"Say We believe in God and what is revealed to us and what was revealed to Abraham and Ishmael and I`saac and Jacob and the Tribes, and what was entrusted to Moses and Jesus and the prophets from their Lord. We make no distinction between any of them and to Him we have surrendered."
(Quran 3: 84)
Almost all of us have been faced with the questioning of a
child by repeating one word over and over He can be very frustrating to us as he
asks Why? If you put a h1ife beyond his reach, he wants to know, Why? When you
explain it is sharp, he asks "Why?" And so you explain, in order to
cut fruit, and he asks, Why? And so it goes
It illustrates the dilemma of applying reason. What we have to
do when we apply reason is first to set standards of proof. We decide for
ourselves, "What will I be satisfied with if I find such and such and so
and so that constitutes for me a final proof?" We have to decide on that
first.
What happens though, is that on the really important issues,
the philosophical matters, thinkers set standards and eventually they may arrive
at their standards. They may arrive at the point which they say would constitute
a proof. But then they ask for a proof of the proof.
The key to avoiding this endless dissatisfaction is to satisfy
ourselves about standards first; to satisfy ourselves that such and such are a
list of criteria that constitute proof, satisfying proof, and then we test the
subjects that we examine. In particular I will apply this to the Qur'an.
Ask a thoughtful Christian why he is Christian, and he will
usually reply, "The miracle of Resurrection." The basis for his belief
being that about two thousand years ago a man died and he was raised from the
dead. That is his miracle, his 'touchstone', because all else depends on that.
Ask a Muslim, "Well, what is your miracle? Why are you a
Muslim? Where is your miracle?" and the Muslim can go over and take his
miracle off the shelf and hand it over to you because his miracle is still with
us today. It is the Qur'an; it is his 'touchstone'.
While all the prophets have their signs, Moses had the
competition with the magicians and the Pharaoh, Jesus healed the sick and raised
the dead and so on, one sign was given to the last of the prophets. According to
the Muslims, this is the Qur'an. And this one Sign is still with us. Does not
that after all seem fair, that if prophethood is to end that the last prophet
should bring something that stays with us so that, in fact, a Muslim who takes
his religion seriously suffers no disadvantage to Muslims who lived fourteen
centuries ago?
Those people who kept company with the Prophet had access to
no more of the necessary information than we have today. They had the Qur'an.
That was the sign for them. It is still a sign to us today, the same miracle.
Well, let us test the Qur'an. Suppose that if I say to a man,
"I know your father." Probably he is going to examine the situation
and see if it seems likely that I have met his father. If he is not convinced he
will start asking me questions like: "You know my father, you say, is he a
tall man? Does he have curly hair? Does he wear glasses?" and so on. If I
keep giving him the right answers to all these questions, pretty soon he is
going to be convinced. "Well I guess this man did meet my father like he
said." You see the method.
Here in the Qur'an we have a book which claims that is author
is one who was present at the beginning of the universe, at the beginning of
life. So, we have a right to address that author and say, "Well, tell me
something prove to me that you were there when the world began, when life
began." The Qur'an gives us an interesting statement. It reads:
"Have not the disbelievers seen that the Heavens and
the Earth were one piece and we parted them? Will they not then
believe?"(21:30)
There are three key points here. First of all it is the
disbeliveers who are mentioned as being those who would see that the heavens and
the earth were one piece and then parted and would see that all life cam e to be
made from water.
As it happens the universally accepted theory of the origin of
the universe is now the Big Bang theory. It maintains that at one time all of
the heavens and the earth were one piece, the 'monoblock' as it is called. At a
particular point in time, this 'monoblock' burst and it continues to expand.
This gives us the universe we have today. This was a recent discovery, a recent
confirmation.
The Nobel Prize in Physics was awarded only a few years ago to
those who confirmed the Big Bang origin of the universe. It was only about two
hundred years ago that Leeuwnhoek and others perfected the microscope and
discovered for the first time that living cells are composed of about eighty
percent water.
Those Nobel Prize winners and the Dutchman who invented the
microscope were not Muslims. And yet they confirmed the vital statement that at
one time the universe was one piece, that life was made from water, just as this
verse says"
"Have not the disbelievers seen that the Heavens and
the Earth were one piece and we parted them? Will they not then
believe?"(21:30)
Well, this sounds like an answer to the question we stated
with when we ask the author: "Tell me something that shows me you were
present when the universe began when life began?"
