Those who believe in the Creator can answer the
questions: where from? And where to? They know that they have come intoexistence by being created by the Creator and they also know that there is an
eternal life after death. But what about the answer to the third question, that
is: why have we been created? If we had been created by the Creator, shouldn’t
we expect that He would tell us the purpose of our creation? Shouldn’t He tell
us on what basis He is going to judge us on the Day of Judgment?
Muslims say they know the answers
because they have the Quran. But people of other religions also have their own
scriptures, so what is so special about the Quran? The Quran is basically a
book of divine guidance in areas that cannot be covered by the human senses or
intellect, such as faith, acts of worship, a moral code and a code that governs
the transactions between people. These are the four basic foundations of
religion, an area in which man always needs divine guidance. Muslims contend
that the Quran is the last revealed scripture by Allah (Allah is the proper
name of God and is not used to denote any other being. Therefore, I shall use
the name Allah in preference to the
word God). The Quran is the recorded words
of Allah Himself dictated verbatim to the Prophet Muhammad (S) in installments, verse by verse or a
group of verses, through the angel Gabriel over a period of 23 years between
610 and 633 AD. It is divided into 114 units, each called a surah.
Muhammad (S) received
revelation of the Quranic surahsas and when Allah chose to bestow on him
new revelation. At times several surahs, particularly the longer ones,
were being revealed to him concurrently. Muhammad (S) used to have a group of scribes entrusted with committing
immediately whatever was revealed to him to writing. Those scribes used
parchment, pottery, date palm leaves, flat stones, tree bark, wood, dried
animal skins and even the shoulder blades of sheep or camels to write on; and
the revealed verses were memorized by heart as the mere recitation of the Quran
is in itself an act of worship, and as Muslims used these verses in their
judgments and in their daily five prayers. In this manner, the verses of the
Quran were preserved in the hearts of Muslims, as well as written down, during
the lifetime of the Prophet. Muhammad (S)was
instructed by angel Gabriel where to place every new passage in the surahs.
The surahs were named by divine decree, and Muhammad (S) recited the whole of the Quran in
front of Gabriel more than once in the last year of his life. Similarly, the
arrangement of the surahs in a specific order was given by the
Prophet Muhammad (S) who
indicated it mostly by reading the surahs, particularly in prayer, in a specific
order. No revealed book has ever enjoyed the authenticity of the Quran or had
the cherishing, reverence, surveillance and care of its followers as the Quran.
The whole Quran has been memorized by a large number of Muslims in the lifetime
of Muhammad (S).
After Muhammad’s (S)( departure, the first Caliph, Abu
Bakr, asked one of the original scribes, Zaid ibn Thabit, to be in charge of
collecting the original writings of the Quranic revelations and writing down
the whole Quran. Zaid produced a whole copy of the Quran written on pages of
leather. It was arranged in the order we have today. This was done in the first
two years after the Prophet’s death, since Abu Bakr ruled for less than two
years. This copy was then entrusted with the second Caliph, Omar, and finally
with the third Caliph, Othman. During the reign of Othman, the Arabs came to
know the paper industry from China and Othman called on Zaid to head a
committee of four Quranic scholars who would take on the task of making seven
copies. Those seven copies (written 14 years after Muhammad’s (S) death) were distributed to the various
centers of the Muslim state to be the reference copy in each center. At least
three of those original copies of the Quran are still intact, one in Tashkent,
one in Istanbul, and one in Cairo. They do not differ in one letter from the
millions of copies of the Quran that are in the hands of people today. This
authentication of the last revelation is in itself miraculous. The Quran is the
oldest book within the hands of humanity that has been kept intact in exactly
the same language of revelation word for word and letter for letter. That is
why the Quran is unique, because it is the word of the Creator in its purest
divinity.
Muslims believe in the authentic
original revelations given to Prophets Moses, David and Jesus, but none of
these original revelations is found intact, and none is found in the original
language of revelation, and here the Quran stands unique in its divine purity.
Again the Quran is different from any human writings because it is neither
prose nor poetry. It came to the Arabs when they were at their peak in
eloquence and challenged them to produce one single chapter of it, or similar
to it, or to produce ten similar chapters or even a book like it. This
challenge still exists today and no challenger is forthcoming. The early
scholars of the Quran thought that its miraculous nature was due mainly to its
style and beautiful expression. The beauty of expression is really unique and
cannot be paralleled by human writings. That is why the early commentators of
the Quran concentrated on its eloquence and style. Yet being the word of the
Creator, any area that has been covered in the Quran must be unique. If you
look at jurisprudence the Quran is unique, in the area of worship, the Quran
instructs people how to worship Allah. The concepts of Divinity, prophet hood,
and morality are all unique in the Quran. If we look at the narration of
history of previous nations, one after the other, and how they received the
divine message, their reaction towards it and what their reward or punishment
was, at a time when there was no form of regular documentation whatsoever. The
Quran talks about these successive nations without a single mistake, and modern
archaeological discoveries are a testimony to this.
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