ASK
MUSLIMS
by Gerhard Nehls
July 1992
PART THREE....................................................................................................... 65 1
The Ethics Of Islam Seen From A Christian View Point ...........................................................................65 The status of Women in the Quran and Hadis ...........................................................................................65 The concept of prayer..................................................................................................................................67 Total Predestination or the Free Will of Man? ...........................................................................................68 Pre ordained Sin - but man's responsibility? ...............................................................................................68 The witness of the Hadis. ............................................................................................................................69 The witness of the Quran ...........................................................................................................................70 Righteousness or mercy?.............................................................................................................................73 Fear or love?................................................................................................................................................75 Allah directs believers.................................................................................................................................77 The Holy War.................................................................................................................................................79 The romantic ideal.......................................................................................................................................79 The materialistic purpose. ...........................................................................................................................79 The opposing concept of Jesus....................................................................................................................80
They say: 'None shall enter Paradise unless he be a Jew or a Christian ' Those are their desires Say: 'Produce your proof if ye are Truthful' " (Sura 2:111)
PART ONE
The Quran repeatedly and emphatically states that the Torah and Gospel - we take this to stand for the Old and New Testaments - are revelations by the same God as the God of the Quran.
"People of the Book! Stand fast by the Law, the Gospel, and all the revelation that hath come to you from your Lord. It is the revelation that has come to thee from THY LORD.'' ibid.
vs. 71
''The Quran is a confirmation of (revelations) that went before it''. S. Ynus 10:37 ''lf thou wert in doubt as to what We have revealed unto thee, then ask those who have been reading the Book from before thee. The truth had indeed come to thee from thy Lord.'' ibid. vs.
94
''And dispute ye not with the people of the book but say: we believe in the revelation which has come down to us and that which came down to you. S. Ankabt 29:46 "This is a book which We have revealed, bringing blessings, and confirming (the revelations) which came before it: that thou mayest warn the Mother of Cities and all around her." Sura 6:92 What else does this mean, than that Mohammed claims to bring revelation to Mecca and the Arabs, confirming and establishing what was sent before him? ''Before thee, also, the apostles We sent were but men, to whom We granted inspiration: If ye realize this not, Ask of those who possess the message." Sura 21:7 We can clearly see, that the Quran presupposes the divine revelation of ''the Book'' and its unpolluted content at the time of the prophet Mohammed. The Quran criticises, however, the twisting and misinterpretation of ''the Book'': "Ye People of the Book! Why do ye clothe truth with falsehood, and conceal the truth, while ye have knowledge?'' S Al-i-lmran 3:71 ''There is among them a section who distort the Book with their tongues: (as they read) you would think it is part of the Book, but it is no part of'the Book.'' S. ibid. vs. 78 If there is anything that comes out very clearly, it is that the Quran is emphatic that the Torah and the Gospel are revelation from God. This is what Christians believe too. The Quran says in this regard: ''No change can there be in the words of Allah." Sura 10:64 ''There is none that can alter the words of Allah.'' Sura 6:34 Besides that, history and archaeology prevent one from arguing that the Bible has undergone any change since its official canonisation in A.D.324. In fact almost all portions of the New Testament in their present form were in general circulation among the churches of the Second Century A.D. It was by general agreement at a Council of the bishops of 318 churches that all these were fully recognized and accepted as Apostolic and inspired. When Mohammed referred to ''the Book'' or ''Taurat" or ''lnjil'' he referred, no doubt, to what was in circulation in Arabia in his day and age. If words mean anything at all, then Mohammed referred to this ''Book'' (al-Kitab) as revelation. We take this as an established fact on the strength of the above evidence, unless it can be proved wrong. Why should a Jew or Christian before or after the time of Mohammed be interested in changing God's revelation? Does he want to go to hell?
''I warn every one who hears the words of the prophecy of this book; if any one adds to them, God will add to him the plagues described in this book, and if any one takes away from the words of the book of this prophecy, God will take away his share in the tree of life and in the holy city, which are described in this book.'' Revelation 22:18-19
These are virtually the last verses of the Bible. The only conceivable reason to bring about changes would be that the Quran differs from the ''Book". Consequently there are two possibilities: either the Christians refusing to accept the Quran tried to change all similarities between the Bible and the Quran; or Muslims seeing that the ''Book'' was in contrast to the Quran, expediently claim that the Bible must have been corrupted. The first assumption is against all evidence and logic.
Why do Muslims keep on claiming that the Bible is corrupt? When was the Bible allegedly polluted? Why does the Quran not clearly state that it was polluted?
That Moses was adopted by Pharaoh's wife (Sura 28:9) is contradicted by Exodus 2:10, where he was adopted by Pharaoh's daughter. (otherwise he would also have been adopted by Pharaoh himself) Moses' wife - we understand from the context (in Sura 28:22-28), that this must be Zipporah the daughter of Jethro - was given to Moses in exchange for 8-10 years' service. The Bible does not account for this. (Exodus 2:16-22) We are, however, strongly reminded of Genesis 29:18 where Jacob pledges to serve Laban 7 years in exchange for Rachel. This was approximately 220 years prior to the time of Moses. Again we should like to enquire what possible purpose could any man have in changing the words of the Bible in historical narratives like these? Or could it have been Mohammed who confused some the stories he had heard? The same applies to the statement that Haman was a servant of Pharaoh. According to the Quran, he is ordered by Pharaoh to light a kiln to bake bricks out of clay to "build me a lofty palace" (Sura 28:38, Yusuf Ali); or "high tower that I may ascend unto the God of Moses" (G. Sales); or ''a tower, that I may reach the avenues of the heavens and ascend unto the God of Moses" (by Palmer and Rodwell); or "and make me a tower that I may mount up to Moses, god." (by Arberry) We do recall the building of the tower of Babel in the Bible. But this event in (Genesis 11) occured 750 years before the time of Pharaoh in Exodus, and Haman (Book of Esther) lived 1100 years after Pharaoh. Yusuf Ali suggests (comm. 3331) that this refers to another Haman, but there is none other by that name in the Bible. We find it strange that Yusuf Ali, in contrast to all other translators, speaks of a lofty palace, rather than a tower. Did he want to obscure the obvious similarities, which are embarrassing because they are historical misfits? In the Bible (Judges 7) we read how God made Gideon select his small army of 300 from 32,000 men, for a special task. In Sura 2:249 we read of a very similar event, but this time under King Saul. Yusuf Ali in his commentary is aware of this, and remarks ''as Gideon did before Saul.'' (comm. 284) This deed of Saul's is not found in the Bible and we take it to be another error. Muslims believe that Ishmael was the son to be offered by Abraham on the altar. The Bible states that it was Isaac. This incidence highlights the whole concept of sacrifice, where a wide difference between the two Books can be detected. Idu'l-Azha is based on Sura 22:33-38 where it says, inter alia: ''We have appointed for every nation a holy rite that they may mention Allah's narne over such beasts of the flocks as He has provided them . .. And the beasts of sacrifice - We have appointed them for you as among Allah's waymarks; therein is good for you . . . The flesh of them shall not reach Allah, neither their blood (!) But godliness from you shall reach Him.'' The Christian reader immediately notices in the above a total contradication of the Biblical message.
" and when I see the blood, I will pass over you." '' Exodus 12:13
These are the words of God to Moses and the Jews after telling them that by applying the blood of a sacrifice to the lintels and doorposts of their homes, their families would escape the judgement of God that would strike Egypt.
"For the life of a creature is in the blood, and I have given it to you to make atonement for yourselves on the altar; it is the blood that makes atonement for ones life." Leviticus 17:11
This is a concise statement, representing the very heart of the Law given to Moses. Although this ultimately points to the sacrifice of Jesus who ratified all the offerings presented by the people under the Old Covenant, the demand of God still stands:
" without the shedding of blood there is no forgiveness." Hebrews 9:22
It is a misjudgement of God's holiness and man's sinful nature to assume that our good deeds will ever be able to compensate for the evil in our lives. The origin of Idu'l-Azha can be traced back to the year when, a few months after the Hejira', Mohammed observed the Jews of Medina celebrating the Day of Atonement (Leviticus 16) and he saw the role that sacrifice played among the people of the Book, the Jews. A Tradition records that Mohammed asked them why they kept the fast. He was informed that it was a memorial to the deliverance of Israel under Moses from the hands of the Egyptians. ''We have a greater right in Moses than they" said Mohammed and fasted with the Jews, commanding his followers to do the same.
The following year the initially friendly atmosphere between the Muslims and Jews had deteriorated and with it the Qibla was changed from Jerusalem to Mecca. Mohammed and his followers did not participate in the ''Yom Kippur'' (Day of Atonement) celebrated then. Instead, he instituted the Idu'l-Azha. He killed two young goats' one for himself and his family and one for the people (See Leviticus 16), still remaining true to Biblical demands. Idolatrous Arabs had been performing the annual Hajj to Mecca at this time of the year the sacrifice of animals was also part of their ceremonial, so the institution of Idu'l-Azha may be seen also as a well timed token of goodwill towards the Arabs of Mecca. Although there is no reference in the Qur,an to the fact, it is generally accepted by Muslims that this feast was instituted to commemorate Abraham's sacrifice of his son Ishmael on Mount Mina near Mecca. The reason for the above assumption is as follows: if Abraham's ''only son" (Genesis 22:2) was offered, lsaac could not have been born at that stage, for Ishmael could not have been the only son anymore. But Genesis 22:2 is quite clear on this point. It actually states the name Isaac. In Sura 37:99-133 the story of the sacrifice of Abraham's son is recorded without naming the son: ''We gave him the good news of a boy ready to suffer and forbear''. Although this Sura deviates somewhat from the Biblical narrative, the event of the sacrifice is reported. As a parallel passage we should mention Sura 11:71, where, however, the chronology of the event has been somewhat mixed up. The reference in Sura 37 culminates in the words: ''We ransomed him (the son) with (another) momentous (or noble) sacrifice.'' The lslamic concept that lshmael was on the altar can be supported only by the Traditions. (Yusuf Ali Commentary, note 4096, 4101) (''Dictionary of Islam,'' page 219) Bearing everything in mind we are tempted to conclude that the Islamic view is motivated by expediency. Regarding the meaning of the sacrifice (Qurban = ''approaching near,'' to whom? How? Why?), Muslims deny any implication of Biblical concepts whatsoever; we hold that this is not legitimate, since we are dealing with Biblical narrative and content. To the Muslim the Qurban is merely a remembrance rite to make one think of Ishmael. But even in the Quran, although denied in other passages (Sura 22:37), the issue is clear: ''Ransomed by sacrifice!'' Liberated from death by someone else stepping in, amomentous, noble sacrifice to redeem Isaac. (or Ishmael, if you wish)
Here is Biblical ground. Here is the pointer to the sacrifice of Jesus Christ. He became the momentous, noble sacrifice to die in our stead! Today Idu'l-Azha is a feast of rejoicing. But the sacrifice is not interpreted as being a ransom! Muslims claim that Abraham took Hagar and Ishmael, as a baby yet unweaned, to Paran. (believed by Muslims to be near Mecca) This clashes with the Genesis account in the following respects: a) Hagar and Ishmael were sent away, unaccompanied by Abraham, when b) Isaac had already been born, i.e. lshmael was at least 14 years old, (and not weaned!) c) Paran is not near Mecca but is south of Israel in the Sinai Peninsula. We noted that in Genesis 22:2 Isaac is called Abraham's only son. This is biologically incorrect, but legally correct, for it obviously refers to: the covenant bearer (Genesis 21:12); and Abraham's marriage to Sarah (Hagar was Abraham's concubine)
A Muslim may contend that the given Quranic text is ''nazil'', or has come as revelation from heaven: God knows about the matter and it need not have been reported in the Bible for Him to know. Of course God knows all things, past present and future. He revealed many events of the future comprehensively through the prophets in the Bible to demonstrate His authorship, and every reader is able to check and test if the facts reveal the divine imprint. But judging unemotionally, just guided by the evidence, Christians fail to see any divine imprint in the Quran. (See pp. 39 ff )
How can one, in the light of the opening text of this chapter account for these differences?
The division of inheritance left by parents or other relatives according to Sura 4:7 had to be equal. (a share and a share which has to be determined) This was abrogated and replaced by verse 11, where it is commanded that males must get double the share of females. The night prayer performed by reciting the Quran ought to be more or less half the time of the night. (Sura 73:2) This was changed to as much as may be easy for you. (verse 20) The treatment of adulteresses is to be life imprisonment (Sura 4:15), which was changed to flogging with 100 strokes. (Sura 24:2) This despite the leniency prescribed for homosexuals (Sura 4:16) on repenting. The retaliation in cases of crime, particularly murder, was to be confined to people of equal rank. (slave for slave, free for free, etc.) (Sura 2:178) This is in disagreement with Sura 5:48 and Sura 17:33 where retaliation is allowed against the murderer only. The Jihad or Holy War was forbidden in the sacred months (Sura 9:5) but is allowed, even encouraged in verse 36, which replaces the former.
Sura 2:106 occurs immediately before a series of sweeping changes, or rather modifications, introduced by Muhammad in both the ritual and the legal spheres The verse thus precedes a change in the Qibla (vss 115,177,124151); in the pilgrimage rites (vs. 158); in the dietary laws (vss 168-174); in the law relating to talio (vss.178-179); in bequests (vss. 180182); in the fast (vss 182-187); and again in the pilgrimage. (vss. 191-203) Similarly, Sura 16:101 is followed by allusions to modifications in the dietary laws (vss 114-119), and in the Sabbath laws." (vs 124) ("The Collection of the Quran" by John Burton) Elaborating on this we note that the fast is compulsory, "But if any of you is ill or on a journey, the prescribed number (should be made up) from days later For those who can do it (with hardship), is a ransom, the feeding of one, that is indigent."
Sura 2:184
Here one can hardly escape the conclusion that the first verse (i e 184) allows a rich man to buy himself out of the fast. (Islam" by A Guillaume) The next verse is said to replace the former. It allows no compensation of any kind for the fast. In verse 180 of the same Sura it is prescribed, when death approaches any of you, if he leaves any goods, that he make a bequest to parents and next of kin." This is said to be replaced by Sura 4:11, according to which a double portion of inheritance falls to males compared to that of females. The much discussed verses of the sword'': fight and slay the pagans wherever ye find them and seize them, beleaguer them and lie in wait for them in every stratagem, " (or war) (Sura 9:5) and when you meet the unbelievers (in fight) cut off their necks (Sura 47:5) are said to have cancelled no less than 124 verses which en joined toleration and patience.'' (A Guillaume) To us it is surprising to find the mansukh and nasikh verses often near to each other. We judge these to be cases of interpolation. As stated earlier, we do believe in progressive revelation. The Old Covenant of the Law, as given to Moses, was superseded by the New Covenant of grace, which Jesus introduced But these developments took place over a considerable time (1500 years) with many prophetic warnings and predictions in between, so that no arbitrary action may be assumed on the side of God. In the light of this we find it unacceptable that within a space of 20 years a need for change or correction can become necessary. This surely suggests that God is either not allknowing or else the recorder made a correction . There are other verses which further add to the confusion: ''lf we wished, we could make away with what we have revealed to you!'' (Sura 17:86) ''We shall teach you to recite it (i.e. the Quran) and you will not forget - except that Allah wills." Sura
87:6-7
Why should anything be forgotten of an eternal revelation? To ''substitute for it something better?'' We do admit that an inspired man can err at times' but an inspired book (nazil) cannot! Zarkasi explains the above concept more deeply. He states (vol. I p. 235): ''The 'naskh' (sic) of the wording and recital occured by means of God's causing them to forget it. He withdrew it from their memories, while commanding them to neglect its public recital and its recording in the mushaf. With the passage of time, it would quite disappear like the rest of God's revealed Books which He mentions in the Quran, but nothing of which is known today. This can have happened either during the Prophet's life so that, when he died' the forgotten material was no longer being recited as part of the Quran; or it might have happened after the death of the Prophet. It would still be extant in writing, but God would cause them to forget it. He would then
remove it from their memories. But, of course, the naskh of any part of the revelation after the death of the Prophet is not possible.'' ("The Collection of the Quran'' by John Burton p. 97) We suggest that Allah could have spared us a lot of confusion, doubt and explaining, had He given the better text right from the beginning. ''There was a series of Hadiths designed expressly to give the impression that Muhammad had forgotten part of the revelations. The reports were specific and detailed enough to identify the actual wording of the verses in question. Anas is reported in the two Sahih's (i.e al-Bukhari and Muslim) as declaring: 'There was revealed concerning those slain at Bi'r Ma'na a Quran verse which we recited until it was withdrawn: ''Inform our tribe on our behalf that we have met our Lord. He has been well pleased with us and has satisfied our desires. al-ltqan'' by Jall al
Din
'Abdullah b.al Zubair therefore asked 'Uthmn what had possessed him to include Sura 2:240 in the 'mushaf' (document or canon), when he knew it to have been abrogated by Sura 2:234. 'Because'' he replied 'Uthman' 'I know it to be part of the Quran text.' '' (ibid.) ''The Collection of
the Quran'' by John Burton
A further problem arises from the fact that there is by no means any certainty which verses are mansukh and which nasikh, since the order in which the Quran was written down is not chronological, but according to the length of the Suras. However, even the Suras were not necessarily given in one piece. It happened that a certain portion of a Sura was given, and the next given text would be directed by Mohammed to be added to another Sura, and later again another addition was made to the first again, etc. The Hadis gives no conclusive information about the chronological order either, so that strictly speaking, there is no means of determining which of two disagreeing texts is mansukh, and which nasikh. In any case we Christians see in this whole subject just a theological gimmick to ''explain'' contradictions. The quotation: ''No change can there be in the Words of Allah'' and ''There is none that can alter the Words of Allah. Already hast thou received some account of those Apostles.'' or "the other Apostles also said so.'' (Suras 10:64 and 6:34) is contradicted by all those Muslims who claim that the Bible which is admitted to be a revealed book, has been altered and corrupted. To underline our point let us just look at two passages of the Quran that have not been reconciled in terms of the law of abrogation. In Sura 41:9-12 we read that the world was created in eight days, in Sura 7:54 we are told it were six days. It is, we suppose, up to the bel iever to make up his mind which of the two he will accept.
Must we assume that God is inconsistent? Knowing all things, such contradiction surely does not originate from God?
We see a definite regression from this standard in the Quran. We also find it strange to read: "Strongest among men in enmity to the believers wilt thou find the Jews and Pagans; and nearest among them in love to the believers wilt thou find those who say, we are Christians'."
Sura 5:85
This is supported to some extent by an explanatory note in the "Mishkat" (IV page 103, note 2380) where we are told that "nearly two thirds of paradise" will be filled with "the followers of the Holy Prophet and the followers of other prophets will form one-third." In strange contrast to this are the words of Sura 5:54: Take not the Jews and the Christians for your friends." What about being together in Paradise? The reason is just as strange: "They (Jews and Christians) are but friends and protectors to each other And he amongst you that turns to them (for friendship) is of them Verily Allah guideth not a people unjust" It can hardly be said that Jews and Christians have ever protected each other, except that they agree on the authenticity of the Old Testament. It is said of Mohammed that he was the first to bow down to Allah (in lslam) (Sura 6:14, 163, 39:12) But it is also said of Abraham, his sons and Jacob that they were Muslims (Sura 2:132), and of all earlier prophets who brought books, (i.e. Mosei, David and Jesus) (Sura 28:52-53) Again it is reported of the disciples of Jesus that they were Muslims (Sura 3:52) All these we view as contradictions Some would not be of a serious nature, were it not for the claim that the Quran is nazil" or brought down" from heaven to Mohammed without the touch of human hand - except for the act of writing itself.
Is there any uncontradicted statement in the Quran on which a Mulsim can rely to have eternal life in heaven?
10
Dr. Rashad Khalifa, a Muslim scholar living in the United States, wrote a book entitled "The Perpetual Miracle of Muhammad." According to his testimony, he was taken up by a verse in the Quran (Sura 74:30), which reads: ''Over it are nineteen.'' This verse does not make any sense in its context. This is no isolated case, for many of the Suras have been composed of several revelations over a period of time and are not in chronological sequence. Many of these revelations can be understood only in the light of certain happenings involving the person of Mohammed which are at least partially recorded in the Hadis. Nevertheless, there are passages that provide problems for the interpreter and one such verse is Sura 74:30. Now Dr. Khalifa has tried to solve this riddle by means of an "electronic wizzard'' or magic beast'', as Mr. Deedat in his booklet, ''AI-Quran The Ultimate Miracle'', chooses to call a computer. He discovered a number of combinations of letters and words to which the number 19 is the key. To him this is such breathtaking evidence of God's authorship of the Quran that he shares it with the readers of his literature: "Everyone, whether he has seen a computer or not has heard about the magic and marvel of this machine and his life is affected by it. And, astonishingly, it always gives you the right answer, whether Christian-owned or Communist-owned. If you ask the computer even with your own pre-conceived notions -'What is one plus one plus one?' the unerring answer will always be 'Three'. If you ask a Roman Catholic-owned computer, 'God the Father, God the Son and God the Holy Ghost - How many gods do they make?' It will immediately respond 'Three, without blushing. It has no feeling or sympathy for its owners, who desire to hear one. Perhaps it is necessary to point out that a computer is neither magic nor, on the other hand, is it a "beast'' that can answer any given question on its own. The computer is rather an instrument that is able to store data on any specified subject and makes the given information and combinations thereof available in almost an instant when an answer is requested. It presupposes that the basic information is fed into the computer and a programmer draws up a programme that will enable this computer to provide the necessary combinations on demand. There exist, for instance, computers that are programmed to play chess. It is almost impossible for even a chess master to beat such a computer, because it is able to review all the possibilities of all the following moves of that game and so devise the best possible move in an instant. The computerdraws on the wealth of information that was fed" into it by a mathematician - chess-master, who worked out all the possible combinations beforehand. It is here that we have to state that if you ask that computer any opinion about the Quran or space travel or cybernetics or any other subject, it can and will not give an answer until a programme providing for such an answer plus the necessary information, has been fed into it When Dr. Khalifa began to investigate the mystery of the number 19 in the Quran, he needed, first of all, to feed the Quran into the computer. He could then, with the appropriate programme. ask for instance: How many A's, L's, M's, R's etc. are in such and such a Sura" or the whole Quran'' and he would get an instant answer without any effort time-wise. He could also be informed about all combinations of letters that in some way bear a relationship to the number 19. He could, for instance' ask: Which letters in a given Sura sum up to a number that is divisible by 19 ?'' Using such methods he has been able to single out all combinations that enable him in turn to produce figures that appear to constitute such a phenomenal chance, that it cannot be regarded as chance anymore. These combinations, so it is argued provide logical proof by their intricacy and the obvious inability of Mohammed to have devised them, that the origin of the Quran is divlne. Our basic comments on this approach are as follows:
11
1.
2.
3.
A message claiming to be divine and apparently proved to be so because it contains a startling combination of numbers, should still not be accepted if the historical and moral content of such a message or book fails to confirm its divine origin Christians have rightly perceived that if the sources of the information in the Quran are found to have been in existence before the time ot Mohammed, as indeed thev were: and if its content offers personal advantages to its Apostle (pp. 108-123); and if its historical information is faulty (pp 49-65); then the Quran cannot be accepted as divine We thus find the "proof" offered by this type of numerics to be simply deceptive. We find it difficult to accept that God would use a system of proof that excludes all the people who needed it during the 1 400 years of the Quran's existence, and who groped in the dark when puzzled by unintelligible verses. Although, as we shall discover later, the presence of the number 19 in the Quran, as presented by Dr. Khalifa, is impressive, it nevertheless lacks the persuasiveness that divine intervention would have provided Mr Deedat in his booklet (page 69) says: "If the electronic wizzard was asked 'What are the possibilities of a book being written, and by chance' successfully weaving an in terlocking system based on the number 19?' the computer's reply is - 'The odds of such happening are: 626 Septillions to one against such a happening.' " We would object to such an answer because the question is formulated in far too general a way: 'a book being written,' 'an interlocking system based on the number 19, 'successfully weaving'. No exact figure other than extreme odds could be given by any computer in reply to such a vague question. We have to realize that coincidences do occur. It is reported from Britain that two trains were passing each other The brake-lining of one engine came loose, was hurled through the air and hit the driver of the other train on the head, killing him. Brake-linings of trains do not normally come loose, and if they do come loose, what would be the chance of hitting the dnver of an on-coming train so as to kill him? It can be worked out, and the chance would be equally slim, yet this freak accident did actually occur In a photograph that once appeared in a newspaper three cars were shown parked behind one another, - the same make, model and colour All three had identical registration numbers but all came from different cities. They belonged to different owners, who were totally unaware of this Coincidence! These things do happen, don't they? What are the odds against their happening? Are all such happenings necessarily the result of divine intervention? Definitely not! Finding a system of numerics like the one mentioned in Dr. Khalifa's and Mr. Deedat's books is, in the opinion of this writer, possible for any piece of literature, or music if you wish. Any piece of literature will have combinations of letters, perhaps in relation to the title, that will allow a computer, properly fed and programmed, to find a system of combinations that will prove equally surprising. If so, would the piece be of divine origin? Not being a computer scientist I cannot substantiate the above reasor,ing, but am convinced that it could be done. Certainly Mr. Deedats claim - that it is unlikelv that a writer in his lifetime would be able to find a sentence consisting of 19 letters with which to start a book - is nonsense.
