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When the Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him) claimed
that the Qur’an was a divine book revealed to him by God
for the guidance of man, there were many who did not believe
him. The scriptures to them were a human rather than a
divine composition. The Qur’an then gave a challenge to
these skeptics, asking them to produce “a scripture similar
to it,” if what they said were true. (52:34).
It declared, moreover, in no uncertain terms that, even
if all the human beings and the jinns made collective
and concerted efforts to produce a book like the Qur’an,
they would all fail miserably in their attempt. (17:88).
The Qur’an, being an eternal book, poses a perennial challenge,
addressed to every human being under the sun until Doomsday.
Now the question arises as to the characteristics this
sacred book possesses which render it inimitable. Several
aspects of its uniqueness are mentioned in the Qur’an,
one of which is its consistency:
Do they not ponder over the Qur’an? If it had not come
from God,
they would have found in it many contradictions (ikhtilaf).
(4:82)
(Professor Arberry has translated the Arabic word
ikhtilaf as ‘inconsistency’. Other renderings of the
word include contradiction, disparity and difference.)
Total consistency is an extremely rare quality, one which
is an exclusive attribute of God. It is, therefore, beyond
any human being to compose a work in which there are no
disparities. For a work to be completely flawless, the
composer has to have a command of such knowledge as encompasses
the past and the future, and extends also to all objects
of creation. There must be no shadow of doubt in his perception
of the essential nature of things. Furthermore, his knowledge
must be based on direct acquaintance, not on information
indirectly received from others. And there is another
unique quality he must possess: he must be able to see
things, not in a prejudiced light, but as they actually
are.
God and God alone can possess all these extraordinary
qualities. For this reason, only His Word will remain
perennially free of all inconsistency. The work of man,
on the other hand, is always marred by imperfection, for
man himself is imperfect; it does not lie within his power
to compose a work free of contradiction.
Contradictions in Human Reasoning
It is not
by chance that the work of man is fraught with contradictions.
It is inevitable, given the inherent limitations of human
cerebral activity. Such is the nature of creation that
it accepts only the Thought of its Creator. Any theory
which is not in consonance with His thinking can find
no place in the universe. It will contradict itself, for
it stands at variance with the universe at large; it will
be inconsistent, for it does not run true to the pattern
of nature.
For this reason, intellectual inconsistency is bound to
mar any theory conceived by man. We shall illustrate this
point by several examples.
Darwinism
Charles
Darwin (1809-1882), and other scientists after him, developed
the theory of Evolution from their observations of living
creatures. They saw that the various forms of life found
on earth outwardly appeared different from one another.
Yet, biologically, they bore a considerable resemblance
to each other. The structure of a horse, for instance,
when standing up on its two hind legs, was not unlike
the human frame.
From these observations they came to the conclusion that
man was not a separate species, and that along with other
animals, he had originated from a common gene. All creatures
were involved in a great evolutionary journey through
successive stages of biological development. While reptiles,
quadrupeds and monkeys were in an early stage of evolution,
man was in an advanced stage.
For a hundred years this theory held sway over human thought.
But then further investigations revealed that it had loopholes.
It did not fully fit in with the framework of creation.
In certain fundamental ways, it clashed with the order
of the universe as a whole. For instance, there is the
question of the age of the earth. By scientific calculation,
it has been put at around two thousand million years old.
Now this period is far too short to have accommodated
the process of evolution envisaged by Darwin. It has been
shown scientifically that for just one compound of protein
molecule to have evolved, it would have taken more than
just millions and millions of years. There are over a
million different forms of animal life on earth and at
least two hundred thousand fully developed vegetable species.
How could they all have evolved in just two thousand million
years? Not even an animal low down in the evolutionary
scale could have developed in that time, let alone man,
an advanced life-form which could have developed only
after passing through countless evolutionary stages.
A mathematician, by the name of Professor Patau, has made
certain calculations concerning the biological changes
postulated by the theory of evolution. According to him,
even a minor change in any species would take one million
generations to be completed. From this, one can have an
idea of how long a period would elapse before a dog, for
example, turned into a horse. The multiple changes involved
in such a complicated evolutionary process would have
taken much too long for them to have happened during the
human lifespan of the world.
As Fred Hoyle puts it, in The Intelligent Universe:
‘Just how excruciatingly slowly genetic information accumulates
by trial and error can be seen from a simple example.
Suppose, very conservatively, that a particular protein
is coded by a tiny segment in the DNA blueprint, just
ten of the chemical links in its double helix. Without
all ten links being in the correct sequence, the protein
from the DNA doesn’t work. Starting with all the ten wrong,
how many generations of copying must elapse before all
the links—and hence the protein—come right through random
errors? The answer is easily calculated from the rate
at which DNA links are miscopied, a figure which has been
established by experiment.
‘To obtain the correct sequence of ten links, by miscopying,
the DNA would have to reproduce itself on an average,
about a hundred million members of the species all producing
offspring, it would still take a million generations before
even a single member came up with the required rearrangement.
And if that sounds almost within the bounds of possibility,
consider what happens if a protein is more complicated
and the number of DNA links needed to code for it jumps
from ten to twenty. A thousand billion generations would
then be needed, and if one hundred links are required
(as is often the case), the number of generations would
be impossibly high because no organism reproduces fast
enough to achieve this. The situation for the neo-Darwinism
theory is evidently hopeless. It might be possible for
genes to be modified slightly during the course of evolution,
but the evolution of specific sequences of DNA links of
any appreciable length is clearly not possible’ (p. 110)
And in any case, as Hoyle had earlier stated, ‘Shufflings
of the DNA code are disadvantageous, because they tend
to destroy cosmic genetic information rather than to improve
it.’
To solve this problem, another theory, called the Panspermia
Theory, was formed. It held that life originated in outer
space. From there it came to earth. But as it turned out,
this theory created new problems of its own. Where in
the vastness of space was there a planet or a star with
the conditions needed for life to develop? For example,
there is nothing more essential to life than water. Nothing
can come into existence or continue to survive without
it. Yet no one knows of anywhere in the entire universe,
except the earth, where it exists. We then had a certain
body of intellectuals who favored a theory of Emergent
Evolution, according to which life—or its various forms—came
into being all of a sudden. But this theory is empty of
meaning. How can there be sudden appearance of life without
the intervention of an outside force? So we are back to
where we started, with the Outside Force—or Creator—to
discount which, all these theories were originally invented.
