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The Content of the Quran
Chapter Thirteen
The Content of
the Quran
In this part, we are going to discuss two
issues, the mythical episodes and the religious teachings. We
will be brief, otherwise we would need to write another book to
deal with the strange, unacceptable things contained in the
Quran which no sensible person believes. Our main aim is to
remove this deceptive veil from the face of the Quran.
First: Some Names Of Quranic
Chapters And Mythical Episodes
We have already mentioned that there are
some chapters in the Quran whose names have no meaning.
These chapters are: 20, 36, 38, 50, and 68. No one knows what
Taha, Yasin, Sad, Qaf, or Nun mean. Mostly, they are mere letters
and not words as to say, for instance, Chapter N, Chapter S,
Chapter Y. Would that mean anything in English?
All the Muslim scholars have indicated that
they do not know the meanings of the names of these chapters. God
only knows (refer to the Jalalan). On the other hand, the
meanings of the names of the rest of the chapters are understood
and familiar although there are very strange names linked to a
mythical episode which is meaningless, as we will see.
It should be noted that some of the
Quranic chapters carry the names of insects or animals such
as the chapters of the Cow, Ants, Spider, Elephant, Bee and the
Cattle. We do not find in the Bible, for example, books with such
names as "The Book of the Lion" or "The Bat"
or "The Buffalo" or "The Book of the
Serpent". We also find in the Quran some chapters
entitled, "Chapter of the Afternoon", or "The
Dawn", or "The Night", or "Morning".
Moreover, there are strange stories which
were the reasons behind these given names. Also, we are going to
relate some stories recorded in the Quran which are only
fit to be narrated by grandparents to children as part of
folklore.
1. The Chapter Of The Ants
(27:17-19)
In this chapter, the Quran says:
"And there were gathered together
unto Solomon his armies of the Jinn and humankind and of the
birds and they were set in the battle order. Till, when they
reached the valley of the Ants, an ant exclaimed, O
Ants! Enter your dwellings lest Solomon and his armies crush
you. And Solomon smiled, laughing at her
speech."
This is the reason why this chapter is
entitled, "The Ant". All scholars (without exception)
present this episode as it is recorded. They acknowledge that it
is supernatural, yet it truly happened with Solomon, the Wise
(refer to Baydawi, page 501; the Jalalan, p. 316,317).
When Qatada, one of Muhammads
companions, came to Iraq, he was surrounded by some Muslims who
inquired of him about this episode. The Imam Abu Hanifa who was
still a lad, asked him, "Was the ant of Solomon male or
female?" He answered, "It was a female." This is
what Zamakh-shari has recorded. He even mentioned that the ant
which warned its friends was called Tahina and Solomon heard her
when he was still three miles away.
In order to have a fuller picture of the
story, let us read the rest of the episode and see what happened
to Solomon (chapter 27:20-22).
"And Solomon sought among the
birds and said, How is it that I see not the hoopoe, or
is he among the absent? I verily will punish him with hard
punishment or I verily will slay him or he verily shall give
me a plain excuse. But he was not long in coming and he
(the hoopoe) said to Solomon, I have found out a thing
that you apprehended not and I come unto you from Sheba with
sure tidings."
So Solomon sent the hoopoe to the Queen of
Sheba and her people to preach to them about the oneness of God.
Muslim commentators (without exception) confirm this
interpretation. Of course, the Bible records for us that the
Queen of Sheba came to visit Solomon. After she observed the
wisdom of Solomon and of his servants, she believed in the God of
Israel, but there is no mention of a military battle between
Solomons soldiers of vultures and Jinn and the kingdom of
ants, or of the hoopoe, the teacher and the preacher!
2. The Chapter Of The Prophets
(21:81, 82)
"And unto Solomon we subdued the
wind in its raging. It set by his command toward the land
which we had blessed. And of the evil ones (demons) subdued
we unto him some who dived for pearls for him and did other
works."
All scholars agree on the interpretations
of these verses. God utilized the winds to obey Solomons
orders. Thus, they some- times blew smoothly and sometimes they
raged like a strong storm whenever he wanted them to carry him
fast for a long distance. God even utilized the demons to dive
deep in the sea to bring forth treasures of precious stones. They
were sometimes ordered to construct cities and palaces, and to
invent some progressive handicrafts. These same words are
recorded also in another place in the Quran. The expounders
presented the same interpretation for these verses (refer to
Baydawi, page 435; Jalalan, page 274; Zamakh-shari in The
Kash-shaf, part 3, page 130).