Everyone must be committed to something. You have to put your
foot down some place. It is impossible to be neutral all time. There has to be a
point of reference in the life of any thinking individual. You have to take a
stand somewhere. The question, of course, is to put your foot down in the right
place. Since there is no such thing as a proof of a proof and so on, in order to
find the right place to put one's foot down, to take a stand, we have to search
and find that place and it is by a method that I hope to illustrate here.
It is a question of finding a point of convergence. You see,
we search for truth in many places and we begin to know that we are succeeding
in finding the truth if all our different paths start to converge; they start to
come together at the same point.
If we are examining a book, looking for evidence of divine
origin, and we are led to Islam, this is one path. If at the same time we are
examining the words of all those who were called prophets and we find ourselves
led to Islam, we have a firmly grounded basis for belief. We started looking for
truth in two different places and ground ourselves going down the path headed
for the same destination.
No one ever proves all things. We have to stop at some point
being satisfied with our standards as I have mentioned earlier. The point is, in
order to take a stand and to be sure it is in the right place we want to examine
all the evidence around us and see where does it lead us and anticipate this
point of convergence; to say it looks like all things are pointing to this
place. We go to that place and then look at the data around us to see if it fits
into place. Dos it now make sense? Are we standing in the right place?
Let me first show more of our examination of the Qur'an, and
then an examination of some words of prophets to find this point of convergence.
In chapter fifty-one, verse forty seven, it is mentioned that the heavens are
expanding. As I mentioned earlier, this is in connection with the 'Big Bang'
origin of the universe, as it is usually called, and it was in 1973 that the
Nobel Prize was awarded to three men who were confirming that, after all, the
universe is expanding.
The comments of Muslims over the centuries on this verse which
speaks of the heavens doing exactly that is ver interest. The wisest among them
had stated that the words are very clear, that the heavens are expanding, but
they could not imagine how that could be so. But they were content to leave the
words as they were, to say: "Allah knows best"
The Qur'an mentions a city by the name of Iram (89:7). The
city of Iram has been unknown to history, so unknown that even some Muslim
commentators, out of embarrassment for feeling apologetic for their religion,
have commented on this mention of the city in the Qur'an as being perhaps
figurative, that Iram was possibly a man and not a city.
In 1973 the excavation in Syria at the site of the ancient
city of Eblus uncovered the largest collection of cuneiform writings on clay
tablets ever assembles. In fact, the library discovered in Eblus contains more
clay tablets that are more that four thousand years old than all other tablets
combined from all the other sites.
Interestingly enough, you will find the details in the
National Geographic of 1978 which confirms that in those tablets the city of
Iram is mentioned. The people of Eblus used to do business with the people of
Iram. So here in these comes confirmation of the fact that, after all, there
really was an ancient city by that name, wherever it was. How did it find its
way into the Qur'an, we might ask?
Those Muslims who may have offered their commentary trying to
explain away this reference that they were uncomfortable with, were outsmarted
by the author of the Qur'an. They would attempt it. Primarily their actions
would involve trying to produce evidence that the author of this book had a
primitive understanding of the world around us.
For example, there is a word which is translated to usually in
Arabic as zarrah. This is usually translated 'atom' and it is usually thought of
in Arabic as being smallest item available at one time. Perhaps the Arab thought
it was an ant or a grain of dust. Today the word usually translated as 'atom'.
Those who would outsmart the author of the Qur'an have
insisted that, well, the atom is not after all the smallest piece of matter
because in this century it has been discovered that even the atom is made of
still smaller of matter. Is it then possible to outsmart the author who chose to
use this word? Well, there is an interesting in chapter ten, verse sixty one,
which speaks of items the size of a zarrah, (atom) or smaller. There is no
possibility in this subject someone is going to say a new discovery has outdated
the words of the Qur'an on the issue of the size of matter or the ultimate
particles. The verse talks about items the size of a zarrah (atom) or smaller.
Speaking of outsmarting the author of the Qur'an, the Islamic
point of view is that when a man embraces Islam, his past is forgiven from the
very beginning. This has been the invitation to Islam: come to Islam and all is
forgiven from the past.
