Calling the Qur’ān amazing is not something done only by
Muslims, who have an appreciation for the book and who are pleased with it; it
has been labelled amazing by non-Muslims as well. In fact, even people who hate
Islam very much have still called it amazing.
One thing which surprises non-muslims who are examining
the book very closely is that the Qur’ān does not appear to them to be what they
expected. What they assume is that they have an old book which came fourteen
centuries ago from the Arabian desert and they expect that the book should look
something like that -- an old book from the desert. And then they find out that
it does not resemble what they expected at all. Additionally, one of the first
things that some people assume is that because it is an old book which comes
from the desert, it should talk about the desert. Well the Qur’ān does talk
about the desert -- some of its imagery describes the desert; but it also talks
about the sea -- what it’s like to be in a storm on the sea.
Some years ago, the story came to us in Toronto about a
man who was in the merchant marine and made his living on the sea. A Muslim gave
him a translation of the Qur’ān to read. The merchant marine knew nothing about
the history of Islam but was interested in reading the Qur’ān. When he finished
reading it, he brought it back to the Muslim and asked: ‘This Muhammad (sws),
was he a sailor?’ He was impressed at how accurately the Qur’ān describes a
storm on a sea. When he was told: ‘No as a matter of fact, Muhammad (sws) lived
in the desert,’ that was enough for him. He embraced Islam on the spot. He was
so impressed with the Qur’ānic description because he had been in a storm on the
sea, and he knew that whoever had written that description had also been in a
storm on the sea. The description of ‘a wave, over it a wave, over it clouds’
was not what someone imagining a storm on a sea to be like would have written;
rather, it was written by someone who knew what a storm on the sea was like.
This is one example of how the Qur’ān is not tied to a certain place and time.
Certainly, the scientific ideas expressed in it also do not seem to originate
from the desert fourteen centuries ago.
Many centuries before the onset of Muhammad’s Prophethood,
there was a well-known theory of atomism advanced by the Greek philosopher,
Democritus. He and the people who came after him assumed that matter consists of
tiny, indestructible, indivisible particles called atoms. The Arabs too, used to
deal in the same concept; in fact, the Arabic word Dharrah commonly referred to
as the smallest particle known to man. Now, modern science has discovered that
this smallest unit of matter (ie the atom, which has all of the same properties
as its element) can be split into its component parts. This is a new idea, a
development of the last century; yet, interestingly enough, this information had
already been documented in the Qur’ān which states:
He [ie Allah] is aware of an atom’s weight in the heavens
and on the earth and even anything smaller than that. (10:61)
Undoubtedly, fourteen centuries ago that statement would
have looked unusual, even to an Arab. For him, the Dharrah was the smallest
thing there was. Indeed, this is proof, that the Qur’ān is not outdated.
Another example of what one might expect to find in an
‘old book’ that touches upon the subject of health or medicine is outdated
remedies or cures. Various historical sources state that the Prophet (sws) gave
some advice about health and hygiene, yet most of these pieces of advice are not
contained in the Qur’ān. At first glance, to the non-Muslims this appears to be
a negligent omission. They cannot understand why Allah would not ‘include’ such
helpful information in the Qur’ān. Some Muslims attempt to explain this absence
with the following argument: ‘Although the Prophet’s advice was sound and
applicable to the time in which he lived, Allah, in His infinite wisdom, knew
that there would come later medical and scientific advances which would make the
Prophet’s advice appear outdated. When later discoveries occurred, people might
say that such information contradicted that which the Prophet (sws) had given.
Thus, since Allah would never allow any opportunity for the non-Muslims to claim
that the Qur’ān contradicts itself or the teachings of the Prophet, He only
included in the Qur’ān information and examples which could stand the test of
time.
However, when one examines the true realities of the
Qur’ān in terms of its existence as a divine revelation, the entire matter is
quickly brought into its proper perspective, and the error in such argumentation
becomes clear and understandable. It must be understood that the Qur’ān is a
divine revelation, and as such, all information in it is of divine origin. Allah
revealed the Qur’ān from Himself. It is the words of Allah which existed before
creation, and thus nothing can be added, subtracted or altered. In essence, the
Qur’ān existed and was complete before the creation of Prophet Muhammad (sws),
so it could not possibly contain any of the Prophet’s own words or advice. An
inclusion of such information would clearly contradict the purpose for which the
Qur’ān exists, compromise its authority and render it inauthentic as a divine
revelation.
Consequently, there was no ‘home remedies’ in the Qur’ān
which one could claim to be outdated; nor does it contain any man’s view about
what is beneficial to health, what food is best to eat, or what will cure this
or that disease. In fact, the Qur’ān only mentions one item dealing with medical
treatment, and it is not in dispute by anyone. It states that in honey there is
healing. And certainly, I do not think that there is anyone who will argue with
that!
If one assumes that the Qur’ān is the product of a man’s
mind, then one would expect it to reflect some of what was going on in the mind
of the man who ‘composed’ it. In fact, certain encyclopaedias and various books
claim that the Qur’ān was the product of hallucinations that Muhammad (sws)
underwent. If these claims are true -- if it indeed originated from some
psychological problems in Muhammad’s mind -- then evidence of this would be
apparent in the Qur’ān. Is there such evidence? In order to determine whether or
not there is, one must first identify what things would have been going on in
his mind at that time and then search for these thoughts and reflections in the
Qur’ān.
It is common knowledge that Muhammad (sws) had a very
difficult life. All of his daughters died before him except one, and he had a
wife of several years who was dear and important to him, who proceeded him in
death at a very critical period of his life. As a matter of fact, she must have
been quite a woman because when the first revelation came to him, he ran home to
her afraid. Certainly, even today one would have a hard time trying to find an
Arab who would tell you: ‘I was so afraid that I ran home to my wife.’ They just
aren’t that way. Yet Muhammad (sws) felt comfortable enough with his wife to be
able to do that. That’s how influential and strong a woman she was. Although
these examples are only a few of the subjects that would have been on Muhammad’s
mind, they are sufficient in intensity to prove my point. The Qur’ān does not
mention any of these things -- not the death of his children, not the death of
his beloved companion and wife, not his fear of the initial revelations, which
he so beautifully shared with his wife -- nothing; yet, these topics must have
hurt him, bothered him, and caused him pain and grief during periods of his
psychological reflections, then these subjects, as well as others, would be
prevalent or at least mentioned throughout.
