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Towards Understanding Islam
THE PROPHETHOOD
OUR earlier discussion brings home the
following points:
1. The right course for man is to live in obedience to God, and for the
observance of such a of obedience knowledge and faith are absolutely essential:
knowledge Of God and His attributes, His likes and dislikes, His Chosen way and
of the Day of Judgment; and unflinching faith in the truth and veracity of this
knowledge: this is Iman
2. Secondly, God has graciously spared man the arduous task of acquiring this
knowledge through his Personal effort alone. He has not put man to this
difficult trail. Instead, He revealed this knowledge to the Prophets chosen from
amongst men, commanding them to convey the Will of God to other human beings and
Show them the right path. This has saved man from formidable misfortunes.
3. Lastly, the duty of the common men and women is to recognize a prophet and,
after ascertaining that one Is the true prophet of God, to have faith in him and
his footsteps. This is the road to salvation. In this chapter we shall discuss
the nature, history, and other aspects of prophethood .
PROPHETHOOD: ITS NATURE AND NECESSITY
You can see that God has most graciously provided man all that he needs in this
universe. Every new-born child arrives in the world endowed with eyes to see,
ears to hear, nose to smell and breathe, hands to touch, feet to walk, and mind
to think and ponder. All those potentialities, powers, and faculties that a man
needs or can need are most carefully provided and marvelously set in his tiny
body. Every minute requirement is foreseen and Provided for. Nothing, which he
needs, is left out.
Similar is the case with the world he lives in. Everything essential for life is
provided here in abundance air, light, heat, et cetera. The child, on opening
his eyes, finds his food in the mother’s breast. Parents love him instinctively
and in their has been Implanted an irresistible urge to look after him, to bring
him up and to sacrifice their all for his welfare. Under the sheltering care of
his system of sustenance the child grows to maturity and in every stage of his
life obtains From nature all that he needs. All the material conditions of
survival and growth are provided for and he finds that the whole universe is at
his service and is serving him on every turn and pass.
Furthermore, man is blessed with all those powers, capacities, and
faculties-physical, mental, and moral -which he requires in his struggle for
life. Here God has made a wonderful disposition. He has not distributed these
gifts to men strictly equally. Their equal distribution would have made men
totally independent of each other and marred the possibilities of mutual care
and co-operation. Thus although mankind as a whole possesses all that is needed,
yet in between men capacities are distributed unequally and sparingly. Some
possess physical strength and prowess, others distinguish them selves for their
mental talents. Some are born with greater aptitude for arts, poetry, and
philosophy, some possess sharpness of tongue, some others military acumen,
commercial intelligence, mathematical keenness, scientific curiosity, literary
observation, philosophic disposition, etc. These special aptitudes make a man
distinct and enable him to grasp even those intricacies which elude the grip of
the common man. These insights, aptitudes. and talents are the gifts of God.
They are incarnated in the nature of those men whom God has destined to be thus
distinguished. They are mostly inborn and cannot be acquired merely be education
and training.
Careful reflection upon this disposition of God’s gifts also reveals that the
talents have been distributed amongst men in a marvelous way. Those capacities
which are essential for the general maintenance of human culture have been
endowed to the average human beings, while those extraordinary talents which are
required only to a limited extent are given only to a small number of people.
The number of soldiers, peasants, artisans, and workers is large; but military
generals, scholars, statesmen, and intellectuals are comparatively fewer.
Similar is the case with all professions, with all the arts and crafts of
culture. The general rule seems to be: higher the capacity and greater the
genius, the lesser the number of people who possess them. Super geniuses, who
leave an indelible mark on human history and whose achievements guide humanity
for ages, are few and far between. Their number is still less.
Here we are faced with another question: Is the fundamental need of human
culture confined to the need of experts and specialists in the fields of law and
politics, science and mathematics, engineering and mechanics, finance and
economics and the like, or does it also need men who may show man the Right
Path-the way to God and salvation? Other experts provide man with the knowledge
of all that is in the world and of the ways and means to use that, but there
must be someone to tell man the purpose of creation and the meaning of life
itself. What man himself is and why has he been created? Who has provided him
with all the powers and resources and why? What are the proper ends of life and
how are they to be achieved? What are the proper values of life and how can they
be attained? This is the most cardinal need of man and unless he knows this he
cannot erect the edifice of culture on sound foundations and cannot succeed in
life here and hereafter. And our reason refuses to believe that God Who has
provided man with even the most trivial of his requirements would ignore to
provide for this greatest, most paramount and most vital need. Nay, it can never
be so. And it is not so. While God has produced men of distinction in arts and
sciences. He has also raised men with deep vision, pure intuition, and highest
faculties to know and understand him. To them, He Himself revealed the way of
godliness, piety, and righteousness. He gave them the knowledge of the ends of
life and values of morality and entrusted them with the duty to communicate the
Divine Revelation to other human beings and to show them the Right Path. These
men are the Prophets and Messengers of God.
The prophets distinguish themselves in the human life is not in accordance with
his ideal. Neither his word nor his deed is prompted by any self-interest. He
suffers for the good of others, and never makes others for his own good. His
whole life is an example of truth, nobleness, purity of nature, high thinking,
and the most exalted form of humanity. His character is without any blemish and
even the minutest scrutiny fails to reveal any flaw in his life. And all these
facts, all these attributes, make it evident that prophet of God and faith must
be reposed in him.
When it becomes quite clear that such and such a person is the true prophet of
God, the natural dictate of this realization is that his words should be
accepted, his Instructions followed, and his orders. Obeyed. It is quite
unreasonable to accept a man as God’s true prophet, and yet not to believe in
what he says or not to follow what he ordains; for your very acceptance of him
as God’s prophet means that you have acknowledged that what he says is from God,
and that whatever he does is in accordance with God’s Will and pleasure. Now,
disobedience to him is the disobedience of God-and disobedience of God leads to
nothing but ruin and devastation. Therefore, the very acceptance of the prophet
makes it incumbent on you to bow to his instructions and accept them without any
demur whatsoever. You may not be able fully to grasp the wisdom and usefulness
of this or that order, but the every fact that an instruction has emanated from
the Prophet is sufficient guarantee for its truth, and there can be no room for
doubt or suspicion. Your inability to understand it is no reason for its having
flaw or defect; for a common man's understanding is not flawless. It has its own
limitations and they cannot be ignored altogether. It is evident that one who
dos not know some art thoroughly cannot understand it subtleties, but such a
person would be a fool to eject what an expert says, merely on the plea that he
himself dose not fully understand the expert, It is noteworthy that in every
important worldly affair an expert is needed for advice, and when you turn to
the expert you thereafter trust his advice and entirely depend upon it. You
rather surrender your own right of judgment and inference and follow him
honorably. Every ordinary man cannot be a master in all arts and crafts of the
world. The proper way for an average human being is to do what he can and, in
respect of things he cannot do, to use all his wisdom and shrewdness in finding
out the proper man to guide and help him, and after finding out such a man to
accept his advice and follow him. When you are sure that a certain person is the
best man available for your purpose, you solicit his advice and guidance, and
have complete trust in him. To interfere with him at every step and say, "Make
me understand it before you proceed any further," is evidently imprudent. When
you engage a solicitor in any legal case, you do not interfere with him on every
turn and pass. You rather have faith in him and follow his advice. For your
medical treatment you go to the doctor and follow his instructions. You neither
poke your nose in medical matters nor test your skill in logic by debating with
the doctor. This is the proper attitude in life. So must be done in case of
religion. You need the knowledge of God; you require to know the mode of life
according to God’s pleasure; and you possess no means for obtaining this
knowledge. It is incumbent upon you, therefore, to look for a true prophet of
God; and you will have to use utmost care, discernment, and sagacity in your
search for him, for if you choose a wrong man for a true prophet, he will put
you on the wrong track. If, however, after properly weighing and measuring all
considerations, you decide definitely that a certain person is really God’s
prophet, then you must trust him completely and obey all his instructions
faithfully.
