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People
can be grouped into three categories according to their different
attitudes toward the physical miracles of Prophet Muhammad (peace
and blessings be upon him). The three categories and some of the
miracles are discussed below:
Those
With an Exaggerated Belief
These
people exaggerate in their belief in all the miracles mentioned in
the books written on this subject, regardless of whether these books
have been written by early scholars or contemporary ones, and
regardless of whether they are concerned with examining the
authenticity of the hadiths reported or not. They also pay no
attention to whether the hadiths reported in this connection are in
line with the principles and foundations of religious knowledge or
at odds with them. The mere mention of the miracles in a book, any
book, or in poems eulogizing Prophet Muhammad (peace and blessings
be upon him) is sufficient evidence for these people to believe in
their occurrence.
This
is usually the attitude of the ordinary people. But we are to bear
in mind that there are books that are of trivial weight and others
that are of great weight, and that hadiths vary with regard to their
degrees of authenticity. There are hadiths that are strongly
authentic, others that are just accepted, others rejected, and
others fabricated.
Unfortunately,
the Muslim religious culture is stained with some authors who are
fond of cramming their writings with strange stories, even if they
are unreasonable or contradict the authentic religious texts. Such
authors pay no attention to the authenticity of the information they
include when they write about the Prophet’s miracles or when they
intend to preach good manners and warn against evil deeds, on the
pretext that no juristic rulings would be concluded from such
narrations. When it comes to handling subjects relating to the
lawful and unlawful in religion, they become meticulously concerned
with the authenticity of the narrations, exercising great effort in
revising and refining the hadiths they cite.
This
category of writers also includes such ones who cite the narrations
in their writings accompanied by the chains of reporters, without
making reference to whether these narrators are credible and
reliable, believing that merely mentioning the chains of reporters
would serve as a disclaimer against any problem in terms of the
authenticity of such narrations. This assumption, however, might
have been feasible in the early ages when the citation of the chain
of reporters was adequate for scholars to distinguish the
authenticity of the reports. However, this is not workable at
present, as most people depend on narrating whatever they find in
books without studying the chains of reporters or verifying the
degree of reliability of each reporter. Today, writers merely quote
the texts of hadiths they want to include in their writings from
reference books such as At-Tabari’s or Ibn Sa`d’s Tabaqat,
disregarding all about their chains of reporters.

Those
With an Exaggerated Denial
On
the other hand, another type of writer exaggerates in denying all
the physical miracles of the Prophet (peace and blessings be upon
him). Their pretext in adopting such an attitude is that the
principal and sole miracle of Prophet Muhammad (peace and blessings
be upon him) is the Glorious Qur’an. People are challenged to
produce a similar book, ten surahs, or even a single surah that can
be comparable to the Qur’an. Further, when the polytheists asked
for physical signs, the verses of the Qur’an were revealed to
reject their demands. Allah Almighty says:
[And
they say: We will not put faith in thee till thou cause a spring to
gush forth from the earth for us; or thou have a garden of date
palms and grapes, and cause rivers to gush forth therein abundantly;
or thou cause the heaven to fall upon us piecemeal, as thou hast
pretended, or bring Allah and the angels as a warrant; or thou have
a house of gold; or thou ascend up into heaven, and even then we
will put no faith in thine ascension till thou bring down for us a
book that we can read. Say (O Muhammad): My Lord be glorified! Am I
naught save a mortal messenger? And naught prevented mankind from
believing when the guidance came unto them save that they said: Hath
Allah sent a mortal as (His) messenger?]
(Al-Israa’ 17:90–94)
Explaining
the reason behind this rejection, Allah Almighty says:
[Naught
hindereth Us from sending portents save that the folk of old denied
them. And We gave Thamud the she-camel, a clear portent, but they
did wrong in respect of her. We send not portents save to warn.]
(Al-Israa’ 17:59)
He
the Exalted also asserts in another verse that the Qur’an is a
sufficient sign to prove the truthfulness of the message of Prophet
Muhammad (peace and blessings b upon him):
[And
is it not enough for them that We have sent down to thee the Book
which is rehearsed to them? Verily, in that is Mercy and a Reminder
to those who believe.]
(Al-`Ankabut 29:51)
According
to this second category of writers, there is a divine wisdom in
giving the Prophet (peace and blessings be upon him) an intellectual
rather than a physical miracle: It befits the concluding of the
divine messages sent to mankind, after they have reached maturity,
to be coupled with an eternal miracle of intellectual nature, for it
is the intellectual aspect that grants a miracle its eternity, while
the physical miracles are of temporary nature. Such writers base
their viewpoint on an authentic hadith reported by Al-Bukhari:
“Every
Prophet was given miracles because of which (his) people believed,
but what I have been given is a revelation which Allah has revealed
to me. So I hope that my followers will outnumber the followers of
the other Prophets on the Day of Resurrection.”
In
my point of view, there are two things that motivate this category
of writers to hold such attitude:
First,
people’s staunch belief in the present time in the physical
sciences and the inevitability of the law of causality. Some
examples are that fire burns, that a knife cuts, that inanimate
objects cannot turn into animate ones, that a dead person cannot
return to life in this world.
Second,
the exaggerated belief of the first category in the occurrence of
all miracles mentioned in the books, regardless of whether or not
they truly happened. The
first category’s exaggeration in this matter is so extreme that
they almost cancel the existence of the law of causality upon which
Almighty Allah has established this world.