A truly scientific approach to the Qur’ān is possible
because the Qur’ān offers something that is not offered by other religious
scriptures, in particular, and other religions, in general. It is what
scientists demand. Today there are many people who have ideas and theories about
how the universe works. These people are all over the place, but the scientific
community does not even bother to listen to them. This is because within the
last century the scientific community has demanded a test of falsification. They
say: ‘If you have theory, do not bother us with it unless you bring with that
theory a way for us to prove whether you are wrong or not.’ Such a test was
exactly why the scientific community listened to Einstein towards the beginning
of the century. He came with a new theory and said: ‘I believe the universe
works like this; and here are three ways to prove whether I am wrong!’. So the
scientific community subjected his theory to the tests, and within six years it
passed all three. Of course, this does not prove that he was great, but it
proves that he deserved to be listened to because he said: ‘This is my idea; and
if you want to try to prove me wrong, do this or try that.’ This is exactly what
the Qur’ān has -- falsification tests. Some are old (in that they have already
been proven true), and some still exist today. Basically it states: ‘If this
book is not what it claims to be, then all you have to do is this or this or
this to prove that it is false.’ Of course, in 1400 years no one has been able
to do ‘This or this or this’, and thus it is still considered true and
authentic. I suggest to you that the next time you get into dispute with someone
about Islam and he claims that he has the truth and that you are in darkness,
you leave all other arguments at first and make this suggestion. Ask him: ‘Is
there any falsification test in your religion? Is there anything in your
religion that would prove you are wrong if I could prove to you that it exists
-- anything?’ Well, I can promise right now that people will not have anything
-- no test, no proof, nothing! This is because they do not carry around the idea
that they should not only present what they believe but should also offer others
a chance to prove they’re wrong. However, Islam does that. A perfect example of
how Islam provides man with a chance to verify it authenticity and ‘prove it
wrong’ occurs in the 4th chapter. And quiet honestly, I was surprised when I
first discovered this challenge. It states:
Do they not consider the Qur’ān? Had it been from any
other than Allah, they would surely have found therein much discrepancy. (4:82)
This is a clear challenge to a non-Muslim. Basically, it
invites him to find a mistake. As a matter of fact, the seriousness and
difficulty of the challenge aside, the actual presentation of such a challenge
in the first place is not even in human nature and is inconsistent with man’s
personality. One doesn’t take an exam in school after finishing the exam, write
a note to the instructor at the end saying: ‘This exam is perfect. There are no
mistakes in it. Find one if you can!’. One just doesn’t do that. The teacher
would not sleep until he found a mistake! And yet this is the way the Qur’ān
approaches people. Another interesting attitude that exists in the Qur’ān
repeatedly deals with its advice to the reader. The Qur’ān informs that reader
about different facts and then gives the advice: ‘If you want to know more about
this or that, or if you doubt what is said, then you should ask those who have
knowledge.’ This too is a surprising attitude. It is not usual to have a book
that comes from someone without training in geography, botany, biology, etc.,
who discusses these subjects and then advises the reader to ask men of knowledge
if he doubts anything.
Yet in every age there have been Muslims who have followed
the advice of the Qur’ān and made surprising discoveries. If one looks to the
works of Muslim scientists of many centuries ago, one will find them full of
quotations from the Qur’ān. These works state that they did research in such a
place, looking for something. And they affirm that the reason they looked in
such and such a place was that the Qur’ān pointed them in that direction. For
example, the Qur’ān mentions man’s origin and then tells the reader: ‘Research
it!’ It gives the reader a hint where to look and then states that one should
find out more about it. This is the kind of thing that Muslims today largely
seem to overlook - but not always, as illustrated in the following example. A
few years ago, a group of men in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia collected all if the
verses in the Qur’ān which discuss embryology -- the growth of the human being
in the womb. They said: ‘Here is what the Qur’ān says. Is it the truth?’ In
essence, they took the advice of the Qur’ān: ‘Ask the men who know.’ They chose,
as it happened, a non-Muslim who is a professor of embryology at the University
of Toronto. His name is Keith Moore, and he is the author of textbooks on
embryology -- a world expert on the subject. They invited him to Riyadh and
said: ‘This is what the Qur’ān says about your subject. Is it true? What can you
tell us?’ While he was in Riyadh, they gave him all the help that he needed in
translation and all of the co-operation for which he asked. And he was so
surprised at what he found that he changed his textbooks. In fact, in the second
edition of one of his books, called ‘Before We Are Born...’ about the history of
embryology, he included some material that was not in the first edition because
of what he found in the Qur’ān. Truly this illustrates that the Qur’ān was ahead
of its time and that those who believe in the Qur’ān know what other people do
not know.
I had the pleasure of interviewing Dr. Keith Moore for a
television presentation, and we talked a great deal about this -- it was
illustrated by slides and so on. He mentioned that some of the things that the
Qur’ān states about the growth of the human being were not known until thirty
years ago. In fact, he said that one item in particular -- the Qur’ān’s
description of the human being as a ‘leech-like clot’ ('alaqah) at one stage -
was new to him; but when he checked on it, he found that it was true, and so he
added it to his book. He said: ‘I never thought of that before,’ and he went to
the zoology department and asked for a picture of a leech. When he found that it
looked just like the human embryo, he decided to include both pictures in one of
his textbooks. Dr. Moore also wrote a book on clinical embryology, and when he
presented this information in Toronto, it caused quite a stir throughout Canada.