The fact of the matter is, without taking a Creator into
account, one cannot give a valid explanation of life.
There is simply no other theory which fits in with the
pattern of the universe. Being inconsistent with the nature
of life, other theories fail to take firm root. It is
indeed significant that eminent scholars from various
fields have thought fit to contribute to an Encyclopaedia
of Ignorance, which has been published in London. The
book has the following introduction:
‘In the Encyclopaedia of Ignorance some 60 well-known
scientists
survey different fields of research, trying to point out
significant gaps in our knowledge of the world.’
What this work really amounts to is an academic acknowledgement
of the fact that the Maker of the world has fashioned
it in such a way that it just cannot be explained by any
mechanical interpretation. For instance, as John Maynard
Smith has written, the theory of evolution is beset with
certain ‘built-in’ problems. There appears to be no solution
to these problems, for all we have to go by are theories.
And without concrete evidence, there is no way we can
back up our theories
According to the Qur’an, man and all other forms of life
have been created by God. The theory of evolution, on
the other hand, holds that they are all the result of
a blind mechanical process. The Qur’anic interpretation
explains itself, for God can do as He wills. He can create
what He wishes without material resources. Such is not
the case with the theory of evolution, which demands that
there should be a cause for everything that happens. Such
causes cannot be found, with the result that the theory
of evolution is left without an explanation—in an intellectual
vacuum, one might say, while the same cannot be said of
the explanation of life offered by the Qur’an.
Political Philosophy
The same
is true of political philosophy. According to the 1984
edition of the Encyclopaedia Britannica: ‘Political
philosophy and political conflict have evolved basically
around who should have power over whom.’ (14/697).
For five thousand years, eminent human brains have addressed
their efforts toward finding an answer to this question.
Yet they still have not been able to produce what Spinoza
termed a ‘scientific base’ on which to form a coherent
political philosophy.
Altogether, there are more than twelve schools of political
thought, which fall into two broad categories: despotism
and democracy. The first is strongly objected to on the
grounds that no good reason can be found for one single
individual to tyrannize the entire population of a country
or countries. Although democracy, as opposed to despotism,
has wide popular support, it has not provided foolproof
solutions either to philosophical or practical problems.
The literal meaning of democracy — a word of Greek origin
— is rule by the people. This notion has been widely hailed
as a panacea of all ills, but, in practice, it has proved
impossible to establish rule by the entire population
of any given country. If all of the people are to govern,
how can they — at the same time — be governed? If all
the people cannot have power simultaneously, how can a
popular government be formed? Various theories have been
propounded, the most popular of which is Rousseau’s, i.e.
that it should be left to the General Will, which can
be determined by plebiscite. But, this being a time-consuming
and cumbersome process (not to speak of the expense involved),
government by the people becomes, in effect, government
by a few elected individuals. People may be free to vote
as they please, but after they have voted, they are once
again subjected to the rule of a select group. Democratically
elected rulers over the world are now seen to assume the
same role as the monarchs of former times.
The notion of freedom is traditionally associated with
democracy, but there, too, as a political system it does
not necessarily make people more liberated than they were
under overtly oppressive regimes. Although the entire
basis of democracy is the belief that people are born
equal, with equal rights and that they are free, Rousseau
expresses the more immediate reality with the very first
lines of his Social Contract, “Man was born free and everywhere
he is in chains.” Then, too, there is man’s very nature
to be considered. He is a social animal. Far from being
an independent entity in this world with the liberty to
live as he pleases, he is an integral part of the corpus
of society. Another philosopher goes so far as to say
that "man is not born free. Man is born into society
which imposes restraints on him.”
Clearly, democracy, although in large measure an improvement
on despotism, does not automatically provide the key to
solving the problems of restricted individual liberty
and social inequality. Often, in the name of democracy,
a dynastic monarchy is supplanted by an elective oligarchy,
leaving the individual still feeling that he is no more
than a pawn in the struggle for power. In the 18th and
19th centuries, people rose in rebellion against monarchical
systems of government, but, once free of the yoke of kingly
rule, they had to resign themselves to rule by an elite
group calling themselves ‘representatives of the people’
— which did not seem much of an improvement on life under
the old monarchs, who had laid claim to being ‘representatives
of God on earth.’
All political philosophers have been caught up in contradictions
of this nature. And there appears no way out of the impasse.
Even the so-called “representation’ of the people is open
to question. Take the example of the British conservatives
who, in one year, won a decisive victory, winning an overall
majority of 144 seats. In terms of votes, however, the
conservative share of the vote (43%) had fallen since
1979, i.e. as far as seats were concerned the conservatives
had won a massive overall majority. But, as far as votes
were concerned, they could muster only 43%. Could this
be said to be truly representative of the people? Man’s
failure in this field has been summed up in these words:
‘The history of political philosophy from Plato until
the present day makes it plain that modern political philosophy
is still faced with the basic problems.
In fact, there is only one political philosophy that does
not contradict itself, and that is the philosophy put
forward by the Qur’an. The Qur’an says, that only God
has the right to rule over man: ‘ “Have we any say in
the matter?” they ask. Say to them: “All is in the hands
of God,”’ (3:154)
The idea of God as Sovereign makes for a coherent system
of thought, free from all forms of contradiction. But
when man is considered sovereign, there are bound to be
contradictions and inconsistencies in the political theories
that evolve. The aim of all political theories has been
to eradicate the divisions between ruler and subjects.
Yet no human system, whatever its nature, has been able
to do this. In both the democratic and totalitarian systems,
human equality has remained an unattainable ideal, for
power has always had to be put in the hands of a few individuals,
with others becoming their subjects. This disparity can
only disappear when God is considered Sovereign. Then
the only difference that remains is between God and man.
He is the Ruler, all are His subjects. All men are equal
before Him. There is no division and no distinction between
man and man.
