Romans — arabic
TRI knowledge bundle for Romans (arabic).
Executive Summary
Executive Summary
Why it matters
Romans is the theological backbone of the New Testament, and Arabic carries a different shape of doctrinal risk than most languages in this pipeline: it is not that Arabic lacks vocabulary for Romans’ key terms, but that the correct, unavoidable, and often centuries-established word for a term (المسيح for Messiah, الرب for Lord, الله for God, ابن الله for Son of God) already carries a large body of specific, well-defined, and directly contradicting theological content from Islamic doctrine. Getting these terms “right” linguistically is only step one; every occurrence must also actively correct the pre-loaded content the word brings with it.
Key findings
- The registry tracks 40 doctrines across Romans 1-16; 29 require mandatory human theologian review before any translated segment ships (10 Critical, 19 High).
- Ten doctrines are Critical-risk, more than double Hindi’s count for the same curriculum, because Arabic’s risk is structural (built into the only available vocabulary) rather than avoidable (a bad word choice among several options).
- Sonship, deity, incarnation, and lordship of Christ are Critical specifically because the Quran directly and repeatedly denies each claim (Surah Al-Ikhlas 112:3; Maryam 19:35; An-Nisa 4:157) — this is not ambiguity to be resolved by better phrasing, it is a doctrinal collision to be engaged.
- Only 2 of 40 doctrines (Thanksgiving, Mutual Edification) are Low-risk and clear for automated review alone — fewer than Hindi’s 3, reflecting Arabic’s generally higher-stakes vocabulary landscape.
Risks
- Pre-loaded false content, not syncretism: unlike languages where a tempting-but-wrong word imports a foreign framework, Arabic’s highest-risk terms (المسيح, الروح القدس, عيسى) are already the Quran’s own vocabulary for adjacent concepts, with a fixed and different theological content attached.
- Doctrinal deadlock terms: Son of God, Incarnation, and the crucifixion-dependent Resurrection of Christ each collide with an explicit Quranic denial, not merely an absent concept — these require apologetic scaffolding in addition to correct translation.
- Political and safety sensitivity: “Israel” carries live contemporary political weight, and evangelism/mission vocabulary intersects with real apostasy-law risk in some Arabic-speaking contexts — these are routed to native speaker review specifically for cultural and safety judgment automated review cannot supply.
Opportunities
- Because Arabic already shares vocabulary with Islamic theology (الرب, الروح القدس, الشفاعة, المسيح), Romans can engage real, pre-existing Muslim theological questions (assurance of salvation, who intercedes for me, is Jesus more than a prophet) directly rather than needing to introduce foreign categories from nothing.
- The Van Dyck / New Arabic Version Christian tradition already establishes strong precedent for the highest-risk terms (يسوع, الناموس, التجسد), which removes ambiguity for translators and reviewers and predates Islam itself.
Recommended actions
- Route every Critical and High risk segment (29 of 40 doctrines) through human theologian review before publication; do not allow automated-only review to touch these terms.
- Brief native-speaker reviewers specifically on contemporary political sensitivity (Israel) and real-world safety risk (evangelism, apostasy norms), which automated glossary enforcement alone cannot catch.
- Reuse this Language Package’s
translation_memory.jsonfor every Romans lesson in Arabic rather than re-deriving terms per document, per the two-phase pipeline design.
Requirements
Culture Impact Analysis
Doctrines
Doctrine Risk Groups
Critical
- Adoption into God's Family CRITICAL: the Quran (33:4-5) explicitly denies adopted sons true filial and inheritance status.
- Assurance of Salvation CRITICAL: mainstream Sunni piety treats certainty of one's own final salvation as presumptuous (only Allah knows the outcome on the mizan); Romans 8's assurance, grounded in God's unchanging character rather than a deeds-balance, runs directly against this default posture and must be taught deliberately.
- Deity of Christ CRITICAL: co-equal divine nature, the paradigm case of shirk from an Islamic standpoint.
- Incarnation CRITICAL: Islamic tawhid holds God's transcendence (tanzih) makes assuming a body unthinkable.
- Lordship of Christ CRITICAL: al-Rabb is a defining title of Allah in the Quran's opening surah.
