Narrated 'Abdullah bin 'Abbas:
Abu Sufyan bin Harb informed me that Heraclius had sent a messenger to
him while he had been accompanying a caravan from Quraish. They were
merchants doing business in Sham (Syria, Palestine, Lebanon and Jordan),
at the time when Allah's Apostle had truce with Abu Sufyan and Quraish
infidels. So Abu Sufyan and his companions went to Heraclius at Ilya
(Jerusalem). Heraclius called them in the court and he had all the
senior Roman dignitaries around him. He called for his translator who,
translating Heraclius's question said to them, "Who amongst you is
closely related to that man who claims to be a Prophet?" Abu Sufyan
replied, "I am the nearest relative to him (amongst the group)."
Heraclius said, "Bring him (Abu Sufyan) close to me and make his
companions stand behind him." Abu Sufyan added, Heraclius told his
translator to tell my companions that he wanted to put some questions
to me regarding that man (The Prophet) and that if I told a lie they
(my companions) should contradict me." Abu Sufyan added, "By Allah!
Had I not been afraid of my companions labeling me a liar, I would not
have spoken the truth about the Prophet. The first question he asked
me about him was:
'What is his family status amongst you?'
I replied, 'He belongs to a good (noble) family amongst us.'
Heraclius further asked, 'Has anybody amongst you ever claimed
the same (i.e. to be a Prophet) before him?'
I replied, 'No.'
He said, 'Was anybody amongst his ancestors a king?'
I replied, 'No.'
Heraclius asked, 'Do the nobles or the poor follow him?'
I replied, 'It is the poor who follow him.'
He said, 'Are his followers increasing decreasing (day by day)?'
I replied, 'They are increasing.'
He then asked, 'Does anybody amongst those who embrace his religion
become displeased and renounce the religion afterwards?'
I replied, 'No.'
Heraclius said, 'Have you ever accused him of telling lies before
his claim (to be a Prophet)?'
I replied, 'No. '
Heraclius said, 'Does he break his promises?'
I replied, 'No. We are at truce with him but we do not know what he
will do in it.' I could not find opportunity to say anything against
him except that.
Heraclius asked, 'Have you ever had a war with him?'
I replied, 'Yes.'
Then he said, 'What was the outcome of the battles?'
I replied, 'Sometimes he was victorious and sometimes we.'
Heraclius said, 'What does he order you to do?'
I said, 'He tells us to worship Allah and Allah alone and not to
worship anything along with Him, and to renounce all that our ancestors
had said. He orders us to pray, to speak the truth, to be chaste and to
keep good relations with our Kith and kin.'
Heraclius asked the translator to convey to me the following, I
asked you about his family and your reply was that he belonged to a
very noble family. In fact all the Apostles come from noble families
amongst their respective peoples. I questioned you whether anybody
else amongst you claimed such a thing, your reply was in the negative.
If the answer had been in the affirmative, I would have thought that
this man was following the previous man's statement. Then I asked you
whether anyone of his ancestors was a king. Your reply was in the
negative, and if it had been in the affirmative, I would have thought
that this man wanted to take back his ancestral kingdom.
I further asked whether he was ever accused of telling lies before
he said what he said, and your reply was in the negative. So I wondered
how a person who does not tell a lie about others could ever tell a lie
about Allah. I, then asked you whether the rich people followed him or
the poor. You replied that it was the poor who followed him. And in
fact all the Apostle have been followed by this very class of people.
Then I asked you whether his followers were increasing or decreasing.