Twofold Inconsistency
If the
different parts of a book contradict each other, the book
is inconsistent within itself. If the contents of a book,
as a whole, or in part, contradict known facts, the book
is inconsistent with external realities. The Qur’an claims—with
justice—to be free of either type of inconsistency, whereas
no work of human origin can be free of either. It follows,
therefore, that the Qur’an must be superhuman in origin.
Had it been written by a human being, it would have been
flawed by inconsistencies of the type so frequently found
in the works of man.
Contradictions within a work arise basically from the
deficiencies of its author. If such imperfections are
to be avoided, two things are essential: absolute knowledge
and total objectivity. There is no human being who is
not sadly deficient in both of these areas. It is only
God who is omniscient, and flawless as a Being, and while
works wrought by the human hand are invariably marred
by inconsistencies, His book, and His book alone never
contradicts itself.
Because of man’s inherent limitations, there are many
things which, intellectually, he cannot grasp. He is forced,
therefore, to speculate, and this frequently leads him
into making erratic judgments and unfounded contentions.
Every human being graduates from youth to old age, and
when a man grows old, he often contradicts things he asserted
as facts when he was young and immature. With age, his
knowledge and experience increase, hence his final verdict
stands at variance with his initial judgments. But even
when death finally comes to take him away, he still has
much to learn, and often the assertions of his maturer
age are proved wrong after his death. The truth is not
arrived at purely through experience and reasoning.
Human beings, in addition to making inadvertent and unwitting
errors are all too prone to make deliberate misrepresentations
of facts when they are motivated by the base emotions
of greed, envy, jealousy, revenge and fear.
Human moods and passions are often to blame for people
turning a blind eye to the truth and falling a prey to
faulty reasoning. Love and hate, friendship and hostility
all have their influence on human thinking. A man’s inability
to be dispassionate, his elation or depression, his triumph
or despair, his successes and frustrations all color the
quality of his thought. Such fluctuations of mood, caprice
and willfulness, can deflect the very best minds from
the truth.
The only one who is free of all such caprice and all such
limitations is the Almighty. That is why His word is of
an impeccable consistency.
Biblical Inconsistency
To illustrate
this point, let us take the example of the Bible, which,
as a book of revelation was the forerunner of the Qur’an.
Initially, the Bible was the word of God, but in later
years it suffered from human interpolations, with the
result that many internal contradictions began to sully
its pages. A case in point is the genealogy of the Messiah,
which has been given in several places in that part of
the Bible known as the Injil, or New Testament.
The Gospel according to Matthew begins with this abridged
genealogy: “The book of the genealogy of Jesus Christ,
the son of David, the son of Abraham” (Matt. 1:1).
The genealogy of Christ is then given in detail, beginning
with Abraham and ending with Joseph who, according to
the New Testament was “the husband of Mary, of whom was
born Jesus” (Matt. 1:16).
When the reader turns to the Gospel according to Mark
he finds these words: “The beginning of the gospel of
Jesus Christ, the Son of God” (Mark. 1:1).
According to one chapter of the New Testament, Jesus was
the son of a person named Joseph, while another chapter
of this very New Testament says he was the Son of God.
Undoubtedly, in its original form, the Injil was
the Word of God and free of all inconsistencies. It was
only in later years, that human beings made additions
of their own, introducing contradictions into a formerly
consistent text. The Christian Church has evolved yet
another extraordinary contradiction in order to explain
away this discrepancy in its sacred book. The description
given of Joseph in the Encyclopaedia Britannica
(1984 edition) is as follows: ‘Christ’s earthly father,
the Virgin Mary’s husband.’
Secular Contradictions
For an instance of serious internal contradiction in secular
writings, I turn to the works of Karl Marx, who commands
an immense following in the modern world. The famous American
economist, John Galbraith, has written of him:
‘If we agree that the Bible is a work of collective authorship,
only Mohammad rivals Marx in the number of professed and
devoted followers recruited by a single author. And the
competition is not really very close. The followers of
Marx now far outnumber the sons of the Prophet.’
But Marx’s enormous popularity does not change the fact
that his work is little better than a collection of glaring
contradictions. For example, Marx considers the existence
of class as the root of all evil in the world. According
to his philosophy, class distinction is derived from the
system of private ownership, and the control exercised
by the bourgeoisie over the means of production enables
them to plunder the lower laboring class.
The solution prescribed by Marx consisted of confiscating
the properties of the capitalist class and putting them
under the administration of the laboring class. Thus,
he claimed, a classless society would come into being.
But herein lies the basic flaw in Marx’s philosophy. For
what comes into existence as a result of this transfer
is not a classless society, but a society in which one
class takes over where the other leaves off. Where one
class previously controlled the economy by virtue of ownership,
another class now controls it by virtue of its right to
administer. Marx’s so-called classless society, was, in
fact, one in which capitalist ownership was replaced by
communist ownership.
What Marx had condemned in one place, he condoned in another.
But due to his great antipathy for and antagonism towards
the capitalist class, he was unable to see his own contradiction
in thought. He was in favor of taking the control of economic
resources away from capitalists and entrusting it to officials.
But, blinded by prejudice, he failed to see what he was
doing. He gave separate names to two different forms of
the very same phenomenon: in the one case, he called it
plunder of the many by the few, in the other, he termed
it ‘social order.’
The Qur’an, on the other hand, is completely free of self-contradiction
of this nature, and there is absolute harmony in its content.
Even so, opponents of the Qur’an have tried to prove that
contradictions do occur in it. All the examples they cite
in this regard, however, have no connection whatsoever
with the case they are trying to prove. They say, for
instance, that in the sermon of his Farewell Pilgrimage,
the Prophet stated that all men were from Adam, and Adam
was from the earth. According to this principle women
should enjoy the same status as men. In practice, however,
this is not the case, say opponents of the Qur’an, who
point to the inferior position women have been allotted
in Islamic society. They then cite the fact that the testimony
of two women is equated in law with that of one man. It
is true that this is so, but only in special sets of circumstances,
as is made clear in the verse of the Qur’an where this
rule has been laid down. The verse in question deals with
the written recording of debts:
‘And take two male witnesses. If there are not two men,
then one
man and two women—you may select the witnesses of your
choice.