- Messianic Promise CRITICAL: al-Masih is 'Isa al-Masih's own Quranic title, already loaded with a specific competing narrative - honored prophet, not divine, not crucified, not risen.
- Obedience of Faith CRITICAL: 'Islam' itself means submission - obedience is the religion's defining category, not a downstream fruit of belief.
- Resurrection of Christ CRITICAL: mainstream Islamic doctrine (Quran 4:157) denies Jesus was crucified at all.
- Salvation CRITICAL: mainstream Islamic soteriology weighs deeds on a scale (mizan) with no assured outcome, and the Quran explicitly denies substitutionary bearing of another's sin (6:164).
- Sonship of Christ CRITICAL: the Quran states directly that Allah 'does not beget nor is He begotten' (112:3) and that a son is not befitting for Allah (19:35).
High
- Apostleship Al-rasul is Muhammad's own defining title (Rasul Allah); applying it to Paul is linguistically correct and pre-Islamic in origin but requires explicit distinction from the Islamic prophetic office and its finality claim.
- Christian Identity in Christ Identity located in union with Christ, not in tribal (qabila), ethnic, or sectarian (Sunni/Shia) identity markers, which carry unusually strong social weight in many Arab contexts.
- Davidic Covenant Dawud is a shared, positively-regarded Quranic prophet-king, but the Quranic portrayal carries none of the covenant-king typology pointing forward to a promised messianic heir; this background must be taught, not assumed.
- Divine Calling God's sovereign summons runs the opposite direction from da'wah, the Islamic term for human invitation of others to Islam; keep the direction of address explicit.
- Effectual Calling Must be distinguished from folk qadar (fatalistic 'it is written' determinism about all life outcomes); this is God's specific redemptive purpose unto salvation through Christ.
- Faith Islamic iman is primarily creedal assent to six articles of belief, paired with practice; Pauline faith is personal trust/reliance in Christ specifically.
- Fulfillment of Prophecy Islamic naskh (abrogation) doctrine treats later revelation as superseding earlier revelation; Romans' claim that Christ fulfills rather than abrogates the OT promise needs deliberate framing against this default.
- Gospel Must be taught as the NT record itself, not conceded as a corrupted successor to a lost original revelation, per mainstream Islamic tahrif doctrine.
- Grace Islamic fadl and rahmah both function as favor responsive to obedience.
- Humanity of Christ Real, physical human nature - not an illusion.
- Inspiration of Scripture Islamic wahy denotes verbatim divine dictation (the Quran's own claimed mode of revelation); biblical inspiration is God moving human authors to write in their own voice exactly what He intended.
- Peace with God Relational, legal peace secured through justification - not the Sufi/Quranic sense of subjective heart-tranquility (tuma'ninah) reached through dhikr.
- Prayer and Intercession Shafa'ah (intercession) is a live, contested Islamic category (Muhammad's 'greater intercession' at Judgment).
- Sainthood (Called to be Holy) All believers are saints; must not be rendered with vocabulary evoking awliya' (Sufi 'friends of God'), a venerated, shrine-intercession class distinct from ordinary believers.
- Sanctification The Spirit's ongoing work of making believers holy, not ritual purification (wudu/ghusl) achieved through washing.
- Separation unto God's Service Must not be confused with Sufi zuhd (world-renunciation/asceticism) or with ritual purification rites; biblical separation is devoted engagement with the world, not withdrawal from it.
- Unity of Jews and Gentiles Requires careful pastoral framing given the contemporary political weight of 'Isra'il' in Arabic-speaking contexts (see the 'israel' glossary term); Romans 9-11's redemptive-historical argument must not be flattened into or read as a statement on the present conflict.
- Universal Human Accountability Islamic fitrah doctrine holds each person is born in a state of natural purity; Romans' claim that all are guilty in Adam runs against this default and must be taught explicitly, not assumed as shared ground.
- Universal Scope of the Gospel Challenges tribal, clan, and sectarian (e.g.
Medium
- Christ-Centered Ministry Ministry done in Christ's name and for his glory, not humanitarian service divorced from gospel proclamation; also carries real security considerations for ministers working in restricted-access contexts.
- Christian Fellowship Shared participation in Christ; note the uncomfortable root-resonance between al-sharikah and shirk (idolatrous partnership), even though the senses are unrelated.
