Muhammad Shahrur rereads it as a tool for understanding human development and the dynamism of history, not as a mechanism for sanctifying conflict or entrenching stagnation. Here, it is linked to mutual contest and to the historical reading that explains transformation and plurality.
- Islam is a universal human message
- Human beings are the agents of evolving history
- The Sunna and mutual contest are tools for understanding development
- Qur’anic narratives are not for legislation
- Qur’anic narratives explain history and reveal its Sunan instead of legislating
- Qur’anic narratives reveal the Sunan of history, not rulings
- The narratives reveal the Sunan of history
- Objectives turn into an instrument of power
Cross-book concept: See The Sunna for the unifying theme across the books.