But consider this. There is only one enemy of Muhammad, peace
be upon him, who is mentioned by name in the Qur'an: one Abu Lahab. In a short
chapter of this book, he is condemned to punishment for his sins.
As it happens, the man himself was alive for many years after
this revelation. He could therefore have finished Islam very easily. He needed
only to go to the Muslims to announce his conversion. They had in their hands
the revelation which said that this man is doomed to punishment. He could have
gone to Muslims and say: "I accept Islam, am I forgiven or not?"
He could have confused them so much as to finish this small
movement because he would have been pointing out to them that they were now in
confusion. The policy was instant forgiveness of the past, but their own
revealed scripture announced that he was not forgiven. As it was, Abu Lahab died
without accepting Islam.
In fact, the Qur'an confidently predicted a number of things
only a few years before they came to pass. The fall of the Persian Empire, for
example, was predicted in spite of the fact that it had just suffered a serious
military reverse. The evidence was all to the contrary. But in the chapter
entitled Rom, the fall of the Persian Empire who were recently victors over the
Romans was predicted.
When all the Muslims in the world could meet in one room, the
revelations were already discussing their future successes. In confidence, they
were planning for the day when they would be in charge of the city where they
were forced at that time to hide for their very lives.
Some people may like to find any number of things in the
Qur'an. But an honest method in examining this book, looking for evidence of the
Divine origin, is to take things at their value, to look for things that are
clear and to look in those places where we are invited to look. Remember the
passage that I quoted earlier: "Have not the disbelievers seen..."
This a common phrase of the Qur'an: "O Man, Have you not seen." The
invitation is to examine the evidence in these places. We are doing the sensible
thing if we examine the words used to look for the doubted meaning and to find
evidence of the Divine origin.
Each one of us is an expert on something. One does not have to
have a degree in a particular subject to decide that now, "I can take my
expertise to the Qur'an and see what I can find." We all now something for
some from our own experience and life.
I heard a story, several years ago in Toronto, of man who was
given the Qur'an to read. The man was a member of the merchant marines who spent
his life on the sea. When he read a verse in the Qur'an describing the wave on
the ocean, "waves within waves and the darkness between," he was
surprised because the description was just what he knew the situation to be.
When he returned the Qur'an to the man who gave it to him to read, he asked him
(because he was completely ignorant of the origins of Islam): "This
Muhammad, was he a sailor?" Well, of course, he was quite surprised to know
that the man spent his life in the desert. So he had to ask himself: "From
where did he get this knowledge of what looks like on a stormy sea?"
We all know something that we can be confident of and if we
can turn to the Qur'an to read what it says about that subject, we are asking
for confirmation of our belief in the Divine origin of the book.
A friend of mine from the University of Toronto, had
experience of dealing with a man who was doing his doctorate in psychology. He
chose as his subject: "The Efficiency of Group Discussion."
He suggested a number of criteria as to what constituted an
efficient discussion. He graphed the process; that is achieved a measure of the
efficiency of all groups in the discussions according to an index by his
system., On his graph he indicated the progress made by the discussion groups of
various sizes.
The interesting thing that happened which he did not expect to
find when he began his project was that, while there were some difference
between the size of an given group and how well they did in discussions, he was
surprised to find that groups of two were completely off his scale. In other
words, when two people sit down to discuss something, they were so much more
efficient than any other size of group that it went completely off his scale of
measurement.
When my friend heard about this, something went on at the back
of his mind. My friend, being a Muslim, thought there was something familiar
here about this idea. The psychology researcher was not a Muslim. He was
debating with himself on changing the topic of his thesis. Should he call it
'The Phenomenon of Two' or 'The Two Phenomena'? He was so surprised at his
discovery.
Meanwhile, my friend found that there is a verse in the
Qur'an, and he found it for himself on the same night, which speaks on
discussions and the size of groups and how efficient they are. And maybe we
should not be surprised to find that it is the groups that are two in numbers
that do the best in achieving results. The verse in the Qur'an reads, concerning
discussion groups, that when discussion the Qur'an one should sit alone and
reflect on its meaning or discuss it in groups of two.
For myself, as I said everyone knows something for sure or has
an interest and experience in life; my interest is in mathematics and logic.