Of course, the Azhar scholars along with
the Saudi scholars agree with the former scholars concerning the
subject of the ants, the hoopoe, and the exploitation of the wind
and demons to serve Solomon. For example, Sheikh Sharawi
(the most famous preacher in the Islamic world today) asserts
that this story undoubtedly happened and that God subjected the
Jinn to Solomon in order to refurbish the earth and for the
benefit of the people (refer to the "Legal Opinions",
page 422).
3. The Chapter Of The Jinn Or
Jan (17:1)
Since we have mentioned the Jinn, it is
inevitable that we allude to the chapter of the Jinn.
"Say, O Muhammad, it is revealed
unto me that a company of the Jinn gave ear and they said,
Lo, it is a marvelous Quran."
All Muslim scholars, in the context of
their exposition of those verses, say that God foretold this
matter to Muhammad which was invisible to the eyes of Muhammad.
As Muhammad was praying the morning prayer and reading the
Quran beside a palm tree near Mecca, a party of Jinn (who
were Satans soldiers) heard him. When they returned to
their own people, they told them, "We have heard eloquent,
well-styled words, and we have to repent and believe and never
worship Satan again or be subservient to him." They were
between three and ten persons.
The Baydawi says that the Jinn are beings
which are made mostly of fire or wind, or else they are mere
spirits or human souls which departed from their bodies (refer to
Baydawi, page 763; Jalalan, page 488; Zamakh-shari, part 4, page
623). The Bukhari assures us that they were demons who listened
to the Quran being recited by Muhammad during the dawn
prayer while he was on his way to Suq Ukadh. They were
moved by what they heard, and recanted. This is the testimony of
ibn Abbas himself (refer to the Sahih of the Bukhari, part
6, page 200).
This same story of the Jinn listening to
Muhammad and repenting is found in the chapter of the Ahqaf. Both
Kishk and Sheikh Sharawi agree with the former scholars and
do not question their interpretation (refer to the "Legal
Opinions" by Sheikh Kishk, part 1, page 20).
4. Chapter Of The Elephant
This chapter could have been called the
chapter of the gravel or the vultures, but it was called the
chapter of the Elephant simply because the vultures carried the
gravel and threw it at the elephants and their riders who marched
towards Mecca to invade the Kaba. We read in the
Quran the following:
"Hast thou not seen how your lord
dealt with the owners of the elephants? Did he not bring
their stratagem to naught, and send against them swarms of
flying creatures which pelted them with stones of baked
clay."
All Muslim scholars affirm that this event
took place many years before the proclamation of Muhammads
prophethood. Some said maybe during the time of his birth. What
really happened was that Abraha, king of Yemen, constructed a
church in Sana. An Arab man came and defiled the church and
did some damage to it. Abraha decided to demolish the Kaba
which was a sacred site for the heathen people of Quraysh and the
site of their annual pilgrimage before Islam.
Abraha headed the invasion operation along
with his generals who rode on elephants. It was said that there
was a huge, strong elephant called Mahmud. God sent black or
green birds to attack the invading army. Each bird carried one
piece of gravel in his beak and two in his claws and hit the
owners of the elephants. They claim that each piece of gravel
penetrated the head of a man and exited from the backside (anus -
lower opening of the rectum). On each piece of gravel was written
the name of the victim. Abraha suffered a violent death (refer to
the Zamakh-shari in the Kash-shaf, part 4, page 797; Baydawi,
page 811;Jalalan, page 519; also the "Prophets
Biography" by ibn Hisham, part 1, pages 38 and 39).
The Quran does not tell us why God
sent these vultures to assist the heathens against the
Christians. The Quran was content to record the episode of
this battle between the vultures and the elephants. Thus, a
chapter in the Quran was inspired under the title of
Chapter of the Elephant.
5. The Chapter Of The Cave
Why was it called by this strange name? The
answer is simple. Some lads (accompanied by their dog) entered a
cave and slept for three hundred and nine years! The story is
recorded in the Quran in seventeen verses (18:9-25).
The Quran clearly relates this story
and all Muslim scholars agree on its interpretation. They said
that God forbade the sun to hurt them, and he used to turn them
from one side to the other so the ground would not erode their
flesh. Their dog whose name was Qatmir, laid down stretching its
legs. The lads who entered the cave were seven. Their names were
Yamlikha, Makshalmina, Mashilmina, Martush, Darnush, Shadhinush,
along with a shepherd They were from the city of Ephesus. (This
information is related to us by the Baydawi, page 390; Jalalan,
pp. 244, 245, and the Zamakh-shari in the "Kash-shaf",
part 2, page 703.) Contemporary scholars verify this information.