Now it is clear that the Right Path for man is that and that alone which the
prophet declares to be so and the correct way of life that only which he informs
us to be from God. From this one can easily understand that to have faith in the
prophet and to obey and follow him is absolutely necessary for all men, and that
a man who puts aside the prophet’s instructions and himself tries to carve out a
way for himself, deviates from the Right Path and surely goes astray.
In this matter man guilty of strange errors. There are men who admit the
integrity and truthfulness of the prophet, but do not repose Iman (faith) in
him, nor do they follow him in the affairs of their life. Such men are not only
Kafirs, but also behave in an imprudent and unnatural way: for not to follow the
prophet after admitting him to be true means that one knowingly follows untruth.
And what folly can be greater than that !
Some people declare, We do not need a prophet for our guidance and we can
ourselves find out the way to truth. this too is a faulty view. You have
probably learnt geometry, and you know that between two points there can be only
one straight line, and all other lines must be crooked or will fail to touch the
in point in view. The same is the case with way the to truth, which, in the
Language of Islam, is called sirat-i-mustaqeem (the Straight Path). This path
begins from man and goes straight up to God, and this Path can evidently be one
only one; all other paths would be aberrations and will lead astray. Now this
Straight path has been indicated by the Prophet, and there is and can be no
straight oath besides that. The man who ignores that path and seeks other
errands is only a dupe of his own imagination. He chooses a way and imagines it
to be right, but he soon finds himself entangled and is lost in the mazes and
meandering created by his own fancy. What can you think of a person who has lost
his way and when a good man shows him the right one, he definitely ignores the
guidance, declaring, "I will not take your guidance nor accept the way you have
shown to me, but I will myself grope in this unknown region and try to reach the
object of my search, in my own way"? This, in the presence of the clear guidance
of the prophets, is sheer stupidity. If everybody tries to start UP again from
the scratch, it would be gross waste of time and energy. We never do so in the
field of sciences and arts; why here?
This is a common error, and even a little reflection reveals its flaws and
weaknesses. But if you go a little deeper into the matter, you will notice that
a person who denies to have faith in the true prophet cannot at all find any way
straight or otherwise to reach God. This is so because a man who refuses to
believe the advice of a truthful man adopts such a perverse attitude that the
vistas of truth become estranged from him and he becomes a victim of his own
obstinacy, arrogance, bias, and perversity.
Often this refusal is because of false arrogance, or blind conservatism and
obstinate adherence to the way of the forefathers, or slavery of the lower
desires of the self, whose gratification becomes impossible by submission to the
teachings of the prophets. If a man is engrossed in any of the above conditions,
the Path to truth becomes closed to him. He like a jaundiced person cannot look
upon things in the uncolored light of reality. Such a man cannot find out any
road to salvation. On the other hand, if a man is sincere and truth-loving and
if he is not slave to any of the above complexes, the road to reality becomes
paved for him, and there is absolutely no ground for him to refuse to believe in
the prophet. nay, he finds in the teachings of the prophet the very echo of his
own soul and discovers himself by discovering the prophet.
And, above all, God Himself raises the true prophet. It is He who has sent him
UP to mankind to convey His message to His people. It His Command to repose
faith in the prophet and to follow him. Thus, one who refuses to believe in
God’s Messenger actually refuses to follow God’s Commandments and becomes a
rebel. There is no denying the fact that one who refuses to acknowledge the
authority of the viceroy of a sovereign actually refuses the authority of the
sovereign himself. This disobedience turns him into a rebel. God is the Lord of
the universe, the true Sovereign, the King of kings, and it is the bounden duty
of every man to acknowledge the authority of His Messengers and Apostles and to
obey them as His accredited prophets. And one who turns away from the Prophet of
God is surely a kafir, be he a believer God or a disbeliever.
II BRIEF HISTORY OF
PROPHETHOOD
Now let us cast a cursory glance at the history of prophethood Let us see how
this long chain began, how it gradually unfolded itself and finally culminated
in the prophethood of the last of the prophet, Muhammad (peace be upon him).
The human race began from one man: Adam. It was from him that the family of man
grew and the human race multiplied. All human beings born in this world have
descended form that earliest pair: Adam and Eve.1 History and religion are
agreed on this point. Scientific investigations about the origin of man too do
not show that originally different man came into being, simultaneously or at
different points of time, in different parts of the world. Most of the
scientists also conjecture that one man would have been brought into existence
first and the entire human race might have descended from the same one man.
Adam, the first man on earth, was also appointed as the first Prophet of God. He
revealed His religion-Islam to him and enjoined him to convey and communicate it
is him descendants: to teach them that Allah is One, the Creator, the Sustainer
of the world that He is the Lord the universe and He alone should be Worshipped
and obeyed; that to Him they will have to return one day and to Him alone they
should appeal for help; that they should live good, pious, and righteous life in
accordance with God's pleasure and that if they did so they would be blessed by
God with goodly reward, and if they turned away from Him and disobeyed Him they
would be losers here and in the hereafter and would be severely punished for
this disbelief and disobedience.
Those of Adam's descendants who were good trod the right path shown to them by
him, but those who were bad abandoned their father's teachings, and gradually
drifted away into devious ways. Some began to worship the sun, the moon, and the
stars; others took to the worship of trees, animals, and rivers. Some believed
that air, water, fire health, and all the blessings and forces of Nature were
each under the control of a different god and that each one of them should be
propitiated by means of worship. In this way ignorance gave rise to many forms
of polytheism and idolatry, and scores of religions were formulated. This was
the age when Adam's progeny had spread fairly over the globe, and formed
different races and nations. Every nation had made a different religion for
itself, each with formalities and rituals of its own. God the one Lord and
Creator of mankind and the universe was altogether forgotten. Not only that;
Adam's descendants forgot even the way of life which God had revealed for them
and which their great progenitor had taught them. They had followed their own
devices. Every kind of evil evil custom grew, and all sorts of notions of
ignorance spread them. They began to err in discerning right from wrong: many
evils began to be considered right and many right things not only ignored but
dubbed as wrong.
At this stage God began to raise prophets among every people, who preached Islam
to them. Each one reminded his people of the lesson they had forgotten. They
taught them God-worship, put an end to idol-worship and the practice of shirk,
i.e. associating other deities with God, did away with all customs of ignorance,
taught them the right way of living in accordance with God's pleasure, and gave
them life-giving laws to be followed and enforced in society. God's true
Prophets were raised in all countries: in every land and people. They all
possessed one and the same religion the religion of Islam. No doubt, the methods
of teaching and the legal codes of different Prophets were a little different in
accordance with the needs and the stage of culture of the people among whom they
were raised. The particular teachings of each Prophet were determined by the
kind of evils which he faced and endeavored to eradicate. The methods of reform
differed as it suited to fight different notions and ideas. When the people were
in the primitive stages of society, civilization and intellectual development,
their laws and regulations were simple; they were modified and improved as the
society evolved and progressed. These differences were, however, only
superficial and apparent. The fundamental teachings of all the religions were
the same, i.e. belief in the unity of God, adherence to a life of piety,
goodness and peace, and belief in the life after death with its just mechanism
for reward and Punishment.
