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The Miraculous Quran (part 1 of 11): My Path to Islam
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Description: One of the leading Islamic personalities in America, Jamaal Zarabozo, discusses the miracle of the Quran, as how it played an influence in his journey to Islam. Part One: An Introduction to this topic, along with a brief description of the Quran and the Prophet Muhammad.
By Jamaal al-Din Zarabozo (© 2007 IslamReligion.com)
- Published on 12 Mar 2007 - Last modified on 01 Apr 2008
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Opening Statement
Let me state at the outset that, after being Muslim for
many years now, if I were given the topic of “The Miraculous Quran,” as I see
it now, I would be emphasizing and discussing aspects that were completely
unknown to me at the time that I was studying Islam as a non-Muslim. I have
been studying the Quran for over thirty years now and it never fails to
fascinate me. In fact, the phenomenon of continually finding new fascinating
aspects of the Quran has been true for the Muslim scholars throughout the
years. Over the centuries, as they have spoken about the Quran, later scholars
recognize the miraculous aspects that the earlier scholars mentioned while
coming across other aspects that they consider no less remarkable and amazing. Thus,
for example, in the past century, we have had Aishah bint al-Shaati, Sayyid
Qutb and Mustafa Saadiq al-Raafi’ee all adding components to the overall theory
of the miraculous nature of the Quran.
Lately, many have emphasized what are called the “scientific miracles of the
Quran,” a topic we shall try to visit toward the end of this lecture.
However, this lecture is about “my story” and my path to
Islam via the Quran. Therefore, I will be emphasizing those aspects of the
Quran that influenced me the most at that time and I will give less time to
other aspects that I have studied in detail since then.
A Very Brief Introduction to the Prophet Muhammad and the
Quran
I am sure that most of you have some familiarity with
the Prophet Muhammad, may the mercy and blessings of God be upon him, and the
Quran but for some points that I will make later, I believe a very brief
introduction to the two is in order.
Muhammad was born around 570 years after the birth of
Jesus Christ. He was born in Mecca, in the Arabian Peninsula. The people of Mecca were devoted to idol-worship. The area was not known as a place of advanced
civilization or learning at its time. In fact, the Prophet Muhammad was
illiterate. At the age of forty, Muhammad received his first revelation. Although
he was known among his people as “the trustworthy,” the majority of the Arabs
belied him and soon after started a massive campaign to persecute those who
believed in him. After thirteen years of preaching in Mecca, the Prophet
himself left for the city of Medina, where he already had some followers. They
made him the leader of the city. The disbelievers of Mecca did not rest and
attempted to militarily squash the new faith. However, what was originally a
small band of Muslims grew in number and were able to withstand the onslaught
of the disbelievers. Within ten years, the Prophet himself led an army back to
Mecca and conquered it in a bloodless victory. Thus, Islam became victorious
in Arabia and began spreading throughout the world. The Prophet Muhammad, may
the mercy and blessings of God be upon him,, finally died in 632.
As for the Quran, it was revealed to the Prophet
Muhammad over a period of twenty-three years. It was revealed directly to him
via the angel Gabriel. He would receive the revelation and then convey it to
his followers. Thus, the Quran is very different from the Bible. There are no
human contributions to the Quran; it is only the revelation from God. In other
words, you will not find any stories about the Prophet written by his
Companions in the Quran. In fact, you will not even find in the Quran any of
the Prophet’s speech outside of what he stated to be the revelation of the
Quran. The Prophet’s own words have been kept completely separate from the
Quran.
One final note, the Quran is only in Arabic. The best
translation is not the Quran. Once you lose something in its original wording
and rely only on translation, the original is truly lost.
The Story of My Conversion and my Near Baptism
The story of my conversion is not the most fascinating. However,
one aspect is of interest: the affect that the Quran had on me.
My family moved to California from Spain. Thus, we were nominally Catholic. I had very little exposure to any religion until a friend
of mine in school invited me to their church. I started attending and this was
the first time that I began to read the Bible. I was definitely taking
everything very seriously. There then came the time to be baptized. I had no
problem with it except that I decided that, since this was the first religion I
was exposed to, I should just look around at other religions to make sure that
I was certain about what I was doing. I did not think this would actually
affect my final decision while, in reality, that near baptism led me to
becoming a Muslim.
I started studying about all religions I could find. This,
obviously, is what led me to the Quran.
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The Miraculous Quran (part 2 of 11): The Quran and Orientalists
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Description: One of the leading Islamic personalities in America, Jamaal Zarabozo, discusses the miracle of the Quran, as how it played an influence in his journey to Islam. Part Two: A comparison between the Quran and what Orientalists had to say about it.
By Jamaal al-Din Zarabozo (© 2007 IslamReligion.com)
- Published on 12 Mar 2007 - Last modified on 01 Apr 2008
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Studying the Quran in 1976: The Quran Versus many Non-Muslim
Writers
You should keep in mind that this took place in 1976. This
was before the Iranian Revolution and Islam being plastered all over the media.