There is a verse in the Qur'an which says:
"This a scripture whose verses are perfected and then
expounded."(11:1)
Which tells me that there are no wasted words in the Qur'an;
that each verse is perfected and then it is explained. It could not be in a
better form. One could not use fewer words to say the same thing or if one uses
more words one would only be adding superfluous information.
This directed my attention to a particular mathematical
subject, a logical subject, and I examined the Qur'an to see if I could find
something of what I knew to be the case.
A revolution in logic has occurred in the last one hundred
years, primarily over the difference between use and mention of words. A
structure of logic seemed to be in danger of collapsing about a hundred years
ago because it came to the attention of the people who studied these matters
that the structure was not quite sound. The issue involved 'self-reference' and
the use and the mention of words which I will explain briefly.
Aristotle's law of the 'excluded middle' was the statement
that every statement is either true false. About a hundred years ago, somebody
pointed out that the law of the excluded middle is a statement and is therefore
not a law after all. It could just as well be false as well as true.
This was a tangled knot for the logicians to untie until they
came to understand the difference between the use and the mention of a word.
When we use a word, we consider its meaning. When we mention a
word we are discussing the word itself. If I said Toronto is a large city, I
mean Toronto, that place, is a large cit. If I say Toronto has seven letters, I
am talking about the word 'Toronto'. In the first case I used the word and in
the second I mentioned the word. You see distinction.
Connecting these ideas and the idea that the Qur'an composed
of verses that are perfected and then expounded for us, consider the verse which
says:
"The likeness of Jesus before Allah is as the likeness
of Adam." (3:59)
It is very clear that what we have in the statement is an
equation. This verse goes on to explain how that is true because they both came
under unusual circumstances rather than having a mother and a father in the
usual human reproductive way. But more than that, I got to consider the use of
the mention of words.
The words are used clearly enough. Jesus is like Adam and by
Jesus and Adam, we mean those two men. But what about the mention of the words?
Was the author aware of the fact that if we were considering the words as words
themselves, this sentence also read that 'Jesus' is something like 'Adam'. Well,
they are not spelt with the same letters, how can they be alike in this
revelation? The only answer came to me fairly quickly and I took a look at the
index of the Qur'an.
The index of the Qur'an has been made available only since
1945. This book was the result of years of work by a man and his students who
assembled a book which lists every word in the Qur'an and where it can be found.
So, when we look up the word Isa (Jesus), we find it in the
Qur'an twenty-five times. When we look up Adam, we find it in the Qur'an
twenty-five times. The point is that they are very much alike in this book. They
are equated. So, following up on this idea, I continued to examine the index
looking for every case where something was set up as an equation, where the
likeness of something was said to be the likeness of some other thing. And in
every case, it works. You have to example a verse which reads:
"The likeness of this who reject our signs is as the
likeness of the dog." (7:176)
Well, the phrase is Arabic for 'the people who reject our
signs' could be found in the Qur'an exactly five times. And so is the Arabic
word for 'the dog' (al-kalb). And there are several instances of exactly the
same occurrence.
It was some months after I found this for myself that a friend
of mine, who is continuing this investigation with me, made a suggestion that
there are also some places in the Qur'an where one thing is said to be not like
another thing.
As soon as he mentioned this up to me, we both went for the
index and had a quick look at several places where on thing is said to be not
like another thing and counted their occurrence in the Qur'an. We were surprise
and maybe should not have been to find that, after all, they do not match up.
But an interesting thing does happen. For example, the Qur'an makes it very
clear in the verse that trade is not like interest. The two words will be found
six times for on and seven for the other. And so it is in every other case.
When one thing is said to be not like another, they over for a
difference of one time. It would be five of one and four of the other, or seven
of one and eight of another.
There is one interesting verse which, I felt, spoke directly
to me from right off the page. It mentions two words in Arabic, al-khabeeth (the
evil), and al-taib (the good). The verse reads:
"Say, the evil and the good are not comparable, even
though the abundance of evil will surprise you. So be mindful of your duty to
Allah, O Man of understanding that you may succeed."(5:100)
Well, I had a look at those two words in Arabic, the evil and
the food, and found it in the Qur'an that they both occur seven times. Yet the
verse here is saying that they are not comparable. I should not expect to find
that they occur the same number of times. But what does the rest of this verse
say?
