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The Prophet's
miracle
Prophets and
Miracles
Divine Prophets have always been sent with clear signs, so
that men might be convinced that they had come from God. For this
reason those who have souls like polished mirrors and like clear
transparent springs, glistening and pure so that they can
recognise these signs commit themselves and have faith; like the
magicians of Pharaoh's time who, when they saw the amazing
miracle of Musa (A.S.), how the staff became a poisonous serpent,
and understood that this was beyond the power of a human being,
believed in him and ignored Pharaoh's intimidation.
The disciples of 'Isa (A.S.) also saw with their own eyes the
effects of his breath when he breathed into the bodies of the
dead, and, by the will of God, raised the dead and gave them
life. They were attracted to him, and the souls and spirits of
the dead were given everlasting life through faith in 'Isa
(A.S.). The Prophet of Islam, who was the last prophet and the
best and greatest of them, and who brought an everlasting
religion, the perfection of all Divine religions, which will last
till the Resurrection, came at the time of his mission with clear
signs from God, so that he could be clearly a proof of the
legitimacy of His true and perfect religion.
* * *
The Qur'an,
the everlasting miracle.
Thus it was that the Qur'an, the everlasting document of
Islam, appeared on the horizon of human thoughts and ideas. The
torch which will always shine at the apex of the great religion
of Muhammad (S.A.) at the highest peak of human intellects, as
long as the sun rises in the East. It is a brilliant divine sign
whose lights, like the rays of the sun, are essential in every
era and century and for always, for the continuance of life and
the safeguarding of the happiness of all races of humanity.
Within this framework and on this foundation, all that is
necessary for man's guidance has come. It elucidates the
foundations of belief and also the relation of man and God and
the ways of strengthening that relation in words with the
softness of the clear waters of murmuring brooks, and the
firmness of the standing mountains, attractive, eloquent and
strong. It describes the social responsibilities of man; it
teaches the ways and the rules of social behaviour. It puts an
end to class differences and unequal divisions. It wishes the
highest in man and his borotherhood and equality and his
elevation.
* * *
Unequalled
Eloquence
Being conversant with vocabulary and having a good knowledge
of words at one's fingertips is not such a great difficulty, but
their combination and arrangement and harmonisation in a style
which has regard for eloquence and fluency, and the construction
of phrases with a variety of expression yet in the same way in
which they arise in the mind, is the most important skill, and it
is something which is not practicable without observing the
narrow rules of literary exactness, and using craftsmanship and
eloquence. In the art of eloquence, it is said that for eloquence
in any speaking or writing it is necessary to observe three
principles.
1) Proficiency in words and their meanings.
2) Power of thought and subtlety of eloquence.
3) Power of expression, or skill with the pen.
But it must always be kept in mind that although all the rules
and requirements of eloquence may be heeded, no one can claim
that his speech or writing is always the best, and that no one
can parallel him. However, Allah the Exalted, Whose range of
power and knowledge is without limit, has so variously decorated
His words in the Qur'an with arrangements and harmonisations of
words that no one, be he the most eloquent man on earth, can
bring its like. And this is the secret of the eternity of the
Qur'an, the |everlasting prophetic document of Hazrat Muhammad
(S.A.). The Qur'an, according to the testament of history, shone
at that time when the Arabs were at the zenith of their literary
development.
The famous poets and great orators, Imra'ul-Qais, Labid, etc.,
who are still counted as outstanding geniuses in the field of
literature, wrote poems and gave orisons which sometimes reached
the limits of greatness and which were written on curtains and
golden plaques and attached to the wall of the Ka'abah. But, with
the rising of the brilliant sun of the Qur'an, all of these lost
their light and were eclipsed like the stars. The eloquent Arabs
were left bewildered by the eloquence of the Qur'an, which was
such that the enemies who were full of hate for Islam and
Muhammad (S.A.), who even took to the sword to wipe him and his
religion out, were unable, with all their efforts, to find even
one short mistake in the language and expression of the Qur'an.
* * *
The Enemies'
Judgment
It was the time of Hajj. People were coming to Mecca from
everywhere, and the Quraysh were uncomfortable from fear that the
news of Muhammad's prophethood might have an effect on the new
arrivals. So a group of the Quraysh, with Walid at their head,
gathered round them and related what unjust things they could say
about the Prophet and thus dissuade the new arrivals from meeting
him. Then when they were gathered, one of them said, "Let us
say this man is soothsayer." "They will not believe
us," said Walid, "for his speech is not like the
sayings of soothsayers." "Let us say he is mad,"
someone else volunteered. "No one will accept that,"
Walid replied, "because his speech and behaviour are not
like a lunatic's." "We shall say he is a poet,"
they said. "This also will not work, because Arabs know all
kinds of poetry, and his words are not like a poem."
