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The Miraculous Preservation of the Qur’an.

History has not always dealt kindly with Scriptures. The original Gospel of Jesus was lost in its infancy and replaced by the later works of anonymous writers. These are people who most likely never met Jesus and were merely recording the rumours and traditions that had been passed down about him. There can be no sharper contrast than the Qur’an, which has been blessed with rapid diffusion through the Arabian Peninsula during Prophet Muhammad’s lifetime, peace be upon him. As we will see, the fact that the Qur’an in our possession today is identical to that which was originally revealed by God Almighty over 1,400 years ago is a testament to its miraculous preservation.

GOD’S PROMISE TO MANKIND

“Indeed, it is We who sent down the Qur’an and indeed, We will be its guardian.” [Qur’an, chapter 15, verse 9]

Throughout history man has corrupted the divinely revealed Scriptures, whether by accident or intentionally. This was completely by the Will of God Almighty, called Allah in Arabic, He allowed it to happen because these earlier Scriptures were time bound and only served as temporary guidance until the coming of the Qur’an. Allah blessed His final revelation, the Qur’an, with something that was not bestowed on any of the prior Scriptures, by promising to protect and preserve it from any corruption.

One of the means by which Allah has protected the Qur’an is through the language of the Qur’an itself. Allah informs us:

“And We have certainly made the Qur’an easy for remembrance, so is there any who will remember?” [Chapter 54, verse 17]

It is estimated that there are at least 10 million Muslims alive today who have memorised the entire Qur’an in its original Arabic language. Many of these memorisers lead their Muslim communities in prayer five times a day, every day, in mosques throughout the world. These leaders of prayer are known as Imams and typically there is at least one Imam assigned to each of the estimated 2.5 million mosques throughout the world.

This is a testament to the promise made by Allah to protect the Qur’an. The Orientalist scholar William Graham stated that the Qur’an is perhaps the only book, religious or secular, that has been memorised completely by millions of people [1]. Note that these memorisers include people of all ages, and the vast majority are not Arabs and don’t even speak Arabic as a language. How is it possible then, that they can memorise a book in a language that they don’t speak? This is down to the sublime rhythm and rhyme of the Qur’an which happens to be one of its many miracles. If every written copy of religious Scriptures in existence today were to be somehow destroyed then it is only the Qur’an that could be recreated perfectly, thanks to its mass memorisation. It must be pointed out that every Muslim of the estimated 1.7 billion Muslims in the world today are required to memorise at least some parts of the Qur’an in Arabic in order to be able to fulfil the obligation of the Islamic prayer.

Moreover, the Qur’an was revealed gradually over a period of 23 years, one of the wisdoms of this was to facilitate the memorisation of the Qur’an by the early Muslims at large. It should be mentioned that the revelations to the previous prophets were not gradual like the revelation of the Qur’an. Rather, each previous Scripture was given to the particular prophet all at once, for example the Qur’an informs us about Moses:

“And We wrote for him [Moses] on the tablets [something] of all things – instruction and explanation for all things, [saying], “Take them with determination and order your people to take the best of it. I will show you the home of the defiantly disobedient.” [Chapter 7, verse 145]

PROPHET MUHAMMAD’S ROLE

“And indeed, the Qur’an is the revelation of the Lord of the worlds. The Trustworthy Spirit [Angel Gabriel] has brought it down; Upon your heart, [O Muhammad] – that you may be of the warners.” [Chapter 26, verses 192-194]

Prophet Muhammad was tasked by Allah with memorising, disseminating and explaining the verses of the Qur’an as they were revealed from Allah to him through the Angel Gabriel. The eagerness of the Prophet to fulfil this task is mentioned in the Qur’an:

“Move not your tongue with it, [as it is being revealed O Muhammad], to hasten with recitation of the Qur’an. Indeed, upon Us is its collection [in your heart] and [to make possible] its recitation. So when We have recited it [through Gabriel], then follow its recitation. Then upon Us is its clarification [to you].” [Chapter 75, verses 16-19]

Here Allah instructed Prophet Muhammad that he should be patient and that there was no need for haste in memorising the verses, as they would be etched unerringly into his heart.

