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Isa The Light And The Fragrance Of God
Copyright © 1996 by M. Anderson.
All rights reserved.
Jesus The Light And The Fragrance Of God
by M. Anderson
PART 4: STRIKE THE TRUTH IN THE CROSS
Chapter 3: Lifted Up In Spite Of Death
THE CHRIST AND AL-HUSEIN
Truth has its own special ring, no matter under what circumstances or in
which generation it is told. That ring of truth can be detected in accounts
of both the crucifixion of Jesus and the murder of al-Husein, the grandson
of the prophet of Islam.
In both tragedies greed played its part: Judas betrayed Jesus for thirty
pieces of silver, and the army leader who killed al-Husein was promised the
governorship of a great province.
Both Jesus and al-Husein felt thirsty as a result of being wounded,
bleeding and exhausted. Al-Husein requested a drink of water from his
enemies and was denied.[1] Jesus expressed His thirst, and was offered
vinegar, which He refused. Their experience was real.
Both were robbed of their clothing: The Roman soldiers took the garments of
Jesus while He was still on the cross. Enemies of al-Husein took his
turban, his sword, his shirt, his shoes, and the last man came, but
finding nothing, cut off his finger and took his ring.[2]
Both al-Husein and Jesus prayed for their enemies. Al-Husein prayed for
vengeance against them, asking God to withhold the rain, to give them years
of starvation like those of Joseph, and to drink a bitter cup.[3] Jesus
prayed to God for forgiveness for his murderers, on the grounds that they
did not know what they were doing.
Dr. Mahmoud Ayoub, in his book Redemptive Suffering in Islam noted another
similarity. He said of the suffering of Jesus:
In the garden of Gethsemane, Christ prayed that the bitter cup of death be
taken away from him, but finally he committed his life and will to the
divine will. In this submission to the will of God, he transcended the
human plane of existence, and thus attained victory on the cross as a
divine hero. He was abandoned by God and men, as we see in his cry, 'My
God, why hast thou forsaken me?' Yet he declared before his crucifixion
that if he had so willed, God would have sent legions of angels to defend
him. Thus the cross became his throne of glory and the wreath of thorns his
crown of victory. These elements of the archetypical life and struggle of
the divine hero, as exemplified in Christ, instructively parallel the life
and struggle of al-Husein.[4]
Dr. Ayoub saw Jesus' death on the cross and the death of al-Husein as
transcending the human plane of existence of humility and defeat to the
level of submission to the divine will, which is victory and triumph. So
the cross, the tool of execution, becomes the throne of glory; and the
crown of thorns, which was intended as mocking, became the crown of
victory.
But it is important to note that in the above statement of Dr. Ayoub, the
validity of the parallel between the two lives can only be true if Jesus
suffered and died. If Jesus did not suffer and die on the cross, there is
no parallel, for myth cannot parallel history. If the crucifixion of Jesus
is but a myth or mere story, it cannot be the archetype of the suffering
and death of al-Husein. Only reality can parallel reality, only truth can
parallel truth. As Dr. Ayoub wrote, al-Husein spent his last moments 'in a
Gethsemane of sorrow and tears.'[5]
The similarities even include the claim that, like Jesus, al-Husein was not
murdered, 'for some have stressed unequivocally that al-Husein did not die,
but was taken up to heaven, and that his likeness was assumed by someone
else.'[6]
This claim is flatly denied by those who know the historically transmitted
reports:
The sixth Imam was asked what he thought of those who held such a view. He
answered, 'These are liars ... for they have given the lie to the prophet
and the Imams after him, in saying that al-Husein was not killed ... These
are not of my community (Shi'ah) and I am innocent of them. This group has
been regarded by the Twelve Shi'is as extremists (ghulat) and delegators
(mufawwidah)'. The sixth Imam concludes his statement by cursing the ghulat
and mufawwidah.
Moreover, it is related on the authority of the twelfth Imam, as
transmitted by his first representative (wakil): 'As for those who claim
that al-Husein was not killed, this is infidelity (kufr) lying and straying
away (dalalah) from the right.'[7]
Just as the crucifixion of Jesus was denied by claiming that a double took
his likeness, al-Husein's murder was also denied with the same claim. And
just as new versions of what was supposed to have happened to Jesus were
forged, so it was with the murder of al-Husein.
