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What
they say about the Quran
Humanity has received the Divine guidance through two channels: firstly
the word of Allah, secondly the Prophets who were chosen by Allah to
communicate His will to human beings. These two things have always been
going together and attempts to know the will of Allah by neglecting
either of these two have always been misleading. The Hindus neglected
their prophets and paid all attention to their books that proved only
word puzzles which they ultimately lost. Similarly, the Christians, in
total disregard to the Book of Allah, attached all importance to Christ
and thus not only elevated him to Divinity, but also lost the very
essence of TAWHEED (monotheism) contained in the Bible.
As a matter of fact the main scriptures revealed before the Qur'an,
i.e., the Old Testament and the Gospel, came into book-form long after
the days of the Prophets and that too in translation. This was because
the followers of Moses and Jesus made no considerable effort to preserve
these Revelations during the life of their Prophets. Rather they were
written long after their death. Thus what we now have in the form of the
Bible (The Old as well as the New Testament) is translations of
individuals' accounts of the original revelations which contain
additions and deletions made by the followers of the said Prophets. On
the contrary, the last revealed Book, the Qur'an, is extant in its
original form. Allah Himself guaranteed its preservation and that is why
the whole of the Qur'an was written during the lifetime of the Prophet
Muhammad (PBUH) himself though on separate pieces of palm leaves,
parchments, bones, etc... Moreover, there were tens of thousands of
companions of the Prophet who memorized the whole Qur'an and the Prophet
himself used to recite to the Angel Gabriel once a year and twice in the
year he died. The first Caliph Abu Bakr entrusted the collection of the
whole Qur'an in one volume to the Prophet's scribe, Zaid Ibn Thabit.
This volume was with Abu Bakr till his death. Then it was with the
second Caliph Umar and after him it came to Hafsa, the Prophet's wife.
It was from this original copy that the third Caliph Uthman prepared
several other copies and sent them to different Muslim territories.
The Qur'an was so meticulously preserved because it was to be the Book
of guidance for humanity for all times to come. That is why it does not
address the Arabs alone in whose language it was revealed. It speaks to
man as a human being:
"O Man!
What has seduced you from your Lord."
The practicability of the Qur'anic teachings is established by the
examples of Muhammad (PBUH) and the good Muslims throughout the ages.
The distinctive approach of the Qur'an is that its instructions are
aimed at the general welfare of man and are based on the possibilities
within his reach. In all its dimensions the Qur'anic wisdom is
conclusive. It neither condemns nor tortures the flesh nor does it
neglect the soul. It does not humanize God nor does it deify man.
Everything is carefully placed where it belongs in the total scheme of
creation.
Actually the scholars who allege that Muhammad (PBUH) was the author of
the Qur'an claim something which is humanly impossible. Could any person
of the sixth century C.E. utter such scientific truths as the Qur'an
contains? Could he describe the evolution of the embryo inside the
uterus so accurately as we find it in modern science?
Secondly, is it logical to believe that Muhammad (PBUH), who up to the
age of forty was marked only for his honesty and integrity, began all of
a sudden the authorship of a book matchless in literary merit and the
equivalent of which the whole legion of the Arab poets and orators of
highest calibre could not produce? And lastly, is it justified to say
that Muhammad (PBUH) who was known as AL-AMEEN (The Trustworthy) in his
society and who is still admired by the non-Muslim scholars for his
honesty and integrity, came forth with a false claim and on that
falsehood could train thousands of men of character, integrity and
honesty, who were able to establish the best human society on the
surface of the earth?
Surely, any sincere and unbiased searcher of truth will come to believe
that the Qur'an is the revealed Book of Allah.
Without necessarily agreeing with all that they said, we furnish here
some opinions of important non-Muslim scholars about the Qur'an. Readers
can easily see how the modern world is coming closer to reality
regarding the Qur'an. We appeal to all open-minded scholars to study the
Qur'an in the light of the aforementioned points. We are sure that any
such attempt will convince the reader that the Qur'an could never be
written by any human being.