To continually refresh the Prophet’s memory, the Angel Jibreel (Gabriel) would visit him particularly for that purpose every year. Here are some examples of narrations from the companions of Prophet Muhammad in this regard:

Fatima said, “The Prophet informed me secretly, Jibreel used to recite the Qur’an to me and I to him once a year, but this year he has recited the entire Qur’an with me twice. I do not think but that my death is approaching.'” [2]

Abu Huraira said that the Prophet and Jibreel would recite the Qur’an to each other once every year, during Ramadan, but that in the year of his death they recited it twice.’ [3]

Ibn Mas’ud gave a similar report to the above, adding, “Whenever the Prophet and Jibreel finished reciting to each other I would recite to the Prophet as well, and he would inform me that my recitation was eloquent.” [4]

INCENTIVES FOR LEARNING AND TEACHING THE QUR’AN

Below are some of the incentives that have inspired and motivated Muslims to learn and teach the Qur’an:

  • They are the best people:

‘Uthmaan, may Allah be pleased with him, said that Prophet Muhanmmad said: “The best of you are the ones who learn the Qur’an and teach it to others” [5]

  • The Qur’an will intercede for Muslims on the Day of Judgement:

Abu Umaamah relates that Prophet Muhammad said: “Read the Qur’an, for verily it will come on the Day of Standing as an intercessor for its companions.” [6]

  • There are ten rewards for each letter a Muslim recites:

“Whoever reads a letter from the Book of Allah, he will have a reward. And that reward will be multiplied by ten. I am not saying that “Alif, Laam, Meem” is a letter, rather I am saying that “Alif” is a letter, “laam” is a letter and “meem” is a letter.” [7]

  • The reciters of the Qur’an will be in the company of the noble and obedient angels:

‘Aishah relates that the Prophet said: “Verily the one who recites the Qur’an beautifully, smoothly, and precisely, he will be in the company of the noble and obedient angels. And as for the one who recites with difficulty, stammering or stumbling through its verses, then he will have twice that reward.” [8]

  • A Muslim’s position in Paradise is determined by the amount of Qur’an they memorise in this life:

‘Abdullaah ibn ‘Amr ibn Al-’Aas heard the Prophet saying: “It will be said to the companion of the Qur’an: Read and elevate (through the levels of the Paradise) and beautify your voice as you used to do when you were in the dunyaa [earthly life]! For verily, your position in the Paradise will be at the last verse you recite!” [9]

  • Allah’s mercy descends upon Muslims when the Qur’an is recited:

Abu Huraira reports from the Messenger of Allah that, “No people gather in a house of the houses of Allah reciting the Book of Allah and studying it among themselves except that serenity descends upon them, mercy envelops them, the angels surround them, and Allah makes mention of them to those with Him.” [10]

The next section will address the question of how the Prophet achieved the momentous aim of teaching the Qur’an to each and every Muslim.

MEMORISATION DURING PROPHET’S LIFETIME

The first 13 years of Prophethood were spent in the Pagan stronghold of Makkah. During this time the Muslims suffered their worst persecution at the hands of the idolaters, and the Islamic propagation opportunities were restricted. In spite of these challenges and obstacles, there were numerous Muslim converts thanks to the recitation of the Qur’an by Prophet Muhammad. They in turn often imparted verses to their tribes beyond the valley of Makkah, helping to secure firm roots in the city of Madinah prior to the Muslim migration there.

After 13 years of persecution in Makkah, the Muslims migrated to the city of Madinah. With the help of the local Muslims they were able to establish a base. It was here that and spread of the Qur’an flourished thanks to the emphasis on education:

• Arriving in Madinah, the Prophet set up the Suffa, a school dedicated to instructing its attendees in the skills of literacy, providing them with food and a place to sleep as well. Approximately 900 Companions took up this offer. While the Prophet imparted the Qur’an, others such as ‘Abdullah bin Sa’id bin al-‘As, ‘Ubada bin as-Samit, and Ubayy bin Ka’b taught the essentials of reading and writing. [11]

• Deputations arriving from outlying areas were given into the care of the Muslims in Madinah, not only for the provisions of food and lodging but also for education. The Prophet would subsequently question them to discover the extent of their learning. [12]

• Upon receiving any new verses of the Qur’an, the Prophet observed a habit of immediately reciting the latest verses to all the men in his company, proceeding afterwards to recite them to the women in a separate gathering. [13]

• Literate prisoners of war could secure their freedom by teaching ten Muslims to read and write. [14]

The companions of the Prophet also functioned as teachers, imparting what they learnt of the Qur’an onto others. A plethora of evidence demonstrates that the Companions actively took part in this policy during the Madinah period. The following narrations represent only a fraction of the evidence at our disposal:

• Abdullah bin Mughaffal al-Muzani said that when someone migrated to Madinah, the Prophet would assign a teacher from the Ansar [Muslims that were native to Madinah] to that individual saying: let him understand Islam and teach him the Qur’an. “The same was true with me,” he continued, “as I was entrusted to one of the Ansar who made me understand the religion and taught me the Qur’an.” [15]