4.
5.
To prove my point, here are just ten quickly composed sentences of 19 letters each: "Beware, false prophets!" ''There is deceit in lies." ''Seek first His Kingdom." ''Prepare like a wise man. ''Do not lay up treasures " ''Jesus forever the same.'' "I am a loving Christian.'' "Love is patient, is kind." ''Truth and love will win.'' We would have no problem combining any number of sentences each containing 19 letters and if we did not wish to waste time we could, by using a computer, be even more successful still. We find' therefore, the overdramatic presentation of this matter to be highly suspicious and inappropriate. 6. The statement by Dr. Khalifa that there is no other book extant with any similar numerical system, is untrue. The Bible is one such book. Let us select only one number and one verse to illustrate what we mean.
12
We shall investigate the presence of the number seven - a number used very often with the symbolic meaning of divine completeness in the first verse of the Bible.
In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth.''
The verse consists of 7 Hebrew words and 28 letters (7 x 4) There are three nouns: 'God, heavens, earth'. Their total numeric value (Hebrew has no numbers, but these are represented by letters: the sum of the number-letters being the numeric value) is 777 (7 x 111) The verb created' has the value 203 (7 x 29) The object is contained in the first three words with 14 letters (7 x 2) The other four words contain the subject also with 141etters (7 x 2) The Hebrew words for the two objects the heavens and the earth" - each have seven letters. The fourth and fifth words have 7 1etters. The value of the first, middle and last letters in the verb 'created' is 1 33 (7 x 19); the numeric value of the first and last letters of all the words is 1 393 (7 x 199); and the value of the f irst and last letters of the verse is 497 (7 x 71) The Hebrew particle eth' with the article the', used twice, has the value 407 (7 x 58) and the last letters of the first and last words equal 490. (7 x 70) In all, there are over 30 different numberic features related to 7 in this verse. The odds against the above features occurring by chance are 33 Trillions:1 But the number seven is also interwoven throughout the Bible. Creation took 7 days; Naaman had to wash 7 times in the Jordan to be cleansed from leprosy; the Israelites had to march around Jericho 7 days and 7 times on the 7th day; they had to set aside one day in 7 for rest and worship. There was a 7-armed lampstand in the temple' etc. In the last book, Revelation, we find mentioned: 7 spirits,7 lampstands,7 churches, 7 stars, 7 seals, 7 trumpets, 7 vials, 7 thunders, 7 plagues, 7 mountains and 7 kings. The tribulation period is to be 7 years being the last 'week of vears" of Daniel's 70 weeks. (Dan 9:24 ff.) Beyond this we know that the incubation period of the human embryo is 280 days (7 x 40) In Genesis we are told that man was formed from the dust of the ground. The dust of the ground'' contains 14 (7 x 2) elements, and so does the human body. Every cell in the human body is renewed every 7 years and every 7th day the pulse beats slower. In certain diseases the critical days are the 7th, 14th, 21st, etc. and the female cycle is 28 days (7 x 4) Light is made up of 7 colours; the moon completes its orbit around the earth in 28days (7 x 4); and the earth is 49 (7 x 7) times larger than the moon. (This information is taken from "TheSeal of God" by F.C. Payne. The actual numerics were compiled by Dr. Panin) This information was available for many years, long before the advent of computers. It never persuaded a single Muslim, to our knowledge, to accept the challenge of receiving the Bible as the Word of God although the evidence is more convincing than the findings of Dr Khalifa Why? Despite the superiority of this presentation over the one figured out by Dr. Khalifa, we can and would not suggest that anyone accept numerics alone as a basis for faith in the Bible. It is at best a crutch.
Evaluation
Dr. Khalifa, unlike Mr Deedat, exposed himself to criticism by providing a table in order to illustrate the system on which his findings are based. His main theme is to show that exactly half (we are not quite sure what "exactly half" in this instance is supposed to prove) of the letters of the Arabic alphabet, i.e fourteen letters, are used - some of them repeatedly as "Mystic initials" at the beginning of 29 Suras. According to many old commentators. these initials (called "al-Mukkataat") are the initials of the scribes of the Suras concerned: ALM, ALMS, ALR, ALMR, KHYAS, TH, TSM, TS, YS, S, HM, HMASQ, Q, N. ALM, for example, stands for Amar Li Muh. Dr. Khalifa, with the aid of his computer, discovered, however, that in certain Suras the sum of all the letters that are represented in the initials above the Sura are divisible by the mysterious 19. To give an example: Three initials (ALR) stand at the head of Sura 15. In the text of this Sura, the sum of the L's is 323 and this figure represents 17 x 19. In the case of Sura 68which has the initial N above it, the sum of all the N's in the Sura is 133, i.e. 7 x 1a. Then again if one were to add up all the letters of all Suras that have the initial A at the top, we would again have a number divisible by 19. Similarly the totals of all the letters of the initials above each individual Sura when added up are divisible by 19. In Sura 36 'for instance' where the initials are Y and S' there. are 48 x S and 237 x Y. Though neither of these sums can be divided by 19, the combined total is 15x19. In Mr. Khalifa's table we have, therefore, 14 vertical columns and their totals, representing the sums of each individual letter; and 29 horizontal columns where the totals are given of all letters as represented in the initials of each individual Sura.
13
Of the 121 figures given in toto in this table, including the 43 totals, 22 are divisible by 19, which is roughly one in six-and-a-half. Of the 78 figures that are given in the table (excluding the totals), six are divisible by 19. This is one out of every 13, which is hardly above average odds. We have to reject this as proof of divine action having been involvecd. Coming to the vertical totals (i.e. the sums of all letters represented by the initials of each individual Sura), we find a more spectacular result. Eight of the twenty-nine totals are divisibie by 19, which is about one in three-and-a-half. Much more convincing still, are the totals of each individual letter represented in the 29 Suras: 8 of the 14 sums are divisible by 19. Do these figures constitute evidence of divine intervention? Bearing in mind the arguments contained in points 1 to 7 above, we would say: impressive, yes; divine, no. How impressive, in fact, are these findings? We realize firstly that the method is based on manipulation. If we used a critical method of programming, our results would be average', because we would reduce the combinations in our system that show evidence of 19. We note that Dr. Khalifa (and Mr. Deedat, p. 67-68) has tried his best to improve his results by stating for example that in all Suras with the initials ALM at the top, the respective letters in the three Suras combined add up to a figure that is divisible by 19. In his case the sum of all A's and L's and M's in Suras 2, 3, 7, 13, 29-32 add up to 26 676, which is equal to 19 x 1 404. I n order to make this total divisible by 19, he had to leave the initial S out in the case of Sura 7. The reason is that this Sura has the initials ALMS, which disqualifies it from being included, because it is not a Sura with the initials ALM. So in order to produce a number divisible by 19, he included Sura 7 but excluded the 98 S's. The same applies to the use of Sura 13 (ALMR) in this context. The same type of manipulation was used in the set of Suras 10, 11, 12, 13, 14 and 15, which begin with the initials ALR (except 13, which has the initials ALMR) Adding up all the ALR's of these six Suras, Dr. Khalifa arrives at the sum of 9 709 (=19 x 511), but my computer shows that the sum is 10 813, which is not divisible by 19. Dr. Khalifa arrived at this figure by adding all the letters indicated by the initials ALR of these Suras excepting Sura 13 (which begins with ALMR) and adds from this Sura only the figure 137, i.e. the number of times the initial R occurs, conveniently leaving out the A's and L's, for other wise the sum (10 813) would not be divisible by 19, as we have shown. He does not expect his readers to check on his data, and perhaps we are the first to do so. It is so much easier simply to be impressed by the "divine" touch and to be strengthened in faith by a manipulation which is needed as a crutch to support a religion without other evidence. Other manipulations can be seen in Sura 42. Here the sum of all the letters as represented in the initials HMASQ is 570 or 19 x 30, but it is divided into 361 + 209 to fit the first sum into the total of all HM's In order to increase his successes, Dr. Khalifa gives the final figure for Sura 68 as 152, which is already reflected in the vertical column of the letter N, and is therefore a duplication. These are findings that strike the eye of a superficial reader who is totally unacquainted with statistics,or mathematics We would stil lhave to check whether the figures given for the A's, L's, M's, etc. in the various chapters do in fact correspond with the number of times they occur in the Quran. It is beyond the scope of this investigation to undertake such checking. However, as the given figures that can be easily checked were found to be unreliable, we may well assume that those that we cannot check without great effort, are hardly likely to be any more trustworthy. A rather striking statement in addition to the table we have just investigated, is that the Key to Mohammed's perpetual, eternal miracle is found in the very first verse of the Quran, which says, 'In the name of God, the compassionate, the merciful, or as it reads in the Arabic: Bismillah al-Rahman al-Rahim ' " When we count the Arabic letters that make up this verse, we find they total 19. Dr Khalifa discovered that every word in this verse is mentioned a number of times in the Quran and these numbers are multiples of nineteen. The first word name' is allegedly found exactly 19 times in the entire Quran. The second word "Allah" is mentioned in the Quran 2 698 times, (19 x 142), the third word of the verse, "al-Rahman", is found in the Quran 57 times, (3 x 19); and finally, the fourth word in the first Quranic verse, "alRahim", is mentioned 114 times (6 x 19) in the entire Quran. (Dr Rashad Khalifa) We are amazed at this statement, because everv child in the Madressa school is aware that of the 1145 suras of the Quran, 113 begin with this verse: ''In the name of God, the compassionate, the merciful. "We do not understand how Dr. Khalifa can state that the word name" is found in the whole Quran exactly 19 times or "al-Rahman" 52 times or "al-Rahim" 114 times. We suspect that the socalled "Bismillahs", ie. the opening verses of almost all Suras have been expediently left out by Dr. Khalifa. Had he included them, his totals would no longer have been divisible by 19.
14
We must conclude that Dr. Khalifa has purposely tried to mislead his readers when he states that the whole Quran is meant. He has left out the Bismillahs to suit his own purpose of providing divinity through deception. We should like to conclude this chapter by repeating in our own words, a statement in this connection made by John Gilchrist:
Surely if 19 were a divinely chosen seal on the Quran, Sura 19:19 would give the ultimate message of the Quran. What does it say there? It speaks about the holy son", Jesus Surely this is significant when we compare it with verse 19 of Sura 47 where it states that Mohammed should "ask forgiveness for his fault"
In his booklet Mr. Deedat claimed that the first revelation, the first five verses of Sura 96, were followed by verses 17-30 of Sura 74, which ends: over it are 19." He concludes, that 5 verses plus 14 verses add up to 19 verses; hence the verse over it are 19" We state, that it is by no means historically established that the sequence of the revelations was a Mr Deedat claims According to J.M Rodwell, a Quranic translator and chronologist, Sura 74 was second in sequence after Sura 96, although no verses are indicated Jalalu'd-din, a Muslim chronologer, names Sura 74 as being the fourth one revealed. Sir W Muir estimates it to be the 21st. Apart from that, we are aware that the division of verses in the Quran is based on five different systems: The Kufah system, following the tradition of Ali; The Basra system, following Mohammed's companion Asim ibn Hajjaj; The Shami system of Syria used by Mohammed's compdnion Ab du'llah ibn Umar; The Makkah system and The Madinab system
This makes it obvious that Mohammed did not undertake the division into verses. As far as the ordering of the Suras is concerned, this was done by Khalif Uthman and thus the whole of Mr Deedat's argument falls flat. (Information from "Dictionary of Islam", pages 489-492) In order to check Dr Khalifa's date we wrote to ask him to supply us with the mathematical methods of research he used, so as to enable us to repeat his exoeriments. We also asked for the mathematical formula which he had used to calculate the probability of the pattern occurring by chance; a copy of the magnetic tape of the whole Quran that he used as information for the computer; as well as the computer programme that was used to analyse the text to determine the numerical pattern he had discovered. The reply to this letter was most surprising. Dr. Khalifa wrote: ''To repeat the work, all you need to is count the letters in a Quran written according to the original Uthmani method. Most of the facts are simple and need no mathematics. We wonder what the extensive use of a computer as mentioned in his book, was all about. Perhaps you, dear reader, have arrived at your own conclusion by now. (See chart pages 140 & 141)
15
Quran that should have been added to the bible? In which respects is Islamic morality or its ethics superior to the Bible?
4. 5. There are people alive who are able to quote the Quran from memory. (Hafiz) Unlike the Bible the Quran has never been changed since it was given to Mohammed.
16
and even with what you asked for. Why then, did you slay them if they speak the truth? Then if they reject thee, so were rejected Apostles before thee, who came with clear signs, books of dark prophecies, and the Book of Enlightenment.'' 2. If the message is the revelation from God (=nazil), it must contain neither error, nor contradiction in the original text Muslims claim that the Quran has remained unchanged from its inception but it does fact contain both error and contradiction as we have seen. It contains contradictions between it and the Bible, which in many of the cases mentioned earlierare from Genesis and Exodus - books that were written 2 000 years earlier than the Quran. This means that the Biblical source is contemporary to the events or at least very considerably closer to them' and consequently more trustworthy than the Quran. In addition, the Quran contradicts itself as we have observed. One would, for example, turn to Caesar's "Gallic War'' to discover the history of that era rather than to a much later writer whose account did not quote other sources and that differed widely from the "Gallic War''. 3. Where two ''Books" i.e. the Bible and the Quran, both claim to be final, sole, full and universal in their message, yet display strongly contrasting standpoints, only intemal and external evidence will reveal which of the two is divine The diacritical marks and vowel signs of the Arabic language were introduced only after the Quran became widely known. Those marks can change the meaning of words, and indeed, when introduced, there were arguments about many a word. (See chapter ''Collection of the Quran'' pp. 44,47-48, 57) The claim that the Quran is entire and complete is not acceptable. (See chapter "Collection of the Quran" pp 49 ff.) The Quran according to most scholars, cannot be interpreted (Tafsir) without consulting the tradition (Hadis) of the Prophet Mohammed. Muslims consider the life of Mohammed to have been an explanation and an interpretation of the Quran. The Hadis, as we shall later see, by no means provides an accurate or conclusive picture of Mohammed, since these traditions were collected and recorded about two and a half centuries later, and the selection thereof (only 1% of all the collected traditions were selected by alBukhari) was again entirely dependent on the judgement of one person. The emphasis on the total absence of variation in manuscripts (in contrast with the Biblical manuscripts, which do vary, not in message, but in some detail) can be adequately understood only if one remembers that the third Khalif, Uthman, ordered the destruction of all maauscripts after having compiled one version. (See chapter "Collection of the Quran") Concerning the fine literary quality of the Quran (measured obviously against other human pieces of literature): it is as irrelevant as the statement that a Rolls Royce, being the best motor car ever produced, is for that reason divine. In every written language there must be a 'best piece" of literature. Regarding the content of the message we should like to ask whether the Quran contains any information or has any qualities that were not accessible or available in some form during the life of Mohammed. 9. If the Quran is an eternally pre-existing, divine revelation, Muslims will have to explain the very apparent marks of man in it. Large portions of the Quran are preoccupied with the personal and political affairs of one man and his companions at one particular stage in history. Most of these statements have no value to any other generation in history. (See chapter ''Sources of Islam)
4.
5. 6.
7.
8.
10. There is what is called a photographic memory. This can easily account for the memorization of the Quran. We are, however, also aware of such faculty originating from spiritist sources. 11. The last point is frequently met with strong emotional rejection by Muslims. We must' therefore, apologize in advance for touching on a matter that is most contentious. If we offend any religious feelings here or elsewhere, it is not done from a sneering or superior attitude. The reader will have to accept that we do not want to hurt him in any way - except with a view to uncovering facts that might help him to find the Truth of God and eternal life. Christians and Muslims believe in good and bad, light and darkness, God and the Devil. There is constant spiritual warfare between these torces. Each man or woman; boy or girl living on earth is the prize in this battle. God gives His rewards to His followers - and so does the Devil. One of the main tasks of the Devil is betrayed by his biblical name. He is called ''diabolos'' or one who mixes up things.'' From time immemorial we know first of primitive' but later developing, forms of witchcraft and spiritism. This incorporates direct contact with
17
spirits and intelligent communication between a medium and a spirit and vice versa. Fortune telling, which one may call the prophecy'' of the devil' is one of the features that is inclined to bring man into bondage. Spiritism of any form is rejected by and forbidden in the Bible in no uncertain terms (Deuteronomy 18:10-14; Leviticus 20:6 etc.)
"Who practices these things is detestable to the LORD the LORD your God has not permitted you to do so."
go to any other source but Him.To ensure us of His trustworthiness and reliability, the prophets of old foretold His coming and work in much detail. (ibid.pp.48 ff.) It lies in the nature of the diabolos, Satan, to confuse this. His first words recorded in the Bible are ''Should God have said ?" sowing doubt and distrust. Consequently, in the battle for mankind, Satan has provided his revelations also. They are subtle, no doubt, or else no one would be tripped up thereby. So we Christians are extremely careful not to accept anything as coming from God, which is actualy from another source. With this in mind we ask the question: Is the Jahveh Elohim (Lord God) of the Bible really the same as al-illah of the Quran? Contrary to the view of the Quran, the objective student must agree that - although we may use the English term "God" for both - they are not likely to be the same Who is Allah then? He was not, of course, an invention of Mohammed's. Al-illah was not unknown before the coming of Mohammed. Allah is a form of "alillah", which means "the God". We note the article, the''. He was generally known before Mohammed's time as can be seen in the name of Mohammed's father, for instance, which was Abdullah (slave of Allah) His uncle's name was Obeidallah. "The Quran itself bears out the fact that the old polytheism had no real hold as a religion, and that Allah was in a sense recognized as a supreme deity by the polytheists themselves. In all the opposition to Muhammad we scarcely meet a defence of the old religion which can be called an argument in its favour. The Quran is quite frank in recording the objections raised by opponents; but there is no reference to any defence of polytheism which could be said to rest on a conviction of its truth... It is inherently probable that the heathen themselves had some such idea of the relation of their special gods to a supreme deity... They will admit that Allah is the creator of the worlds It seems clear that the Arabs had the idea of a supreme God, in a sense superior to their local deities, but only turned to in their times of stress." ("The Origin of Islam in its Christian Environment" by Richard Bell, pp. 55-57) We also know of poets who used the name Allah before Mohammed. The seven "Moallaqt" by Imra'ul Cays and the "Dewan" by Labid refer to Allah. (For further information on pre-lslamic knowledge we refer to the chapter Sources of Islam" pp. 96 ff ) We are aware of the explanation by our Muslim friends, that over the period of some 2500 years since Abraham and Ishmael began worshipping God to the time of Mohammed, Allah had gradually been degraded in status to be placed, eventually, among the heathen deities of idolatrous Arabia. This may be so, but does not really convince us. Also, we see no support for this view in the faith that the Hanifites had in the God of Abraham.They must have been incontact with the Jews and Christians in the Arabian Peninsula, who had knowledge of the story of Abraham in the Bible. What confirms this is that of the six contemporaries of Mohammed that are titled Hanif, half became Christians and one contessed not to know the right way. The following account is from the Sirt: "The Coreish were once gathered together during their Eid beside one of their idols, slaying sacrifices, praying and making circuits around it, as they used to do at this festival every year. Just then four friends stood apart, and spoke secretly to one another in righteous terms. These were Waraca, Obeidallah grandson of Abdal Mutalib. Othman and Zeid ibn Amr They said: - 'By the Lord! Our people have nothing left of the faith of Abraham. What is this stone that we should encircle it? It can neither hear nor speak, neither hurt nor help. O our people! Look out for your souls, for by the Lord you are altogether wanting.' Then they separated, and departed into various lands to find out the true faith of Abraham. Waraca embraced the Christian religion, and studying the books of its people, became fixed in their faith. Obeidallah remained in his doubts, but at last embraced Islam; then with a party of the Moslems he emigrated to Abyssinia along with his wife Omm Habibah, daughter of Abu Sofian and also a believer There, however, he afterwards became a Christian, and perished. When he was converted to Christianity, he said to his companions: - 'We see, but you are only blinking' - this is, cannot see plainly, like a whelp trying to open its eyes. The Prophet himself married his widow. Now as to
18
Othman, he repaired to the court of the Emperor of Byzantium, where he obtained a high rank and embraced the Christian faith . Last of all we come to Zeid, who stood fast, joining neither the Jewish nor the Christian religion He broke off from his people's faith, and gave up idols, the eating of carrion, blood, the slaughter of animals for the gods, and the putting of daughters to death. He said: - 'I worship the God of Abraham; but he blamed the people for having chosen evil ways. Zeid, then very aged, leaning with his back on the Ka'aba prayed: O, Lord! If I know what way was most pleasing unto thee, I would worship thee in that manner, but I know it not.' ''
Siratu'l Rasool vs. 144 p. 99
All these points on which we are to elaborate in this study show justifiable reasons why Christians are so sceptical about lslam. We find that the common belief of Muslims is not really based on historical Islam and on the original theology of the Quran, the Hadis and the theologians who understood Islam and its message in its original context.
If you compare the evidences for the inspiration of the Quran with those of the Bible, must you not honestly admit that, the Biblical evidences ("Christians answer Muslims" pp. 43 ff, 105. 135) are in comparable?