If one woman forgets, the other will be able to remind
her.’
The wording of the verse shows quite clearly that the
basis of this rule is—not discrimination between the sexes—but
rather allowances being made for the inferior memorizing
ability of women. What is alluded to is a biological fact—that
women are not as adept at remembering things as men. This
is why, if women’s testimony is to be accepted in loans
cases, there should be two of them: so that if at any
time subsequently, they are required to give evidence,
one of them should be able to compensate for the other’s
poor memory.
It should be borne in mind that any other interpretation
of this rule shows a total misunderstanding of the scriptures.
It should be borne in mind that modern research has confirmed
what the Qur’an asserts—that women’s memory is weaker
than that of men. Russian scientists have gone into this
matter in great detail, and their conclusions have been
published in book-form. A summary, entitled ‘Memorizing
Ability’, appeared in the New Delhi edition of the Times
of India on January 18, 1985:
'Men have a greater ability to memorize and process mathematical
information than women, but females are better with words,’
says
a Soviet scientist. (UPI.) ‘Men dominate mathematical
subjects
due to the peculiarities of their memory,’ Dr. Vladimir
Konovalov told the Tass news agency.
The Qur’anic rule, far from evincing any contradiction,
proves in fact that the Qur’an has come from One who has
absolute knowledge of the facts of existence. He sees
things from every angle, and so is in a position to issue
commandments that are in total harmony with nature.
External Inconsistency
Now we
turn to external inconsistency. External inconsistency
in a literary work occurs when what it asserts is contradicted
by some reality in the outside world. Since man’s speech
and writing occur within the sphere of his own knowledge,
which is marked by human limitations, what he writes or
says fails to conform to the external reality. We produce
here a few comparative examples to illustrate this point.
Certain ancient Arab tribes sometimes killed their children,
in most cases female babies, for fear of being unable
to feed a large family. It was in this context that the
following verses were revealed:
Do not kill your children for fear of want: We shall provide
sustenance for them as well as for you. Truly, the killing
of
them is a great sin. (17:31)
Inherent in this pronouncement of the Qur’an was the claim
that the growth in population, whatever its extent and
degree, would not create a problem of sustenance for man
on the earth; that there would be a constant favorable
balance of sustenance and human population; that there
would be an adequate provision of sustenance tomorrow
just as there is today.
Throughout the ages, Muslims have been endorsing this
claim as a matter of faith. They have left this matter
to God, the great Provider.
One thousand years after this claim made by the Qur’an,
the British economist, Robert Malthus (1766-1834) published
in 1798 his book, An Essay on the Principle of Population
as it Affects the Future Improvement of Society, in
which he set forth his famous theory on the growth of
population. ‘Population, when unchecked, increases in
a geometrical ratio. Subsistence only increases in an
arithmetical ratio.’
Simply stated, growth in population and growth in sustenance
are not naturally equal. Human population grows geometrically,
that is at a ratio of 1-2-4-8-16-32, while the growth
of food supplies maintains an arithmetical ratio: 1-2-3-4-5-6-7-8.
Sustenance, therefore, cannot keep up with the astronomical
growth in human population. The only solution to this
problem, according to Malthus, was for mankind to control
its birth rate. The population should not be allowed to
exceed a certain limit, failing which the number of people
on earth would become disproportionate to the amount of
sustenance available, thereby ushering in an age of famine
in which countless people would starve to death.
Malthus’s book made a powerful impression, winning substantial
support among writers and thinkers, and leading to the
launching of birth control and family-planning schemes.
Recently, however, researchers have come to the conclusion
that Malthus was quite wrong in his calculations. Gwynne
Dwyer has summarized this research in an article, provocatively
entitled ‘Malthus: The False Prophet,’ which appeared
in The Hindustan Times (New Delhi) on December
28, 1984:
It is the 150th anniversary of Malthus’ death, and his
grim
predictions have not yet come true. The world’s population
has
doubled and redoubled in a geometrical progression as
he
foresaw, only slightly checked by wars and other catastrophes,
and now stands at about eight times the total when he
wrote. But
food production has more than kept pace, and the present
generation of humanity is on average the best fed in history.
Malthus was born in an age of ‘traditional agriculture.’
He was unable to envisage the approach of an age of ‘scientific
agriculture,’ in which amazing advances in production
would become possible. Over the 150 years since Malthus’s
death, methods of cultivation have been radically altered.
Crops under cultivation are chosen for their particularly
high yield. Cattle are able to produce a far higher amount
of dairy food than before. New methods have been discovered
to increase the fertility of land. Modern machinery has
brought vast new areas under cultivation. In technologically
advanced countries of the world there has been a 90% fall
in the number of farmers: yet at the same time a tenfold
increase in agricultural produce has taken place.
As far as the third world is concerned, 3 billion people
inhabit these under-developed countries, but the third
world also possesses the potential to produce food for
33 billion—ten times the present population. According
to F.A.O. estimates, if the increase in the population
of the third world continues unabated, reaching over the
4 billion mark by the year 2000 A.D., there will still
be no cause for alarm. The increase in population will
be accompanied by an increase in production: the means
will be available to provide food for 1½ times more than
the number of people who have to be fed. And this increase
in food production will be possible without deforestation.
So there is no real danger of a food crisis, either on
a regional or on a universal scale. Gwynne Dwyer concludes
his report with the following words:
‘Malthus was wrong. We are not doomed to breed ourselves
into famine.’
Where Malthus’s book on population and sustenance—the
work of a human mind working within the confines of time
and place—was very far out in its predictions for the
human race, (and this was proved to the world just 150
years after the author’s death) the Qur’an, on the other
hand—the work of a superhuman mind—still bears out external
realities to this very day.
Historical inaccuracy
In the 20th century B.C., during the time of the Prophet
Joseph, the Children of Israel entered Egypt. Seven centuries
later they left Egypt along with Moses, crossing over
into the Sinai Peninsula. These events are mentioned in
both the Bible, and the Qur’an. But, while the account
in the Qur’an is entirely consistent with external history,
the Bible relates several incidents which do not correspond
to historical records. This has created problems for believers
in the Bible. Should they accept what is written in the
Bible, or should they go by history? Since the two contradict
one another, they cannot accept both at the same time.