• Ubayy taught the Qur’an during the Prophet’s lifetime, in Madinah [16], even trekking regularly to teach a blind man in his house. [17]

• ‘Uqba bin ‘Amir remarked, “The Prophet came to us while we were in the mosque, teaching each other the Qur’an.” [18]

• Jabir bin ‘Abdullah said, “The Prophet came to us while we were reading the Qur’an, our gathering consisting of both Arabs and non-Arabs…” [19]

Additional evidence shows that companions travelled beyond Madinah to serve as instructors:

• Mu’adh bin Jabal was dispatched to Yemen to teach Qur’an. [20]

• On their way to Bi’r Ma’una, at least forty companions known for teaching the Qur’an were ambushed and killed. [21]

• Abu ‘Ubaidah was sent to Najran to teach Qur’an. [22]

• Wabra bin Yuhannas taught the Qur’an in Yemen to Um-Sa’id bint Buzrug during the Prophet’s lifetime. [23]

The sea of incentives and opportunities for learning the Qur’an, coupled with the waves of people involved in disseminating it, soon yielded a significant number of companions who had thoroughly memorised it by heart. These individuals are given the honorary title of ‘hafidh’, an Arabic word literally meaning ‘guardian’. Many of these names have been lost in history due to being killed in war. What the records do show are the names of more than thirty of those who lived on, who memorised the Qur’an and continued to teach it, either in Madinah or in the newly conquered lands of the growing Muslim realms:

Ibn Mas’ud, Abu Ayyub, Abu Bakr as-Siddiq, Abu ad-Darda’, Abu Zaid, Abu Musa al-Ash’ari, Abu Huraira, Ubayy bin Ka’b, Um-Salama, Tamim ad-Dari, Hudhaifa, Hafsa, Zaid bin Thabit, Salim client of Hudhaifa, Sa’d bin ‘Ubada, Sa’d bin ‘Ubaid al-Qari, Sa’d bin Mundhir, Shihab al-Qurashi, Talha, ‘A’isha, ‘Ubada bin as-Samit,’Abdullah bin Sa’ib, Ibn ‘Abbas, ‘Abdullah bin ‘Umar, ‘Abdullah bin ‘Amr, ‘Uthman bin ‘Affan, ‘Ata’ bin Markayud (a Persian, living in Yemen), ‘Uqba bin ‘Amir, ‘Ali bin Ali Talib, ‘Umar bin al-Khattab, ‘Amr bin al-‘As, Fudala bin ‘Ubaid, Qays bin Abi Sa’sa’a, Mujamma’ bin Jariya, Maslama bin Makhlad, Mu’adh bin Jabal, Mu’adh Abu Halima, Um-Warqah bint ‘Abdullah bin al-Harith and ‘Abdul Wahid. [24]

It must be noted that these are not unknown individuals, they are all renowned companions of Prophet Muhammad and we have their biographical information.

CHAINS OF MEMORISERS

This legacy of memorisation has continued throughout Islamic history to this day. It is not just the core text of the Qur’an that is memorised, the rules and regulations for pronouncing each individual letter is also memorised. This ensures that Muslims not only recite the same content as Prophet Muhammad, but also in the same style (stopping points, intonation, ryhthm etc).

Muslims that gain mastery in this field are known as Qurra, which literally means ‘reciters’. Among them are some who have attained an ijazah. An ijazah, literally meaning ‘permission’, is a certificate used primarily to indicate that one has been authorised by a higher authority to transmit a certain subject or text of Islamic knowledge. This usually implies that the student has learned this knowledge through face-to-face interactions “at the feet” of the teacher. In a formal, written ijazah, the teacher granting the certificate usually includes a sanad (or chain) containing his or her scholarly lineage of teachers back to the Prophet Muhammad, a later admired scholar, or the author of a specific book. So in the context of Qur’an memorisation, it means that the memoriser has become a living link among the many links in the unbroken chain of memorisers going all the way to Prophet Muhammad.

The image is a typical license (ijaza) issued at the end of perfecting Quran recitation certifying a reciter’s unbroken chain of instructors going back to the Prophet of Islam. The above image is the ijaza certificate of Qari Mishari bin Rashid al-Afasy, well known reciter from Kuwait, issued by Sheikh Ahmad al-Ziyyat.

The image is a typical licence (ijazah) issued at the end of perfecting Qur’an recitation, certifying a reciter’s unbroken chain of instructors going back to Prophet Muhammad. The above image is the ijazah certificate of Mishari bin Rashid al-Afasy, a world famous reciter from Kuwait.