Man's attitude to words God's Prophets has been strange. First he maltreated the
Prophets and refused to listen and accept their teachings. Some of the Prophets
were expelled from their lands; some were assassinated; some, in face of the
people in difference, continued preaching the whole of their lives, and hardly
won more than a few followers. In the midst of harassing opposition, derision,
and indignity to which they were perpetually subjected, these Apostles of God,
however, did not cease to preach. Their patient determination at last succeeded:
their teachings did not remain without effect. Large groups of people and
nations accepted their message, and were converted to their creed. The erring
tendencies of the people, born of centuries of persistence in deviation,
ignorance, and malpractice, now took another form. Though during the lives of
their Prophets they accepted and practiced their teachings, yet after their
death they introduced their old distorted notions in to their religions, and
altered the Prophet’s teachings. They adopted quite novel methods of worshipping
God; some even took to the worship of their Prophets. Some made the Prophets the
incarnations of God; some made their Prophets the sons of God; some associated
their Prophets with God in His Divinity. In short, man’s varied attitudes in
this respect were a travesty of his reason and a mockery of himself; he made
idols of those very persons whose holy mission was to smash idols to pieces. By
intermixing religion, custom and rituals of ignorance, baseless and false
anecdotes and man-made laws, man so changed and Perverted the ideology of the
Prophets that after the lapse of centuries it became a hotchpotch of the real
and the fictitious and the teachings of the Prophets were lost in a
conglomeration of fictions and perversities so much so that it become impossible
to distinguish the grain from the chaff. And, not content with this corruption
of the Prophet, they further attached fictitious anecdotes and unworthy
traditions to the lives of their Prophets and so polluted their life histories
that a real and reliable account of their lives becomes impossible to be
discerned. Despite these corruption by the followers, in the work of the
Prophets has not been altogether in vain. Among all nations, in spite of all
interpolation and alteration, some traces of Truth have survived. The idea of
God and of the life after death was definitely assimilated in some form or
other. A few principles of goodness, truth goodness and morality were commonly
admitted throughout the whole world. The Prophets, thus, prepared the mental
attitude of their respective People in such a way that a universal religion
could be safely introduced a religion, which is quite in consonance with the
nature of man, which embodies all that was good in all other creeds and
societies, and which is naturally and commonly acceptable to the entire mankind.
As we have said above, in the beginning separate Prophets used to appear among
different nations or groups of People, and the teachings of each Prophet were
meant specially and specifically for his each people. The reason was that at
that stage of history, nations were situated separately and were so cut off from
each other that one was bound up within the geographical limits of its own
territories and the facilities for mutual intercourse were just non-existent. In
such circumstances it was very difficult to propagate a common World Faith with
its accompanying system of the life of this world. Besides, the general
conditions of the early nations were widely different from one another. Their
ignorance was great, and among the different Peoples it had given different
forms to their moral aberration and distortions of Faith. It was, therefore,
necessary that different Prophets be raised to preach the Truth to them and win
them over to God's ways to gradually eradicate evils and aberrations; to root
out the ways and modes of ignorance and teach them to Practice the noblest
Principles of simple, Pious, and righteous life, and thus train and bring them
up in the arts and crafts of life. God alone knows how many, and developing him
mentally, morally, and spiritually. Anyhow, man continued to make Progress and
at last the time came when he grew from his infancy, and entered the age of
maturity.
With the progress and spread of commerce, industry, and arts, intercourse was
established between nations. From China and Japan, as the distant lands of
Europe and Africa, regular routes were opened both by sea and land. Many people
learnt the art of writing; knowledge spread. Ideas began to be communicated from
one country to the other and learning and scholarship began to be exchanged.
Great conquerors appeared, extended their conquests far and wide, established
vast empires, and knit many different nation under one Political system. Thus
nations came closer and to one another, and their differences became less and
less.
It became Possible under these circumstances that one and the same faith,
envisaging a comprehensive and all-embracing way of life, catering to the moral,
spiritual, social, cultural, political, economic, and all other needs of man and
embodying both religious and seculars elements be sent by God for the entire
mankind. More than two thousand years ago mankind had attained caliber that it
all seemed to crave for a universal religion. Buddhism, though it consisted only
of some moral principles and was not a complete system of life, emerged from
India, and spread as far as Japan and Mongolia on one side, and to Afghanistan
and Bokhara on the other. Its missionaries traveled far and wide in the world. A
few centuries later, Christianity appeared. A although the religion taught by
Jesus Christ (peace be upon him) was none but Islam, his followers reduced it
into a hotchpotch called Christianity, and even this overt and Israelis religion
was spread in the far- off places of Persia and Asia Minor and info the distant
climes of Europe and Africa. From these events it is clearly inferred that the
conditions of mankind in that age a demanded a common religion for the whole
human race and they were so prepared for it that when they found no complete and
true religion in existence, they began to propagate among the nations the
prevalent religions, howsoever defective, incomplete, or unsatisfying they might
be.
At such a crucial stage of human civilization, when the mind of man was itself
craving for a world religion, a Prophet was raised in Arabia for the whole world
and for all nations. The religion he was given to propagate was again Islam-but
now in the form of a complete and full-fledged system, covering all aspects of
individual and material life of man. He was made a Prophet for the entire human
race and was deputed to propagate his mission to the whole world. He was
Muhammad the Prophet of Islam (Peace be upon him).
The Prophethood of Muhammad
If we cast a glance at the world at the atlas, we find that the other country
could have been more suitable for the much needed world religion than Arabia. It
is situated right in the middle of Asia and Europe is not far away from it. At
the time of Mohammed's appearance the central part of Europe was inhabited by
civilized and culturally advanced nations; and thus these people were more or
less at about the same distance from Arabia as were the people of India. This
fact gave Arabia a central position.
And look at the history of that era and you will find that no other people were
more suited for the endowment of this prophethood than the Arabs Great nations
of the world had been struggling hard for world supremacy, and in this long
struggle and incessant strife, they had exhausted all their resources and
vitality. The Arabs were a fresh and virile people. The so-called social
progress had produced bad habits among the advanced nations, while among the
Arabs no such social organization existed, and they were, therefore, free form
the inactivity, debasement and indulgences arising out of luxury and sensual
satiety. The pagan Arabs of the fifth century had not been affected by the evil
influence of the artificial systems and civilization of the great nations of the
world. They processed all the good human qualities, which the people untouched
by the 'social progress' of the time, ought to possess. They were brave,
fearless, generous, faithful to their promises, lovers of freedom, and were
Politically independent -not subject to the hegemony of the imperial Powers.
They lived a very simple life, and were strangers to the life of luxury and
indulgence. No doubt, there were certain undesirable aspects of their life as
well, as we shall maintain later on, but the reason for the existence of such
aspects was that for thousands of years no prophet had risen among them, nor had
there appeared a reformer who might have civilized them and purged their moral
life of all evil impurities. Centuries of free and independent life in sandy
deserts had bred and nourished extreme ignorance among them. Nor had there
appeared a reform who might have civilized them and purged their moral life of
all evil impurities. Centuries of free and independent life in sandy deserts had
bred and nourished extreme ignorance among them. They had, therefore, become so
hard-hearted and firm in their traditions of ignorance that to make them human
was not the task of an ordinary man. At the same time, however, they did possess
a capacity that fi some person of extraordinary powers were to invite them for
reform and gave them a noble ideal and a complete program they would accept his
call and readily rise to act effectively for the achievement of such a goal, and
spare no strife for or sacrifice in the cause. They would be prepared to face
without the least scruple even the hostility of the entire world in the cause of
their mission. And verily it was such a young, forceful, and virile people that
were needed for disseminating the teachings of the World Prophet: Muhammad
(Peace be upon him)
And then look to the Arabic language. If you study that language and fathom deep
into its literature, you will be convinced that there is no other language than
Arabic which is more suited to give expression to high ideals, to explain the
most delicate and subtle problems of Divine knowledge, and to impress the heart
of man and mould it into God’s submission. Small phrases and brief sentences
express a world of ideas, and at the same time they are so forceful that they
steal into the heart, their every sound moves man to tears and ecstasy. They are
so sweet that it is felt as if honey were being poured into the ears; they are
so full of harmony that every fiber of the listener's body is moved by their
symphony. It is such a rich and powerful language that was needed for the Quran,
the Great Word of God. It was, therefore, the manifestation of God’s great
wisdom that He chose the land of Arabia for the birth place of the World
Prophet. Let us now see how unique and extraordinary was the blessed personality
chosen by God for the mission of the World Prophet.
