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The Defense of The Qur'an Against The Bible Borrowing Theory


The Defense
of The Qur'ân Against The Bible Borrowing Theory
Khâlid al-Khazrajî,
Mustafa Ahmed, Elias Karîm, Qasim Iqbal, cAbd
ar-Rahmân Robert Squires, M S M Saifullah & Muhammad Ghoniem
© Islamic
Awareness, All Rights Reserved.
Last Updated:
14 June 1999
Assalamu-alaikum wa rahamatullahi wa barakatuhu:
The Qur'ân is made up of 114
Surahs: only 27 of them were revealed in Madinah while the remaining
87 were revealed in Makkah or some other nearby locations. It is to be reminded
that the Jews were in Madinah and the Christians were in Najran and Yemen. There
was no seat of Christianity in Mecca, in al-Hijaz nor in Madinah as stated
by Bell:
...in spite of traditions to the effect
that the picture of Jesus was found on one of the pillars of Ka'aba, there is no
good evidence of any seats of Christianity in the Hijaz or in the near neighbourhood
of Makkah or even of Madina.[1]
Dr. Nabîh Aqel, a Professor
of Arabic and Islamic History, University of Damascus, states in his book Tarîkh al-cArab
al-Qadîm:
The big difference between Christianity
and Judaism is that Christianity unlike Judaism didn't have any bases in Hijaz
, Christianity was an external source of enlightenment echoed in Hijaz either by
missionary activities form Ethiopia, Syria and Iraq or from Alheerah's Christian
centres; dair Hind al-Kubra [the
order of Hind al-Kubra] - Um
Amro al-Mundhir [the order of
Um Amro] - Dair Hind al-Sugra
[the order of Hind al-Sugra]) or from some of the scattered churches in Bahrain,
al-Yamamah and Yemen.[2]
Ibn Ishâq narrated also
in al-Sîrah al-Nabawiyyah, speaking about four people from Quraysh
(Mecca) who were among the generation that preceded the Prophet Muhammad(P) and who had abandoned their people's faith (paganism) and
went in search for their Haneefite roots.
These four men were Waraqah bin Nawfal,
cAbdullâh bin Jahsh, cUthmân
bin al-Huarith and Zaid bin Amro who said to each other "you know that your
people had deviated from the religion of your father Abraham" and decided to
search for their Haneefite roots and they "scattered into different countries
seeking the Haneefite religion, the religion of Abraham". Ibn Ishâq
said that Waraqah bin Nawfal had converted to Christianity as a result of his search.
[3]
The migration of these four men out
of Mecca shows that the city was completely a pagan society for if there was any
significant Christian or Jewish presence in Mecca, it wouldn't be necessary for these
men to travel in search for it.
Yet another piece of evidence is
that during the period of Christian influence and power in Yemen, from Najran to
Abyssinia (Ethiopia), history narrates to us the famous attempt of a great Christian
army to conquer Mecca. This army from Yemen was supported by elephants and
was lead by Abraha, the Abyssinian. The doomed invasion occurred in the
same year that the Prophet Muhammad(P)
was born ,and later came to be known amongst the Arabs as the Year of
the Elephant. The army's aim was to vanquish Mecca, destroy the Ka'aba
(the holy shrine built by Abraham(P) and his son Ismâcîl(P)) and then to convert the pagan Arabs to Christianity.
Once this was accomplished, they could force them to make pilgrimage to the great
church named al-Qulais that Abraha had built in Yemen for this purpose.
Ibn Ishâq
in al-Sîrah al-Nabawiyyah under the title The Story of
the Elephant said:
Then Abraha built the "Qulais"
in San'a, it was a church that people never saw its like in their time, then he wrote
to the Abyssinian king; "I built for you O king, a church that no king had before
you, and I'll not stop until I make the Hajj - that the Arabs perform to Ka'aba
- shifted to it..."[4]
Dr Helmi Mahroos Ismâcîl in his book al-Sahrq
al-'Arabi al-Qadîm writes:
Abraha worked hard on spreading Christianity
among the Yemens, he built many churches there the most important of it all was the
"Qulais" in Sana'a which the Abyssinian took as their capital in Yemen.
