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The Light OF Muhammad(SAW)
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Melad-ul-Nabi (Sallallaho Alaihi Wasallam)
The Light of the Prophet
Sall-Allahu `alayhi wa sallam
The "Salafis" object to the verses (of al-Burda
by al-Busiri):
52. wa kullu ayin ata al-rusulu al-kiramu
biha / fa innama ittasalat min nurihi bihimi
And every single sign brought by the noble
Prophets was theirs only in connection to his light,
53. fa innahu shamsu fadlin hum
kawakibuha / yuzhirna anwaraha li al-nasi fi al-zulami
For verily he is a sun of perfection of
which they are the moons bringing its light to people in the midst of darkness.
Their objection is based on
their known abhorrence of referring to the Prophet as "Light," although Allah
Himself refers to him as "light" three times in His Glorious Book:
·
"From Allah has come to you a Light
and a Book manifest." (5:15)
·
"The likeness of His light is as a
niche wherein is a Lamp (the lamp in a glass, the glass as it were a glittering
star) kindled from a Blessed Tree, an olive that is neither of the East nor of
the West, whose oil wellnigh would shine, even if no fire touched it; Light upon
Light." (24:35)
·
"O Prophet! Truly We have sent you as
a Witness, a Bearer of glad tidings, and a Warner, and as one who invites to
Allah by His leave, and as a Lamp spreading Light." (33:45-46)
Thus Allah Himself calls the
Prophet explicitly: a Lamp, a Lamp inside a niche, a Light, and again a Lamp
spreading light (sirajan muniran). This specific knowledge that the
Prophet is the spring-well of all other light in the world is by no means new,
rather it is inherited from the Companions themselves as established by the
following lines of his poet, Hassan ibn Thabit, as quoted by Ibn Hisham on the
last page of his Sirat Rasulillah:
He was the light and the brilliance we
followed.
He was sight and
hearing second only to Allah....
By Allah, no woman has conceived and given
birth
To one like the Apostle,
the Prophet and guide of his
people.
Nor has Allah created among his creatures
One more faithful to his sojourner or his
promise
Than he who was
the source of our light.
`Ali al-Qari said in his Sharh al-Shifa
(1:505) in commen-ting upon the Prophet's title "as a Lamp spreading Light" (33:
46):
Muhammad... is a tremendous light and the
source of all lights, he is also a book that gathers up and makes clear all the
secrets... sirajan muniran means a luminous sun, because of His saying:
"He hath placed therein a great lamp and a moon giving light" (25:61). There is
in this verse an indication that the sun is the highest of the material lights
and that other lights are outpourings from it: similarly the Prophet is the
highest of the spiritual lights and other lights are derived from him by virtue
of his mediating connection and pivotal rank in the overall sphere of creation.
This is also inferred from the tradition: "The first thing Allah created is my
light."
Commenting upon the same verse al-Khazin
says in his Tafsir: "Allah extended [amadda] the light of
discernment [basira] through the light of Muhammad's prophethood just as
He extends the light of eyesight [basar] through the light of the sun;
Allah called him a lamp and not a sun, because it is impossible to take anything
directly from the light of the sun, but it is possible to take many lights from
the lamp." Allah therefore caused this madad or light of discernment to
issue from the Prophet and extend to all.
al-Qastallani (d. 923) in his al-Mawahib
al-laduniyya (ed. al-Shami, 2:583), quoted Ibn Marzuq commenting on Busiri's
lines:
He [al-Busiri] means that every miracle that
every messenger has brought, surely was only because it was an extension to each
one of them of the light of Muhammad, may Allah bless him and give him peace.