19
Reading the oldest historical account about the first revelation in Hira (Sirtu'l Rasool vs. 152), we feel uneasy, for the entire experience is removed from reality, being a dream Gabriel, the angel who transmitted the revelations, "came to me, said the apostle of God, while I was asleep 'After reporting the conclusion of the revelation, we read on (vs. 153) that he awoke f rom his sleep. This is identical to the experience of the night journey from Mecca to the Mas jid al-Aqs (which was not in existence at that time!) on Burq Muwiya ibn Ab Sufyn said that this was a vision and Aisha used to say: "The Apostle's body remained where it was, but God removed his spirit by night." ibid vss 265-266 (See also vs. 151) Strangest of all to us is the test which Khadija, the first wife of Mohammed, applied to identify the source of the first revelation She asked Mohammed to notify her whenever the messenger should appear again This time it obviously did not happen in a dream Upon his notification that Gabriel had come, she said: "Get up, O son of my uncle and sit by my left thigh. The apostle did so, and she said: Can you see him?' 'Yes,' he said."This was
20
repeated on her right thigh with like result. After that she asked him to sit in her lap with the same result. Now she disclosed her form and cast aside her veil while the apostle was sitting in her lap (according to 'Abdullah ibn Hasan' she made the apostle of God come inside her shift') whereupon Gabriel departed." (ibid vs 154) The report ends with Khadija being satisfied that it must have been an angel and not Satan. We have to ask the question: What did Khadija know about Satan and angels, at least at that stage, and what did she know about Allah? It is surprising that even straight after the first revelation Khadija said: "By Allah, never will Allah humiliate you " ibid 'lbn Ishq says that, before the Revelation first began to descend upon him, Mohammed's friends feared that he was suffering from the evil eye: and that, when it came upon him, almost the same illness attacked him again. In tradition it is stated that he (Mohammed) said: 'I fear lest I should become a magician' lest one should proclaim me a follower of the Jinn (spirit)'' and again: 'I fear lest there should be madness' (or demonic possession) 'in me.' After an accession of shivering and shutting his eyes' there used to come over him what resembled a swoon' his face would foam and he would roar like a young camel.'' Mizanu'l Haqq' page 345 ''The Apostle of Allah said (to Ayshah) 'Sometimes it comes to me like the ringing of a bell and that is the most troublesome to me... sometimes the angel assumes the form of a man for me and talks with me and I retain in memory what he says! Ayshah reported 'And indeed I saw him while the revelation descended upon him on an intensely cold day; then it left him while his brow steamed with sweat.''' (Mishkat IV' page 360) Other Hadis mention that when inspiration was sent down to him' Mohammed's countenance changed and he was troubled at the happening. He also became very heavy, so that his camel, if he was sitting on it, went down. Zaid-ibn-Thbith reported that: ''Once his leg fell upon mine' and 'by Allah' there is no such heavy leg as was that of the Apostle of Allah As often as the Prophet received inspiration' it seemed as if his soul was being taken from him' for he had always a kind of swoon and looked like one intoxicated.'' Insnu'l 'Uyn as quoted in Mizanu'l Haqq, page 346 If we look at all these by no means scanty Hadis, a picture begins to form. Anyone acquainted with spiritist phenomena sees certain happenings that can be expected at any ''good" seance or with a ''good'' medium. Occult phenomena in childhood; day-dreams; the hearing of voices and calls; nightly devotions; extreme persperation during trances and the subsequent exhaustion and swoonlike condition even the ringing of bells' is not uncommon. Most interesting is the materialization or forming'' of the man who talked with Mohammed and also the condition that looked like intoxication. Anyone being in a real and reasonably deep trance has that look. (On many occasions the writer has witnessed this himself) All this will also explain the aversion of Mohammed to the crucifixion of Jesus, the symbol of the cross and the God-provided atonement. Speaking of there turning Jesus (Mahdi): he will destroy the ''myth of the cross", "destroy the cross"' or ''break the cross''. (Mishkat IV, page 80 ff) It is related by Waqidi that ''Mohammed had such a repugnance to the form of the cross that he broke everything brought into his house with that figure upon it." (''Dictionary of Islam'' page 63) All this speaks of a very deep rift between the Biblical revelation and the Quranic one. Revelation in the sense we understand it, is the making known of something that was hidden before. It concerns truth and wisdom from God, which man needs to be directed in life. Animals are equipped with an instinct that guides them. They are not equipped to make moral decisions. Consequently, man turns to God - and God reveals all we need to know about Himself and His purpose and plan with His creation. To us it is plain mockery, when we read in a certain instance of revelation that: ''Saud (one of Mohammed's wives. G.N.) went out (in the fields) in order to answer the call of nature... She had been a bulky lady, significant in height amc,ngst the women, and she could not conceal herself from him who had known her. Umar B. Khattab saw her and said: 'Saud, by Allah, you cannot conceal from us'... She turned back. Allah's Messenger was at that time in my (Ayshah's) house having his evening meal and there was a bone in his hand. She (Saud) came and said: 'Allah's Messenger" I went out and Umar said to me so and so She (Ayshah) reported: 'There came the revelation to him and then it was over the bone was then in his hand and he had not thrown it and had said: 'Permission has been granted to you that you may go out for your needs.' '' Sahih Muslim lll' page 1186
21
If the Qurn is ''nazil'', no trace of human hand (character of writer objectives; culture; traceable similarity to existing cults; emotion, etc.) should be noticeable, but in fact the character, objectives, aims and personal affairs of Mohammed and the context of his time are very clearly detectable. Mohammed was also criticized by his contemporaries for copying. Rouzat al Ahbb (Hadis): ''lt was Mohammed's practice to converse in their own language with people of every nation who visited him, and hence the introduction of some Persian words into the Arabic language.'' According to the Sirtu'l Rasool (''Life of the Prophet'') Mohammed had among his companions, a Persian called Salmn. It is said that some of the Prophet's opponents spoke of this Persian as having assisted him in the composition of the Qurn. The answer to this accusation is recorded in Sura 16:105: we know that they say, Truly a certain man teaches him; But the tongue of him unto whom thev incline, is a foreign one, (but) this (Quran) is the tongue of perspicuous rabic." This Quran could not have been forged apart from God They say, Why has he forged it?' Say: 'Then produce a Sura like it' ' Sura 10:39 It was the custom for poets to hang their compositions upon the Ka'aba The seven 'Moallaqt'' were so exposed by Imra'ul Cays. We are told that Fatima, the Prophet's daughter, was repeating as she went along, the verse: The hour is come and shattered is the moon" Sura 54:1 Just then, she met the daughter of Imra'ul Cays, who cried out: Oh, that is what your father has taken from my father's poems and calls it something that has come down to him from heaven!" Imra'ul Cays' poetry is so apparently similar in style and diction to the Quran, that many Muslim scholars held it to be poetry existing within the l1eavenly tablet from all eternity. ("Sources of Islam", page 9) Ibn-Hisham further relates: 'Mohammed sat in the assembly, prayed and read the Quran to them After he had left one day, Nadr, son of al-Hrith, came in and told them stories of the great Rustem and Isfandeyr and the kings of Persia He then said, 'I swear by the Lord, that the stories of Mohammed are not better than my own. They are nothing but tales from the past, which he has written out, just as I have written out mine Again the Quran answers: The unbelievers say, This is naught, but a calumny, he has forged and other folk have helped him to it. So they have committed wrong and falsehood They say 'Fairy tales of the ancients, that he has written down, so that they are recited to him at the dawn and in the evening Say: 'He sent it down, who knows the secret in heavens and earth; he is all forgiving, all-compassionate.''
Sura 25:6,7
The sad fate of Nadr (or Nadir) which resulted from his frankness in voicing his opinion about Mohammed is recorded on page 119. In addition, we refer to the chapter: The Sources of Islam" regarding this subject
How can one be sure that a revelation comes from God and not from another source? Are there any objective evidences showing the divine origin of the Quran?
22
Omitted passages
After the sudden death of Mohammed, Zaid-ibn-Thbith was ordered to compi le and write down the Quran (Mishkat'u I Masbh) It is attested that at least three revelations were ieft out. One of these, according to Mohammed's wife, Aysha' with whom he resided at this death, was kept under their bed at the time of Mohammed's death, but was eaten by adomestic animal (related by ibn-Myah in ''Kitabu'l Sunan" with Sahih Muslim, page 740) According to the biographer and Hadis compiler Muslim (page 501): ''Abu Ms al Ashari said to 300 reciters of the Qurn is Basra: 'We used to recite a Sura resembling in length and severity (Sura) Bar-at (Sura 9) I have, however, forgotten it with the exception of this, which I remember out of it: 'If there were two valleys of riches, tor the son of Adam, he would long for a third valley, and nothing would fill the stomach of the son of Adam bur dust.' And we used to recite a Sura which resembled one of the Suras of Musabbihat, and I have forgotten it, but remember out of it: 'O people who believe, why do you say that which you do not practise' and that is recorded in your necks as a witness (against you) and you would be asked about it on the Day of Resurrection.' " The latter quotations may be from Suras 61:2 and 17:13, but the first, the same length as Sura 9 (129 verses) is missing in the Quran! In this case the possible explanation, namely that of abrogation, is unacceptable, for it would render God very human indeed. We conclude that the statement about the completeness of the Quran cannot be maintained - and with that the argument of "nazil" i.e. that it came from heaven and complete as it is. Another tradition states (Sahih Muslim, page 912, Mishkat l l, page 534 and others) Umar said: 'Verily Allah sent Mohammed with truth and revealed the Book to him. Out of the verses, the Almighty Allah revealed, there was the verse of stoning to death. The Messenger of Allah stoned to death (Sahih Muslim, page 920) and after him we also stoned to death: And in the BOOK OF GOD stoning to death is a truth against one, who commits adultery The verse was thus: 'The old man and the old woman, if they have committed adultery, they stoned them both assuredly ' " This passage too, is not in the Quran: There is a tradition from 'Ayisha, the prophet's wife, that a certain chapter which now consists of 73 verses once contained no less than 200; and that when Uthmn compiled the Quran, the missing verses could not be found. One of them v.as called the Verse of Stoning, and is said to have contained the order to stone a man or woman who had committed adultery. This verse is said to have been part of the original Quran. Many early authorities say so, and what is very significant is that the first Caliphs punished adulterers by stoning; this is still the penalty
23
by A Guillaume, p. 191
prescribed in Muslim law-books, whereas the Quran (24:2) prescribed a hundred stripes." "Islam"
At a later date when Uthmn was Khalif, he sent for the existing manuscripts in Hafsah's possession and others, had them revised to one text, and copied several times by Zaid-ibn-Thbith and three men of the Quraish tribe When you differ in anything of the Quran, write it in the dialect of the Quraish, because it was revealed in their dialect.'' Uthmn sent out one copy of this newly established original to every country and issued orders that every differing compilation or script of the Quran should be burnt. (Mishkat vol. 111 p. 708) Hafsah's copy of the Quran was burnt by Marrh. Why? Muslims as a rule explain this Hadis (Tradition) as meaning a revision to conform to the language (Quraish) of the original. But we hold that the difference in the Quran reading" does not only refer to this. Why then burn other codices? Others will reason that the burnt scripts were really corrupt texts. Who was the judge? They were also in writing! Zaid-ibn-Thbith could'just as well have used these in his collection. Much of this chapter is really no more than a compilation of quotations from eminent scholars, linked only by some of my own sentences Where not mentioned otherwise (and apart from the connecting sentences), the quotations are from the book "The Collection of the Quran" by Dr J. Burton (University of Cambridge) "In Sura 53:19 we read 'Have you considered al-Lt and al-'Uzz and Manat the third other?' This was once followed by the words: 'Verily they are the exalted maidens (gharnq, also translated 'cranes') and their intercession is to be hoped for' ('is approved' in another version) The earliest authority on the life of Mohammed (i.e Ibn Hisham) asserts that these words were uttered by Mohammed at the instigation of Satan." "Islam", page 189 and "New Light in the Life of
Muhammad", page 38 by A Guillaume
"The Quran has made a slight alteration and a significant omission to the first text: instead of saving 'By al-Lt,' etc., it reads, 'Have you considered al-Lt', etc and the sentence about the exalted maidens is dropped altogether. Subsequently Gabriel came to the prophet and denied that he had revealed the word to him ('Sirat'ul Rasool' as revised by Ibn Hisham, (vs. 239), Tabari pp 1 192 ff, al Suhayli, p 229, Guillaume) The polytheists of Mecca were delighted about this, for these words were those of the chant of the Quraish as they processed around the Ka'aba, but some companions doubted and left Mohammed Who were the three maidens7 The three principle idols in the Ka'aba of pre Islamic Mecca." ibid Strange as it may sound, Muslim theologians converted this rather embarrassing account of interpolation or abrogation (however one looks at it) into a story of the victory of light over darkness. A summary of other contentions about the reliability of the Quranic texts still give us more clarity on the subject. "A curious story is told about 'Abd-Allh ibn-Abi-Sarh. While Mohammed was dictating to him the passage beginning (with Sura) 23:12, he was carried away by wonder at this description of the creation of man; and' when Mohammed paused after the words another creature', exclaimed blessed be God, the best of creators'. Mohammed accepted this as the continuation of the revelation' and told him to write it down. This aroused doubt' however, in ibn-Abi-Sarh' and later he gave up Islam and returned to Mecca; at the conquest of Mecca he was one of those proscribed' but was pardoned on the intercession of Uthmn. Introduction to the Quran''' page 37,
by Richard Bell quoting from al Baidawi's and Zamakshari's commentries
''The canonical traditionists report that Sura 4:95 was dictated by the prophet to his amanuensis Zaydthus: 'Those believers who sit at home are not equal to those who fight in the way of God with their goods and their persons. 'A blind man was present and heard the words. He immediately interjected that were he as other men he would certainly fight; where upon the prophet interposed the words 'except those who suffer from a grave impediment' which stand in the text today. ( lslam'' by A.Guillaume,p.191) We can see from this that even before the collection of the Quran, the assumed scrutiny and exactness of the revelations was violated. "Ab Bakr collected the Qurn into volumes on the deaths of those killed at Yemma. 'Uthmn later derived from these volumes a single text,'' ''Ab Bakr collected the Qura n between two covers'' differs from ''Uthmn formed but a single text'': 'Uthmn allad jama'a al mashif 'al mushaf whid'.
24
'''Uthmn united the Muslims on a single text Jama'a 'Uthmn al ns 'al hda al mushaf''' is not what Ab Bakr did when he 'jama'a al Quran. Katibal Mugni'' by ibn Sa'id Dani
The Syrian from Ubayy ibn Ka'b, one of the scribes of Mohammed?'' (or from Miqdd?
Mu'd) "Relative to the Companion texts' Uthmn is is the text without interpolations. Relative to the revealed Quran, Uthmn is incomplete.'' ''Uthmn quite ignores the most significant feature of reported variants, namely, the attempt to document differing local approaches to certain legal questions.'' That the differences in the texts caused much concern, even antagonism, can be clearly seen in the fact that:
25
Ibn Mas'd ordered his followers to lay their Qurans in hiding and withhold them from the government agents charged with their destruction. How did the differences occur? "The origin of the reported difference was simply that Umr had memorized the Sura at an early date Hism became a Muslim only at the time of the conquest of Mecca. Umr was unaware of the later additions to the Sura." ("Fath al Ba by ibn Hajar") The variant readings were not copied from one another in a faulty manner: "The relation between texts is clearly not one in which the author of the ibn Mas'd variants had the Uthmnic texts before him and, recognizing the ambiguity of his 'Vorlage' (i.e. model or pattern), prepared to select a positive reading. Rather, for him, the meaning of the verse was still alive and this is what he sought to express in the clearest manner. He differs from the author of the Uthmnic texts in that he makes even greater efforts to achieve a clear expression insofar as the deficiencies of the script will permit this. Finally, it is necessary to posit the existence of a parallel tradition independent of the Uthmnic text to account for those innumerable variants which are too trivial and insignificant to be regarded as deliberate alterations. Die Geschichte des Korantexts'' by Th. Noldeke "For the (theological) schools, the Uthmnic and the non Uthmnic Quran traditions were regarded as parallel and equally sovereign." "That the variant readings appealed to continued to be (sic) associated with individuals among the Companions suggests that they had always been recognized as varying from the generally accepted Quran texts,'' There are signs of liberty in arranging the order of the text' at least to some degree: ''Ibn Abbs asked Uthmn what possessed him to place Srat al Anfl, one of the mathn with Bar'a, one of the mi'n; join them with no bismillh between them; and place them among the seven lengthy Suras. Uthmn replied that often the Prophet received quite long revelations. He would call for one of the scribes and say, 'Put these verses in the Sura in which so-and-so occurs.' Anfl was among the first of the Medina revelations and Bar'a among the last. Since its contents resembled those of Anfl' Uthmn took it to belong with it' for the Prophet had died without explaining that it was part of it al Itqn. by Jafl al Dn ''Mlik had a shorter explanation for the absence of this bismallh. The beginning of Bar' a fell out and its bismillh fell out with it". "al Itqn'' by Jall al Dn Variant readings were generally accepted and explained. ''The Muslims were fully alive to the import of variant readings: 'The differences in the readings indicate the differences in the legal rulings.' Jal al Dn: ''al Itqn" ''Two opposing doctrines - the invalidation of the ritual purity (wud), and the contrary doctrine - could both be referred to the Quran' according as the contending fuqah' read: Lamastum/Lmastum; or the permissibility of sexual intercourse with the menstruating woman at the expiry of her period but before she has cleaned herself, and the contrary doctrine, according as they read either yathurna or yattahirna." ''There is an interesting discussion on verses yielding two fold readings. Ab al Laith reported two views: God had uttered them both; God had uttered only one, but permitted the verse to be read in two possible ways. Samarqants own view was that if each of the two readings was susceptible of a distinct interpretation and legal application, God had uttered both. In such instances, the two readings were the equivalent of two distinct revelations. If the two readings yielded a single meaning, God had uttered only one reading, but permitted the other, owing to the differences between the dialects of the peninsular Arabs." "In Sura 5:7 the verse imposing the wud' yielded a two-fold reading, the distinction this time residing in the vowelling. 'The verse was revealed to sanction two distinct legal doctrines: arjulakum - enjoined the washing of the feet arjulikum - permitted the wiping of the feet ' ( al Itqn" by Jall al Dn)"
26
"The differences over the Fiqh of this question had called forth the differences in reading." "Local variation was possible solely within the range demonstrated by readings based on the consonantal framework of the universally agreed text The scholars were in consequence driven to seek the liberties they craved in varying the vocalic data (arjulakum/arjulikum), or the diacritical pointing (yathurna/yattahirna), or by questioning the punctuation of the individual verses. "The reading variants that were indentified had been rationalized by attribution to the several Companions." But it was not only variant readings based on differing interpretation of vowelling and diacritical marks that caused differences. In certain instances we find words interpolated (or forgotten - depending on the stand point from which one looks at it): "It was of the highest significance for the history of the development of Islamic Law and to the attendant school polemic whether one read fa m stamta'tum bihi minhunna (Q 4.24) with or without the attempted interpolation il ajalin musamman. ("Kitab al Mashif" by ibn abi Da'd) The sole purpose of the attempt was to provide a Qurnic basis (asl) for the doctrine of temporary marriage, mut'a, whose rejection by other scholars was currently based upon evidence circulating in the Sunna. It is of the highest significance whether one read Q 5.89 or Q 4.24 with or without Abdullh's or Ubayy's reported interpolations Only with the Ubayy interpolation does Q 4.24 sanction the doctrine of rnut'a, or temporary marriage, rejection of which was elsewhere being propounded on the basis of information from a third Companion of the Prophet as a part of the Sunna Evidently the Quran, in the form of the Ubayy reading, is playing the role of a counter-sunna, rather, a counter-exegesis, the function of the Ubayy interpolation being to gloss and bring out the full meaning of the root of stamta'tum, m t' " The above statements are acknowledged by the teaching of the Ayatollah Khomeini, who in his work "Towzihol-Masael" accepts temporary marriage': Girls and boys who attend coeducational classes in grammar schools, high schools, universities, or other teaching establishments, and who, in order to legalize such a situation" wish to contract a temporary marriage may do so without the permission of their fathers. The same applies if the boy or girl are in love but hesitate to ask for such permission." "If a woman authorizes someone to marry her to a man for a period of ten days, for example, without specifying the exact date, the man may contract the marriage at his pleasure, but if the woman has specified a precise day and hour, the formula must be spoken at that specified time.'' "Young boys or girls in full sexual effervescence are kept from getting married before they reach the legal age of majority This is against the intention of divine laws. Why should the marriage of pubescent girls and boys be forbidden because they are still minors, when they are allowed to listen to the radio and to sexually arousing music?" from "The Little Green Book" or
"Sayings of the Ayatollah Khomeini", Bantam Books
If the Ayatollah knows no reasons, we do! But that is besides the point here. In another instances the meaning of Sura 5:92 has been altered by the insertion (or omission) of a word. Gazl relates: "The fast in expiation for a breach of one's oath need not be consecutive, even if Abdullh did read, three (consecutive) days'. This reading is not universally acknowledged to be the Quran text. Perhaps Abdullh adduced this reading in order to elucidate what he took to be a justifiable exegesis." Sarakhs (A H. 490) a Hanaf argued: "The fast in expiation of a breach of oath is consecutive on the basis of Abdullh's reading which was in circulation as late as the time of Ab Hanfa, but did not turn out to be mutawtir, the sole criterion for inclusion in the mushaf. No one can question Abdullh's veracity, nor his memory. We can but conclude that the word 'consecutive' was part of the original wording of the Qurn and has been preserved in Abdullh's reading. The word was apparently withdrawn in the lifetime of the Prophet. The Muslims were caused to forget it, with the exception of Abdullh who was honoured with its preservation, in order to preserve
27
the ruling. The isolate sunna-hadth may establish a practice: the isolate Quran- hadth can do no less." "Usl" by al Sarakhs Variant readings were common during the life-time of Mohammed. Variant readings, although transmitted from Companions, claim to derive from the Prophet himself.'' "A man recited in the presence of Umr who corrected him. The man, incensed, claimed to have recited for the Prophet and he had not corrected him. They carried their dispute to Muhammad. When the Prophet endorsed the man's claim that Muhammad had personally instructed him, doubts sprang up in Umr's mind. Reading Umr's expression, the Prophet struck him on the chest, exclaiming, 'Out devil!' Muhammad then explained, 'All the modes of reciting are correct so long as you don't turn a statement on mercy into one on wrath and vice versa.' "
Tafsir of Tabari
"It is claimed that the Quran cannot be imitated. So that which is verbally inimitable can scarcely have passed through a phase of multiple wordings when the individual Companions had the Prophet's permission to substitute whichever word chanced to correspond with the meaning revealed by God." "It may be argued that there may be different readings (texts) The wording of the Quran is not its most relevant feature. The meaning matters above all. Differing readings were known to the Prophet and he lacked the pedantry to object." "Ubayy entered the mosque and, hearing a man recite, asked him who had instructed him. The man replied that he had been taught by the Prophet. Ubayy went in search of the Prophet. When the man recited, Muhammad said, 'That is correct.' Ubayy protested, 'But you taught me to recite so-and-so.' The Prophet said that Ubayy was right too. 'Right? right?' burst out Ubayy in perplexity. The Prophet struck him on the chest and prayed, 'O God! Cause doubt to depart.' Ubayy broke into a sweat as his heart filled with terror. Muhammad disclosed that two angels had come to him. One said, 'Recite the Quran in one form.' The other advised Muhammad to ask for more than this. That was repeated several times until finally the first angel said, 'Very well. Recite it in seven forms.' The Prophet said, 'Each of the forms is grace-giving, protecting, so long as you don't terminate a punishment verse with an expression of mercy, or vice versa - as you might for example say, Let's go; or, let's be off.' " Tafsir of Tabari. "The different readings have the Prophet's (and Heaven's) approval Differences in utterance are not material. The meaning is paramount. The differing readings are all equally valid, having been revealed in parallel. The difference appears to consist simply in the use of this as opposed to the synonym. That ought to occasion neither wonder nor alarm, neither squabbling nor scandal All readlllgs are correct. All readings come down from the days of the Prophet. All readings carry the seal of his approbation.'' ''Differences reported from the Companions on Quran matters' which divided them already in the days of the Prophet, concerned more than merely verbal matters." "Abdullah reports 'We differed about a Sura, as to whether it consisted of thirty-five or thirty-six verses, so we went to the Prophet who was engaged in conversation with Al. When we told him we disagree over the reading, his face reddened as he replied, "Those before you perished through their disagreements." He whispered something to Al who said, "The Prophet commands you to recite as you were taught ' '' Tafsir of Tabari "A man complained to the Prophet, Abdullah taught me to recite a Sura of the Quran. Zaid taught me the same Sura and so too did Ubayy. The readings of all three differ Whose reading ought I to adopt?' The Prophet remained silent Al who was at his side replied, 'Every man should recite as he was taught. Each of the readings is acceptable, valid.' '' Tafsir of Tabari ''Umr said, 'I heard Hism b. Hukaim reciting Surat al Furqn and listened to his recital. On observing that he was reading many forms which the Prophet had not taught me, I all but rushed upon him as he prayed. But I waited patiently as he continued, and, collaring him when he had finished, I asked him, 'Who taught you to recite this Sura?' He claimed that the Prophet had taught him. I said' 'By God! you're Iying!' I dragged him to the Prophet telling him that I had heard Hism recite many forms he had not taught me. The Prophet said, 'Let him go. Recite, Hism.' He recited the reading I had already heard from him. The Prophet said, 'That is how it was revealed.' He then said, 'Recite, Umr', and I recited what he had taught me. He said,
28
'That's right That is how it was revealed. This Quran was revealed in seven forms' so recite what is easiest.' '' (Tafsir of Tabari) (See also Mishkat vol. Ill pp. 702-705) Also, Al Baizawi in his commentary on Suras 3:100, 6:91, 19:35, 28:48, 33:6, 34:18, 38:22, etc.) suggests variations extant in his time. Mizanu'l Haqq' page 261 ''The scholars were to disapprove of the use by the Muslims of the post-Apostolic ages of isolate Quran readings at prayer. That is not, however, the point of the report. The earliest rationalization of reading variants was that, as all had been revealed, all were equally legitimate. Ab Huraira reports the Prophet as saying, 'The Quran was revealed in seven forms and contention about the Quran is disbelief.' " Tafsir of Tabari We would be eager to know what is meant by form'. The whole context of this subject seems to leave no doubt, however, that it is not just a matter of dialect or pronounciation, though partly so ''lbrhm reports that ibn Abbs heard some man refer to 'the former Quran text'. He asked him what he meant. The man explained, 'Umr sent Abdullah to Kfa as instructor and the people there adopted his reading. Uthmn altered the text' and so they refer to Abdullh's reading as "the former text''.' ibn Abbs rejected this. 'Abdullh's is the later' based on the final review.' Ibn Abbs also reports that Abdullh attended the final review and learned what had been withdrawn and what had been abrogated." (al Qurtubi) Tradition speaks of a ''final review'' of all the given revelation by Gabriel. This does not, however, agree with many of the previous quotations. ''Zaid is also said to have attended the final review and to have learned what was withdrawn and what remained. al Itqn'' by Jall al Dn "al-Bagaw in Sarh al Sunna, concluded, 'The mushaf which has been traditionally accepted represents the final review text. Uthmn ordered it to be copied into the mushafs he despatched throughout the empire' simultaneously making away with all the other Quran materials with the aim of preventing differences. Whatever is at variance with the written text is now to be regarded in the same light as that which has been abrogated and withdrawn. It is no longer competent for any man to go beyond the text' " Fath al Bari" by ibn Hajan "Tabar taught that the Companions agreed to write out that which they were certain represented the text as checked on the occasion of the final review. They were unanimous that all other Quran materials must be abandoned.'' "The Qd Ab Bakr holds 'that the entirety of the Quran, as God revealed it, and as He commanded that it be recorded' such as He did not abrogate, nor withdraw in respect of the wording alone, is represented in the mushaf of Uthman.' '' ''ln. Bqillani's view' therefore' the Uthmn mushaf' as collected by Zaid, equals the Quran minus two classes of verses: naskh al hukm we al tilwa and naskh al tilwa dna al hukm.'' ''ibn Zibyn reports that ibn Abbs asked him which of the two texts he recited. He replied the former reading, that of ibn Umm 'Abd (i.e Abdullh's) 'But ''said ibn Abbs, 'it is the later of the two.' Fath al Bari'' by ibn Hajar Abdullh, is himself reported as declaring' 'Did I know of anyone whom camels could reach who had later information on the final review than I have, I should go to him.' '' "Despite the statement attributed to Abdullh that he who denies single verse of the Quran denies the entire revelation, Abdullhs depicted in the literature as having denied three whole chapters of the Quran!" "The codex ascribed to Abdullah is said to lack three of the Suras present in our (the Uthmnic) text. The codices ascribed to ibn Abbs, Ubayy and Ab Ms are said to contain two Suras which the Uthmnic text lacks." al Itan" by Jall al Dn "The Mutazil scholar al Nazzm is reported to have impugned Abdullh's memory on the ground that he had denied two Suras (sic) which are part of the Book of God This is a reference, says ibn Qutaiba, to Q 113 and Q 114, and for his attitude Abdullh had justification. Men may opine and opine wrongly. This is possible for prophets.and for ordinary mortals more possible still. What induced Abdullh to refrain from recording the two Suras in his mushaf was that he observed that the Prophet used the chapters as charms to invoke the divine protection upon his grandsons, al Hasan and al Husain."