III MUHAMMAD’S PROPHETHOOD: A RATIONAL VINDICATION
If one were to close one’s eyes and imagine oneself in the world of 1400 years
ago, one would find that it was a world completely different from ours, having
not even the least semblance to the rough and tumble that we find around
ourselves. How few and far between were the opportunities for the exchange of
ideas! How limited and undeveloped were the means of communication! How little
and meager was man’s knowledge! How narrow was his outlook! How enveloped was he
in superstition and wild and sophisticated ideas!
Darkness held the sway. There was only a faint glimmer of learning, which could
hardly illumine the horizon of human knowledge. There was neither wireless nor
telephone, neither television nor cinematography. Railways and motor cars and
airplanes were undreamed of, and printing presses and publishing concerns were
unknown. Hand-written books or copyists alone supplied whatever scanty literary
material was there to be transmitted from generation. Education was a luxury,
meant only for the most fortunate, and educational institution were every few
and between.
The store of human knowledge was scanty, man’s out look was narrow, and his
ideas of man things were confined to his limited surroundings. Even a scholar of
that age lacked in certain respects the knowledge possessed by a layman of
today, and the most cultured person was less refined than our own man in the
street. Indeed, humanity was steeped in ignorance and superstition. Whatever
light of learning there was seemed to be fighting a losing battle against the
darkness prevailing all around. What are considered to be matters of common
knowledge today could hardly be acquired in those days even after years of
calculated thought and patient research. People used to undertake hazardous
journeys and spent a whole lifetime in acquiring that modest information which
is everybody’s heritage in the present age of learning. Things, which are
classed as 'myth' and 'superstition' today, were the unquestionable truths of
that age. Acts, which we now regard as heinous and barbarous, were then the
order of the day.
Methods whish appear obnoxious to our moral sense today constituted the very
soul of morality, and one different way of life also. Incredulity had assumed
such mighty proportions and had become so wide- so read that people refused to
consider anything as lofty and sublime unless it the garb of the supernatural,
the extraordinary, the uncanny, and even the untenable. They had developed such
an inferiority complex that they could never imagine a human being to possess a
godly soul and the saint to human.
ARABIA-the Abyss of Darkness
In that benighted era, there was a territory where darkness lay heavier and
thicker. The neighboring country of Persia, Byzantium and Egypt possessed a
glimmer of civilization and a faint light of learning. But Arabia could receive
no share from their cultural Influences. It stood isolated, cut off by vast
oceans of sand. Arab traders plodding great distances, which took them months,
carried their wares to and from these countries, but they could hardly acquire
any grain of knowledge on their journeys. In their own country, they did not
have a single educational institution or library. None seemed to be interested
in the cultivation and advancement of knowledge. The few who were literate were
not educated enough to have anything to do with the existing arts and sciences.
They did possess a highly developed language capable of expressing the finest
shades of human thought in a remarkable manner. They also possessed a literary
taste of high order. But the study of the remnants of their literature reveals
how limited was their knowledge, how low was their standard of culture and
civilization, how saturated were their minds with superstitions, how barbarous
and ferocious were their thoughts and customs, and how uncouth and degraded were
their moral standards and conceptions.
It was a country without a government, every tribe claimed sovereignty and
considered to be an independent unit. There was no law except the law of the
jungle. Loot, arson, and murder of innocent and weak People was the order of the
day. Life, Property, and honor were constantly at stake. Different tribes were
al ways at daggers drawn with one another. Any trivial incident was enough to
cause blaze out in ferocious fury, which sometimes even developed into a
countywide conflagration ceaselessly continuing for several decades. Indeed, a
Bedouin could not understand why he should let off a person of another tribe,
whom, he thought, he had every right to kill and plunder.
What ever nations they had of morals, culture, and civilization, were primitive
and uncouth. They could hardly discriminate between pure and impure, lawful and
unlawful, civil and uncivil. Their life was wild, their methods were barbaric.
They reveled in adultery, gambling and drinking. Loot and plunder was their
motto, murder and rapine their very habits. They would stand stark naked before
each other without any qualms of conscience. Even their womenfolk would become
nude at the ceremony of circumambulating the Ka'ba. Out of sheer foolish nations
of Prestige, they would bury their daughters alive lest anyone should become
their son-in-law, They would marry their stepmothers after the of their fathers.
They were ignorant of even the rudiments of everyday routine of eating,
dressing, and washing.
As regards their religious beliefs, they suffered from the same evils, which
were playing havoc with the rest of the world.
They worshipped stones, trees, idols, stars, and spirits: in short, everything
conceivable except God. They did not know anything about the teaching of the
Prophets of old. They had an idea that Abraham and Ishmael were their
forefathers, but they know next to nothing about their religious preaching and
about the God Whom they worshipped. The stories of ‘Ad and Thamud were to be
found in their folklore, but they contained no traces of the teachings of
Prophets Hud and Sail. The Jews and the Christians had transmitted to them
certain legendary folktales relating to the Israelite Prophets. They presented a
harrowing picture of those noble souls. Their teachings were adulterated with
the figments of their own imagination and their lives were tarred black. Even
today, an idea can be had of the religious conceptions of those people by
casting a cursory glance at those Israelite traditions which Muslim commentators
of the Quran have conveyed to us. Indeed, the picture which has been presented
there of the institution of prophethood and of the Israelite Prophets is the
very antithesis of all that those noble followers of truth had stood for.
The Savior is Born
In such a Dark Age and in such a benighted country a man is born. In his very
childhood his parents die and, a few years later, the sad demise of his
grandfather also occurs. Consequently, he is deprived even of that scant
training and upbringing which an Arab child of his time could get. In his
boyhood he tends he flock of sheep and goats in the company of Bedouin boys.
When of age, he takes to commerce. All his association and all his dealings are
with the Arabs alone condition has just been described. Education has not even
touched him; he is completely unlettered and unschooled. He never gets a chance
to sit in the company of learned of learned man, for such men were totally
non-existent in Arabia. He dose have a few opportunities to go out of his
country, but those journeys are confined to Syria and are nothing more than the
usual business trips undertaken by Arab trade caravans. If he men there or has
the occasion to observe any aspects of culture and civilization, those random
meeting and stray observations cannot be given any place in the making of his
personality. For such things can never have that profound influence on anyone
which may lift him to tally out of his environment transform him completely, and
raise him to such heights of originality and glory that there remains no
affinity between him and society he is born. Nor can they be the means of the
acquisition of that profound and vast knowledge which may transform an
unlettered Bedouin into a leader not only of his own country and age but of the
world at large and of all ages to come. Indeed, whatever the measure of the
intellectual and cultural influence of those journeys one might suppose, the
fact remains that they could in no case impart to him those conception and
principles of religion, ethics, culture, and Civilization which were to tally
nonexistent in world of those days, and they could in no way create that sublime
and perfect pattern of human character which was nowhere to be found in those
days.