Before we conclude the episode of the
chapter of the Cave, it is appropriate to allude to the story of
Moses, the Whale, the ship and the lad. This strange story is
also recorded in the chapter of the cave (l8:60-82) The gist of
the story as it is stated in the Quran is that God
disagreed with Moses who claimed that he was the most
knowledgeable person. He told him that he has a servant
"whose name is Khadr who is more knowledgeable than you.
Take with you a whale and go to the confluence of the two seas.
When the whale departs from you, you will find him (the
man)."
Moses did so and found the man. Moses told
him, "I will be submissive and obedient to you." The
Khadr took Moses and sailed in a ship which belonged to some poor
people who toiled hard in the sea. This man, Khadr, caused the
boat to spring a leak big enough to sink it. When Moses
complained, the Khadr told him, "We had agreed that you
would never complain. I will show you in the end that I am more
knowledgeable than you are." Moses kept silence.
Then they met a young boy who was playing
with his friends. The Khadr seized him and violently killed him
by smashing his head against the wall, the Zamakh-shari remarked.
Moses objected to that, then he apologized to the Khadr. Later,
the Khadr started to explain to Moses the implication of his
behavior. He said, "I sank the ship because there was a
wicked king who was intending to confiscate it by force. And I
killed the lad because he was going to cause his righteous
parents much hardship by his atheism."
This strange story is meaningless, because
this poor lad was guilty of no crime that he should be brutally
killed by a man of whom God boasted. God said to Moses that the
Khadr was "my righteous servant and he is more knowledgeable
than you". Did he foretell the future and know that this lad
was going to create a lot of problems for his devout parents?
Would this be a justification for his death or should it be a
cause for his guidance and repentance?
This baffling issue made some people ask
ibn Abbas, "Is it permissible for the Khadr to do that
to the lad?" He answered that the apostle of God himself
said, "Yes." He also added that this is lawful to
anyone if he can foretell what this lad is going to do in the
future (refer to Baydawi, page 396; Bukhari, part 6, pp. 111,
112; Jalalan, page 250; and the Zamakh-shari in the
"Kash-shaf", part 2, page 736). The Bukhari insists
that the Khadr seized the lad and pulled his head off, separating
it from his body.
We have already discussed the story of
Alexander the Great who had located the suns setting place
which is recorded in this same chapter (the Cave).
6. The Chapter Of The Cow
In this lengthy chapter, there are at least
four mythical stories recorded. We will briefly examine them as
evidence of the lack of authenticity of the Quran.
A. Jews Transformed Into Apes
God transformed these Jews into apes
because they disobeyed His commandment and went to catch fish on
a Saturday. These Jews inhabited a coastal city (refer to Chapter
2:65). The Quran says:
"And you know of those of you who
broke the Sabbath, how we said unto them, Be apes,
despised and hated!"
The interpretation of the expositors of the
Quran is in full agreement with the content of these verses
(refer to the Baydawi, page 14; Jalalan, pages 10, 11;
Zamakh-shari, part 1, page 286). We also read the same incident
in chapter 7:163-166 and in chapter 5:60 in which these Jews were
transformed into apes and swine.
B. Two Angels Teach People
Magic
This story is among the strangest episodes
recorded in chapter 2. Who would believe that God would send two
angels in order to tempt people to see whether they would be
seduced into learning magic or not? Muslim scholars indicate that
these two angels were called Harut and Marut and the incident
took place in Babylon. They used to warn people not to learn
magic "... because it is ungodly, but if this is your
desire, then we will teach you." Thus, people started to
learn how to cause separation between a husband and wife by
employing magic (refer to the commentary of the Jalalan, page 15;
The Baydawi, page 21; Zamakh-shari in the "Kash-shaf",
part 1, page 301).
Contemporary scholar Sheikh Sharawi
states in his "Legal Opinions" (part 1, page 42) that
this incident of separation between a husband and wife really
happened by the power of magic performed by these two angels.
Sharawi says:
"One of the characteristics of the
Jinn is the ability of transformation. It is possible for a
Jinn to take the image of an ape (and superimpose) himself on
the face of a woman. Thus, her husband would hate her. Also,
Satan can transform himself into a beast (and superimpose)
himself on the face of a husband which would make her turn
against her husband."