On January 12, 1985, a gathering was held in the Indian
Institute of Islamic Studies at Tughlaqabad in New Delhi,
which was addressed by Ezra Kolet, president of the Council
of Indian Jewry. His topic was: ‘What is Judaism?’ Naturally,
he dealt with Jewish history in his talk, mentioning,
among other things, the Jew’s entrance into and exodus
from Egypt. The names of both Joseph and Moses figured
in his talk as well as the kings who were ruling in Egypt
in their respective times. For both kings, the contemporaries
of Joseph and Moses, he used the term ‘Pharaoh.’
As everyone acquainted with the period knows, this nomenclature
is historically incorrect. The reign of the kings known
as Pharaohs did not begin until the time of Moses: in
Joseph’s day, a different line of monarchs ruled in Egypt.
When Joseph entered Egypt, the kings of a dynasty known
as the Hyksos were in power. They were ethnically Arabs,
and had usurped the Egyptian throne, reigning from 2000
B.C. until the end of the 15th century B.C. at which time
the indigenous population rebelled against foreign rule,
thus bringing the Hyksos dynasty to an end.
Home rule was then established in Egypt. The clan that
took over sovereignty chose for itself the name of Pharaoh,
which literally means son of the sun-god, for in those
days Egyptians worshipped the sun, and in order to vindicate
their right to rule over the Egyptians, they made themselves
out to be incarnations of the sun-god.
In effect, Mr. Kolet was calling the Hyksos Kings, Pharaohs.
He had no option in this, for that is what they are called
in the Bible, with reference to both Joseph’s and Moses’
respective periods. The Jewish speaker could either accept
the Bible or history, but not both simultaneously. Since
he was speaking in his capacity as president of the Jewish
Council, he put history aside and based his talk on biblical
accounts.
But in the Qur’an we do not find accounts which clash
with history in this way, and those who follow the Qur’an
are not compelled to forsake history in order to uphold
their Holy Book. When the Qur’an was revealed, people
had no knowledge of ancient Egyptian history. Only in
later years did archeological excavations make it possible
for Egyptologists to compile a record of the history of
that country’s ancient kings.
Even so, the Qur’an mentions the Egyptian monarch who
was a contemporary of Joseph, and refers to him by the
title, of ‘King of Egypt.’ As for the king who ruled in
Moses’ day, the Qur’an repeatedly calls him Pharaoh. We
thus have a Qur’anic account that corresponds exactly
with historical facts, unlike the biblical account which
is historically inaccurate. This shows that the Qur’an
was written without recourse to human sources of knowledge,
by One who had direct access to the Truth.
An Example from History
According to the theory of evolution, both man and animals
are descended from a common ancestor. That is, a single
animal species passed through many gradual stages of evolution,
ultimately developing into the chimpanzee, and finally,
homo sapiens.
Even if we take for granted the theory of evolution, there
are ‘missing links’ between these evolutionary stages
between animal and man which have still to be accounted
for. Where are the species still in the process of evolution
possessing both animal and human features? Though no such
real middle link has yet been discovered, evolutionists
believe that such species did exist and will one day be
discovered.
In 1912, the English newspapers trumpeted the news that
a fragment of an ancient skull, half-ape and half man,
dating back to some nebulous, pre-historic period, had
been found at Piltdown, thus providing material evidence
which confirmed Darwin’s theory of evolution.
This Piltdown Man achieved instant popularity. The name
appeared in standard textbooks such as R.S. Lull’s Organic
Evolution. Leading intellectuals counted the discovery
among the great triumphs of modern man. In authoritative
works such as H.G. Wells’ Outline of History and Bertrand
Russell’s History of Western Philosophy, it was mentioned
as though there was no doubt about the Piltdown Man’s
existence.
For nearly half a century scholars remained enthralled
with this “great discovery.” It was only in 1953 that
some scientists became doubtful. They extracted the Piltdown
man from its iron, fire-proof box in the British Museum
and subjected it to detailed, modern, scientific analysis,
studying it from every relevant angle. Their final conclusion
was that the Pildown Man was a forgery. The great acclaim
it had received was totally unfounded. What had actually
happened was that someone, who wished to discredit a rival
by playing a trick on him, had taken the jaw of a chimpanzee
and dyed it to make it look ancient, and had then filed
its teeth to make them look human. He then submitted his
“find” to the British Museum, saying that he had come
across it in Piltdown, England. He intended at a later
stage to reveal the whole affair as a hoax, in order to
make his rival look foolish, but when he saw the seriousness
with which his trick had been taken by the entire body
of western scientists, he was afraid to own up, and his
silence then prevented positive thinking on evolution
for several decades. (Encyclopaedia Britannica, 1984,
Piltdown Man.)
The Mummy of Merneptah
One of
the most intriguing predictions made by the Qur’an concerns
a Pharaoh of Egypt, called Merneptah, who was the son
of Rameses II. According to historical records, this king
was drowned in pursuit of Moses in the Red Sea. When the
Qur’an was revealed, the only other mention of Pharaoh
was in the Bible, the sole reference to his having drowned
being in the book of Exodus: ‘And the waters returned,
and covered the ‘chariots, and the horsemen, and all the
host of Pharaoh that came into the sea after them; there
remained not so much as one of them.’
Amazingly, when this was all the world knew about the
drowning of Pharaoh, the Qur’an produced this astounding
revelation: ‘We shall save you in your body, this day,
so that you may become a sign to all posterity.
How extraordinary this verse must have appeared when it
was revealed. At that time no one knew that the Pharaoh’s
body was really intact, and it was nearly 1400 hundred
years before this fact came to light. It was a Professor
Loret who, in 1898, was the first to find the mummified
remains of the Pharaoh who lived in Moses’ day. For 3000
years the corpse had remained wrapped in a sheet in the
Tomb of the Necropolis at Thebes where Loret had found
it, until July 8, 1907, when Elliot Smith uncovered it
and subjected it to proper scientific examination. In
1912 he published a book entitled The Royal Mummies. His
research had proved that the mummy discovered by Loret
was indeed that of the Pharaoh who ‘knew Moses, resisted
his pleas, pursued him as he took flight, and lost his
life in the process.’ His earthly remains were saved by
the will of God from destruction to become a sign to man,
as is written in the Qur’an.