Here is an example of an ijazah obtained by Sheikh Ihsaan Ibrahmin in South Africa [25]:

sanad3

Notice how we have the names of the Qurra going all the way back to Prophet Muhammad. Other information such as the date of birth, death and locations are also known. This information is critical for verification reasons and allows for the detection of fabricated chains.

The evidence for the reliability of this methodology for preserving the Qur’an is in the recitation of the Qur’an itself. In millions of mosques throughout the world, at least five times a day every day, these memorisers and Qurra who herald from different parts of the world and learnt at the feet of different scholars mix together and recite the Qur’an with one another. Any mistakes in recitation are immediately corrected by the congregation. And yet there is never any disagreement about the Qur’an itself. Truly a miracle!

Now you can appreciate why Muslims have certainty in the perfect preservation of the Qur’an. Not only do we have to believe it from a theological perspective, but we also know it to be true from a historical and experiential one.

NON MUSLIM SCHOLARSHIP’S TESTAMENT TO THE PRESERVATION OF THE QUR’AN

Here are just a few examples of non-Muslim religious and textual scholars who testify to the preservation of the Qur’an:

A.T. Welch, a non-Muslim Orientalist, writes:

“For Muslims the Qur’an is much more than scripture or sacred literature in the usual Western sense. Its primary significance for the vast majority through the centuries has been in its oral form, the form in which it first appeared, as the “recitation” chanted by Muhammad to his followers over a period of about twenty years… The revelations were memorized by some of Muhammad’s followers during his lifetime, and the oral tradition that was thus established has had a continuous history ever since, in some ways independent of, and superior to, the written Qur’an… Through the centuries the oral tradition of the entire Qur’an has been maintained by the professional reciters (Qurraa). Until recently, the significance of the recited Qur’an has seldom been fully appreciated in the West.” [26]

Leading Orientalist Kenneth Cragg reflects that:

“…this phenomenon of Qur’anic recital means that the text has traversed the centuries in an unbroken living sequence of devotion. It cannot, therefore, be handled as an antiquarian thing, nor as a historical document out of a distant past. The fact of hifdh (Qur’anic memorization) has made the Qur’an a present possession through all the lapse of Muslim time and given it a human currency in every generation, never allowing its relegation to a bare authority for reference alone.” [27]

TAKING THINGS A STEP FURTHER – PRESERVATION OF LANGUAGE

“Indeed, We have made it an Arabic Qur’an…” [Chapter 43, verse 3]

As has been discussed so far, the Qur’an has been preserved in both content and recitation style. To this we can add that the Qur’an has also been preserved in meaning. Why is this important? You can’t separate language from Scripture. As Allah stated above, the Qur’an is tied to the Arabic language. So if we were to lose the Arabic language, then we would also lose the Qur’an. What use is having the perfect preservation of the content of a Scripture if you have lost the meanings of the words it is written in? You wouldn’t be able to properly understand the Scripture, it would be like having a lock without the key.

Let’s examine the Judaic tradition for the sake of comparison. Hebrew was a dead language from the second century CE until the foundation of Israel. Ever since the spoken usage of Mishnaic Hebrew ended in the second century CE, Hebrew had not been spoken as a mother tongue. [28].

Even though the Torah was originally revealed to Moses over three thousand years ago, the first Hebrew lexicon wasn’t created until the tenth century [29] – some three hundred years after the Qur’anic revelation. They don’t have any dictionaries older than that. They have oral traditions, such as the Mishnah, where they studied the Torah and the meanings of words, but they did not have a systematic lexicography that the Muslims have. This idea seems to have been borrowed from the Muslims. It’s a known fact that in Hebrew studies, Hebrew scholars are forced to go to classical Arabic dictionaries to see what the Arabs had to say about the roots of words. This is because Arabic and Hebrew are both Semitic languages and share many words with similar meaning. This allows Hebrew scholars to get a more ancient understanding of their own root structures [30].

In fact lexicography is really an Islamic science and the Europeans learnt it from the Muslims. The earliest English dictionary is from the sixteenth century [31]. The first Arabic Dictionary was created in the eighth century, not long after Prophet Muhammad who died in 632 CE [32]. This ensured that none of the meanings of the words of the Qur’an have ever been lost.

COMMON MISCONCEPTIONS

Uthman bin Affan, a companion and close friend of Prophet Muhammad, is accused by some Christian Missionaries and Apologists of corrupting the Qur’an as he was the first to compile it into book form. They cite the fact that he burned some Qur’anic manuscripts as evidence for parts of the Qur’an being lost.