It was on the front pages of some of the newspapers across Canada, and some of
the headlines were quite funny. For instance, one headline read: ‘SURPRISING
THING FOUND IN ANCIENT BOOK!!’ It seems obvious from this example that people do
not clearly understand what it is all about. As a matter of fact, one newspaper
reporter asked Professor Moore ‘Don’t you think that maybe the Arabs might have
known about these things -- the description of the embryo, its appearance and
how it changes and grows? Maybe there were not scientists, but maybe they did
some crude dissections on their own carved up people and examined these things.’
The professor immediately pointed out to him that he [ie
the reporter] had missed a very important point - all of the slides of the
embryo that had been shown and had been projected in the film had come from
pictures taken through a microscope. He said: ‘It does not matter if someone had
tried to discover embryology fourteen centuries ago, they could not have seen
it!’. All of the descriptions in the Qur’ān of the appearance of the embryo are
of the item when it is still too small to see with the eye; therefore, one needs
a microscope to see it. Since such a device had only been around for little more
than two hundred years, Dr. Moore taunted: ‘Maybe fourteen centuries ago someone
secretly had a microscope and did this research, making no mistakes anywhere.
Then he somehow taught Muhammad (sws) and convinced him to put this information
in his book. Then he destroyed his equipment and kept it a secret forever. Do
you believe that? You really should not unless you bring some proof because it
is such a ridiculous theory.’ In fact, when he was asked: ‘How do you explain
this information in the Qur’ān?’ Dr. Moore’s reply was: ‘It could only have been
divinely revealed.!’
Although the aforementioned example of man researching
information contained in the Qur’ān deals with a non-Muslim, it is still valid
because he is one of those who is knowledgeable in the subject being researched.
Had some layman claimed that what the Qur’ān says about embryology is true, then
one would not necessarily have to accept his word. However, because of the high
position, respect, and esteem man gives to scholars, one naturally assumes that
if they research a subject and arrive at a conclusion based on that research,
then the conclusion is valid. One of Professor Moore’s colleagues, Marshall
Johnson, deals extensively with geology at the University of Toronto.
He became very interested in the fact that the Qur’ān’s
statements about embryology are accurate, and so he asked Muslims to collect
everything contained in the Qur’ān which deals with his speciality. Again people
were very surprised at the findings. Since there are a vast number subjects
discussed in the Qur’ān, it would certainly require a large amount of time to
exhaust each subject. It suffices for the purpose of this discussion to state
that the Qur’ān makes very clear and concise statements about various subjects
while simultaneously advising the reader to verify the authenticity of these
statements with research by scholars in those subjects. And as illustrated, the
Qur’ān has clearly emerged authentic. Undoubtedly, there is an attitude in the
Qur’ān which is not found anywhere else. It is interesting how when the Qur’ān
provides information, it often tells the reader: ‘You did not know this before.’
Indeed, there is no scripture that exists which makes that claim. All of the
other ancient writings and scriptures that people have, do give a lot of
information, but they always state where the information came from.
For example, when the Bible discusses ancient history, it
states that this king lived here, this one fought in a certain battle, another
one had so may sons, etc. Yet it always stipulates that if you want more
information, then you should read the book of so and so because that is where
the information came from. In contrast to this concept, the Qur’ān provides the
reader with information and states that this information is something new. Of
course, there always exists the advice to research the information provided and
verify its authenticity. It is interesting that such a concept was never
challenged by non-Muslims fourteen centuries ago. Indeed, the Makkans who hated
the Muslims, and time and time again they heard such revelations claiming to
bring new information; yet, they never spoke up and said: ‘This is not new. We
know where Muhammad (sws) got this information. We learned this at school.’
They could never challenge its authenticity because it
really was new! In concurrence with the advice given in the Qur’ān to research
information (even if it is new), when ‘Umar was caliph, he chose a group of men
and sent them to find the wall of Dhu’l-Qarnayn. Before the Qur’ānic revelation,
the Arabs had never heard of such a wall, but because the Qur’ān described it,
they were able to discover it. As a matter of fact, it is now located in what is
called Durbend in the Soviet Union. It must be stressed here that the Qur’ān is
accurate about many, many things, but accuracy does not necessarily mean that a
book is a divine revelation. In fact, accuracy is only one of the criteria for
divine revelations.
For instance, the telephone book is accurate, but that
does not mean that it is divinely revealed. The real problem lies in that one
must establish some proof of the source the Qur’ān’s information. The emphasis
is on the reader. One cannot simply deny the Qur’ān’s authenticity without
sufficient proof. If, indeed, one finds a mistake, then he has the right to
disqualify it. This is exactly what the Qur’ān encourages. Once a man came up to
me after a lecture I delivered in South Africa. He was very angry about what I
had said, and so he claimed: ‘I am going to go home tonight and find a mistake
in the Qur’ān.’ Of course, I said: ‘Congratulations. That is the most
intelligent thing that you have said.’ Certainly, this is the approach Muslims
need to take with those who doubt the Qur’ān’s authenticity, because the Qur’ān
itself offers the same challenge. And inevitably, after accepting its challenge
and discovering that it is true, these people will come to believe it because
they could not disqualify it. In essence, the Qur’ān earns their respect because
they themselves have had to verify its authenticity. An essential fact that
cannot be reiterated enough concerning the authenticity of the Qur’ān is that
one’s inability to explain a phenomenon himself does not require his acceptance
of the phenomenon’s existence or another person’s explanation of it.
Specifically, just because one cannot explain something
does not mean that one has to accept someone else’s explanation. However, the
person’s refusal of other explanations reverts the burden of proof back on
himself to find a feasible answer. This general theory applies to numerous
concepts in life, but fits most wonderfully with the Qur’ānic challenge, for it
creates a difficulty for one who says: ‘I do not believe it.’ At the onset of
refusal, one immediately has an obligation to find an explanation himself if he
feels others’ answers are inadequate. In fact, in one particular Qur’ānic verse
which I have always seen mistranslated into English, Allah mentions a man who
heard the truth explained to him. It states that he was derelict in his duty
because after he heard the information, he left without checking the verity of
what he had heard. In other words, one is guilty if he hears something and does
not research it and check to see whether it is true. One is supposed to process
all information and decide what is garbage to be thrown out and what is
worthwhile information to be kept and benefited from at a later date. One cannot
just let it rattle around in his head. It must be put in the proper categories
and approached from that point of view. For example, if the information is still
speculative, then one must discern whether its closer to being true or false.