Diamond in a Heap of Stones
We may now look at the life and work of this noble man in the context not only
of the Arabian society but also of the entire world as it stood in that period.
He is totally different form the people among whom he is born and with whom he
passes his youth and early manhood, attaining finally his full stature. He never
tells a lie. His whole nation is unanimous in testifying to his truthfulness.
Even his worst enemies never accuse him of telling a lie on any occasion
whatsoever during his entire life. He talks politely and uses obscene and
abusive language. He has a charming personality and winsome manners with him.
In his dealings with the people he always follows the principles of justice and
fair play. He remains in trade and commerce for years, but he never enters into
any dishonest transaction. Those who deal with him in business have full
confidence in his integrity. The entire nation calls him "Al-Ameen"(the Truthful
and the Trustworthy). Even his enemies deposit their costly belongings with him
for safe custody and he scrupulously fulfils their trust. He is the very
embodiment of midst of a society which is immodest to the core. Born and bred
among a people who regard drunkenness and gambling as virtues, he never touches
alcohol and never indulges in gambling. His people are uncouth, uncultured and
unclean, but he personifies in himself the highest culture and the most refined
aesthetic outlook. Surrounded on all sides by heartless people, he himself has a
heart overflowing with the milk of human kindness. He helps the orphans and
widows. He is hospitable to travelers. He harms no one; rather, he goes all out
to suffer hardships for others’ sake. Living among those for whom war is bread
and butter, he is such a lover of peace that his heart melts for them when they
take up arms and cut each other’s throats. He keeps aloof form the feuds of his
tribe, and is foremost in bringing about reconciliation. Bred up in an
idolatrous race, he is so clear-minded and possesses such a pure soul that he
regards nothing in the heavens and the earth worth worshipping except the One
True God. He dose not bow be fore any created thing and dose not partake of the
offerings made to idols, even in his childhood. Instinctively he hates all kinds
of worship of all creatures and beings besides God. In brief, the towering and
radiant personality of this man in the midst of such a benighted and dark
environment, may be likened to a beacon-light illumining a pitch-dark night or
to a diamond shining in a heap of dead stones.
A Revolution Comes
After spending a great part of his life in such a chaste, pure, and civilised
manner there comes a revolution in his being. He feels fed up with the darkness
and ignorance massed around him. He wants to swim clear of the horrible sea of
ignorance, corruption, immorality, idolatry and disorder which surround him on
all sides. He finds everything around him out of harmony with his soul. He
retires to the hills, away from the hum and drum of habitations. He spends days
and night in perfect seclusion and meditation. He fasts so that his soul and his
heart may become purer and nobler still.
He muses and ponders deep. He is in search of a light which might melt away the
encompassing darkness. He wants to get hold of that power with which he might
bring about the downfall of the corrupt and disorderly world of his day and lay
the foundations of a new and better world.
Lo! A remarkable revolution comes over his person. All of a sudden his heart is
illuminated with the Divine light, giving him the power he had yearned for. He
comes out of the confinement of his cave, goes to the people, and addresses them
in the following strain:
"The idols which you worship are a mere sham. Cease to worship them from now on
ward. No mortal being, no star, no tree, no stone, no spirit, is worthy of human
worship. Therefore, bow not you heads in worship before them. The entire
universe with everything that it contains belongs to God Almighty alone. He
alone is the Creator, the Nourisher, the Sustainer, and, consequently, the real
Sovereign before Whom all should bow down and to whom all should pray and render
obedience. Thus worship Him along and obey only His commands. Loot and plunder,
murder and rapine, injustice and cruelty-all the vices in which you indulge are
crimes in the eyes of God. Leave your evil ways. He hates them all. Speak the
truth. Be just. Do not kill anyone. Do not rob anyone. Take your lawful share.
Give that is due to other in a just Manner. You are human beings and all human
beings are equal in the eyes of God. None is born with the slur of shame on his
face, nor anyone has come into the world with the mantle of honor hung around
his neck. He alone is high and honored who is God-fearing and pious, true in
words and deeds. Distinctions of birth and glory of race are no criteria
greatness and honor. One who fears God and dose good deeds is the noblest. One
who fears God and does good deeds is the noblest of human beings. One who is
shorn of love of God and is steeped in bad manners is doomed. There is an
appointed day after your death when you shall have to appear before your Lord.
Your shall be called to account for all your deeds, good or bad, and you shall
not be able then to hide anything. They whole record of life shall be an open
book to Him. You fate shall be determined by your good or bad-actions. In the
court of the true Judge-the omniscient does not arise. You shall not be able to
bribe Him. No consideration will be given to your pedigree or parentage. True
faith and good deeds alone will stand you in good stead at that time. He who
will be fully equipped with them shall take his abode in the Heaven of eternal
happiness; while one devoid of them shall be cast in the fire of Hell."
This is the message with which he comes. The ignorant nation turns against him.
Abuses and stones are showered at his august person. Every conceivable torture
and cruelty is perpetrated on him. And this continues not for a day or tow but
uninterruptedly for thirteen long troublesome years. At last he is exiled. But
he is not given respite even there. He is tormented in various ways in his abode
of refuge. The whole of Arabia is incited against him. He is persecuted and
hounded down continuously for full eight years there. He suffers it all, but
doses not budge an inch from the stand he has taken. He is resolute firm and
inflexible in his purpose and stand.
Why all that Enmity?
One might inquire: how is it that his nation became his sworn enemy? Was there
any dispute about gold and silver or other worldly possessions? Was it due to
any blood feud? Did he ask for anything from them? No! The whole enmity was
based on the fact that he had asked them to worship the One True God and to lead
a life of righteousness, pity, and goodness. He had preached against idolatry
and the worship of other beings besides God and had denounced their wrong ways
of life. He had cut at the roots of priest craft. He had inveighed against all
distinctions of high and low between human beings, and had condemned the
prejudices of clan and race as sheer ignorance; and he wanted to change the
whole structure of society which had been handed down to them from time
immemorial. In their turn, his countryman told him that the principles of his
mission were hostile to their ancestral traditions and asked him either to up or
to bear the worst consequences.
One might ask: what for did he suffer all those hardships? His nation offered to
accept him as their king and to lay all the riches of the land at his feet if
only he would leave preaching his religion and spreading his message. But he
chose to refuse the tempting offers and to suffer for his cause, instead. Why?
Was he to gain in any way if those people became pious and righteous?
Why was it that he cared not a jot for riches and luxury, kingship and glory,
and ease and plenty? Was he playing for some higher material gains so that these
blessings sank into insignificance in comparison with them? Were those so
tempting that he could elect to go through fire and sword and bear tortures of
the soul and torments of the body with equanimity for years? One has to ponder
over it deeply to find an answer.
Can anyone ever imagine a higher example of self-sacrifice, fellow-feeling and
kind-heartedness towards his fellow-beings that a man may ruin his own happiness
for the good of others, while those very people for whose betterment he is
striving his utmost should stone him, no quarter even in his exile, and that, in
this all, he should refuse to refrain from striving for their will-being?
Can any insincere person undergo so much suffering for a false cause? Can any
dishonest speculator and visionary exhibit such firmness and determination for
his ideal as to stick to his guns to the very last and remain unruffled and
unperturbed in the face of dangers and tortures of every conceivable description
when a whole country rises up in arms against him?