"The evil and the good are not comparable. The
abundance of the evil will surprise you" and it did for there were too many
of them. But it continues:
"So be mindful of your duty to Allah, O Man of
understanding, that you may succeed."
So press on. Use your understanding and you will succeed. That
is what the verse said to me. Well, I found the answer in one verse further on
where it reads:
"Allah separates the evil from the good. The evil HE
piles one on top of the other, heaping them all together."
Here is the solution to the difficulty. While we have several
occurrences of al-taif (the good), according to the principle of this verse,
evil is separated from good and is piled one on top of the other and heaped all
together. We can not count them as seven separate instances
A favorite difficulty, or supposed difficulty, which critics
like to cite or have cited in the past years concerning the Qur'an is that,
apparently to their thinking, the author of this book was ignorant because he
advised the Muslims to follow the lunar instead of the solar year. The critics
say the author was unaware of the difference in the length of years, that if one
follows twelve lunar months one loses eleven days every year.
The author of the Qur'an was well aware of the distinction
between the length of the solar year and the lunar year. In chapter eighteen,
verse nine, it mentions three-hundred years and gives their equivalent as
three-hundred and nine years. As it happens, three hundred solar years is equal
to three -hundred and nine lunar years. Let us go back to my original scheme of
the occurrence of words in the Qur'an. The Arabic word for 'month', shahar, will
be found twelve times in the Qur'an. There are twelve months in a year. If we
find twelve months, how many days should we expect to find? The word in Arabic
is yaqum, and as it happens you will find that the word occurs three-hundred and
sixty five time in the Qur'an.
As a matter of fact, the original issue which had me interest
in looking up the occurrence of months and days was this distinction between the
solar year and the lunar year. Well, for twenty-five centuries it has been known
that the relative positions of the sun, moon and earth coincide every nineteen
years. This was discovered by a Greek by the name of Meton, and it is called the
'Metonic' cycle. Knowing this, I looked again to the index for the word 'year',
sanah and found, sure enough, that it occurs in the Qur'an nineteen times.
Now, what is the point of this perfect balance of words? For
myself, it shows the author was well aware of the distinction between using
words and mentioning words, a fine logical point. But more than that, it
indicates the preservation of this book.
After giving a lecture on the subject of the Qur'an , I
touched on some of these subjects and a questionnaire from the audience
afterwards said: "How do we know we still have the original Qur'an. Maybe
pieces of it have been lost or extra parts been added?" I pointed out to
him that we had pretty well covered that point because since these items, the
perfect balance of words in the Qur'an, have come to light only in this
generation, anybody who would have lost the portion of this book, hidden some of
it, or added some of their own would have been unaware of this carefully hidden
code in the book. They would have destroyed this perfect balance.
It is interesting to note too that, well, such a thing might
be possible to organize today by the use of a computer to coordinate all words
so that whatever thought you might have as to a meaning of a sentence or however
you might construe an equation out of a sentence, you could check for yourself
and the book will always have the balance of words.
If that were possible today, if it were possible fourteen
centuries ago, why would it be done and then left hidden and never drawn to the
attention of those who first saw this book? Why it would be left with the hope
of the author who contrived this, that maybe in many centuries someone will
discover it and have a nice surprise? It is a scheme that does not make sense.
We are told in the Qur'an that no questionnaire will come to
the Muslims with the question for which a good answer has not been provided, and
the best explanation for whatever his question. This verse says:
"For everything they say we are given something to go
back to them and reply." (25:33)
We looked again to the index of the Qur'an and we found the
word, qalu (they say), is found three hundred and thirty-two times. Now, what
would be the natural counterpart? The Arabic word, qul, which is the command
'say' and you will find at the index it also occurs three hundred and thirty-two
times.
An interesting feature of the Qur'an is that it replies to
critics as to its origin. That is, no one has yet come up with suggestion as to
where this book came from which is not commented on within the book itself.
In fact, the new Catholic Encyclopedia, under the heading
Qur'an, mentions that over the centuries there has been many theories as to
where this book came from. There conclusion: today, no sensible person believes
any of these theories. This leaves the Christians in some difficulty. You see,
all the theories suggested so far , according to this encyclopedia, are not
really acceptable to anyone sensible today. They are too fantastic.