In 1975, Dr. Bucaille made a detailed examination of the
Pharaoh’s mummy which by then had been taken to Cairo.
His findings led him to write in astonishment and acclaim:
Those who seek among modern data for proof of the Holy
Scriptures will find a magnificent illustration of the
verses of
the Qur’an dealing with the Pharaoh’s body by visiting
the Royal
Mummies Room of the Egyptian Museum, Cairo!
As early as the seventh century A.D., the Qur’an had asserted
that the Pharaoh’s body was preserved as a sign for man,
but it was only in the 19th century that the body’s discovery
gave concrete proof of this prediction. What further proof
is needed that the Qur’an is the Book of God? Certainly,
there is no book like it, among the works of men.
Natural Phenomena
The Qur’an
was revealed at a time when little was known about nature.
Rainfall, for example, was believed to come from a river
in heaven which gushed down on to the earth. The earth
was thought to be flat and the heavens a kind of vault
resting on the hilltops which provided a roof over the
earth. Stars were considered to be shining silver nails
set in the vault of heavens, or thought of as tiny lamps
which were swung to and fro at night by means of a rope.
The ancient Indians held that the earth rested upon the
horns of a cow and when the cow shifted the earth from
one horn to the other, this caused earthquakes. Up till
the time of Copernicus (1473-1543 A.D.) it was generally
believed that the earth was stationary and that the sun
revolved around it. (Two thousand years earlier, Aristarchus
of Samos had anticipated this theory, but his ideas did
not gain ground).
With the advances made in the field of science and technology,
the range of human observation and experiment were vastly
increased, opening up great vistas of knowledge about
the universe. In all spheres of existence and in all disciplines
of science, previously established concepts were proved
wrong by later research and were discarded. This means
that no human work dating back 1500 years can boast of
total accuracy, because all ‘facts’ must now be re-evaluated
in the light of recent information. No such book has,
in fact, been found to be totally free of errors, with
the notable exception of the Qur’an, whose authenticity
has withstood all challenges over the centuries. This
constitutes conclusive evidence of the Qur’an having had
its source in an Omnipresent and Eternal Mind—one which
knows all facts in their true forms and whose knowledge
has not been conditioned by time and circumstances. Had
it been a human fabrication, it could not have withstood
the test of time, human vision being, by contrast, narrow
and limited.
The basic theme of the Qur’an is salvation in the life
hereafter. That is why it does not fall into the category
of any of the known arts and sciences of the world. But
since it addresses itself to man, it touches on almost
all the disciplines which concern him. In spite of the
breadth of its scope, none of its statements has ever
been shown to stem from inadequate knowledge. Bertrand
Russell, in his Impact of Science on Society makes the
point that, renowned philosopher as he was, Aristotle,
while ‘proving’ the inferiority of women to men, stated
that ‘women have fewer teeth than men,’ thus revealing
his ignorance of the fact that men and women have an equal
number of teeth. No such ignorance or misconception has
ever been detected in the Qur’an. This clearly shows that
the origin of this work is a superior Being whose knowledge
pre-dates time itself and goes infinitely far beyond present
knowledge, no matter how advanced the latter may appear
to be.
Examples from Astronomy
Referring
to the sun and the moon, the Qur’an tells us that both
these heavenly bodies are moving in their own circular
courses (falak) (36:40). Dr Maurice Bucaille, discussing
these verses in detail, says that falak here has the scientific
meaning of ‘orbit,’ while, ‘floating’ is the most appropriate
term to describe the movement of celestial bodies in a
vast and subtle space.
Dr Bucaille further writes:
It is shown that the sun moves in an orbit, but no indication
is
given as to what this orbit might be in relation to the
Earth.
At the time of the Qur’anic Revelation, it was thought
that the
Sun moved while the Earth stood still. This was the system
of
geocentrism that had held sway since the time of Ptolemy,
in the
second century B.C., and was to continue to do so until
Copernicus in the sixteenth century A.D. Although people
supported this concept at the time of Muhammad, it does
not
appear anywhere in the Qur’an, either here or elsewhere
(p. 159).
The Development of Biology
An interesting example of the Qur’an’s fore knowledge
of biology was highlighted in the press towards the end
of 1984. The Canadian newspaper, The Citizen, (22
November, 1984) published it under the heading: Ancient
Holy Book 1300 Years Ahead of its Time.
The Times of India,
New Delhi (10 December, 1984) stated with equal drama:
Koran Scores Over Modern Sciences.
This new light on ancient Quranic verses was shed by Dr.
Keith More, a famous embryologist and professor at Toronto
University, Canada. In order to make a comparative analysis
of the assertions of the Qur’an and the findings of modern
research on embryology, he made an in-depth study of the
descriptions of the development of the foetus as given
in certain verses such as 23:14 and 39:6. In this connection
he also visited the King Abdul Aziz University in Jeddah,
Saudi Arabia, on several occasions, along with his colleagues.
He found, astonishingly, that the statements of the Qur’an
corresponded in every detail with modern discoveries.
He was very surprised that facts contained in the Qur’an
had been brought to light by the Western World as late
as 1940. In a paper written on this subject, he says:
“The 1300 years old Koran contains passages so accurate
about embryonic development that Muslims can reasonably
believe them to be revelations from God.”
Convincing supportive details can be had from the analysis
Maurice Bucaille makes in his book, The Bible, The Qur’an
and Science which was published in 1970. We reproduce
here some excerpts from the chapter entitled ‘Human Reproduction.’
Evolution of the Embryo inside the Uterus
The Qur’anic
description of certain stages in the development of the
embryo corresponds exactly to what we know about it today,
and the Qur’an does not contain a single statement that
is open to criticism from modern science.
