Tahrif Is Moses’s Will Of Pluralism
The Jewish Rabbis stated that 55 Jewish Prophets in the Hebrew Bible were know by name. The Talmud counts 48 male prophets and 7 female prophets.
Muslim scholars like Ibn Atiyya report that Ibn Abbas and Muqatil ibn Sulayman interpret the statement about there being no warner before in Qur’an 32:3 to refer only to the period of time between Jesus and Muhammad. Mahmud ibn Umar al-Zamakhshan (d. 538/1144) explains also that the lack of a warner mentioned in Qur’an 28:46 and Qur’an 36:6 refers to the 550 years between Prophets Jesus and Prophet Muhammad.
Muhammad ibn Sacd (d. 230/845) reports that the number of apostles, including Prophet Muhammad, is 315, and the total number of prophets is 2,000: Ibn Abbas says: Between Moses and Jesus ibn Mary were 1,900 years (really 1,300) and there was no pause between them, for between them were sent 1,000 prophets from the Israelites, equal to what was sent for all the world’s non-Israelites.
Why so many Jewish prophets? In the Torah is the brief episode of Eldad and Medad (Numbers 11:26-30) that is really a subunit within a larger framework of Numbers 11, where we are told how God provided Moses with a special group of seventy elders from the 12 tribes, who would serve as his assistants in his dealings with the Hebrew people.
These elders were to undergo a special “initiation rite” (11: 16-17); they were to follow Moses to the Tent of Meeting that stood at a distance from the Israelite tents and stand there with Moses in a state of preparedness. God would come down in a cloud and speak to Moses at the tent, and He would extend some of the “spirit” (ru’ach) that was on Moses onto the adjacent elders of Israel. This, apparently, would “energize” the elders, and give them the spiritual power necessary to aid Prophet Moses in leading the Jewish people (1 Samuel 10:5-7).
So Prophet Moses gathered the elders and placed them around the tent of meeting. God came down in a cloud and spoke to Moses, and conferred some of the spirit that was on Moses onto the elders. The elders immediately hitnab‘u, “prophesied,” or “spoke in ecstasy,” clearly as a result and sign of their newly acquired spirit (verses 24-25). Then a new development is reported. Two men, Eldad and Medad, “spoke in ecstasy” in the presence of the people when Moses was away and far out of sight: (Numbers 11:26) The two men, Eldad and Meded, remained behind in the camp, and the spirit rested upon them. They were among those (70) who had been enrolled, but they did not go out to the Tent. And they spoke in ecstasy inside the camp.”
When Moses is informed of this (v. 27), Joshua attempts to intervene: “And Joshua son of Nun, Moses’ attendant from his (Joshua) youth, spoke up and said, “My lord........
