Al Qur'an
The Miracle
of Miracles
By Ahmed Deedat
"Say: If the whole of mankind and jinn's were to gather together
to produce the like of this Qur'an,
they could not produce the like thereof, even if they backed up
each other with help and support."
What is a miracle?
I
think it is necessary that we have a clear picture of what we
mean by a miracle. Here are some definitions:
-
"An event that appears so inexplicable by the laws of
nature, that it is held to be supernatural in origin or an
act of God."
-
"A person, thing or event that excites admiring awe."
-
"An act beyond human power, an impossibility."
It is logical that greater the impossibility, greater the
miracle. For example, should a person expire before our very
eyes and is certified dead by a qualified medical man, yet later
on a mystic or a saint commands the corpse to 'arise!', and to
everybody's astonishment the person gets up and walks away , we
would label that as a miracle. But if the resurrection of the
dead took place after the corpse had been in the mortuary for
three days, then we would acclaim this as a greater miracle. And
if the dead was made to arise from the grave, decades or
centuries after the body had decomposed and rotted away, then in
that case we would label it the greatest miracle of them all!
A Common Trait
It has been a common trait of mankind since time immemorial that
whenever a guide from God appeared to redirect their steps into
the will and plan of God; they demanded supernatural proofs from
these men of God, instead of accepting message on its merit.
For example, when Jesus Christ (pbuh) began to preach to his
people - "the children of Israel" - to mend their ways and to
refrain from mere legalistic formalism and imbibe the true
spirit of the laws and commandments of god, his 'people'
demanded miracles from him to prove his bona fides (his
authenticity , his genuineness), as recorded in the Christian
scriptures:
Then certain of the scribes and the Pharisees answered, saying
master, we would have a sign ( miracle ) from thee. But he
answered and said unto them, "an evil and adulterous generation
seeketh after a sign (miracle) and there shall no sign be given
to it, but the sign of the prophet Jonas (matthew 12:38-39 holy
bible).
Though on the face of it, Jesus (pbuh) refuses to pamper the
Jews here, in actual fact, he did perform many miracles as we
learn from the gospel narratives.
The holy bible is full of supernatural events accredited to the
prophets from their lord. In reality all those 'signs' and
'wonders' and 'miracles' were acts of God, but since those
miracles were worked through his human agents, we describe them
as the miracles of prophets (i.e. Moses or Jesus (pbuh) by those
hands they were performed).
Quirk Continues
Some six hundred years after the birth of Jesus (pbuh), Muhammad
(pbuh) the messenger of God was born in Makkah in Arabia. When
he proclaimed his mission at the age of forty, his fellow
countrymen, the mushriks of makkah made an identical request for
miracles, as had the Jews, from their promised Messiah. Text
book style, it was as if the Arabs had taken a leaf from the
Christian records. History has a habit of repeating itself!
And they say: why are not signs sent down to him from his lord?
[Qur'an 29:50]
SIGNS! WHAT SIGNS!!
"Miracles ? Cries he, what miracles would you have? Are not you
yourselves there? God made you 'shaped you out of a little
clay.' Ye were small once; a few years ago ye were not at all.
Ye have beauty, strength, thoughts, 'ye have compassion on one
another.' Old age comes-on you, and grey hairs; your strength
fades into feebleness: ye sink down, and again are not. 'Ye have
compassion on one another': This struck me much: Allah might
have made you having no compassion on one another, how had it
been then! this is a great direct though, a glance at first-hand
into the very fact of things...." "(On heroes hero-worship and
the heroic in history"), by Thomas Carlyle.
"This Struck Me Much"
This, that "ye have compassion on one another", impressed thomas
carlyle most from his perusal of an English translation. I
presume, there verse that motivated this sentiment is:
1. And among his signs is this, that he created for you mates
from among yourselves, that ye may dwell in tranquillity with
them. and he has put love and mercy between your (hearts):
verily in that are signs for those who reflect. (emphasis added)
Translation by A Yusuf ALi [Qur'an 30:21]
2. And one of his signs it is, that he hath created wives for
you of your own species that ye may dwell with them, and hath
put love and tenderness between you. herein truly are signs for
those who reflect (emphasis added) Translation by Rev. J.M.
Rodwell(M.A.)
3. By another sign he gave you wives from among yourselves, that
ye might live in joy with them, and planted love and kindness
into your hearts. surely there are signs in this for thinking
men (emphasis added) Translation by N.J. Dawood.
The first example is from the translation by Yusuf Ali, a
muslim. The second is by a Christian priest the rev. Rodwell and
the last example is by an Iraqi Jew, N.J. Dawood.
Unfortunately Thomas Carlyle had no access to any one of these
because none of them had seen the light of day in his time. The
only one available to him in 1840 was as he said on page 85 of
his book under referance - "We also can read the Koran; our
translation of it, by sale, is known to be a very fair one."
Taint is in the Motive
Carlyle is very charitable to his fellow countryman. The motives
of george sale, who pioneered an English translation of the Holy
Quran, were suspect. He makes no secret of his antagonism to the
holy book of Islam. In his preface to his translation in 1734 he
made it known that it was his avowed intention to expose the man
Mohammad and his forgery. He records: "who can apprehend any
danger from so manifest a forgery?... The protestants alone are
able to attack the Koran with success; and for them, I trust,
providence has reserved the glory of its overthrow." George
Sale, And he set to work with his prejudiced translation. You
will be able to judge how 'fair' and scholarly george sale was
from the very verse which 'struck' (carlyle) 'much!' Compare it
with the three example already given by a Muslim, a Christian
and a Jew: And of his signs another is, that he had created you
, out of yourselves, wives that ye may cohabit with them, and
hath put love and compassion between you.