Here is one version of how it happened: It is attributed to one of the
sixth Imam's most important disciples, al-Mufaddal, who said:
Tell me, O master, concerning al-Husein, how it seemed to men that they
killed him as it seemed before to them concerning the killing of Jesus?'
Al-Sadiq said: 'This is one of the secrets of God which He made hidden from
men, making it known only to the faithful of His servants, the elect ones.
For the Imam enters into bodies as he chooses and leaves them as he
chooses, as one would remove his cloak or shirt, without any fear or doubt.
As they gathered to slay al-Husein, he left his body and God lifted him up
to Him. Thus God prevented the enemies from catching him ...[8]
The Imam continued: 'When the soldiers surrounded al-Husein, he called
Gabriel, Mikhael, and Israfil, and they answered, "Here we are (labbayk), O
our Lord.' He ordered them, 'Lift me up in the air.' Thus they lifted
al-Husein and his servant Gabriel...' The sixth Imam turned to his disciple
and said, 'O Mufaddal, you have been granted much good, for you have
received esoteric knowledge. Beware that you keep the secret of God hidden.
Disclose it only to a sincere friend (wali). For if you were to disclose it
to our enemies, you would help in the destruction of your own soul." As
al-Mufaddal showed his surprise that such wonderful things should be hidden
from men, the sixth Imam concluded, 'Yes, for God wished to be worshipped
in secret.'[9]
It is interesting to note that this statement is attributed to the sixth
Imam, who categorically condemned those who claimed that a substitute was
killed instead of al-Husein, calling them liars, infidels and accursed.
But forgers used the same method, for that is what they made Barnabas say,
in the fabricated work, 'The Gospel of Barnabas'. Just as the fabricators
hid behind the authority of the sixth Imam to propagate the lie that
al-Husein was not murdered, so they also hid behind the authority of
Barnabas to propagate the lie that Jesus was not crucified.
Another explanation attributed to the sixth Imam sheds light on the reason
for the introduction of such fabrications:
Said al-Mufaddal, 'I said to My master, al-Sadiq, tell me about the killing
of the Imam and how that could happen'. He smiled, showing his teeth, and
said, 'Perhaps you mean the killing of al-Husein and the death of
Zakariyyah [Zechariah] and Yehia [John the Baptist] and Isa'... [al-Sadiq
continued], 'These are, O Mufaddal, the pure ones of God, His friends
(awliya') and elect. You (people) imagine them to have tasted the pain of
the sharp steel at the hands of their enemies. But this was only outwardly
(fi al-zahir) so that the proof, or contention (hujjah) of God may be
established against them. But that they could be actually killed, that
cannot be, as God preserves His friends and elect.'[10]
This is the underlying principle that gave rise to the theory of
substitution not only for Jesus and al-Husein, but also of 'Ali (one of
Mohammad's companions).
This is the seed of the theory, the first step away from the truth about
the death of Jesus, al-Husein and 'Ali. What happened to Jesus and
al-Husein and 'Ali was explained as only external - for the eyes of the
onlookers, whereas in reality their blood was not shed.
And why? Because they are the pure ones of God, the friends of God and His
elect, whom God must preserve. 'That they could actually be killed, that
cannot be' Otherwise, their enemies would have triumphed.
However al-Husein was killed:
He was killed gradually, first by randomly shot arrows, then by wounds
inflicted on him by stones and the swords of those passing by, who did not
wish to kill him... He was left naked on the sand...alone, unable to move,
he sat on the ground and uttered a pathetic cry for help:
Is there no one to defend the women of the Apostle of Allah? Is there not
one professing the oneness of Allah (muwahhid), who would fear God for our
sake? Is there no one to come to our help, seeking thereby that which Allah
has in store as a reward for those who would aid us?[11]
One can argue theologically that the murder of al-Husein was impossible,
and that his lifting up was the only possible alternative. For how could
any Muslim lift a finger to harm the grandson of the prophet? To have the
majority of the Muslims doing nothing to help the grandson of the prophet
is unthinkable, let alone to actually harm him. To read that his supporters
were only eighteen in number is unbelievable. To read that the head of the
grandson of the prophet was mocked by a man who confessed the prophethood
of Muhammad is illogical, etc., etc. But then we come through theological
reasoning to a position that is contrary to the historical facts. We can
turn the historical facts upside down. And all the historical after-effects
of his death would have been based on nothing. The multitude of books
written on his death would become a farce.