You replied that they were increasing, and in fact this is the way of
true faith, till it is complete in all respects. I further asked you
whether there was anybody, who, after embracing his religion, became
displeased and discarded his religion. Your reply was in the negative,
and in fact this is (the sign of) true faith, when its delight enters
the hearts and mixes with them completely. I asked you whether he had
ever betrayed. You replied in the negative and likewise the Apostles
never betray. Then I asked you what he ordered you to do. You replied
that he ordered you to worship Allah and Allah alone and not to
worship any thing along with Him and forbade you to worship idols and
ordered you to pray, to speak the truth and to be chaste. If what you
have said is true, he will very soon occupy this place underneath my
feet and I knew it (from the scriptures) that he was going to appear
but I did not know that he would be from you, and if I could reach
him definitely, I would go immediately to meet him and if I were with
him, I would certainly wash his feet.' Heraclius then asked for the
letter addressed by Allah's Apostle which was delivered by Dihya to
the Governor of Busra, who forwarded it to Heraclius to read. The
contents of the letter were as follows: "In the name of Allah the
Beneficent, the Merciful (This letter is) from Muhammad the slave of
Allah and His Apostle to Heraclius the ruler of Byzantine. Peace be
upon him, who follows the right path. Furthermore I invite you to
Islam, and if you become a Muslim you will be safe, and Allah will
double your reward, and if you reject this invitation of Islam you
will be committing a sin by misguiding your Arisiyin (peasants). (And
I recite to you Allah's Statement:)
'O people of the scripture! Come to a word common to you and us
that we worship none but Allah and that we associate nothing in
worship with Him, and that none of us shall take others as Lords
beside Allah. Then, if they turn away, say: Bear witness that we
are Muslims (those who have surrendered to Allah).'
(Âl 'Imran 3:64).
Abu Sufyan then added, "When Heraclius had finished his speech
and had read the letter, there was a great hue and cry in the Royal
Court. So we were turned out of the court. I told my companions that
the question of Ibn-Abi-Kabsha) (the Prophet Muhammad) has become so
prominent that even the King of Bani Al-Asfar (Byzantine) is afraid
of him. Then I started to become sure that he (the Prophet) would be
the conqueror in the near future till I embraced Islam (i.e. Allah
guided me to it)."
The sub narrator adds, "Ibn An-Natur was the Governor of llya'
(Jerusalem) and Heraclius was the head of the Christians of Sham. Ibn
An-Natur narrates that once while Heraclius was visiting ilya'
(Jerusalem), he got up in the morning with a sad mood. Some of his
priests asked him why he was in that mood? Heraclius was a foreteller
and an astrologer. He replied, 'At night when I looked at the stars,
I saw that the leader of those who practice circumcision had appeared
(become the conqueror). Who are they who practice circumcision?' The
people replied, 'Except the Jews nobody practices circumcision, so you
should not be afraid of them (Jews).
'Just Issue orders to kill every Jew present in the country.'
While they were discussing it, a messenger sent by the king of
Ghassan to convey the news of Allah's Apostle to Heraclius was
brought in. Having heard the news, he (Heraclius) ordered the people
to go and see whether the messenger of Ghassan was circumcised. The
people, after seeing him, told Heraclius that he was circumcised.
Heraclius then asked him about the Arabs. The messenger replied,
'Arabs also practice circumcision.'
(After hearing that) Heraclius remarked that sovereignty of the
'Arabs had appeared. Heraclius then wrote a letter to his friend in
Rome who was as good as Heraclius in knowledge. Heraclius then left
for Homs (a town in Syria) and stayed there till he received the
reply of his letter from his friend who agreed with him in his
opinion about the emergence of the Prophet and the fact that he was
a Prophet. On that Heraclius invited all the heads of the Byzantines
to assemble in his palace at Homs. When they assembled, he ordered
that all the doors of his palace be closed. Then he came out and
said, 'O Byzantines! If success is your desire and if you seek right
guidance and want your empire to remain then give a pledge of
allegiance to this Prophet (i.e. embrace Islam).'
(On hearing the views of Heraclius) the people ran towards the
gates of the palace like onagers but found the doors closed. Heraclius
realized their hatred towards Islam and when he lost the hope of their
embracing Islam, he ordered that they should be brought back in
audience.
(When they returned) he said, 'What already said was just to test
the strength of your conviction and I have seen it.' The people
prostrated before him and became pleased with him, and this was the
end of Heraclius's story (in connection with his faith).
(Sahih Bukhari, vol.1, book 1, no. 6)
- Noble birth.