I didn’t know any Muslims at the time. (I was living in a relatively small
college town and I incorrectly assumed that there were no Muslims there.) Thus,
there was no one trying to convince me of the truth of Islam. In fact, I
eventually converted to Islam before ever meeting a Muslim, doing my best to
learn the prayers from a book written by a missionary, T. P. Hughes’ The
Dictionary of Islam.
Therefore, the information I was receiving about Islam
came mostly from non-Muslims writing about Islam. There were very few books
available to me at that time written by Muslims. In fact, I only recall coming
across one work written by a Muslim, a relatively small work by Maudoodi. However, I was
able to find a couple of copies of the Quran translated by Muslims. In
particular, I was reading the translation by Abdullah Yusuf Ali.
In essence, it was truly the Quran versus a number of
works written by non-Muslims. In general, these non-Muslims were forced to
praise Islam every now and then but always tried to find some fault with the
very basis of the faith. Thus, they came up with many theories about the
Prophet Muhammad and the Quran. I would be reading their critique side-by-side
with the Quran.
Most of the authors I was reading were clearly saying
that the Quran was not a revelation from God but simply written by the Prophet
Muhammad, may the mercy and blessings of God be upon him. Such was the view
expressed by Richard Bell in The Qur'an: Translated With a Critical
Re-arrangement of the Surahs, Arberry in his introduction to
his translation of the Quran, Kenneth Cragg in The Call of the Minaret, ad
nauseum.
However, as Montgomery Watt noted, this in itself presented
a host of questions. If Muhammad were a phony, did he do what he did
maliciously? He was not known to be an insincere or malicious person
beforehand, what then led to his change? Furthermore, if he did it
maliciously, how did he come up with all of the information contained in the
Quran, especially while living in a place like Mecca? Did he have teachers; if
so, who were they and where is it documented that he had teachers?
To be frank, I was not very impressed with those who
claimed that the Prophet had some teacher who gave him all of the information
that later made up the Quran. In general, those authors would refer to chance
or one-time meetings between the Prophet and specific individuals. Thus, for
example, Muir and Margoliouth attributed the information found in the Quran to Baheerah,
a monk that the Prophet may have met in Syria during his youth while part of a
trading caravan, long before he claimed to be a Prophet. Such arguments are
flatly illogical and extremely far-fetched. I did not spend much time with
them.
Some critics were forced to admit that the Prophet
Muhammad was known to be an extremely honest and sincere person. They also
noted how he did not really materially benefit from his actions, as he continued
to live a very sincere and humble life. Therefore, they concluded that he was
honest and sincere but terribly deluded. But still, if he were deluded, where
did this information come from? Some made it seem like it was from his
subconscious. Anderson even called it “wishful thinking.” Others actually
said that he was suffering from epileptic seizures and that the revelations
were the result of such seizures. These theories may have been convincing to
anyone who simply read what these authors wrote without taking the time to read
and study the Quran itself. As shall be noted later in this lecture, there is
simply too much information in the Quran that could not have possibly have come
from one’s own subconscious.
Another common claim that I had read was that the
Prophet Muhammad was some kind of “nationalist” leader whose main goal was to
unite the Arabs. Typical of this way of thinking is what was stated in The
New Catholic Encyclopedia: “About the age of 40 he received his ‘prophetic
call’ to unite Arabs under a monotheism.”
This approach can be considered more complementary, as it does not seek to
ridicule the Prophet in any way. Yet, at the same time, it made no sense to me
just on the basis of one reading of the Quran. It is sufficient to note that
there is not one passage in the Quran that is addressed to the Arabs. In the
Quran, God speaks to humankind or the people, believers and disbelievers. If
this book were meant for the Arabs only, why are they never addressed directly
and, instead, these general terms that cross all of humanity are used?
In any case, the plethora of their different views
concerning the Prophet was a sign to me that something unfathomable to those
authors had occurred. This was all evidence to me that there was really
something to the Quran, as otherwise just could have just discounted it as a
trivial work, not worth the effort of refuting or discussing. It actually got
me even more interested in the Quran. This is something that you will see
again later: The works that should have dissuaded me from further pursuing the
Quran made me more convinced that I need to pursue it further.
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The Miraculous Quran (part 3 of 11): A Sacred Scripture Must be From God
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Description: In order for a religion to be true, it must be from God in a total sense, in part and parcel, and not merely its origin.
By Jamaal al-Din Zarabozo (© 2007 IslamReligion.com)
- Published on 19 Mar 2007 - Last modified on 01 Apr 2008
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My First Parameter: If it is God’s Religion I am Looking for,
the Sacred Scripture Must be From God
In my study of other religions, one of my goals was to
read each religion’s sacred scriptures directly, in order to understand
directly from the source what the religion was all about. This is obviously
what piqued my curiosity in the Quran.
I already had a strong belief in God and was convinced
of the existence of a Supreme Being. In fact, for a while, I was sometimes a
Christian and sometimes simply a deist, following in the footsteps of Voltaire
and many of the “founding fathers” of the United States.