What emerges out of all this is that just as the efforts to corrupt the
truth concerning the death of al-Husein could not change the fact that he
was murdered by decapitation in the desert of Karbala'a, so the
fabrications surrounding the death of Jesus can never change the facts of
His death by crucifixion and His bodily resurrection after three days.
MY GOD MY GOD
It has been argued that Jesus' final struggle in the Garden of Gethsemane
revealed a tragic flaw in his heroic character.[12] Razi, commenting on
the patience of the prophet Job and answering the objection, 'Does not
complaining impair the virtue of being patient?', quotes Sifyan Ibn
'Ayinah, who said,
He who complains to God the Most High cannot be considered
fearful, if in his complaint he was accepting the will of
God, for enjoying suffering is not a condition of patience.
Did you not hear the words of Jacob [Q. 12:86], 'I make
complaint of my anguish and sorrow unto God'?[13]
In the light of this, Jesus' struggle was not a flaw in his heroic
character but an insight into the perfect process of submission, in which
the perfect servant cleaves to God despite the opposing forces. This
struggle is like that of the process by which a seed unfolds to upturn the
rock that obstructs its growth. A life without difficulties and hence
without struggle does not constitute heroism, but rather a life which
unfolds in the face of opposing forces that unfolds upwardly to God in
perfect submission The sword of death could not sever the relationship
between Jesus and God. Jesus emerged victorious and the sword of death was
left blunt.
Some have concluded that the cry on the cross, 'My God, My God, why hast
Thou forsaken Me' could not have been that of Jesus, because it portrays
him as lacking submission to the will of God. However, closer examination
shows that only Jesus could utter such a statement on the cross.
The moment of death reveals man's true nature, especially if he is a
religious man. It is a universal phenomenon that many religious men just
before this moment of death seek the forgiveness of their sins. This was
the experience of Muhammad:
'Aisha the wife of the prophet reported: 'I heard the prophet and listened
to him before his death, while he was lying supported on his back, and he
was saying, "O Allah ! Forgive me and bestow Your mercy on me, and let me
meet the highest (Companion of the Hereafter)."'[14]
This is a revealing comment on the relationship between the dying man and
God. The request for forgiveness reveals the dying one as the transgressor;
it points to the party that did not keep the covenant.
However, the words of Jesus on the cross contain no confession of sin, and
no request for forgiveness. If the victim on the cross was not Jesus,
chances are that the substitute would have sought forgiveness. But the
absence of such a statement from the cross is in line with what we know of
the sinless character of Jesus.
The more sensitive the dying person is, or the more pious, the more
remorseful he will be in confessing his sins - even those the average
person would not consider worth mentioning. Those little sins cause the
same remorse as big ones.
The character of the Christ belonged to the transcendent level, and the
whiter the page the clearer the stain, even one sin in Jesus would have
shown up starkly. But what do we find being uttered in those final moments?
Not one confession, not one mark against himself, but a statement
concerning God. We do not have any reference about what Jesus did to God,
as with the rest of mankind, but a statement concerning what God did to
Jesus!
To understand the implications of this statement we must understand
something about the war between Satan and God. The suffering of the prophet
Job serves as an illustration.
Ayoub [Job] was an upright man and Satan wanted to prove
that Job's praise and gratitude to God were not because
Ayoub feared God, but because God had given Ayoub many
blessings. Satan argued that if all these blessings were
taken away from Ayoub he would blaspheme and deny God.
God then gave Satan permission to destroy all that Ayoub
had. Satan destroyed his camels by fire, but Ayoub
remained steadfast in his faith. Then he killed all his
sheep, but Ayoub did not deny God. Then he destroyed
his oxen and the rest of his belongings, but Ayoub
remained faithful.
Satan went back and requested that he should have power
over Ayoub's children, for that would be more effective
than destroying his belongings. Having been given
permission by God, Satan killed Ayoub's children.
Distraught, Ayoub placed dust over his head, then sought
forgiveness from God, but he did not blaspheme God.
