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Science regards as
“scientific” any fact established through
empirical methods. Therefore, assertions not
established through observation and experiment
are only theories or hypotheses.
As
science cannot be sure about the future, it does
not make definite predictions. Doubt is the
basis of scientific investigation. However
Prophet Muhammad, upon him be peace and
blessings, who was taught by All-Knowing, made
many decisive predictions. Most have come true
already; the rest are waiting for their time to
come true. Many Qur’anic verses point to
recently discovered and established scientific
facts. As pointed out in the previous section,
the Qur’an mentions many important issues of
creation and natural phenomena that even the
most intelligent person living fourteen
centuries ago could not have known. Furthermore,
it uses the Prophets’ miracles to allude to the
farthest reaches of science, which originated in
the Knowledge of the All-Knowing
One.
DOES THE QUR’AN CONTAIN
EVERYTHING?
Being a Book describing man
and the universe, the Quran contains
‘everything’. It declares:
With Him are
the keys of the Unseen. None but He knows them.
And He knows what is in the land and the sea.
Not a leaf falls but with His Knowledge, not a
grain amid the darkness of the earth, nothing of
wet or dry but (it is noted) in a Manifest Book.
(al-An‘am, 6.59)
Ibn Mas‘ud says that the
Quran provides information on everything but we
may not be able to see everything in it. Ibn
‘Abbas, known as the Interpreter of the Quran
and the Scholar of the Ummah, asserts that if he
loses the rein of his camel, he can find it by
means of the Quran. Jalal al-Din al-Suyuti, a
significant scholar who lived in Egypt in the
15th century, explains that all sciences or
branches of knowledge are to be found in the
Quran.
How can a book of medium size and
which contains reiterations contain everything
we need about life, sciences, conduct, creation,
the past and future and so on?
As is
known, the Quran is a book of medium size and
due to certain purposes it makes reiterations.
So, how can it contain everything we need about
life, sciences, conduct, creation, the past and
future and so on?
Before proceeding to
explain this important matter, we should point
out that in order to benefit from the Quran,
which addresses all time and space and all
levels of understanding from philosophers to
sociologists and psychologists, from physicists
to biologists, from lawyers to Traditionists and
from spiritual guides to educationists, one
should be prepared to benefit from it. A student
of the Quran should, first of all, have firm
belief in the Quran and does his utmost to
practice it in his daily life. Second, he must
try to refrain from sins as much as possible.
Thirdly, the Quran declares that a man has only
that for which he makes effort (al-Najm, 53.39),
so, in order to benefit from the Quran, a
student of the Quran should, in the manner of a
good, experienced diver searching for coral or
of a deep-sea explorer, dive into the ‘ocean’ of
the Qur’an and, with no tiredness and boredom,
he should continue his research until death.
Fourthly, understanding the Qur’an requires a
good command of the Arabic language and
sufficient knowledge about all the branches of
natural and religious sciences. Therefore, a
good interpretation of the Quran demands the
cooperation of scientists from all the fields of
natural and sociological sciences and religious
scholars-experts on the Quranic commentary,
Hadith, fiqh (Islamic Jurisprudence), theology
and spiritual sciences. Fifthly, while reciting
and studying it, a student of the Quran should
regard him as the first addressee of the Quran.
He should be conscious of the fact that every
verse of the Quran addresses each of its
students directly. If we consider, for example,
its verses telling of the past events or the
stories of the Prophets and their peoples as,
simply, an account of certain historical events
which has nothing to say to us, we cannot
benefit from the Quran. We should know that with
all of its verses, the Quran addresses us
directly and describes us to
ourselves.
According to its nature,
significance, worth and place in existence,
everything has a place of its own in the
Quran
According to its nature,
significance, worth and place in existence,
everything has a place of its own in the
Quran:
The Quran contains every thing but
not in the same degree. The Quran pursues four
purposes: it seeks to prove the existence and
Unity of God, Prophethood and bodily
resurrection and concentrates on worship of God
and justice. In order to realize its purposes,
the Quran draws our attentions to God’s acts in
the universe, His matchless art displayed
through creation, the manifestations of His
Names and Attributes and the magnificent,
perfect order and harmony in existence. Also, it
mentions certain historical events, lay down the
rules of personal and social good conduct and
morality and the principles of a happy,
harmonious social life. Again, it explains how
we must worship our Creator and what we must do
in order to please Him. The Quran also gives
much account of the other life and expounds how
we can gain eternal happiness and be saved from
eternal punishment.
· Everything is found
in the Quran, but everyone cannot see every
thing in it since the things are found at
different levels.