But if all of the facts have been presented, then one must decide absolutely
between these two options. And even if one is not positive about the
authenticity of the information, he is still required to process all of the
information and make the admission that he just does not know for sure. Although
this last point appears to be futile, in actuality, it is beneficial to the
arrival at a positive conclusion at a later time in that it forces the person to
at least recognise, research and review the facts. This familiarity with the
information will give the person ‘the edge’ when future discoveries are made and
additional information is presented. The important thing is that one deals with
the facts and does not simply discard them out of empathy and disinterest.
The real certainty about the truthfulness of the Qur’ān is
evident in the confidence which is prevalent throughout it; and this confidence
comes from a different approach – ‘Exhausting the Alternatives.’ In essence, the
Qur’ān states: ‘This book is a divine revelation; if you do not believe that,
then what is it?’ In other words, the reader is challenged to come up with some
other explanation. Here is a book made of paper and ink. Where did it come from?
It says it is a divine revelation; if it is not, then what is its source? The
interesting fact is that no one has an explanation that works. In fact, all
alternatives have been exhausted. As has been well established by non-Muslims,
these alternatives basically reduce to two mutually exclusive schools of
thought, insisting on one or the other. On one hand, there exists a large group
of people who have researched the Qur’ān for hundreds of years and who claims:
‘One thing we know for sure -- that man, Muhammad (sws), thought he was a
prophet. He was crazy!’ They are convinced that Muhammad (sws) was fooled
somehow. Then on the other hand, there is another group which alleges: ‘Because
of this evidence, one thing we know for sure is that that man, Muhammad (sws),
was a liar!’ Ironically, these two groups never seem to get together without
contradicting. In fact, many references on Islam usually claim both theories.
They start out by saying that Muhammad (sws) was crazy and then end by saying
that he was a liar. They never seem to realize that he could not have been both!
For example, if one is deluded and really thinks that he
is a prophet, then he does not sit up late at night planning: ‘How will I fool
the people tomorrow so that they think I am a prophet?’ He truly believes that
he is a prophet, and he trusts that the answer will be given to him by
revelation. As a matter of fact, a great deal of the Qur’ān came in answer to
questions. Someone would ask Muhammad (sws) a question, and the revelation would
come with the answer to it. Certainly, if one is crazy and believes that an
angel put words in his ear, then when someone asks him a question, he thinks
that the angel will give him the answer. Because he is crazy, he really thinks
that. He does not tell someone to wait a short while and then run to his friends
and ask them: ‘Does anyone know the answer?’ This type of behaviour is
characteristic of one who does not believe that he is a prophet. What the
non-Muslims refuse to accept is that you cannot have it both ways. One can be
deluded, or he can be a liar. He can be either one or neither, but he certainly
cannot be both! The emphasis is on the fact that they are unquestionably
mutually exclusive personal traits.
The following scenario is a good example of the kind of
circle that non-Muslims go around in constantly. If you ask one of them: ‘What
is the origin of the Qur’ān?’ He tells you that it originated from the mind of a
man who was crazy. Then you ask him: ‘If it came from his head, then where did
he get the information contained in it? Certainly the Qur’ān mentions many
things with which the Arabs were not familiar.’ So in order to explain the fact
which you bring him, he changes his position and says: ‘Well, maybe he was not
crazy. Maybe some foreigner brought him the information. So he lied and told
people that he was a prophet.’ At this point, then you have to ask him: ‘If
Muhammad (sws) was a liar, then where did he get his confidence? Why did he
behave as though he really thought he was a prophet?’ Finally backed into a
corner, like a cat he quickly lashes out with the first response that comes to
his mind. Forgetting that he has already exhausted that possibility, he claims:
‘Well, maybe he wasn’t a liar. He was probably crazy and really thought that he
was a prophet.’ And thus he begins the futile circle again.
As has already been mentioned before, there is much
information contained in the Qur’ān whose source cannot be attributed to anyone
other than Allah. For example, who told Muhammad (sws) about the wall of
Dhu’l-Qarnayn -- a place hundreds of miles to the north? Who told him about
embryology? When people assemble facts such as these, if they are not willing to
attribute their existence to a divine source, they automatically resort to the
assumption someone brought Muhammad (sws) the information and that he used it to
fool the people. However, this theory can easily be disproved with one simple
question: ‘If Muhammad (sws) was a liar, where did he get his confidence? Why
did he tell some people out right on their face what others could never say?’
Such confidence depends completely upon being convinced that one has a true
divine revelation. For example, the Prophet (sws) had an uncle by the name of
Abū Lahab. This man hated Islam to such an extent that he used to follow the
Prophet around in order to discredit him. If Abū Lahab saw the Prophet (sws)
speaking to a stranger, he would wait until they parted and then would go to the
stranger and ask him: ‘What did he tell you? Did he say: “Black?” Well, its
white. Did he say: “Morning?” Well, its night.’ He faithfully said the exact
opposite of whatever he heard Muhammad (sws) and the Muslims say. However, about
ten years before Abū Lahab died, a little chapter in the Qur’ān was revealed to
him. It distinctly stated that he would go to the Fire (ie, Hell). In other
words, it affirmed that he would never become a Muslim and would therefore be
condemned forever. For ten years all Abū Lahab had to do was say: ‘I heard that
it has been revealed to Muhammad (sws) that I will never change -- that I will
never become a Muslim and will enter the Hellfire. Well I want to become a
Muslim now. How do you like that? What do you think of your divine revelation
now?’ But he never did that. And yet, that is exactly the kind of behaviour one
would have expected from him since he always sought to contradict Islam. In
essence, Muhammad (sws) said: ‘You hate me and you want to finish me? Here, say
these words, and I am finished. Come on, say them!’ But Abū Lahab never said
them. Ten years! And in all that time he never accepted Islam or even became
sympathetic to the Islamic cause. How could Muhammad (sws) possibly have known
for sure that Abū Lahab would fulfil the Qur’ānic revelation if he [ie, Muhammad
(sws)] was not truly the messenger of Allah? How could he possibly have been so
confident as to give someone 10 years to discredit his claim of Prophethood? The
only answer is that he was Allah’s messenger; for in order to put forth such a
risky challenge, one has to be entirely convinced that he has a divine
revelation.