Satan finally went back and said, 'To Ayoub the loss of
belongings and children is a little thing, but if you
give me power over his body, I can assure you that if he
himself suffers in his own body he will blaspheme You.'
So God granted him his request, and Satan afflicted Ayoub
in his body. Ayoub's flesh and skin began to fall off him,
and though he complained to God yet he did not blaspheme.[15]
Ayoub's ultimate test was not in his belongings, neither in his children,
but in the closest thing to his soul - in that which directly affected
him. His acid test of loyalty to God was extremely personal. Indeed, it is
the afflictions that touch us personally that reveal our inner nature.
Now Satan comes to afflict every person in the particular area that
constitutes his greatest advantage. Satan attacks where it will cause the
most damage. He comes to rob the person of whatever represents the
cornerstone, or the most vital aspect of his being.
When Satan came to afflict Jesus, which area would he attack? Which area
represented the most vital aspect of Jesus' being, which if attacked would
sustain the greatest damage? To Ayoub this area was his own body, but to
Jesus it was his union with God. For this was what set Jesus apart from all
others. This union was his joy, his riches, his belonging. It was the
strength of his inner being. It was upon this area that any attack should
be concentrated - the area of ultimate testing. Those who are of the dust
are tested in their flesh, but He who is of God had to be tested in His
union with God.
To attack the union of Jesus with God is to touch Jesus himself, just as
Ayoub was attacked in his body. It is the most personal, direct and
devastating assault on Jesus himself.
This abandonment by God experienced by Jesus was the ultimate form of
suffering. This explains the struggle in the Garden of Gethsemane. It was
not due to fear of death but it was the struggle of one who eternally
experienced one-ness with God, yet in time was to experience the
abandonment of God.
Jesus on the cross experienced the scorching heat of spiritual desert, the
absence of the Divine, which is Hell. This was the most bitter cup of all.
Yet it is here we hear the words 'My God, My God'. Jesus, although forsaken
by God, and afflicted with the ultimate affliction, takes the confession of
God, His God to this spiritual barrenness, to hell. When Adam surrendered
his will to the enemy of God, he was implying that Satan is right and God
is wrong (God forbid), and in effect he was denying that God is God - at
least for the duration of his disobedience. But if God is not God at all
times, He cannot be God at all. So while Adam denied God in the paradise,
the Christ confessed God in hell. The confession that Adam denied in the
presence of God in paradise, Jesus upheld in spite of the abandonment of
God. That confession of God in spite of Hell, to the last drop of blood on
the cross, is the ultimate victory.
Finally Jesus' statement on the cross was not a question directed to God in
the hope of receiving an answer, but a statement expressing his current
spiritual experience.[16]
THE TRUTH WAS STRUCK
But why was Jesus hated by the Jews? Why was He condemned to death on the
cross? Why did the Jews plot to kill the man who healed their sick, opened
the eyes of the blind, He even raised some of the dead? Traditional Muslim
scholars never paid serious attention to that point.
However, the author of al-Insan al-kamel (i.e. The Perfect Man) gives the
clue as to the reason why the Jews wanted to kill Jesus when he wrote 'the
extra thing that Jesus brought, apart from what is in the Torah is that He
revealed the secret of Lordship and Power.'[17]. Then he stated the
implication of this: 'For the revealing of the secret of Lordship is
blasphemy'[18]
It is this charge of blasphemy that the Jews used to crucify Jesus.
And that is also why al-Hallaj[19] was killed. For the Hallaj, being a man,
made a statement that was considered to be blasphemous. His most famous
words are, 'Ma fil-jubbati el'la-Allah', that is, 'There is nothing in the
Jubba [his garment] except Allah'. Another such statement was made in his
reply to one of his opponents al-Shibli, in the mosque of al-Mansur, when
he said, 'Anal-haqq', that is 'I am [God]', so proclaiming that he had no
other 'I' than God.[20] He also said: 'The important thing is to proceed
seven times around the ka'ba of one's heart.' His opponents therefore
accused him of being a rebel, who wished to destroy the ka'ba of Mecca.[21]
As a result he was sentenced to death by the pronounced formula: 'It is
lawful to shed your blood.' Al-Hallaj was handed over to the chief of
police, and in the evening in his cell, he exhorted himself to face
martyrdom and foresaw his glorious resurrection. Next day, before an
enormous crowd, al-Hallaj, with a crown on his head, was beaten, half
killed, and exposed still alive on a gibbet. Those who had signed for his
condemnation cried out: 'Let his blood be on our heads'. He was then
decapitated, his body sprinkled with oil and burned, and the ashes thrown
into the Tigris from the top of a minaret on the 27, March 922.[22]
It is not myth that has this quality of repeating itself, but history. The
similarities between the death of al-Hallaj and the death of Jesus are
quite remarkable. al-Hallaj was accused of claiming divinity as was Jesus.