Abraha tried to make the Arabs to perform Hajj to it.[5]
This Christian attempt lead by Abraha
to destroy the Ka'bah corroborates that Mecca and al-Hijaz, in general, had
no Christian or Jewish influence whatsoever even until the time the Prophet Muhammad(P) was born. Abraha had failed in his attempt to destroy the
Ka'bah and this was a subject of a Qur'ânic Chapter as a Sign from God (Surat
al-Fîl) :
Seest thou not how thy Lord dealt
with the Companions of the Elephant? Did He not make their treacherous plan go astray?
And He sent against them flights of Birds Striking them with stones of baked clay.
Then did He make them like an empty field of stalks and straw (of which the corn)
has been eaten up. [Qur'ân:
105]
Historians could not explain how
this great army of Abraha didn't reach its goals in conquering the weak- and almost
surrendered city of Mecca!!
The following provides an excerpt
from a Yemenite archaeological site that mentions, in part, this incident. Walter
W. Muller, a specialized researcher in ancient Arabian history, under the subject
Outline
of the History of Ancient Southern Arabia, says:
Muller says: "Southern Arabia became
an Abyssinian dominion, first under the local Christian vassal simyafa then
under the former Abyssinian General Abreha (Abraha). In 542 .... An inscription dated
547, reporting of a campaign against the rebellious Maadd in Central Arabia (Ry 506).
States that Abreha had already styled himself king. The most recently dated inscription
of the Himyarite era (CIH 325) is from A.D. 554. It virtually marks the end of the
well-documented ancient Southern Arabian epoch and heralds the decline of the Sabeo-Himyarite
empire..... Towards the end of his reign, Abreha launched yet another military
campaign against the North which has been preserved in the memory of the Arabs because
of the elephants accompanying it. Abreha failed to take Mecca as he had intended
and the operation had to be abandoned."
Without giving any reason why Abraha
had failed in capturing Mecca even though it had surrendered!
Bernard Lewis in his book The Middle East: 2000 Years Of History From
The Rise Of Christianity To The Present Day,
writes:
Newly converted, the Ethiopians were
fervent in their Christianity and responded eagerly to Byzantine embassies. Unfortunately
for the Ethiopians, they were not able to complete the task assigned to them. They
succeeded initially in crushing and destroying the last independent state in southern
Arabia, and opening the country to Christian and other external influences, but they
were not strong enough to maintain it. They had even tried to advance northwards
from the Yemen, and in 507 CE had attacked Mecca, a Yemenite trading post on the
caravan route to the north. The Ethiopians failed and were defeated, and a little
later the Persians came to the Yemen in their place.[6]
For further information on the story
of this Christian campaign against Mecca a reference is made in al-Seerah al-Nabawiyyah.
Below is a pre-Islamic poem from the same source that preserved the event by a person
who had witnessed it. The poet Nufail bin Habeeb was there when the event took place
and met with the fleeing soldiers of Abraha's army who asked him the directions to
Yemen:

The poem can be roughly
translated as follows:
Greetings Rudainah (A female name) we have been pleased with an early morning view.
We had received - a seeker of fire - from your side (the word Qabis is used for a person who seeks fire or wood to
be used as a source of light at night) but
he could not find anything here. O Rudainah! if you have seen what we have seen near
al-Muhasab (a location between
Mecca and Mina) you would
excuse me and not be saddened with what happened in the past between us. I thanked
God when I saw the birds and I was afraid of stones that was thrown on us.
And they (Abraha's men)
were asking about me (to show them the way) as
if I was owing them some previous debts.[7]
Bernard Lewis also gave a brief summary
on how al-Hijaz looked before the advent of Islam saying the weakness that hit the
empires of the north and the south lead to the state that later came to be known
to Arabs as al-Jahiliyyah (the days of ignorance).