Before getting into a response, let’s first look at some important background information. During the reign of Uthman, selected by popular pledge as the third Caliph (or leader) of the Muslims after the death of Prophet Muhammad, the Muslim empire had rapidly expanded to the reaches of Azerbaijan and Armenia in the north. Hailing from various tribes and provinces, these fighting forces possessed a variety of dialects. Unfortunately, the Muslims started differing amongst themselves with regards to the recitation of the Qur’an. They began contending with each other, each regarding his own recitation to be superior. These Muslims were not companions, they had never met Prophet Muhammad, and therefore were not trained in the proper manner and etiquette of the recitation of the Qur’an. One of the companions who was present with them, a military commander called Hudhaifa bin al-Yaman, realised some action must be taken to prevent this occurrence on a larger scale. He therefore left Azerbaijan to report directly to Caliph Uthman. “O Caliph”, he advised, “take this ummah [community] in hand before they differ about their Book like the Christians and Jews.” [33]

After receiving the report from Hudhaifa, that very year Uthman resolved to end these disputes. Assembling the people, he explained the problem and sought their opinion on recital in different dialects, keeping in mind that some might claim a particular dialect as superior based on their tribal affiliations. When asked for his own opinion Uthman replied (as narrated by Ali bin Abi Talib):

“I see that we bring the people on a single Mushaf [with a single dialect] so that there is neither division nor discord.” And we said, “An excellent proposal”. [34]

Uthman next appointed a committee to oversee the task of compiling the Qur’an in book form. Among this group were personal scribes of the Prophet such as Zaid bin Thabit [35]. Uthman commissioned them to manage this task by collecting and tabulating all the Qur’anic parchments that had been written in the presence of Prophet Muhammad during his lifetime. Once completed, the book was read to the companions in Uthman’s presence [36]. With the final recitation over, he dispatched duplicate copies for distribution throughout the many provinces of the Islamic nation.

Not only did Uthman send the actual copies to each province, he also sent Qur’anic reciters to teach the people the correct recitation of the Qur’an. Zaid bin Thabit remained in Medinah, to Makkah he sent Abdullah bin Saa’ib; to Syria was sent al-Mugheerah bin Shu’bah; Abu Abd ar-Rahman as-Sulamee and Aamir bin Abdul Qays to Iraq. All of these reciters were well-known for their recitation of Qur’an. [37]

With the task complete, the ink on the final copy dry, and duplicate copies dispatched, there was no need for the numerous fragments of the Qur’an circulating in people’s hands. So all such fragments were burned. Mus’ab bin Sa’d asserts that the people were pleased with Uthman’s decision; at the very least no one voiced any objections. Numerous reports confirm this unanimous approval, including ‘Ali bin Abi Talib who says:

“By Allah, he did what he did with these fragments in the presence of us all [i.e. and none of us objected].” [38]

In the West, when we think of burning it has negative connotations, such as hiding evidence. The reader must understand that this is a common practice in Islam, as we can’t just discard Qur’anic verses by throwing them away in the rubbish, they have to be burnt or buried out of respect for the content. This act done by Uthman was not something new like critics claim, it was also done during the time of the Prophet:

“The Prophet commanded the companions, ‘Do not write anything from me except the Qur’an. Whoever writes anything besides the Qur’an should destroy it” [39]

Some critics may argue that with some manuscripts being burnt, we may have lost parts of the Qur’an. They would be correct had the only recordings consisted of written copies. However, as has already been shown, the oral tradition has always been the primary means of preservation of the Qur’an, and thanks to the large number of early Muslims who had memorised the entire Qur’an it was a trivial process to safeguard the compiled book form against corruption.

CONCLUSIONS

Whether or not the reader agrees that the Qur’an is divinely inspired, and this is a separate question that has been addressed in other blog posts, there can be no doubt that the Qur’an has been flawlessly preserved to this very day since its first revelation to Prophet Muhammad. As Allah tells us in the opening verses of the Qur’an:

“This is the Book about which there is no doubt, a guidance for those conscious of Allah.” [Chapter 2, verse 2]

Allah has assured mankind that this is the Scripture we can be sure of. And Allah is true to His word.

Learn more

To learn more about the miracles of the Qur’an you can order and download the free book “The Eternal Challenge: A Journey Through The Miraculous Qur’an” from the One Reason website (click on the image below):

Web

References

1 – William Graham, Beyond the Written Word, UK: Cambridge University Press, 1993, p. 80.

2 – Al-Bukhari, Fada’il al-Qur’an: 7.

3 – Al-Bukhari, Saum: 7.

4 – Al-Bukhari, Fada’il al-Qur’an: 7.

5 – Riyad-us Saliheen, Bukhari, Book 9, #993.

6 –  Riyad-us Saliheen, Muslim, Book 9, #991.

7 – Riyad-us Saliheen, Tirmidhi, Book 9, #999.