29
"A similar cause led Ubayy, on the contrary, to copy into his mushaf the two qunt prayers which he noted the Prophet reciting at the ritual service. Abdullh, taking two chapters to be prayers, thought them to be no part of the Qur an, while Ubayy, taking two prayers to be Suras, thought that they were part of the Quran." Of the two reports, it was that concerning Abdullh's supposed omission of Q 113 and Q 114, but more especially his refusal to record the first Sura, the Ftiha." "ibn Masd, the eponym of the Quran of the Kufans, is reported to have said, 'I recited from the very mouth of the Prophet some seventy Suras while Zaid still had his ringlets and was playing with his companions.' In a second version, 'The Prophet taught me to recite seventy Suras which I had mastered before Zaid had even become a Muslim' 0r, again, 'Am I to be debarred from copying the mushafs and the job given to a man who was an infidel in his father's reins when I first became a Muslim?' Abdullh is supposed to have enjoined his followers, 'Lay up your Qurans! How can you order me to recite the reading of Zaid, when I recited from the very mouth of the Prophet some seventy Suras?' " 'Am I,' asks Abdullh, 'to abandon what I acquired from the very lips of the Prophet?' " "I went to Ab Ms's house and saw there Abdullh and Hudaifa I sat with them. They had a mushaf that Uthmn had sent ordering them to make their Qurans conform with it Ab Ms declared that anything in his mushaf and lacking in Uthmn's was not to be omitted. Anything in Uthmn's and lacking in his own was to be added. Hudaifa asked' 'What is the point of all our work? Nobody in this region will give up the reading of this saikh' meaning Abdullh' and nobody of Yemen origin will give up the reading of Ab Ms.' '' "Kitab al Mashif" by ibn abi Da'd A very interesting development can be observed. At first the authenticity of a statement would be measured by the seniority of the man in question. This is apparent from the above texts. There came a shift to giving preference to the younger - the one who was aware of the abrogations and the withdrawn texts. ''ln the legal sciences, where hadth reports clash, a brilliant and elegantly simple technique was developed to resolve the problem. This involved employment of isnd theory in terms of ta'akhkhur, the later abrogates the earlier if they differ." "Kitab al Umm'' by al Rislah "This resulted, however, in earliness of conversion being driven out in favour of lateness of conversion.'' This is the obvious reason why Zaid ibn Thbith was considered more trustworthy to edit Uthmn's version than any of the older companions of the Prophet' like ibn Mas'd' Ubayy or Ab Ms. And that was also the reason for the intended destruction of their versions. 'Uthmn prohibited the variant readings since he feared dissension. lt is said that when Uthmn received the completed mushaf' he noticed certain linguistic irregularities.'' "Mashif" "Yazd b. Mu'wiya was in the mosque in the time of al Wald b Uqba' sitting in a group among whom was Hudaifa. an official called out' 'Those who follow the reading of Ab Ms' go to the corner nearest the Kinda door. Those who follow Abdullh's reading' go to the corner nearest Abdullh's house.' Their reading of Q 2.196 did not agree. One group read, 'Perform the pilgrimage to God.' The others read it, 'Perform the pilgrimage to the Ka'aba.' Hudaifa became very angry, his eyes reddened and he rose' parting his qams at the waist' although in the mosque. This was during the reign of Uthmn. Hudaifa exclaimed' 'Will someone go to the Commander of the Faithful' or shall I go myself? This is what happened in the previous dispensations.' '' "Kitab al Mashif'' by ibn ab Da'd "Hudaifa said to Uthmn' 'Whatever you would do if you heard someone talking of the reading of so-and-so' and the reading of another' as the non-Muslims do' then do it now. Kitab al Muqni" by b. Sa'id al Dan ''Hudaifa said, ''The Kufans say' the text of Abdullh"; the Basrans say, "the text of Ab Ms". By God! if I reach the Commander of the Faithful' I will recommend that he drown these readings.' (Mashif) Abdullh said' 'Do and God will drown you, but not in water!' '' ibid "Abdullh' Hudaifa and Ab Ms were on the roof of Ab Ms's house. Abdullh said' 'I hear you say such-and-such. Hudaifa said' 'Yes' I deplore folk talking about this one's reading and that one's reading. They are differing like non-Muslims.' Hudaifa continued' 'Abdullh b. Qais,
30
you were sent to the Basrans as governor and teacher. They have adopted your adab, your dialect and your text.' To b. Mas'd he said' 'You were sent to the Kfans as their teacher and they have adopted your adab' your dialect and your reading.' '' 'In that case'' retorted b. Mas'd' 'I have not misled them. There is no verse in the Book of God but that I know where and in what connection it was revealed. Did I know of anyone more learned than myself on the subject I should go to him.' Masahif And yet he differs in content from the Uthmnic version. ''The conclusion which such reports invite us to draw is that there was genuine fear that Islam' like the religions before it, would be fragmented into warring sects as a result of the differences arising in the reading of the sacred texts. Uthmn's purpose and his achievement was to unite the Muslims on the basis of a single agreed Quran reading. "Fath al Bari" by ibn Hajar "During the reign of Uthmn, teachers were teaching this or that reading to their students. When the students met and disagreed about the reading, they reported the differences to their teachers. They would defend their readings' condemning the others as heretical. News of this came to Uthmn's ears and he addressed the people, 'You who are here around me are disputing as to the Quran' and pronouncing it differently. It follows that those who are distant in the various regional centres of Islam are even more widely divided. Companions of Muhammad! act in unison; come together and write out an imm (imn?) for the Muslims. Kitab al Mashif'' by ibn ab Da'd ''The reading disputes were apparently not restricted to the provinces. They appear to have prevailed also at Medina. We are unfortunately given no information on the nature of these differences, nor any explanation as to how they might have arisen. We are told, however, that the completed mushaf was delivered, Uthmn observed certain irregular uses." ibid. 'Unanimity is often claimed by appeal to the authority of Al who is projected as averring that what Uthmn had done in respect of the mushaf, and especially in respect of the most sensitive issue of all, the alleged destruction of all Qurnic records other than the textus receptus achieved as the result of his initiative, he had done only after the fullest consultation with the Companions. Far from protesting at this highhandedness, they had applauded and blessed his decisiveness." "By God! he did not act on the mushaf except in the fullest consultation with us, for he said, 'What is your view in this matter of reading? I have heard that some even say, "My reading is superior to yours." This is tantamount to heresy ' We asked him, 'What are you thinking to do?' He replied, 'My view is that we should unite the Muslims on the basis of a single mushaf. That way, there will be no disagreement, no segmentation ' We replied, 'An excellent idea!' Someone then asked, 'Whose is the purest Arabic? And whose the greatest acquaintance with the recitation (alt. Quran)? They said that the purest Arabic was that of Sa'd b. al 'As and that the one most acquainted with the recitation (Quran) was Zaid b Thbith Uthmn said, 'Let the one write and the other dictate.' The two then set to work and in this way Uthmn united the Muslims on the basis of a single text." 'Al concludes his report with the declaration, 'Had I been in power, I should have done just what Uthmn did " ibid.
(The above quotations are taken from the book "Collection of the Qurn" by Dr John Burton)
'It is not without interest, that records show that the Qurnic text was finally fixed by the two visirs ibn Muqlah and ibn-'Tsa in A.D. 933 (A H 311) with the help of the learned ibn-Mu jhid Ibn-Majhid admitted seven readings, which had developed because of lack of vowel and diacritical marks, as canonical." "History of the Arabs" by Philip K Hitti, page 123 as quoted from
"Materials for the History of the Text of the Koran" by Arthur Jeffrey and "New Researches into the Composition and Exegesis of the Koran" by Hartwig Hirschfeld
AIl this proves beyond any doubt that the very accusation levelled by muslims against the Bible, can be reversed and applied far more effectively against the Quran. When a Muslim refers to the Quran as' nazil" he is lying in the teeth of the facts recorded above. Therefore, considering the absence of external and internal evidence that should effectively verify the revelatory character of the Quran' we find it very hard, if not impossible, to
31
accept the Quran as a Message sent by God This is particularly so, because the Quran contradicts earlier revelation' the evidence for the origin of which is given above. (See pp. 3 ff.)
Why do Muslims continually discredit the Bible on grounds that the Quran, though 600 years younger, shows in a very much exaggerated way? Why is the unity of the Quran so strongly taught' when historical records prove the contrary? Were you dear reader made aware of the basic fact so outlined above?
The Ka'aba
(also called the Holy Masjid) is described as a shrine of worship by Deodorus Sicolus in 60 B.C.
Hajj
The pilgrimage to the Ka'aba was practised before Mohammed's time, including visits to Safa and Marwa and also the throwing of stones against a stone pillar, symbolizing lblis (the evil), in Wadi Mina. This is still practised today.
Prayer
32
The now extinct tribe of the Sabaeans who lived in the Arabian Peninsula observed seven daily prayers at appointed times. Mohammed appointed five of these. The Sabaeans also prayed for the dead, a custom that has been maintained.
Ramadan
The Sabaeans fasted thirty days every year and celebrated the Eid. The fast was prolonged by one day, should the new moon not be clearly visible on Eid. Againt his practice was incorporated in the new religlon of Islam In the Mishna Berkhoth (Jewish Talmud) it was said that fasting should begin and stop at the time when one could begin to distinquish between a white and black thread. This custom has also been incorporated in Islamic traditions. We cannot accept that these imitations are purely accidental. We hold that they were known to, and approved, by Mohammed and that he incorporated them in the Quran, while others were incorporated in the Hadis.
Qibla
i.e the direction in which one faces while praying. At first' the direction was towards Jerusalem, as was Jewish practice. When the Jews fell into disfavour with Mohammed' however, this was changed to Mecca. (Sura 2:1 42)
Abraham
Whatever Mohammed knew about Abraham is not from the Torah, but from Jewish legends, the source being the Midrash Rabbah (Suras 2:260; 6:74-84; 19:42-50; 21:52-72; 26:70-82; 29:16, 17; 37:83-89; 43:26-30 and 60:4.)
33
heretical teachings they did not gain the approval of the early Church. One of Mohammed's concubines, Mary the Copt, could have related these stories to him Significant is the fact that the Apocryphal writings that had been rejected as non-apostolic and lacking in authenticity by the Church, were the main source of information to these sects. This is undeniably reflected in the Quran.
Jesus
His name in the Arabic Quran is Isa. In Sura 19:16-31 it is related that he was born under palm trees. This story can be traced back to the ''History of Navtivity''. When Mary was accused by her family for having a child without being married' the new-born Jesus speaks out of the cradle in defence of his mother. The source for this is the ''Gospel of Infancy''. (Both sources are not Biblical' but are from the Apocrypha) In Sura 3:49 and 5:113 it is related that as a child Jesus made clay pigeons and by breathing on them made them come alive so that they could fly away. This was taken from the ''Gospel of Thomas'' (Apocrypha) In Sura 4:156, as in the general context of the Quran and Hadis, it is related that Jesus was neither killed, nor crucified. The source for this is a Docetic or Gnostic heresy, promoted by Basilides, an early Christian heretic of the Second Century. The Hadis speaks of the return of Jesus in a way that is foreign to the Bible: He will return to earth, live forty years, marry and have children, then die and will be buried next to Mohammed in Medina.
The Trinity
Christians are surprised to discover in Suras 5:119, 4:171 and 5:75-76 that the Trinity comprises God, Mary and Jesus. This thought is foreign to every Christian and the Bible, but no doubt finds its origin in the veneration of Mary as "The Mother of God" by the Catholic Church.
The Miraj
Is the reported ascent of Mohammed to the Seventh Heaven after a miraculous night journey from Mecca to Jerusalem on a horse" called Buraq. This story is related to us in Sura 17. More detail is furnished in the "Mishkat". We can trace this story back to a fictitious book called the "Testament of Abraham" (BC 200), which was written in Egypt and then translated into Greek and Arabic.
34
Is a story related to us in Sura 18:9-26. It is not difficult to detect its striking resemblance to a book called the "Story of Martyrs'' by Gregory of Tours. It is a legendary tale of Christians under persecution who fell asleep in a cave for 200 years. In the Qurn, this period was prolonged to 309 years.
Balances
For some strange reason throughout the Western World, the idea of a huge set of balances that God will operate at the Day of Judgement has been in the minds of people. In fact, this is in total contrast to the basic teaching of the Bible where justification is by faith and not by good deeds. Although the balance and judgement concept is found in the Quran, in Suras 101:5,6 and 42:17, we discover that the original source is the "Testament of Abraham". "The book of the Dead", also from Egypt, refers to judgement by Osiris, an Egyptian deity, and here the same concept of judgement by balances is apparent.
Sirat
The bridge that leads over the deep gulf of hell to Paradise, is called Chnavad (the connecting link) in the Zoroastrian book "Dinkart''. These likenesses may perhaps be claimed to be accidental and they may well be, although we are aware that there was much contact between Arabia and the culturally advanced Persians. We also recall Salman the Persian, who is mentioned directly in the Siratu'l Rasool and indirectly in the Quran (pp. 47-48) However, the concepts taken from the Bible cannot be expiained in any way, other than that Mohammed's knowledge of the Bible was scanty and poor and that he was misled into believing that the legandary tales he heard were actually Biblical.
When making a choice, why should a man select as basis for eternal life a book which shows such dependence on other sources and even misrepresents them?
35
36
PART TWO
3. 4. 5.
Indeed, Jesus over and above His uniqueness is universal' even according to the Quran: "We made her (Mary) and her son (Jesus) a sign for all people.'' Sura 21:91 Surely that should give all people food for thought, particularly those who believe in the message of the Quran. None of the above can be invalidated by the statement:
37
''Muhammad is not the father of any of your men, but (he is) the Apostle of Allah, and the Seal of the Prophets." Sura 33:40 Yusuf Ali's Commentary on this verse explains it as follows: "When a document is sealed it is complete and there can be no further addition. The holy Prophet Mohammed closed the long line of Apostles.'' This is in keeping with the Islamic concept that the Quran had to replace former scriptures, because of their incompleteness and corruption and that Mohammed, being the last of the prophets, is the greatest of them all. This interpretation is, however, contradicted by other verses: "Say ye: 'We believe in Allah, and the revelation given to us, and to Abraham, Ismail, Isaac, Jacob and the Tribes, and that given to Moses, and Jesus, and that given to all prophets from their Lord: We make no difference between one and another of them'' Sura 2:136 ''Say: 'We believe in Allah, and in what has been revealed to us and what is revealed to Abraham, Ismail, Isaac, Jacob, and the Prophets from their Lord. We make no distinction between one and another among them . . . " Sura 3:84 It is only later in his career that Mohammed extends his call and apostleship universally (Sura 34:28) We consequently conclude: Islamic theology that juggles Jesus into second place, or creates an image of Jesus that does not coincide with the teaching of the Gospel, or even with that of the Quran, is the result of embarrassment over the obviously different position that Jesus had in relation to the other prophets, for Jesus was not a prophet within the normally accepted meaning of the word, but the only Salvation that God ever offered to mankind This is decidedly expressed in His very name, Jesus (= salvation) The Bible claims universality for Jesus as the only liberator from sin, if sin is properly understood. (John 14:6, Acts 4:12 and many other passages) The uniqueness of the life of Jesus and the evidences in support of the divine source of the Bible provide sufficient proof for this claim. Why should any man seek helo elsewhere?
38
from Allah's Messenger, that he should show them (some) signs (miracles) and he showed them the splitting of the moon.'' We find this rather a strange argument. How did the witness know that the other part was behind the mountain? A number of Hadis tell about miracles: Mohammed, being thirsty, asks permission to milk an almost ''dry'' goat. After obtaining it he invoked blessing on it and it supplied milk profusely, enough for the owner' his companions and himself (''Mishkat'' IV, page 450) Asked for credentials of his prophethood, he ''called a tree while it was by the side of a valley, and so it came, tearing the ground till it stood in his presence. He wanted it to recite three attestations (Kalimas) So it attested thrice as he had said and then it returned to its root.'' On another occasion Mohammed called date trees, which came at his command, fell down near him, and returned (ibid. page 436) ''lbn Mas'ud reported from the Messenger of Allah who said: 'Verily you will be given help and gain (booties), and there will be victory for you.' '' (ibid. page 437) This is considered fulfilled prophecy, i.e a miracle. Wewould ask thatthis prophecy be compared with those in the Bible ("Christians answer Muslims'' pp. 43 ff.) The feeding of a battalion of his soldiers to the full with some scrap foods that multiplied miraculously reminds one a little of the feeding of the 4000 (5 000) in the Bible. (Mishkat IV p. 429) Likewise the provision of water ''springing forth from amidst the fingers of the Apostle of Allah'', is a wellknown Hadis. (ibid. pages 407 and 427) Water in the desert is the most important commodity. Hence a number of stories of its miraculous provision are in circulation. On another occasion, the well of Hudaibiyyah was exhausted on the day of the battle of the same name. Mohammed, having heard about it, called for a pot of water. "He made ablution and then gurgled and invoked. Thereafter he poured it therein (the well) and then said: 'Leave it for an hour.' Then they allowed satisfaction to themselves and their riding animals by water till they departed.'' (ibid. page 408) We are, of course, aware that wells do fill up again after having been depleted! To the Christian reader many of these reports sound very much like the legendary stories of the New Testament Apocrypha. These are well-meaning ''reports''' often very fanciful in character. They lack just one thing: authenticity. The Apocrypha dates mainly from the Second Century A..D. i.e. 70-170 years after the death of Jesus. The Hadis was compiled approximately 250-300 years after the Hegira. This being the case, we have to take both the Apocrypha and the Hadis with a pinch of salt.'' ''A man wrote to the Prophet that he turned an apostate from Islam and joined the infidels (the man was according to the footnote, first a Christian, then turned Muslim and reverted again to the Christian faith) The Prophet said: 'Verily the earth will not accept him.' Abu Talhah informed me that he had come to the land wherein he died. He found him thrown outside. He said: 'What is the matter with him?' They said: 'They buried him several times, but the earth did not accept him.' '' ibid. page 419 One is tempted to compare the attitude of Mohammed with that of the early Christians. Tradition has it that when the Apostle John returned to Ephesus after having been banned to the Isle of Patmos for a period of time, he found a young man of the Christian fellowship there missing. On enquiring, he found out that he had back-slidden and joined the robbers in the hinterland mountains. ''You did not love him enough''' exclaimed the very aged John and asked to be taken into the mountains to the robbers. He recognized the man and saw that he returned to Christian fellowship. Another alleged miracle of Mohammed's took place at the battle of Hunain: ''The companions of the Apostle of Allah took (to their) heels. When they (apparently the enemies. G.N.) surrounded the Apostle of Allah, he got down from the mule (Mohammed always rode a white mule. G.N.) and then caught a handful of dust from the earth' threw it toward their faces and said: 'May thy faces be disfigured!' Allah did not create a man out of them, but filled up his eyes with dust (sic) as a result of that handful and so they turned back. Thus Allah routed them, and the Apostle of Allah divided their booties among the Muslims.'' ibid. page 413 Another account of the same event reports:
39
''The Prophet was looking while riding upon his mule like one eagerly longing to kill them. He said: 'This was when the blood boiled in veins.' Thereafter he took some pebbles and threw them at the faces of the infidels and then said: 'Be routed by the Lord of Mohammed. 'By Allah defeat was not due but to his throwing ctr)nes at them." ibid. page 411 Is there any need for proof that a prophet is indeed from God? Yes, undoubtedly otherwise anyone could claim to be a messenger of God. (Many have actually done so and misled millions of ignorant and uncritical andwellmeaning people.) prophecies fulfilled and signs prove the authenticity of a messenger of God and his message. Christians seek in vain for prophecies and signs in Mohammed's life. The abovementioned ones are in disagreement either with what Mohammed himself had said or what the Quran reports.
In addition we refer to a statement in the Mishkat Volume IV, page 396 where it says: "The greatest thing in miracles is a prophecy i.e. a forecast of future events. This is not a political forecast but a forecast of future secrets derived from Divine Knowledge. Prophecy is greatest for the following reasons. It can be historically proved but a miracle cannot. Prophecy manifests God's fore- knowledge, while a miracle God's power. As knowledge is greater than power, prophecy is greater than a miracle " When we consider Mohammed in the light of this, we find that he spoke about past events, but as has already been pointed out, his knowledge was scanty and displays historical misconceptions. Did Mohammed then foretell future events? We shall investigate the matter: Books have been written about this subject (I refer especially to one by Q.I. Hingora), but generally there are said to be twenty-two PREDICTIONS IN THE QURAN. These are recorded in the following passages: Sura 2:23 and 24, 88 and 89 3:10, 106-107,144 5:70 8:7 9:14 15:9, 96 24:55 28:85 30:1-4 41 :42 48:16-21, 27-28 54:44-45 56:1-56 11 0:1-2 They may be divided into three categories: 1. Those that refer to Mohammed's victories; 2. Those relating to the Quran itself; 3. A prophecy regarding the victory of the Byzantines of Syria, i.e political forecast. With regard to the victories, it is impossible to prove these to be valid predictions, since the time between prediction and fulfilment was almost nil. We also realize that Mohammed obviously expected victory otherwise he would not have been fighting. Besides that, he also needed to encourage his warriors. In every war that has been fought, both parties have expected and predicted victory. One of the two parties has always been right; therefore we cannot regard these predictions as prophecies.
40
The prophecies regarding the Quran are predictions about the preservation of the Quran in a state of completeness and without injury (Sura15:9) If we consider the destruction of all original manuscripts by Uthmn, after he had revised and reduced these to one uniform copy, as well as the loss of Suras as recorded in the Traditions (See page 49), we must conclude that this prophecy was not fulfilled. The remaining prophecy is in Sura 30:1 and reads: ''The Romans have been defeated in the nearest part of the land and they shall conquer in a small number of years after their defeat.'' This passage refers to the defeat of the Byzantines in Syria by the Persians under Khusran Parvis. (A.D. 615-6 years before the Hegira) However, the defeat of the Persians should take place soon - ''in a small number of years''. In the light of this Prediction, Abu-Bakr undertook a bet with Ubai-ibn-Khalaf that this prediction would be fulfilled within three years' but he was corrected by Mohammed who stated that the ''small number'' is between three and nine years (Al-Baizwi) Muslims tell us that the Byzantines overcame their enemies within seven years. The fact, however, is that the Byzantines defeated Persia in A.D. 628 (Al-Baizwi commentary) that was twelve years after the prediction of Mohammed. Consequently this passage does not qualify as a prophecy, particularly as the time between prophecy and fulfilment was far too short, and in addition the event was easily predictable. Perhaps we ought to realize, that some ''prophecies'' uttered by Mohammed in the Quran' have not been fulfilled, e.g. Sura 6:159: ''There is none of the People of the Book (Jews) but must believe in him (Jesus) before his death.'' There are two possible interpretations to this text. This depends on whose death the writer refers to. If it refers to the "People of the Book''' is has already been proved incorrect; if to the death of Jesus Christ' this is to occur according to the Hadis, after his return to earth at the end of time. This is equally unacceptable as a prophecy. (Above information i.a. from Mizanu'l Haqq' page 277) The prophetic argument thus breaks down. We may conclude that we do not find Quranic prophecy conforming to the Biblical standard as set out in ("Christians answer Muslims" pp. 44 ff.)