The militant Christian monarchy which
had emerged in Ethiopia developed a natural interest in the events on the other side
of the Red Sea [Yemen]. Persians were, of course, always concerned to counter Roman
or Christian - for them, the two were much the same - influence.
By this time even these remote outposts of Mediterranean civilization were influenced
by the general economic decline of the ancient world.... At least part of the reason
for this decline in Arabia must be sought in the loss of interest by both rival imperial
powers. During the long period from 384 to 502 CE when Rome and Persia were at peace,
neither was interested in Arabia or in the long, expensive and hazardous trade routes
that passed through its deserts and oases. Trade routes were diverted elsewhere,
subsidies ceased, caravan traffic came to an end, and towns were abandoned. Even
settlers in the oases either migrated elsewhere or reverted to nomadism. The drying-up
of trade and the reversion to nomadism lowered the standard of living and of culture
generally, and left Arabia far more isolated from the civilized world than it
had been for a long time. Even the more advanced southern part of Arabia also
suffered, and many southern nomadic tribes migrated to the north in hope of better
pasturage. Nomadism had always been an important element in Arabian society. It now
became predominant. This is the period to which Muslims give the name Jahiliyya,
the Age of Ignorance, meaning by that of course to contrast it with the Age of Light,
Islam. It was a dark age not only in contrast with what followed, but also with what
went before. And the advent of Islam in this, sense may be seen as a restoration
and is indeed presented as such in the Qur'ân - as a restoration of the religion
of Abraham.[8]
Although the above excerpt paints
a very dark image of how the situation was in Arabia before Islam, it is not totally
true. The great amount of cultural heritage left by the Arabs of al-Hijaz
represented, for example, by their literature shows that the term al-Jahiliyyah
is not descriptive and was mainly used to mean the decline in the social/ethical
standards, but nothing else.
Furthermore; the failure of the Christian
Abyssinian army of Abraha to capture Mecca made the pagan Arabs glorify the city
even more. Mecca was mainly a pagan society that worshipped stones and trees, yet
still believed in a Supreme God. As the Qur'ân makes clear, they believed
that their false gods and idols were a means of getting nearer to God:
Is it not to Allah that sincere devotion
is due? But those who take for protectors other than Allah (say): "We only serve
them in order that they may bring us nearer to Allah." Truly Allah will judge
between them in that wherein they differ. But Allah guides not such as are false
and ungrateful. [Qur'ân:
39:3]
The historical evidence plus the
internal evidence of the Qur'ân proves beyond any doubt that there was no Christian
nor Jewish influence in al-Hijaz, in general, and in Mecca, in particular. So
how was Muhammad(P) borrowing from the Bible when the non-existence
of any Arabic Bible or Arabic apocryphal sources has been proven?
Again the Qur'ân denies that
someone was teaching the Prophet(P) and at the same time points to the fact that
the language is foreign.
We know indeed that they say "It
is a man that teaches him." The tongue of him they wickedly point to is notable
foreign while this is Arabic pure and clear. Those who believe not in the Signs of
Allah Allah will not guide them and theirs will be a grievous Penalty. [Qur'ân 16:103-104]
Had someone been teaching Prophet
Muhammad(P), his family and close friends would have
eventually known. However, far from being skeptical about his claims to prophethood,
these people gave their wealth and lives for Islam.
In Sûrah Fussilat, the Qur'ân
explains the reason why the revelation is in Arabic. This is to make sure that the
people who were experiencing it could not make excuses.
Had We sent this as a Qur'ân
(in a language) other than Arabic they would have said: "Why are not its verses
explained in detail? What! (a Book) not in Arabic and (a Messenger) an Arab?"