Where did the book come from? Those who have not really
examined the Qur'an usually dismissed it as being, they say, a collection of
proverbs or aphorisms, saying that one man used to announce from time to time.
They imagined that there was a man who, from time to time during the day, will
think of some witty little saying and spit it out and those around him will
quickly write it down and eventually these were all collected and became the
Qur'an.
Those who read the Qur'an will find that it is not anything
like that at all. The collection of things said by the Prophet is the subject
and the content of the Hadith. But the subjects and contents of the Qur'an are
all in a form of a composition and explanation. I site as an example the
chapter, Yusuf, which is an entire story in great detail about on e particular
episode of one portion of the life of one man. It is a composition.
It is for this reason that virtually all those who have
actually examined the Qur'an usually refer to it as being the product of the
authorship as attributed to Muhammad and his 'co-adjudicators'. These were
supposed to be people who would sit with him and composed the Qur'an. You see
they imagined that the Qur'an was composed by a committee.
They acknowledged that there was too much information and it
was too well composed for one man to have assembled. So, they imagined that a
committee of men used to meet regularly, brought their various sources of
information, composed something and then handed to this man and told him,
"Go to the people tomorrow, this is your revelation." In other words,
it was a fraud concocted by a group of people. But what do we know about fraud?
The Qur'an reminds us as it says:
"Saw, now the truth has come, and falsehood neither
invents anything nor restores anything." (34:49).
It is hard to translate it into English precisely, but what
this verse is telling us is that falsehood is not the source of a new thing. A
new and truthful thing cannot come from falsehood and falsehood does not
restore, to our minds, the facts. Truth is in agreement with facts. Falsehood is
something else. So falsehood is empty. If something is born fraud, it will never
bring us new information. It will never endure; it will only collapse over a
period of time.
Another interesting verse is a challenge which is addressed to
those non-believers. It reads:
"Have they not considered the Qur'an, if it came,
other than Allah, surely they will find in it many inconsistencies."(4:82)
Here is a challenge to the reader. If you think you have an
explanation where this book came from, have another look at the book. Surely you
will be able to uncover some inconsistencies to support your case.
Imagine a student submitting a term paper or a final exam and
then writing at the bottom of the page a not to his teacher: "You will find
no mistakes in this paper. There are no mistakes on this exam." Can you
imagine the teacher letting that rest? The teacher would probably not sleep
until uncovering some inconsistency after a challenge like that. It is not the
way human beings speak. They do not offer challenges like that. But here we have
it in the Qur'an, a direct challenge saying: "If you have a better idea as
to where this book came from, here's all you need to do. Find some
inconsistencies."
There are critics who make the attempt, critics who try to say
the Qur'an contains inconsistencies. A publication that came to my attention
recently suggested that the Qur'an was contradictory on the subject of marriage,
because in one place, it says: "don't marry more than one wife unless you
can provide for them all," and in another place it says: "Don't marry
more than four." They see this as a contradiction. What they have is a
counter-distinction. In one case, the qualification for marrying more than one
has been given. In the other case a limitation on how many may be married is
given. There is no contradiction.
Critics are too quick to grab hold of something, give it an
interpretation, and then offer it as an excuse to escape the reality of this
document.
For critics who would attack the Qur'an and insist it contains
mistakes, we can use the same method as in our reply to Christians who claim
that Jesus is on record as claiming to be equal to God. Remember the three
categories of evidence offered. The evidence offered was insufficient, ambiguous
or impossible.
You see, if someone cites a verse from the Qur'an, trying to
show that it is a mistake, we only need to show that the verse cited is
insufficient to establish that there is a mistake or we need to show that the
verse cited cannot possible have the interpretation which the critic is giving
it. It will always fall into one of these three categories.
I had experience, on one occasion, describing some of the
contents in the Qur'an to a man who did not know the book I was talking about.
He sat next to me with the cover turned over. I just told him about the book,
what it contained and told him it was not the Bible. His conclusion was, the
book was miraculous. This man was a minister in a Christian Church. He said,
"Yes, that book could not possible have originated with the man and
therefore it must come from the devil, because it's not the Bible."
The Qur'an comments on this suggestion in chapter twenty-six,
verse two-hundred and eleven, as to those who would suggest that the book came
from the devil. It points out that it does not quite suit him, does it? Is this
how the devil misleads people? He tells them, worship none but God, he insists
that they fast, that they practice charity. Is this how the devil misleads
people?