Already believing in God, therefore, my first parameter for
a true religion was that the religion must have God as its original source. No
one can know the details about God except God. He is above and beyond the
realm of human experience. More importantly, no one knows how He should be
worshipped except Him. No one knows what way of life is pleasing to Him except
Him. Although humans are able to come to many sound conclusions about God, no
human could logically claim that he has somehow—independent of revelation from
God—discovered the way in which God should be worshipped and the way that is
pleasing to God. Thus, if the ultimate goal in one’s heart is to truly please
and worship God as He should be worshipped, then one has no alternative but to
turn to Him for guidance and direction.
Based on this first premise, any man-made religion is
not a logical alternative. No matter how hard humans may try, they cannot
authoritatively speak about how God is supposed to be worshipped.
It is important to note that this parameter does not
mean that one time God played a role in the formation of a specific religion. No,
this parameter means that the entire scope of the teachings come from God. There
are some religions that may have originated from God but, afterwards, their
adherents felt free to rely upon human reasoning to adjust, modify or alter the
religion. In the process, they actually created a new religion, different from
that which God had revealed. This, once again, completely defeats the purpose.
What God revealed does not need any improvement or change from humankind. Any
such change or alteration means a deviation away from what God revealed. Thus,
any change or alteration will only take humankind away from the true and proper
way of worshipping God. Furthermore, God is more than capable of revealing a
perfect revelation for any time or circumstance. If there were any need to
alter or change any of God’s laws, the authority for that also rests only with
God. In other words, God is free to change some of His laws due to His wisdom
and knowledge, for example, out of mercy or as a form of punishment upon His
servants. He may do this by sending a new revelation or even by sending a new
prophet. With that, there is no logical problem. But there is a grave problem
when humans take it upon themselves to “fix” God’s revelation.
Thus, the first parameter states that the religion
originates with God. However, this is not sufficient. The second parameter is
that the teachings from God must be preserved in their original form. The
logic behind this point should be obvious. If the original revelation came
from God but was then later tampered and distorted by humans, one now has a
mixture of God’s religion and human interpolation. This is no longer God’s
pure religion. Although this may seem like an obvious premise, it is amazing
to see many people who have not even considered this point, blindly following
scriptures or teachings that cannot be historically authenticated.
The First Miraculous Aspect of the Quran: Its Detailed
Preservation
In fact, this is one of the first things that impressed
me concerning the Quran. Even those who were clearly anti-Islam in their
writings, such as Sir William Muir, would admit that the Quran that we have
today was preserved since the time of the Prophet, may the mercy and blessings
of God be upon him.
In fact, even those who tried to be most critical and cast doubt upon the
complete authenticity of the Quran, such as Jeffery, impressed me even further
as to the amount of information that we have concerning the history of this
text.
To fully appreciate this point, one must put it into the
context of my Christian background. Incidentally, this paper is in no way
meant to be a critique of Christianity. However, it is the background from
which I came and it was the litmus test by which I examined other religions. Therefore,
I did a lot of cross comparisons between Christianity and other religions,
including Islam. Hence, I have no choice but to refer to Christianity during
the course of this paper as this is a paper about my experience.
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The Miraculous Quran (part 4 of 11): The Detailed Preservation of the Quran
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Description: One of the unique qualities of the Quran is its detailed preservation, a fact which makes it much different than all other religions.
By Jamaal al-Din Zarabozo (© 2007 IslamReligion.com)
- Published on 19 Mar 2007 - Last modified on 01 Apr 2008
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I was painfully aware of much of the history of the
Bible and it was one of the main problems that I had with Christianity. I had asked
pastors and the like about this question and most of them at that time, this
was before the fundamentalists became very mainstream, were very open about it
and would admit that there were problems with the historical authenticity of
the Bible. At the same time, though, most of them proclaimed that the “teachings”
have been preserved although the details may not have been. In other words,
the Bible was clearly not God’s word; they would claim that the Biblical
writers were “inspired” by God. That is the most that they could claim,
although even that they could not prove. This seemed to me to be blind faith
because if you do not know if the details have been preserved, how can you be
so certain that the main teachings have truly been preserved. In reality, we
do not even know who Matthew, Mark, Luke and John were and why exactly their
names were attached to those famous Gospels.
In the light of this, I found Jeffrey, while trying to
prove that there are some minor difficulties with the Quran, demonstrating that
the compilation of the Quran from its earliest years is known in great detail,
as most of his work was concerning the time of the Companions of the Prophet. I
was very impressed and this supposed attack on the Quran simply, again as I
alluded to earlier, made me continue in my study of the Quran. (Of course,
much later I would read responses to Jeffrey’s arguments, totally refuting his
claims of the Quran not being preserved in tact.)
The Quran’s Promise that it Shall be Preserved
In any case, it caught my eye that the Quran says about
itself:
“We have revealed the reminder and We shall preserve it.” (Quran
15:9)
This was interesting to me because within the Quran
there is a clear reference as to how the previous peoples fail to preserve
completely the message that they received.
Hence, in the light of what the Quran was saying about previous revelations,
this was a very bold statement. And, incidentally, it can be considered one of
the prophecies of the Quran- coming from a Judeo-Christian perspective,
prophecies were somewhat important to me. If they did not come to pass, they
would be very damaging in my eyes while if they did come to pass, I would
consider that a very good sign.
