Material on the Authenticity of the Qur’an & Allah
The Weight of Evidence
Picture:Page of the Quran |
The Quraish decided that the only convincing
propaganda they could make against the Prophet, peace be upon him, was that the
magic of his speech turned a man away from his father, wife, brother and
family. So Abu Lahab would wait on the road ways into Mecca in the Hajj season,
and warn the people from listening to Muhammad’s speech. Tufail ibn Amr, chief
of the Daws tribe and a distinguished poet, was one such man accosted by the
Meccans, as he himself mentioned: “I approached Mecca. As soon as the Quraish
leaders saw me, they came up to me and gave me a most hearty welcome and
accommodated me in a grand house. Their leaders and notables then gathered and
said: ’O Tufayl, you have come to our town. this man who claims that he is a
Prophet has ruined our authority and shattered our community. We are afraid
that he would succeed in undermining you and your authority among your people
just as he has done with us. Don’t speak to the man. On no account listen to
anything he has to say. He has the speech of a wizard, causing division between
father and son, between brother and brother and between husband and wife.’ They
went on telling me the most fantastic stories and scared me by recounting tales
of his incredible deeds. I made up my mind then not to approach this man, or
speak to him or listen to anything he had to say. The following morning I went
to the place of worship to make tawaf around the Ka’abah as an act of worship
to the idols that we made pilgrimage to and glorified. I inserted cotton in my
ears out of fear that something of the speech of Muhammad would reach my
hearing. As soon as I entered the place of worship, I saw him standing near the
Ka’abah. He was praying in a fashion which was different from our prayer. His
whole manner of worship was different. The scene captivated me. His worship
made me tremble and I felt drawn to him, despite myself, until I was quite
close to him. Notwithstanding the precaution I had taken, God willed that some
of what he was saying should reach my hearing and I said to myself: ‘What are
you doing, Tufayl? You are a perceptive poet. You can distinguish between the
good and the bad in the poetry. What prevents you from listening from what the
man is saying? If what comes from him is good, accept it, and if it is bad,
reject it.’ I remained there until the Prophet left for his home. I followed
him as he entered his house, and I entered also and said: ‘O Muhammed, your
people have said certain things to me about you. By God, they kept on
frightening me away from your message so that I even blocked my ears to keep
out your words. Despite this, God caused me to hear something of it and I found
it good. So tell me more about your mission.’ The Prophet, peace be upon him,
did and recited to me Surah al-Falaq. I swear by God, I had never heard such
beautiful words before. Neither was a more noble or just mission ever described
to me. Thereupon, I stretched out my hand to him in allegiance and testified
that there is none worthy of worship except Allah and that Muhammed is the
Messenger of Allah. This is how I entered Islam. Even the leaders of Quraish
were unable to resist hearing the Qur’an.”
The Seerah (i.e. Prophetic biography) of Ibn
Ishaq reports one incident when Abu Sufyan, Abu Jahl and Al-Akhnas snuck out of
their houses at night to listen to the Prophet reciting the Qur’an - hiding in
their places until dawn. On the way home, they met and reproached one another,
saying: “Don’t do it again, for if one of the weak minded fools see you, you
will arouse suspicion in their minds.” This happened three nights in a row,
until they took from each other a solemn oath not to do it again. Utba bin
Rabi’a, a chief of Quraish, during one of their meetings in which they
discussed possible means to stop Muhammed’s preaching, suggested to make some
proposals to Muhammed and “give him whatever he wants, so he will leave us in
peace.” Their leaders agreed, so Utba went and sat by the Prophet, peace be
upon him, and said: “Oh my nephew, you are one of us as you know, of the
noblest of the tribe and hold a worthy position in ancestry. You have come to
your people with an important matter, dividing their community thereby and
ridiculing their customs, and you have insulted their gods and their religion,
and declared that their forefathers were unbelievers, so listen to me and I
will make some suggestions, and perhaps you will be able to accept one of them.”
The Prophet agreed, and he went on: “If what you want is money, we will make
you our chief so that no one can decide anything apart from you; if you want
sovereignty, we will make you king, and if this ghost which comes to you, which
you see, is such that you cannot get rid of him, we will find a physician for
you, and exhaust our means in getting you cured, for often a familiar spirit
gets possession of a man until he can be cured of it.” The Prophet, peace be
upon him, listened patiently, and then said: “Now listen to me”. The Prophet,
peace be upon him, then recited from the beginning of Surah Fussilat (41) until
the verse of prostration, were the Prophet prostrated, and all the while Utba
listened attentively, sitting on his hands, and leaning on them. The Prophet,
peace be upon him, then said: “You have heard what you have heard, Abu’l
Waleed; the rest remains with you.’ When Utba returned to his companions they
noticed that his expression completely altered, and they asked him what had
happened. He said that he had heard words that he had never heard before, which
were neither poetry, nor witchcraft. “Take my advice and do as I do, leave this
man entirely alone for, by God, the words which I have heard will be blazed
abroad. If the other Arabs kill him , others will have rid you of him; if he
gets the better of the Arabs, his sovereignty will be your sovereignty, his
power your power, and you will be prosperous through him.’ They said: ‘He has
bewitched you with his tongue”. To which he answered: “You have my opinion, you
must do what you think fit’.
