Sunni Sunnis believe that the Qur'an is the uncreated word of God. Considering a part of the
Qur'anic verse 7:54: The exegetes have suggested that this verse underlines the separation between God's creation and His command, therefore the Qur'an was not created. In fact, fatwas have been given by Imams
Ahmad bin Hanbal,
Sufyan al-Thawri,
Malik ibn Anas,
Sufyan ibn ʽUyaynah, and
Yahya ibn Ma'in that the one who believes otherwise is a
disbeliever of Islam.
Shia Ahlul Bayt Digital Islamic Library Project, which collects Shia scholarly works, cites
ibn Babawayh (c. 923–991) as disagreeing with Sunnis on the issue of the Quran's createdness because God's attributes of
doing (creating, giving sustenance, etc.) cannot be eternal since they require objects to do actions
to. For this to be true, "we will have to admit that the world has always existed. But it is against our belief that nothing except God is Eternal."
Muʿtazilah The adherents of the Muʿtazili school, known as Muʿtazilites, are best known for rejecting the doctrine of the Quran as uncreated and co-eternal with God, asserting that if the Quran is the word of God, he
logically "must have preceded his own speech". Based on
Q.2:106 some Muʿtazilah also argued that if the Quran could be subjected to abrogation, with a new verse abrogating an earlier one, it could not be eternal. Other Muʿtazilah however denied the theory of abrogation and did not believe any verse of the Quran was abrogated.
Implications Malise Ruthven argues that believers in an uncreated, and thus eternal and unchanging, Quran also argued for
predestination of the afterlife of mortals. The two ideas are associated with each other (according to Rwekaza Sympho Mukandala) because if there is predestination (if all events including the afterlife of all humans has been willed by God) then God "in His omnipotence and omniscience must have willed and known about" events related in the Quran. Believers in a created Quran emphasize free will given to mortals who would be rewarded or punished according to what they chose in life on judgement day. Advocates of the "created" Quran emphasized the references to an 'Arabic' Quran which occur in the divine text, noting that if the Quran was uncreated it was—like God—an eternal being. This gave it (they argued) a status similar to God, constituting a form of bi-theism or
shirk.
Rémi Brague argues that while a created Quran may be
interpreted "in the juridical sense of the word", an uncreated Quran can only be
applied—the application being susceptible only "to grammatical explication (tasfir) and mystical elucidation (ta'wil)"—not interpreted. ==Ahmad ibn Hanbal and the
Mihna (ordeal)==