We saw earlier that the Quran does accept the Bible as revelation. In this revelation God warns of false prophets and provides a pattern for testing fulfilled prophecies. According to this pattern we, as the contemporary Jewish and Christian believers, find it not possible to accept Mohammed as one of God's prophets. Can we be expected to go against God's standards? Will God abandon His standards for others (Muslims)? Do we have to assume inconsistency on the part of God?
41
42
Muslim translator, to get the actual message or meaning which may be very clear and simple in the original. Is it perhaps from motives of expediency that an English that makes the message of the Quran obscure has so often been used? A final remark before we turn to the extracts to be compared. The phrase ''second to none'' surely does not exclude ''previous revelations.'' Therefore we feel obliged to use some Biblical passages also. We were somewhat tempted to use them exclusively. To our knowledge, the Quran itself does not disqualify the Bible as revelation. There are no references given with the texts. The reason is that you, the reader, may in a reasonably unbiased fashion select the best texts. Then you may find out the source of your choice from the index given - and reach your own conclusion. 1. "To know God is the beginning of joy, To serve God is the continuation of joy, To see God is the consummation of joy.'' ''God weighs more the love with which a man works than the work he does." 2. ''Grant me' Almighty God' that I may circumspectly explore your will for my life' that I may truly know it and completely fulfill it. Arrange my life that it may bring honour to you and salvation to me. Add to this, O Lord' a free heart' a strong heart, a vigilant heart, an unchangeable heart. Make me modest without presumption, serious without sadness truthful without deceit brave without fear active without being thoughtless. Let my way reach its purpose safely. Let me set my hope on you forever, you the loving God of my life.'' "It is not important what people think and say to us, but what we are before God. It is not important what we do, but how and why we do it. It is not important that we escape suffering, but that suffering fulfills its purpose. It is not important when we die, but that we are ready to meet God!" ''For the covenants (of security and safeguard enjoyed) by the Quraish' their covenants (covering) journeys by winter and summer, let them adore the Lord of this House' who provides them with food against hunger, and with security against fear (of danger)'' "The Lord sees not as man sees, man looks at the outward appearance, but the Lord looks on the heart.'' ''Is he, then, to whom the evil of his conduct is made alluring, so that he looks upon it as good (equal to one who is rightly guided)? For God leads astray whom He wills, and guides whom He wills. So let not thy soul go out in (vanity) sighing after them.'' "The Lord is not willing that any should perish, but that all should reach repentance. " "God desires all men to be saved and to come to the knowledge of the truth . " What man of you, having a hundred sheep, if he has lost
3.
4.
5. 6.
7.
43
one of them, does not leave the ninety-nine in the wilderness, and go after the one which is lost, until he finds it?" "I am the good shepherd ... I lay down my life for my sheep. No one takes it from me, but I lay it down of my own accord." 8. "This is an admonition: whosoever will, let him take a path to his Lord. But you will not, except as God wills He will admit to his mercy whom He wills But the wrongdoers, for them has he prepared a grievous penalty." "lf God had willed he would have made you one nation. But He leads astray whom He will and guides whom He will But you shall certainly be called to account for all your actions " 9. "My sheep hear my voice, and I know them, and they follow me, and I give them eternal life, and they shall never perish."
10. "Perish the hands of the "Father of Flame" (nickname of a person) Perish he! No profit to him from all his wealth, and all his gains! Burnt soon will he be in a fire of blazing flames! His wife shall carry the (crackling) wood as fuel! A twisted rope of palm-leaf fibre round her (own) neck!" 11. "Lord, make me an instrument of your peace: that I practice love where I am hated, that I forgive where I am offended, that I heal where there is strife, that I speak truth where there is error, that I bring faith where doubt oppresses, that I rouse hope where despair torments, that I kindle your light where darkness reigns, that I bring joy where sadness is dwelling. Lord, let me not seek to be comtorted, but that I may comfort others also; not seek to be understood, but to understand others also; not seek to be loved, but to love others also. For he that gives shall receive, he that forgets himself shall find, he that forgives shall be forgiven he that dies shall awake to eternal life." 12. "He is surely and truly invincible that clings to God and to whom God is the only good " 13. "You can only live for what is worth dying for, He does not love truth most that speaks about it, but he that endures it." 14. "I renounced for the love of Him, everything that was not He, and I live as if there was none but He and I in the world I found no small pain in the exercise, and yet I continued it As for what passes in me at present, I cannot express it. I have no pain or difficulty about my state, because I have no will but that of God, which I endeavour to accomplish in all things, and to which I am so resigned that I would not take up a straw from the ground against His order, or from any other motive than purely that of Love of Him God has infinite treasure to bestow, and we take up with little sensible devotion, which passes in a moment. Blind as we are, we hinder God and stop the current of His grace. But when He finds a soul penetrated with a living faith, He pours into it His grace and favours plentifully. We
44
often stop this torrent by the little value we set upon it But let us stop it no more! Let us make way for grace, let us redeem the lost time, for perhaps we have but little left. Death follows us close Let us be well prepared for it I have taken the liberty to impart to you these good sentiments, that you may compare them with your own. I will serve to kindle and inflame them I know that for the right practice of it the heart must be empty of all other things, because God will possess the heart ALONE, and as He cannot possess it alone without emptying it of all besides, so neither can He act there, and do in it what He pleases, unless it be left vacant to Him God knows best what is needful for us, and all that He does is for our good If we knew how much He loves us, we should always be ready to receive equally and with indifference from His hand the sweet and the bitter. All would please that came from Him. That sorest afflictions never appear intolerable, except when we see them in the wrong light." 15. By the sun and his (glorious) splendour. By the moon as she follows him. By the day as it shows Up (the sun's) glory. By the night as it conceals it. By the firmament and its wonderful structure. By the earth and its (wide) expanse By the soul and that which shaped it And inspired it to wickedness and piety, As to its wrong and its right Truly he succeeds that purifies it And he fails that corrupts it." 16. "The realization of God without the realization of our misery makes man proud. The realization of our misery without the realization of God leads to despair. The realization of Christ mediates between the two, for in Him we find God and our misery. 17. "Seest thou not how thy Lord dealt with the companions ot the elephant? Did He not make their treacherous plan go astray? He sent against them flights of birds, striking them with stones ot baked clay. Then did He make them like an empty field of stalk - and straw (of which the corn) has been eaten up.'' 18. ''Say: O ye that reject faith! I worship not that which ye worship, Nor will ye worship that which I worship. And I will not worship that which ye have been Wont to worship' nor will ye worship that which I worship. To you be your way, and to me mine." 19. ''He is no fool that gives what he cannot keep to gain what he cannot lose.'' 20. "The Lord is my shepherd, I shall not want; he makes me lie down in green pastures. He leads me beside still waters; he restores my soul. He leads me in paths of righteousness for his name's sake.
45
Even though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I fear no evil; for thou art with me; thy rod and thy staff, they comfort me. Thou preparest a table before me in the presence of my enemies; thou anointest my head with oil, my cup overflows. Surely goodness and mercy shall follow me all the days of my life; and I shall dwell in the house of the Lord for ever." 21. "Lord, when I have surrendered my life, spirit, soul and body, to you; when you have all of me - and I have you; then your love for me is not wasted: I will be spiritual and faithful in all I think or speak or do. More: my love for you and for the unloved and unlovable around me will be motivated and constrained by the love which you have lavished on me. I will have courage to speak the truth, exercise self-control in my moods and actions and will be disciplined in spending my time in your presence, always! 22. "The woman and the man guilty of adultery or fornication, flog each of them with a hundred stripes; let not compassion move you in their case, in a matter prescribed by God if ye believe in God and the Last Day: and let a party of believers witness their punishment.'' 23. "And the scribes and Pharisees brought unto him a woman taken in adultery; and when they had set her in the midst, they said unto him, 'Master, this woman was taken in adultery, in the very act. Now Moses in the law commanded us' that such should be stoned: but what sayest thou?' This they said, tempting him, that they might have to accuse him. But Jesus stooped down' and with his finger wrote on the ground, as though he heard them not. So when they continued asking him, he lifted up himself, and said unto them, 'He that is without sin among you, let him first cast a stone at her.' And again he stooped down, and wrote on the ground. And when they heard it, being convicted by their own conscience, went out one by one, beginning at the eldest, even unto the last: and Jesus was left alone, and the woman standing in the midst. When Jesus had lifted up himself, and saw none but the woman, he said unto her, 'Woman, where are those thine accusers? Hath no man condemned thee?' She said, 'No man, Lord.' and Jesus said unto her, 'Neither do I condemn thee: go, and sin no more. Then spake Jesus again unto them, saying, 'I am the light of the world he: that followeth me shall not walk in darkness, but shall have the light of life." 24. ''lf you believe Him for forgiveness, you must believe Him for deliverance. He Who saves us from the guilt of sin can deliver us from the power of sin He can cut the chains that bind him to his former master He purchases us that He might possess us If we want deliverance from the power of indwelling sin, we must rely in simplicity upon His Word, accepting without question what God says to us about it.
46
We must still move in faith The aim of the Lord involves two things: the praise of God and the perfecting of the believer, that is to say His glory and our glorification is prepared, for His glory and our good, to go all lengths with us. In occupying our vision with Christ, He seeks to show us what He desires our likeness to become In this way, the more we behold Him the more we are prepared to endure that we might be conformed to His beauty God puts the believer to the test, but in effect it is Himself He puts on trial. When He proves us, He expects us to prove Him. When a person who believes God is put through harrowing experiences, God waits, as it were, to see whether that person will consider Him worthy of his trust to the bitter end His glory in that circumstance is linked up with that mans faith. When faith triumphs in the sufficiency of God's grace, then God is glorified in the world The entrustment (by God) of trial and discipline is one therefore of highest honour (to us) He dares to expose Himself, to see whether in the darkest hour we will really respond to Him who is invisible, more than all the visible terror about us; to see whether we will love Him more than life and count His joy more to be grasped at than tne moment's excitement of an apparent security." 25. "When my soul was embittered, when I was pricked in heart, I was stupid and ignorant, I was like a beast toward thee Nevertheless I am continually with thee, thou dost hold my right hand. Thou dost guide me with thy counsel, and afterward thou wilt receive me to glory. Whom have I in heaven but thee? And there is nothing upon earth that I desire besides thee My flesh and my heart may fail, but God is the strength of my heart and my portion for ever. For lo, those who are far from thee shall perish; thou dost put an end to those who are false to thee. But for me it is good to be near God; I have made the Lord God my refuge, that I may tell of all thy works." 26. To the Thamud people (We sent) Salih, one of their own brethrell: He sald. O my people! Worship God; ye have no other gotd but Him Now hath come unto you a clear (sign) from your Lord!This she-camel of God is a sign unto you: so leave her to graze in God's earth, and let her come to no harm, or ye shall be seized with a grievous punishment. And remember how He made you inheritors after 'Ad people and gave you inhabitations in the Land: ye build for yourselves palaces and castles in (open) plains, and carve (sic) out homes in the mountains; so bring to rememberance the benefits (ye have received) from God, and refrain from evil and mischief on the earth. ' 27. They say: Why is not a sign sent down to him from his Lord?' Say. 'God hath certainly poweer to send down a sign: but most of them understand not thost who reject our signs are deaf and dumb, in the midst of darkness protound: whom God willeth He leaves to wander, whom He willeth, He placeth on the Way that is straight Say: For me, I have an obvious sign from my Lord, but ye rejected it They swear tneir strongest oaths by Allah that it a (special) sign came to them, by it they would believe Say: certainly all Signs are in the power ot God:
47
but what He wisheth you to understand is that (even) if a (special) sign comes, they will not believe '' 28. "What makes a man great, the wonder of creation, pleasing in the eyes ot Cod? What makes a man strong, stronger than the world? What makes him weak, weaker than a child? what makes a man hard, harder than rock; and what makes him as soft as wax? It is love. What is older than everything else? Love. What shall survive everything else? Love. What cannot be talken .away yet gives it all? Love. What has permanence when all else staggers?? Love. What comforts whe all other comlfort fails? Love. What endures when all else chalnges? Love. What remains whe everything temporal fades away? Love. What witnesses when prophecies cease? Love. What does not pass away when revelations cease? Love. What illuminates when sinister thoughts overwhelm? Love. What blesses the abundance of gifts? Love. What gives utterance of right emphasis? Love. What turns the "Widow's mite" into abundance? Love. What makes wise the speech of the simple? Love. What never changes when all else changes? Love. Only that is love, that never changes!" 29. "Love is patient and kind; love is not jealous or boastful; it is not arrogant or rude. Love does not insist on its own way; it is not ir!itable or resentful; it does not rejoice at wrong, but rejoices in the right. Love bears all things, believes all things, hopes all things, endures all things Love never ends!" 30. "We have indeed revealed this (message) in the Night of Power: and what will explain to thee what the Nigh of Power is? The Night of Power is better than a thousand months. Therein come down the angels and the spirit by God's pennission, on every errand; Peace! This until the rise of morn!" 31. "Fight those who believe not in God nor the Last Day, nor hold that forbidden which hath been forbidden by God and His Apostle, nor acknowledge the Religion of Truth, (even if they are) of the People of the Book, until they pay the polltax with willing submission, and feel themselves subdued." 32. "Blessed are the poor in spirit (i e those who stand empty-handed or humble before God), for theirs is the kingdom of heaven Blessed are those who mourn, for they shall be comforted Blessed are the meek for they shall inherit the earth. Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness, for they shall be satisfied. Blessed are the merciful, for they shall obtain mercy. Blessed are the pure in heart, for they shall see God. Blessed are the peacemakers, for they shall be called the sons of God. Blessed are those who are persecuted for righteousness' sake, for theirs is the Kingdom of heaven. Blessed are you when men revile you and persecute you and utter all kinds of evil against you falsely on My account. Rejoice and be glad, for your reward is great in heaven." 33. "O ye who believe! I nter not the prophet's houses, until
48
leave is given you, for a meal, (and then) not (so early as) to wait for its preparation: but when ye are invited, enter; and when you have taken your meal, disperse, without seeking familiar talk Such (behaviour) annoys the Prophet: he is ashamed to dismiss you, but Cod is not ashamed (to tell you) the truth God and His Angels send blessings on the Prophet: O ye that believe! Send ye blessings on him, and salute him with all respect Those who annoy God and His Apostle - God has cursed them in this world and in the Hereafter, and has prepared for them a humiliating punishment." 34. "Humility and a deep consciousness of our own unworthiness are the true marks of holiness. The nearer we live to Him of Whom the angels chant 'Holy, holy, holy Lord God Almighty', the more we will confess our own sinfulness and rejoice in His Holiness." 35. "You know that the rulers of the Gentiles Lord over them, and their great men exercise authority over them. It shall not be so among you; but whosoever would be great among you must be your servant, and whoever would be first among you must be your slave; even as the Son of Man came not to be served, but to serve, and to give his life a ransom for many." 36. "By the Break of Day, by the Nights twice five; by the Even and Odd (contrasted); and by the Night when it passeth away; Is there (not) in these an adjuration (or evidence) for those who understand? Seest thou not how the Lord dealt with the 'Ad (people), of the (city of) Iram, with lofty pillars, the like of which were not produced in (all) the land? And with the Thamud (people), who cut out (huge) rocks in the valley? And with Pharaoh Lord of stakes? All these transgressed beyond bounds in the lands, and heaped therein mischief (on mischief) Therefore did thy Lord pour on them a scourge of diverse chastisement: for thy Lord is (as a guardian) on a watch-tower." 37. "Love may cause pain to its object, but only on the supposition that that object needs alteration to become fully lovable Christianity now has to preach the diagnosis - in itself very bad news - before it can win a hearing for the cure A recovery of the old sense of sin is essential to Christianity. Christ takes it for granted that men are bad. Until we really feel this assumption of His to be true, though we are part of the world He came to save, we are not part of the audience to whom His words are addressed." 38. ''God has not abandoned His first purpose Still He plans that a great host of mankind should come to love and honour Him. His ultimate objective is to bring them to a state in which they please Him entirely and praise Him adequately, a state in which He is all in all to them, and He and they rejoice continually in the knowledge of each other's love - men rejoicing in the saving love of God, set upon them from all eternity, and God rejoicing in the responsive love of men, drawn out of them by grace through the Gospel His immediate objectives are to draw individual men and women into a relationship of faith, hope, and love, toward Himself, delivering them from sin and showing forth in their lives the power of His grace; to defend His people against the forces of evil; and to spread throughout the world the Gospel by
49
means of which He saves." 39. "Have we not expanded thy breast? And removed from thee thy burden the which did gall thy back? And raised high the esteem (in which) thou (art held)? So verily with every difficulty there is relief: Verily, with every difficulty there is relief. Therefore when thou art free (from thine immediate task) still labour hard, and to thy Lord turn (all) thy attention." 40. "So I lift up my hands to my Redeemer Who, after His coming had been predicted for four thousand years, has come to this earth to suffer and die for me, at the time and in the manner as it had been prophesied. Through His grace I can await my death in peace, resting on the hope of being united with Him forever. Until that time I live content and in gladness of heart, be it with the provisions that He has been pleased to give me, or in sufferings which He has sent to promote His salvation and which He has taught me bv His example to endure." No doubt the style and content of the above quotations have betrayed the origin of some. Before looking at the sources, try to give an impartial evaluation. Mark the squares at the end of a quotation. If it is, in your honest opinion, a very spiritual message, mark it 1. If it is very poor in its message fill in a 5 or fill in, according to your own discretion and honest opinion of the quality, any number between 1-5. In the second square give your opinion of the diction, style, rhetoric and beauty of the text. Mark them with any letter from A-E . Then look up the source and decide whether some of the given texts are as good as - or superior to - the Quranic texts. If that is so, you will have agreed with us that the argument that the Quran is 'the greatest wonder among the wonders of the world'' and that ("is second to none in the world'') is without foundation. With that the only Quranic "sign" or evidence that the Quran is the ultimate and final revelation of God, replacing the Bible as the Word of God and source of salvation, has been disqualified. We need to stress again, however, that your judgement must be impartial, and, as far as possible, unbiased and sober. You may hold it against the extracts, that the selection of the portions from the Quran has been unfavourable in contrast to the other quotations. To a certain extent this is true. But does it not say ''produce a chapter like it"? A chapter would mean any chapter, no doubt. It is not unfair to select the very best of the pen of a spiritual man to "produce a chapter like it:'' This was obviously not possible. We have utilized only extracts from books at hand in our home, and have indeed picked both the books and their extracts without doing very much selection. We also did not systematically go through the Quran to pick those Suras, or parts thereof, which from our point of view were best to quote. So we deem this test to be fair. We are aware also, that this test could be reversed. Biblical texts could be taken and opposed in similar fashion. This has been done, but unfortunate Iy the opposition has never taken into consideration that many statements and events described in the Bible are historical records, including quotations uttered by opponents of God, and which do not necessarily ref lect the consent, thought and will of God. Taken out of context such tests may be abused to support just about anything. One must always bear in mind that the Islamic concept of 'nazil" is not the Biblical concept of revelation, a fact that must be respected. In the above quotations we were careful not to quote a portion out of its context. That is why we chose several short, but complete Suras Most quotations have been translated from one language into another, often twice (for example from Latin to German to English, or even English to German to English again etc)This obviously must have a negative effect on the expression and beauty thereof, which the reader will no doubt confirm. Sources: 1. Thomas a Kempis (13801471 A.D) (German) 2. Thomas Aquinas (1224 - 1274) (1talian) 3. Eva von Thiele Winkler (German) 4. Sura 106 5. O.T. (Old Testament or Torah) 1Samuel 16:7 6. Sura 35:8
50
7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 27. 28. 29. 30. 31. 32. 33. 34. 35. 36. 37. 38. 39. 40.
N.T. (New Testament or Gospel) 1Timothy 2:4; Luke 15:3-4; John 10:14, 18 Sura 76:29-30 and Sura 16:93 N.T. John 1 0: 28 Sura 111 Francis of Assisi (1182-1226 A D) (ltalian) St Augustin (354 430 A.D) (North Africa) A.de Saint-Excupery (reported missing in 1944 at a reconnaissance flight over the Sahara Desert) (French) Brother Lawrence around 1666 (quote from "The Practice of the Presence of God" (French) Sura 91 Blaise Pascal (1623-1662) (French mathematician) Sura 105 Sura 109 Jim Elliot (martyr for the Gospel in Amazon Jungle 1956) (American) O.T. Psalm 23 Unknown Su ra 24:2 N.T. John 8: 3-12 Geoffrey Bull (from "God holds the Key", thoughts during his time of imprisonment in a Chinese Communist Camp) (English) O.T. Psalm 73:21-28 Sura 7 :73-74 Sura 6:37,39,57,109 Sqren Kirkegaard (1815-1855) (Danish) see also Mark 12:42 (Bible) N.T I Corinthians 13:4-7 Sura 97 Sura 9:29 N.T. Matthew 5:3-12 Sura 33:53,56-57 Jim Elliot (American) N.T Matthew 20:25-28 Sura 89:1-14 C.S Lewis (from"TheProblemof Pain") (English) J I Packer(from"KnowingGod") (English) Sura 94 Blaise Pascal (French)
Does one need a longer list of writings to show that the claim of uniqueness in beauty and content of the Quran is not justified?
51
52
The fact that many Muslims insist that a Hadis is only acceptable if it does not contradict the Quran, underlines our problem. There is the Hadisu's-sahi, a genuine Tradition", handed down by truly pious persons, distinguished for their integrity. Then there is the Hadisu'z-Za'if, which is a weak Tradition." Another school divides them into exhorted Traditions", restricted Traditions" and intersected Traditions''. Yet another school divides the Hadis into "undoubted Tradition","well-known Tradition", rare Tradition" poor Tradition" and a "single saying". All this after having been extensively sifted by the collectors! From the host of Tradition-collectors, Muslim scholars have singled out six of some 1 465 collections as being the "correct books" (Sihahu's-Sittah): 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. al-Bukhari 256 A.H. (After the Hegira, i.e A D 622) Muslim 261 A.H. at-Tirmize 279 A.H. Abu-Da'ud 275 A.H. Abu-Abdi'r-Rahman 303 A.H. Abu Abdi'llah Muhammad 273 A H
In addition must be mentioned the Mishkat (or "Mishkat-ul-Masabih'') Being a collection of most authentic sayings and doings of the Prophet Muhammad selected from the most reliable collections of Hadis literature" by al-Baghawi. The theological and judical system of Islam and its practical application are thus based on these books. Since only few people are sure of the morality of their actions, it has always been considered a "good'' way to do what most people do. To copy the one who was Allah's chosen Prophet' who must have been well-pleasing to Allah is surely to follow the best example (J Christensen) So every good Muslim follows, and in doing the right actions seeks the favour of Allah. As we saw earlier, Mohammed directly and indirectly agreed with and encouraged Sunnah. "Ye have indeed in the Apostle of Allah a beautiful pattern of (conduct) for anyone whose hope is in Allah and the Final Day." A brief look at some traditions will illustrate what this involves: "Umar looked towards the black stone at Mecca and said, 'By Allah, I know that thou art only a stone, and canst grant no benefit, canst do no harm. If I had not known that the Prophet kissed thee, I would not have done so, but on account of that, I do it.' " (Muslim and al-Bukhari in Mishkat lll, page 604) Abd-ullah ibn-Umar was seen riding his camel round and round a certain place. In answer to an enquiry as to his reason for so doing, he said: 'That I know not, only I have seen the Prophet do so here." Ahmad-ibnHambal would not eat watermelons, because although he knew the Prophet ate them, he did not know whether he ate them with or without the rind, or whether he broke, bit or cut them. Even so his action was not 'Sunnah, for Mohammed ate watermelons! Muslims proudly regard Islam as the natural religion" in which every aspect of life is considered and regulated: from prayer to the cleaning of teeth; f rom the pilgrimage to marriage and the raising of children. The pattern for this is largely provided in the Hadis. Basically this leads to submission to a long set of rules for behaviour, rather than getting to the heart of the human condition. To put it Biblically:
"Why, as though you still belonged to it, do you submit to its rules: Do not handle! Do not taste! Do not touch!? These are all destined to perish with use, because they are based on human commands and teachings. Such regulations indeed have an appearance of wisdom, with their self-imposed worship, their false humility and their harsh treatment of the body, but they lack any value in restraining sensual indulgence. Colossians 2:20b-23 " gifts and sacrifices being offered were not able to clear the conscience of the worshiper. They are only a matter of food and drink and various ceremonial washingsexternal regulations applying until the time of the new order." (i.e. during the time of the dispensation under the Law of the Old Testament. G.N.) Hebrews 9:9-10
10
Jesus asked them. Dont you see that whatever enters the mouth goes into the stomach and then out of the body? But the things that come out of the mouth come from the heart, and these make a man unclean.For out of the heart come evil thoughts, murder, adultery, sexual
53
immorality, theft, false testimony, slander.These are what make a man unclean; but eating with unwashed hands does not make him unclean. Matthew 15:17-20
We should like to make ourselves clear: We do not criticize good habits! We do not want to discourage anyone from following a good example - on the contrary! But we must not expect spiritual results from this. The realization of sin; the hatred for sin; true repentance and deep love for God, does not result from keeping laws! Christians do not despise laws either. What would we do without law and order in this already corrupt and perverse world? Never mind how insufficient and poor these laws often are. In the New Testament we find that the Law of God is to love Him and to love one another This love is kindled, like any other human love relationship, by an appreciation of the object of our love. This again springs from our occupation with the One we love - or wish to love. As within a human relationship, we have to probe, make contact, seek information, test and converse. In spiritual terms this means occupation with God's Word, besides our talking to Him in prayer This means more than the recitation of the Rak'at seventeen times a day or more. No man can honestly claim that he can possibly have intimate contact with God after the first thousand times of recitation, as little as an experienced nurse is moved at the sight of blood. Adoration, worship, praise and prayer are the overflow of a loving and grateful heart towards God, Who, despite our sirnfulness in thought and deed, did not cast us aside, but is willing to receive us back to Himself and to shower his love over us - all by grace, i e by presenting this to us as an undeserved gift. This we may accept. Now we in turn can present ourselves to Him. The Bible puts it this way in Romans 12:1-2:
"Therefore, I urge you, brothers, in view of Gods mercy, to offer your bodies as living sacrifices, holy and pleasing to Godthis is your spiritual act of worship. Do not conform any longer to the pattern of this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind. Then you will be able to test and approve what Gods will ishis good, pleasing and perfect will."We suggest that there are two ways of achieving, submission to God.