Compare the attitude of someone like this, to the attitude of
the Jews who knew Jesus and opposed him until the very end. There is an episode
reported in the Bible where Jesus raised a man from the dead, one Lazarus, who
had been dead for four days. When Lazarus came out of the tomb, alive again
those Jews who were watching, what did they do? Did they suddenly say that this
man is a true prophet and become believers? No, the Bible says they immediately
discussed among themselves that "since this man is working on his signs
soon everyone will believe in him. We've got to find a way to kill him,"
and they attributed his miraculous powers to the devil. He raised that man by
the power of the devil.
Now, the Christians who read that episode will feel very sorry
for those Jews who had clear evidence right before their very eyes and attribute
the miracles to the devil. Does it not appear that they may be doing the same
thing when we illustrate what we have in the Qur'an and their final excuse is
only: "It originated with the devil."
There are those who insist that the Qur'an was copied, that it
originated in Christian and Jewish sources. As a matter of fact, a book
published in recent years called Worshipping the Wrong God has stated, as though
it were a fact, that after the first revelation of the Qur'an came to Muhammad,
peace be upon him, that his wife died and so he quickly married a Jew and a
Christian, and this is where he drew the rest of his sources for his book.
Well, they have the facts partly right. It was ten years after
the first revelation of the Qur'an that his wife died, and it was another ten
years after that when the Qur'an was virtually completed that he married a Jew
and a Christian.
Did he copy from Jewish and Christian sources? In the Qur'an,
the ruler of Egypt who opposed Moses is known as Fir'aun, not Pharaoh. The Jews
and Christians have always said 'Pharaoh'. It is easy for an Arab to say
'Pharaoh'. But in the Qur'an, it is Fir'aun, with an 'n'. Why? Surely the Jews
must have teased them about that and said: "You've got the word wrong. It's
'Pharaoh' and not Fir'aun." But they insisted on it and it continues that
way in the Qur'an, Fir'aun.
As it happens, this historical writings of Herodotus, the
Greek historian, exist to this day, and Herodotus comments on the ruler of
Egypt, being in his day and in the centuries before him, one man who went by the
title of Fir'aun.
Did the book copy from the Christians sources? The Qur'an
insists that Jesus was not crucified, that this was only an illusion, but that
the Jews who thought they crucified Jesus were mistaken because it was not
really so. Christians would have no part of that. As it happens, the idea that
Jesus was not really crucified is really very ancient and can be traced back to
the first century. But Christians who believed that were eliminated as heretics
within the first two-hundred years after the time of Jesus and they were not
teaching this doctrine anywhere around the Arabian Peninsula fourteen centuries
ago.
Could the author of the Qur'an have been copying from
Christian sources when he says that Jesus spoke to man as a babe (3:46) and in
later life? The Arabic word used indicates that he was still speaking to man and
teaching to them in the forties. The Christians have always maintained that
Jesus was gone by the time he was thirty-three. It indicates that there could
have been no copying. In fact, a man would have to be stubborn and insists on
the points as explained in the Qur'an in the face of Christian opposition who
would have said: "No! No! I wasn't like that. We tell the story
differently."
Now we go to the words of the prophets themselves, which
represent another path that leads to Islam. In the Persian scriptures, which
have been around for thousands of years, we read:
"When the Persians should sink so low in mortality, a
man will be born in Arabia whose followers will upset their throne, religion and
everything. The mighty stiff-necked ones will be overpowered. The house which
was built and in which many idols have been placed will purged of idols and
people will say their prayers facing towards it. His followers will capture the
towns of the Farsi, Entaus and Balkh, and other big places round about. People
will embroil with one another. The wise men of Persia and others will join his
followers." (Desature no.14)
The Muslims recognize this very quickly because the Ka'bah,
the building which all Muslims face in prayers everyday, was at one time filled
with idols and it was part of the mission of Muhammad , peace be upon him, to
purge the house of idols till today. It was in the next generation, after the
time of the Prophet that the wise men of Persia and others did join his
followers.
In the Bible, in Deuteronomy chapter eighteen, we have the
words of Moses who reports that God told him that H would raise up a prophet,
from among the brothers of the Israelites, like Moses.
