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The Qur'an's wisdom with the philosophy of its students Print E-mail
Written by Said Nursi   
Friday, 17 November 2006

We now present a most true evidence for its nobility, the clearest proof of its truth, and a most powerful sign of its miraculousness. Consider this: The Qur'an contains and explains all degrees, varieties, and requirements of Divine Unity's manifestation in a perfectly balanced manner.[18] Moreover, it maintains the equilibrium among elevated Divine truths, contains all commandments and principles required by the Divine Names, and maintains exact and sensitive relationships among them. It holds together all the acts and "functions" of God's Divinity and Lordship with perfect balance.

All of these show its matchless virtue and characteristics, which cannot be found in the greatest human works, in those of saints who penetrate the inner realities of things, or of those Illuminists who discern the inner aspects of things and events, or of those wholly purified scholars who penetrate the World of the Unseen. It is as if, according to a certain division of labor, each group devoted itself to one branch of the mighty tree of truth and busied itself only with its leaves and fruits, all the while being unaware of the others.

Absolute, unlimited truth cannot be comprehended by restricted minds and vision, but only by the Qur'an's universal and all‑encompassing vision. All that is not the Qur'an cannot comprehend the universal truth in its entirety, even if they benefit from it, for their minds are limited, restricted, and wholly absorbed in only a couple of its parts. They frequently go to extremes, dwelling on one or two points more than the others, and thereby destroy the balance and accurate relations among the truths. This point was discussed in the Second Branch of The Twenty‑fourth Word. We will approach it here with another parable.

Imagine a treasure under the sea full of jewels. Many divers look for it but, since their eyes are closed, they search for it with their hands. One seizes a large diamond and concludes that he has found the treasure. When he hears that his friends have found other jewels, such as a round ruby or a square amber, he thinks that they are facets or embellishments of what he has found. Each diver has the same idea.

Such a thought and attitude destroys the balance and accurate relations among truths. It even changes the color of many of them, for one is compelled to make forced interpretations and detailed explanations to see the true color of truths or show them to others. Some even deny or falsify them. Those who make a careful study of the Illuminists' books, or of the works of Sufi masters who rely on their visions and illuminations without weighing them on the scales of the Qur'an and the Sunna, will confirm this judgment. Although they have benefited from the Qur'an and generally have been taught by it, their teachings have certain shortcomings and defects because they are not the Qur'an itself. The Qur'an, that ocean of truths, encompasses and sees in its verses the entire treasure and describes its jewels in such a harmonious and balanced way that they show their beauty perfectly.

For example, just as the Qur'an sees and shows the Divine Lordship's grandeur in:

The whole Earth is His handful on the Day of this world's destruction and building of the next, and the heavens are rolled up in His Right Hand (39:67) and The day when We shall roll up the heavens like a scroll rolled up for books (21:104), it sees and shows the all‑encompassing Mercy expressed by God, nothing on Earth or in the heavens is hidden from Him. He shapes you in the wombs as He pleases (3:5‑6); He grasps every moving creature by the forelock (11:56), and How many a moving creature there is that bears not its own provision. God provides for it and for you·(29: 60).

Just as it sees and points out the vast creativity expressed by: (He) has created the heavens and Earth and made the darkness and the light (6: 1), it sees and shows the comprehensive Divine control of things and His encompassing Lordship in: He creates you and what you do (37:96). It sees and shows the mighty truth expressed in: He gives life to Earth after its death (30:50) and the truth concerning His munificence expressed in: Your Lord has inspired the bee (16:68), and the great truth concerning His Sovereignty and command expressed in: The sun and the moon and the stars subservient by His command (7:54).

The Qur'an sees and shows the truth of compassion and administration expressed in:

Do they not observe the birds above them in ranks, spreading and closing their wings? None uphold them save the Most Merciful; indeed He sees all things (67:19); the vast truth expressed in: His Seat includes the heavens and Earth, and He is never weary of preserving them (2:255); the truth concerning His overseeing, expressed by: He is with you wheresoever you may be (57:4); the all‑embracing truth expressed by: He is the First and the Last, the Outward and the Inward, and knows all things (57:3); His being nearer to beings than themselves, expressed by: We have created humanity and know what its soul whispers to it; We are nearer to humanity than its jugular vein (50:16); the elevated truth expressed by: The angels and the Spirit ascend to Him in a day the span of which is 50,000 years (70:4); and the all‑encompassing truth expressed by: God enjoins justice and absolute kindness, and giving to kinsfolk, and forbids all shameful deeds, things abominable to sound conscience, injustice and rebellion·(16:90).