C. Should Angels Prostrate
Themselves Before Man?
The Quran says yes, and God Himself
commanded them to do so; therefore, they all prostrate themselves
before man except Satan who refused to obey. We read in the
Quran (2:34),
"And when we said unto the angels,
Prostrate yourselves before Adam, they fell
prostrate, all save Iblis (Satan). He demurred through pride,
and so became a disbeliever."
The reason for all that is an obscure,
meaningless story recorded in chapter 2:30-34:
"And he taught Adam all the names,
then showed them to the angels saying, Inform me of the
names of these if you are truthful. They said, Be
glorified! We have no knowledge saving that which Thou has
taught us. Lo! Thou, only thou, are the Knower, the
wise" (2:3 1 -32).
We wonder why it would be a crime if the
angels did not know the names of the animals. What merit does
Adam have if God secretly taught him these names? Does this
justify Gods command to the angels to prostrate themselves
to Adam? It is well known that the Bible teaches us that such
worship should be only to God.
We do not believe this story and this
dialogue between God and the angels, especially since the
angels words proved to be true and they manifested their
knowledge of the future. Man defiled the earth and shed blood
since the time of Cain, son of Adam, who killed his brother. Adam
himself disobeyed his Lord and did not deserve worship from the
holy angelsno respect or adoration, but only reproach even
though he knew all the names.
D. The Cow And The Dead Man.
This episode is clearly taught in the
Quran (2:67-73). Muslim commentators indicate that a
righteous Israeli old man had a son who was assassinated by his
cousins in order to get his inheritance. They dumped his corpse
at the city gate. No one knew who had killed him. God told Moses,
"Slay a cow and hit the dead man by a part of it (its
tongue, or thigh, or ear) as the scholars say." When Moses
did so, the deceased rose up and told them who had killed him,
then he immediately died again (refer to the commentary of the
Baydawi, pp. 14,15; the "Kash-shaf" by the
Zamakh-shari, part 1, page 289; and the Jalalan, page 11).
Indeed, we do not find this story in the biblical records of the
Old Testament.
7. Chapter Of al-Hujarat (The
Private Apartment)
There is no mythical story in this chapter,
but the reason for naming it is somewhat amusing and does not
entail the need to receive an inspired chapter under this title.
Those who translated the Quran into English indicate that
this name was given to this chapter because of the following
verse:
"Lo those who call you (Muhammad)
from behind the private apartments, most of them have no
sense" (49:4).
Now, what is the interpretation of this
verse? The Baydawi says (page 683),
"What is meant by Private
rooms, is the women of the prophet
Muhammad. It is tantamount to his being in seclusion
with the women and their calling to him from within their
private quarters. Either they came into them (private rooms)
room by room or they (the women) scattered themselves among
these rooms calling for him."
We read the same words in the
"Kash-shaf" of the Zamakh-shari (part 4, page 357),
also in the commentary of the Jalalan (page 435). They said,
"Each one of his women called from
behind (inside) her room in a voice filled with harshness and
estrangement."
These are the statements of the
scholars who interpreted this verse. Does this personal, private,
insignificant matter require that Gabriel inspire a chapter under
the title, "The Private Rooms"; that is, the private
rooms of Muhammads wives?
8. The Chapter Of Yunis
It is sufficient to quote verses 90 and 91
of this chapter. The Pharaoh, while he was sinking in the sea,
said, "I have believed in God," but God did not accept
his repentance, and told him, "Do you say this now because
you are drowning?" The commentators tell us that
Muhammads companions, such as ibn Umar and ibn
Abbas, have said that Muhammad himself told them:
"Gabriel told me, I wish you
had seen me taking mud from the sea to close up
Pharaohs mouth lest he believe and be reached by
Gods mercy (refer to Jalalan, page 179;
Zamakh-shari, part 2, page 368, and others).
Undoubtedly, this story is mythical,
because if Pharaoh intended to believe, God would have accepted
his repentance immediately and there is no need for the angel
Gabriel to hasten to take a handful of sea mud to close
Pharaohs mouth so that he would not make a confession of
faith and be pardoned. God does not send his angels to do such
wicked things.
We believe Muhammads companions and
ibn Abbas who claimed that Muhammad related that to them.
