How can we prove that The Qur'an is the word of God?
The amount of people who have believed in the Divine authorship of the
Qur’an since its revelation 14 centuries ago amounts to billions. In the
face of such a consensus, especially when considered that each affirmation
corroborates the others while negations or denials add nothing to each
other, it falls upon those who reject the Divine authorship of the Qur’an to
prove their negation, which is impossible. However, in order to remove the
dust of doubt that may come to the hearts and minds of some believers under
the influence of both modern trends of scepticism and atheism and followers
of other religions, we shall mention only a few of the evidences to
establish that the Qur’an is a word of God.
The Qur’an is completely different from all the other books in the
world.
When we study the Qur’an even superficially from the viewpoint of its
wording, styles, and meaning, we will certainly conclude that it is
completely different from all the other books in the world. So, in rank and
worth it is either below all of them—even Satan cannot claim this, nor does
he conceive of it—or above them. Since it is above all of them, it must be
the Word of God.
The Qur’an, which he brought, has challenged all mankind with all their
literary geniuses and scientists, from the first day of its revelation to
the Last Day, to produce a like of it or even a single chapter of it
The Qur’an openly declares:
You (O Muhammad) was not a reader of any Scripture before it, nor did you
write (such a Scripture) with your right hand, for then those who follow
falsehood might (have a right) to doubt it. (al-Ankabut, 29.48)
It is an established, undeniable fact that the Prophet Muhammad, upon him
be peace and blessings, was unlettered. Whereas the Qur’an, which he
brought, has challenged all mankind with all their literary geniuses and
scientists, from the first day of its revelation to the Last Day, to produce
a like of it or even a single chapter of it:
If you are in doubt concerning that which We have sent down onto Our
servant (Muhammad), then produce a chapter of the like thereof, and call
your witnesses, supporters, who are apart from God, if you are truthful.
(al-Baqara, 2.23)
Mankind have since been unable to produce a like of only one of its
chapters, including, of course, its shortest ones like sura al-Ikhlas or
sura al-Kawthar; those who have ventured to do that have all laid themselves
open to ridicule. This is a clear proof for the Divine authorship of the
Qur’an.
The Qur’an was revealed in 23 years, yet there are not any contradictory
points in it.
The revelation of the Qur’an lasted 23 years. It is inconceivable that
any book written by a mortal being in 23 years, one which is a book of
Divine truths, metaphysics, religious beliefs and worship, prayer, law and
morality, a book fully describing the other life, a book of psychology,
sociology, epistemology, and history, and a book containing scientific facts
and the principles of a happy life, does not have any contradictory points.
Whereas, the Qur’an openly declares that it has no contradictions at all and
therefore is a Divine Book:
Will they not then ponder on the Qur’an? If it had been from other than
God they would have found therein much contradiction and incongruity. (al-Nisa’,
4.82)
The Qur’an is beyond compare from the viewpoint of its styles and
eloquence.
The Qur’an is beyond compare from the viewpoint of its styles and
eloquence. All the sentences, words and even letters used in the Qur’an form
such a miraculous harmony that, with respect to rhythm, music, and even
geometric proportions and mathematical measures, and with respect to how
many times each is used in the whole of the Qur’an, each is in the exact
place it must be and interwoven and interrelated with others. The literary
masterpiece of no one, including the sayings of the Prophet himself, upon
him be peace and blessings, cannot compete with the Qur’an.
Prophet Muhammad was unlettered and no one had heard him say even a
couple of poetry. However, the Qur’an also challenged the known experts in
poetry and oratory and forced them to surrender.
In the period when the Qur’an was revealed, in addition to eloquence,
poetry and oratory enjoyed great prestige in the Arabian peninsula. They
used to hold poetry competitions and the poems of the winners write in gold
and hang on the wall of the Ka‘ba. The Prophet Muhammad was, as everybody
knows, unlettered and no one had heard him say even a couple of poetry.
