The Language of the Quran
Another crucial point in this respect is the huge difference between the linguistic style of the Quran and that of the Prophet’s own style of communication. A comparison of his recorded sayings or Hadith and the Quran shows unequivocally that the author of the Quran is entirely different from that of the Hadith.
It is recorded authentically that the Arabs themselves were surprised by the language of the Quran because the Prophet was not known to have composed any literature before its revelation. Clearly, the language of the Quran was not from Muhammad’s own tongue. Even in translation non-Arabic speaking people can see a difference between the Quran and the Hadith.
3- There is a marked difference between the Prophet’s preserved statements and Quranic verses.
The books of Hadith are in multiple volumes and are more extensive than the Quran. When he naturally spoke, his speech was not associated with any extraordinary experiences but when he received revelation he would often experience different states.
When verses were revealed to Prophet Muhammad, sometimes he would sweat even on cold days, his face would become red, his body would become heavy and so forth. Was he just acting? Definitely not! How could he have lived such a pretentious and complicated life for 23 years? This indeed is the difference between the Hadith and the Quran. Muslims believe the Quran is God’s own speech that was revealed to the Prophet.
4- A good portion of the Quran includes stories of previous Prophets and their nations.
Often the concluding remark is that the Prophet had no previous knowledge of any of those stories or historical events, he only knew of them through revelation. For example, after relating the story of Moses and Pharaoh the Quran states:
You were not (there, O Prophet,) on the western mountainside (of Tur) when We decreed to Moses the Commandments. Nor were you (there among those) of the Children of Israel who bore witness (to these events). Furthermore, We brought forth (many) generations (after Moses), such that the life spans (of heedlessness) that stretched over them grew (so very) long – (until they forgot God’s Covenant). Moreover, you were not (there with Moses when he was) dwelling among the people of Median, conveying Our message unto them… (28: 44-5)
The Quran also states after the story of Jesus and Mary:
This account of something that was beyond the reach of your perception We [now] reveal unto you: for you were not with them when they drew lots as to which of them should be Mary’s guardian, and you were not with them when they contended [about it] with one another. (3: 44)
After the story of Joseph:
This is (but one) of the tidings of the unseen (past) that We reveal to you, (O Prophet). For you were not with them when they resolved (to execute) their (evil) affair, and while they were plotting (it). (12: 102)
Verses like the above appear routinely after such stories in the Quran. Thus, if one were to believe the allegation that the Prophet had learned these stories from Jews and Christians, why should he ascribe them to God? His teachers would have been close at hand and someone would have eventually exposed him as a fraud.
Muhammad Criticized!
5- The Quran criticized the Prophet Muhammad on several occasions.
The Prophet was once sitting with some of the leaders of his tribe inviting them to Islam. A blind man who was already a Muslim, came to the Prophet to ask him some questions regarding Islam. The Prophet ignored him, as he was busy delivering the message of Islam to the leaders of Quraysh, hoping they would come to Islam. Thereupon the revelation came reproaching and reprimanding him:
He frowned and turned away because the blind man approached him. Yet for all you did know (O Muhammad) he might perhaps have grown in purity? (80: 1-3)
The Prophet used to love to eat honey. Once he refused to consume any honey after his wives discouraged him to do so, as a result of a quarrel they were having among themselves. God again reproached and reprimanded him:
O Prophet! Why do you, out of a desire to please [one or another of] your wives impose [on yourself] a prohibition of something that God has made lawful to you? (66:1)
At the time of an impending battle some people who had hypocritically embraced Islam came and asked the Prophet to excuse them from participating in the campaign. The merciful Prophet accepted their excuse. Thereupon revelation came down upon him again:
May God pardon you (O Prophet)! Why did you grant them permission (to stay at home) before it had become obvious to you as to who was speaking truth and (before) you came to know (who were) the liars. (9: 43)
There are many incidents in which the Prophet was reproached by God. The logical question here is why would the Prophet make up these verses?
Even if someone had instructed him to include these verses, why would he run the risk of damaging his image?
His followers regarded him as the Messenger of God; why would he purposely show himself in a less than flattering light?
The logical and factual answer is that these are not the words of the Prophet, and he is not the author of the Quran.
6- One of the major themes of the Quran is that the source of the Quran is God Himself.
The Prophet did not have any right to add or subtract from what had been revealed to him:
If he (Muhammad) had dared to attribute some of (his own) sayings unto Us, we would indeed have seized him by his right hand and would indeed have cut his life-vein. (69: 44-6)
If the Prophet was really the author of the Quran, why did he have to state these words?
What would he have gained if he allegedly concocted the Quran and then devised threats against himself?
The Prophet was universally known never to have uttered a lie in his whole life. Before Prophethood, even the pagan idolaters attested to his truthfulness, and he was known as the “Trustworthy” and “Truthful”.
Are we to believe that suddenly, at the age of 40, the Prophet not only began to utter a long string of lies but that these lies were against God Himself?
History and logic would refute this notion.
(From Discovering Islam’s archive.)
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