How beautiful is his saying "surely was theirs only in connection to his light"
for it suggests that his light, may Allah bless him and give him peace, always
remained unchanged in him, and nothing of it was decreased. Had he said, "surely
it was part of his light", then it could have been imagined that he distributed
it to them, and that perhaps nothing of it remained for him. All the signs given
each one of them was only theirs through his light, may Allah bless him and give
him peace, because he is a sun of excellence, and they are the planets of that
sun which convey its lights to humankind in the darkness. The planets are not
shining by themselves, but they receive light from the sun, so that when the sun
is absent they show the light of the sun. Similarly, the Prophets before his
existence used to show his excellence, so that whatever lights appeared at the
hands of the messengers other than him, it was only from his outpouring light
and vast extension (madad), without decreasing anything of it.
·
`Irbad ibn Sarya relates
that the Prophet said: "Verily I was written in Allah's Presence as the Seal of
Prophets while verily Adam was still kneaded in his clay." (Narrated by Ibn
Hibban in his Sahih, and al-Hakim in his Mustadrak.)
·
The Prophet also said: “I was a Prophet
while Adam was still between the spirit and the body.” Tirmidhi narrated it and
said it hasan sahih, and it is authenticated by al-Hakim 2:609 as
sahih, and also narrated by Ibn Abi Shayba in his Musannaf 14:292,
and al-Bukhari in his Tarikh 7:374.
Imam Taj ad-Din Subki said: "It has been said that Allah created the
spirits before the bodies, and the Prophet's reference to his prophecy in the
hadith, "I was a Prophet while Adam was still between the spirit and the body”
may be a reference to his blessed spirit and to the Reality of Realities (haqiqat
al-haqa'iq). Our minds fall short of knowing such a Reality, but its Creator
knows it, and also those to whom He extends a madad of light from Him [man
amaddahu bi nurin ilahi]. Allah brings to existence whichever of these
realities that He likes in the time that He pleases. As for the reality of the
Prophet, it is most likely that it was before the creation of Adam, and Allah
gave it its prophetic attribute upon its creation; therefore already at that
time, he was the Prophet." (Quoted by Suyuti in Hawi li al-Fatawi, and by
Qastallani at the beginning of his Mawahib al-laduniyya 1:31-32.)
There is a further confirmation of the
relation of the light of the Prophet to that of the rest of creation in the
hadiths comparing Prophetic knowledge to the light of the stars in the darkness
of night. Anas relates that the Prophet said: "The simile of the scholars of
knowledge (al-`ulama') on the earth is the stars in the sky by which one
is guided in the darkness of the land and the sea. When the stars are clouded
over, the guides are about to be lost." Ahmad narrated it in his Musnad
(3:157 #12606) with a chain containing Rishdin ibn Sa`d who is weak. However, it
is confirmed by the hadith in Muslim and Ahmad narrated by Abu Musa al-Ash`ari
whereby the Prophet said:
The stars are trust-keepers for the heaven,
and when the stars wane, the heaven is brought what was promised (i.e. of the
corruption of the world and the coming of the Day of Judgment); and I am a
trust-keeper for my Companions, so when I go my Companions will be brought what
was promised them (i.e. of fitna and division); and my Companions are
trustkeepers for my Community, so when they go my Community will be brought what
was promised to you (i.e. following hawa and vying for dunya).
EXPLANATION OF THE PROPHET'S
NAME "LIGHT" (NUR)
There are three verses in the Qur'an which
mention the Prophet as a light.
·
Allah said: "From Allah has come
to you a Light and a Book manifest." (5:15)
Qadi `Iyad said: "He [the Prophet] was
named a Light because of the clarity of his case and the fact that his
Prophecy was made manifest, and also because of the illumination of the hearts
of the believers and the knowers of Allah with what he brought."
Suyuti in Tafsir al-Jalalayn,
Fayruzabadi in the Tafsir Ibn `Abbas entitled Tanwir al-miqbas (p.
72), Shaykh al-Islam, Imam Fakhr al-Din al-Razi, the Mujaddid of the sixth
century, in his Tafsir al-kabir (11:189), Qadi Baydawi in his Tafsir
entitled Anwar al-tanzil, al-Baghawi in his Tafsir entitled
Ma`alim al-tanzil (2:23), Imam al-Shirbini in his Tafsir entitled
al-Siraj al-munir (p. 360), the author of Tafsir Abi Sa`ud (4:36),
and Thana'ullah Pani Patti in his Tafsir al-mazhari, (3:67) said: "What
is meant by a Light is: Muhammad, Blessings and peace upon him."