Such was the power of the Qur’an that Umar ibn
Al-Khattab, who was on his way to kill the Prophet, discovered his sister and
her husband reciting the Qur’an. Upon reading twenty verses, instead went to
the Prophet, peace be upon him, and embraced Islam. So how is it possible for
an un-lettered and un-learned man, not versed in poetry, to be able to produce
a work of unrivalled eloquence and perfect rhetoric, so that even the assembled
experts and masters of all the forms poetry and the Arabic language were unable
to produce the like of its smallest chapter? Indeed they chose rather to fight
the Prophet, peace be upon him. Thus the flower of their nobility were killed,
and their trade and reputation destroyed. How could they choose this rather
than counter the verses of Qur’an? It is as at-Tabari wrote in the introduction
to his Tafseer (commentary on the Qur’an): "There can be no doubt that the
highest and most resplendent degree of eloquence is that which expresses its
self with the greatest clarity, making the intention of the speaker evident and
facilitating the hearer’s understanding. But when it rises beyond this level of
eloquence, and transcends what man is capable of, so that none of the servants
of God is able to match it, it becomes a proof and a sign for the Messengers of
the One, the All-powerful. It is then the counterpart of raising the dead and
curing of lepers and the blind, themselves proofs and signs for the Messengers
because they transcend the realm of the highest attainment of man’s medicine
and therapy . . .". Continuing on, at-Tabari says: ". . . it is
obvious that there is no discourse more eloquent, no wisdom more profound, no
speech more sublime, no form of expression more noble, than this clear
discourse and speech with which a single man challenged a people at a time when
they were acknowledged masters of the art of oratory and rhetoric, poetry and
prose, rhymed prose and soothsaying. He reduced their fancy to folly and
demonstrated the inadequacy of their logic. He dissociated himself from their
religion and summoned all of them to follow him, accept his mission, testify to
its truth, and affirm that he was the Messenger sent to them by their Lord. He
let them know that the demonstration of the truth of what he said, the proof of
the genuineness of his prophethood, was the bayan (the clear discourse), the
hikma (the wisdom), the furqan (the criterion between truth and falsehood),
which he conveyed to them in a language like their language, in a speech whose
meanings conformed to the meanings of their speech. Then he told them that they
were incapable of bringing anything comparable to even a part of what he
brought, and that they lacked the power to do this. They all confessed their
inability, voluntarily acknowledging the truth of what he had brought, and bore
witness to their own insufficiency...".
If we examine analytically the claim of anyone to
Prophethood then there are three possibilities concerning such a claim. The
first possibility is that the individual is a liar. The second possibility is
that the individual sincerely believes he or she is receiving revelation, but
is only suffering some form of delusion, and the third is that the individual
really is receiving revelation, and is speaking the truth. It is interesting to
mention some of the arguments raised by the Christian and secularist
Orientalists against Muhammad, peace be upon him, because taken as a whole they
offer a conclusive proof in his favour. One school of thought has suggested, in
essence, that Muhammad was a liar and a fabricator; that he learnt from various
rabbis and Christian priests, and during his various retreats to the Mountain
of Light, composed the Qur’an. Some have tried to soften these accusations by claiming
that he was motivated by a sincere desire to reform his people, and so invented
Islam to achieve this. Others accuse him of more worldly interests and cite the
large number of wives as a proof of this. This approach has been rejected
altogether by the second school, who upon observing the evidence of Muhammad’s
character which places him far above lying and deceit, and the reality of his
life style which was a paragon of simplicity and even poverty. Having found no
substantiating proof that he had any rabbi’s or priests as teachers, and the
complete acceptance of his claim by his close family and wives, to whom any
duplicity would inevitably have been exposed, have claimed that he was totally
sincere in his claim to prophethood, and that he truly believed that he was a
prophet receiving revelation. They, also unable to accept the possibility that
Muhammad truly was a Prophet, attempt various psycho-analytical explanations,
such as the Qur’an being a voice of the subconscious, or the revelation being bought
on by trances induced by epileptic fits. The basic claim being that Muhammad
was deluded. We will not attempt to refute these accusations in detail here.
The cursory examination of the opposing positions will suffice. What makes this
a conclusive proof in Muhammad’s favour is that he could not be a calculating
liar and be deluded at the same time. A man who sincerely believes that he is a
Prophet, does not sit down thinking and planning what he will say the next day,
because he believes that God is going to reveal it to him! Yet the opponents of
Islam need both to explain the phenomena of Muhammad. He needs to be a cunning
and calculating deceiver in order to explain the information and linguistic
inimitability of the Qur’an, yet he needs to be deluded in order to explain his
obvious sincerity. If one takes these two bodies of information together the
only way to reconcile them is the third possibility, that he was indeed what he
claimed to be - the Messenger of Allah.
Indeed, the Quraish found it very hard to produce
a convincing argument against Muhammad, peace be upon him. They knew that
Muhammad, peace be upon him, was unable to produce the likes of the Qur’an,
either in its eloquence, or in the knowledge it contained. They were also
familiar with his character and personality, and admitted that he had been the
best, most trusted and well liked amongst them. Even Abu Lahb, the Prophet’s
persistent enemy, said: "We don’t call you a liar, Muhammad, we just don’t
believe in what you have brought." In reality, Abu Lahab’s motivation for
refusing to accept Muhammad was tribal rivalry. When the Prophet, peace be upon
him, first received revelation to call his people openly to Islam, he went to
the top of Mount Saafa’ and called all the tribes of Mecca, until they had all
gathered or sent a representative. He said to them: "Oh my people, if I
was to tell you there was a band of horsemen about to attack from behind this
hill, would you believe me?" They all replied: "Yes! Why should we
not believe you, we never heard anything but truth from you!" So the
Prophet, peace be upon him, said: "I have come to warn you of a terrible
chastisement from your Lord." So Muhammad’s people testified to his
truthfulness, and that they had never heard lies from him. And as Heraculus,
the Byzantine Roman Emperor, said, when questioning Abu Sufyaan about the
Prophet, peace be upon him: "If he does not lie about men, then he would
not lie about Allah!"
The Quran
Reviewed by Engel
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