The Prophet
and the Quran
It was demanded of
the Prophet, as it had been of other prophets, that he produce
a miracle. The Prophet himself also confirmed the power of prophets
to produce miracles as has been asserted clearly by the Quran.
Many miracles by the Prophet have been recounted, the transmission
of some of which is certain and can be accepted with confidence.
But the enduring miracle of the Prophet, which is still alive,
is the sacred book of Islam, the Holy Quran. The Holy Quran is
a sacred text consisting of six thousand and several hundred verses
(ayah) divided into one hundred and fourteen large and small chapters
(surah). The verses of the Holy Quran were revealed gradually
during the twenty-three year period of prophecy and mission of
the Prophet. From less than one verse to a whole and complete
chapter were revealed under different circumstances, both at day
and night, on journeys or at home, in war or peace, during days
of hardship or moments of rest.
The Holy Quran in
many of its verses introduces itself in unambiguous language as
a miracle. It invited the Arabs of that day to rivalry and competition
in composing writings of comparable truth and beauty. The Arabs,
according to the testimony of history, had reached the highest
stages of eloquence and elegance of language, and in the sweetness
of language and flow of speech they ranked foremost among all
people. The Holy Quran claims that if it be thought of as human
speech, created by the Prophet himself or learned through instruction
from someone else, then the Arabs should be able to produce its
like or ten chapters like it, or a single one of its verses, making
use of whatever means were at their disposal to achieve this end.
The celebrated Aram men of eloquence claimed that in answer to
this request that the Quran was magic and it was thus impossible
for them to produce its like.
Not only does the
Quran challenge and invite people to compete with its eloquence
and elegant language, but also it occasionally invites rivalry
from the point of view of its meaning and thus challenges all
the mental powers of men and jinn, for the Quran is a book containing
the total program for human life. If we investigate the matter
carefully we will discover that God has made this vast and extensive
program which embraces every aspect of the countless beliefs,
ethical forms and actions of mankind and takes into account all
of their details and particularities to by the "Truth" (haqq)
and to be called the religion of the truth (din-i haqq). Islam
is a religion whose injunctions are based on the truth and the
real welfare of mankind, not the desires and inclinations of the
majority of men or the whims of a single, powerful ruler.
At the foundation
of this vast program is placed the most cherished word of God
which is belief in His Unity. All the principles of the sciences
are deduced from the principle of Unity (tawhid). After that,
the most praiseworthy human ethical and moral virtues are deduced
from the principles of the religious sciences and included in
the program. Then, the countless principles and details of human
action and individual and social conditions of man are investigated,
and the duties pertaining to them which originate from the worship
of the One are elaborated and organized. In Islam the relation
and continuity between the principles (usul) and their applications
(furu') are such that each particular application in whatever
subject it may be, if it is brought back to its source, returns
to the principle of Unity or tawhid, and Unity if applied and
analyzed becomes the basis for the particular injunction and rule
in question.
Of course, the final
elaboration of such an extensive religion with such unity and
interconnection, or even the preparation of an elementary index
for it, is beyond the normal powers of the best authorities on
law in the world. But here we speak of a man who in a short span
of time was placed amidst a thousand difficulties concerning life
and property, caught in bloody battles and faced with internal
and external obstacles and furthermore placed alone before the
whole world. Moreover, the Prophet had never received instruction
nor learned how to read and write. He had spent two-thirds of
his life before becoming a prophet among a people who possessed
no learning and had had no taste of civilization. He passed his
life in a land without water or vegetation and with burning air,
among a people who lived in the lowest social conditions and were
dominated by neighboring political powers.
Besides the above,
the Holy Quran challenges men in another way. This book was revealed
gradually, during a period of twenty-three years, under totally
different conditions in periods of difficulty or comfort, war
or peace, power or weakness, and the like. If it had not come
from God but had been composed and expounded by man, many contradictions
and contrasts would be observed in it. Its ending would of necessity
be more perfect than its beginning, as is necessary in the gradual
perfection of the human individual. Instead, the first Meccan
verses are of the same quality as the Medinan verses and there
is no difference between the beginning and the end of the Quran.
The Quran is a book whose parts resemble each other and whose
awe-inspiring power of expression is of the same style and quality
throughout.