Another example of the confidence which Muhammad (sws) had
in his own Prophethood and consequently in the divine protection of himself and
his message is that when he left Makkah and hid in a cave with Abū Bakr during
their emigration to Madīnah, the two clearly saw people coming to kill them, and
Abū Bakr was afraid. Certainly, if Muhammad (sws) was a liar, a forger and one
who was trying to fool the people into believing that he was a prophet, one
would have expected him to say in such a circumstance to his friend: ‘Hey, Abū
Bakr, see if you can find a back way out of this cave.’ Or ‘Squat down in that
corner over there and keep quiet.’ Yet, in fact, what he said to Abū Bakr
clearly illustrated his confidence. He told him: ‘Relax! Allah is with us, and
Allah will save us!’
Now, if one knows that he is fooling people, where does
one get this kind of attitude? In fact, such a frame of mind is not
characteristic of a liar or a forger at all. So, as has been previously
mentioned, the non-Muslims go around and around in a circle, searching for a way
out -- some way to explain the findings in the Qur’ān without attributing them
to their proper source. On one hand, they tell you on Monday, Wednesday and
Friday: ‘The man was a liar’, and on the other hand, on Tuesday, Thursday and
Saturday they tell you: ‘He was crazy.’ What they refuse to accept is that one
cannot have it both ways; yet they refuse to accept is that one cannot have it
both ways; yet they need both excuses to explain the information in the Qur’ān.
About seven years ago, I had a minister over to my home.
In the particular room which we were sitting, there was a Qur’ān on the table,
face down, and so the minister was not aware of which book it was. In the midst
of a discussion, I pointed to the Qur’ān and said: ‘I have confidence in that
book.’ Looking at the Qur’ān but not knowing which book it was, he replied:
‘Well, I tell you, if that book is not the Bible, it was written by a man!’ In
response to his statement, I said: ‘Let me tell you something about what is in
that book.’ And in just three to four minutes I related to him a few things
contained in the Qur’ān. After just those three or four minutes, he completely
changed his position and declared: ‘You are right. A man did not write that
book. The Devil wrote it!’ Indeed, possessing such an attitude is very
unfortunate -- for many reasons. For one thing, it is a very quick and cheap
excuse. It is an instant exit out of an uncomfortable situation. As a matter of
fact, there is a famous story in the Bible that mentions how one day some of the
Jews were witnesses when Jesus (sws) raised a man from the dead. The man had
been dead for four days, and when Jesus (sws) arrived, he simply said: ‘Get up!’
and the man arose and walked away. At such a sight, some of the Jews who were
watching said disbelievingly: ‘This is the Devil. The Devil helped him!’ Now
this story is rehearsed often in churches all over the world, and people cry big
tears over it, saying: ‘Oh, if I had been there, I would not have been as stupid
as the Jews!’ Yet ironically, these people do exactly what the Jews did when in
just three minutes you show them only a small part of the Qur’ān and all they
can say is: ‘Oh, the Devil did it. The Devil wrote that book!’. Because they are
truly backed into a corner and have no other viable answer, they resort to the
quickest and cheapest excuse available. Another example of people’s use of this
weak stance can be found in the Makkans’ explanation of the source of Muhammad’s
message. They used to say: ‘The devils bring Muhammad (sws) that Qur’ān!’ But
just as with every other suggestion made, the Qur’ān gives the answer. One verse
in particular states:
And they say: ‘Surely he is possessed [by jinn], but it
[-- the Qur’ān --] is not except a reminder to the worlds. (68:52)
Thus it gives an argument in reply to such a theory. In
fact, there are many arguments in the Qur’ān in reply to the suggestion that
devils brought Muhammad (sws) his message. For example, in the 26th chapter
Allah clearly affirms:
No evil ones have brought it [this revelation] down. It
would neither be fitting for them, nor would they be able to. Indeed they have
been removed far from hearing. (26:210-12)
And in another place in the Qur’ān, Allah instructs us:
So when you recite the Qur’ān seek refuge in Allah from
Satan, the rejected. (16:98)
Now is this how Satan writes a book? He tells one: ‘Before
you read my book, ask God to save you from me?’ This is very, very tricky.
Indeed, a man could write something like this, but would Satan do this? Many
people clearly illustrate that they cannot come to one conclusion on this
subject. On the one hand, they claim that Satan would not do such a thing and
that even if he could, God would not allow him to; yet, on the other hand, they
also believe that Satan is only that much less than God. In essence, they allege
that the Devil can probably do whatever God can do. And as a result, when they
look at the Qur’ān, even as surprised as they are as to how amazing it is, they
still insist: ‘The Devil did this!’ Thanks be to Allah, Muslims do not have that
attitude. Although Satan may have some abilities, they are a long way separated
from the abilities of Allah. And no Muslim is a Muslim unless he believes that.