Say: "It is a guide and a healing to those who believe; and for those who believe
not there is a deafness in their ears and it is blindness in their (eyes); they are
(as it were) being called from a place far distant!" [Qur'ân 41:44]
Now with
the absence of Jewish and Christian sources in Mecca, the question remains: who was
teaching Muhammad(P) the stories of the old Prophets and Nations
which were all revealed in Mecca as the following table shows:
|
Adam(P)
|
| 7: 11~25 Mecca | 15: 26~44
Mecca | 17: 61~ 65 Mecca | 18: 50 Mecca |
|20: 115~126 Mecca | 38: 67~88 Mecca |
|
Enoch(P)
|
|19:56~57 Mecca | |
|
Nûh(P)
|
| Surat Noah ( the complete chapter) Mecca
| 7: 59~64 Mecca | 10: 71~73 Mecca | 11: 25~49
Mecca | 21:76~77 Mecca | 23: 23~30 Mecca | 26: 105~122
Mecca | 29: 14~15 Mecca | 37: 76~82 Mecca | 54: 9~17
Mecca | 4:163~165 Madina | 6: 83~87 Mecca | 9:70
Madina | 14: 9 Mecca | 17:3 -17:7 Mecca |
38:12~14 Mecca | 40:5~6 Mecca | 42:12 Mecca | 50:12~14 Mecca | 51:46
Mecca | 53:52 Mecca | 57:26 Madina | 66:10 Madina | |
|
Hûd(P)
|
|11:50~60 Mecca | 7:6~27
Mecca | 23:31~41 Mecca | 26:123~140 Mecca | 41:15~16
Mecca.| 46:21~25 Mecca | 51:41~42 Mecca | 53:50~55
Mecca | 54:18~22 Mecca | 69:6~8 Mecca | 89:6~14 Mecca | |
|
Saleh(P)
|
| 7:73~79 Mecca | 11:61~68
Mecca | 15:80~84 Mecca | 17:59 Mecca | 26:141~159 Mecca | 27:45~53
Mecca | 41:17~18 Mecca | 54:23~32 Mecca |
91:15 Mecca | |
|
Ibrahîm(P)
|
|14: 35~40 Mecca | 6:74~83
Mecca | 21:51~70 Mecca | 26:69~83 Mecca | 29:16~27
Mecca | 19:41~48 Mecca | 37:83~98 Mecca | 2:124~141
- 2:258 Madina | 22:26~27 Madina | 16:120~123
Mecca | 53:37 Mecca | |
|
Ishmâ'îl(P)
|
| 14:37 Mecca | 2:127~129
Madina | 37:99~113 Mecca | |
|
Ishâq(P)
|
|37:112~113 Mecca | 11:69~73
Mecca | 15:51~56 Mecca | 51:24~30 Mecca | 19:49
Mecca | |
|
Lût(P)
|
| 7:80~84 Mecca | 11:69~83
Mecca | 15:51~77 Mecca | 26:160~175 Mecca | 27:54~58
Mecca | 29:28~35 Mecca | 37:133~138 Mecca | 51:31~37
Mecca | 54:33~40 Mecca | |
|
Shuaib(P)
|
| 7:85~93 Mecca | 11:84~95
Mecca | 15:78~79 Mecca | 26:176~191 Mecca | |
|
Yûsuf(P)
Joseph
|
Surat Yousuf [ The complete chapter] Mecca |
|
Ayoub(P)
Job
|
| 6:84 Mecca | 4:163
Madina | [21:83~84] Mecca | 38:41~44 Mecca | |
|
Yûnus(P)
Jonah
|
| Surat Yonus [10:98] Mecca
| 21:87~88 Mecca | 37:139~148 Mecca | |68:48~50
Mecca | |
|
Moses(P)
|
| 19:51~53 Mecca | 28:1~44
- 28:76~83 Mecca | 20:9~100 Mecca | 27:7~14
Mecca | 17:101~104 Mecca | 7:103~155 - 7:159~174 Mecca | 43:46~56
Mecca | 33:69 Mecca | 26:10~68 Mecca | 79:15~25
Mecca | 41:45 Mecca |
| 10:75~93 Mecca | 40:23~54 Mecca | 2:49~103
Madina | 18:60~82 Mecca | |
|
Jesus(P)
|
|3:33~62 Madina | 5:72~77
- 5:110~120 Madina | 19:16~40 Mecca |
| 21:90~91 Mecca | 4:156~159 Madina | 61:14
Madina | 57:27 Madina | |
Arranged according
to Qisas al-Anbya - Stories of the Prophets - by Imam Ibn
Kathîr
[10]
The only answer to the question of
who was teaching Muhammad(P) the Qur'ân can be found in these verses
[53:2-5]
Your Companion is neither astray
nor being misled. Nor does he say (aught) of (his own) Desire. It is no less than
inspiration sent down to him. He was taught by one mighty in Power. [Qur'ân 53:2-5]
