According to mainstream Sunni Islam, the Injīl is the divinely revealed physical scripture granted to Jesus (ʿĪsā) by God, referenced in several Qurʾānic passages, notably in 5:46–47. It is described as a guidance-filled and light-bearing scripture that confirms the
Torah. Mainstream Islamic theology holds that the original Injīl was not preserved in its revealed form but was subjected to
taḥrīf—a process of textual and doctrinal alteration over time. For example,
Abdullah Yusuf Ali wrote: Most Muslims do not identify the Injīl with the four canonical Gospels of the
New Testament. Rather, they view those texts as later, human-authored biographies composed decades after Jesus’s lifetime. Islamic theology maintains that the original revelation may have already been lost or obscured before these texts were written, but they agree that the Injil/Gospel was a physical scripture. While the Gospels may preserve indirect echoes of the original message, they are not considered divinely revealed scripture. From a textual standpoint, Christian scholars generally assert that the New Testament Gospels have been reliably preserved through a large and early manuscript tradition. While most Muslims do not believe that the Injeel of the Qur'an refers to the gospels written by the New Testament Apostles, some Muslims identify the
Gospel of Thomas as being the Injeel of Jesus. ==In Qur'anic exegesis==