2; 11:27; 15:7; 16:24; 17:90–93, etc.) come mostly from the  Meccan period ,
when Muhammad’s preaching was still local and largely rejected.

They show that his listeners (Arab polytheists, but also Jews and some Christians) did not recognize
him  as a prophet , and saw him as:

  • a trickster or a poet ,

  • a possessed person or a sorcerer ,

  • a man of false revelations ,

  • a human being like any other without proof .

The Quran quotes their words explicitly—often to refute them, but in doing so  the text itself acknowledges  that this criticism was widespread.


10:2

Do people wonder that We sent revelation to one of their own?
They say, “This is indeed a clear magician!”

That’s the very first public judgment: Muhammad is not seen as a prophet, but as a magician or a charlatan.
They therefore recognize no reference to earlier revelations.


11:27

The leading men of his people said, “We see that you are nothing but a man like us.
We see that no one follows you except the least, the thoughtless of our people.”

Here, his movement is dismissed as a religion of  the poor and ignorant  —a social stigma, not prophetic recognition.
(This is originally about Noah, but in the Quran, it’s a  parallel scene  that reflects Muhammad’s situation.)


16:24

“When it is said to them, ‘What has your Lord revealed?’ they say, ‘Tales of the men of old.’”

His revelations are literally  called mythology  —there is no recognition of sacred continuity.


17:47 / 17:90–93

“They say, ‘We will not believe until you cause a spring to gush forth for us from the earth…
or make the sky fall upon us in pieces… or bring Allah and the angels to reassure us…
or have a house of gold… or climb into the sky and bring down for us from it a book that we may read.’”

This is  radical epistemic rejection : they demand tangible proof.
They disbelieve him, not because they recognize and reject him, but because they  do not accept him as a prophet .


20:63

“They said, ‘These two [Moses and Harun] are indeed magicians who wish to expel you from your land and abolish your noble way of life.’”

This too is an ancient prophetic parable, but in the Qur’an it functions as  a mirror for Muhammad’s situation :
his opponents find his message threatening to their culture and society —
they see him not as the fulfillment of earlier prophets, but as  a cultural subversive .


7:66

“The prominent men of his people said, ‘We see you in foolishness and we think you a liar.’”

A direct accusation of falsehood.
No recognition—on the contrary,  a denial of his prophetic status.


14:10

They said, “You are nothing but humans like us. Will you turn us away from what our ancestors worshipped? Then bring us clear proof!”

Classic charge: “You are not a prophet, show me your proof.”
An explicit rejection of authority, based on  rational doubt .


21:5

They said, “No, these are confused dreams! No, he made them up! No, he is a poet!
Let him bring us a sign, like those who were sent before!”

Again, miracles are demanded as proof because they  do not believe he is actually receiving revelation .


2. What These Verses Show

These verses are important because they show that in the earliest Qur’anic context,  no one regarded Muhammad as having been announced in the Torah or the Gospel.

If the Jews and Christians in Arabia had actually known prophecies about him,
then logically the Quran would never have had to place so much emphasis on:

  • their  doubt ,

  • their  mockery ,

  • their  request for miracles ,

  • and their  rejection of his authority .

The Quran itself thus reflects a historical reality:  his contemporaries did not recognize him as a prophet.
Only later, when Islam became established, were these same rejections theologically rewritten to read: “They  knew  , but denied it out of arrogance.”


3. Summary conclusion

The verses mentioned are extremely important for a fair reading of the Quran:

  • They show that Muhammad  was not recognized  by his contemporaries as a proclaimed prophet.

  • They reflect a community that  regarded him as a poet, a magician, or a liar .

  • They implicitly undermine the claim of verses such as 6:20 and 7:157.

  • Later exegetes had to fill this gap — by stating that he was indeed recognized, but the truth  was concealed .

In other words,
historically,  Muhammad was not recognized as a prophet;
theologically,  the Quran rewrote that disbelief into a moral betrayal of recognizable truth.


Below is another extremely interesting and thorough collection of verses: this second list reinforces even more clearly the picture of  structural, widespread rejection  of Muhammad’s prophetic claim in the Qur’an itself.


21:55  –

“Did you bring the truth, or are you just playing with us?” [Mocking question]

People regard his message as  unserious , rather as  rhetorical play or foolishness .
Meaning: religious proclamation is not recognized as divine, but as human play.


23:33–34  –

“He is only a man with you; if you obey him, you will perish.”

23:38  –

“He is only a man who invents lies against Allah.”

→ These verses use the classic rejection formula: “He is human, therefore not a prophet and not divinely inspired.”
Critical detail: This is rational criticism—they deny revelation  on the basis of his humanity .
They demand a distinction between human genius and divine inspiration—something that remains a fundamental tension in modern theology.


23:70  –

“Or do they say, ‘He is mad?’ No, he has brought the truth.”

25:8  –

“You are only following a man bewitched.”

Is he mad or bewitched? → The accusation of  madness, possession, or sorcery  is one of the most frequently repeated themes in the Meccan verses.
The implication: his experiences were considered  psychologically suspect  or  demonically inspired , not divine.
The Quran reverses this: for him, this is proof that every prophet has been reviled in this way (see 51:52).