One is through fear. I fear the consequences of my actions against established rules and laws, and consequently I try to keep them. The relationship between God and man in this case is that between Master and slave. The other is based on love. Because I love God with all my heart, I hate nothing more than to disappoint Him. I hate sin. Anything, He likes I endeavour to do. I burn to please Him, as He wants to please me. This is a Bridegroom - bride relationship. The former relationship is predominently apparent in the Old Testament in God's dealings with a rebellious Israel; the latter relatioship begins to appear in the old Tectament, but is unfolded fully only in the New Testament. We need power to overcome sin Love is the most superior propellant of life, as we all know. Therefore love as a motive is superior to fear. Disregarding polemics, we must state that the following of rules degrades a man to being a mechanical servant. The Law is a schoolmaster (N. T. Galatians 3:24):
"So the law was put in charge to lead us to Christ that we might be justified by faith."
We observe the shift from mechanical obedience to loving response and to responsible action. We are lifted to a higher plane promoted to act as free men, bound only by love. This, however, is granted only to those who do indeed love God in a sincere manner, otherwise we have chaos as is widely seen in this world that professes religion, but does not possess the sincerity to live it. If, with this in mind, we look at certain sunnah, we must seriously ask what kind of spiritual effect, even by implication, they may produce: The Apostle of God said: When a fly falls into a vessel belonging to anyone of you, then let him immerse the whole of it. Afterwards let him throw it out, for verily (!) in one of its wings is healing, and in the other disease. Al-Bukhari and Abu-Daud in Mishkat 11, page 152. ''Jabir reported that Allah's Messenger commanded the licking of fingers and the dish saying: 'You do not know in what portion the blessing lies.' " Sahih Muslim. page 1 120 ''When anyone eats food' he should not wipe his hands until he had lickd it (hands and dish) himself or has given it to someone else to lick it. ibid, page 1 119 ''lbn-Umar reported Allah's Messenger as saying: 'A believer eats in one intestine, whereas a non-believer eats in seven intestines.' '' ibid., page 1137 Mohammed said: ''The angels do not enter a house in which there is a dog or pictures.'' Hadis of
Abu-Talhah
''Every maker of pictures is in the fire. Allah will appoint for him, for every picture which he has drawn, a person who will punish him in hell" Hadis of ibn-Abbas
54
Yet even in Islamic countries pictures are painted, photos taken and films viewed - not to mention T.V. ''lf a man steals an egg or a length of rope, his hand should be cut off.'' (Sahih Muslim ch. DCLXXVIII vs. 4185, vol. Ill, p. 908 and Mishkat Ch. XXV vs. 123' vol. Il, p. 555 confirming Sura 5:41) Interpreters today, however say Mohammed means this to be the extreme and final penalty for incorrigible thieves. However, those who ignore the Hadis and thereby ignore following ''such tradition today ould violate the spirit of the Quran.'' The Messenger of Allah said: ''Allah loves sneezing but hates yawnings. So when one of you sneezes and praises Allah, it becomes the duty of every Muslim who hears to say for him, 'May Allah be kind to thee.' As for yawning, it is surely from the devil. So when one of you yawns, let him return it if he can, because when one of you yawns, the devil laughs at him.'' Mishkat l, page
590
The explanatory notes enlighten us: "Yawning is the result of sloth and sluggishness and has therefore been termed (as) coming from the devil, and sneezing is the result of a sound brain and sound health and is therefore termed to be of an angel." Allah's Messenger said: "When one of you yawns, he should keep his mouth shut with the help of his hand' for it is the devil that enters therein.'' Sahih Muslim, page 1 540 All the above statements need neither comment nor explanation regarding their usefullness and acceptability in the light of anatomy, medicine, bacteriology and technology. Of course, we are aware that the above selection does not represent a balanced view of the Hadis. However, an unemotional reader of the Hadis, searching for peace with God and joy in His presence, as we Christians experience it, will find little but detailed rules on how exactly to prostrate in prayer, perform the Hajj, shave the hair of the body, perform ablutions, etc. etc. Of course, this can be noticed only by those who experience another kind of relationship with God. The man who draws saline water from a deep well in the Kalahari considers it terrific, until he moves to a house with running water, hot and cold. Without wishing to be superior, we note that any one comparing life under the New Testament with the life under the Old Covenant must realize the tremendous change and freedom that came with Jesus. Islam leads its followers back under the Law. (Galatians 3 and 4) Christians, as mentioned earlier, certainly do not live lawlessly. We have been, as it were, promoted from the stage of observing strict ordinances that regulate every aspect of life by detailed commandments, which is basically the situation sought after by the immature. It is no doubt more beautiful to live under the Law of Love, for as Francis of Assisi put it once: Love God and then do what you like! "But love also dictates restraint! It is not something that I must force myself to do. I do it to please the One whom my soul loves. We must hasten to add, however, that this applies only to the genuine, practising Christian - not to just any Church member. Here perhaps more than in any other area can we see the difference that the Christian faith makes. There is no point in stating that lslam and its way aims at just that. It does not. It is a delusion and selfdeception to assume that. Is it reasonable to build or support ones faith for eternity on traditions which are so vague in their rational substance and dependability?
55
Evaluation Of The Challenge That Mohammed Ought To Be the Model Of All Mankind
" If you love Allah, then follow me (Mohammed) Sura 3:31 '"Ye have indeed in the Apostle of Allah a beautiful pattern of (conduct) for anyone whose hope is in Allah and the Final Day." Sura 33:21 "I leave with you two things. If you hold fast by them both, you will never be misguided - the Book of Allah and Sunnah of the Prophet." "Mishkat" 1, page 173
ibid. pages 5 and 159
"Whoso obeys me shall enter Paradise and whoso disobeys me, has indeed rejected the truth."
"All the utterances and deeds of the Holy Prophet are divinely inspired, and in them alone can one find the true meaning and the real significance of the will of Allah The Prophet alone is best fitted and, therefore, divinely authorized to determine the meanings of the Holy Quran, to unfold before humanity the deep wisdom contained in it It is by following Muhammad that we can achieve the cherished goal of winning Allah's favour. "Sahih Muslim Introduction pp. i-ii (See also chapter: ''The Hadis and Sunnah''' page 46) It is essential that our Muslim friends do not assume that Christians are just trying to be difficult when they imply that Mohammed was not a man of immaculate quality. "For three centuries, they (writers of European countries) have cried themselves hoarse over their accusations of Muhammad being a licentious man, an imposter, a murderer, a liar and all other vile epithets which their hearts could accept. And they go on repeating these lying accusations believing that some of the mud they throw may stick And what proof have these writers of Muhammad being a licentious man? Nothing but the fact that after he was 53 years old, he gradually contracted a number of marriages which they dislike, and the further fact that whilst he limited the number of wives to his followers at a maximum of four he made an exception of the law in his own case. Abraham, David, Solomon and many other prophets and saints of the Old Testament had many wives. Were they all licentious men? God forbid such an accusation!" ''Dictionary of Islam''' pp.399-400 In reply to this, we should like to state that the word ''European'' has no place here. It is not a question of nationality, race or colour, but rather of truth or error. Racism with all its consequences is evil wherever it comes from. We reject the implication that certain objections raised by Christians are not supported by fact. We cannot be ruled by our emotions on this subject. It ought to be mentioned also, that all our information about Mohammed comes from Islamic sources. I very substantiated statement can consequently not be a lying accusation." If it is demanded of a person that he follow and obey a certain leader he may weigh up the pros and cons and reach a decision. But when Truth and eternal life are involved, expediency on temporal issues matters no longer. So when we are told to follow the footsteps of a spiritual leader, our confidence must not be emotional only, but most important of all, it must be rational. That presupposes as deep a study of the quality of the life of the example, as possible. One should not give a deaf ear to negative reports, provided they are substantiated. Also one would not explain away possible flaws. But most of all one must have a fixed standard by which to measure right and wrong, good and evil. As Christians we use the standard that is found in the Bible. Ultimately our concept of what is moral and what immoral will find its origin there. May just one text indicate what we mean by this:
"Lord, who may dwell in your sanctuary? Who may live on your holy hill? He whose walk is blameless and who does what is righteous , has no slander on his tongue, who does his neighbour no wrong and casts no slur on his fellow man who keeps his oath even when it hurts '' from Psalm 15
56
Since it has been mentioned already, let us look at the concept of monogamy and polygamy. Was Abraham polygamous? He had Sarah, his wife, and after her death he ''took another wife whose name was Ketu'rah'' (Genesis 25:1) But then he had Hagar for a short period of time on the advice of Sarah, whose servant she was (Genesis 16:1-2), with the object of raising a descendant and heir to Abraham. This was, at least in a sense, polygamy. What was God's view of this relationship? We have only one and that by implication: after this episode God had no communion with Abraham for 13 years. (Genesis 16:16-17:1) Besides this, we see the inevitable problem of jealousy coming up, which eventually led to Hagar and Ishmael's banishment from the family. Also in the case of David we read of no comment by God on his polygamy, although God severely judged him for his adulterous act with Bathsheba (2 Samuel 12) Solomon lived in absolute excess as far as women were concerned, yet there is no direct condemnation, except in that he took idolatrous wives who led him away from the Lord in the latter years of his life. There were other cases of polygamy also, but we see no rejection ot this practice in the Old Testament. Jesus, when approached on the question of divorce, reinstituted, however, the original purpose of marriage:
"He (God) who made them from the beginning made them male and female" (implying not male and females!) and said "for this reason a n,an shall leave his father and mother and be ;oined to his wife (not wives!) and the two shall become one. So they are no longer two but one. What therefore God has joined together, let no man put asunder " They said to him: 'Why then did Moses command one to give a certificate of divorce, and to put her away?' He said to them, 'For your hardness of heart Moses (not God) allowed you to divorce your wives, but from the beginning it was not so. And I say unto you: Whoever divorces his wife, except for u"chastity, and marries another, commits adultery." "the man who marries a divorced woman commits adultery."(Matthew 19:4 and Luke 16:18
Why? Because polygamy excludes devoted love, for love between the sexes is exclusive, otherwise it is degraded in essence to mere sexual fulfilment. No woman who loves her husband and wishes to be fully loved in return, can tolerate a partner. One may lose sight of this fact in a polygamous society, but even Ayshah, the favourite wife of Mohammed, confessed to having been jealous. How much more would the others have been! But there is one further aspect: Monogamy gives recognition, status and integrity to a woman. It is silly to argue that a polygamous society makes pro stitution unnecessary. What about sexual fulfilment for the woman, who has to share her husband with other wives? And what about the men who surely have to go without wives, because someone else has more than one? The fact that there is a numerical superiority of girls over boys, is too insignificant to justify the legalisation of polygamy. We cannot accept the argument that during the "Holy Wars" when many men were killed, polygamy was a justifiable provision for the widows. According to notes in "Sahih Muslim" 111, page 941, in all the 82 hostilities during the lifetime of Mohammed, only 259 Muslims lost their lives He moved to Mecca with 10 000 men. How many of them would have had a chance of marrying even one widow? 2% ! Be that as it may, we do not wish to regard the custom of polygamy as a sinful practice, simply because it appears that in Old Testament times at least, God overlooked it - maybe because of the ''hardness of heart'' of the people or simply because it was part of their culture. Had it been of much consequence spiritually, God would, no doubt, have spoken out Nevertheless to a Christian and even in Western Society the above quotation by Jesus and the reasoning that follows, give polygamy a negative connotation. We have to remember that Mohammed lived in a polygamous society. But he also lived after Jesus and ought to have been aware of His teaching.
57
Al-Baizwi, (Commentary Vol. Il, pp. 340 341), the Quranic commentator, gives an explanation of this passage: It is related that Mohammed was alone in company with Mary in Ayshah's or Hafsah's turn. Hafsah became aware of that and therefore scolded him about it He declared he had taken an oath, but admitted his unlawful behaviour, therefore these verses descended." "Mizanu'l Haqq, page 330 (The "Mishkat" names Zainab instead of Hafsah - "Mishkat" 11, pages 680-681)
(The complete story is told in the Rauzatu'r Saf, Vol. Il, page 188)
It is in brief, as follows: "Mary (the Copt) was a Christian slave given to Mohammed 7 A.H. (628 A.D) by the Governor of Egypt, Elmokaukas. Her sister, Shereena was also given at the same time. Mohammed became intimate with Mary and she bore him Ibrahim, who died in 10 A.H. The intimacy took place in the home and bed of his wife Hafsah (daughter of Umar) who was absent at that moment and on the day which was either her or Ayshah's turn. When Hafsah found this out and questioned him he promised (on oath) not to touch Mary again if she would keep this a secret, and promised that Umar and Abu-Bakr should be his successors. Hafsah, however, told Ayshah about this event, and for a full month Mohammed had no dealings with any of his wives, living with Mary alone.'' During that period this revelation'' was given. ''Der Koran''' translated by Ludwig Ullman'
Footnote 2 of Sura 66:1-2, page 456
It is noteworthy that a revelation from the Holy One should promote and commend a breach of oath by Mohammed - and under such circumstances! We conclude that Mohammed, at least in his later years, used Quranic utterances in favour of his personal interests. That certain revelations were used for his personal convenience is obvious, and bewilder us: "O believers, enter not the house of the Prophet, except leave (permission) is given you for a meal without watching for its hour. But when you are invited, then enter. And when you have had the meal, disperse, neither lingering for idle talk, that is hurtful to the Prophet and he is ashamed before you." According to the Hadis (''Sahih Muslim'' Il, page 723 ff. and ''Mishkat page 210) this ''revelation'' came when Mohammed had just married Zainab and he wanted the guests to leave. In Sura 33 there are other instances that no one can really term ethical. The Sura records: ''It is not fitting a believer, man or woman, when a matter has been decided by Allah and his Apostle, to have any option about their decision. If anyone disobeys Allah and his Apostle, he is indeed on a clearly wrong path.'' Sura 33:36 We find it presumtuous - not to say blasphemous - when a prophet assumes a position of equality with God ('' has been decided by Allah and his Apostle '') This suspicion is amplified when the very next text covers up, or even makes acceptable, an action which we consider unethical, never mind what the circumstances. In this case Mohammed married the wife of his adopted son, Zaid-ibn-Haritha. The story is rather obscure, but was reported by Al Baizwi thus: ''Mohammed beheld her' (Zainab, Zaid's wife) after he (Mohammed) had wedded her (Zainab) to him (Zaid), and she fell into his soul therefore he said 'Praise to Allah who turneth hearts upsidedown.' Zaid heard it and there occured to his soul an aversion from her society (nearness) Therefore he came to the Prophet and said: 'I desire to put away my wife!' After having been persuaded to keep her on, Zaid tried a while, but then divorced her. After the time prescribed following a divorce' (a waiting period of 90 days), another "revelation" came to Mohammed: '' 'We wedded her to thee' (Sura 33:37) the meaning is that He (Allah) made her his (Mohammed's) wife without the interposition of a marriage contract. And what confirms it (i.e. this explanation) is that she used to say to the rest of the Prophet's wives, 'Verily Allah acted the part of a relative in my being given in marriage, and as for you, your relatives gave you in marriage.' And it is said that Zaid was the go between in her betrothal, and that was a great trial, and an evident witness to the strength of his faith". Commentary of Al Baizwi' Volume ll, page 129 (Mizanu'l Haqq, pages 331-332) The latter statement of Baizwi is, also reflected in the "Sahih Muslim" (page 724): ''Allah's Messenger said to Zaid to make a mention to her (Zainab) about him. Zaid went -and said: 'Zainab, Allah's Messenger has sent (me) with a message to you!' She said: 'I do not do anything until I consult the will of my Lord.' So she stood at her place of worship and the (verse
58
of) the Quran (pertaining to her marriage) was revealed' and Allah's Messenger came to her without permission.'' This revelation'' can be read in Sura 33:37-38: ''When Zaid had dissolved (his marriage) with her with the necessary (formality = 9O days waiting), We (= Allah) joined her in marriage to thee And Allah's command must be fulfilled. There can be no difficulty to the Prophet in what Allah has indicated to him as a duty.'' All the modern commentators explain that both Zaid and Zainab, being incompatible, were suffering in their marriage; that both were encouraged by Mohammed to stay together, until the marriage could last no longer, only then did Zaid (a freed slave) divorce Zainab (of a noble family); and Mohammed, feeling partly responsible for the failure and wanting to reinstate Zainab, married her. We have not found any support for this modern interpretation in the Traditions. We are reminded of the words of Jesus:
" the man who marries a divorced woman commits adultery."Luke 16:18
One may argue that in Zainab's case Mohammed was subject to the culture and customs of those davs. True. But when God speaks He gives absolute standards that are binding to all who claim to be believers. Also very strange to us is a special concession to Mohammed concerning his matrimonial affairs. In Sura 4:3 the number of wives for a Muslim is restricted to four at a time, plus, however, "What your right hand possesses", i.e. concubines or slave girls. A Baizwi We would contend that prisoners or slaves are still human beings with needs and feelings. One could degrade them to animals or use them like a shirt or socks, butwe hold that this is barbaric and unethical. If that was the practice in a barbaric society, a man of God could not fall in line with it. Purely for that reason alone we ought to say that an intimate relationship, without giving the woman concerned the status of wife, constitutes exploitation, even if the social environment does not regard it as such. That is why concubinage is a practice rejected by Christians. In Sura 33:50-56, however, we notice a different law: O Prophet! We have made lawful to thee thy wives (1) to whom thou hast Daid their dowers; and those whom thy right hand possesses (2) and of the prisoners of war whom Allah has assigned to thee; (3) and daughters of thy maternal uncles and aunts (4) who migrated with thee (from Mecca); and any believing woman (5) who dedicates her soul to the Prophet - if the Prophet wishes to wed her. This only for thee and not for the believers Thou mayest defer (the turn of) any of them that thou pleasest, and thou mayest receive any thou pleasest, and there is no blame on thee if thou invitest one whose (turn) thou hast set aside It is not lawful for thee (to marry more) women after this, nor to change them for other wives, even though their beauty attract thee, except any thy right hand should possess." "It is not right for you that ye should annoy Allah's Apostle, or that ye should marry his widows after him at any time: truly such a thing is Allah's sight an enormity Allah and his Angels send blessings on the Prophet. O ye that believe! Send ye blessings on him, and salute him with all respect Those who annoy Allah and his Apostle - Allah has cursed them in this world and in the hereafter, and has prepared for them a humiliating punishment. Thus Mohammed indeed enjoyed a superhuman status. Ayshah, Mohammed's favourite wife, "Reported that Allah's Apostle married her when she was seven years old, and she was taken to his house as a bride when she was nine, and her dolls were with her, and when he (the Holy Prophet) died she was 18 years old." "Sahih Muslim", page 716 In Sura 4:25-26 marriage is forbidden with two sisters at the same time. It is not well-known, but Mohammed had as slave concubine not only Mary, the Copt, but also her sister, Shereena. How Mohammed's wives must have felt about all this is reflected to sorne extent in a Hadis of Ayshah's: "I used to backbite those (females) who offered themselves for the Messenger of Allah. So I asked: 'Does a woman offer herself? Then the Almighty Allah revealed: 'You may put off whom you please of them, you may take to you whom you wish, and if you desire any whom you have separated no blame attaches you.' Sura 33:51. I said: 'It seems to me that your Lord hastens to satisfy your desire.' " "Mishkat" 1, page 210 We must emphasize, that all this information comes from authentic Islamic sources!
59
Not without reason Christians are inclined to be critical about expedient "revelations'' like this: "Ayshah reported that Allah's Messenger sought our permission when he had (a turn to spend) a day with (one of his wives) amongst us (whereas he had wanted to visit his other wives too) It was after this that this verse was revealed: 'Thou mayest put off whom thou pleasest of them, and take for thee whom thou pleasest.' Sura 33:5; "Sahih Muslim" Il, page 762 Muslims seem to be under the impression, that sexuality in the case of Mohammed played a very subordinate role in his marriages. Quotations from the Hadis do not confirm this Perhaps one Hadis of Al-Bukhari's (Volume 1, page 165) will illustrate this: "Anas bin Malik said, 'The Prophet used to visit all his wives in a round, during the day and night and they were eleven in number.' I asked Anas, Had the Prophet the strength for it? Anas replied, 'We used to say that the Prophet was given strength of thirty (men) There are some final questions. Was there no envy or jealousy among the wives of Mohammed? Did he actually make use of his special privileges? Did he treat all his wives alike, as is prescribed in the Quran? Let us hear another of Ayshah's accounts ("Sahih Muslim" IV, pages 1 299-1301): "The wives of Allah's Apostle sent Fatima, the daughter of Allah's Messenger, to Allah's Apostle. She sought permission to get in as he had been lying with me in my mantle (robe) He gave her permission and she said: 'Allah's Messenger, verily your wives have sent me to vou in order to ask you to observe equity in case of the daughter of Abu Quhfa' (It happened to be her turn" G.N.) Ayshah said: 'Keep quiet.' Thereupon Allah's Messenger said to Fatima: 'O daughter, don't you love whom l love?' She said: 'Yes!' Thereupon he said: 'l love this one'. Fatima then stood up when she heard this from Allah's Messenger, and went to the wives of Allah's Apostle and informed them of what she had said to him and what Allah's Messenger had said to her. Thereupon they said to her: 'We think that you have been of no avail to us. You may again go to Allah's Messenger and tell him that his wives seek equity in case of the daughter of Abu Quhfa'. Fatima said: 'By Allah, I will never talk to him abc:ut this matter.' Ayshah (further) reported: The wives of Allah's Apostle then sent Zainab, the wife of Allah's Apostle, and she was one who was somewhat equal in rank with me in the eyes of Allah's Messenger, and I have never seen a woman more advanced in religious piety than Zainab more close to Allah, than her. She, however, lost her temper very soon, but was soon calm. Allah's Messenger permitted her to enter as she (Ayshah) was alone with Allah's Messenger in her mantle, in the very same state when Fatima entered. She said' 'Allah's Messenger' your wives have sent me to you, seeking equity in the case of the daughter of Abu Quhfa.' She then came to me and showed harshness to me and I was seeing the eyes of Allah's Messenger whether he would permit me. Zainab went on until I came to know that Allah's Messenger would not disapprove if I retorted. Then I exchanged hot words until I made her quiet. Thereupon Allah's Messenger smiled and said: 'She is the daughter of Abu Bakr.''' We have not quoted the above to slander Mohammed, but try to balance the one-sided romantic picture that has persisted in Islam down the centuries. This is despite the above negative information being available information that prevents us from being able to accep that Mohammed s life is the product of divine revelation. We appeal to those who present a totally one-sided impression of the life of Mohammed to the followers of Islam, to be impartial. We are aware that prophets are only people, after all. But we do not expect them to secure an exclusive position for themselves, and seek privileges that would be called sin in others. For instance, we cannot accept the sentimental suggestions by many Muslims, that Mohammed's matrimonial (and extra-matrimonial) affairs are the result of unselfish sacrifice to unite Arab tribes and protect exploitecl widows, although this should not be ruled out. That Mohammed lived in monogamy until Khadiyah's death (when he was 50) and that he married no virgin (apart from Ayshah) does not seem to prove anything when one considers reports in the Hadis such as quoted above.