This faith, this perseverance, and this resolution, with which he led his
movement to ultimate success, is, therefore, an eloquent proof of the supreme
truth of his cause. Had there been the slightest touch of doubt and uncertainty
in his heart, he could never have been able to brave the storm which continued
in all its fury for twenty-one long years.
This is one side of the revolution wrought in his being. The other is even more
wonderful and remarkable.
A Changed Man at Forty-Why?
For forty years he lived as an Arab among Arabs. In that long period he was not
known as a statesman, a preacher, or an orator. None had heard him imparting
gems of wisdom and knowledge as he began to do hereafter. He was never seen
discoursing upon the principles of metaphysics, ethics, law, politics,
economics, and sociology. Not to speak of being a great general, he was not even
known as an ordinary soldier. He had uttered no word about God, the Angels, the
revealed Book, the early prophets, the bygone nations, the Day of Judgment, the
Life after, Death, Hell and Heaven. No doubt he possessed an excellent character
and charming manners, and was highly cultured; yet there was nothing so deeply
striking and so radically extraordinary in him which could make men expect
something great and revolutionary from him in future. He was know among his
acquaintances as a sober, calm, gentle, law-abiding citizen of good nature. But
when he came out of the cave with a new message he was completely transformed.
When he began preaching his Message the whole of Arabia stood in awe and wonder
and was bewitched by his wonderful eloquence and oratory. It was so impressive
and captivating that his worst enemies were afraid of hearing it, lest it should
penetrate deep into the recesses of their hearts or the very marrow of their
beings and carry them off their feet and make them bid goodbye to their old
religion and culture. It was so matchless that the whole legion of Arab poets,
preachers, and orators of the highest caliber failed to bring forth its
equivalent in beauty of language and splendor of diction when he threw the
challenge to his opponents to put their heads together and produce even a single
line like the one he recited.
His All-embracing Message
Along with this, he now appeared before his people as a unique philosopher, a
wonderful reformer, a renowned molder of culture and civilization, an
illustrious politician, a great leader, a judge of the highest eminence and an
incomparable general. This unlettered Bedouin, this dweller of the desert, spoke
with such learning and wisdom the like of which none had said before and none
could say after him. He expounded the intricate problems of metaphysics and
theology. He delivered speeches on the principles of the decline and fall of
nations and empires, supporting his thesis by the historical data of the past.
He reviewed the achievements of the old reformers, passed judgments on the
various religions of the world, and gave verdicts on the differences and
disputes between nations. He taught ethical canons and principles of culture. He
formulated such laws of social culture, economic organization, group conduct,
and international relations that even eminent thinkers and scholars can grasp
their true wisdom only after life-long research and vast experience of men and
thing. Their beauties, indeed, unfold themselves progressively as man advances
in theoretical knowledge and practical experience.
This silent and peace-loving trader who had never handled a sword before, who
had no military training, who had but once participated in a battle and that
also just as a spectator, turned suddenly into such a brave soldier that he did
not even once retreat in the fiercest battles. He become such a great general
that he conquered the whole of Arabia in nine years, at a time when the weapons
of war primitive and the means of communication poorest. His military acumen and
efficiency developed to such a high pitch and the military spirit which he
infused and the military training which he imparted to motley crowd of Arabs
(who had no equipment worth the name) wrought such a miracle that within a few
years they overthrew the two most formidable military powers of the day and
became the masters of the greater part of the then known world.
This reserved and quiet man who, for full forty years, never gave indication of
any political Interest or activity, appeared suddenly on the stage of the world
as such a great political reformer and statesman that, without, the aid of radio
and wireless and press, he brought together the scattered inhabitants of a
desert of twelve hundred thousand square miles, -a people who were warlike,
ignorant, unruly, uncultured, and plunged in internecine tribal warfare-under
one banner, one law, one religion, one culture, one civilization, and one form
of government.
He changed their modes of thought, their very habits and their morals. He turned
into the cultured, the barbarous into the civilized, the evildoers and bad
characters into pious, God-fearing, and righteous persons. Their unruly and
stiff-necked natures were transformed into models of obedience and submission to
law and order. A nation which had not produced a single great man worth the name
for centuries gave birth, under his influence and guidance, to thousands of
noble souls who went forth to far-off corners of the world to preach and teach
the principles of religion, morals and civilization.
He accomplished this feat not through any worldly lure, oppression or cruelty,
but by his captivating manners, his endearing moral personality, and his
convincing manners, his endearing moral personality, and his convincing
teaching. With his noble and gentle behavior he befriended even his enemies. He
captured the hearts of the people with his unbounded sympathy and the milk of
human kindness. He ruled justly. He did not swerve from truth and righteousness.
He did not oppress even his deadly enemies who were after his life, who had
pelted him with stones, who had turned him out of his native place, who had
pitched the whole of Arabia against him nay, not even those who had chewed raw
the liver of his dead uncle in a frenzy of vengeance. He forgave them all when
he triumphed over them. He never took revenge from anyone for his personal
grievances or the wrongs perpetrated on his person.
In spite of the fact that he became the ruler of his country, he was so selfless
and modest that he remained very simple and sparing in his habits. He lived
poorly, as before, in his humble thatched mud-cottage. He slept on a mattress,
wore coarse clothes, ate the simplest food of the poor, and sometimes went
without any food at all. He used to spend whole nights standing in prayer before
his Lord. He came to the to the rescue of the destitute and the penniless. He
felt not the least humility in working as a laborer. Till his last moments there
was not the slightest tinge of kingly pomp and show or hauteur of the high and
the rich in him. Like an ordinary man he would sit and walk with people and
share their joys and sorrows. He would so mix up and mingle with the crowd that
a stranger, an outsider, would find it difficult to point out the leader of the
people and the ruler of the nation from the rest of the company.
In spite of his greatness, his behavior with the humblest person was that of an
ordinary human being. In the struggles and endeavors of his whole life he did
not seek any reward or profit for his own person, not left any property for his
heirs. He dedicated his all to Millat. He did not ask his adherents to earmark
anything for him or his descendants, so much so that he forbade his progeny from
receiving the benefit of Zakat (or poor-tax), lest his follower at any future
time may dole out the whole share of Zakat to them.
His Contribution to Human Thought
The achievements of this great man do not end here. In order to arrive at a
correct appraisal of his true worth one has to view it in the background of the
history of the world as a whole. That would reveal that this unlettered dweller
of the desert of Arabia, who was born in the ‘dark ages’ some 1400 years ago,
was the real pioneer of the modern age and the true leader of humanity. He is
not only the leader of those who accept his leadership but of those also who do
not acclaim him as such: even of those who denounce him! the only difference
being that the latter are unaware of the fact that his guidance is still
imperceptibly influencing their thoughts and their actions and is the governing
principle of their lives and the very spirit of the modern times.
It was he who turned the course of human thought from superstition-mongering,
love for the unnatural and the inexplicable, and monasticism towards rational
approach, love for reality, and a pious, balanced worldly life. It was he who,
in a world which regarded only supernatural happenings as miracles and demanded
them for the verification of the truth of a religious mission, inspired the urge
for rational proof and the faith in them as the criterion of truth. It was he
who opened the eyes of those who had been accustomed till then to look for the
signs of God in the natural phenomena. It was he who, in place of baseless
speculation, led human beings to the path of rational understanding and sound
reasoning on the basis of observation, experiment, and research. It was he who
clearly defined the limits and functions of sense perception, reason, and
intuition. It was he who brought about a rapprochement between the spiritual and
the material values. It was he who harmonized Faith with Knowledge and Action.
It was he who created the scientific spirit with the power of religion and who
evolved true religiosity on the basis of the scientific spirit.
