Not really. Early commentators? Please name them and show what they said.
You cut and pasted this.
Ja'far ibn Mansur al-Yaman (d. 958), Abu Hatim Ahmad ibn Hamdan al-Razi (d. 935), Abu Yaqub al-Sijistani (d. 971), Mu'ayyad fi'l-Din al-Shirazi (d. 1078) and the group Ikhwan al-Safa also affirm the historicity of the Crucifixion, reporting Jesus was crucified and not substituted by another man as maintained by many other popular Quranic commentators and Tafsir. More recently,
Mahmoud M. Ayoub, a professor and scholar, provided a more symbolic interpretation for Surah 4 Verse 157:
You have completely missed one of the main statements that "Quran clearly says" and focused on the fringe that seems to help you. I understand why.
I already told you that you would pick some fringe muslims, not general muslim scholars. Thats exactly what you have done. Anyway you picked Ishmaili Shii, and a group of people who are unknown, fringe, cultish, and is a so called "small secret group". So what you claimed about "Early Islamic commentators" is absolutely false.
You are ignoring the Quran. You have thrown the Quran under the bus to further your faith. Thats acting against God who you claim revealed the Quran.
Now lets understand Jafar ibn Mansur al Yaman. Do you know that he was an Ismaili evangelist who worked for the Fatimid government and assisted spread Ishmaili faith where ever he could? Do you know that he claimed some skills that the Quran says is available only to God? He was not a "commentator" or a "Mufassireen" and he never ever claimed to have been. Thus, your claim is false Adrian. Prior to making statements like this and cutting and pasting from somewhere do some research. Or, this is just blind faith. I knew you would go to some fringe people and cut and paste from some wikipedia article as evidence, which is why I said what Muslims believe is not relevant. This is about Bahai belief, and the text of the Qur'an. Unless you embrace all of those Ishmaili's and secret groups you have given above as commentary you think helps you. Tell me. Who wrote the Kithab Al Kashaf? How many years after he died? Have you even read the book?
Ill tell you what. Why dont you read a Tafsir. Since you are embarking on early "Islamic commentators", go to Tafsir of Ibn Abbas. What do you say? That has more authenticity than Kashaf with at least an Isnad.
Be genuine in your research Adrian.