The hadith tells us:
Heraclius asked the translator to convey to me the following, I
asked you about his family and your reply was that he belonged to a
very noble family.
In fact all the Apostles come from noble families
amongst their respective peoples.
How does one define noble?
Was Noah of a noble family? Was Abraham?
We really have no such knowledge.
Now, of course, not all Arabs are of noble descent (otherwise that
question is totally useless),
but perhaps due to the high social status of the Quraish (due to
their custodial role of the Ka'aba),
Muhammad was regarded as of a noble family.
Yet we know that Jesus came from a poor family and Joseph too,
and Jesus worked as a carpenter before His ministry.
Moses and Aaron were descendents of slaves in Egypt (descendents
of Jacob about 400 years later).
Also, we know that David was descended from an incestuous
relationship between Judah and his daughter-in-law, Tamar.
The genealogy of Jesus in
Matthew 1:1-17
listed exactly four women, an extremely unusual phenomenon in Jewish
genealogy: Tamar (v. 3), Rahab (v. 5), Ruth (v. 5)
and Bathsheba (v. 6, indirectly as Uriah's wife). Tamar had an
incestuous relationship with Judah; Rahab was a foreigner and
a prostitute; Ruth was a
Moabitess forbidden to enter into the assembly of God,
and Bathsheba and David had adultery.
Such unglamorous ancestry! Such gossip-inviting ancestry!
Should Heraclius disqualify David, Solomon and Jesus?
- No one else among them claimed prophethood
Heraclius said:
I questioned you whether anybody
else amongst you claimed such a thing, your reply was in the negative.
If the answer had been in the affirmative, I would have thought that
this man was following the previous man's statement.
Now of course, Heraclius, according to this account,
must be quite ignorant of his own religion.
Was not Jesus' relative, John the Baptist, also ministering
slightly earlier than Jesus. So, does that disqualify Jesus?
How should Heraclius deal with the Biblical prophets, many of whom
are contemporaries?
Clearly, this line of argument is also specious.
- No ancestor was a king.
Heraclius said:
Then I asked you
whether anyone of his ancestors was a king. Your reply was in the
negative, and if it had been in the affirmative, I would have thought
that this man wanted to take back his ancestral kingdom.
Again, we find that David and Solomon were kings (and a number of
their descendents), and in fact, the
Jews were looking for the restoration of this Davidic Kingdom
under the Messiah. And Jesus' human ancestry was from David. So,
should Heraclius disqualify Jesus?
On the other hand, Muhammad's great grandfather was the custodian
of the Ka'aba, and so although Muhammad's ancestors may not have
kings, his family was a powerful and influential one, although by
the time it reach Muhammad's time, he was not. Yet, when faced
with opposition from other Meccans, his uncle Abu Talib was
influential enough to protect Muhammad.
Note: Now, we should understand that, at most, these first three
questions can only establish if Muhammad was sincere (more or
less), but play no part really in prophethood, because we find
that previous prophets contradict these attributes. Unless one
denies these previous prophets' prophethood, these cannot be
determining factors.
- Not a liar.
Heraclius said:
I further asked whether he was ever accused of telling lies before
he said what he said, and your reply was in the negative. So I wondered
how a person who does not tell a lie about others could ever tell a lie
about Allah.
Now, this is of course reasonable, but very dangerous. Almost
everyone that is pious (of whatever religion) is sincere and very
often very honest about their faith. Yet, these different honest
people held to conflicting views of God. Surely, not all of them
are correct. At best, we can only say that they believed that to
be true, not necessarily the truth.
Only the external evidence of God Himself can
authenticate them. In fact, a person can be lying about God but he
himself is unaware of it.
In fact, at the end of the Job's (Ayub's) severe trial,
God asked:
Then the LORD answered Job out of the storm. He said: "Who is this
that darkens my counsel with words without knowledge? Brace yourself
like a man; I will question you, and you shall answer me.
(Job 38:1-3)
One would disqualify a habitual liar, but what about an occasional
one?