It was he who eradicated idolatry, man-worship and polytheism in all forms so
thoroughly and created such a firm faith in the Unity of God that even those
religions which were based entirely on superstitions and idolatry were compelled
to adopt a monotheistic theme. It was he who changed the basic concepts of
ethics and spirituality. To those who believed that asceticism and self-
annihilation alone formed the standard of moral and spiritual purity –that
purity could not be achieved except by running away from worldly life,
disregarding all the urges of the flesh and subjecting the body to all types of
tortures-it was he who showed the path or spiritual evolution, moral
emancipation, and attainment of salvation through active participation in the
practical affairs of the world around them.
It was he who brought home to man his true worth and position; those who
acknowledged only a God incarnate or a son of God as their moral preceptor or
spiritual guide were told that a human being like them having no pretension to
Godhead could become the vicegerent of God on earth; those who proclaimed and
worshipped powerful personages as their gods were made to understand that their
false lords were mere. It was he who stressed the point that no person could
claim holiness, authority, and kingship as birthright and that none was born
with the stigma of untouchability, slavery, or serfdom on his person. It was he
and his teaching which inspired the thoughts of the unity of mankind, equality
of human beings, true democracy and real freedom in the world.
Leaving aside this realm of thought and moving a bit further one will find
countless practical results of the leadership of this unlettered person firmly
impressed on the laws and ways of the world. So many principles of good
behavior, culture and civilization, purity of thought and deed, which are
prevalent in the world today, owe their origin to him. The social laws which he
gave have infiltrated deep into the structure of human social life, and this
process continues up to this day. The basic principles of economics which he
taught have ushered in many a movement in world history and hold out the same
promise for the future. The laws of governance which he formulated brought about
many an upheaval in the political notions and theories of the world and continue
to assert their influence even today. The fundamental principles of law and
justice which bear the stamp of his genius have influenced to a remarkable
degree the administration of justice in the courts of nations, and form a
perpetual source of guidance for all legists to come. This unlettered Arab was
the first person who set on foot for the first time practically the whole
framework of international relations, and regulated the laws of war and peace.
For no one had previously even the remotest idea that there could be an ethical
code of war also and that relation between different nations could be regulated
on the ground of common humanity.
The Greatest Revolutionary
In the cavalcade of world history the sublime figure of this wonderful person
towers so high above all the great men of all times who are famous as heroes of
nations, that they appear to be dwarfs when contrasted with him. None of them
possessed a genius capable of making any deep impression on more than one or two
aspects of human life. Some are the exponents of theories and ideas but are
deficient in practical action. Some others are men of action but suffer from
paucity of knowledge. Some are renowned as statesmen only; others are masters of
strategy and maneuvering. Some have concentrated on one aspect of social life in
a manner that other aspects have been overlooked. Some others have devoted their
energies to ethical and spiritual verities but have ignored economics and
politics. Some other have taken to economics and politics, but neglect morals
and the spiritual side of life. In short, one comes across heroes who are adepts
and experts in one walk of life only. His is the only example where all the
excellences have been blended into one personality. He is a philosopher and a
seer and also a living embodiment of his own teachings. He is a great statesman
as well as a military genius. He is a legislator and also a teacher of morals.
He is a spiritual luminary as well as a religious guide. His vision penetrates
every aspect of life and there is nothing which he touches and does not adorn.
His orders and commandments cover a vast field from the regulation of
international relations down to the habits of everyday life like eating,
drinking, and cleanliness of the body. On the foundations of his theories he
established a civilization and a culture and produced such a fine equilibrium in
the conflicting aspects of life that there is to be found not even the slightest
trace of any flaw, deficiency, or incompleteness. Can anyone out any other
example of such a perfect and all-round personality?
Most of the famous personalities of the world are said to be the products of
their environment. But his case is unique. His environment seems to have played
no part in the making of his personality. It also cannot be proved that
historically his birth synchronized with the order of things in Arabia at that
time. What one can say at the most is that the circumstances in Arabia cried
aloud for the appearance of such a person who could weld together the warring
tribes into one nation and lay the foundation of their economic solidarity and
well-being by bringing other countries under their sway-in short, a national
leader who would have all the traits of an Arab of those days and, through
cruelty, oppression, bloodshed, deceit, and hypocrisy, or by any other fair or
foul means, could have enriched his own people, and left a kingdom as a heritage
for his successors. One cannot prove any other crying need of the history of
Arabia of that time.
What one can say at the most in the light of Hegel’s philosophy of history or
Marx’s historical materialism is that the time and environment demanded the
emergence of a leader who could create a nation and build up an empire. But the
Hegelian or Marxian philosophy cannot explain how such an environment could
produce a man whose mission was to teach the best morals, to purify humanity of
all dross, and to wipe out prejudices and superstitions of the days of ignorance
and darkness, who looked beyond the watertight compartments of race, nation, and
country, who laid the foundations of a moral, spiritual, cultural and political
superstructure for the good of the world and not for his country alone, who
practically, not theoretically, placed business transactions, civics, politics,
and international relations on moral grounds and produced such a balanced and
temperate synthesis between worldly life and spiritual advancement that even to
this day it is considered a masterpiece of wisdom and foresight exactly in the
same way as it was considered in his lifetime. Can anyone honestly call such a
person as the product of the all-pervading darkness of Arabia?
He does not only appear to be independent of his environment. Rather, when we
look at his achievements we are irresistibly drawn to the conclusion that he
actually transcends all limitation of time and space. His vision breaks through
all temporal and physical barriers, passes beyond centuries and millenniums and
comprehends within itself entire human activity and the whole of human history.
He is not one of those whom history has cast into oblivion, and he is not
praised only because he was just a good leader in his own time. He is that
unique and incomparable leader of humanity who marches with the time, who is
modern in every age and in every era, as he was in his own age of history.
Truly, his teachings are as modern as tomorrow morn.
Those whom people style as makers of history’ are only ‘creatures of history’.
In fact, in the whole history of mankind, he is the unique example of a ‘maker
of history’. One may scan the lives and circumstances of the great leaders of
the world who brought about revolutions and one will find that on each such
occasion the forces of revolution were gathering momentum for the destined
upheaval, were taking their course in certain directions and were only waiting
for propitious moment to burst out. In harnessing these forces in time for
action the revolutionary leader played the part of an actor for whom the stage
and the role is set beforehand. One the other hand, amidst all ‘makers of
history’ and revolutionary figures of all times, he is the only person who had
to find ways and means to bring together the wherewithal of revolution, who had
to mould and produce the kind of men he wanted for his purpose because the very
spirit of revolution and its requisite paraphernalia were nonexistent in those
people among whom his lot was cast.
He made an indelible impression on the hearts of thousands of his disciples by
his forceful personality and molded them according to his liking. By his iron
will he prepared the ground for revolution, molded its shape and features, and
directed the currents into a channel as he wished and desired. Can anyone cite
another example of a maker of history of such brilliance and splendor?
The Final Testimony
One may ponder over this matter and wonder how, in the dark ages 1400 years back
in a benighted region of the earth like Arabia, an unlettered Arab trader and
herdsman came to possess such light, such knowledge, such power, such
capabilities, and such finely-developed moral virtues?
One may say that there is nothing peculiar about his Message. It is the product
of his own mind. If it is so, then he should have proclaimed himself as God. And
if he had made such an assertion at that time, the peoples of the earth who did
not hesitate in calling Krishna and Buddha as gods and Jesus as the Son of God,
just out of their own fancy, and who could without compunction worship even the
forces of nation like fire, water and air would have readily acknowledged such a
wonderful person as the Lord God Himself.