"We shall say he is a sorcerer." "Sorcerers have
special methods, like tying knots and blowing on them, and
Muhammad does nothing like this." Then Walid himself
declared, "I swear by God, the speech of that man has a
special sweetness and pleasantness. His speech is like a tree,
luxuriant, with steady deep roots and branches which bend down
laden with fruit. Thus we can say to people that his speech is
bewitched, because it causes separation between father and child,
wife and husband, sister and brother.'' To discover the Qur'an's
eloquence, and also to find out that it is at the summit of
eloquence, non-Arab speakers can turn back to the sayings of
those Arabs who were experts in the language of those days and
which are recorded in history, and also to present day authors
who write on this subject, and to the acknowledgments of those
specialists in this branch. Fortunately, from the time of the
Prophet (S.A.) till now, all specialists in the art of Arabic
eloquence have confessed to the unparalleled eloquence of the
Qur'an, and have been overwhelmed in the face of it. For example,
the famous contemporary Arab writer Abdulfatah Tabbarah writes:
"Arab history tells us of many famous men, knowledgeable in
the best poetry and prose, like Ibn al-Muqaffa', Jahiz, ibn
al-'Amid, Farazdaq, Bashshar, Abu Nuwas, Abu Tammam and so forth,
but all of them have shown humility when faced with the Qur'an,
and have of necessity confessed that the great Qur'an is not of
the words of man, but a Divine revelation.'' Dr. Taha Husayn, the
powerful contemporary Egyptian writer, said: The Qur'an
transcends the limits of prose and poetry, because it has special
qualities which cannot be found in any poem or prose. So the
Qur'an cannot be called poetry or prose, rather it should be
said:" It is the Qur'an, that is all."
* * *
Harmonisation
of its Themes
The speech or writing of a person, however skillful or
eloquent he may be, will not be uniform in all conditions and
circumstances. In particular, the works which appear in the days
of any author's first writings are very different from the works
which come after many years and as the result of much experience
and repeated practice; the later works are almost always better.
But the Qur'an, in that it was sent down in the course of 23
years, and in that it was revealed in various circumstances and
like a long flowing river passed over various stoney places,
rapids, narrows, valleys and plains, and witnessed many amazing
events, it remained forever, like a spring, clear and fresh. The
unity and harmony of the themes and the style and expression of
the Qur'an are a source for wonder. We see this wonder reach its
apex, and notice in the contents of the Qur'an that many
different subjects are dealt with, but the style and unity of
expression remain constant. It is clear that if someone, when he
reached a stage of mastery over a special subject, shows what he
can do, he may display brilliance, but if he undertakes something
in another branch of which he is not a master, he will not
produce any distinctive work. But the Qur'an shines to an amazing
degree in every area.
* * *
Scientific
Wonders in the Qur'an
Although the first and basic aim of the Qur'an, according to
what it says itself, is only to guide man to the great road of
contentment and prosperity in the life of this world, the world
of man, but on the way, in pursuing this aim, it expresses many
truths from human knowledge in the natural sciences, in
physiology and astronomy. And this is itself another great sign
of the wonder of the Qur'an. For the Prophet, according to the
definite testimony of history, had never studied, grew up in an
environment completely devoid of human knowledge and science
(except literature), and was far from the centers of science of
those days - Greece, Rome and Iran. Now let us see some
indications of this wonder.
1. Meteorology is a very new science. The knowledge of former
people about the phenomena of clouds, wind, rain and snow did not
go beyond conjecture and what they could see, and, generally
speaking, it had an air of imaginativeness and chance and was
never established on a scientific basis. Captains and farmers
both had their signs and indications for forecasting wind and
rain, but they did not really understand these phenomena.
Thus things went on for thousands of years, till, in the 17th
century A.D., the thermometer, and in the 19th century the
telegraph, and, gradually, other things necessary for meteorology
were invented and discovered. In their turn, scientists settled
down to research, till, in the first half of the 20th century,
the Norwegian scientist, Byerkness, succeeded in discovering the
general laws of the formation and movements of clouds and the
occurrence of storms and rains in all places. After him, the
extent of discoveries in this science, as in other areas,
progressed: the rain-bearing properties of clouds, how rain is
released from them, the formation and occurrence of hail, matters
relating to thunderbolts and thunder and lightening and storms in
tropical areas, air currents near the surface of the earth, and
other matters, till knowledge reached extensive limits. But
fifteen centuries ago, when the Qur'an told about the winds and
the rain and other phenomena, it was right when it told us about
the latest, newest discoveries of meteorology.