In short, the Qur'an sees and shows in detail all truths pertaining to knowledge and practice concerning this world and the next, and each of the six pillars of belief. It points out purposefully and earnestly each of the five pillars of Islam and all other principles of securing happiness in both worlds. It preserves the exact balance and maintains the accurate relationship and proportion among them. The subtlety and beauty originating from the harmony of the entirety of those truths give rise to a form of the Qur'an's·miraculousness.

Scholars of theology study the Qur'an and have written numerous volumes on the pillars of belief. But some of them, like the Mu'tazilites, have preferred reason over transmitted knowledge originating from Divine Revelations and so have not been able to explain these truths as effectively as even 10 Qur'anic verses. It is as though they have dug tunnels under mountains as far as the end of the world to obtain and convey water. They have gone along with the chains of cause and effect as far as the beginning of time and then, cutting the chains, jumped over to eternity to obtain the knowledge of God (the water of life for people) and prove the Necessarily Existent One's Existence.

On the other hand, each Qur'anic verse can extract "water" from every place like the staff of Moses, opening up a window from everything and making the Majestic Maker known. In addition, because they could not preserve the exact balance between the truths, leaders of all heretical groups, those who have delved into the inner nature of things by relying on their visions instead of the Prophet's Sunna, have returned half‑way and formed different sects. This caused them to fall into heresy and misguidance, and to cause others to deviate. Their failure also demonstrates the Qur'an's miraculousness.

Conclusion

Among the gleams of the Qur'an's miraculousness, its reiterations and brief mentions of scientific facts and developments, which are wrongly thought to be a cause of defects, were discussed in the Fourteenth Droplet of The Nineteenth Word. Another gleam of the Qur'an's miraculousness, radiating in its mention of the Prophets' miracles, was shown in the Second Station of The Twentieth Word. You will find many other gleams discussed in other Words and my Arabic treatises. However, I will add here another aspect.

Just as the Prophets' miracles exhibit an aspect of the Qur'an's miraculousness, the Qur'an with all its miracles is a miracle of Muhammad, and all of his miracles constitute a miracle of the Qur'an. They demonstrate its Divine authorship, through which each word becomes a miracle, for just like a seed, each word may contain a tree of truths; just like a heart's center, it may have relations with all parts of a mighty truth. Since it depends on an All‑Encompassing Knowledge and Infinite Will, it may be interrelated by means of its letters, position, meaning, connotations, and in its entirety, with countless other things. This is why specialists in the science of letters assert that each letter of the Qur'an contains as many mysteries as may cover a page, and prove it to those who have expert knowledge in that science.

Consider all the Lights, Rays, Gleams, Radiances, and Beams discussed so far, and see how the claim at the beginning becomes a decisive, undeniable conclusion. In other words, this entire treatise decisively proclaims the truth of: Say: "If humanity and jinn banded together to produce the like of this Qur'an, they would never produce its like, even though they backed one another" (17:88).

Glory be to You. We have no knowledge save what You have taught us. You are the All‑Knowing, All‑Wise. Our Lord, do not reproach us if we forget or make mistakes. Lord, open my breast and make my task easy. Loosen a knot on my tongue so that they can understand my words.

O God, bestow blessings and peace; the best, finest, most pleasant and most manifest, purest, most gracious and most abundant, mightiest, greatest, most honored and most elevated, most flourishing and most prosperous, and the most subtle of your blessings; the most sufficient and most abundant, most ample and most exalted, most sublime and most constant of Your peace; and as blessing, peace, mercy, good pleasure, forgiving, and pardoning, in increase and continuity along with the rains from the clouds as favors of Your Generosity and Munificence, and in continuos multiplication along with the fine and exquisite bounties of Your Generosity and Benevolence; eternally, without beginning or end, along with Your eternity—on Your servant, Your beloved, and Your Messenger, Muhammad, the best of Your creatures, the brightest light, the clearest and most decisive proof, the most profound ocean, the most comprehensive light, having shone grace and overwhelming majesty and superior perfection; bestow blessings on him through the grandeur of Your Being, and blessings on his Family and Companions through which You may forgive our sins, open our breasts, purify our hearts, uplift our spirits, bless us, refine our memories and thoughts, remove the filth from our souls, cure us of our diseases, and open the locks on our hearts.


[18] For example, Unity of Divine Being, and being unique or having no matches in His Essential Qualities as being God and the Lord, and in His Attributes, Names, and acts. (Tr.)

 
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