Home > Surah 37 - Those Who Set the Ranks
As a Meccan surah, this verse belongs to the period where the Quran was aggressively establishing the "Evidence Standard" that divine truth is not a matter of opinion but must be rooted in a physical, written revelation.
This provides the very methodology needed to dismantle the Quran's later claims by using its own demand for scriptural evidence.
Surah 37:157:
Then bring your Scripture, if ye are truthful.
The verse establishes that truthfulness is verified by "bringing the Book."
The Quran claims to be the "Truth" because it "confirms" the previous Books (the Torah and Gospel).
If the Quran challenges the Meccans to "bring their Book" to prove their claims, the Christian can accept this challenge. The Christian "brings the Book" (the Bible) that the Quran claims to confirm.
If the "Book" the Christian brings contradicts the Quran (e.g., on the Sonship of Christ or the Crucifixion), then according to Surah 37:157, the one holding the Book is the "truthful" one, and the one making claims without a matching Book is the one who fails the test.
When this was revealed in the 7th century, the "Books" of the Jews and Christians were widely available.
By telling people to "bring your Book," the Quran is acknowledging that these Books are extant, readable, and authoritative. You don't ask someone to bring a "corrupted" or "lost" book to prove a point.
This verse certifies the physical integrity of the Bible in Muhammad's time. If those Books were the standard for truth then, and we have those same Books today, the Quran is bound to the contents of the 7th-century Bible.
The verse places the burden of proof on the text.
In debates, Muslims often claim the Bible is corrupted to avoid its testimony.
Surah 37:157 says: "Bring the Book if you are truthful." When the Christian brings the Bible, he is fulfilling the Quranic requirement for truthfulness. If the Muslim then rejects that Book, he is rejecting the very evidentiary standard the Quran established to prove its own point against the polytheists.
Surah 37:157 says: 'Bring your Book, if you are truthful.'
I am accepting that challenge. I have 'brought my Book'—the Gospel and the Torah—which your Quran claims to confirm.
My Book, which existed in the 7th century and exists today, says Jesus is the Son of God who died for our sins.
According to your own verse, since I have brought the Book to back my claims, I am being 'truthful.'
If you accept my Book, the Quran is proven wrong. If you reject my Book and say it's corrupted, you are violating the standard of Surah 37:157, which says the Book is the proof of truth. Why does your Book tell me to 'bring my Book' as evidence if you are just going to ignore the evidence when I bring it?