However, the Qur’an also challenged the known experts in these fields and
forced them to surrender. When those who persisted in unbelief heard the
Qur’an, they were captivated by it. Nevertheless, in order to prevent the
spread of Islam, they labelled it as something magical and advised people not
to listen to it. But when those, like Hansa and Lebid, who believed in the
Qur’an, gave up inventing poetry after the Qur’an’s revelation in respect
for and awe of its styles and eloquence, the unbelievers had to confess: ‘If
we call it a piece of poetry, it is not. If we designate it a piece of
rhymed prose, it is not. If we describe it as the word of a soothsayer, it
is not.’ At times, they could not help listening to the Prophet’s recitation
secretly at night but they could not overcome their arrogance and so believe
in its Divine origin.
Arabic became so rich through the Qur’an and attained such a high level
that it developed as the language of the most magnificent civilization of
world history with all its scientific, religious, metaphysical, literary,
economic, juridical, social and political aspects.
Despite the high level poetry reached at that time, the vocabulary of
Arabic was not as advanced as the same degree. It was difficult, even
impossible, to express in it metaphysical ideas or scientific, religious and
philosophical concepts. Restricted to the words and expressions to explain
the thoughts and feelings of desert men and the simple life they led, this
language became so rich through the Qur’an and attained such a high level
that it developed as the language of the most magnificent civilization of
world history with all its scientific, religious, metaphysical, literary,
economic, juridical, social and political aspects. It is impossible for an
unlettered one to prepare the ground for and give way to such a philological
revolution unparalleled in human history.
Despite its apparent simplicity, the Qur’an has such depths of meaning
that everyone from the commonest of people to the most high-ranking scholar,
scientist and literary man, finds his share in it.
Despite its apparent simplicity, the Qur’an has such depths of meaning
that everyone from the commonest of people to the most high-ranking scholar,
scientist and literary man, finds his share in it. The Qur’an is such a book
that it illuminates the ways of both poets, musicians and orators,
sociologists, psychologists, scientists, economists and jurists. Also, the
founders of all the true spiritual orders and the schools of law and conduct
found in it the principles of their orders and schools. The Qur’an has shown
everybody the ways to solve their problems. It also satisfies everyone in
his spiritual quests. Is there another book of the same character, quality
and level next to the Qur’an?
No one has ever been heard to be bored with the recitation of the
Qur’an.
However beautiful and interesting, we can read a book at most two or
three times and then are bored with it. However, no one has ever been heard
to be bored with the recitation of the Qur’an. Hundreds of millions of
Muslims recite portions from it in their five daily prayers and most of them
recite it from beginning to end at least once a year. There have been
hundreds of thousands of people reciting it from the beginning to the end
once or twice or even three times a month. The more frequently one recites
it, the more one benefits from it and the more desire one feels to recite
it. One never gets tired of it, its wording, meaning and content, nor does
the Qur’an lose anything of its originality and freshness. As time passes,
it breathes into minds and souls new truths and meanings, thus increasing
them in activity and liveliness.
The Qur’an describes man with all his physical and spiritual aspects
and contains principles to solve all the problems that may appear at any
time and in any place concerning all the social, economic, juridical,
political and administrative fields of life. Furthermore, it satisfies both
the mind and spirit at the same time and guarantees happiness in both
worlds.
The Qur’an describes man with all his physical and spiritual aspects and
contains principles to solve all the problems that may appear at any time
and in any place concerning all the social, economic, juridical, political
and administrative fields of life. Furthermore, it satisfies both the mind
and spirit at the same time and guarantees happiness in both worlds.
However great a genius one may be, it is impossible for one to establish
rules to solve all kinds of problems that mankind may encounter until the
Last Day. Even the best of systems that do not originate in the Qur’an or
the Divine Revelation cannot last without undergoing revisions at least
every 50 years. More important than this, none of those systems can promise
man eternal happiness; the principles of all of them are restricted to the
worldly life, which is transient and infinitely short when compared to the
afterlife. By contrast, none of the principles which the Qur’an laid down
centuries ago has become outmoded and worn-out with the passage of time, nor
do they have any defects or shortcomings. For example, the Qur’an enjoins
that wealth should not become a means of prosperity circulated only among
the rich (al-Hashr, 59.7); that government offices should be entrusted to
competent persons qualified for them and absolute justice should be the rule
in public administration and judging between people (al-Nisa’, 4.58), and it
lays down that a man has only that for which he makes effort (al-Najm,
53.39) and that whoever kills a human being unjustly is as if he had killed
all mankind (al-Ma’ida, 5.32). All such eternal, golden principles and many
others like the prohibition of usury, gambling, alcohol and all kinds of
illicit intercourse, and the injunctions with respect to praying, fasting,
alms-giving and good conduct—principles strengthened through love and fear
of God and through the promise of an eternal, happy life and fear of the
eternal punishment of Hell—constitute another undeniable proof for the
Divine authorship of the Qur’an.