It is interesting to note that in all the traditions mentioned by Tabari,
the reason why the Jews sought to kill Jesus is not mentioned at all. Some
have suggested it was because Jesus proclaimed that God is love. But that
is not controversial enough to be a reason to kill him. Jesus had no
political ambitions, He was the poorest of the poor, His companions were
not high-class or considered among the powerful, but rather were weak and
poor. The reason the Jews sought to kill Him was because he claimed
divinity.
But there is another factor in Jesus' death that repeated itself, in the
death of al-Hallaj. The opponents of al-Hallaj, to insure his complete
removal, had to have a political component in their accusations. So they
accused him of being 'an agitator and a rebel who was a threat to the order
of the community.'[23]
The same accusation was levelled against Jesus 900 years before the death
of al-Hallaj. Even the accusation that al-Hallaj wished to destroy the
ka'ba had its counterpart in the accusation against Jesus, that He said he
would destroy the Temple and then rebuild it three days.
However, all who claim Divinity died and remained dead, except Jesus. He
rose again, to prove that He is the Eternal, Uncreated Word of God.
It is reported that al-Hallaj said to his disciples as he was being taken
to be executed: 'Do not be upset over this: in thirty days I will return to
you.'[24] Others reported him as predicting to those present that he would
return in forty days.[25] Nevertheless, after his death and cremation, his
ashes were thrown into the Tigris River. And as a result of the promise of
his return, 'his disciples still waited there on the bank of the Tigris, in
the hope that he would arise from it.'[26]
Where are the followers of al-Hallaj today? They do not exist,[27] for the
claims of al-Hallaj were not substantiated; they did not come true. He
promised his disciples he would return, but he remained dead. Jesus, on the
other hand spoke of His resurrection, and showed Himself to His followers.
If Jesus did not rise from the dead, there would be as few followers of
Jesus as there are followers of al-Hallaj. However, the faith of the
followers of Jesus is based on his resurrection from the dead.
The Qur'an said: 'God strikes both the true and the false. As for the scum,
it vanishes as jetsam, and what profits men abides in the earth...'[28]
The truth has been struck, and has proved stronger than death. For by the
death of Jesus on the cross, the truth was struck. Jesus' claim to divinity
was subjected to the acid test, and the truth became victorious. Jesus rose
again. His claims to divinity were not blasphemous, they were defended and
attested to by God.
Jesus was killed on the cross because He claimed to be the Fragrance of
God, the Radiance of God, the Power of God, the Love of God, and the
perfect Servant of God. All these are summed up in the title 'the Son of
God'. Because of this claim He was crucified, and everyone who rejects this
claim of Jesus is siding with the Jews who crucified Jesus. Every one who
passes a verdict on Jesus is actually passing a verdict on himself.
God's verdict on Jesus, demonstrated by his rising from the dead, was God's
seal of approval on the truth of Jesus' claims.
Ikhwan as-Safa (a religious group who regarded themselves as Muslims but
were open to other points of views as well) believed in the actual
crucifixion of Jesus. This is what they believed:
When God desired to cause Jesus to die and to lift Him up to Himself, his
disciples met with Him in Jerusalem in one room, and He said to them, 'I am
going to my to Father and your Father, and before leaving my human nature
(nasuti), I give you a commandment, and exact a promise from you, and make
a covenant with you, so he who accepts My commandment and fulfils My
covenant, will be with Me tomorrow. And he who does not accept My
commandment, does not belong to Me and I do not belong to him.'
They said, 'What is the commandment?'