Interestingly, both the Bible and Muslim traditions recorded that
Abraham had lied. Yet, this did not disqualify Abraham from being
a prophet.
Sahih Bukhari records for us:
Narrated Abu Huraira:
Abraham did not tell a lie except on three occasion. Twice for
the Sake of Allah when he said, "I am sick," and he said,
"(I have not done this but) the big idol has done it." The
(third was) that while Abraham and Sarah (his wife) were going
(on a journey) they passed by (the territory of) a tyrant.
Someone said to the tyrant, "This man (i.e. Abraham) is
accompanied by a very charming lady." So, he sent for Abraham
and asked him about Sarah saying, "Who is this lady?" Abraham
said, "She is my sister." Abraham went to Sarah and said, "O
Sarah! There are no believers on the surface of the earth except
you and I. This man asked me about you and I have told him that
you are my sister, so don't contradict my statement." The tyrant
then called Sarah and when she went to him, he tried to take hold
of her with his hand, but (his hand got stiff and) he was
confounded. He asked Sarah. "Pray to Allah for me, and I shall
not harm you." So Sarah asked Allah to cure him and he got cured.
He tried to take hold of her for the second time, but (his hand
got as stiff as or stiffer than before and) was more confounded.
He again requested Sarah, "Pray to Allah for me, and I will not
harm you." Sarah asked Allah again and he became alright. He then
called one of his guards (who had brought her) and said, "You
have not brought me a human being but have brought me a devil."
The tyrant then gave Hajar as a girl-servant to Sarah. Sarah came
back (to Abraham) while he was praying. Abraham, gesturing with
his hand, asked, "What has happened?" She replied, "Allah has
spoiled the evil plot of the infidel (or immoral person) and gave
me Hajar for service." (Abu Huraira then addressed his listeners
saying, "That (Hajar) was your mother, O Bani Ma-is-Sama (i.e. the
Arabs, the descendants of Ishmael, Hajar's son)."
(
Sahih Bukhari, vol. 4, book 55, no. 578,
also
no. 577 and
vol. 7, book 62, no. 21)
The second occasion mentioned in this hadith is the apocryphal
story of Abraham breaking the idols and then lying about it when confronted.
More details here. This is not mentioned in the Bible.
The last occasion was mentioned in the Bible in
Genesis 20
with some differences
[we will not discuss the differences here].
The hadith was unable to name the "tyrant", but the Bible says
that it was the king of Gerar, Abimelech. Interestingly, Isaac
committed the same mistake (like father, like son?)
with regards his wife Rebecca before
Abimelech, King of the Philistines
(Genesis 26:1-31).
Now, given that the Bible recorded these, should Heraclius
disqualify Abraham and Isaac under this criterion? Should Abraham
be disqualified under Muslim traditions?
Therefore, this criterion is flawed, even though it is important.
No doubt, we should dismiss a habitual liar, but even a liar can be
used of God to be his messenger, as we saw in Abraham and Isaac
[The Muslim argument that prophets are sinless falls
flat on these two examples. The argument also that prophets do not
sin after being called to be prophets is also not true, since
Isaac was already a prophet according to Islam when he was born.
(as-Saffat 37:112).].
In fact, many people fit into the
profile of an occasional liar. This criterion is not at fault, but
humans are. And all humans are sinners.
- Followers are poor.
Heraclius said:
I, then asked you whether the rich people followed him or
the poor. You replied that it was the poor who followed him. And in
fact all the Apostle have been followed by this very class of people.
This is actually reasonable, but again we find that it is not
always true. Job, Abraham and Lot were rich people, and Abraham,
Issac, Jacob dealt with Kings. What kind of
followers did they have?
Even Jesus had rich followers (like Joseph of Arimathea).
But of course, a prophet's message must
appeal to the under-privileged.
- Increasing or decreasing.
Heraclius said:
Then I asked you whether his followers were increasing or decreasing.
You replied that they were increasing, and in fact this is the way of
true faith, till it is complete in all respects.