They cannot lie in such matters, especially since Muhammad warned
them that whoever "lies and claims things which I do not do,
or says things which I did not say, will occupy his seat in
hell". We believe the companions in all that they convey to
us on the authority of Muhammad, but we cannot believe
Muhammads claim that Gabriel had told him that he closed
Pharaohs mouth. The one who prevents people from believing
is Satannot an angel of God.
Second: God In The Quran
God in the Quran is not the God of
love, the God of the Christian revelation and the Holy Gospel. It
is as if God (six hundred years after the birth of Christ) has
deteriorated. After He had been full of love and affection, He
has become a relentless, wrathful God. You can search the heart
of this God of Islam, but you will never find the flowing, loving
feelings which were clearly manifest in Jesus Christ.
Let us now probe the most significant
characteristics of God as they are revealed in the Quran.
There us no doubt, the Quranic God differs from the God of
the Gospel. The Gospels God is real while the other is
illusive, non-existent. We have already alluded to Gods
command recorded in the Quran when we discussed human
rights and womens status, non-Muslims classification and
the enslavement of man to his fellow man.
Yet, here we would like to magnify a very
salient concept; that is, the concept of love. The God of the
Quran lacks the element of love. The Quran records
ninety-nine attributes of God which do not include the attribute
of love although among these attributes are some which repeatedly
contain the same inference, but love is not one of them. Indeed,
some of these attributes indicate that God is merciful, yet you
do not find mercy expressed on the pages of the Quran, in
the life of Muhammad or among his companions. If mercy had ever
been practiced in Muhammads life or in the life of his
companions, this would have been the exception and not the rule.
The rule was the application of relentless brutality and
barbarism.
There is no substitute for the word love.
Love is stronger and richer than mercy. We do not say that a
husband bestows mercy on his wife. We say he loves her. Likewise,
we do not say (even when it is fitting to say) that a mother
bestows her mercy on her children, but rather that she loves
them. Love is a word rich with the meanings of sacrifice and
giving. Love is a warm expression elevating human relationships
to the highest summit of healthy growth. The Quran is empty
of this word whether in its relationship to man or in the area of
human relationships.
God (in the Quran) does not liken
himself to a Father who loves His spiritual children, the
believers, as stated in the Gospel, but rather as a fearful
master. People are but mere slaves who must always live in fear
of Him.
Now let us survey some Quranic verses
and vivid samples from the lives of the most devout Muslim
believers.
1. In chapter "The Believers" (:
60), we read the following:
"And those who give that which
they give with hearts afraid because they are about to return
unto their lord."
Muhammad himself spared us the trouble of
interpreting this verse because he himself explained it. In
Baydawi (page 457), Jalalan (page 288), and in the
"Kash-shaf" of the Zamakh-shari (part 3, page 192), we
read:
"Aisha said, O,
apostle of God, is the one who is afraid of God the one who
commits adultery, steals, drinks wine, thus he is afraid of
punishment? Muhammad told her, No, O daughter of
Sedik, he is the one who prays, fasts and gives alms, thus he
is afraid that God may not accept these things from
him."
We wonder where then is the sense of
security and peace of mind. Where is the assurance and the
guarantee concerning eternal life? How can peace fill the
Muslims heart? How can his soul rejoice and his spirit be
filled with joy if he does not know whether God is going to
accept his acts of fasting, praying and his almsgiving or not?
Therefore, all Muslims suffer from fear because whatever they do
of good deeds, their hearts will constantly be subjected to fear,
according to the Quranic text and the interpretation of
Muhammad himself.
We do not find among the chapters of the
Quran and their verses one clear verse which offers a life
of joy. There is no love and joy. Of course, we do not hear
melodies of rejoicing bursting out of the hearts and mouths of
the Muslim worshippers who gather in the mosques, but rather you
see grim faces, especially those who are the most devout and
those who are the most acquainted with the fundamentals of their
religion, the interpretation of the Quranic verses and
Muhammads expositions. The reason is because they are not
sure of what to expect after death. The future of their eternal
life is obscure and their God does not guarantee them anything.
The first person we quote is Abu Bakr Al
Sedik, who said that there is no certainty with God. Abu Bakr
(the first Caliph) is regarded by all Muslims as one of the best
Muslims if not the best. Even Muhammad acknowledged that Abu Bakr
Al Sedik was the closest to him. Therefore, the Muslims elected
him as caliph after the death of Muhammad. Abu Bakr always
believed in Muhammad and in all that he uttered. He used to obey
him blindly. When Muhammad suffered from a sickness which caused
his death, he ordered Abu Bakr to lead the Muslims in prayer.