Once again, the history of Islam presents a different
scenario than that of the earlier revelations. The Prophet Muhammad, may the
mercy and blessings of God be upon him, lived just over 1400 years ago. He is
definitely the most “historical” of the various prophets. Thus, the history of
the Quran is known and documented.
The Quran was preserved with meticulous care. The Quran
describes itself as both a “reading” (Quran) and a book (kitaab). In
fact, it was via both of these means that the Quran was meticulously preserved.
During the life of the Prophet, the Prophet had specific
scribes whose job was to record the revelation when the he received it. The
Quran was not revealed all at once. It was revealed and recorded over a period
of twenty-three years. During that time, revelation could come to the Prophet
at any time. When it did, it would be recognized by physical signs on the
Prophet (a point that led some to claim that he was simply epileptic). He
would then call for his scribes and tell them what had been revealed and
exactly where the new passage fits vis-à-vis what had already been revealed by
God.
The Quran, which is not a large book, was also preserved
in memory as well as written form from the time of the Prophet Muhammad himself.
Many of the Companions of the Prophet had memorized the entire Quran and,
fearing what had happened to earlier religious communities, they took the
necessary steps to protect it from any form of adulteration. The Quran
continues to be memorized today—another amazing aspect of the Quran. In fact, God
says about the Quran:
“And We have indeed made the Quran easy to understand and
remember…” (Quran 54:17)
To this day, millions of Muslims have the Quran
memorized. If Ray Bradbury’s Fahrenheit 451 were to be a reality today
and all the books were to be burned to ashes, the Quran would still survive. Muslims
would be able to rewrite the entire Quran from memory.
Soon after the death of the Prophet, the Quran was all
compiled together and shortly afterwards official copies were sent to the
distant lands to ensure that the text was pure. To this day, one can travel to
any part of the world and pick up a copy Quran and find that it is the same
throughout the world.
Even the language of the Quran, which is essential to
keeping a true understanding of the text, has been preserved. Such cannot be
said for earlier prophets such as Moses and Jesus, whose Hebrew and Aramaic no
longer exist.
As noted earlier, the greatest care was taken to make
sure that anything that did not belong to the revelation directly from God—even
the Prophet’s own statements—were kept completely out of the Quran. The Quran
was nothing but the words that the Prophet received as revelation and informed
his followers that they formed part of the Quran. Hence, the Quran is
completely different from the Bible, which includes stories about the prophets,
comments on their lives and teachings, letters and writings by non-prophets and
so forth. No such human interpolations and additions can be found in the Quran
whatsoever.
Thus, the Quran originally impressed me in two ways:
First, it clearly proclaimed itself to be the word of God and was not
interlaced with words from humans. Second, it was minutely preserved from the
time of its revelation. These two points meant that the Quran met my logical
parameters for religion and revelation. I was therefore ready to move on to
further study and analyze its teachings.
By the way, someone may rightfully ask as to why it is
that God allowed his earlier revelations to be distorted and not preserved. One
can actually think of a lot of important reasons behind this. First, as is
clear in their own scriptures, the earlier prophets, such as Moses and Jesus,
were not sent for all of mankind. Their messages were clearly for the Tribe of
Israel and for their particular times. Actually, God teaches us that all
peoples had messengers who were sent to them and whose purposes were limited. The
Prophet Muhammad, and therefore his revelation, is meant for all of humankind
from his time until the Day of Judgment. Secondly, if their revelations were
preserved, their followers could use that as a reason for continuing to follow
their prophets and refusing to follow the Prophet Muhammad. Since it is very
clear via many means, such as historical evidence, contradictory statements
within the text and so on, that their scriptures have not been preserved in
detail and that they cannot claim to be following what is purely God’s
religion—not mixed with human interpolation—they have no valid excuse not to
abandon their non-preserved revelation for the true, complete and exact
revelation from God found in the Quran.
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The Miraculous Quran (part 5 of 11): The Excellence of its Teachings I
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Description: The Quran itself contains proofs for its truth and its teachings a clear and make perfect sense. It requires no “leap of faith” in order to believe it. Also, a look at the accusation that Muhammad borrowed or stole from other religions, particularly, the Christians and the Jews.
By Jamaal al-Din Zarabozo (© 2007 IslamReligion.com)
- Published on 26 Mar 2007 - Last modified on 01 Apr 2008
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I was very impressed with the Quran’s teachings about God
and found it unlike any other scripture that I had studied. This was once
again proving to me that this scripture was free of all human interpolation. I
was also very impressed with the way that it handled belief about God in
particular and its belief system as a whole.
Let me explain what I mean by this.
No Leap of Faith
Coming from a Christian background, I experienced what
many experienced concerning matters of belief and how to understand them. It
was virtually impossible to get straight answers concerning the very basics of
Christian beliefs from the pastors and priests. The reality is that the
concepts of belief were meant to be a “mystery” and belief in what one cannot
truly understand is what proved a person’s faith.
That approach simply did not sit well with me and I
found it, and still find it, illogical. It does not seem that the truth as
revealed by the Merciful and Wise God, who has given so many marvelous signs in
the creation, should lead one to have to say, as the 2nd-century North African
Church Father Tertullian is well known for saying: credo quia absurdum est,
“I believe because it is absurd.” Religion should not be simply “faith-based”—a
leap of faith, as such. Actually, it should be first as well “knowledge-based,”
so that both the heart and the mind find solace in it and submit to it with a
firm resolution. And this is what I found in Islam.