The Qur’an unveils the mystery of man, creation and the universe.
Also, the Qur’an unveils the mystery of man, creation and the universe.
These three creatures of God, that is, man, the Qur’an and the universe, are
the three ‘books’ which make the Creator known to us. They are the three
versions or expressions of the same truth. Therefore, the One Who has
created man and the universe is He Who has revealed the Qur’an.
The Qur’an is the embodiment of Muhammad in words or Muhammad is the
embodiment of the Qur’an in belief and conduct
You cannot find one who does exactly what he tells others to do or one
whose work exactly reflects himself. However, the Qur’an is exactly
identical with the Prophet Muhammad, upon him be peace and blessings, who
received it from God and designed his life according to it. It may be said
that the Qur’an is the embodiment of Muhammad in words or Muhammad is the
embodiment of the Qur’an in belief and conduct. They are the two expressions
of the same truth. When asked about the conduct of Muhammad, upon him be
peace and blessings, ‘A’isha Siddiqa answered: ‘Don’t you read the Qur’an?
The conduct of Muhammad, upon him be peace and blessings, consisted in the
Qur’an.’ This clearly shows that both the Qur’an and Muhammad, upon him be
peace and blessings, are the works of God Almighty.
Even though revealed in parts on certain occasions, the Qur’an is
equally universal and objective where it deals with particular issues as it
is exact and precise where it deals with universal matters.
A writer usually writes under the influence of the conditions surrounding
him. It is almost impossible to find a writer, whether he be a realist or
idealist or even a science-fiction writer, who can write completely detached
from the conditions surrounding him. By contrast, even though revealed in
parts on certain occasions, the Qur’an is equally universal and objective
where it deals with particular issues as it is exact and precise where it
deals with universal matters. It uses precise expressions even while
describing the beginning of creation and end of time and the creation of man
and his future life in the other world. Also, just as it sometimes draws
universal conclusions from particular events, so too it sometimes goes from
universal principles to particular events. This is typical of the Qur’anic
style, which is impossible to find in any human work and is, therefore,
another sign of its Divine origin.
The Qur’an contains at least the principles of all the branches of
knowledge either in summary or detail and not even a single piece of the
knowledge it contains has ever been contradicted.
There has been no one in human history who has written books accurate to
the same degree on both religion and law and sociology and psychology and
eschatology and morality and history and literature and so on. However, the
Qur’an contains at least the principles of all the branches of knowledge
either in summary or detail and not even a single piece of the knowledge it
contains has ever been contradicted. Must this not be enough for one
unprejudiced to acknowledge its Divine origin?
“As time passes, the Qur’an grows ever younger.”
Which writer can claim that whatever he writes is absolutely correct and
cannot be contradicted until the Last Day? At a time when the conclusions of
science soon become ‘outmoded’ and worn-out and even the previous Divine
Scriptures such as the Torah and Gospels undergo continuous alterations—even
a superficial study of the issues of the Bible published in different times
and in different languages will be enough to see the great alterations it
has undergone—the truths of the Qur’an retain their freshness or, in the
words of Said Nursi, ‘as time passes, the Qur’an grows ever younger.’
Despite all the efforts to find mistakes and contradictions in it exerted
since the beginning of its revelation, it has remained unchanged and
displayed its uniqueness, conquering every day new hearts and its hidden
unlimited treasures being discovered one by one or growing to full bloom
like a heavenly rose with countless petals.
The Qur’an addresses and legislates for all in all times.
However knowledgeable you are and if you are famous for your
truthfulness, can you speak on behalf of the president, the prime minister
and all of the ministers, and also on behalf of the associations of literary
men, lawyers and craftsmen, and the board of university lecturers and
scientists? If you can, can you claim that you represented them all as
perfectly as each would want you to? If you can, can you legislate for all
the affairs of the country? This is just what the Prophet achieved through
the Qur’an. Now, how can you claim that an unlettered one, who had had
nothing to do with any such affairs until his fortieth year, achieved this
without Divine inspiration and support?