After ‘the thing which clings’ (an expression which is
well-founded, as we have seen) the Qur’an informs us that
the embryo passes through the stage of ‘chewed flesh,’
then osseous tissue appears and is clad in flesh (defined
by a different word from the preceding which signifies
‘intact flesh’).
—Surah 23, verse 14:
We fashioned the thing which clings into a chewed lump
of flesh and We fashioned the chewed flesh into bones
and
We clothed the bones with intact flesh.
‘Chewed flesh’ is the translation of the word mudgha;
‘intact flesh’ is lahm. This distinction needs
to be stressed. The embryo is initially a small mass.
At a certain stage in its development, it looks to the
naked eye like chewed flesh. The bone structure develops
inside this mass in what is called the mesenchyma. The
bones that are formed are covered in muscle; the word
lahm applies to them.
It is known how certain parts appear to be completely
out of proportion during embryonic development with what
is later to become the individual, while others remain
in proportion.
This is surely the meaning of the word mukhallaq, which
signifies ‘shaped in proportion’ as used in verse 5, surah
22 to describe this phenomenon.
We fashioned… into something which clings… into a lump
of flesh fashioned and unfashioned.
More than a thousand years before our time, at a period
when whimsical doctrines still prevailed, those who were
privileged to have a knowledge of the Qur’an were fortunate,
for the statements it contains express in simple terms
truths of primordial importance which man has taken centuries
to discover.
Origin of the Universe
The Qur’an
says:
Do not the disbelievers see that the heavens and the
earth were one solid mass (ratq) which we tore
asunder (fatq)
(21:30)
Ratq means wholesomeness, compactness, while
fatq is the opposite, that is, disintegration.
Modern studies in astronomy have confirmed the truth of
this concept, various observations having led scientists
to postulate that the universe was formed by an explosion
from a state of high density and temperature (the ‘big-bang’
theory) and that the cosmos evolved from the original,
highly compressed, extremely hot gas, taking the form
of galaxies of stars, cosmic dust, meteorites and asteroids.
The present outward motion of the galaxies is a result
of this explosion. According to the Encyclopaedia Britannica
(1984), this is ‘the theory now favored by most cosmologists.’
Once the process of expansion had set in—about six billion
years ago—it had to continue, because the more the celestial
bodies moved away from the center, the less attraction
they exerted over one another. Estimates of the circumference
of the original matter place it at about one thousand
million light years and now, according to Professor Eddington’s
calculations, the present circumference is ten times what
it was originally. This process of expansion is still
going on. Professor Eddington explains that the stars
and galaxies are like marks on the surface of a balloon
which is continuously expanding, and that all the celestial
spheres are getting further and further apart. Ancient
man supposed quite wrongly, that the stars were as close
to one another as they appeared to be. How significant
that the Qur’an should state in Surah 51, verse 47, ‘The
heaven, We have built it with power. Truly, We are expanding
it.’ Now science has revealed that since the universe
came into existence 90 thousand million years B.C., its
circumference has stretched from 6 thousand to sixty thousand
million light years. This means that there are inconceivably
vast distances between the celestial bodies. And it has
been discovered that they revolve as part of galactic
systems, just as our earth and the planets revolve around
the sun.
Just as within the Solar System, many planets and asteroids
are situated at great distances from each other, yet revolve
according to one system, likewise every material body
is composed of innumerable ‘Solar Systems’ on an infinitesimally
small scale. These systems are called atoms. While the
vacuum of the Solar System is observable, the vacuum of
the atomic system is too small to be visible. All things,
however solid they appear, are hollow from the inside.
For instance, if all the electrons and protons present
within the atoms of a six foot tall man were to be squeezed
in such a manner that no space were left, his body would
be reduced to such a tiny spot as would be visible only
through a microscope.
The farthest galaxy that has been observed is situated
several million light years away from the sun. Yet it
is held that if the total quantum of cosmic matter as
worked out by astrophysicists—and it is enormous—were
to be compressed so as to eliminate all space, the size
of the universe would be only thirty times the size of
the sun. In view of how recently these calculations have
been made, it is quite extraordinary that 1500 years ago
the Qur’an asserted that not only had the universe expanded
from a condensed form but that its original quantum of
matter had remained constant, so that it could conceivably
be re-condensed into a relatively small space. It describes
the end of the universe thus: “On that day, we shall roll
up the heaven like a scroll of writing” (21:104)
The moon is our nearest neighbor in space, its distance
from the earth being just two hundred and forty thousand
miles. Due to this proximity, its gravitational force
affects the sea waves, causing an extraordinary rise in
the water level twice a day. At certain points these waves
rise as high as sixty feet. The land surface too is affected
by this lunar pull, but only in terms of a few inches.
The present distance between the earth and moon is optimal
from man’s point of view, there being several advantages.
If this distance were reduced, for example, to only fifty
thousand miles, the seas would be so stormy that a major
part of the earth would be submerged in them and, moreover,
the continual impact of the stormy waves would cut the
mountains into pieces and the earth’s surface, more fully
exposed to the moon’s gravitation, would start to crack
open.
Astronomers estimate that at the time the earth came into
existence, the moon was close to it and the surface of
the earth had, therefore, been exposed to all kinds of
upheavals. In the course of time, the earth and the moon
drew apart, to their present distance from one another,
according to astronomical laws. Astronomers hold that
this distance will be maintained for a billion years,
then the same astronomical laws will bring the moon back
closer to the earth. As a result of conflicting forces
of attraction, the moon will ‘burst when close enough
and glorify our dead world with rings like those of Saturn.’
This concept bears out the Qur’an’s prediction to a remarkable
degree. The following lines, in addition to presenting
this phenomenon as a physical fact, explain its religious
significance:
The Hour of Doom is drawing near, and the moon is cleft
in
two. Yet, when they see a sign, the unbelievers turn their
backs
and say, ‘Ingenious magic!’
The Healing Property of Honey
The Qur’an
tells us about the healing property of honey (16:69).
In the light of this verse Muslims attached great importance
to the medicinal aspect of honey, and it became an important
ingredient in their pharmacology. But the western world
remained unaware of its medical value for centuries; they
treated it as merely a liquid food-item. It was not before
the twentieth century that the European physicians discovered
the antiseptic properties of honey.