You should recall that the Prophet Muhammad, may the
mercy and blessings of God be upon him, first encountered a people who were indulged
in idol worship. Furthermore, they, in general, did not believe in the
Hereafter. Some of them, it seems, did not have a clear perception of the
Supreme Being.
It was in this environment that the Quran was revealed.
The Quran did not simply give them a command to believe. No, indeed! The
Quran gave them proof after proof, lesson after lesson, sign after sign that
should make anyone believe that there is a Creator and that the Creator created
humans and all of this wonderful working of the Universe with a purpose, as He
is not a foolish or ignorant Creator.
Hence, the Quran is filled with passages demanding that
humans think. In essence the message was this: Allah knows that if humans do
use their mental capabilities properly, they will come to recognize the truth
of what Allah is saying in the Quran. In fact, Islam teaches that the
recognition of such facts is innate within the souls of humans.
The fact is that one’s belief in Allah, the Quran and
the Prophet Muhammad is not based on mere emotion or a blind leap of faith. It
is based on real reasons and evidence.
Coming from my background, this boldness in propagating
the belief and challenging humans to think and ponder was nothing short of
miraculous.
Stealing from the Christians and Jews
One concept that many of the non-Muslim writers were
claiming was that the Prophet Muhammad, may the mercy and blessings of God be
upon him, simply stole most of his teachings from the Jews and Christians. Take,
for example, the title of Bell’s book, The Origin of Islam in
its Christian Environment—which, by the way, if you tell any Arab that
Islam developed in a Christian environment, it would be a real shock to them!
I recognized that there were two possibilities:
(1) the Prophet Muhammad did steal his material or
(2) the revelation he received was from the same
God who sent Moses, Jesus and the earlier prophets, as the Prophet Muhammad himself
claimed. If it were the latter, it would explain why there would be much
overlap in the teachings and message. The same God sent the earlier prophets
and is simply recounting their stories again in the new revelation.
However, I immediately started to notice some glaring
differences between the Quran and the Bible, even with respect to the teachings
about God. If the Prophet Muhammad was “editing” what he was hearing from the
Bible—and by the way, at that time, there was no Bible available in Arabic—then
he was doing an excellent job.
I found that the strange teachings about God that one
finds throughout the Bible are completely and unequivocally missing from the
Quran.
For the sake of brevity, only a few examples
illustrating this point shall be given.
The New International Version of Genesis 3:8-11,
reads,
8 Then the man and his wife
heard the sound of the LORD God as he was walking in the garden in the cool of
the day, and they hid from the LORD God among the trees of the garden. 9 But
the LORD God called to the man, “Where are you?” 10 He answered, “I heard you
in the garden, and I was afraid because I was naked; so I hid.” 11 And he said,
“Who told you that you were naked? Have you eaten from the tree that I
commanded you not to eat from?”
Here, God is pictured as walking in the garden in the
cool of the day. What is even more astonishing is that Adam and Eve were able
to hide from God and he had to ask, “Where are you?” If a human is able to
hide from Him in the garden, how is it that this Lord is going to have knowledge
of the sins that people commit? It would be difficult for any human to gender
in his heart the kind of love and fear of God that he should have when he
believes that his God is so faulty and weak that an event like this could occur
to him.
In Genesis 32:24-28,
there is the story and literal description of Jacob wrestling with and
defeating God. In verse 28, it says, “You [Jacob] have wrestled with God and
with men, and you have won.” In other words, the creator of the universe whom
mankind is expected to worship and submit to was defeated by a mere mortal in a
wrestling match.
The Old Testament even pictures God as one who intended
to do evil but then repented. Exodus 32:14 states, “And the Lord repented of
the evil which he thought to do unto his people” (King James Version). It
would not be surprising for anyone to turn away from God and not consider Him
worthy of worship if He himself has to repent from His own evil.
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The Miraculous Quran (part 6 of 11): The Excellence of its Teachings II
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Description: The depictions of God and the Prophets in the Quran vs. the Bible and the Talmud.
By Jamaal al-Din Zarabozo (© 2007 IslamReligion.com)
- Published on 26 Mar 2007 - Last modified on 12 Jul 2008
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> The Authenticity and Preservation of the Holy Quran
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Furthermore, in the Talmud—and
some non-Muslim scholars, such as Rodinson, claimed that the Quranic material
came from the Talmud—it states that there was a dispute between God and the
Jewish scholars. After a lengthy debate with no resolution, they decided to
refer the matter to one of the rabbis. After the rabbi’s decision, God was
forced to admit that He was mistaken.
Thus, God, according to them, is not even perfect with respect to His
knowledge.