- Church as God's People New covenant community, not merely the physical building of a marked minority-religion enclave, which is the dominant everyday sense of al-kanisah in many contexts.
- Evangelism Tabshir (evangelism) intersects with apostasy norms in many Muslim-majority contexts, where leaving Islam can carry serious social or legal consequence; use language of witness and proclamation with awareness of the real safety stakes for both speaker and hearer.
- Kingdom Mission God's spiritual reign advancing through the gospel, not a political theocratic state; avoid resonance with khilafah (caliphate) framing found in Islamist political movements.
- Mission to the Nations Avoid risalah (prophetic-commission) vocabulary that invites comparison to Muhammad's own risalah; also note that open evangelism carries real legal and social risk under apostasy norms in some Arabic-speaking contexts.
- Power of God for Salvation Quwwah is broadly compatible with Al-Qawiyy (The Strong); low independent collision risk beyond standard care.
- Providence God's personal, purposive care; keep distinct from folk qadar fatalism, which strips outcomes of relational particularity.
- Spiritual Gifts Must retain the 'spiritual' qualifier so mawhiba is not read as natural talent or artistic ability.
Glossary
Glossary Risk Groups
Critical
- Adoption CRITICAL: the Quran (33:4-5) explicitly restricts adoption - adopted sons are declared not to be true sons and must be called by their biological father's name, denying full filial/inheritance status.
- Father CRITICAL: paired risk with 'Son of God' - Islamic tanzih theology treats any begetting language applied to Allah as a form of anthropomorphism verging on shirk.
- God CRITICAL: Allah is simply the Arabic word for God, used by Arabic-speaking Christians (Copts, Maronites, Syriac Orthodox) for centuries before and after Islam - there is no viable alternative word and none should be sought.
- Holy Spirit CRITICAL: identical phrase appears in the Quran (2:87, 2:253) but mainstream tafsir identifies it there with the angel Jibril (Gabriel), a created being - not a co-equal, co-eternal divine Person.
- Imputed Righteousness CRITICAL: al-birr alone does not convey forensic crediting.
- Incarnation CRITICAL: established in pre-Islamic Arabic Christian literature.
- Jesus CRITICAL: established Eastern Christian Arabic form (predates Islam).
- Justification CRITICAL: التزكية (tazkiyah) is a Quranic term for self-purification through deeds - a process, not a forensic declaration.
- Law CRITICAL: established Arabic Bible tradition (Van Dyck) deliberately uses the Greek loanword الناموس for the Mosaic Law rather than الشريعة, because 'shari'a' today overwhelmingly denotes the total Islamic religious-legal-political system.
- Lord CRITICAL: al-Rabb is a defining title of Allah (Rabb al-'Alamin, opening of the Quran).
- Messiah CRITICAL - inverse risk pattern from other terms: al-Masih is not an available-but-wrong word, it is the unavoidable and correct word, and it is also 'Isa al-Masih's own Quranic title (4:171) - already loaded with a specific, well-defined, competing narrative (honored prophet, virgin-born, but explicitly not divine, not crucified, not resurrected, not an atoning sacrifice).
- Obedience Of Faith CRITICAL: 'Islam' itself means submission/obedience - it is the defining category of the entire religion, not a downstream fruit of belief.
- Resurrection CRITICAL: al-qiyamah itself is safe, shared vocabulary (Yawm al-Qiyamah = the general Day of Resurrection Islam affirms for all people).
- Righteousness CRITICAL: al-birr appears in the Quran (2:177) as a checklist of pious deeds - charity, prayer, honesty - i.e.
- Salvation CRITICAL: mainstream Islamic soteriology has no assured salvation - a soul's fate rests on a deeds-weighing scale (mizan) judged at the end, and the Quran explicitly denies substitutionary bearing of sin ('no bearer of burdens shall bear another's burden,' 6:164).
- Son Of God CRITICAL: the Quran twice states directly that Allah 'does not beget nor is He begotten' (112:3) and that it is not befitting for Allah to have a son (19:35).
High
- Abba Aramaic intimacy-term preserved in Romans 8:15, as Paul himself preserved it.
- Apostle الرسول is Muhammad's own defining title in the shahada (Rasul Allah) - the single most claimed prophetic office in Islam.