This is again reasonable. Yet when the number of followers of
Jesus was swelling, He acted to make sure that only true believers
followed him. We find that Jesus said difficult words to his followers
so that many of them turned from following him after that
(cf. John 6:53-66).
What we learned is that numbers of so-called followers
is not an issue, only true disciples.
In fact, how many prophets in the Bible can we count that
had many followers? Even in the Qur'an most prophets seem not to
have found a large following.
Man may be interested in numbers, but God looks at the heart.
We note that many religions are
increasing in number, simply because of the population growth.
The number of Christians, Muslims, Hindus
are all increasing. Even the number
of Mormons, Jehovah Witnesses, the Ahmadis, the Nation of Islam,
etc, are increasing. Clearly, it is
just not possible to use this to test the truthfulness of a
religion. In fact, Jesus tells us that numbers don't count:
"Enter through the narrow gate. For wide is the gate and broad is
the road that leads to destruction, and many enter through it.
But small is the gate and narrow the road that leads to life,
and only a few find it.
(Matthew
7:13-14).
Further reading: Sura 61:14 and Church History
- No apostates.
I further asked you
whether there was anybody, who, after embracing his religion, became
displeased and discarded his religion. Your reply was in the negative,
and in fact this is (the sign of) true faith, when its delight enters
the hearts and mixes with them completely.
In another hadith, we are told that the last sentence was:
When its delight enters the heart and
mixes with them completely, nobody can be displeased with it."
(Sahih Bukhari, vol. 1, book 2, no. 48)
This is false!
There was a very highly regarded hanif (by Muslims)
that became a Muslim, and later gave up Islam.
He was Abu Sufyan's son-in-law, and his apostasy occurred
long before Abu Sufyan's alleged meeting with Heraclius!
In the year 615 A.D., a group of Muslims were persecuted and some
of them went to the Christian King of Ethiopia (Abyssinia) for
refuge. There they were
accepted and allowed to live. A man, who was regarded as a
hanif
before he become a Muslim was among them.
This man was
Ubaidullah b. Jash,
and his wife was Umm Habiba, daughter of Abu Sufyan.
Thus Ubaidullah was Abu Sufyan's son-in-law.
The Muslim chronicler, Ibn Ishaq, tells us:
"`Ubaydullah went on searching until Islam came; then he
migrated with the Muslims to Abyssinia taking with him his
wife who was a Muslim, Umm Habiba,
d. Abu Sufyan. When he
arrived there he adopted Christianity, parted from Islam,
and died a Christian in Abyssinia.
Muhammad b. Ja`far b. al-Zubayr told me that when he had become
a Christian `Ubaydullah as he passed the prophet's companions
who were there used to say: `We see clearly, but your eyes are
only half open,' i.e. `We see, but you are only trying to see
and cannot see yet.' He used the word sa'sa' because when a
puppy tries to open its eyes to see, it only half sees. The
other faqqaha means to open the eyes. After his death the
apostle married his widow Umm Habiba."
(Ibn Ishaq, The Life of Muhammad, tr. Guillaume, 1967, p. 99)
A group of refugees returned around AD 628.
Ubaidullah become a Christian not long after arriving at Abyssinia.
Not only that, we see that Ubaidullah used to debate with the
Muslims on religion.
Now, Abu Sufyan was the father-in-law of Ubaidullah, so thirteen
years later, at the meeting with Heraclius,
Abu Sufyan should have known that his son-in-law had
become an apostate of Islam. Even if he did not know, the facts
given to Heraclius were false.
There were also other instances of apostasy from Islam during
Muhammad's lifetime.
Narrated Abu Burda:
....
The Prophet then sent Mu'adh bin Jabal after him and when Mu'adh
reached him, he spread out a cushion for him and requested him to
get down (and sit on the cushion). Behold: There was a fettered man
beside Abu Muisa. Mu'adh asked, "Who is this (man)?" Abu Muisa
said, "He was a Jew and became a Muslim and then reverted back to
Judaism." Then Abu Muisa requested Mu'adh to sit down but Mu'adh
said, "I will not sit down till he has been killed. This is the
judgment of Allah and His Apostle (for such cases) and repeated it
thrice. Then Abu Musa ordered that the man be killed, and he was
killed. Abu Musa added, "Then we discussed the night prayers and
one of us said, 'I pray and sleep, and I hope that Allah will
reward me for my sleep as well as for my prayers.'"