Christian missionaries attribute
to Muhammad(P) an encyclopedic knowledge, indirectly saying
that he knew all the sources - Christian, Jewish, Zoroastrian, Hanif and ancient
Arab beliefs - you name it - before he could compile the Qur'ân. This
ignores the simplest facts which the disbelievers from among his own people acknowledged
1400 years ago- that Muhammad(P) was an illiterate man. The following verse,
for example, was revealed in Mecca during the early stages of the Prophet's
call:
And thou wast not (able) to recite
a Book before this (Book came) nor art thou (able) to transcribe it with thy right
hand: in that case indeed would the talkers of vanities have doubted. Nay here
are Signs self-evident in the hearts of those endowed with knowledge: and none but
the unjust reject Our Signs [Qur'ân
29:48~49]
The Qur'ân had answered this
accusation 1400 years ago; but all through the past thousand years were the Christian
missionaries able to provide any further evidence for their claims?
It should be kept in mind that the
Qur'ân was publicly memorized and recited by all Muslims, both during and after
the life of Muhammad(P). If it was not clearly and widely known
in Mecca that Muhammad(P) was illiterate, the verses which claimed
that he was certainly would have caused doubts amongst the Muslims. However,
not only did the Prophet's(P) followers continue to grow - in spite of
great persecution - but there is also no record of the pagan Arabs in Mecca accusing
Muhammad(P) of not being illiterate. They
instead accused him of having a tutor or of being possessed, as previous verses have
shown, since it was common knowledge that he was illiterate.
Related Articles On The Borrowing Theories
Of The Qur'ân
The Orientalists,The
Bible & The Qur'ân: A Brief Review Of Bible Borrowing Theories
Comments On Geiger &
Tisdall's Books On The 'Sources' Of The Qur'ân
Is The Bible Really The Source
Of The Qur'ân?
The Prophet's Wives Teaching
The Bible?
Did Waraqa Ibn Nawfal Teach
The Prophet?
What About Salman - The Persian?
But What About The Story Of
Cain & Abel In The Qur'ân?
On The Judeo-Christian Sources
Of al-Khidr & Dhul-Qarnayn
Problem Of The Parallels
References
[1]
Richard Bell, The Origin of Islam
in its Christian Environment,
1925; 1968 (Reprinted), The Gunning Lectures Edinburgh University, London: Frank
Cass and Company Limited, p.42.
[2] Nabîh Aqel,
Tarîkh al-cArab al-Qadîm, 1983 (Third Edition), Dâr al-Fikr,
Beirut, p. 305.
[3] Ibn Hishâm, al-Sîrah
al-Nabawiyyah, Mousasat cUlûm al-Qur'ân, Beirut, p.222.
[4]
Ibn Hishâm, Op.Cit, p.43.
[5] Helmi Mahroos Ismael, al-Sahrq
al-cArabî al-Qadîm, 1997, Mousasat Shabab al-Jami'ah, Egypt, p. 210 - 211.
[6] Bernard Lewis,
The Middle East: 2000 Years Of History From The Rise Of Christianity To The Present
Day, 1996 (Second Impression),
Phoenix: London, p.45
[7]
Ibn Hishâm, Op.Cit, p.53.
[8] Bernard Lewis,
Op.Cit, p.42
[9] Nabîh Aqel, Op.Cit, p.271
[10] Ibn Kathîr, Qisas
al-Anbiya, 1985 (Third Edition),
Dar al-Jeel, Beruit.
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