The Christian conception of God and God having a son is,
of course, completely blasphemous from an Islamic perspective. I often
wondered how there could have been a semi-human son of God or how Jesus in
particular could be the son of God. As Jesus is pictured in the New Testament,
besides performing some miracles that earlier prophets performed, there is
nothing special about him. He lived like a human being, eating and drinking. He
suffered like a human and even prayed out to God. The Romans and Jews defeated God’s
supposed son and he could not save himself, even crying out to his father. Beyond
that, there are also of the difficult questions encountered by Christians: was
he partially divine and partially human, was he completely divine, he was
completely human, was he divine since birth, was he divine at a time and then
that divinity left him and so on. In the Islamic conception of God, there is
nothing of this nature whatsoever. In fact, the Quran even denies the
crucifixion—surely if the Prophet Muhammad, may the mercy and blessings of God
be upon him, were simply copying from the Bible, he would have included that
story.
In the Quran, on the other hand, God is depicted in such
a way that one realizes that He is deserving of worship. One feels gratitude
to Him and hope in Him. God truly becomes beloved to the individual as He
understands more about Him via the Quran. Some passages in the Quran
describing God are noteworthy:
“God is He, other than Whom there is no other god; Who knows
(all things) both secret and open; He, Most Gracious, Most Merciful. God is
He, other than Whom there is no other god; the Sovereign, the Holy One, the
Source of Peace (and Perfection), the Guardian of Faith, the Preserver of
Safety, the Exalted in Might, the Irresistible, the Supreme: Glory to God!
(High is He) above the partners they attribute to Him. He is God, the Creator,
the Evolver, the Bestower of Forms. To Him belong the Most Beautiful Names:
whatever is in the heavens and on earth, doth declare His Praises and Glory;
and He is the Exalted in Might, the Wise.” (Quran 59:22-24)
“God! None has the right to be worshipped but He, the Ever
Living, the One Who sustains and protects all that exists. Neither slumber nor
sleep overtakes Him. To Him belongs whatever is in the heavens and whatever is
on earth. Who is he that can intercede with Him except with His Permission? He
knows what happens to them (His creatures) in this world, and what will happen
to them in the Hereafter. And they will never compass anything of His
Knowledge except that which He wills. His Footstool extends over the heavens
and the earth, and He feels no fatigue in guarding and preserving them. And He
is the Most High, the Most Great” (Quran 2:255).
“Say [to them, O Muhammad], ‘He is God, (the) One. God, The Self-Sufficient
Master, Whom all creatures need. He begets not, nor was He begotten; And there
is none co-equal or comparable unto Him” (Quran 112:1-4).
By the way, even when describing the Prophets, many
important, yet rather despicable, stories that are prominent in the Bible have
been completely ignored in the Quran. For example, Exodus 32:1-6 has the story
of Aaron, the brother of Moses and one of the religious leaders of the tribe of
Israel, making a golden calf as an idol for worship. In 2 Samuel,
chapter 11, verses 1-17, the leader of the Jewish people David, whom the
Muslims consider a prophet, is shamelessly pictured as committing adultery,
doing his best to conceal it and then doing his best to have the woman’s
husband killed.
Solomon is also accused of committing idolatry simply out of love for his many
wives.
In addition, the Bible also claims the following: Jacob
committed deceitful tricks towards his father Isaac. The drunken Prophet
Lot committed incest with his daughters. Judas committed incest with his
daughter in law. Pharez and Zarah who were the result of that incest are
honored as the great grandfathers and great grandmothers of Jesus. Jesus
is reported to have rebuffed his own mother when he said, “Woman, what
have I to do with thee?”
All of these stories are not found in the Quran and a
Muslim does not believe such ignoble accusations concerning the noble prophets
selected by God to guide humanity.
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The Miraculous Quran (part 7 of 11): Various Aspects of the Law
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Description: The comprehensiveness, completeness, balance and practicality of the law itself.
By Jamaal al-Din Zarabozo (© 2007 IslamReligion.com)
- Published on 02 Apr 2007 - Last modified on 19 Feb 2008
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Category: Articles
> Evidence That Islam is Truth
> The Authenticity and Preservation of the Holy Quran
Category: Articles
> The Holy Quran
> The Authenticity and Preservation of the Holy Quran
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I noticed almost immediately that the Quranic teachings
are very comprehensive, complete, balanced and practical. For the sake of
brevity, I will not go into this aspect in any detail but it was something that
impressed me quite a bit. The range and flexibility of the laws of the Quran
are impressive. It was clear to me that this book was not revealed just for a
people at a specific time but was meant for people of very different times and
places.
The Quran is very comprehensive in that it touches upon
and gives clear guidance concerning such diverse issues as ritual acts of
worship, business transactions, marriage, divorce, the laws of warfare and so
on. There is a definite balance that one feels when one reads the Quran. A
human’s spiritual and mundane needs are met simultaneously in the same passage.
Even the most detailed passages concerning law still contain admonition,
remembrance of Allah and exhortation to behave in the best manner possible.
The scope of the Quranic teachings is not just for the
individual himself. It is not the case that Allah has given him some kind of
spiritual guidance to, perhaps, only guide his morals and character. Instead,
Allah has also revealed a law that is meant for society as a whole. Humans do
not have to grope about trying to decide what is best for the community at
large. It has been given by Allah to guide mankind to the best way of life.