If Prophet Muhammad had written the Qur’an by himself, he should never
have mentioned some incidents concerning him.
However slight, there are some admonitions for the Prophet in the Qur’an.
- No one, especially if that one claims Prophethood, mentions a grave
slander against his wife in the book he writes by himself. Whereas, the
Qur’an gives an important place to the slander hypocrites uttered against
‘A’isha, the Prophet’s wife.
- In order to show practically that Islam does not allow any racial
discrimination and that superiority is only by piety and righteousness, not
by birth, color, race, wealth or position, the Prophet married Zaynab, a
noble woman from the Hashimites, to Zayd, an emancipated black slave.
However, verses revealed later ordered that, in order to put an end to an
established false tradition—namely, neither adoption nor any other way of
declaring someone a son can create a legal relationship comparable to the
relationship of children and natural parents, and there is no difficulty and
sin for believers in marriage with the divorced wives of those whom they
once adopted as sons—the Prophet should marry Zaynab. This marriage was very
difficult for God’s Messenger to enter into, but since it was ordered by
God, he had no way out other than fulfilling it. As ‘A’isha would later say,
if the Prophet, upon him be peace and blessings, would have concealed
something of the Qur’an, he would have concealed this order and would not
have married Zaynab. Also, if he had written the Qur’an by himself, he would
never have mentioned this incident.
- Abu Talib, the Prophet’s uncle to whose safeguarding ‘Abd al-Muttalib
entrusted him, undertook the Prophet’s maintenance when he was yet eight
years old and, after his declaration of Prophethood, protected him against
the Quraysh for ten years. The Prophet, upon him be peace and blessings,
loved his uncle very deeply and desired his conversion very much. However, a
verse came and admonished the Prophet against this desire of his which
nearly drove him to death: You guide not whom you love, but God guides whom
He wills. He is best aware of those who are guided (al-Qasas, 28.56). What
would have prevented the Prophet, if he were the author of the Qur’an, from
falsely declaring that his uncle had accepted Islam?
There are answers to many such questions in the Qur’an that one who
does not have an all-encompassing knowledge could not have answered them.
There are many verses in the Qur’an beginning with ‘They ask you’ and
continue with ‘Say (in answer)’. These verses were revealed to answer the
questions put to the Prophet by Muslims and non-Muslims, including
especially the Jews of Madina. The questions asked were about lawful or
unlawful things, the distribution of war spoils, the mansions of the moon,
the Judgment Day, Dhu’l-Qarnayn (one of the ancient kings who made great
conquests in Asia and Africa), the spirit and so on. One who does not have
an all-encompassing knowledge cannot answer such questions. But the answers
given by the unlettered Prophet, upon him be peace and blessings, satisfied
everybody and no one could object to him. This shows that he was taught by
God, the All-Knowing.
To claim that Muhammad—God forbid such a thought!— invented the Qur’an
means that Muhammad, who was known as Muhammad the Trustworthy, was—we beg
forgiveness for having to narrate such a false claim—the greatest liar and
cheat history has ever known.
As was explained earlier, the Prophet lived a very austere life and never
pursued any worldly gains or aims like fame, rulership, wealth and having
beautiful women. Furthermore, he had to resist hardships and persecutions of
the severest kind. To claim that Muhammad—God forbid such a thought!—
invented the Qur’an means that Muhammad, who was known as Muhammad the
Trustworthy, was—we beg forgiveness for having to narrate such a false
claim— the greatest liar and cheat history has ever known. What might have
caused him to falsely claim Prophethood despite the severest of deprivations
and persecutions? To accuse the Prophet Muhammad of falsely claiming
Prophethood and attribute the Qur’an to him, is the most groundless and the
most degrading and meanest of accusations.
