The Challenge of the Quran
- Categories: Da'wah to Non-Muslims -
Description: The Qur'anic
challenge to produce a work similar to it, and the inability of its
contemporaries to meet it.
The Quran is not only unique in the way in which it presents its
subject matter, but it is also unique in that it is a miracle
itself. By the term "miracle," we mean the performance of a
supernatural or extraordinary event which cannot be duplicated by
humans. It has been documented that Prophet Muhammad, may God
praise him, challenged the Arabs to produce a literary work of a
similar caliber as the Quran, but they were unable to do so in
spite of their well-known eloquence and literary powers. The
challenge to reproduce the Quran was presented to the Arabs and
mankind in three stages:
l. The Whole Quran
In the Quran, God commanded the Prophet to challenge all of
creation to create a book of
the stature of the Quran:
"Say: 'If all mankind and the jinn would come together to produce
the like of this Quran, they could not produce its like even though
they exerted all and their strength in aiding one another.'" [Al
Asraa 17:88]
{قُل لَّئِنِ
اجْتَمَعَتِ الْإِنسُ وَالْجِنُّ عَلَىٰ أَن يَأْتُوا بِمِثْلِ
هَـٰذَا الْقُرْآنِ لَا يَأْتُونَ بِمِثْلِهِ وَلَوْ كَانَ بَعْضُهُمْ
لِبَعْضٍ ظَهِيرًا}
Transliteration: Qul laini ijtamaAAati alinsu
waaljinnu AAala an yatoo bimithli
hatha alqurani la yatoona bimithlihi walaw
kana baAAduhum libaAAdin
thaheeran
2. Ten Chapters
Next, God made the challenge ostensibly easier by asking those who
denied its divine origin to imitate even ten chapters of the
Quran:
"Or do they say that he has invented it? Say (to them), 'Bring ten
invented chapters like it, and call (for help) on whomever you can
besides God, if you are truthful." [Hud 11:13]
{أَمْ
يَقُولُونَ افْتَرَاهُۖقُلْ فَأْتُوا
بِعَشْرِ سُوَرٍ مِّثْلِهِ مُفْتَرَيَاتٍ وَادْعُوا مَنِ اسْتَطَعْتُم
مِّن دُونِ اللَّـهِ إِن كُنتُمْ صَادِقِينَ}
Transliteration: Am yaqooloona iftarahu qul
fatoo biAAashri suwarin mithlihi muftarayatin
waodAAoo mani istataAAtum min dooni
Allahi in kuntum sadiqeena
3. One Chapter
This final challenge was to produce even a single chapter to match
what is in the Quran, whose shortest chapter, al-Kawthar, consists
of only three verses:
"And if you all are in doubt about what I have revealed to My
servant, bring a single chapter like it, and call your witnesses
besides God if you are truthful." [Al-Baqara 2:23]
{وَإِن كُنتُمْ فِي
رَيْبٍ مِّمَّا نَزَّلْنَا عَلَىٰ عَبْدِنَا فَأْتُوا بِسُورَةٍ مِّن
مِّثْلِهِ وَادْعُوا شُهَدَاءَكُم مِّن دُونِ اللَّـهِ إِن كُنتُمْ
صَادِقِينَ}
Transliteration:Wain kuntum fee raybin
mimma nazzalna AAala AAabdina fatoo
bisooratin min mithlihi waodAAoo
shuhadaakum min dooni Allahi in kuntum
sadiqeena
These challenges were not just empty words with no one caring to
prove them wrong. Prophet Muhammad's call to monotheism, to the
abolition of idolatry in all its forms, and to the equality of
slaves and their masters threatened the whole socio-economic
framework of Mecca society in general, and the position of the
ruling Quraishee tribe from which the Prophet came in particular.
Mecca, the trading center of Arabia, as well as its spiritual
center, desperately wanted to stop the spread of Islam. Yet all
that the Prophet's opponents had to do to crush the movement was to
make up a single chapter like any one of those which the Prophet
and his followers were reciting to the people. A number of
Quraishee orators and poets tried to imitate the Quran, but they
failed. They then resorted to offering him vast amounts of wealth,
the position of king over them, and the most noble and beautiful of
their women in exchange for his promise to stop inviting people to
Islam. He responded to them by reciting the first thirteen verses
of Chapter Fussilat, until they asked him to stop.[1] The Quraish
also resorted to torturing their slaves and relatives who had
embraced Islam in a vain attempt to cause them to revert to
paganism. Later they organized an economic boycott against the
Prophet his followers and the members of his clan, Banu Hashim, in
an attempt to starve them into submission. But even this plan
eventually failed. Finally, they plotted to kill him in his home by
sending armed young men from each of the clans of Quraish in order
that the guilt of his murder be shared by all the clans, making
revenge by the Prophet's clan impossible.
However, God enabled the Prophet and his followers to flee Mecca
and join a new band of converts who had arisen among the tribes of
a city to the north called Yathrib. Islam spread rapidly through
the clans of Yathrib, and within a year Muslims became the city's
majority. Prophet Muhammad was then made the ruler, and the name of
the city was changed to Medina an-Nabi (The City of the Prophet may
God praise him), which was then shortened to "Medina." Over the
next eight years, the clans of Mecca and its neighboring lands
mounted a series of unsuccessful battle campaigns against the
emerging Muslim state in Medina, which ended with the Muslim
invasion of Mecca itself.
All of this bloodshed could have been avoided if only the Quraish
and their allies had been able to produce a mere three lines of
poetry or flowing prose similar to the shortest chapter of the
Quran. Hence, there can be no doubt about the inimitability of the
Quran's literary style, about the miracle of its rhyme and the
marvel of its rhythm.
It has been suggested that the inimitability of the Quran is not
necessarily unique, for great English poets like Shakespeare,
Chaucer, or great poets in any language tend to have distinctly
unique styles which set them apart from their contemporaries.
However, if, for example, some leading poet of today were to make
an in-depth study of Shakespeare's writings and write a sonnet in
Shakespeare's style in old ink and on old paper, then claim that he
had discovered a lost poem of Shakespeare's, the literary world
would probably accept this claim, even after careful study. Thus,
even the greatest of poets could be imitated; no matter how unique
his style was, just as the famous painters have been imitated. [In
fact, some English scholars consider much of what has been
attributed to Shakespeare to have been written by his contemporary,
Christopher Marlowe.] The Quran, however, is way above this level,
as attempts to forge chapters have been made throughout the ages,
yet none has withstood close scrutiny. And, as was mentioned
before, the incentive to imitate the Quran was more intense during
the time of its revelation when literally skills were at their peak
than at any other time, yet there was no successful attempt.
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Footnotes:
[1] Collected by al-Hakim, al-Bayhaqee, Aboo Ya'laa and Ibn
Hishaam, and declared Hasan by Ibrahim al-'Alee in Sahih as-Seerah
an-Nabaweeyah, p.64.
Source: Dr. Bilal Philips