"However often we turn to it [the Qur'an] at first disgusting us
each time afresh, it soon attracts, astounds, and in the end enforces
our reverence... Its style, in accordance with its contents and aim is
stern, grand, terrible - ever and anon truly sublime -- Thus this book
will go on exercising through all ages a most potent influence."
--Goethe, quoted in T.P. Hughes' DICTIONARY OF ISLAM, p. 526.
"The Koran admittedly occupies an important position among the
great religious books of the world. Though the youngest of the
epoch-making works belonging to this class of literature, it yields to
hardly any in the wonderful effect which it has produced on large masses
of men. It has created an all but new phase of human thought and a fresh
type of character. It first transformed a number of heterogeneous desert
tribes of the Arabian peninsula into a nation of heroes, and then
proceeded to create the vast politico-religious organizations of the
Muhammadan world which are one of the great forces with which Europe and
the East have to reckon today." --G. Margoliouth, Introduction to
J.M. Rodwell's, THE KORAN, New York: Everyman's Library, 1977, p. vii.
"A work, then, which calls forth so powerful and seemingly
incompatible emotions even in the distant reader - distant as to time,
and still more so as a mental development - a work which not only
conquers the repugnance which he may begin its perusal, but changes this
adverse feeling into astonishment and admiration, such a work must be a
wonderful production of the human mind indeed and a problem of the
highest interest to every thoughtful observer of the destinies of
mankind." --Dr. Steingass, quoted in T.P. Hughes' DICTIONARY OF
ISLAM, pp. 526-527.
"The above observation makes the hypothesis advanced by those who
see Muhammad as the author of the Qur'an untenable. How could a man,
from being illiterate, become the most important author, in terms of
literary merits, in the whole of Arabic literature? How could he then
pronounce truths of a scientific nature that no other human being could
possibly have developed at that time, and all this without once making
the slightest error in his pronouncement on the subject?" --Maurice
Bucaille, THE BIBLE, THE QUR'AN AND SCIENCE, 1978, p. 125.
"Here, therefore, its merits as a literary production should
perhaps not be measured by some preconceived maxims of subjective and
aesthetic taste, but by the effects which it produced in Muhammad's
contemporaries and fellow countrymen. If it spoke so powerfully and
convincingly to the hearts of his hearers as to weld hitherto
centrifugal and antagonistic elements into one compact and
well-organized body, animated by ideas far beyond those which had until
now ruled the Arabian mind, then its eloquence was perfect, simply
because it created a civilized nation out of savage tribes, and shot a
fresh woof into the old warp of history." --Dr. Steingass, quoted
in T.P. Hughes' DICTIONARY OF ISLAM, p. 528.
"In making the present attempt to improve on the performance of my
predecessors, and to produce something which might be accepted as
echoing however faintly the sublime rhetoric of the Arabic Koran, I have
been at pains to study the intricate and richly varied rhythms which -
apart from the message itself - constitute the Koran's undeniable claim
to rank amongst the greatest literary masterpieces of mankind... This
very characteristic feature - 'that inimitable symphony,' as the
believing Pickthall described his Holy Book, 'the very sounds of which
move men to tears and ecstasy' - has been almost totally ignored by
previous translators; it is therefore not surprising that what they have
wrought sounds dull and flat indeed in comparison with the splendidly
decorated original." --Arthur J. Arberry, THE KORAN INTERPRETED,
London: Oxford University Press, 1964, p. x.
"A totally objective examination of it [the Qur'an] in the light of
modern knowledge, leads us to recognize the agreement between the two,
as has been already noted on repeated occasions. It makes us deem it
quite unthinkable for a man of Muhammad's time to have been the author
of such statements on account of the state of knowledge in his day. Such
considerations are part of what gives the Qur'anic Revelation its unique
place, and forces the impartial scientist to admit his inability to
provide an explanation which calls solely upon materialistic
reasoning." --Maurice Bucaille, THE QUR'AN AND MODERN SCIENCE,
1981, p. 18.
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