The verse above
(al-An‘am, 6.59) states that everything, wet or
dry, is found in it. Is that really so? Yes,
everything is found in it, but everyone cannot
see every thing in it since the things are found
at different levels. The Quran contains all
things, but since the basic duty of the Quran
is, as mentioned above, to teach about the
perfections, essential qualities and acts of God
and the duties and the status and affairs
pertaining to the sphere of servanthood to God,
it contains them either in the form of seeds or
nuclei or summaries or as principles or signs,
and they are found either explicitly or
implicitly, or allusively, or vaguely, or
suggestively. One or other of these forms is
preferred according to occasion, in a way
fitting for the purposes of the Quran and in
connection with the requirements of the context.
For example:
As the result of man’s
progress in science and industry, some
scientific and technological wonders such as
planes, electricity, motor vehicles, and means
of radio and telecommunication have come into
existence and taken the most prominent position
in the material life of mankind.
The
Quran’s viewpoint of life and the world is
completely different from the modern
one
The Quran’s viewpoint of life and the
world is completely different from the modern
one. According to the Quran, the world is a
guest-house. Man is a guest with many duties who
will stay there for a short time only, and he is
charged with preparing all the necessities for
eternal life. He will give priority to the most
urgent and important of his duties. Therefore,
whatever is designed and used mostly for worldly
purposes, it will have very little share in
servanthood to and worship of God, which is
founded upon love of truth and otherworldliness,
and therefore it will have a place in the Quran
according to its merit.
If the Quran had
mentioned future events and scientific
developments explicitly, then the purpose for
testing men would have been
meaningless
Religion is for examination,
a test and trial offered by God so that in the
area of competition elevated spirits and base
ones may be distinguished from each other. Just
as raw materials are put in the fire so that
diamond and coal, gold and earth, separate out
from one another, so too, in this arena of trial
the Divine obligations are for testing conscious
beings and putting them to a competition so that
the precious ‘ore’ in the ‘mine’ of human
potential may be separated from the dross. Since
the Qur’an was sent for man to be perfected
through trial in this abode of testing, in this
arena of competition, for sure it will only
allude to the future events pertaining to the
world, which everyone will witness in due course
of time, and will only open the door to reason
to a degree that proves its argument. If it had
mentioned them explicitly, then the purpose for
testing men would have been meaningless. Simply,
the truth of the Divine obligations or proposals
would have been as evident as if inscribed with
stars on the face of the skies. Then everyone
would be left no alternative other than
affirming them. There would be no competition,
the testing and trial would mean nothing. A
spirit like coal would remain together with, and
appear to be of the same degree as, a spirit
like diamond.
Again, the Quran addresses
all times and places and all levels of
understanding. It is the commonalty in every
community and in every age that constitute the
great majority of people. Therefore, in order to
guide everyone to truth and to its basic
purposes, the Quran follows a style and language
which is understandable to
everyone.
Again, the Quran addresses all
times and places and all levels of
understanding. It is the commonalty in every
community and in every age that constitute the
great majority of people. Therefore, in order to
guide everyone to truth and to its basic
purposes, the Quran follows a style and language
which is understandable to everyone. As an
ordinary man of the lowest intellectual level
can benefit from the Quran, a greatest
scientist, no matter to which branch of science
he belongs to, also benefits from the Quran.
This is also why the Quran usually uses a
symbolical language and frequently resorts to
metaphors, allegories, comparisons and parables.
Those who are well-versed in knowledge (Al
‘Imran, 3.7) know how to approach the Quran and
benefit from it and conclude that the Quran is
the Word of God.
If the Quran had
mentioned modern scientific and technological
discoveries, the people of earlier times would
not have been able to understand them and
therefore been deprived of benefiting from the
relevant verses of the Quran. Also, sciences are
in constant advance and what is regarded today
as true may appear tomorrow as wrong or, by
contrast, what we see today as wrong, may be
proved to be true in the future.
God
Almighty has endowed man with intellectual
faculties, so in many of its verses the Qur’an
urges man to use those faculties of him and
study nature and events.
God Almighty has
endowed man with intellectual faculties, so in
many of its verses the Quran urges man to use
those faculties of him and study nature and
events. If, therefore, the Quran had mentioned,
say, modern scientific and technological
discoveries or everything pertaining to life,
nature, history and man himself, it would have
been meaningless that man is created as the best
pattern of creation endowed with many
intellectual faculties. For he would not have
been able to use those faculties and improve
them.
If the Quran had mentioned
explicitly whatever we like it to do so, then it
would have been a book with hundreds of
thousands of pages impossible to read
If
the Quran had mentioned explicitly whatever we
like it to do so, then it would have been a book
with hundreds of thousands of pages and
therefore we would not be able to recite it
completely to benefit from its spiritual
enlightenment. Also, it would give us great
boredom to recite. This is contrary to the
reason of its revelation and the purposes it
pursues.... |