What must we understand from 'miracle'?
A miracle is an extraordinary accomplishment which God Almighty brings
about at the hands of a Prophet in order to prove his Prophethood,
strengthen the faith of believers, and to break the obstinacy of
unbelievers.
The universe operates according to fixed laws that God has determined.
But for these laws and the uniform character of natural events, everything
would be happening in a continuously changing, unstable flux and we could
therefore not have found out the Divine laws of nature or realized any
scientific developments. Although recent discoveries in atomic physics have
made it clear that whatever exists is a wave in continuous motion and
therefore it is not possible to say that a second later its existence will
be in the same state as it is in now, on the surface everything occurs
according to the principles which the ‘classical’ or Newtonian physics
established.
Normally, life has its own laws according to which we behave. We need
certain amount of food and water to satisfy our hunger and thirst and go to
a doctor when we are ill. We use animals to do certain kinds of labor for us
but we cannot talk to them. Trees are fixed in their places and neither they
nor stones and mountains give us greetings. We act in conformity with the
laws of gravitation and repulsion and we do not attempt to rise upwards into
the sky without first making calculations based upon those laws.
God is not dependent on or bound to any “natural” laws
All these and other laws are for us; but for them, as we pointed out
above, life would be impossible for us. However, since it is God Who has
determined them, He is not dependent on or bound to any of these laws at
all. Therefore, He may sometimes annul any of these laws or change the
ordinary flux of events and create an ‘extraordinary’ occurrence at the
hands of a Prophet, either to provide a proof for his Prophethood or to show
that He is is able to do whatever He wills at whatever time He desires. We
call such an occurrence a ‘miracle’. The original word in Islamic literature
translated as miracle is mu‘jiza, which literally means something which
makes others unable to produce a like of it. If God creates such an
occurrence at the hands of a saint, not a Prophet, then it is called karama,
meaning, literally, an ‘extraordinary favor’. These favors constitute
another proof for the Prophethood of Muhammad, upon him be peace and
blessings, and the truth of Islam.
Examples of the predictions of some saints
There are innumerable karama God has created at the hands of Muslims. One
kind of these consists in foretelling future events. For example, although
having died almost half a century before the establishment of the Ottoman
State, Muhyi al-Din ibn al-‘Arabi wrote in his Shajarat al-Nu‘maniyya about
the Ottomans and predicted the conquest of Damascus and Egypt by them. He
also wrote that Murad IV would march upon Baghdad and conquer it after a
siege of 41 days, and that Sultan ‘Abd al-‘Aziz would be killed by cutting
the veins of his wrists. Again, he writes in his work mentioned: ‘When “S”
enters “SH”, the burial-place of Muhyi al-Din will be discovered.’ Using
symbols in his predictions, by ‘S’ he means ‘Selim’, and by ‘SH’, Sham
(Damascus). Like his other predictions, this one also came true when the
Ottoman Sultan Selim I conquered Damascus, he had Ibn al-‘Arabi’s
burial-place discovered and ordered a tomb to be built on it.
As another example, Mushtaq Dada from Bitlis, an eastern province of
Turkey, predicted seventy-one years before in verse that after many wars and
convulsions Ankara would be the capital city of Turkey. Interestingly
enough, Mushtaq Dada gives the name of the one who would change the capital
city from Istanbul to Ankara. When you combine the initial letters of the
lines of Mushtaq Dada’s piece of verse, you will read the name Kamal.
All of the Prophets were favored with miracle-working
God Almighty favored all His Prophets with miracle-working. However,
since all the previous Prophets were sent to a certain people and their
Prophethood was restricted to a certain time and people, the miracles they
worked pertained to the arts or crafts widespread in the time of each. For
example, since at the time of Moses, upon him be peace, sorcery enjoyed
great prestige in Egypt, God Almighty favored Moses with a ‘staff’ which
would change into a snake which swallowed all the products of sorcerers.
Likewise, at the time of Jesus, upon him be peace, the healing arts enjoyed
great prestige and most of the miracles Jesus worked pertained to healing.
The miracles of the noble Prophet, upon him be peace and blessings, are
very diverse. Since his Messengership is universal, he was distinguished by
miracles that are connected with nearly all species of creation. When the
aide-de-camp of a glorified ruler enters a city, bearing diverse gifts, a
representative from each of the different peoples of that city welcomes him
cheerfully, each in his own language. In the same way, when the supreme
Messenger of the Eternal Sovereign honored the universe as an envoy to the
human inhabitants of the earth, bringing from the Creator the light of truth
and spiritual gifts that are related to the truths of the whole universe, he
was welcomed as the Prophet by each species—from mineral elements to plants,
animals and human beings, and from moon and sun to stars—in its own language
and bearing one of his miracles. It would require many volumes to mention
all his miracles.
The majority of the Prophet’s miracles, numbering about one thousand,
were related, first, by a group of Companions and then by numerous reliable
narrators and authorities, and were recorded in authentic books of
Tradition. As for the rest of them, although they were related each by one
or two Companions, they must also be indisputable, as they later acquired
unanimity by being accepted as truth by reliable authorities and narrated by
more than one chain of transmission. In addition, most of those miracles
occurred in the presence of great gatherings, either during a military
campaign or a wedding ceremony or on similar occasions like a feast, and one
or two of those present related the miracle and the others confirmed him by
keeping silent. Therefore, the miracles recorded in authentic books of
Tradition are indisputable and it is impossible to deny or reject them.
Every word, act and state of the noble Prophet, upon him be peace and
blessings, bears witness to his Prophethood and his faithfulness, but not
all of them need necessarily be miraculous
Every word, act and state of the noble Prophet, upon him be peace and
blessings, bears witness to his Prophethood and his faithfulness, but not
all of them need necessarily be miraculous. For the Almighty sent him in the
form of a human being so that he could be a guide and leader to human beings
in all their individual and collective affairs, through which they can
attain happiness in both worlds, and so that he could disclose to human
beings the wonders of God’s art and the works of His Power, each of which
is, in fact, a miracle although it appears to us ordinary and familiar. If
he had been extraordinary in all his acts, then he could not have been a
guide to human beings and instructed them through his words, acts and
attitudes. He was, however, provided with some extraordinary phenomena to
prove his Prophethood to obstinate unbelievers and so he occasionally worked
miracles. But his miracles never occurred in such an obvious fashion as
would have obliged people to believe as it were against their free will.
For, in accordance with the test and trial that man is to undergo in the
world, the way to truth must be shown to him without depriving him of using
his free will. If the miracles had occurred in so apparent a way as to
compel people to believe, without allowing them to use their own power of
choice, then intelligence would have been left with no choice and there
would have remained no meaning in testing man in this life and in his being
the noblest of creation endowed with a free will and intellect. |