8 – Riyad-us Saliheen, Bukhari, Book 9, #994.

9 – Tirmidhi, #2914.

10 – Muslim, Kitab Al-Dhikr, #6518.

11 – Al-Baihaqi, Sunan, vi:125-126.

12 – Ibn Hanbal, Musnad, iv:206.

13 – Ibn Ishaq, as-Seyar wa al-Maghazi, ed. by Zakkar, p. 147.

14 – Ibrahim Syed, Education of Muslims in Kentucky Prisons. Louisville: Islamic Research Foundation International.

15 – Ibn Shabba, Tariklz al-Madina, p. 487.

16 – Abu ‘Ubaid, Fada’il, p. 207.

17 – Abu ‘Ubaid, Fada’il, p. 208.

18 – Abu ‘Ubaid, Fada’il, pp. 69-70.

19 – Al-Faryabi, Fada’il, p. 244.

20 – Al-Khalifa, Tarikh, i:72; ad-Dulabi, al-Kuna, i:19.

21 – Al-Baladhuri, Ansab, i:375.

22 – Ibn Sa’d, Tabaqat, iii/2:299.

23 – Ar-Razi, Tarikh Madinat San’a, p. 131.

24 – Muhammad Mustafa Al-Azmi, The History of the Qur’anic text From Revelation to Compilation, pp. 64 – 66.

25 – Muslim Judicial Council South Africa.

26 – The Encyclopedia of Islam, ‘The Quran in Muslim Life and Thought.’

27 – Kenneth Cragg, The Mind of the Quran, London: George Allen & Unwin, 1973, p. 26.

28 – A Short History of the Hebrew Language, Chaim Rabin, Jewish Agency and Alpha Press, Jerusalem, 1973.

29 – Sa’adyah Gaon (892 – 942) a religious leader in present-day Iraq, author of the first grammar and dictionary of the Hebrew language.

30 – Kaltner, John, The Use of Arabic in Biblical Hebrew Lexicography (Washington, D.C.: Catholic Biblical Association of America, 1996).

31 – Latin-English dictionary published by Sir Thomas Elyot in 1538.

32 – Karin C. Ryding, Introduction to Early Medieval Arabic: Studies on Al-Khalīl Ibn Ahmad, pg. 3. (Washington, D.C.: Georgetown University Press, 1998).

33 – Al-Bukhari, Sahih, #4987.

34 – Ibn Abi Dawud, al-Masahif, p. 22.

35 – Ibn AbI Dawud, al-Masahif, p. 3; see also al-Bukhari, Sahih, Fada’il al-Qur’an:4.

36 – Ibn Kathir, Fada’il, vii:450.

37 – az-Zarqaanee, v. 1, p. 262.

38 – Ibn Abi Dawud, al-Masahif, p. 22.

39 – Muslim, al-Zuhd al-Raqaiq, #5326.

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A CALL TO THE TRUTH

16 Comments

  • January 8, 2014 at 11:08 pm
    KASIM

    MAY ALLAH CONTINUE TO STRENGTHEN HIS UMMAH

  • January 9, 2014 at 1:24 am

    Indeed, there is need for muslim to start dawah via Blogosphere.

  • January 9, 2014 at 4:36 pm

    Allahu Barik Feeh, May Allah accepts our good deeds and forgive our sins

  • January 10, 2014 at 12:38 pm
    Sadiq Shah

    May Allah swt reward u & your family in abundance for such a blissful efforts to convey the message of Islam and eradicate misconceptions, may Allah swt reward u for sharing with us which will definitely help us in our dawah inshaAllah. Jazakumallahu khairun

  • July 31, 2014 at 3:47 am
    Cumar Warsame

    “One of the proofs for Muslims that the Qur’an is of divine origin is that it contains no contradictions. This is all the more remarkable when one considers the way in which the Qur’an was revealed. In spite of being revealed in gradual stages, a few verses at a time over a period of 23 years, there is not a single verse which contradicts another.” Is this true? Consider: – Surah 2:106:

    None of Our revelations do We abrogate or cause to be forgotten, but We substitute something better or similar: Knowest thou not that Allah Hath power over all things?

    Why did God need to change his mind or improve on what he had revealed in the short space of 23 years?

    • July 31, 2014 at 12:10 pm

      Contradictons are not the same as abrogration. Hopefully without sounding condescending, a contradiction is defined as:

      “The Law of non-contradiction is one of the basic laws in classical logic. It states that something cannot be both true and not true at the same time when dealing with the same context.”