What did Abu Bakr Al Sedik say about God?
"I swear to God that I do not feel
safe from Gods cunning (deceitfulness) even if one of
my feet is already inside paradise" (refer to the
successors of the Apostle, Khalid Muhammad Khalid, page
114).
What a striking acknowledgment uttered by
Abu Bakr the caliph of the Muslims and the father of Aisha,
wife of Muhammad! "I do not feel safe from Gods
cunning even if one of my feet is already inside paradise".
Maybe God would deceive him and push that foot outside of
paradise because He changed His mind. There is no other meaning
of this statement. This is not surprising, O, Abu Bakr, because
the God of Islam and Muhammad as well as of the Quran, as
you well know, does not bestow on the believer any assurance
concerning eternity. He is not at all the God of the Christian
revelation whom we know and experience, enjoying His
lovewith whom we have a personal relationship based on
spiritual love because He is our heavenly father.
When we ponder the life of both Rabia
al-Adawiyya and Hasan al-Basri who both are renowned among
Muslim circles so that students used to come from all of the
Islamic world to learn from them and to receive instruction, we
find that both of them lived in fear of God. Dr. Suad
Abdul-Razzak says:
"Rabia al-Adawiyya
asked al-Hasan al-Basri and said to him, What does a
scholar say when asked, "If I die and the people are
called in the day of resurrection (to be divided in two
groups), one group to go to paradise and the other to be sent
to hell, in which group will I be?" He said to her,
"This is concealed, and nobody knows what is concealed
except God"" (p. 44).
On page 87, we also read that whenever
death was mentioned in the presence of Rabia
al-Adawiyya, she would shiver and faint. On pages 84 and 85
of the same book, we read:
"Rabia
al-Adawiyyas life bore the stamp of sadness and
fear; and Hasan al-Basri was heading the group of the fearful
devout. Sadness dominated his life. He increasingly (spent
his time) in mourning. He made mourning a norm for all
people. He used to believe that the Quran is the key to
permanent sadness. He was accustomed to saying, O, son
of Adam, I swear to God, if you had read the Quran and
believed in it, your sadness would have been prolonged, and
your fear would have been stronger. You mourning in the world
would have been excessive. The people of Basra said
about him, Every time we see him, he looks as if
calamity has recently befallen him."
We have to remember that al-Hasan al-Basri
received his religious education from the companions (refer to
"Itqan", part 4, page 21l). Those people understood
Islam and they knew that the Quran is the key to abiding
sadness. Whoever reads it and believes it will be subject to
ever-increasing sadness, fear and mourning.
On the other hand, the word Gospel,
which we will discuss later, means "glad tidings" and
"good news" which makes people full of joy, happiness
and abiding peace.
These are living examples drawn from the
lives of Rabea al-Adawiyya, al-Hasan al-Basri and Abu Bakr
Al Sedik who said when resurrection, paradise, and hell were
mentioned in his presence, "I wish I were a tree eaten by an
animal; I wish I had never been born" (refer to Jalalan,
page 45 1). This is the same Abu Bakr who remarked, "I do
not feel safe from Gods cunning."
But, there is more than that about God in
the Quran. God is depicted in the Quran as if He
purposed the destruction of all people. He says, for example,
"I indeed will fill hell with both people and jinn." In
another verse, He indicates:
"And if your lord willed, all who
are in the earth would have believed together" (Yunis:
99).
On the other hand, the Gospel declares
clearly that God does will that all people be saved. God
is not the cause for the eternal damnation of any man. He does
not will that. God forbid! The only reason for mans eternal
damnation is his own rebellious will and his unrepentant heart.
This fact is repeated dozens of times in the Gospel.
This is contrary to the Quran which
indicates that God does not will the salvation of all people. Had
He willed it, then all who inhabited the earth would have
believed in Him. Such a God is not the God whom Jesus Christ
proclaimed to us.
In addition to the above, the Quran
presents God to us a God who plots against man to destroy him. If
you do not believe it, turn with me to the Quran to read a
quotation from the "Chapter of the Isra" ("The
Night Journey") 17:16:
"And when we would destroy a
township, we send commandment to its folk who live a life of
ease and afterwards they commit abomination therein, and so
the word of doom has its effect and we annihilate with
complete annihilation."