It is common knowledge even among non-Muslims that the Devil can easily make
mistakes, and it would be expected that he would contradict himself if and when
he wrote a book. For indeed, the Qur’ān states:
Do they not consider the Qur’ān? Had it been from any
other than Allah, they would surely have found therein much discrepancy. (4:82)
In conjunction with the excuses that non-Muslims advance
in futile attempts to justify inexplicable verses in the Qur’ān, there is
another attack often rendered which seems to be a combination of the theories
that Muhammad (sws) was crazy and a liar. Basically, these people propose that
Muhammad (sws) was insane, and as a result of his delusion, he lied to and
misled people. There is a name for this in psychology. It is referred to as
mythomania. It means simply that one tells lies and then believes them. This is
what some non-Muslims say Muhammad (sws) suffered from. But the only problem
with this proposal is that one suffering from mythomania absolutely cannot deal
with facts, and yet the whole Qur’ān is based entirely upon facts. Everything
contained in it can be researched and established as true. Since facts are such
a problem for a mythomaniac, when a psychologist tries to treat one suffering
from that condition, he continually confronts him with facts. For example, if
one is mentally ill and claims: ‘I am the king of England’, a psychologist does
not say to him: ‘No you aren’t. You are crazy!’ He just does not do that.
Rather, he confronts him with facts and says: ‘OK, you say you are the king of
England. So tell me where the queen is today. And where is your prime minister?
And where are your guards?’ Now, when the man has trouble trying to deal with
these questions, he tries to make excuses, saying: ‘Uh... the queen... she has
gone to her mother’s. Uh... the prime minister... well he died.’ And eventually
he is cured because he cannot deal with the facts. If the psychologist continues
confronting him with enough facts, finally he faces the reality and says: ‘I
guess I am not the king of England.’ The Qur’ān approaches everyone who reads it
in very much the same way a psychologist treats his mythomania patient. There is
a verse in the Qur’ān which states:
Oh mankind, there has come to you an admonition [-- the
Qur’ān –] from your Lord and a healing for what is in the hearts -- and guidance
and mercy for the believers. (10:57)
At first glance, this statement appears vague, but the
meaning of this verse is clear when one views it in light of the aforementioned
example. Basically, one is healed of his delusions by reading the Qur’ān. In
essence, it is a therapy. It literally cures deluded people by confronting them
with facts. A prevalent attitude throughout the Qur’ān is one which says: ‘Oh
mankind, you say such and such about this; but what about such and such? How can
you say this when you know that?’ And so forth. It forces one to consider what
is relevant and what matters while simultaneously healing one of the delusions
that the facts presented to mankind by Allah can easily be explained away with
flimsy theories and excuses. It is this very sort of thing -- confronting people
with facts -- that had captured the attention of many non-Muslims. In fact,
there exists a very interesting reference concerning this subject in the New
Catholic Encyclopaedia. In an article under the subject of the Qur’ān, the
Catholic Church states: ‘Over the centuries, many theories have been offered as
to the origin of the Qur’ān ... Today no sensible man accepts any of these
theories!!’ Now here is the age-old Catholic Church, which has been around for
so many centuries, denying these futile attempts to explain away the Qur’ān.
Indeed, the Qur’ān is a problem for the Catholic Church. It states that it is
revelation, so they study it. Certainly, they would love to find proof that it
is not, but they cannot. They cannot find a viable explanation. But at least
they are honest in their research and do not accept the first unsubstantiated
interpretation which comes along. The Church states that in fourteen centuries
it has not yet been presented a sensible explanation. At least it admits that
the Qur’ān is not an easy subject to dismiss. Certainly, other people are much
less honest. They quickly say: ‘Oh, the Qur’ān came from here. The Qur’ān came
from there.’ And they do not even examine the credibility of what they are
stating most of the time. Of course, such a statement by the Catholic Church
leaves the everyday Christian in some difficulty. It just may be that he has his
own ideas as to the origin of the Qur’ān, but as a single member of the Church,
he cannot really act upon his own theory. Such an action would be contrary to
the obedience, allegiance and loyalty which the Church demands. By virtue of his
membership, he must accept what the Catholic Church declares without question
and establish its teachings as part of his everyday routine. So, in essence, if
the Catholic Church as a whole is saying: ‘Do not listen to these unconfirmed
reports about the Qur’ān’, then what can be said about the Islamic point of
view? Even non-Muslims are admitting that there is something to the Qur’ān --
something that has to be acknowledged -- then why are people so stubborn and
defensive and hostile when Muslims advance the very same theory? This is
certainly something for those with a mind to contemplate -- something to ponder
for those of understanding!
Recently, a leading intellectual in the Catholic Church --
a man by the name of Hans -- studied the Qur’ān and gave his opinion of what he
had read. This man has been around for some time, and he is highly respected in
the Catholic Church, and after careful scrutiny, he reported his findings,
concluding: ‘God has spoken to man through the man, Muhammad (sws).’ Again this
is a conclusion arrived at by a non-Muslim source -- the very leading
intellectual of the Catholic Church himself! I do not think that the Pope agrees
with him, but nonetheless, the opinion of such a noted, repute public figure
must carry some weight in defence of the Muslim position. He must be applauded
for facing the reality that the Qur’ān is not something which can be easily
pushed aside and that, in fact God is the source of these words. As is evident
from the aforementioned information, all of the possibilities have been
exhausted, so the chance of finding another possibility of dismissing the Qur’ān
is non-existent. For if the book is not a revelation, then it is a deception;
and if it is a deception, one must ask: ‘What is its origin. And where does it
deceive us?’ Indeed, the true answers to these questions shed light on the
Qur’ān’s authenticity and silence the bitter unsubstantiated claims of the
unbelievers. Certainly, if people are going to insist that the Qur’ān is a
deception, then they must bring forth evidence to support such a claim. The
burden of proof is on them, not us! One is never supposed to advance a theory
without sufficient corroborating facts; so I say to them: ‘Show me one
deception! Show me where the Qur’ān deceives me! Show me, otherwise, don’t say
that it is a deception!’ An interesting characteristic of the Qur’ān is how it
deals with surprising phenomena which relate not only to the past but to modern
times as well. In essence, the Qur’ān is not an old problem. It is still a
problem even today -- a problem to the non-Muslims that is. For everyday, every
week, every year brings more and more evidence that the Qur’ān is a force to be
contended with -- that its authenticity is no longer to be challenged! For
example, one verse in the Qur’ān reads;
Do not the unbelievers see that the heavens and the earth
were joined together, then We clove them asunder, and made from water every
living thing? Will they not then believe? (21:30)
Ironically, this very information is exactly what they
awarded the 1973 Noble Prize for -- to a couple of unbelievers. The Qur’ān
reveals the origin of the universe -- how it began from one piece -- and mankind
continues to verify this revelation, even up to now. Additionally, the fact that
all life originated from water would not have been an easy thing to convince
people of fourteen centuries ago. Indeed, if 1400 years ago you had stood in the
desert and told someone: ‘All of this, you see (pointing to yourself), is made
up of mostly water’, no one would have believed you. Proof of that was not
available until the invention of the microscope. They had to wait to find out
that cytoplasm, the basic substance of the cell, is made-up of 80% water.