It covers the individual’s personal practice and piety
as well as his relationship with his parents, spouse, children, neighbors,
community and humanity as a whole. All of this with a proper balance and within
the overall framework of making one’s life a true and complete form of worship
of God alone. There is clearly one only goal for humans—the worship of God—and
all of the deeds of this worldly life fall within the scope of that goal. There
is no schizophrenia in a person’s life. He is not trying to please God and
Caesar at the same time or even at different times. He does not even need to
resort to chasing after vain desires and compromise his ethics to live a
rewarding life in this world. He simply needs to live his life in this world in
a wholesome manner under the shade of the comprehensive guidance of the Quran.
One Particular Aspect of Islamic Law: Its Practicality
The practicality of Islamic Law is one particular aspect
that truly impressed me at that time, coming, again, from my Christian
background. It is a great blessing that in Islam one finds detailed teachings
that result in their desired goals while, at the same time, being extremely
practical and consistent with human nature. The lack of such teachings is one
of the greatest dilemmas faced by Christianity. For example, with respect to
societal cohesion and interaction, the greatest teachings found in the New
Testament are what are known as “the hard sayings” of Jesus. They are as
follows:
“Ye have heard that it hath been said, An eye for
an eye, and a tooth for a tooth: But I say unto you, That ye resist not evil:
but whosoever shall smite thee on thy right cheek, turn to him the other also.
And if any man will sue thee at the law, and take away thy coat, let him have
thy cloak also. And whosoever shall compel thee to go a mile, go with him
twain. Give to him that asketh thee, and from him that would borrow of thee
turn not thou away. Ye have heard that it hath been said, Thou shalt love thy
neighbour, and hate thine enemy. But I say unto you, Love your enemies, bless
them that curse you, do good to them that hate you, and pray for them which
despitefully use you, and persecute you; That ye may be the children of your
Father which is in heaven: for he maketh his sun to rise on the evil and on the
good, and sendeth rain on the just and on the unjust. For if ye love them which
love you, what reward have ye? do not even the publicans the same? And if ye
salute your brethren only, what do ye more than others? do not even the
publicans so? Be ye therefore perfect, even as your Father which is in heaven
is perfect” (Matthew 5:38-48).
Christian scholars themselves are perplexed. How are
such obviously impossible or impractical teachings to be applied? Just one
example of a discussion of these words will suffice to show how perplexing they
are to those who staunchly believe in them:
[For interpreting these words, t]he model proposed by
Joachim Jeremias is simple, representative, and of continuing influence.
According to this model, the Sermon usually is seen in one of three ways:
(1) as a perfectionist code, fully in line with the legalism of rabbinic
Judaism; (2) as an impossible ideal, meant to drive the believer first to
desperation, and then to trust in God's mercy; or (3) as an ‘interim
ethic’ meant for what was expected to be a brief period of waiting in the
end time, and which is now obsolete. Jeremias adds his own fourth thesis:
The Sermon is an indicative depiction of incipient life in the kingdom of God, which presupposes as its condition of possibility the experience of
conversion. More complex or comprehensive schematizations have been
offered, but most major interpreters can be understood in relation to the
options posed by Jeremias.
In Islam, there are no such dilemmas. The teachings are
easy, flexible, practical and completely suited to everyday life, even for a
new Muslim living in a completely non-Islamic environment, such as I was. The
famed author James A. Michener also noted and appreciated this aspect of Islam.
In one of the earliest writings that I had read about Islam, entitled
“Islam—the Misunderstood Religion,” Michener wrote,
The Koran is remarkably down-to-earth in its
discussion of the good life. In one memorable passage it directs: ‘When ye deal
with each other in transactions involving future obligations reduce them to
writing… and get two witnesses…’ It is this combination of dedication to one
God, plus practical instruction, that makes the Koran unique.
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The Miraculous Quran (part 8 of 11): From Savages to Saints
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Description: The Quran’s Effect on the Generation of the Prophet and Afterwards.
By Jamaal al-Din Zarabozo (© 2007 IslamReligion.com)
- Published on 09 Apr 2007 - Last modified on 01 Apr 2008
Viewed: 4802 - Rating: none yet - Rated by: 0 Printed: 292 - Emailed: 3 - Commented on: 0
Category: Articles
> Evidence That Islam is Truth
> The Authenticity and Preservation of the Holy Quran
Category: Articles
> The Holy Quran
> The Authenticity and Preservation of the Holy Quran
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The next aspect that caught me eye—and this again was something
that non-Muslims were mentioning in their works—was the effect that the Quran
had on the generation of the Prophet. May the mercy and blessings of God be
upon him, and afterwards.
It is clear that the Arabs at the time of the Prophet
were wont to drink, make merry and engage in tribal battles. They were known to
sometimes kill their female babies. However, one finds that in a short span of
close to twenty years a movement that started with just one man was able, due
to the grace of God and the miraculous effect of the Quran, to change almost
all of the Arabs and non-Arabs in the Arabian peninsula and bind them together
into a brotherhood of faith and mercy which was so strong that if any one part
of this brotherhood was in anguish, the whole brotherhood would be affected
negatively. At that time, one could find two people who were from previously
antagonistic tribes sharing their wealth and willing to give up their lives for
each other. Indeed, one was willing to split half of his wealth and divorce one
of his wives for the sake of his new brother who was from a “foreign” tribe.