For example, it has now been proved that it is possible for a
cloud to reach saturation point but to yield no rain, and for it
to be just microscopic particles tiny enough to hang suspended in
the air and not to fall and cause rain; however, by means of
invisible particles of salt which are blown by the wind from the
surface of the sea it will rain. Or, something more important;
the humidity in the air gathers round the crystallised snow
flakes which lie at high altitudes and which are scattered by the
wind. Eventually small drops and the first rain unite together,
and, as a result of mixing and colliding together in the wind,
they gradually become bigger and bigger, and because of their own
relatively heavy weight fall from the massed clouds. This is what
the Qur'an made clear 15 centuries ago:
"And We send winds for making fruitful, and then We
send down water from the sky, thus We give it unto you to drink
of it." (XV;22)
2. Until the invention of the aircraft and the possibility of
high-altitude flying, man's knowledge and experience did not
encompass needles of ice beyond the clouds. Till then no one knew
that mountains of ice-needles existed in the sky above man's
heads. But the Qur'an is very clear when it says:
"He sendeth down from the sky, from mountains
therein, hail..." (XXIV;43)
3. Living things in other worlds. Man, with the help of his
knowledge of space, has set foot on the moon, but the matter of
the existence of living things on other worlds has not proceeded
beyond theory, and we can say that, from many signs, only it is
possible that there are living things such as animals or man on
some other planets and stars. But the Qur'an declares
unambiguously:
"And of His signs is the creation of the heavens and
the earth and of what He hath spread out in both of them of
animate beings, and for their gathering together when He willeth,
He is All-PowerfuL" (XLII;29)
4. In Surah 36, verse 36, we have:
"Glory be to He Who created all the pairs of what the
earth produces, and of themselves, and of what they know
not."
And in Surah 20, verse 53, we read:
"And He sent down water out of the sky, and therewith
We have brought forth various pairs of plants."
In times when man's knowledge did not permit the respected
interpreters of the Qur'an to know that plants and growing things
came in pairs and couples, they interpreted and observed pairing
in classes, species or by form and matter or other philosophical
terms which do not exist in the pages of the Qur'an. But today,
on the basis of new research, it has been discovered that not
only are men and animals created in pairs, but other living
things also. One of the most amazing phenomena in the world is
the pairing and fertilizations of plants, which is all explained
in natural science books.
* * *
The Qur'an
Makes a Challenge
Not only from the point of view of eloquence, but also, as we
have seen, in the fields of human ideas and society, and for all
levels of understanding, the Qur'an is a miracle. For
rhetoricians it has its eloquence, for philosophers its wisdom,
and for scientists its different kinds of knowledge. For all
these reasons the Qur'an addresses all people and says: "If
you say this book is the word of man, bring its like and its
equal."
"Say: 'If man and jinn banded together to produce the
like of this Qur'an, they would never produce its like, not
though they back one another." (XVII;88)
"Or do they say: 'He has forged it.'? Say: 'Then bring
you ten surahs the like of it, forged; and call upon whom you are
able, apart from Allah, if you speak truly. ' Then if they do not
answer you, know that it has been sent down with Allah's
knowledge, and that there is no god but He." (XI;13-14)
"and if you are in doubt about what We have sent down on
Our servant, then bring a Surah like it." (II;23)
But we see from the testimony of history from then till now no
one has had the courage to do this and produce its like. Of
course, during the time of Muhammad (S.A.) and after his death,
some Arabs, like Musailemah, Sajah and Ibn Abi'l-'Awja', planned
to challenge it but they were not able, and eventually confessed
to their incapacity. In the time of the Prophet (S.A.), the
enemies of Islam, who used the most awful means in their work,
torturing the Muslims, laying economic boycotts on them, plotting
to kill Muhammad (S.A.), and so forth, had no one who could do a
simple thing like bringing one surah like the Qur'an. In the
present day, too, those who spend millions of dollars trying to
destroy Islam would certainly attack it in this inexpensive and
easy way (bringing a surah like the Qur'an) if they could. If
they had been able to do that up to now, it would have been a
victory for them and the end of Islam and the news would have
been blown on all the trumpets of the world's newsmen.
In the end it is necessary to remind ourselves that if we get
to know the Qur'an, or get to know it better and put its great,
magnificent and precise project into action, greatness will be
ours, and more. The huge edifice of our, the Muslims, greatness
collapsed when we stopped putting the commands of this heavenly
book into practice. So we fell down, we were satisfied only with
the name of Islam. Our departed greatness will return when we
leave this crooked way and, starting again, become new Muslims
and put the Qur'an at the top of the sights of our hearts and our
wisdom, and make it an example for life, as the Prophet said:
"When calamities encompass you like the darkness of the
night, reach for the Qur'an." (Usul al-Kafi, vol. 2, p. 599)
* * *
(The Roots of Religion, p. 136-146).