(Sahih Bukhari vol. 9, book 84, no. 58,
also
Sahih Bukhari, vol. 5, book 59, no. 632)
Narrated Anas:
There was a Christian who embraced Islam and read Surat-al-Baqara
and Âl 'Imran, and he used to write (the revelations) for the
Prophet. Later on he returned to Christianity again and he used to
say: "Muhammad knows nothing but what I have written for him." Then
Allah caused him to die, and the people buried him, but in the morning
they saw that the earth had thrown his body out. They said, "This is
the act of Muhammad and his companions. They dug the grave of our
companion and took his body out of it because he had run away from
them." They again dug the grave deeply for him, but in the morning
they again saw that the earth had thrown his body out. They said,
"This is an act of Muhammad and his companions. They dug the grave of
our companion and threw his body outside it, for he had run away from
them." They dug the grave for him as deep as they could, but in the
morning they again saw that the earth had thrown his body out. So
they believed that what had befallen him was not done by human beings
and had to leave him thrown (on the ground).
(Sahih Bukhari, vol. 4, book 56, no. 814)
[This
man was said to have lived many years after Muhamamd's death]
Even Muhammad knew that there will be apostates.
Narrated Ibn Abbas:
. . .
Then it will be said, '(O Muhammad) These people never
stopped to apostate since you left them."
(Sahih
Bukhari, vol. 6, book 60, no. 264)
Narrated Ibn Al-Musaiyab:
The companions of the Prophet said, "Some men from my companions
will come to my Lake-Fount and they will be driven away from it,
and I will say, 'O Lord, my companions!' It will be said, 'You have
no knowledge of what they innovated after you left: they turned
apostate as renegades (reverted from Islam).
(Sahih Bukhari, vol. 8, book 76, no. 586.
also no. 585, and no. 587
)
Shari'a law also prescribes
punishment for the apostate
(see here for a more detailed
discussion).
There wouldn't be a need for such a punishment if there
is no prospect of apostasy.
Narrated 'Abdullah:
Allah's Apostle said, "The blood of a Muslim who confesses that
none has the right to be worshiped but Allah and that I am His
Apostle, cannot be shed except in three cases: In Qisas for
murder, a married person who commits illegal sexual intercourse
and the one who reverts from Islam (apostate) and leaves the
Muslims."
(Sahih Bukhari, vol. 9, book 83, no. 17)
Narrated Abu Qilaba:
Once 'Umar bin 'Abdul 'Aziz sat on his throne in the courtyard of
his house so that the people might gather before him. Then he
admitted them and (when they came in), he said, "What do you think
of Al-Qasama?" They said, "We say that it is lawful to depend on
Al-Qasama in Qisas, as the previous Muslim Caliphs carried out
Qisas depending on it." Then he said to me, "O Abu Qilaba! What do
you say about it?" He let me appear before the people and I said,
"O Chief of the Believers! You have the chiefs of the army staff
and the nobles of the Arabs. If fifty of them testified that a
married man had committed illegal sexual intercourse in Damascus but
they had not seen him (doing so), would you stone him?" He said,
"No." I said, "If fifty of them testified that a man had committed
theft in Hums, would you cut off his hand though they did not see
him?" He replied, "No." I said, "By Allah, Allah's Apostle never
killed anyone except in one of the following three situations: (1)
A person who killed somebody unjustly, was killed (in Qisas,) (2)
a married person who committed illegal sexual intercourse and (3)
a man who fought against Allah and His Apostle and deserted Islam
and became an apostate." Then the people said, "Didn't Anas bin
Malik narrate that Allah's Apostle cut off the hands of the thieves,
branded their eyes and then, threw them in the sun?" I said, "I
shall tell you the narration of Anas. Anas said: "Eight persons
from the tribe of 'Ukl came to Allah's Apostle and gave the Pledge
of allegiance for Islam (became Muslim). The climate of the place
(Medina) did not suit them, so they became sick and complained about
that to Allah's Apostle. He said (to them ), "Won't you go out with
the shepherd of our camels and drink of the camels' milk and urine
(as medicine)?" They said, "Yes." So they went out and drank the
camels' milk and urine, and after they became healthy, they killed
the shepherd of Allah's Apostle and took away all the camels. This
news reached Allah's Apostle, so he sent (men) to follow their
traces and they were captured and brought (to the Prophet). He then
ordered to cut their hands and feet, and their eyes were branded
with heated pieces of iron, and then he threw them in the sun till
they died." I said, "What can be worse than what those people did?