The reader should notice that God did not
eradicate the town because it was filled with so much wickedness
that He found himself obliged to destroy it against His will.
Rather the Compassionate, the Merciful God purposed and determined
to annihilate it. Therefore, He laid down a very well planned
plot. He ordered its sumptuous residents to live a licentious
life, thus it becomes subject to damnation. He ordered its
affluent residents to commit debauchery! What a holy order!
Lastly, we say that God has disclosed his
hearts desire when He referred to hell in the chapter
Mariam: 71. He said, "Not one of you but will pass through
it." People asked whether this verse refers to the wicked or
includes all men; and what does the phrase passing through
it mean? In "Itqan" (part 4, page 237), the
Suyuti tells us that Muhammad himself has answered this question
and said:
"There is no righteous or
debaucher who would not enter hell."
We do not understand the reasoning which
causes God to send even the righteous to hell. Then the verse
continues, "But we (God) shall save those who guarded
against evil."
Sheikh Kishk asserts Suyutis claim
that Muhammad said that all people (the righteous and the
debaucher) will "pass through it" or "enter
it" (refer to "Legal Opinions", part 6, page 41).
This is the God of the Quran, my dear reader. He is indeed
a fearful God who cannot be trusted; who wills and plans to
annihilate people to fill hell with them. He is a God with whom
nobody can feel safe, even the most devout person (like Abu Bakr)
lest He does not accept him as Muhammad said. This is the
acknowledgment of many great Muslims who experience this fear in
their relationship with God and according to what they understood
from Muhammad and the Quran.
What a difference between this God and the
God of the Gospel which was said of Him:
"God demonstrates His own love
toward us, in that while we were still sinners, Christ died
for us" (Romans 5:8).
Third: Content of Paradise
Since we have alluded to eternal life, it
is appropriate to examine the image of paradise in the
Quran. What did Muhammad say about Paradise? How it was
depicted in the Quran in clear verses? Paradise in the
Quran is a place full of beautiful women and seducing
virgins, grapes, and pomegranates. Yes, it is a place filled with
fruits, meats, wine and honey for everlasting feasts. Also its
inhabitants wear silk and splendid clothes. This is the picture
of paradise which is presented to us by the Quran,
Muhammad, and most of the former and later Muslim scholars.
It is feasible here to cite one example from
among the dozens of Quranic verses which give us an accurate
description of the Quranic paradise (refer to the following
chapters and verses: 47:15, 87:31-33 [sic, perhaps 78:31-34],
56:35-37,56:22-23, 36:55-56, 55:56, 37:41-49).
Of course, the expounders agree on the
interpretation of these verses. Refer, for instance, to the
Jalalan (page 328), or any other commentary you like. In chapters
68:31-33 and 55:56, we are presented with the houris, who are
assigned to fulfill mens sexual pleasures. These houris are
always virgins. Their sexual relationship with men does not
affect their virginity. Every time men approach them, they find
them always virgins. Their breasts are not hanging down loose.
They are always firm. They do not age beyond thirty-three years
of age. They are white with black, wide, charming eyes. Their
skin is smooth. Women who died old on earth will be re-created
virgins for the enjoyment of men. Read the following
commentariesAl Glalan (p. 328, pp. 451-453, p. 499), Al
Baydawy (pp. 710, 711, 781), Al Zumakhary (part 4, pp. 690,453,
459-462).
This is Muhammad s own description of
Paradise (refer to the commentary of the Baydawi, pp. 710, 711
and 781; the Zamakh-shari in Kash-shaf, part 4, pp.
453, 459-462, and 690; and the Jalalan, pp. 451-453, 499). You
may also refer to any other major commentary because all Muslim
expositors re-iterate the same thing. But as we read chapter
Yasin: 55-56, we encounter some strange and shameful matters:
"Lo those who merit Paradise this
day are happily employed (working) they and their wives, in
pleasant shade, on thrones reclining."
Ibn Abbas himself acknowledged that
their business is to deflower the virgins (refer to
Zamakh-shari, part 4, page 21; Jalalan, page 372, and "Women
of the Paradise" by Muhammad Abu al-Abbas, page 54). This
is the mission of the believers in paradise.
Is it any wonder that many people embrace
Islam seeking to enjoy this imaginary paradise by which Muhammad
deceived the Arabs, thus they entered Gods religion by
groups? Arabs sought this alluring life in the desert. They
missed the fruit, pure water, fresh milk, beautiful white women
whose skin is not browned by the heat of the desert sun. This is
paradise as it is depicted in the Quran.