60
Christians therefore have no sympathy with "holy wars". That churches have repeatedly given their blessings to wars and even bombs is a sad proof of the fact that mass-Christianity has little concern for Biblical standards and consequently has no right to call itself truly Christian. Here we should like to have a closer look at the subject of one's enemies on a more personal level: ''We were (sitting) in the mosque when the Messenger of Allah came to us and said: (Let us) go to the Jews. We went out with him until we came to them. The Messenger of Allah stood up and called out to them (saying): 'O ye assembly of Jews' accept lslam (and) you will be safe.' They said: Abu'l Qasim ( =Mohammed) you have communicated (Allah's message to us)' '' This was twice repeated with the same answer. Then Mohammed added: ''You should know that the earth belongs to Allah and His Apostle, and I wish that I should expel you from this land.'' Mohammed expelled Banu Nadir. ''Sahih Muslim pages 963-960 and "Mishkat" 11, page 454 The Banu Quraiza (also Jews) put up a resistance. ''Then he killed their men and distributed their women, children and properties among the Muslims, except that some of them had joined the Messenger of Allah' who granted them security. They embraced Islam. Sahih Muslim'' 111, pages 963 - 64 ''The people of Quraiza su-rendered accepting the decision of Sal'd ibn Mu'adh (a loyal Muslim) about them Sad said; 'You will kill their fighters and capture their women and children.' (Hearing this), the Prophet said: 'You have judged by the command of God.' " ibid. page 966 We are told in practically all the explanations of this incident, that the Ouraiza had been acting treacherously towards the Muslims.We could not find this claim confirmed in any Hadis, but even if we had, the following event would not be justified: Then the Apostle of Allah went out to the market place of Medinah and caused to be dug in it trenches Then he sent for them and beheaded them in those trenches. They were brought forth unto him as sent for . . there were 600 700 of them. And he who estimates their number highest says that they were between 800 and 900 And that state of affairs did not come to an end until the Apostle of Allah had finished with them. Ayshah says: "None of their women were slain, except one woman she was with me, talking with me while the Apostle of Allah was killing her men in the market place, when a crier cried out her name She said, 'It is I, by God.' I said to her, 'Alas for thee, what is the matter with thee?' She said, 'I shall be killed.' I said, 'And why?' She said, 'For the talk which I talk.' Then she was taken off and beheaded." Ayshah used to say, "By Allah, I do not forget my surprise at her, the godliness of her person " "Then verily the Apostle of Allah divided the goods of the Banu Quraiza and their wives and children among the Muslims . And the Apostle of God chose for himself of their women Rihnah and she was with the Apostle of Allah until he died from her, and she was among his concubines.'' Siratu'l Rasool vss. 689 693 She remained in that state, yet this was despite the clear ordinance that: When war ceases, the slave women and girls, when taken at home, cannot be used (!) for sexual intercourse without regular marriage. Look at the case of the Prophet. He did not keep any captive women of war without marriage This was repeated in the verse: '(You may marry) of those whom your right hands have possessed (=prisoners) from among your believing maidens. (Sura 4:25) There is mention of fornication in the above verse if the slave girls are not taken lawfully in marriage."
"Mishkat" 11, page 460 - commentary
Considering the easy and superficial way marriage could be concluded and dissolved, this means very little effort indeed. Again we conclude that this action, however much justification is given to it, is not appropriate for a man of God, all the more when we compare it to the life and teaching of Jesus Christ. "In the Battle of Badr 70 prisoners fell to the hands of Muslims, some of them were released without any ransom by the clemency of the Prophet and some with ransom." "Mishkat" 11 page
439
Maybe the compiler of this Hadis overlooked what Muslim had recorded. There it is related (''Sahih Muslim pages 961-962) that Mohammed asked Abu Bakr for his opinion concerning the 70 captives. Considering that
61
they were of the same tribe, he suggested release for ransom. Thereupon Ibn Khattab was also asked. His reply was: "I am of the opinion that you should hand them over to us so that we may cut off their heads." Mohammed did not approve. Next the narrator I bn Abbas found Mohammed and Abu Bakr shedding tears. Asked for the reason, he said: I weep for what has happened to your companions for taking ransom (from the prisoners) I was shown the torture to which they were subjected (in hell? G N.) Then Allah revealed the verse: 'It is not befitting for a prophet that he should take prisoners until the force of the disbelievers has been crushed ' to the end of the verse: 'So eat ye the spoils of war, (it is) lawful and pure'. (Sura 8:67) So Allah made booty lawful for them." Yet another account of the same situation we read in the "Dictionary of Islam'' (page 380): "Or tomorrow (the day after Badr), the prisoners were brought before him (Mohammed) As he scrutinlzed each, his eye fell fiercely on Nadir, son of Harith 'There was death in that glance,' whispered Nadir trembling to a bystander. 'Not so,' replied the other, 'it is but thine own imagination.' The unfortunate prisoner thought otherwise and he sought Musab to intercede for him Musab reminded him that he had denied the faith and persecuted believers. 'Ah,' said Nadir, had the Quraish been made the prisoners, they would never have met the death!' 'Even if it were so, Mohammed scornfully replied, 'I am not as thou and Islam hath rent all bounds asunder.' " Micdad the Captor, fearing lest the prisoner, and with him the chance of a rich ransom, was about to slip from his hands, cried out: The prisoner is mine!' But at this moment the command to strike off his head was interposed by Mohammed, who has been watching what passed . Nadir was forthwith beheaded by Ali. Two days later Ocba another prisoner, was ordered for execution. He ventured to expostulate and demanded why he should be treated more rigorously than the other captives, 'Because of thy enmity to Allah and His Prophet,' replied Mohammed. 'And my little girl?' cried Ocba, in the bitterness of his soul, who will take care of her?' Hellfire!' exclaimed the conqueror and on the instant his victim was hewn to the ground.' '' Still more distasteful if not in numbers, then in sordidness, is the record of the murder of Ka'bibnu'l Ashraf 'a Jew of the tribe of Banu Nadir. He is said to have conspired against the l if e of Mohammed and to have sung obscene songs defaming Muslim women. ''These crimes were enough to take his life''' is the comment on this account in the ''Sahih Muslim''. ''The Messenger of Allah said: 'Who will kill Ka'b ibnu'l Ashraf? He has maligned Allah 'the Exalted' and His Messenger!' '' (This was after the Muslims apparently were in control of the war situation.) ''Muhammad ibn Maslama said: 'Messenger of Allah' do you wish that l should kill him?' He said: 'Yes'' so Muhammad ibn Maslama came to Ka'b and pretended to be a dissident of Islam to gain his confidence. He asked for the loan of foodstuffs. lt was agreed upon to pledge the weapons in exchange. Muhammad ibn Maslama promised that he would return with three (four) friends. That night they went. When his wife heard them' she exclaimed: ''I hear a voice which sounds like the voice of murder''' but Ka'b quietened her and went down to them. Muhammad (ibn Maslama) said to his companions: ''As he comes down, I will extend my hands towards his head and when I hold him fast' you should do your job.' " They conversed about the ''very fine smell" of the scent of his hair. Being allowed to smell his hair, he held his head fast" and said to his companions: 'Do your job.' And they killed him." "Sihah Muslim" 111, pages 990-991) Ibn Hishm in the ''Siratu'r Rasl"(vss. 550-553) has a more elaborate version. When Muhammad ibn Maslama doubted his ability to execute the job''' Mohammed said to him: '' 'All that is incumbent upon you is that you should try.' He said: O Apostle ofGod' we shall have to tell lies.' He answered: 'Say what you like, for you are free in the matter.' " So lies and deception were used, Mohammed accompanied them for a while and blessed them in parting: Go in God's name; O God help them. After having seized the locks of Ka'b he said: '' 'Smite the enemy of Allah'. Accordingly they smote him. Their swcrds came in collision with one another and effected nothing. Muhammad ibn Maslama said: 'Then I recalled to mind my dagger I seized it. The enemy of Allah cried out with such a cry, that around us there remained not a stronghold on which a fire was not kindled. Then I stuck it into his abdomen, then I pressed upon it till it reached his genitals' and the enemy of Allah fell.' " In the grappling with the swords one
62
of the companions was wounded. They carried him back to Mohammed who was ''standing praying. We saluted him, and he came out to us. We informed him of the killing of the enemy of Allah. He spat upon our comrade's wound' and went back." The laconic end of the story goes like this: "Our attack upon God's enemy cast terror among the Jews, and there was no Jew in Medina who did not fear for his life.'' In the same verses, we are toid that Ibn Ishq said: ''The Apostle of Allah said' 'Kill any Jew that falls into your power.' '' vs. 553 This resulted in the killing of a Jewish merchant. (vss 714715) We are told that rivalry existed between the tribes of the Ansrs, Aus and Khazraj, each being resolved that the others should not excel it in zeal for Islam and Mohammed. "When the Aus had destroyed Ka'b ibnu'l Ashraf the Khazraj said: 'By Allah, they shall never excel us in this!' They remembered a man who was hostile to Mohammed' Ibn Abil Hu-qaiq' at Khaibar. They asked permission of the Apostle of Allah to slay him, and he gave them leave.'' Abdullah ibn Utaik was placed in command of the group of five by Mohammed. He also forbade them to kill a child or a woman. Again in a treacherous way they pretended to seek to buy corn. Having been admitted by his wife' they found him in bed. ''We went in to him, we locked the room upon ourselves and upon her (thereby shutting her out)' through fear lest, if there should be a combat over him, she should intervene between us and him. Therefore his wife cried out and screamed at us. (How impolite! G.N.) We came unexpectantly upon him with our swords: (he was in his bed) Accordingly' when we struck him with our swords' Abdullah ibn Unais pressed upon him with his sword in his belly till he pierced him through and we went out.'' There was an unexpected casualty. On fleeing down the staircase, one of the murderers fell down and hurt himself. The dying victim's friends tried to pursue the murderers, who were then hiding. The victim died when his friends returned. "We carried our wounded comrade and came to the Apostle of Allah and informed him about the killing of the enemy of Allah. And in his (Mohammed's) presence we differed among ourselves about his killing, each of us laving claim to it. Therefore the Apostle of Allah said: 'Bring your swords.' We brought them to him. He looked at them and said: 'Truly the sword of this Abdullah ibn Unais has killed him: On it l see the traces of food!' " In similar manner Abu Atak, a man 100 years old, was slain as also was Asm daughter of Marvn, a poetess who attacked Mohammed in her verses. (Ibid. vs. 995) ''The Apostle ol Allah said, 'Who will rid me of the daughter of Marvn?' " Umair ibn Udai went to her house and killed her. "Then in the morning he was with the Apostle of Allah and said to him' O Apostle of Allah, verily I have killed her.' Then (Mohammed) said, 'Thou hast helped Allah and His Apostle, o Umair!' " ''Mishkat'' IV, page 404: ''Bara'a reported: The holy Prophet sent a party to Abu Rafe'. Abdullah ibn Atik entered his house at night while he was asleep and killed him. Abdullah ibn Atik said afterwards. 'I fixed my sword over his belly till it went out by his back.' He fell thereafter and broke his leg. It was bandaged and then he went to Mohammed to report the murder, whereupon he healed him." In a footnote (2 272) in "Sahih Muslim" 111, page 991, we find a commentary by the well-known Maulana Maududi regarding the murder of Ka'b ibnu'l Ashraf: 'lt is wrong to infer from this that taking of the lives of the chiefs of the enemy secretly is a permanent clause in the ethics of Islamic warfare We find in the whole history of Islam only two persons who were killed this way: one Ka'b ibnu'l Ashraf and the other Abu Rafi' This goes to prove, that killing of an enemy secretly, is not the war policy of Islam, but an exceptlonal case, which is permitted under exceptional circumstances, when the enemy does not come to the forefront, but constantly conspires against the Muslims secretly." "al-Jihad fil-lslam", pages 259-260 This, as many similar comments, shows the embarrassment of Islam about certain actions in early Islamic history. This is a hopeful sign. Disappointing, however, is the fact, that such despicable terrorism is covered by
63
a cloak of respectibility - simply because Mohammed is involved. The sincere love for the Truth at any cost is absent All these reports undermine the possibility that Mohammed is the final and universal Apostle of God. The evidence given here speaks for itself. It may be objected that this chapter is one-sided--that my be so - yet a camouf lage or denial of these facts, is just as one-sided. If we consider Hitler, for example, and leave out his failures and negative trends we would have a person who eliminated unemployment in a country that was riddled with it and who built up a new economy, sense of nationhood and integrity for a whole nation. He built roads and highways, initiated the Volkswagen, which at that time cost two months, salary of the average employee and had tremendous home owner-ship schemes for the workers. How wonderful! But he left Germany in achaos of ruins and despair. So, in fairness, we have to present the other side of the picture.
As mentioned before Christians have a code of ethics by which the above behaviour and happenings are absolutely unacceptable. Can an honest Muslim with a sense of justice and righteousness see any quality reflecting divine inspiration in such actions? Comparing the reports above with the reports of the life of Jesus, can anyone fail to see the total difference? Can any Christian be blamed to prefer being a Christian with a knowledge of the above facts?
64
PART THREE
Marriage in Islam is a contract that, in the days of Mohammed, was engaged in rather lightly. All it required, was that a dower had to be paid, which was often of very little value, however, it could be a garment or even a few handfuls of dates:
65
A woman came to Allah's Messenger and said: 'Messenger of Allah, I have come to entrust myself to you.' Allah's Messenger saw her and cast a glance at her from head to feet Allah's Messenger then lowered his head. When the woman saw that he had made no decision in regard to her, she sat down. There stood a person from amongst his companions and said: Messenger of Allah, marry her to me if you have no need of her. He (the Holy Prophet) said: Is there anything with you (which you can give as a dower)?' He said: No Messenger of Allah, I have nothing ' Thereupon Allah's Messenger said: Go to your people and see if you can find something ' He returned and said: I have found nothing.' Encouraged again to look for even an iron ring, which again he could not obtain, he declared that his only possession was a lower garment, which he was prepared to share. This being rejected by Mohammed' he was asked:'' 'Do you know any of the Quran?' He said: 'I know such and such Suras'' whereupon he said: 'Can you recite them from heart? He said' 'Yes'' whereupon he (Allah's Messenger) said: Go, I have given her to you in marriage for the part of the Quran which you know.' '' "Sahih Muslim pages 717-718 The value of the dower Mohammed gave for his wives amounted to approximately R50.00 (US$75.-) If marriage was easy' so was divorce. Three ''pronouncements" by the husband (except during the time of menstruation) dissolved a marriage (ibid. pages 769-770, 754, 759) "Recent years have brought some amelioration of the hard lot of women in Muslim countries in the matter of divorce. Under the Hanafi law - and this, be it remembered, obtains in the greater part of the Muslim world - a husband may divorce his wife for any reason or for no reason at all The husband can divorce his wife by simply saying so three times. On the other hand, a woman can never divorce her husband on any ground whatever, unless she has his permission to do so. Nor can she get a judicial dissolution of marriage for neglect, ill-treatment, or positive cruelty A feature of the Hanafi system is that a divorce uttered in jest (for fun) and not meant seriously is just as binding as a deliberate utterance. But this is not all. Even a divorce spoken when a man is drunk is valid if he was culpably drunk, and so, too, is a divorce uttered under compulsion." "Islam'' by Alfred Guillaume p. 172 Again Jesus shows us a different concept:
Some Pharisees came to him to test him. They asked, Is it lawful for a man to divorce his wife for any and every reason? Havent you read, he replied, that at the beginning the Creator made them male and female, and said, For this reason a man will leave his father and mother and be united to his wife, and the two will become one flesh? So they are no longer two, but one. Therefore what God has joined together, let man not separate. 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 19:3-9
At the turn of this century 99% of Muslim women were illiterate. There were no state, schools for girls, because Islamic leaders opposed them. The Westerner who visits Islamic countries is at once aware of the absence of women in public life everywhere. Whether it be in the cafs, shops, restaurants or cinemas, one sees men only. Again this is not a criticism of cultural concepts, but rather of the Islamic concept of equality. According to Sura 4:35: "Men are the managers of the affairs of women for that God has preferred in bounty one of them over another, and for that they have expended of their property. Righteous women are therefore obedient, guarding the secret for God's guarding. And those you fear may be rebellious, admonish; banish them off their couches and beat them. If then, they obey you, look not for any way against them; God is all high, all great." It sounds almost ironic that a Muslim lady (Olive Toto) wrote a poem that was published in an Islamic paper sometime back, part of which reads as follows: "Islam lifts women to a high degree; Gives them their full rights legally. By Islam's Law a woman's property (Whether single or married she be) Is still her own right lawfully" Without suggesting that this is typical, weought to mention the "flexibility" one may have regarding the Shariat (Law) Ibn-Saud of Arabia admitted to having had over 200 wives, but maintained that since he had never had more than four at one time, he had never sinned. According to the laws of inheritance, daughters inherit only
66
half of the portion of the sons and in court it takes the evidence of two women to equal the evidence of one man. On the other hand we see a very strong emphasis on the care of orphans and widows and the poor, as well as people in distress. Mohammed himself set a shining example in this field. The hospitality of a Muslim home is exemplary. Christians find many of the Islamic concepts of ethics strange, to say the least. One sample may be presented at random: "The Prophet was asked: 'Which of the actions is best? He said: 'Prolonged standing (in prayer)' Which prayer is best?' He said: 'Prolonged prostration' " "Mishkat" IV, page 357
they think that they will be heard for their many words. Do not be like them, for your Father knows what you need before you ask him. Pray then like this:
Our Father in heaven, hallowed be your name, your kingdom come, your will be done on earth as it is in heaven. Give us today our daily bread. Forgive us our debts, as we also have forgiven our debtors. And lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from the evil one.
We realize that the exhibitionist aspect of prayer is a temptation to Muslims and Christians alike, and don't we all become painfully aware of it time and time again? But the Christian is challenged to forget about form of any sort - the outward, visible, checkable, measurable -be it in posture, quantity, timing or pattern; and have communion with the Father; love Him, appreciate Him, adore Him, follow Him, obey Him and be devoted to Him alone! In my mind's eye I see our Muslim friends protesting and saying that we misunderstand them, for as Muslims they also pray in the above way. Perhaps some do, but that is not what Islam demands. Besides, as we have already observed, many a Chnstian concept has been absorbed by Islam, but such tendencies do not represent the "Spirit of Islam."
Do Muslims as a rule approve of such ethics relating to women by practicing them, or have they preferred to accept the "Western" style of partnership? Would any Muslim lady like to be regarded and treated as outlined above, particularly when knowing of true partnership and equality? Is there a young wife who does not mind to share her husband with another wife? We now venture to discuss a highly delicate subject. We do not need to apologize for this, for it is in reply to a challenge. Measured by Christian, i.e. Biblical standards - and that is legitimate for Muslims also, for the Torah and the Gospel are accepted as revealed by God - how do certain sayings and actions of Mohammed stand up to scrutiny? How can they be related to his prophethood and the Islamic rejection of the Bible?
67
68
eternal and immutable decree to act as he does. Allah can 'if he so wills' admit all men to Paradise, or cast all into hell. Elsewhere it says that: ''Nothing can happen in the world' whether it respects the conditions and operation of things, or good or evil, or obedience and disobedience, or faith and infidelity that is not contained in the written tablet of the decree of Allah.' Dictionary of Islam'' by T.P Hughes, pages 472-473
69
"Allah has power over all things " Sura 3:159 This teaching resulted in the rejection of the Law of Cause and Effect Only Allah causes things to be or be done Logically then, a man can do neither a good deed, nor a bad deed on his own Consequently, man cannot be held responsible for his actions and a righteous God cannot condemn him. A certain Hadis says: "At creation Allah took a lump of mud, divided it into two, threw one into hell saying, 'I do not care.' Likewise he threw the other into heaven, saying, 'I do not care.' " "Der Islam", by Kellerhals,
page 74 and "Handworterbuch des Islam", page 247
How did this concept arise? An Hadis by Al-Bukhari and Muslim enlightens us: "Allah created Adam brought forth from him a family and said, 'I have created this family for hell' and their actions will be like those of the people of hell!" Then a man said to the Prophet, 'Of what use will deeds of any kind be?' He said, 'When Allah creates his servant for Paradise, his actions will be deserving for it until he dies - and when Allah created one for the fire, his actions will be like those of the people of hell till he dies, when he will enter therein." AlBukhari LXXVI1:611, Mishkat, vol. 3 chapter XXXI1:4 and 14
"The Holy Prophet said: 'When you hear about a mountain that it has shifted itself from its place' believe it, but when you hear about a man that he had changed his nature, don't believe it as it will return to what it was created upon.' ' Mishkat, vol. 3 chapter XXXI1:32 (458w) O Prophet of Allah! I believe in you and in what you have come with. Do you still fear for us?' 'Yes', said he, the hearts are between the two fingers of Allah. He changes them as He likes.' ''
Mishkat, vol. 3 chapter XXXI1:20
"Allah created His creations in darkness, and then cast His light upon them, so whoever got anything from that light found guidance, and who so missed it became misguided '' (Mishkat, vol. 3 chapter XXXI 1:19) In the light of the above it seems strange that Muslims, who accept this concept, find it puzzling that a sinner is acceptable to God when the atoning sacrifice of Jesus has provided a covering for his sin. The suffering of the just for the unjust, is to the Muslim blatant injustice! We can learn from this just how much our morality can be influenced by our upbringing and environment.