They deserted Islam, committed murder and theft."
(Sahih Bukhari, vol. 9, book 83, no. 37)
And do we not remember that after Muhamamd's death, many Arab
Muslims apostatize so that it took Abu Bakr more than a year to quell it
all?
Thus Heraclius was given a false fact: at that meeting, there
already were apostates, and in later days of Muhammad as well, and
there were many dissatisfied Muslims that reneged
immediately after Muhamamd's death when they had the chance
[doesn't that tell us something?],
and Muhammad expected it and made laws to punish them.
Thus, Islam did not have "(the sign of) true faith, when its
delight enters the hearts and mixes with them completely,
nobody can be displeased with it" since
there really were apostates.
Since the premise if false, the conclusion is of no consequence.
[Prior to my reading this, I did not think to
doubt Abu Sufyan's testimony. After reading this more carefully, I
now have a lot more doubt about this guy.]
- Never betrayed.
Heraclius said:
I asked you whether he had
ever betrayed. You replied in the negative and likewise the Apostles
never betray.
For this, one should read about Muhammad and the Jewish tribe
Bani Qurayza: The
Bani Quraytha Jews, Traitors or Betrayed? and
What really happened to the Banu Qurayza?.
- His order.
The last point is not really a reasoning, but rather more like an
acclamation of faith:
Then I asked you what he ordered you to do. You replied
that he ordered you to worship Allah and Allah alone and not to
worship any thing along with Him and forbade you to worship idols and
ordered you to pray, to speak the truth and to be chaste. If what you
have said is true, he will very soon occupy this place underneath my
feet and I knew it (from the scriptures) that he was going to appear
but I did not know that he would be from you, and if I could reach
him definitely, I would go immediately to meet him and if I were with
him, I would certainly wash his feet.
It should be noted that the phrase "from the scriptures" is an
interpolation as given in parenthesis
and not in the text of the tradition.
Since no scripture verse was brought forward, we cannot say that
he meant scripture. In fact, in the next section, we will find
that the tradition says that Heraclius was a diviner, so it is
more likely that he meant that he knew through divination.
His attitude certainly does not accord with what we know of
Heraclius later on, when he fought against the Muslims (see the
next section).
In summary, we looked at each of Heraclius' reasons in determining
prophethood:
All that Heraclius maybe managed to establish is Muhammad's sincerity
but not his prophethood. His reasons were contradicted by previous
prophets. But again, not only do we see flaws in his reasoning, but
also that he was not given the complete picture, and even untruths.
We have also reviewed the Muslim tradition on Heraclius' meeting with Abu
Sufyan and also historical facts about Heraclius.
We scrutinized Heraclius' line of questioning of Abu Sufyan as he tried to
understand Muhammad and Islam.
Clearly, he was a man who sought to understand before making
conclusions.
We found that his questions do not adequately reveal if a person is
really a true prophet or not, although they can be used to partially
assess a person's sincerity.
Most importantly,
certain false information were given to Heraclius.
If Heraclius were to know the truth of the matter, his conclusions
might have been rather different.
In summary, would I trust Heraclius with my home (if I were living in
his Empire)? Probably. Would I expect him to rule well? Most likely.
Would I expect to trust him to lead me in spiritual matters? No, thank
you.