Those
With a Moderate View
This
category, to which I belong, holds a moderate view on the question
in hand. This stance can be outline in the following points:
The
Glorious Qur’an is the supreme miracle of Prophet Muhammad (peace
and blessings be upon). With it the Prophet (peace and blessings be
upon him) challenged all mankind, and particularly the Arab people.
It is also the miracle that has distinguished the message of Islam
from the other divine messages. Its subject matter is the very proof
of the truthfulness of the Prophet (peace and blessings be upon
him). Besides, it has ineffable eloquence and is of a supreme
intellectual nature. It contains vast knowledge of the Unseen,
whether of the past, present, or future.
Almighty
Allah granted the Prophet (peace and blessings be upon him) many
great physical miracles, but the purpose of them was not to
establish the truthfulness of his message but rather to honor,
support, console, and assure him and his followers. Examples of
these miracles are the Night Journey, which is mentioned directly in
the Qur’an, and the Ascension to the Heavens, which is referred to
implicitly in the Qur’an and stated explicitly in the authentic
hadiths. Allah Almighty also sent angels to fight with and support
the believers at the Battle of Badr. He Most High also caused rain
then to fall unto the believers to purify them and satisfy their
thirst, while the disbelievers did not avail from it though they
were then adjacent to the Muslims in the battlefield. Allah the
Exalted also protected the Prophet and his Companion Abu Bakr, when
they were in Thawr Cave, against the disbelievers who were then
pursuing them; had the disbelievers looked down at their feet when
they reached the mouth of the cave, they would have detected the
presence of the Prophet and Abu Bakr. Other authentic miracles took
place in the Battles of Al-Ahzab and Tabuk in which there was
insufficient food for the whole Muslim army; Allah Almighty caused a
small amount of food in the hands of the Prophet (peace and
blessings be upon him) to suffice the whole army and completely
satisfy their hunger.
We
only accept the physical miracles that are mentioned plainly in the
Qur’an or the authentic Sunnah. Otherwise, we disregard the
miracles padded out in many trivial books written on this subject.

True
Miracles of the Prophet
A
number of the Companions reported that the Prophet (peace and
blessings be upon him) used to stand on a stump of a date palm tree
while addressing the Muslims. When a pulpit was placed for him, the
stump was heard crying like a pregnant camel till the Prophet got
down from the pulpit and placed his hand over it. Commenting on this
incident, the eminent early scholar Taj Ad-Din As-Subki said, “The
crying of the stump of the date palm tree is an authentic incident,
having been reported by about twenty Companions within various
honest chains of reporters.” Such was also the viewpoint of Judge
`Iyad in his book Ash-Shifa’.
Anas
said: “A bowl of water was brought to the Prophet (peace and
blessings be upon him) while he and his Companions were at
Az-Zawra’. He (peace and blessings be upon him) placed his hand in
it and the water started flowing between his fingers. All the people
performed ablution (with that water)” (Al-Bukhari and Muslim).
Al-Bara’
(may Allah be pleased with him) also said that they were 1,400
persons on the day of Al-Hudaibiyah, and there was a well at
Al-Hudaibiyah. They drew out its water not leaving even a single
drop. Knowing this, the Prophet (peace and blessings be upon him)
sat at the edge of the well and asked for some water with which he
rinsed his mouth and then he threw it out into the well. The
Companions stayed for a short while and then drew water from the
well and “[we] quenched our thirst, and even our riding animals
drank water to their satisfaction” (Al-Bukhari).
There
are some other miracles with regard to the water having sprung from
between the Prophet’s fingers, the authenticity of all of which
has been established.
a)
The authentic collections of the
Sunnah mention many examples of Almighty Allah immediately answering
supplications of the Prophet (peace and blessings be upon him). For
example, he (peace and blessings be upon him) supplicated Almighty
Allah in a rainless year at a time when there was no trace of cloud
in the sky, and before he (peace and blessings be upon him) got down
from the pulpit, it rained abundantly. Likewise, he (peace and
blessings be upon him) beseeched Almighty Allah to bring the Muslims
victory on the Battle of Badr, to make Ibn `Abbas an eminent
knowledgeable scholar in religion, and to give Anas abundant
offspring, and Almighty Allah answered all these invocations. This
was also the case even when he invoked Almighty Allah’s punishment
against some people who affronted him.
b)
The Prophet (peace and blessings be
upon him) also foretold some events which actually came true either
during his lifetime or after his death. Examples of this are his
prediction that the Muslims would conquer Yemen, Busrah, Persia,
Constantinople, and so on; that `Ammar would be killed by the
rebel party; and that through the Prophet’s grandson Al-Hasan
Almighty Allah would reconcile the two disputing parties of the
Muslims.

The
Miracles Related Concerning Hijrah
Some
writers relate that when the Prophet (peace and blessings be upon
him) hid in Thawr Cave, two pigeons laid eggs at the mouth of the
cave and a tree suddenly grew until it covered the entrance of the
cave. There is no hadith— whether authentic, sound, or even
weak—related concerning this incident.
With
regard to people’s circulating that a spider spun its web over the
mouth of the cave, there is a hadith reported about it, but it is
regarded as sound by some scholars and as weak by some others.
The
Qur’an indicates that Almighty Allah supported the Prophet (peace
and blessings be upon him) with unseen hosts. He Almighty says of
this:
[Then
Allah caused His peace of reassurance to descend upon him and
supported him with hosts ye cannot see.]
(At-Tawbah 9:40)
Supposing
that the story of the pigeons and the spider had been true, they
would have been seen, while the verse asserts that the hosts with
which Almighty Allah helped His Prophet were unseen. Reflecting a
bit on this comparison, one, undoubtedly, will realize that
supporting the Prophet (peace and blessings be upon him) with unseen
hosts is a miracle more indicative of Almighty Allah’s capability
and might than aiding him with visible hosts.
It
is the eulogizing poems and writings of the modern authors that have
caused such extraordinary incidents to circulate widely among
people.
This
is my attitude towards the question of the miracles of the Prophet
(peace and blessings be upon him).

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