Here is a summary of modern researches on honey published
in an American journal.
Honey is a powerful destroyer of germs which produce human
diseases. It was not until the twentieth century, however,
that this was demonstrated scientifically. Dr. W.G. Sackett,
formerly with the Colorado Agricultural College at Fort
Collins, attempted to prove that honey was a carrier of
disease much like milk. To his surprise, all the disease
germs he introduced into pure honey were quickly destroyed.
The germ that causes typhoid fever died in pure honey
after 48 hours’ exposure. Enteritidis, causing intestinal
inflation, lived 48 hours. A hardy germ which causes bronchopneumonia
and septicemia held out for four days. Bacillus Coli Communis
which under certain conditions causes peritonitis, was
dead on the fifth day of experiment. According to Dr.
Bodog Beck, there are many other germs equally destructible
in honey. The reason for this bactericidal quality in
honey, he said, is in its hygroscopic ability. It literally
draws every particle of moisture out of germs. Germs,
like any other living organism, perish without water.
This power to absorb moisture is almost unlimited. Honey
will draw moisture from metal, glass, and even stone rocks
(Rosicrucian Digest, September 1975, p. 11).
Superiority of the Qur’an
The very
language in which it is written—Arabic—is a kind of miracle,
being an astonishing exception to the historical rule
that a language cannot survive in the same form for more
than 500 years. In the course of five centuries, a language
changes so radically that the coming generations find
it increasingly difficult to understand the works of their
distant predecessors. For instance, the works of Geoffrey
Chaucer (1342-1400), the father of English poetry, and
the plays and poetry of William Shakespeare (1564-1616),
one of the greatest writers of the English language, have
become almost unintelligible to twentieth century readers,
and are now read almost exclusively as part of college
curricula with the help of glossaries, dictionaries and
‘translations.’
But the history of the Arabic language is strikingly different,
having withstood the test of time for no less than 1500
years. Wording and style have, of course, undergone some
development, but not to such an extent that words should
lose their original meaning. Supposing someone belonging
to the Quranic times of ancient Arabia could be reborn
today, the form of language in which he would express
himself would be as understandable to modern Arabs as
it was to his own contemporaries.
It is as if the Qur’an had placed a divine imprint upon
Arabic, arresting it in its course so that it should remain
understandable right up to the last day. This being so,
the Qur’an is never just going to collect dust on some
obscure ‘Classical Literature’ shelf, but will be read
by, and give inspiration to people for all time to come.
In the field of science, despite the great and rapid advances
in knowledge in recent years, we come back to what was
asserted in the Qur’an, so many centuries ago, as having
arrived at the quintessence of the matter. Just as the
Arabic language seems to have been crystallized at a particular
point in time—in fact, at the moment of divine revelation,
so also does science seem to have been arrested in its
course, the Qur’an having the final say on matters which
for centuries lay beyond man’s knowledge and which still,
in many important cases, elude man’s intellectual grasp.
The most significant of these is the origin of the universe.
Newton’s Theory of Light
Another
point on which human intelligence appeared to have arrived
at a major scientific truth was that of the true nature
of light. It was Sir Isaac Newton (1642-1727) who put
forward the theory that light consisted of minute corpuscles
in rapid motion, which emanated from their source and
were scattered in the atmosphere. Owing to the extraordinary
influence of Newton, this corpuscular theory held sway
in the scientific world for a very long time, only to
be abandoned in the middle of the nineteenth century in
favor of the wave theory of light. It was the discovery
of the action of the photon which delivered the final
blow to Newton’s theory. “Young’s work convinced scientists
that light has essential wave characteristics in apparent
contradiction to Newton’s corpuscular theory.”
It had taken only 200 years to prove Newton wrong. The
Qur’an, on the contrary, gave its message to the world
in the 7th century, and even after a lapse of 1400 years
its truth emerges unscathed. The reason for this is that
it is of divine, not human origin: the absolute truth
of its statements can be proved at all times—an extraordinary
attribute that no other work can claim.
Einstein’s theory of relativity declares that gravity
controls the behavior of planets, stars, galaxies and
the universe itself, and does so in a predictable manner.
This scientific discovery had already been developed into
a philosophy by Hume (1711-1776) and other thinkers, who
declared that the whole system of the universe was governed
by the principle of causation, and that it had only been
when man had not been aware of this, that God had been
supposed to control the universe. The principle of cause
and effect was then thought logically to dispense with
the idea of God.
But later research ran counter to this purely material
supposition. When Paul Dirac, Heisenberg and other eminent
scientists bent their minds to analyzing the structure
of the atom, they discovered that its system contradicted
the principle of causation which had been adopted on the
basis of studies made of the solar system. This theory,
called the quantum mechanics theory, maintains that at
the sub-atomic level, matter behaves randomly.
The word ‘principle’ in science means something which
applies in equal measure throughout the entire universe.
If there is even one single instance of a principle failing
to apply to something, its academic bona fides have to
be called in question. It followed then that if matter
did not function according to this principle of causation
in an exactly similar manner at the subatomic level as
it did in the solar system, it should have to be rejected.
Einstein found this idea unthinkable and spent the last
30 years of his life trying to reconcile these seeming
contradictions of nature. He rejected the randomness of
quantum mechanics, saying, “I cannot believe God plays
dice with the universe.” Despite his best efforts, he
was never able to resolve this problem, and it seems that
the Qur’an has the final word on the reality of the universe.
The fact that the universe cannot be explained in terms
of human knowledge is aptly illustrated by Ian Roxburgh
when he writes:
The laws of physics discovered on earth contain arbitrary
numbers, like the ratio of the mass of an electron to
the mass
of a proton, which is roughly 1840 to one. Why did a Creator
arbitrarily choose these numbers?
Science seems to recognize the fact that the universe
can never be encompassed by human knowledge. The Universe,
it must be conceded, is the awesome manifestation of the
will of the Almighty. Hence no true explanation can be
arrived at unless it is based on the concept of the Will
of God.
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