He said, 'Go to the kings of the end of the earth and tell them what I have
taught you, and call them to what I called you to, and do not be afraid of
them, for when I leave My human nature, I will stand in the air in the
right hand side of My Father and your Father, and I will be with you
wherever you go, confirming you with victory and help by My Father's leave!
Go to them and call them gently, and heal them, and command that which is
good, and rebuke that which is evil, until you get killed, crucified or
expelled from that country'.
They said to Him, 'How can we know the truthfulness of what you command
us?' He answered, 'I am the first to do just that!' He went out to the
people next day, and began to call them, and to preach to them, until He
was taken to the king of the Jews, who commanded that He should be
crucified. So they crucified His human nature. And they nailed His hands to
the wood of the cross, and He remained crucified from the forenoon to the
afternoon. He asked for water but they gave Him vinegar instead. His body
was pierced by a spear, and was buried in the place of the cross [or the
wood]. Forty persons were assigned to guard His grave. All this took place
in the presence of His disciples and acquaintances, so when they saw all
that, they were convinced and knew that he did not command them to do
anything different from what he himself did. Then, after three days, they
met with Him in the place where He promised to see them. They saw the sign
that was between them and Him, and the news spread in Israel that Jesus was
not killed, and they opened the grave but the human nature (nasut) was not
found! ... And those disciples who accepted His commandment scattered in
the different parts of the world ... calling people to the teaching of the
Christ, so that most of them were killed, and the message of the Christ
spread east and west by the works of the disciples of Jesus.[29]
Elsewhere we read in Ikhwan al-Safa the following:
The Christ consented to God's decree and was led to the destined fate, and
yielded His human nature to the Jews most willingly, accepting God's
decree, which is His foreknowledge of all that existed before its
existence.[30]
The Christ, then, died and rose again from the dead. The fact of his death
on the cross still shines after almost 2000 years, for 'lies written in ink
can never disguise facts written in blood', no matter how pious, even
well-intended these lies may be.
Jesus, then, is the only Person who died and was resurrected and lifted up
to be with God, never to die again. Idris was lifted up to a high place,
but he did not die. Jesus was lifted up in spite of death. This is God's
Word, who prevailed over death. It is in the resurrection of Jesus that we
see God's declaration of who Jesus was and is.
APPENDIX
DEEDAT AND THE CRUCIFIXION
In this appendix to part four we will comment on Mr. Deedat's approach to
the death and resurrection of Jesus. (Mr. Deedat, from South Africa, is a
follower of the Ahmadiyya which is considered a cult by traditional
Muslims.).
(For a complete commentary on Deedat's approach read John Gilchrist's books
The Crucifixion Of Christ: A Fact Not Fiction, and What Was The Sign Of
Jonah? available from MERCSA, PO Box 342, Mondeor 2110, South Africa.)
Traditional Muslims and in particular Muslim scholars disagree with
Deedat on many points. The Muslim Digest devoted an entire
issue attacking and exposing Deedat as a threat both to Muslims and
non-Muslims. The Muslim Digest had this to say about Mr. Deedat:
This issue of the MUSLIM DIGEST representing the months of July, August,
September and October is almost entirely devoted in the public interest -
both Muslim and non-Muslim through an indictment against Mr. Ahmad Deedat
of the Islamic Propagation Centre, for his various detrimental and
dangerous activities, both within and outside of the Muslim community.. he
has caused much pain within the Muslim community itself... concerned
Muslims, therefore called upon the MUSLIM DIGEST to indict him and to make
not only Mr. Deedat realise his various dangerous WEAKNESSES, but through
such an indictment, also make responsible members of the Muslim community
realise the seriousness of such WEAKNESSES on Deedat's part.[31] (emphasis
in the original)
Mr. Deedat in his approach, has revived the swoon theory, a theory
propagated around 1800, which says that Jesus did not die on the cross, but
merely fainted, and was buried alive, and subsequently revived in the cool
air of the tomb.
DEEDAT AND THE HADITH
Deedat bases his claims on what are called the ambiguous verses of the
Qur'an. He says that the Qur'anic verse 4:157 is one of these ambiguous
verses. Instead of explaining the ambiguous verses in the light of the
clear verses that teach that Jesus did die, Deedat advances the swoon
theory.
His theory, however, should be tested using a principle established by the
early Muslims who were careful to transmit only the authentic Hadith.