Perhaps one of the best descriptions of the change that
took place among the Muslims can be seen in the famous statement of the
Companion Jafar ibn Abu Talib who was asked by the Negus of Abyssinia about the
mission of the Messenger. He told him,
O king, we were an ignorant people, worshipping idols,
eating carrion and indulging in sexual pleasures. We ridiculed our neighbors, a
brother oppressed his brother, and the strong devoured the weak. At this time a
man rose among us, who had already been known to be truthful, noble and honest.
This man called us to Islam. And he taught us to give up worshipping stones, to
speak the truth, to refrain from bloodshed, and not to defraud the orphans of
their property. He taught us to provide comfort to our neighbors and not to
bring a slander against chaste women. He enjoined upon us to offer prayers,
observe fasts and give alms. We followed him, gave up polytheism and idolatry
and refrained from all evil deeds. It is for this new way that our people have
become hostile to us and compel us to return to our old misguided life.
That generation, in turn, took the message to the rest
of the world. They were clearly a people who were taken from darkness into
light and to the straight path of God. When asked by the Emperor of Persia what
brought the Muslims to their lands, two different Companions answered in
similar terms: “God has sent us to take whoever wishes from the servitude of
mankind to the servitude of God and from the tightness of this world to its
expanse and from the injustice of the ways of life [in this world] to the
justice of Islam.”
During the lifetime of the Prophet, may the mercy and
blessings of God be upon him, one can see how these people were turned into a
pious generation, fearing God and hoping for God’s reward. Even when they, as
humans, slipped and committed sins, they eagerly repented and turned to God for
His forgiveness. They would much rather face a severe penalty in this life,
such as death, than face God with their sins on their hands. This can be seen
in the cases of Maaiz ibn Maalik al-Aslami and the woman called al-Ghaamidiyah.
Both of them came to the Prophet to admit that they had committed adultery and
each asked the Prophet for the worldly retribution to erase their sins. In the
case of al-Ghaamidiyah, the Prophet asked her to go back after her confession
and to return to the Prophet after she had given birth. She came back with her
child in her arms and asked the Prophet to purify her from her sins. The
Prophet then asked her to return after she had weaned the child. Then she
returned after some time and told the Prophet that the child was no longer in
need of her breastfeeding. She once again asked for her expiation from her sin.
Then, finally, the Prophet implemented the legal retribution as an expiation
for her sin of adultery. The Prophet then praised her act of repentance.
The effect of this change in the Companions continued
long after the death of the Prophet. Note the following accounts of the
Companions as they sought to spread the message of Islam to the rest of the
world:
The sterling character and qualities of the Muslim
soldiers were once praised by a Roman officer in these words: “At night you
will find them prayerful; during the day you will find them fasting. They keep
their promises, order good deeds, suppress evil and maintain complete equality
among themselves.”
Another testified thus: “They are horsemen by day and ascetics by night.
They pay for what they eat in territories under their occupation. They are
first to salute when they arrive at a place and are valiant fighters who just
wipe out the enemy.”
A third said: “During the night it seems that they do
not belong to this world and have no other business than to pray, and during
the day, when one sees them mounted on their horses, one feels that they have
been doing nothing else all their lives. They are great archers and great
lancers, yet they are so devoutly religious and remember God so much and so
often that one can hardly hear talk about anything else in their company.”
The benefits of the civilization developed upon the
teachings of the Quran went well beyond the Muslim lands. Many are familiar
with the Muslims’ influence on Europe and how Islamic influences eventually led
to the Renaissance. The author of A History of the Intellectual Development
of Europe, John Draper wrote, “Four years after the death of Justinian,
A.D. 569, was born at Mecca, in Arabia, the man who, of all men, has exercised
the greatest influence upon the human race.”This work was quite an eye opener for me at the
time of my conversion to Islam. Draper, writing in the 19th century,
was very disappointed and seemingly angered that Muslims continually failed to
receive their proper accolades for all that they contributed to European
society and civilization. For instance, he writes "To these Saracens
we are indebted for many of our personal comforts. Religiously cleanly, it
was not possible for them to clothe, according to the fashion of the
natives of Europe, in a garment unchanged till it dropped to pieces of itself, a
loathsome mass of vermin, stench and rags... They taught us the use of the oft-changed and
oft-washed under-garment of linen and cotton, which still
passes among ladies under its old Arabic name...”
Many scholars have recognized the importance of Islam
and the Quran’s teachings for the betterment of humanity. The famous intellect
George Bernard Shaw once stated,
“I have
always held the religion of Muhammad in high
estimation because of its wonderful vitality… I have prophecied about
the faith of Muhammad that it would be acceptable tomorrow as it is beginning
to be acceptable to the Europe of today. Mediaeval ecclesiastics, either through
ignorance or bigotry, painted
Muhammadanism in the darkest colours. They were, in fact, trained to hate both
the man Muhammad and his religion. To them Muhammad was anti-Christ. I have
studied him, the wonderful man, and in my opinion far from being an anti-Christ
he must be called the saviour of Humanity.
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