In his book, "Legal Opinions",
Sheikh Sharawi exposed Islam and Muhammad when he said on
page 36:
"The apostle of God was asked,
Will we have sexual intercourse in paradise? He
said, Yes, I swear by the One who holds my soul in His
hand that it will be a vigorous intercourse, and as soon as
the man departs from her (the houri) she will again become
immaculate and virgin."
On page 148, the Sharawi says:
"The apostle of God, Muhammad,
said, Every morning one hundred virgins will be (the
portion) of each man."
On page 448, he states that:
"The houris in paradise are white
with big eyes."
He also indicates on pp. 265 and 266:
"Her (the houri, the virgin) two
breasts are like the cone; that is, they are not hanging
loose."
On page 191, the Sharawi says that if
a woman got married to more than one man either because her
husband died or she was divorced, she would be given the right in
paradise to choose one of them. Yet a man in paradise has the
right to have dozens of the houris. It is not a secret that the
Lord Christ (to Him be all glory), when He was asked the same
question, said:
"You are mistaken, not knowing the
Scriptures nor the power of God. For in the resurrection they
neither marry nor are given in marriage, but are like angels
of God in heaven" (Matthew 22).
In his "Legal Opinions" (part 6,
page 42), Sheikh Kishk remarks:
But in the case of the houris, they are
a blessed favor from God bestowed on his servants who
sincerely worshipped Him. They are added to the mans
believing women for his enjoyment, as the texts record. But
concerning women, Muhammad said, Any woman who believed
in God and died before she was married, God will marry her to
the best of the devout."
When I singled out both Sheikh
Sharawi and Sheikh Kishk, I did so because of their
reputation as famous scholars whose knowledge in the fundamentals
of Islam is highly recognized and trusted by millions of Muslims
all around the world.
In his famous book, "The Women of The
People of Paradise; their Classifications, and Beauty",
Muhammad Ali Abu al-Abbas (a contemporary Muslim
scholar) wrote about one hundred pages in which he specified
these matters in detail. This book is a current book published in
1987. The author encourages young men to be practicing Muslims in
order to acquire all the available women in paradise, food,
drinks, and clothes. On page 33, he himself says,
"We pray to God that He may grant
us the pleasure of virgin women of paradise because the
virgin has a sweeter mouth, and is more desirable in bed,
than the deflowered woman."
On page 41, he says that Muhammad, the
apostle of God, said:
"Every man of the people of
paradise is given the power of a hundred men for eating,
drinking, intercourse and sexual desire" (The Qurtubi in
his book al-Tadhkira).
He also said that the apostle of God
indicated that:
"Whoever wears silk on earth will
never wear it in eternity; and whoever drinks wine on earth
will never drink it in eternity" (page 40, also
al-Qurtubi in the al-Tadhkira).
The Tirmadhi also mentioned (part 7, page
161 of his book) that the apostle of God said:
"The martyr will be married to
seventy-two wives of the houris. He has the right to
intercede for seventy of his relatives" (page 44).
Muhammad, the apostle of God, was asked
about the meaning of the Qurans words, "good dwellings
in paradise of Eden." Muhammad replied, "The dwellings
are palaces made of pearl. In each palace there are seventy
mansions. In each mansion there are seventy houses. In each house
there is a bed. On each bed there are seventy sheets of different
colors. On each sheet there is a nymph wife (houri) and in each
house there are seventy tables, and on each table there are
seventy kinds of food" (Volume 4, page 537 of "The
Revival of Religious Science"The Ghazali).
These are quotations from Muhammads
sayings and interpretations. No wonder, then, a Muslim wishes to
fight against Christians and Jews (infidels) and die as a martyr
in order to get married to seventy-two women.
In his Sahih (part 4, page 142; part 7, page 47, and part 9,
page 50), the Bukhari records this incident in which Muhammad
related to the Muslims that when he ascended to Paradise on the
back of the Buraq, he saw a beautiful, young girl beside a
palace. When he asked the angel about it, the angel answered,
"The palace and the girl are for Umar ibn
al-Khattab." Muhammad turned away because he remembered
Umars jealousy toward his women. When Muhammad
related this incident to his companions, Umar started to
cry, saying, "Would I feel jealous of you 0, the apostle of
God!" This is Muhammad who deceived his Arab people and
promised them they would be rewarded with houris (refer also to
Sahih of Muslim, volume 5).