Nonetheless, the evidence did come, and once again the Qur’ān stood the test of
time. In reference to the falsification tests mentioned earlier, it is
interesting to note that they, too, relate to both the past and the present.
Some of them were used as illustrations of Allah’s omnipotence and knowledge,
while others continue to stand as challenges to the present day. An example of
the former is the statement made in the Qur’ān about Abū Lahab. It clearly
illustrates that Allah, the Knower of the Unseen, knew that Abū Lahab would
never change his ways and accept Islam. Thus Allah dictated that he would be
condemned to the Hellfire forever. Such a chapter was both an illustration of
Allah’s divine wisdom and a warning to those who were like Abū Lahab.
An interesting example of the latter type of falsification
tests contained in the Qur’ān is the verse which mentions the relationship
between the Muslims and the Jews. The verse is careful not to narrow its scope
to the relationship between individual members of each religion, but rather, it
summarises the relationship between the two groups of people as a whole. In
essence, the Qur’ān states that the Christians will always treat the Muslims
better than the Jews will treat the Muslims. Indeed, the full impact of such a
statement can only be felt after careful consideration of the real meaning of
such a verse. It is true that many Christians and many Jews have become Muslims,
but as a whole, the Jewish community is to be viewed as an avid enemy of Islam.
Additionally, very few people realise what such an open declaration in the
Qur’ān invites. In essence, it is an easy chance for the Jews to prove that the
Qur’ān is false -- that it is not a divine revelation. All they have to do is
organise themselves, treat the Muslims nicely for a few years and then say: ‘Now
what does your holy book say about who are your best friends in the world -- the
Jews or the Christians? Look what we Jews have done for you!’ That is all they
have to do to disprove the Qur’ān’s authenticity, yet they have not done it in
1400 years. But, as always, the offer still stands open!
All the examples so far given concerning the various
angles from which one can approach the Qur’ān have undoubtedly been subjective
in nature; however there does exist another angle, among others, which is
objective and whose basis is mathematical. It is surprising how authentic the
Qur’ān becomes when one assembles what might be referred to as a list of good
guesses. Mathematically, it can be explained using guessing and prediction
examples. For instance, if a person has two choices (ie, one is right, and one
is wrong), and he closes his eyes and makes a choice, then half of the time (ie,
one time out of two) he will be right. Basically, he has a one in two chance,
for he could pick the wrong choice, or he could pick the right choice. Now if
the same person has two situations like that (ie, he could be right or wrong
about situation number one, and he could be right or wrong about situation
number two), and he closes his eyes and guesses, then he will only be right one
fourth of the time (ie, one time out of four). He now has a one in four chance
because now there are three ways for him to be wrong and only one way for him to
be right. In simple terms, he could make the wrong choice in situation number
one and then make the wrong choice in situation number two; OR he could make the
wrong choice in situation number one and then make the right choice in situation
number two; OR he could make the right choice in situation number one and then
make the wrong choice in situation number two; OR he could make the right choice
in situation number one and then make the right choice in situation number two.
Of course, the only instance in which he could be totally right is the last
scenario where he could guess correctly in both situations. The odds of his
guessing completely correctly have become greater because the number of
situations for him to guess in have increased; and the mathematical equation
representing such a scenario is 1/2 x 1/2 (i.e., one time out of two for the
first situation multiplied by one time out of two for the second situation).
Continuing on with the example, if the same person now has
three situations in which to make blind guesses, then he will only be right one
eighth of the time (i.e., one time out of eight or 1/2 X 1/2 X 1/2). Again, the
odds of choosing the correct choice in all three situations have decreased his
chances of being completely correct to only one time in eight. It must be
understood that as the number of situations increase, the chances of being right
decrease, for the two phenomena are inversely proportional.
Now applying this example to the situations in the Qur’ān,
if one draws up a list of all of the subjects about which the Qur’ān has made
correct statements, it becomes very clear that it is highly unlikely that they
were all just correct blind guesses. Indeed, the subjects discussed in the
Qur’ān are numerous, and thus the odds of someone just making lucky guesses
about all of them become practically nil. If there are a million ways for the
Qur’ān to be wrong, yet each time it is right, then it is unlikely that someone
was guessing. The following three examples of subjects about which the Qur’ān
has made correct statements collectively illustrate how the Qur’ān continues to
beat the odds.
In the 16th chapter the Qur’ān mentions that the female
bee leaves its home to gather food. Now, a person might guess on that, saying:
‘The bee that you see flying around -- it could be male, or it could be female.
I think I will guess that it is female.’ Certainly, he has a one in two chance
of being right. So it happens that the Qur’ān is right. But it also happens that
was not what most people believed at the time when the Qur’ān was revealed. Can
you tell the difference between a male and a female bee? Well, it takes a
specialist to do that, but it has been discovered that the male bee never leaves
his home to gather food. However, in Shakespeare’s play, Henry the Fourth, some
of the characters discuss bees and mention that the bees are soldiers and have a
king. That is what people thought in Shakespeare’s time -- that the bees that
one sees flying around are male bees and that they go home and answer to a king.
However, that is not true at all. The fact is that they are females, and they
answer to a queen. Yet it took modern scientific investigations in the last 300
years to discover that this is the case.