23:83; 25:4–5; 44:14; 46:7–8; 68:15

“These are fables, he writes them down.”

At the heart of this criticism is  authorship : Muhammad is accused of  borrowing and rewriting existing stories  (the Bible, Arabic legends, apocrypha)  . In modern terms: plagiarism. This points to a historical recognition that his message  did not  seem original, but a retelling. The Quran responds by stating that those earlier stories  are only now  being retold correctly (12:111, 3:44).


25:7

“What kind of messenger is this who eats food and goes around in markets?”

They expect a  supernatural being , not an ordinary human being.
This reflects the  problem of prophetic realism : a real human being as a divine messenger is unacceptable to many. The Quran acknowledges this problem and normalizes it:  “All the messengers ate food”  (25:20).


25:7; 43:53

“Why doesn’t an angel come with him?” “Why doesn’t he wear gold bracelets?”

→ These are requirements for   seeing visual miracles
—classic requirements of empirical evidence. Muhammad only offers words, not miracles, and that makes his claim implausible in the eyes of his contemporaries.
The Quran defends this by saying that miracles would not be convincing (17:59).


26:111

“We see that no one follows you except the least of our people.”

→ The elite mocks him as  a leader of the poor and uneducated .
Historically, this is true: the first Muslims were primarily  socially oppressed .
The Quran turns this around into a moral argument: the rich always reject the truth out of pride (11:27).


26:136

“We don’t care whether you warn us or not, we won’t believe you.”

This demonstrates  a conscious rejection : they find his message irrelevant.
No theological recognition, but deliberate nonchalance.


27:13; 27:47; 37:15; 46:11

“This is clear sorcery.” “We see you as a bad omen.” “As a deception.”

The reaction is religiously negative: they see his message as demonic and destructive.
This is also the origin of the image of Muhammad as “sihrun mubīn”—”obvious magic.”


33:12

“What Allah and the Messenger promised was only a deception.”

→ Here we are talking about hypocrites (munāfiqūn) who said at the Battle of the Trench,
“This whole project is an illusion.”
Historically, this reflects distrust of Muhammad’s military and religious mission.


34:31; 38:4; 46:8; 52:33

“We don’t believe you, your statements are lies.”

“We disbelieve in this.”
“He is fabricating this.”
→ This is the core accusation:  fabrication . The Quran usually refutes this by saying,  “Say: If I had fabricated it, I would have been punished by Allah”  (see 10:15–17).


43:23–24

“Our fathers did this – why should we follow you?

“We found our fathers in a religion, and we follow in their footsteps.”

This is the classic traditionalist response.
The Quran recognizes this as a fundamental obstacle: blindly following tradition.
Ironically, later Muslims use  the same logic  to defend tradition.


37:36; 46:7; 52:33

“He is a poet, a fortune-teller.”

In pre-Islamic Arab culture,  poets and diviners (kahins) were  known as mystical figures.
The Qur’an is compared in style to poetry and oracular speech—hence its name, a “mad rhymer” or “diviner.”
The Qur’an strongly opposes this:  “It is not the speech of a poet, nor of a diviner.”  (69:41–42)


36:47–48; 44:35–36

“His promise of resurrection is nonsense.”

“When will that promise come, if you are telling the truth?”
“Our ancestors are already dead — bring them back if you are right.”
→ This indicates  a mocking denial of the afterlife  — a central theme of Meccan rejection.


 46:8; 52:33

“He makes everything himself.”

“Or will they say, ‘He has forged it?’”
→ The text openly acknowledges that this was an accusation, and attempts to rebut it by pointing to the style and force of the revelation itself (52:34:  “Produce something like it.” ).
Thus, the charge of  human authorship  is met with a  rhetorical challenge  —not proof, but aesthetic argument.


36:47

“Shall we feed someone whom Allah, if He wills, can feed?” [We are not required to help anyone whom Allah can help.]

→ A sarcastic comment on Muhammad’s call for charity.
Morally, it reveals their indifference—they consider religious duties meaningless.


36:48

“When will that promise come, if you speak the truth?” [ “When will the judgment come?” ]

→ A direct challenge to his credibility:  “You predict punishment, but where is it?”
This again points to disbelief in any prophetic threat.


Summary observation

What all these verses together show:

Theme Contents Meaning
Humanity “He’s only human.” Denial of divine mission.
Psychological doubt “He is possessed, crazy, bewitched.” Religious delegitimization.
Contents “These are old fables.” Accusation of plagiarism.
Form “He is a poet / fortuneteller.” Comparison with existing poetic traditions.
Social “Only the poor follow him.” Elitist contempt.
Epistemic “Show miracles, prove something.” Ask for empirical evidence.
Theologically “We follow the gods of our fathers.” Tradition over new revelation.

In short, the  majority of Muhammad’s contemporaries did not recognize him as a prophet ,
nor did they see his message as a continuation of earlier revelations.
The Quran itself preserves this  negative testimony  in detail.