      Whereas abrogation is one statement ‘replacing’ or abolishing another. God Almighty is free to choose to abrograte His laws as and how He pleases. One of the wisdoms may be that a certain law is appropriate under a set of certain circumstances, and a modified form of the law replaces it to accommodate different circumstanes. There is even abrogration in the Bible, for example the law of divorce:

      If a man marries a woman who becomes displeasing to him because he finds something indecent about her, and he writes her a certificate of divorce, gives it to her and sends her from his house, and if after she leaves his house she becomes the wife of another man, [Deutronomy 24:1-2]

      Jesus abrograted this:

      “It has been said, ‘Anyone who divorces his wife must give her a certificate of divorce.’ But I tell you that anyone who divorces his wife, except for marital unfaithfulness, causes her to become an adulteress, and anyone who marries the divorced woman commits adultery. [Matthew 5:31-32]

      • July 31, 2014 at 8:12 pm
        Stephen Thompson

        No comment because you are not debating rationally. Jesus did not abrogate the law of Moses he explained what really was God’s will for marriage. There were around 1400 years between Moses and Jesus and so God was not changing his mind within 23 years.

      • August 1, 2014 at 1:00 pm

        Since when has abrogation been bound by time, it is not. Doesn’t matter whether it’s 23 years or 2,300 years, if one set of laws (Mosaic law in case of Bible, Shariah in case of Qur’an) has changes made whereby one rule is replaced by another then this is abrogation.

        With the Qur’an, the reason why abrogation of certain laws/rules happened within 23 years is because of the sweeping changes that occurred in the Muslim world and Arabian peninsula in a short period of time.

        The example I gave from the Bible is clearly abrogration. Jesus states that God designs His laws in such a way that they suit the circumstances of their audience:

        “Why then,” they asked, “did Moses command that a man give his wife a certificate of divorce and send her away?” Jesus replied, “Moses permitted you to divorce your wives because your hearts were hard. But it was not this way from the beginning. I tell you that anyone who divorces his wife, except for marital unfaithfulness, and marries another woman commits adultery.” [Matthew 19:7-9]

        In summary, Moses was given a specific law regarding divorce, i.e. it was permissible if the husband is displeased with his wife (which was allowed because of their “hard hearts” as Jesus puts it), and Jesus later abrogated it to allow divorce under one condition only – adultery – because circumstances have changed.

      • August 1, 2014 at 9:39 pm
        Cumar Warsame

        Actually you are wrong. Jesus abrogated nothing. He merely states that from the beginning divorce is not God’s will. The God of the Bible is not an “allah” in the mind of a man. He is independent from man. Muhammad was not divinely inspired and so he was feeling his way. If something did not work he claimed a later “revelation” which superseded the previous one.

        For example, after he felt that the angel Gabriel had spoken to him in the cave of Hira he thought that Jews and Christians would accept him as a prophet and so he told them to check what he was saying with their books. He also talked about them as cousins to the Muslims. Later when they did not accept his prophethood (mostly) his attitude changed. He accused them of changing their books or misinterpreting (the Arabic is not so clear which it is) and he used excuses to wipe out large populations of Jews.

      • August 2, 2014 at 8:10 pm

        I’m going to break this down so that it’s clear beyond any doubt:

        Moses – You can divorce your wife for reasons other than adultery and it is legal for her to remarry.

        Jesus – You can divorce your wife only for adultery. If she is divorced for any other reason, and she remarries, then she has committed adultery.

        I understand that God’s ultimate will is what Jesus promoted, that’s the ideal end goal. But in the mean time, during the time of Moses, the less ideal law – the temporary placeholder which permits divorce for reasons other than adultery – was in place to reflect the “hard hearts” of the Jews, as Jesus put it. Clear abrogation. Case closed.

        It is the example that you gave for Islam that is not actually abrogation. The Qur’an says that the Christians are closest in love to the Muslims, whereas the Jews and Pagans are harshest to the Muslims:

        You will surely find the most intense of the people in animosity toward the believers [to be] the Jews and those who associate others with Allah; and you will find the nearest of them in affection to the believers those who say, “We are Christians.” That is because among them are priests and monks and because they are not arrogant. [5:82]

        Therefore I don’t see how “wiping out large populations of Jews”, as you put it, abrogates the fact that Christians are closest to the Muslims in love. Moreover, it was a particular Jewish tribe – treacherous combatants in a war against the Muslims when they had signed a treaty to support the Muslims – who chose the manner of their own execution, not Prophet Muhammad (pbuh). Their punishment for betraying the Muslims was judged according to the Torah. The adult male combatants were put to death, but women and children were spared, according to the law of the Torah:

        When you march up to attack a city, make its people an offer of peace. If they accept and open their gates, all the people in it shall be subject to forced labor and shall work for you. If they refuse to make peace and they engage you in battle, lay siege to that city. When the Lord your God delivers it into your hand, put to the sword all the men in it. As for the women, the children, the livestock and everything else in the city, you may take these as plunder for yourselves. And you may use the plunder the Lord your God gives you from your enemies. [Deuteronomy 20:10-14]

        So if anyone dislikes the manner of their execution, their issue is with the Torah, not Prophet Muhammad (pbuh). It’s sad to think that any Christian could have such a distorted understanding of what happened in this incident. If you want to improve your knowledge I recommend the book “Life of Muhammad” by Martin Lings, a fantastic book and perhaps the best biography available in the English language.

      • August 2, 2014 at 9:48 pm
        Cumar Warsame

        Jesus pre-dates Moses. Please read the text: – 8 Jesus replied, “Moses permitted divorce only as a concession to your hard hearts, but it was not what God had originally intended. 9 And I tell you this, whoever divorces his wife and marries someone else commits adultery—unless his wife has been unfaithful.” Matthew 19. (NLT). There is no abrogation here.

      • August 3, 2014 at 10:04 am

        The law that Jesus brings does not pre-date Moses, it is God’s ultimate Will that pre-dates Moses (“not what God had originally intended”). You are confusing God’s eternal will and the manifestation of His will on earth. The final law that the prophets enact, in this case a stricter set of rules for divorce via Jesus, are indicative of God’s ultimate will. God, out of His wisdom and mercy for mankind, does not always enact His ultimate will in the first laws that are revealed. He sometimes reveals them in gradual stages, so any temporary laws act as stepping stones toward the final law He wants in place.

        The example we are discussing in the Bible is no different to some of the abrogated laws in the Qur’an. For example, regarding alcohol:

        “O you who have believed, do not approach prayer while you are intoxicated until you know what you are saying… [4:43]”

        Initially, alcohol was permitted with the only restriction being that Muslims do not pray in a state of intoxication. Later this was abrogated such that alcohol is completely forbidden:

        “O you who have believed, indeed, intoxicants, gambling, [sacrificing on] stone alters [to other than Allah ], and divining arrows are but defilement from the work of Satan, so avoid it that you may be successful.” [5:90]

        It is God’s ultimate will that the Muslims do not drink, because it is harmful. This is similar to the Bible in that it is God’s ultimate will that divorce is made less flexible, because it is harmful to society. But God, out of his wisdom, knows that the Arabs were addicted to alcohol and so a sudden prohibition would have been a hardship for them to endure. Therefore God, out of his mercy, prohibited alcohol in gradual steps, just like how we treat addicts at rehabilitation centres. Again this is similar to the Bible, God knows that the Jews had “hard hearts” and therefore made divorce more flexible as a temporary measure.

        The difference between you and I is consistency. I see abrogation in both the Bible and Qur’an, but you only acknowledge it in the Qur’an, even though the examples I explained above from both Scriptures are identical. Abrogation is not a bad thing, we should be grateful that we have a God that takes into consideration our circumstances. In fact if it didn’t exist in the Bible that would be a detriment to the Bible!

      • August 4, 2014 at 12:11 am
        Cumar Warsame

        If you admitt abrogation then it is only a small step to admitt that the Qur’an came through Muhammad’s mind and especially the later revelations were very convenient for his personal situation!

        With Jesus then we agree. God’s will from the beginning was not that divorce should be easy and so there is no abrogation here. Perhaps Moses making a concession.

      • August 4, 2014 at 12:12 pm

        I don’t agree with your conclusion. You’re just playing semantics now, “Moses making a concession” means God making a concession, Moses was not permitted to change the Torah, he was tasked with delivering and teaching it. If God made a concession with regards to divorce, then that means when that concession was revoked with the coming of Jesus then the law of divorce was abrogated.

        Interesting viewpoint that you have regarding Prophet Muhammad (pbuh). Since you mentioned convenience and personal circumstances, can’t the same be said of Paul, that he taught a Torah-free theology (which was at odds with what James the brother of Jesus followed, see Acts 15) just to support his claims of being an apostle to the Gentiles, in order to make it easy and enticing for the Gentiles to enter Christianity? Every point you mention against Islam applies to the Bible as well, yet you only seem to take issue with it when it comes to Islam. We have to adopt a fair and consistent approach.

        It is literally impossible for Prophet Muhammad (pbuh) to have authored the Qur’an, please read and feel free to comment in this article if you want to challenge this:

        https://mpom.wpengine.com/2014/03/18/ten-reasons-muhammad-could-not-have-authored-the-quran/