So, back to the list of good guesses, concerning the topic
of bees, the Qur’ān had a 50/50 chance of being right, and the odds were one in
two.
In addition to the subject of bees, the Qur’ān also
discusses the sun and the manner in which it travels through space. Again, a
person can guess on that subject. When the sun moves through space, there are
two options: it can travel just as a stone would travel if one threw it, or it
can move of its own accord. The Qur’ān states the latter -- that it moves as a
result of its own motion. To do such, the Qur’ān uses a form of the word sabaha
to describe the sun’s movement through space. In order to properly provide the
reader with a comprehensive understanding of the implications of this Arabic
verb, the following example is given. If a man is in water and the verb sabaha
is applied in reference to his movement, it can be understood that he is
swimming, moving of his own accord and not as a result of a direct force applied
to him. Thus when this verb is used in reference to the sun’s movement through
space, it in no way implies that the sun is flying uncontrollably through space
as a result of being hurled or the like. It simply means that the sun is turning
and rotating as it travels. Now, this is what the Qur’ān affirms, but was it an
easy thing to discover? Can any common man tell that the sun is turning? Only in
modern times was the equipment made available to project the image of the sun
onto a tabletop so that one could look at it without being blinded. And through
this process it was discovered that not only are there three spots on the sun
but that these spots move once every 25 days. This movement is referred to as
the rotation of the sun around its axis and conclusively proves that, as the
Qur’ān stated 1400 years ago, the sun does, indeed turn as it travels through
space.
And returning once again to the subject of good guess, the
odds of guessing correctly about both subjects -- the sex of bees and the
movement of the sun -- are one in four!
Seeing as back as fourteen centuries ago people probably
did not understand as much about time zones. So the Qur’ān’s statements about
this subject are considerably surprising. The concept that one family is having
breakfast as the sun comes up while another family is enjoying the brisk night
air is truly something to be marvelled at, even in modern time. Indeed, fourteen
centuries ago, a man could not travel more than thirty miles in one day, and
thus it took him literally months to travel from India to Morocco, for example.
And probably , when he was having supper in Morocco, he thought to himself:
‘Back home in India they are having supper right now.’ This is because he did
not realize that, in the process of travelling, he moved across a time zone.
Yet, because it is the words of Allah, the All-Knowing, the Qur’ān recognises
and acknowledges such a phenomenon. In an interesting verse, it states that when
history comes to an end and the Day of Judgement arrives, it will all be
occurring in an instant; and this very instant will catch some people in the
daytime and some people at night. This clearly illustrates Allah’s divine wisdom
and His previous knowledge of the existence of time zones, even though such a
discovery was non-existent back fourteen centuries ago. Certainly, this
phenomenon is not something which is obvious to one’s eyes or a result of one’s
experience, and this fact, in itself, suffices as proof of the Qur’ān’s
authenticity.
Returning one final time to the subject of good guesses
for the purpose of the present example, the odds that someone guessed correctly
about all three of the aforementioned subjects -- the sex of bees, the movement
of the sun and the existence of time zones -- are one in eight!
Certainly, one could continue on and on with this example,
drawing up longer and longer list of good guesses; and of course, the odds would
become higher and higher with each increase of subjects about which one could
guess. But what no one can deny is the following: the odds that Mohammed (sws)
an illiterate, guessed correctly about thousands and thousands of subjects,
never once making a mistake, are so high that any theory of his authorship of
the Qur’ān must be completely dismissed -- even by the most hostile enemies of
Islam!
Indeed, the Qur’ān expects this kind of challenge.
Undoubtedly, if one said to someone upon entering a foreign land: ‘I know your
father. I have met him’, probably the man from that land would doubt the
newcomer’s word, saying: ‘You have just come here. How could you know my
father?’ As a result, he would question him: ‘Tell me, is my father tall, short,
dark, fair? What is he like?’ Of course, if the visitor continued answering all
of the questions correctly, the sceptic would have no choice but to say: ‘I
guess you do know my father. I don’t know how you know him, but I guess you do!’
The situation is the same with the Qur’ān. It states that it originates from the
One who created everything. So everyone has the right to say: ‘Convince me! If
the author of this book really originated life and everything in the heavens and
on the earth, then He should know about this, about that, and so on.’ And
inevitably, after researching the Qur’ān, everyone will discover the same
truths. Additionally, we all know something for sure: we do not all have to be
experts to verify what the Qur’ān affirms. One’s faith grows as one continues to
check and confirm the truths contained in the Qur’ān. And one is supposed to do
so all of his life.
May God guide everyone close to the truth.
Supplement
An engineer at the University of Toronto who was
interested in psychology and who had read something on it, conducted a research
and wrote a thesis on Efficiency of Group Discussions. The purpose of his
research was to find out how much people accomplish when they get together to
talk in groups of two, three, ten, etc. The graph of his findings: people
accomplish most when they talk in groups of two. Of course, this discovery was
entirely beyond his expectations, but it is very old advice given in the Qur’ān:
Say: ‘I exhort you to one thing - that you stand for
Allah, [assessing the truth] by twos and singly, and then reflect...’ (34:46)
In conclusion I ask you to consider with care the
following:
Additionally, the 89th chapter of the Qur’ān mentions a
certain city by the name of Iram (a city of pillars), which was not known in
ancient history and which was non-existent as far as historians were concerned.
However, the December 1978 edition of National Geographic introduced interesting
information which mentioned that in 1973, the city of Elba was excavated in
Syria. The city was discovered to be 43 centuries old, but that is not the most
amazing part. Researchers found in the library of Elba a record of all of the
cities with which Elba had done business. Believe or not, there on the list was
the name of the city of Iram. The people of Elba had done business with the
people of Iram!
And they say: ‘Why are not signs sent down to him from his
Lord?’ Say: ‘Indeed, the signs are with Allah, and I am but a clear warner.’ But
is sufficient for them that We have sent down to you the Book [ie, Qur’ān] which
is rehearsed to them? Verily, in that is mercy and a reminder to people who
believe. (29:50-1) |