One of the tests used by Muslims to determine the authenticity of a Hadith
was this: 'If the Hadith reporter claims to transmit of the knowledgeable
that which the knowledgeable did not know, his report cannot be
accepted.'[32] In other words, if those who are closer to the historical
events, and consequently in the know, said nothing about a particular
event, then how can those who came later in history, who are less
knowledgeable, venture to assert their knowledge of that event?
The application of this test is particularly valuable in historical
investigations. If the prophet of Islam (who spoke on a multitude of
subjects, some far less important than our topic) did not speak of the
swoon theory, and the companions did not mention it, what authority has
'Gulam Ahmad (the prophet of the Ahmadiyya sect) who lived more than
eighteen hundred years after the event, to advance the swoon theory? Was he
more knowledgable than the prophet of Islam and his companions? Not only is
there no mention in the Hadith of a swoon theory, there is not even one
fabricated Hadith to that effect.
This is a case of the less knowledgable reporting that which the
knowledgable did not report. Therefore, using the above rule of common
sense, Deedat's theory must be rejected.
Indeed Muslim scholarship vehemently disagrees with Mr. Deedat on this
topic. Here is an extract from a letter written to Mr. Deedat published in
the Muslim Digest:
Your thesis, forceful as it may be, is an anti-thesis of the view held by
the majority of the Muslims, in particular the Ahl-Hadith followers. Their
view is opposed to your thesis. They believe that Jesus was never put on
the cross and was 'taken up'. Your arguments very ably axed by the
Ahl-Hadith's fundamental belief about Jesus. They were present in the hall.
Amazing as it may be, your every blow to their fundamental belief made them
clap with joy! So much so that they even shouted 'Allah-o-Akbar,' not
knowing that their own fundamental belief was systematically and logically
being elimenated! As they clapped and cheered I remembered the Qur'anic
verse: 'Deaf, Dumb, Blind' (Q. 2:18).[33]
These are strong words about Mr. Deedat and his deaf, dumb, blind cheering
audience. We can see that neither Ahl-al-Hadith 'who were present in the
hall' nor the story tellers mentioned anything about the swoon theory. From
a Muslim point of view Deedat's theory must be rejected.
DEEDAT AND THE QUR'AN
Deedat does not mention in his book what happened to Jesus after he was
revived. Did Jesus later die and was He then buried in Kashmir, as the
Ahmadiyya sect teaches? This is unlikely because it would be in
contradiction to the teaching of mainstream Islam that says Jesus was
lifted up alive to be with God (Q. 3:55 & 4:157).
So if we give Deedat the benefit of the doubt we would assume that he is a
good Muslim and hence he believes that Jesus was resuscitated by his
friends, and after crawling from the tomb was lifted up alive and stationed
in the place of honour near God. Yet according to this belief, God barely
managed to keep Jesus alive, this is the same Jesus who raised others from
the dead, according to the Qur'an!
What a pathetic picture Deedat paints of the Almighty God! Even the theory
of substitution does more justice to the character of God than the swoon
theory, for in the substitution theory the Jews could not harm Jesus.
However, according to the swoon theory the Jews could have inflicted all
the humiliation they desired upon God's anointed. As a result, to the
outside world the Jews are victorious, and God and His anointed are the
losers. If God was going to lift Jesus up, just as there is no reason for a
substitute, there is no need to have Jesus humiliated on the cross.
The picture Mr. Deedat paints of Jesus is as pathetic and offensive as the
one he painted of God, and once again Deedat's pictures differ from the
picture (of Jesus this time) depicted in the Qur'an.
According to the Qur'an, Jesus all His life was confirmed and fortified by
the Holy Spirit, and was later lifted up to be with God. According to the
Qur'an Jesus was the one who knew the unseen, healed the sick, opened the
eyes of the blind and raised the dead. In contrast, Deedat's picture of
Jesus is an insult to the spirit and intention of the Qur'an.
Jesus is portrayed by Mr. Deedat as being so afraid of being killed by the
Jews that He disguised himself as a gardener, and when He appeared to Mary
Magdalene, He was so weak and in such agony that He said to her 'Do not
touch me!' Mr. Deedat would have us believe that this one who disguised
himself and hid from the Jews in fear, was later lifted up to the glories
of heaven near the throne of God Almighty Himself.