Although other Prophets like Moses and Jesus are mentioned many times
in the Qur’an despite the Jews’ and Christians’ denial of Muhammad, we come
across the name Muhammad only four times
The Prophet Muhammad, upon him be peace and blessings, saw much
resistance from the Jews and Christians. He had to fight against the Jews of
Madina several times and expel them from the city. Despite this, the Qur’an
mentions the Prophet Moses, the Prophet sent to the Israelites, about 500
times, while the name of Muhammad is mentioned in the Qur’an only four
times. The Qur’an also mentions the Prophet Jesus many times. Is it
conceivable that one who falsely claims Prophethood ever mentions the
Prophets of the peoples who show him great hostility?
The Qur’an’s mention of previous Prophets, including especially Moses and
Jesus, upon them be peace, and the Christians’ and Jews’ denial of
Muhammad’s Prophethood and the Divine authorship of the Qur’an, is an
undeniable proof of the Prophethood of Muhammad and the Divine authorship of
the Qur’an and that the Christians’ and Jews’ denial comes from purely false
reasons like jealousy, prejudice and selfishness.
It is another argument for the Divine authorship of the Qur’an that it
refers to certain facts of creation recently established by modern
scientific methods.
It is another argument for the Divine authorship of the Qur’an that it
refers to certain facts of creation recently established by modern
scientific methods. How, except on account of its Divine authorship, is it
possible for the Qur’an to be literally true on matters of which people had
not the least inkling at the time when it was revealed? For example, if the
Qur’an were not a Divine Revelation, would it have been possible for it to
contain such a verse as this: Do not the unbelievers realize that the
heavens and the earth were one unit of creation before we split them
asunder? (al-Anbiya’, 21.20).
Whether the Qur’an really does refer, explicitly or implicitly, to the
kinds of facts the sciences deal with, and the relationship between the
Qur’an and modern sciences, are matters of considerable controversy among
Muslim intellectuals. We should therefore treat the subject at length.
Conclusion
All of the six sides or aspects of the Qur’an are luminous and
demonstrate its truth. From below, it is supported upon the pillars of
proofs and evidences (rational, scientific, historical, and those pertaining
to conscience and sound judgment, and so on); above it, are gleams of the
seal of miraculousness: it aims at happiness in both worlds; and behind it
are, another point of support, the truths of the Divine Revelation. To its
right is the unanimous confirmation of guided reasons based on proofs; and
to its left are the intellectual and spiritual contentment of those with
sound heart and conscience, and their sincere attachment and submission to
it. All these together bear witness that the Qur’an is an absolutely
formidable, extraordinary and unconquerable stronghold which the hand of
heaven established on the earth, and set their seal of admission of it as a
faultless, true Word of God. The Administrator of the universe, Who always
acts in a way to manifest unity, protect virtuousness and goodness, and
extirpate falsehood and slander, has given the Qur’an the most acceptable,
high and dominant rank of respect and success, and thereby confirmed its
truth.
Also, the person who is the interpreter of the Qur’an, upon him be peace
and blessings, believed in it and respected it more than anything and
anybody else. He went into a sleep-like state during the revelation of its
verses and confirmed and preached all of its decrees and commandments with
utmost conviction and without exhibiting any deception and error to eyes
wide open always to catch him, and without anything to shake him. Despite
being unlettered, having founded on the Qur’an, he gave, without hesitation,
news and information about the past and future and about the facts of
creation and operation of the universe. Other sayings of his do not resemble
the Qur’an and are inferior to it in certain respects. All this together
proves that the Qur’an is the true, heavenly and blessed Word of that
person’s Merciful Creator.
The fifth of mankind or even the majority of them in certain cases have
always had an ecstatic and religious devotion to the Qur’an and listened to
it lovingly and in adoration of truth, and as is testified to by numerous
observations, signs, and events, as moths fly round a light, angels,
believing jinn and other spirit beings gather together around it during its
recitation. This also confirms that the Qur’an is accepted by almost all the
beings in the universe and is of the highest rank.
Also, all the groups of mankind with different levels of understanding
and learning, from the commonest to the most intelligent and learned, derive
their share from the teaching of the Qur’an, and all the greatest scholars
in Islamic sciences such as jurisprudence, theology, and religious
methodology, have found in the Qur’an the answers to all of their questions
and based their conclusions upon it. This is another evidence that the
Qur’an is the source of truths, the mine of all true knowledge.