I
don't think that George sale was a 'a male chauvinist pig' of
his day to describe our mates, wives or spouses as sexual
objects. He was only keeping to his promise, which Carlyle
overlooked. The Arabic word which he (sale) perverted is
'li-tas-kunoo' which means to find peace, consolation, composure
or tranquillity; and not 'cohabit' meaning 'to live together in
a sexual relationship when not legally married' (the reader's
digest universal dictionary.)
Every word of the Qur'anic text is meticulously chosen,
chiselled and placed by the All-Wise himself. They carry God's
'fingerprint', and are signs of God. And yet, the spiritually
jaundiced...
Ask For A Sign
What signs?? They mean some special kinds of signs or miracles
such as their own foolish minds dictate. Everything is possible
for God, but God is not going to humour the follies of men or
listen to their false demands. He has sent his messenger to
explain his signs clearly, and to warn them of the consequences
of rejection. Is that not enough? The trend of their demand is
generally as follows:
In specific terms they asked that he - Muhammad (pbuh) - 'Put a
ladder up to heaven an bring down a book from God in their very
sight' - "Then we would believe," they said. Or "ye see the
mountain yonder, turn it into gold' - "then we would believe."
or 'make streams to gush out in the desert' - "then we would
believe."
Now listen to the soft, sweet reasoning of Muhammad (pbuh)
against the unreasonable and sceptical demands of the mushriks -
"Do I say to you, verily I am an angel? Do I say to you, verily
in my hands are the treasures of God? Only, what is revealed to
me do I follow." Listen further to the most dignified reply he
is commanded by his Lord to give the unbelievers.
"Say (O Muhammad): 'The signs (miracles) are indeed with Allah:
And most certainly I am only a clear warner!"
In the following ayah the holy prophet is made to point to the
holy Qur'an itself as an answer to their hypocritical demand for
some special kind of 'sign' of 'miracle' for which their foolish
pagan mentality craved. For indeed all miracles are 'signs'; and
it is their disbelief, their scepticism, their lack of faith
which motivates their request for a sign. They are asked to -
'look at the Qur'an' and again, 'look at the Qur'an!'
It is not enough for them that we have sent down to thee (O
Muhammad) the book (al-Qur'an) which is rehearsed to them?
Verily, in it (this perspicuous book) is a mercy and reminder to
those who believe. [Qur'an 29:51].
Two Proofs
As a proof of the divine authorship and the miraculous nature of
the Qur'an, two arguments are advanced by the almighty Himself:
1. 'that we' (God Almighty) have revealed to you (O Muhammed!)
'the book to you' who art absolutely an unlearned person. An 'ummi'
prophet. One who cannot read or write. One who cannot sign his
own name. Let Thomas Carlyle testify regarding the educational
qualifications of Muhammad -
2. one other circumstance we must not forget: that he had no
school learning; of the thing we call school-learning none at
all.' Moreover the divine author (God Almighty) himself
testifies to the veracity of Muhammad's (pbuh) claim that he
could never have composed the contents of the holy Qur'an; he
could not have been its author:
"And
thou (O Muhammad) was not (able) to recite a book before this
(book came), nor art thou (able) to transcribe it with thy right
hand: In that case, indeed, would the talkers of vanities have
doubted."
[Qur'an 29:48].
The author of the Qur'an is reasoning with us, that had Muhammad
(pbuh) been a learned man, and had he been able to read or
write, then in that case the babblers in the market places might
have had some justification to doubt his claim that the holy
Qur'an is God's word. In the event of Muhammed (pbuh) being a
literate person, the accusation of his enemies that he had
probably copied his book (Qur'an) from the writings of the Jews
and Christians, or that perhaps he had been studying Aristotle
and Plato, or that he must have browsed through the 'Torat,' the
'Zabur' and the 'Injeel' and had rehashed it all in a beautiful
language, might have carried some weight. Then, 'the talkers of
vanities' might have had a point. But even this flimsy pretence
has been denied to the unbeliever and the cynic: a point hardly
big enough to hang a fly upon!
2. 'The book'? Yes, the 'book' itself, carries its own evidence
proving its divine authorship. Study the book from any angel.
Scrutinize it. Why not take up the author's challenge if your
doubts are genuine? Do they not consider the Qur'an (with care)
had it been from other than Allah, they would surely have found
therein much discrepancy.
Consistency
It is inconceivable that any human author would remain
consistent in this teachings and his preachings for a period of
over two decades. From the age of forty, when Muhammad (pbuh)
received his first call from heaven to the age sixty-three when
he breathed his last, for twenty-three years the holy prophet
practised and preached Islam. In those twenty-three years, he
passed through the most conflicting vicissitudes of life. Any
man, during the course of such a mission, would be forced by
circumstances to make 'honourable' compromises, and cannot help
contradicting himself. No man can ever write the same always, as
the message of the holy Qur'an is: consistent with itself,
throughout! Or is it that the unbelievers objections are merely
argumentive, refractory, against their own better light and
judgement.? Furthermore, the holy Qur'an contains or mentions
many matters relating to the nature of the universe which were
unknown to man before but which subsequently through evolution
and discoveries of Science have fully confirmed - a field where
an untutored mind would have most certainly lost in wild and
contradictory speculations!
Self-Evident Proof
Again and again when miracles are demanded from the prophet of
God by the cynical and frivolous few, he is made to point to the
Qur'an - message from high - as 'the miracle.' The miracle or
miracles! And men of wisdom, people with literary and spiritual
insight, who were honest enough to themselves, recognised and
accepted al-qur`an as an a genuine miracle.
Says the holy Qur'an:
"Nay here are signs self-evident in the hearts of those endowed
with knowledge:
And none but the unjust reject our signs."
[Qur'an 29:49] |