Christians wish to apply this to Jesus, to say he was the
prophet like Moses. It is uncomfortable for them to recognize, however that
Jesus was not very much like Moses and Jesus had no father, no wife, no
children; he did not die of old age, and he did not lead a nation; all these
things Moses had or did. But they say, well, Jesus will return; he will return
as a victorious person, and so he will be more like Moses. Do they really expect
he will return to also acquire a father and a wife and children and then die of
old age? Not usually. Moreover, Jesus was an Israelite. The passage of scripture
says that this prophet that was foretold would be raised up among the brothers
of the Israelites, not from the Israelites.
In the third chapter of Acts, the disciple Peter speaks to a
crowd of people and explains that Jesus has been take up and he is in heaven. He
will remain in Heaven and he cannot return until all the things that were
promised but God come to pass. So what are we still waiting for, does he tell
the crowd? He quotes this very saying of Moses saying:
"For God will raise up a prophet from among the
brothers of the Israelites like Moses..."
The point is very clear. Christians like to see this prophet
as being Jesus. But read carefully Acts chapter three, what it says is that
Jesus awaits a return. He cannot return until the fulfillment of this prophecy,
that another prophet has to come. Jesus spoke of it himself and the words
survived, just barely, but they survived in the bible. Jesus spoke of God
sending another 'Paraclete'.
There is a lot of argument over the meaning of this word 'Paraclete'.
For now we can leave that aside. What is a 'Paraclete'? It does not matter. The
first letter of John shows that Jesus was a 'Paraclete'. He is called a 'Paraclete'
and we have Jesus promising another 'Paraclete' is going to be sent. We lose a
lot by this word 'another' in English because it is ambiguous. If someone's car
breaks down, and it is a Toyota, and I say, '" I'll go get you another
car," maybe I mean, "I'll go and get you another Toyota because this
one you have is broken," or maybe I mean, "Forget Toyota, they're no
good; I'll go and get you a Datsun." It is an ambiguous word. But the
Greeks had a word for it. When they meant 'another' of the same kind, they said
aloes. When they meant another of a different kind, they said heteroes. The
important thing there is that when Jesus, who was himself a Paraclete, said
"God will send you another Paraclete" he used the word aloes, not
heteroes.
Christians want to say that this other 'Paraclete' that has
been sent was different from Jesus. It was not a man, it was a spirit. What
Jesus said was: God will send you another one like me, another man."
Muslims believe that Muhammad is the fulfillment of this prophecy by Jesus. The
Qur'an says that this man is mentioned in the scriptures of the Jews and the
Christians (see7:157).
Christians came to expect that the return of Jesus because of
a Jewish misunderstanding. 'Messiah' and 'Son of Man' have been given special
significance by the Jews, even though may people were called by this same name
as in the Bible. The Jews came to expect a victorious leader. When Jesus did not
turn out to be quite what many expected, they hatched the idea that he would
return some day and fulfill all these prophecies.
Suppose that someone observed Jesus two-thousand years ago,
and he left this planet, or he went to sleep for two-thousand years an returned
today to look for the followers of Jesus, who would he find? Who would he
recognize? Christians? I conclude with just this food for thought: the Bible
says very clearly that Jesus used to fast. Do Christians fast? Muslims fast; it
is obligatory on month every year. The Bible says that Jesus prayed by touching
his forehead to the ground. Do Christians pray in this manner? Muslims do. It is
characteristic of their prayer and no one on earth is probably ignorant of that
fact.
According to Jesus, he told his disciples to greet one another
with the expression, "Peace be with you." Do the Christians do that?
Muslims do, universally, whether they speak Arabic of not. The greeting for one
to another is Assalamu' alaikum (peace be with you).
The brother of Jesus in the Book of James, stated that no man
should suggest what he is about to do of highlight his plans for the next few
days in anyway without adding the phrase "if God wills." Do not say
"I will go here and there do this and that" without adding the phrase
"if God wills." Do Christians do that? Muslims do, whether they speak
Arabic or not. If they so much as suggest they are going downtown to pick up
some groceries, they will add Insha-Allah, which in Arabic means, "If God
wills."
These conclude my thoughts on this subject. May Allah guide us
always closer to the truth.
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