Mr. Deedat infers that God was unable to protect Him from the Jews, that the
only place God could protect Jesus was in heaven. As if God were saying to
Jesus 'Be careful, because if the Jews catch and kill you they will spoil
the divine plan. I can lift you up against all physical laws, but I cannot
protect you from the Jews.' This is the ultimate conclusion of Deedat's
theory, and what a blasphemy it is!
THE DEATH BLOW
Strauss, a relentless critic of the Christian faith wrote:
It is evident that this view [the swoon theory] of the resurrection of
Jesus, apart from the difficulties which it involves, does not solve the
problem which is here under consideration - the origin, that is of the
Christian church by faith in the miraculous resurrection of a Messiah.
It is impossible that a being who had been stolen half dead out of the
sepulchre, who crept about weak and ill wanting medical treatment, who
required bandaging, strengthening, and indulgence, and who still at last
yielded to his sufferings, could have given the disciples the impression
that he was a conqueror over death and the grave, the prince of life, an
impression which lay at the bottom of their future ministry.[34]
There is no smoke without fire: an injured, weak and disillusioned Jesus
could not have inspired or motivated the petrified and dispirited disciples
to stand against the hatred of the Jews and the might of the Roman Empire.
However, a risen Christ who conquered death could. This is the fire that
produced Christianity, the power that changed chicken hearted men into
heroes who regarded it an honour to be mutilated and killed by the Roman
Empire rather than deny their faith in the resurrected Jesus Christ.
1. `Abd al-Wahab al-Kashi, Masra' al-Husayn, Dar al-Zahra', Beirut, 1981, p. 89.
2. Ibid., p. 97.
3. Ibid., p. 31.
4. Mahmoud Ayoub, Redemptive Suffering in Islam, Mouton Publishers, New
York, 1987, p. 121.
5. Ibid.
6. Ibid., p. 135.
7. Ibid.
8. Ibid., pp. 248, 249.
9. Ibid.
10. Ibid., pp. 248, 245, 246.
11. Ibid., pp. 118, 119.
12.. Ibid., p. 121.
13. Razi, at-Tafsir al-Kabir, Commenting on The Qur'an, 21:83.
14. Sahih al-Bukhari, Hilal Yayinlari, Arabic-English version, 2nd. edition
1976, Vol 4, Hadith No. 715.
15. Razi, at-Tafsir al-Kabir, Commenting on The Qur'an, 21:83.
16. Such form of expression is found in the Qur'an, and the Torah, where God
asks a question, not because he will be informed, God forbid, but to
communicate something to us.
17. Gilani, al-Insan al-Kamel, Part 1, p. 69.
18. Ibid.
19. He is Abu 'L-Mughith al-Husayn b. Mansur b. Mahamma al-Baydawi, Arabic
speaking mystic theologian (244-309/857-922).
20. The Encyclopaedia of Islam, new edition, Leiden E.J. Brill, London
Luzac & co., 1971, vol.III, pp. 99-102.
21. The Encyclopaedia of Islam, new edition, Leiden E.J. Brill, London
Luzac & co., 1971, vol.III, p. 101.
22. Ibid.
23. Ibid., p. 102.
24. Massignon, The Passion of al-Hallaj, translated from french by Herbert
Mason, 1982, Vol.I, p. 597.
25. Ibid.
26. Ibid., p. 571.
27. The Encyclopaedia of Islam, new edition, Leiden E.J. Brill, London
Luzac&co., 1971, vol.III, p. 103.
28. The Qur'an, 13:17
29. Ikhwan al-Safa, Dar Beirut lel-Teba'a wal-Nashr, Beirut, 1957, Vol IV,
pp. 30-32.
30. Ibid., p. 74.
31. THE MUSLIM DIGEST, Durban, South Africa, 1986, p. 2.
32. Sobhi as-Saleh, `Ulum al-Hadith wa-Mustalahoh, Dar al-'Elm lel-Malayeen,
1984, p. 126.
33. THE MUSLIM DIGEST, Durban, South Africa, 1986, p. 35.
34. James Orr, The Resurrection of Jesus, Hodder and Stoughton, London,
1909, p. 43.
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