- Called Context-sensitive: in 1:1 = called to apostleship; in 1:7 = called to be saints; in 8:28-30 = effectual calling to salvation.
- Calling Da'wah is the standard Islamic term for human missionary invitation to Islam.
- Election القدر (qadar, divine decree) is one of Islam's six articles of faith but functions as exhaustive fatalistic determinism over all events ('maktub,' it is written), popularly detached from any particular redemptive purpose.
- Faith Iman is one of Islam's six articles of belief - primarily creedal assent paired with practice (islam) and excellence (ihsan).
- Glory God's radiant honor and presence.
- Gospel Established term shared with Quranic usage (Injil = the revelation given to 'Isa).
- Grace الفضل (Allah's bounty) and الرحمة (mercy, one of Allah's 99 names) both function in Islamic theology as favor responsive to obedience, not favor totally apart from merit.
- Intercession Shafa'ah is a live, contested category in Islamic theology - mainstream Sunni hadith affirms Muhammad's 'greater intercession' for his ummah at Judgment, while some reform currents restrict all intercession to guard tawhid.
- Israel In contemporary spoken Arabic 'Isra'il' is overwhelmingly associated with the modern nation-state and the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, not primarily with Jacob's given name or the biblical people.
- Prophet Correct and Quran-affirmed (Jesus is a nabi in Islam too), but risks readers stopping at 'prophet' the way Islam's khatam an-nabiyyin (seal of the prophets) doctrine treats Muhammad as superseding and finalizing all prior prophetic revelation.
- Sanctification The Spirit's ongoing work of making believers holy, not ritual purification (wudu/ghusl) achieved through washing rites.
- Seed Of David Romans 1:3; conveys physical lineage and OT covenant fulfillment.
- Sin Islamic anthropology holds each person is born in a state of natural purity (fitrah) and denies inherited sin - each soul bears only its own deeds on the scale (mizan), not Adam's.
Medium
- Church الأمة (ummah) is the specific pan-Islamic term for the worldwide community of Muslims and must never be borrowed for 'church.' In everyday usage al-kanisah often denotes the physical building of a minority religious community rather than the living, gathered people of God; reinforce the latter sense explicitly.
- Covenant 'Ahd also covers generic pledges and treaties in everyday Arabic; retain the relational, unilaterally-initiated biblical covenant sense rather than a mutual contractual one.
- David Shared Quranic figure (a prophet-king associated with the Zabur/Psalms), generally positively regarded, but the Quranic Dawud carries less of the covenant-king typology pointing forward to a messianic heir; supply that context explicitly.
- Fellowship الشركة shares its ش-ر-ك root with shirk (associating partners with God, Islam's cardinal sin) - an uncomfortable resonance even though the senses are unrelated.
- Gentiles الكفار (unbelievers) is a loaded Islamic religious-judgment term and must never be used for the ethnic-neutral sense of 'Gentiles.' الأمم (the nations, plural) shares a root with the loaded singular الأمة (Ummah) but the plural generic sense is safe and standard.
- Holy Shares the ق-د-س root with al-Quds (Jerusalem) and al-Quddus (one of Allah's names) - generally safe shared vocabulary.
- Kingdom Of God Al-Malik (The Sovereign) is one of Allah's 99 names, so malakut carries appropriately majestic connotations.
- Mission الرسالة (risalah) is also the technical term for a prophet's own prophetic commission (Muhammad's risalah); prefer الإرسالية for the corporate sending/mission sense to avoid that comparison.
- Peace In Romans 5:1, relational and legal peace secured through justification, not the greeting-word sense of al-salam nor الطمأنينة's Sufi/Quranic sense of subjective heart-tranquility attained through dhikr (remembrance).
- Power Of God Al-Qawiyy (The Strong) is one of Allah's names; broadly compatible concept, low collision risk beyond standard care.
- Providence Leans toward benevolent divine care and attentiveness rather than impersonal decree, but still needs to avoid drifting into folk qadar fatalism (see 'election').
- Saints الأولياء (awliya', 'friends of God/saints') carries strong Sufi devotional-veneration connotations (intercessory shrine saints) foreign to Romans 1:7's sense of all believers set apart as holy.
- Spiritual Gifts Always pair with الروحية; المواهب alone reads as natural talent or artistic ability, not Spirit-given supernatural enablement.