16:93-95
Regarding unbelievers, we read in Sura 2:5-6: "It is equal to them, whether you warn them or not, they will not believe. Allah has put the seal upon their hearts." Speaking of all mankind' it says in Sura 7:179: "Whomsoever Allah guides, he is rightly guided, and whom he leads astray, they are the losers! We have created for Gehenna many jins and men " "Do ye desire to guide him whom Allah led astray? Whom Allah leads away, you will find no way for him." Sura 4:87-90 "If Allah willed he would have made mankind one nation, but they continue in their differences, excepting those on whom your Lord has mercy. To that end, he created them and perfectly is fulfilled the word of your Lord: 'I shall assuredly fill Gehenna with jins and men altogether.' "
Sura 11:118-120
70
"Allah leads astray whomsoever he will and guides whomsoever he will " Sura 14:4 This is repeated also in Suras 35:8 and 74:31. According to Sura 91:7-8, Allah ''breathed into it (the soul) wickedness and piety'' (other translation--"lewdness and godfearing") With Allah is the argument that reaches home: if it had been His will, He could indeed have guided you all." Sura 6:149 The Hadis (Sahih Muslim. Dace 1395) confirms the meaning of this verse: "Allah's Messenger, what is your opinion that the people do in the world, and strive for, is something decreed for them, something preordained for them, and (sic) will their fate in the Hereafter be determined by the fact that their prophets brought them teachings which they did not act upon, and thus they became DESERVING of punishment?'' Thereupon he said: "Of course, it happens as it is decreed by Destiny and preordained for them and this view is confirmed by this verse of the Book of Allah, the Exalted and Glorious: 'Consider the soul and Him who made it perfect, then breathed into it its sin and its piety.' " Also in Sura 5:20 we read: "He forgives whom he pleases and punishes whom he pleases." A Hadis reports: "Two men in a village died, one had concern for Allah, not the other. The village Imam saw the pious in hell and the unrighteous with wine houris in Paradise. When the pious complained about this obvious injustice, Allah replied: 'Be silent! Have I not the right to do as I please with what is my own?''' All this is total determinism. Man is judged and condemned for what he cannot help doing. This is, in fact, also total injustice. Dare one overlook all these statements with a sentimental glance at the Islamic doctors of religion, expecting them not to mislead anyone for, no doubt, one takes it for granted that they must have the right answers? No, one cannot, for Islamic theologians have and had in fact no greater problem to deal with and have discussed this issue for centuries. Modern writings within Islam strongly tend towards the view that man has a free will. This is in keeping with the Bible and, of course, modern philosophical understanding. But it is not in keeping with the Quran. The Mutazilite Theologians reasoned that if this is what predestination entails: "what is the use of commandments, and prohibitions, rewards and punishment, threats and promises, prophets or books?" They received no satisfactory answer. They were, in tact, silenced. Submission to Islam demands the acceptance of the tenet of predestination - or shall we say fatalism. Perhaps we ought to be reminded that the word used for predestination in Islam does not indicate pre knowlege, but pre-ordering! There is an apparent ray of hope, however in Sura 6:12 we are told that: "Allah has inscribed (prescribed: G.N.) for himself (the rule of) mercy." Verse 35 of the same Sura, however, says, in flat contradiction thereto: "If it were Allah's will, he could gather them together unto true guidance." Consequently, the great Islamic theologian, al-Ghazzali writes: "Allah's justice is not to be compared with the justice of man. A man may be supposed to act unjustly by invading the position of another, but no injustice can be conceived on the part of Allah. It is in his power to pour down torrents upon mankind and if he were to do it, his justice would not be arraigned. There is nothing he can be tied to, to perform, nor can any injustice be supposed of him, nor can he be under obligation to any person whatever. Thus Allah is exempted from all ethical norms - those of mankind and those of himself. He is not bound by any promise. He may also change the standard of his behaviour and this would be completely justified. " If We (i.e Allah) willed, We could withdraw that which We have revealed unto thee, then thou wouldst find no guardian for thee " Sura 17:86 We must assume then, that this is what happened when: Allah curses all liars - and yet permits Mohammed to break an oath (Sura 66:1-2); or Allah alone is to be worshipped yet Satan and the angels were ordered to worship Adam and Satan was eternally punished, because he refused to do so (Sura 2:32)
71
Ibn-Hazm observes: "While the Quran uses the name of Allah, which means the most merciful of those who show mercy, this cannot mean that he is merciful in the way we understand the word, for Allah is evidently not merciful. He tortures his children with all manners of sickness, warfare and sorrow. What then does the Quran mean? Simply that merciful" is one of Allah's names A name that is not in any way descriptive of Allah or meant to throw light on his nature. We must use it because the Quran uses it, but not pretend to understand what is meant by it.' A certain Islamic scholar put it in these words: "The word originally used in the Quran must have had a different meaning in that day, which we cannot really understand today. Nevertheless, we must continue to use the word, because we cannot change the words of the Quran " The problem that arises is simple and clear: If Allah in the Quran manifests himself as the arbitrary God who acts as he pleases without any ties even to his own sayings, he adds a thought totally foreign to the former revelations, which Mohammed claimed to confirm, and in which we are encouraged to take God at His Word. We should like to suggest that God is consistent, righteous and holy. In the case of contradictions or any flaws of any kind in any record supposed to have come from Him, man must be blamed, and not God. It is intolerable to cover these up to protect the image of a book or prophet, or possibly a religion and its leaders. If what has been quoted in these pages is news to you, dear reader, then either you have no knowledge of the Quran whatever (and consequently entrust your eternal welfare to other ignorant men); or you are in the hands of men who are aware of this knowledge, but have kept it f rom you because it disagrees with the general concept of what you learned in the Madressa: namely, that keeping the five pillars of faith, doing good and leaving the rest to the mercy of Allah, will do.
For what reason should a Christian give up his position as an accepted and forgiven person with the God-given assurance of eternal life in His presence - to swop it for total insecurity?
72
Righteousness or mercy?
Another problem is whether we see God as the merciful, forgiving One, OR instead as the God Who is just and righteous? As they stand these attributes cannot be reconciled, for they are a contradiction in terms. Apparently this thought has not been considered by most people. If a judge is righteous, he must punish sin. If he forgives (whom he pleases), he is neither righteous nor just. We must hasten to add, however, that the Bible presents a similar problem. On the one hand we have a loving and forgiving God, whom we accept as righteous. This is correct, but on the other hand we should not overlook the fact, that our Holy God has punished sin by executing judgelnent on the substitutional sacrifice, thereby meeting the required standard of justice. The sin IS punished, though not the offender - the punishment being borne by God Himself in Christ on the cross (Please write for our booklet Comparing, Confusing, Considering, Concluding.) So forgiveness and mercy need not contradict His righteousness God's solution for sin is atonement" or reconciliation. Forgiveness does not work by a magic formula. It is not just that God forgets about it No! A righteous God cannot tolerate un just judgement Sin is so abominable to God, that He has to deal with it - by righteous judgement! But how can the righteousness of God and the love of God toward us meet? An incident from history may illustrate this point: Shamuel was a Caucasian prince living a couple ot hundred years ago. His people were at constant war with the Turks. Once he besieged a Turkish city with his army. As usual his mother was with him in his camp. One night he planned a surprise assault, but the enemy was Iying in wait. His secret plans had been betrayed. The battle was lost. In anger Shamuel announced that the traitor would be punished with 100 lashes of a whip, if found out. Again in great secrecy another surprise attack was planned. With the same result. But the traitor was discovered. It was Shamuel's mother. For three days and nights he withdrew to his tent. What should he do? If he were to spare his mother, all would rightly say that he was unjust. Were he to punish her, however, all would say: Look at Shamuel! He does not even have pity for his own mother!' At long last he appeared. His army gathered expectantly. In a sinister tone he addressed his people: ''We have lost two battles because of treason. Our men have been killed. There is no excuse. The crime was committed, and so the culprit shall be punished according to my law: with 100 lashes! Righteousness and judgement must be maintained." His mother was led into the circle.She was pale and shivering with fear. The executioner lifted his whip - but before the first lash fell, Shamuel cried: "Wait! This is my mother. I am of her flesh and blood. I will take the punishment for her! " He went into the circle, took off his garment and commanded: Fxecutioner, dare not strike more lightly than with the last victim. Do your duty. Hit on!'' Lash after lash found its mark, until he broke down unconscious. He did survive though, against all expectation. This event, perhaps more than any other in history, fits the picture of Jesus. He was God in bodily form. He had and has to execute righteous judgement. But in His perfect love He took on Himself our - my own, your own - sin and suffered the cruel, but just consequences on the cross. We are aware though that it was not only the physical suffering, bad as it was, that was so cruel, but that the very pure and holy God took on Himself all the ugly filth of our sin. Righteousness and love met at the cross of Jesus. "God was in Christ reconciling the world unto Himself, not imputing their trespasses (of God's Law) unto them." (2 Cor. 5:19) This happened once and for all. This sacrifice for sin is good enough for all men at all times. It is God's grace, God's gift to us, which we did not deserve. A gift is, however, only mine, when I accept it. And keep it. When in sincerity I bring all my sin to Him in a prayer of confession, I shall be cleaned: "I will forgive their iniquity and will remember their sin no more." (Jer 31:35) You will cast all our sins into the depth of the sea. ' (Micah7:19) "As far as the East is from the West, so far does He remove our transgressions from us" (Ps. 103:12) "If we confess our sins, He is faithful and just and will forgive our sins and cleanse us from all unrighteousness." (1 John 1:9) I am quite convinced, that no man, after realizing who Jesus is and what He has done, and thus having some understanding of the Person Who is now without a physical body in eternal Glory, can ask the God of the Bible for forgiveness lightly. I mean: without real remorse over what was his part in nailing Christ to the cross. After all how CAN a person after this realization consider more sin in his heart? Yes, we may be tripped. We may fall. But we will not contemplate and plan actions that will hurt God. This is the attitude on which we can base our prayer of forgiveness. In the parable of the 'Prodigal Son' (Luke 15:11 ff .), Jesus speaks of a man who has two sons. One went away with his heritage and wasted it in far places,
73
until he had spent all. Working in a pigsty ''he came to himself'' . He seriously and honestly assessed his situation. He had an 'after-thought' The Bible has this word translated as 'repentance'. It went like this: The young man made a resolution.''l will (a) rise and (b) go to my Father and (c) say to Him, 'Father, I have sinned against heaven and before you, I am no more worthy to be called your son". All he wished was to be a servant to his Father instead of serving a stranger in a pig sty which had led to his near starvation. This resolution was very good indeed. Perhaps we have made such a resolution bef ore. But it was not enough. The young man in our parable did not stop short of actually fulfilling his resolution: "He (d) arose and (e) came to his Father." Much to his surprise the Father was looking out for him. More surprising, he still recognized him. Much earlier he had ridden away confidently, but his high expectation of a successful, truly happy and fulfilled life had not come true. He returned as a filthy, stinking, wretched hobo. But most surprisingly, his Father ran to meet him, embraced him and kissed him! The son could hardly stammer out his confession, before his Father (1 ) had clothed him (covered his dirt. In Hebrew the word is f rom the same root as 'atonement', i.e. to reconcile) with the best robe', (2) put a ring on his finger (i.e. signet ring to indicate his acceptance as son again)' (3) and put shoes on his feet (only free men were allowed to wear them) Then (4) he ordered a feast to be prepared, for "this my son was dead, and he is alive again, he was lost and is found". No doubt the way home was a very hard one. Repentance, however, is most marvellous, when it is over and done with. Our Father will remember our sins no more! There will be no embarrassing questions on the Day of Judgement. Judgement has already been passed on lesus. But the Father had two sons, remember. When the other one came home from the f ields and heard the feasting and was told it was for his brother, he became angry. He could not be persuaded to join the feast for 'this your son' He had aJways been at home, had always done his work. There was never any feast for him! He had never feasted, although he could have! His sonship was a burden. The Christian faith is not occupied with do's and don'ts. After the treasurer of Queen Candace (Acts 8:27 ff.) had seen the Light "he went his way rejoicing! " New things occupy the mind of a Christian New understanding of the world around us leads to new conclusions, purposes and aims. Obviously the old aims and purposes are superseded, and become less important or obsolete. A tremendous new horizon and new meaning in life will emerge, while one is occupied with the things of God, and they will push out old aims and purposes. But this cannot be understood as a sad 'good-bye' to well-loved pleasures. It is rather a fading away of former values to give way to an abundant life. Anything less is legalistic, deadening, a yoke of bondage. It is, in fact, in opposition to a truly spiritual life and an insult to God, Who would then be a taskmaster instead of a Saviour. The real New Birth is an essential part of salvation or conversion: Except a man be born again, he cannot see the Kingdom of God Except a man is born by water and the Spirit, he cannot enter the Kingdom of God." (John 3:3,5) The New Birth is the beginning of the New Lite This is a process of growth, however. Repentance, the New Birth and conversion may happen within one hour. The Christian's life should grow until he leaves this world. All this change in a person is actually the 'conversion' (conversion = change) of that person It is brought about by the loving devotion of such a person who begins to see the folly of his former self-centred life and desires to live in a way pleasing to HlM, in an attitude of thankfulness. This loving devotion is the work of God in a person. When the wedge of sin is gone, God begins to communicate with man, who was dead and is alive again'' And you He made alive, when you were dead in trespasses and sins.' (Eph 2:1) The process of 'making alive again' is called the the New Birth' (John 3:3-5) This, of course cannot be effected by man. It is a divine interaction.
Why do Muslims want to 'buy" by 'good deeds" what cannot be bought? Why does he refuse the gift of God? Is it ignorance or fear? Pride?
74
Fear or love?
Commitment is then followed by a life devoted to, and empowered by God. We desperately need this power to live godly lives, else we would be starting a life of frustration. This power is love. What no law in the world can achieve, is achieved by love. And there can be no f law in a love relationship with God, for He is absolutely trustworthy and faithful. Being loved by Him brings about all the good in man. Love excludes demands, obligation or force. Love needs freedom of choice and action to unfold itself Freedom of choice, however, may be exploited, and indeed is exploited by all those who use it for their own ends. Freedom is not only directed upwards it is at the same time freedom to decline. This is the essential risk factor involved in loving. A religion may produce all kinds of moral and ritual forms which can be enforced by fear of punishment or social pressure. But abiding by these laws, good though they may be to suppress evil, brings bondage and frustrates love. Moral quality is not improved by suppression of the evil act as such. Moral quality is found in the resentment of evil for what it is. Outwardly a society under religious laws appears to be morally cleaner, but the nature of the heart of man remains unchanged, and it is the pure heart that God seeks. God wants to change the mind, intent and purpose (we may call this the heart') of man. Therefore Christians do not seek merely to patch up a broken society. The main concern and the sociai conscience of a Christian is directed at the renewal of society f rom within Christians, like Christ, seek to heal the world by sharing the message of the Love of God with others. Love alone is able to renew the spirit and mind of each of the many individuals that care to respond, thereby up-rooting evil instead of trying to control its growth. In these differing principles the deep split between the Islamic and Christian message becomes apparent. We find that religious demands, fear and even force in Islam stands in contrast to the message of willingness in love in Christianity. We must be realistic enough to admit that the keeping of the Sunnah, the practice of the five pillars of faith and the tremendous social pressure on anyone turning from Islam represents demand, fear and pressure. The group of those individuals that respond to such love forms the Church. It is not organized on a grand scale, but is present, though often as a small minority,all over the world. In and from it we ought to find this principle of love directed on the horizontal level from person to person. The process will never be complete, for the self-willed, through fear of losing something they may get or enjoy, will always exclude themselves from the Kingdom of God. This is the sad side of man's God-given freedom. Without this freedom, however, man can be no more than an automat. Perhaps you would like to ask why there are so many drunkards among Christians, why there is such a lot of immodesty and immorality and exploitatjon. The answer is very obvious Not everyone who says to me, 'Lord, Lord,' shall enter the kingdom of heaven, but he who does the will of my Father who is in heaven."(Matthew 7:21) These are words of Jesus. Not every bottle which is labelled Coca Cola' is filled with it There are empty bottles, and there are those that are alienated in use, may be filled with turpentine - or even brandy. A true Christian can only be a person who has received with a penitent and grateful heart the gift of forgiveness as described above, and who then lives in vital communion with his Lord in total surrender. All this is strange to and is rejected by Islam. However, there can then be no means of reconciling righteousness with mercy without atonement, and this is precisely what Islam contradicts. In contrast to the "former revealed Books the 'heart' of Allah is not involved. In Islamic theology, Al-Barkhawi comments: If all infidels became believers, He (Allah) would gain no advantage. If all believers became infidels, He would suffer no loss." Al-Ghazzali confirms this: "Love is to sense a need of the beloved and since Allah cannot be said to have a need or an experience of a need, it is therefore impossible that Allah should love." We compare this with what Jesus said, speaking of Himself:
I am the good shepherd; I know my sheep and my sheep know me-just as the Father knows me and I know the Fatherand I lay down my life for the sheep. I have other sheep that are not of this sheep pen. I must bring them also. They too will listen to my voice, and there shall be one flock and one shepherd. The reason my Father loves me is that I lay down my lifeonly to take it up again. No one takes it from me, but I lay it down of my own accord. I have authority to lay it down and authority to take it up again. This command I received from my Father.
John 10:14-18
75
Jahveh (God) in the Bible will judge man according to His fixed laws. But in Jesus, He provided the sacrifice that can take away the sins of all men, as long as man does not refuse God's pardon in Christ. Here is a clear relationship between cause and effect. The believer is told in no uncertain terms what the will and purpose of God is. We know" is the ever repeated state ment that we see throughout the New Testament. In reality no Muslim has any guarantee of, or basis for, an assurance of salvation. Allah directs all things, thereby determining all ends. Thus no man has any influence on his destiny, hard though he may try Surely this cannot be true! The Muslim, on the other hand, may hope for the best, but his problem remains that however much he tries to be justified by doing good works or through reliance on the Quran, if Allah alone is active and if he leads astray, man no longer has a basis for knowing that his sin is forgiven and his peace with God has been effected. The Quran gives no answer to this dilemma. In one passage, however, the Quran does speak of cause and effect: "The unbelievers say, 'Why is not a sign sent down to him from his Lord?' Say: 'Truly, Allah leads astray whom he will, but he guides to himself those who turn to him in penitence.' '' Sura 13:27 This verse is no explanation of previously quoted verses, but is a clear contradiction of them. Apart from Allah's arbitrary action, we also find a different concept altogether, namely that portrayed in Sura 3:29 (and many others)
How can any man prefer to live a life of uncertainty and fear to a life of peace with God in love?
76
In the Bible we are commanded to choose whom we will serve. (Joshua 24:15 etc) This demands a decision after inte!ligent and comprehensive consideration. To choose God means also to choose His Way and His Word as a basis for information and trust. Taking God at His Word means trusting His promises and executing His Will. This trust with its resultant action is called faith. The Bible clearly teaches that it was the faith of Abraham, Moses and all the other men of renown that made them acceptable to God. And it was and it is thls faith alone that was and is reckoned to them and us as righteousness (Hebrews 11, Romans 4:18 25, Genesis 15:6) So the righteousness needed to enter the presence of God is not the resu lt of an effort by man to repair somehow the damage done, by offering to God good works as payment. There is no merit in doing what is our duty! Nobody is a Christian because he does good works, but a Christian does good works because he is a Christian. Gratitude and love are the motivating power. Christian faith accepts God's way of reconciliation alone. He has decreed that no person can be saved from the judgement to come except by accepting His offer: Pardon through Jesus, Who offered Himself in our stead to suffer the just punishment for the sins that you and I have committed. Jesus said of Himself:
"For the Son of Man came to seek and to save what was lost. Luke 19:10
He also said:
This cup is the new covenant in my blood, which is poured out for you."Luke 22:20
That these statements were not vain talk is clear, for the very life of Jesus was foretold in every detail in the Old Testament by the prophets hundreds of years before (see "Christians answer Muslims") and thousands of eye witnesses would have protested against the writings in the New Testament, had these been false. We deem it unacceptable to reason: "Why did God do it this way and not that?'', or: "How can God die for unworthy sinners?'', etc God has spoken! And so it stands And His Word is supported with enough evidence to be proved divine. That leaves you, dear reader, with a decision that no one can make for you and which you cannot escape: Whether or not you will investigate in an honest and reasonably unbiased way the statements made in this book.
77
You should consider both points of view, of course. Consider all the facts and supporting evidence, and read the New Testament alongside the Quran, earnestly praying for clarity on the Truth of God. This is your holy responsibility before God, Whose will it is that all men should come to a knowledge of the truth and true repentance. (1 Timothy 2:4, 2Peter 3:9) It is primitive and foolish to reason that one's way of thinking and believing is correct, without having tested it in a valid way. It is bordering on insanity to depend on hear-say when it comes to whether or not eternity will be spent in the presence of Almighty God or in hell. Are you prepared to risk such research and will you dare to act according to the outcome, however the consequences?
78
"The sword has not been used recklessly by the Muslims; it has been wielded purely with humane feelings in the wider interest of humanity" ibid. page 941 - also explanatory note
One could also call it robbery in self-defence, if there is such a thing. "The Holy Quran strictly prohibited conversion by force, saying: 'There is no compulsion in religion.' Sura 2:256" ibid This is reasonable, though one would, perhaps, object to war as a means of income. This income, no doubt, is at the expense of someone's livelihood. But let us look at Muslim warfare in practice: "When an infidel's country is conquered (in self-defence?) by a Muslim ruler, its inhabitants are offered three alternatives: 1. 2. 3. The reception of Islam, in which case the conquered became enf ranchised citizens of the Muslim state, The payrnent of a poll-tax (Jazyah) by which unbelievers in Islam obtained protection" and become Zimmis, provided they were not idolaters (of Arabia); Death by the sword to those who would not pay the poll-tax ("Dictionary of Islam", page 243) " Kill those who join other gods with Allah wherever you find them; besiege them, seize them, lay in wait for them with every kind of ambush " Sura 9:5 "When you encounter the unbelievers, strike off their heads, until ye have made a great slaughter among them " Sura 47:5 Make war upon such of those to whom the Scriptures have been given as believe not in Allah, or in the Last Day, and who forbid not what Allah and His Apostle have forbidden until they pay tribute " Sura 9:29 "Say to the infidels: If they desist, what is now past shall be forgiven them; but if they return, they have already before them the doom of the ancients! Fight then against them till strife be at an end, and the religion be all of it Allah's." Sura 8:39 'Proclaim a grievious penalty to those who reject faith." Sura 9:3 All of the above texts are contradicted by: ''There is no compulsion in religion" From the Hadayah (11, page 140) we learn with regard to the Jihad, that: "To whichever village you go and settle therein, there is your share therein, and whichever village disobeys Allah and His Messenger, its one fifth is for Allah and His Messenger, and the remainder is for you." "Mishkat" 1l, page 412
79
"In the actual war-field in the midst of hostilities, some concessions were sometimes given to soldiers for recreation Captive virgin girls in war were once made lawful for the soldiers for copulation.' ibid page 440 and "Sahih Muslim" I l, pages 705-707 What is right today cannot be wrong tomorrow, otherwise we have an example of situational ethics. To an objective observer the following picture emerges: interest in material gain was as important as the making of converts. One cannot help feeling that the Holy War was a pretence to make booty and receive continuing taxes. This must have persuaded many a man to join the Holy War and thus to become a mercenary. This interest no doubt gave enormous political and military momentum to the cause of Mohammed. Each warrior had a right to the belongings of the man he had slain, and could sell for ransom any prisoner he had made. Women and children were also reckoned as booty and a Muslim saw no moral irregularity in taking married woman prisoners as concubines as long as they were not pregnant. He would also have his share of the combined booty, of which; however, one fifth belonged to Mohammed (and in the case of no fight taking place, it belonged to him totally) We are aware, however, that Mohammed never lived an extravagant life or hoarded goods. On the contrary, he was most generous in every aspect, particularly to the poor, to orphans and to widows. Taxes could be very harsh indeed as in the case of the defeated Jews who lived in Khaiber. They, were allowed to stay in Khaiber on condition that they would pay half the produce of their lands to the Holy Prophet and in addition Jazyah tax''. ("Mishkat page 455, footnote) "After the Battle of Badr, the verse dealing with the booties was first revealed. The verse introduced the rule for the first time that the spoils of war would be the property of the soldiers who actually take part in the battle THAT IS ONE OF THE REASONS why the soldiers of Islam fought tooth and nail. They would get Paradise in case of death in a Holy War, and booties in the case of CONQUEST. Jihad is therefore the best source of all acquisitions."
''Mishkat'' 1l, page 406, explanatory note
Jihad "is the best method of earning both spiritual and temporal. If victory is won, there is enormous booty and (sic) CONQUEST of a country, which cannot be equal to any other source of earnings." (ibid. page 253, explanatory note) "In the battle of Muraisi with Banu Mustalig, the booties gained were nearly 200 camels and 5000 goats. In the campaign of Hunain, the booties that fell to the hands of the Muslims were 24 000 sheep, 4 000 silver coins and innumerable camels. In the Battle of Badr and Uhud, the booties were also great.'' ibid. page 406 There is little wonder that a poem ascribed to Al ibn Ab Tlib' reads thus: "Our flowers are the sword and the dagger: Narcissus and myrtle are nought Our drink is the blood of our foeman; Our goblet his skull' when we've fought.''
Again this is progress. This may not appear very practical - if one excludes God's doings in this world - but it is His way. It is sad to sav that few, if any, nominal Christians give heed to this teaching of Christ's. We find that Mohammed's ethical standards constitute a return or regression to the time before Christ.
80
The question we should like to put is: How does the statement ''There is no compulsion in religion" agree with: ''Kill those who join other gods with Allah strike off their heads'' and ''fight then against them till strife be at an end, and the religion be all of it Allah's?'' Christians wonder why they are not allowed to build churches and freely propagate their faith in Islamic countries, whereas Muslims enjoy religious freedom in most non-Muslim lands, except behind the lron Curtain. Recently the only church in Afghanistan was bulldozed down. The claim that Muslims acted only in defence is patently untrue. What were the Muslims defending in Spain, France, India, Persia or at the very gates of Vienna? The fact that people were not prepared to become Muslims by choice (there is no compulsion in religion'') does not constitute aggression toward the Muslims. The repeated claim that booty could not have been a motive, because the Holy War must have pure religious motives, is insincere, for if it were so, booty would surely not have been made an incentive. We believe that the promise of booty served to attain political aims. From a purely military point of view we can see no fault in Mohammed's actions, if we consider that most other military leaders acted similarly. No doubt he was a superior general, administrator, leader, social reformer and politician; but his actions and what he commissioned, do not in the view of Christians, qualify him to be the ultimate Prophet of God. If God wants to extend His rule by the use of force of His followers, which we see possible, would it be a spiritual inscentive to offer booty? Why are Muslims always stressing the defensive character of Mohammed's warfare, knowing it was mostly offensive? Why were most of the conquests orientated on political and material gains, rather than on the propagation of the Almighty God?
81