Furthermore, although among the unbelieving Arab literary men those who
have been the most advanced in literature, have always felt much need to
dispute with the Qur’an, they have been unable to do that even in eloquence,
which is only one of the seven major aspects of the Qur’an’s miraculousness,
and have not dared to produce the like of even one of its suras. The others,
geniuses of learning and eloquence, who by disputing with it in eloquence
have sought fame, have been compelled to refrain from doing so. This clearly
shows that the Qur’an is a miracle, beyond the capacity of mankind.
Indeed, in order to judge the value, sublimity, and eloquence of a word
it is asked: ‘Who has spoken it? To whom has it been spoken? Why has it been
spoken?’ When considered from the perspective of these questions, again the
Qur’an has no equal. For the Qur’an is the Word of the Lord of all beings
and the Speech of the Creator of the whole of the universe which bears no
signs to suggest that it is a book of imitation, one fabricated by someone
and then falsely attributed to God. God revealed the Qur’an to the one whom
He chose as the representative of all the creatures, one who is His most
famous and renowned addressee, and the extent and strength of whose faith
embraced the comprehensive religion of Islam and caused its owner to rise to
the rank of the distance of two bows’ length, and being honored with direct
conversation with the Eternally Besought-of-All, after which he turned back
to the world to convey to people the principles of happiness in both worlds.
The Qur’an explains the principles of happiness in both worlds and the
results of, and the Divine purpose in, the creation of the universe, and
expounds the Prophet’s most comprehensive faith, which sustains all the
truths of Islam: it shows and describes the huge universe like a map or a
clock or a house and teaches about the Artist Who made it. Certainly it is
impossible to produce a like of it or to match the degree of its eloquence.
In addition, numerous collections of books on the interpretation of the
Qur’an, some of which cover as many as forty or even seventy volumes—written
by meticulous scholars of the highest intelligence and learning—expound with
proofs countless virtues of the Qur’an and its subtleties and mysteries, and
disclose and affirm its numerous predictions. Among them, the one hundred
and thirty treatises of the Risale-i Nur explain each virtue and subtlety of
the Qur’an, such as its allusions to the scientific and technical wonders of
modern civilization like trains and aircrafts and electricity, and its
indirect references to future victories of Muslims and the history of the
Companions after the Prophet, and the meaningful and mysterious design of
its letters. All this means setting a seal on the fact that the Qur’an is a
miracle with no equals and the Word of the Knower of the Unseen, which is
the tongue of the world of the Unseen in this visible world of corporeality.
It is because of such virtues of the Qur’an that its magnificent
spiritual dominion and its majestic sacred rule has been continuing for
centuries to illuminate the earth and the ages, time and space, and more and
more people have been embracing it with perfect respect. It is because of
the same virtues, that each letter of the Qur’an yields at least the merits,
ten rewards, and ten fruits pertaining to the eternal world, and that the
letters of certain verses and suras, each give hundreds or even thousands of
merits, and when recited on certain blessed occasions, the light and merits
of each of its letters multiply by tens or hundreds. The world-traveller came
to understand this and said to himself: ‘Based on the consensus of its
lights and mysteries, and the concord of its fruits and results, this Qur’an,
miraculous in every respect, proves and testifies to the existence, unity,
attributes, and Names of a single Necessarily Existent One in such a manner
that the testimonies of innumerable believers have their sources from that
testimony.’
In a brief reference to the instruction which that traveller has taken
from the Qur’an about faith and the Unity of God, we say:
There is no god but God—the Necessarily Existent One, the One, the
Single—the necessity of Whose existence in His Oneness the Qur’an of
miraculous exposition decisively proves, which is accepted and sought for by
the species of angels, human beings and jinn; all of whose verses are
recited in every minute with perfect respect by the tongues of millions of
human beings; whose sacred rule in the regions of the earth and the realms
of space and on the faces of ages and time; whose enlightened spiritual
dominion has prevailed with perfect splendor over half of the globe and a
fifth of humankind for fourteen centuries... Likewise, with the consensus of
its heavenly and sacred suras, and the agreement of its luminous Divine
verses, and the correspondence of its mysteries and lights, and the concord
of its truths, and results, it manifestly attests, and is a clear proof of,
this same truth. |