But lo! His assertion is just to the contrary. For he proclaimed that: I am a
human being like yourselves. I have not brought any thing to you of my own
accord. It has all revealed to me by God. Whatever I possess belongs to Him.
This message the like of which the whole humanity is not able to produce, of my
own mind. Every word of it has been sent down by Him and all glory to Him Whose
Message it is. All the wonderful achievements which stand to my credit in your
eyes, all the laws which I have given, all the principles which I have
enunciated and taught-none of them is from me. I find myself thoroughly
incompetent for producing such things out of my sheer personal ability and
capabilities. I look to Divine Guidance in all matters. Whatever He wills I do,
what He directs I proclaim.
Hearken! What a wonderful and inspiring example of honesty, truth, and honor it
is! A liar and a hypocrite generally tries to ascribe to himself all the credit
for the deeds of others also, even when the falsehood of his statement can be
easily proved. But this great man does not appropriate the credit of any of
these achievements to his own person even when none could contradict him, as
there was no method of finding out the source of his inspiration.
What more proof of perfect honesty of purpose, uprightness of character, and
sublimity of soul can there be! Who else can be a more truthful person than he
who received such unique gifts and embellishments through a secret channel and
still he out rightly points out the source of all his enlightenment and
inspiration? All these factors lead to the irresistible conclusion that such a
man was the true Messenger of God.
Such was our Holy Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him). He was a prodigy of
extraordinary merits, a paragon of virtue and goodness, a symbol of truth and
veracity, a great apostle of God, His Messenger to the entire world. His life
and thought, his truth and straightforwardness, his piety and goodness, his
character and morals, his ideology and achievements-all stand as unimpeachable
proofs of his prophethood. Any human being who Studies his life and teachings
without bias will testify that verily he was the true prophet of God and the
Qur’an-the Book he gave to mankind-the Book of God. No unbiased and serious
seeker after truth can escape this conclusion.
Furthermore, this must also be clearly understood that, now, through Muhammad
(peace be upon him) alone can we know the straight path of Islam. The Qur’an and
the example of Mohammad are the only reliable sources that are a available to
mankind to learn God’s Will in its totality. Muhammad (peace be upon him) is the
Messenger of God for the whole of mankind and the long chain of prophets has
come to an end with him. He was the last of the prophets and all the
instructions which it was God’s will to impart to mankind through direct
revelation were sent by Him through Muhammad (peace be upon him) and are
enshrined in the Qur’an and the Sunnah. Now, whoever be a seeker of truth and
anxious to become an honest Muslim, a sincere follower of the way of God, it is
incumbent upon him to have faith in God’s last prophet, accepted his teachings
and follow the way he has he pointed out to man. This is the real road to
success and salvation.
IV THE FINALITY OF PROPHETHOOD
This brings us to the question of the finality of prophethood. Let us now
consider this aspect of the prophethood of Muhammad (peace be upon him).
We have already discussed the nature of prophethood and this discussion makes it
clear that the advent of a prophet is not an everyday occurrence. Nor is the
presence in person or the prophet essential for every land, people, and period.
The life and teachings of the prophet are the beacon-light to guide a people to
the Right path and as long as his teachings and his guidance are alive he is, as
it were, himself alive. The real death of a prophet consists not in his physical
demise but in the mitigation of his teachings and the interpolation of his
guidance. The earlier prophets have died because their followers have
adulterated their teachings, interpolated their instructions, and besmirched
their life-examples by attaching fictitious events to them. Not one of the
earlier books-Torah, Zabur (psalms of David), injeel (Gospel of Jesus),
etc-exists to day in its original text and even the followers of these books
confess that they do not possess the original book. The life histories of the
earlier prophets have been so mixed up with fiction that an accurate and
authentic account of their lives has become impossible. Their lives have become
tales and legends and no trustworthy record is a available anywhere. Not only
that the records have been lost and their life precepts forgotten but even this
cannot be said with certainty as to when and when and where a certain prophet
was born and bred, how he lived and what code he gave to mankind. In fact, the
real death of a prophet consists in the death of his teachings.
Judging the facts on this criterion no one can deny that Muhammad (peace be upon
him) and his teachings are alive. His teachings stand uncorrupted and are
incorruptible. The Qur’an-the book he gave to mankind-exists in its original
text, without the slightest alteration of letter, syllable, jot, or title. The
entire account of his life-his sayings, instructions and actions-is preserved
with complete accuracy, so much so that even after the lapse of thirteen
centuries its delineation in history is so clear and complete that it seems as
if we are seeing him with the eyes under our brows. The biography of no other
human being is so well preserved as that of Muhammad, the prophet of Islam
(peace be upon him). In each and every matter of life we can seek the guidance
of Muhammad (peace be upon him) and take a lesson from his life-example. That is
why there is no need of any other prophet after Muhammad, the last prophet
(peace be upon him).
Furthermore, there are three things which necessitate the advent of a new
prophet; it not just the replacement of a departed prophet. These may be summed
up as follows:
1. That the teachings of the earlier prophets have been interpolated or
corrupted or they have died and their revival is needed. In such a case a new
prophet is raised so that he may purge the impurities from the lives of the
people and restore religion to its pristine form and Purity, or
2. That the teachings of a prophet who has passed away were incomplete and it is
necessary to amend them, improve upon them, or add something to them, when a new
prophet is sent is sent to effect these improvements or
3. That the earlier prophet was raised particularly for a certain nation or
territory and a prophet for another nation, people, or country be required.
These are the three fundamental conditions which necessitate the raising of a
new prophet. A careful perusal of the facts shows that none of these conditions
exists today. The teachings of the last prophet, Muhammad (peace be upon him),
are alive, have been fully preserved, and made immortal. The guidance he has
shown unto mankind is complete and flawless, and is enshrined in the Holy
Qu’ran. All the sources of Islam are fully intact and each and every instruction
or action of the Holy Prophet can be ascertained without the least shadow of
doubt. Thus as his teachings are totally intact, there is no need of any of new
prophet on this count.
Secondly, God has completed His revealed guidance through Prophet Muhammad
(peace be upon him) and Islam is the complete religion for mankind. God has said
that, "Today I have perfected your Faith-religion-for you, and have completed My
bounty upon you," and a thorough study of Islam as a complete way of life proves
the truth of these Qur’anic words. Islam gives guidance for life in this world
and in the hereafter and nothing essential has now been perfected and there is
no ground for new prophethood on the plea of imperfection.
Lastly, the Message of Muhammad (peace be upon him) was not meant for any
particular people, place, or period. He was raised as the world prophet-the
messenger of the truth for the entire mankind. The Qur’an has commanded Muhammad
(peace be upon him) to declare: "O mankind, I am God’s Messenger to all of you."
He has been described as "a blessing for all (the people of) the worlds" and his
approach has been universal and human. That is why after him there remains no
need for new prophethood and he has been described by the Qur’an as
khatam-un-Nabiyyin (the last of the chain of the true prophets). Now there fore,
the only source for the knowledge of God and His Way is Muhammad (peace be upon
him). We can know of Islam only through his teachings which are so complete and
so comprehensive that world does not need any new prophet; it needs only such
people as have full faith in Muhammad (peace be upon him) who become the
standard-bearers of his message, propagate it to the world at large, and
endeavor to establish the culture which Muhammad (peace be upon him) gave to
Man. The World needs such men of character as can translate his teachings into
practice and establish a society which is governed by Divine Law, whose
supremacy Muhammad peace be Muhammad (peace be upon him) and on its success
hinges the success of Man. |