Ibn Jarir al-Tabari in his Tafsir jami`
al-bayan (6:92) said: "There has come to you a Light from Allah:
He means by the Light: Muhammad, Blessings and peace upon him, by means of
whom Allah has illuminated the truth, brought forth Islam, and obliterated
idolatry. Therefore he (the Prophet) is a light for those who have been
enlightened by him and by his exposition of truth."
al-Khazin in his Tafsir (2:28)
similarly says: "There has come to you a Light from Allah
means: Muhammad, Blessings and peace upon him. Allah called him a light for
no other reason than that one is guided by him (Muhammad) in the same way that
one is guided by light in darkness."
al-Nasafi in his commentary entitled
Tafsir al-Madarik (1:276) and al-Qasimi in his Mahasin al-ta'wil
(6:1921) similarly say: "There has come to you a Light from Allah:
this is the light of Muhammad, Blessings and peace upon him, because one is
guided by him. Similarly he has been called a lamp
(siraj).
Imam Ahmad al-Sawi similarly said in his
supercommen-tary on Tafsir al-Jalalayn (1:258): "There has come to you
a Light from Allah: that Light is the Prophet, Blessings and peace
upon him. He was named a light because he enlightens the sight and guides it to
the correct path; and also because he is the root of every light whether
material or spiritual." We will return to the latter statement below insha
Allah.
Sayyid Mahmud al-Alusi in his commentary
entitled Tafsir Ruh al-Ma`ani (6:97) similarly says: "There has come
to you a Light from Allah: that is, an immense light which is the Light
of Lights and the Elect among all Prophets, Blessings and peace upon him."
Isma`il al-Haqqi in his supercommentary on
Alusi entitled Tafsir ruh al-bayan (2:370) similarly said: "There has
come to you a Light from Allah and a Book that makes all things manifest: It
is said that the meaning of the former is the Messenger, Blessings and peace
upon him, and the latter is the Qur'an... The Messenger is called a Light
because the first thing which Allah brought forth from the darkness of oblivion
with the light of His power was the light of Muhammad, Blessings and peace upon
him, as he (the Prophet) said: The first thing Allah created is my light." This
narration is addressed below.
Of particular note is the fact that the
Mu`tazilis insisted that the Light in verse 5:15 referred only to the Qur'an and
not to the Prophet. Alusi said in the continuation of the passage quoted above:
"Abu `Ali al-Jubba'i said that the light concerns the Qur'an because the Qur'an
discloses and brings forth the paths of guidance and certitude. al-Zamakhshari
[in al-Kashshaf 1:601] also contented himself with this explanation."
Further elaboration on these two sources is given by Shah `Abd al-`Aziz al-Multani
in his al-Nabras (p. 28-29): "al-Kashshaf proclaims itself Father
of the Mu`tazila... Abu `Ali al-Jubba'i is the Muhammad ibn `Abd al-Wahhab of
the Mu`tazila of Basra." The similarity of the Mu`tazila with the Wahhabis and "Salafis"
of modern times is pointed out by Imam Kawthari in many places in his Maqalat,
where he shows that as in the case of the Mu`tazila, the Wahhabis' denial of the
characteristics of the awliya' camouflages a denial of those of the
Prophets.
There is a notable explanation among Ahl
al-Sunna which ascribes the meaning of the Prophet to both the Light and the
Book. al-Sayyid al-Alusi said in Ruh al-ma`ani (6:97): "I do not consider
it far-fetched that what is meant by both the Light and the Manifest Book is the
Prophet, the conjunction being in the same way as what was said by al-Jubba'i
[in that that both the Light and the Book were the Qur'an]. There is no doubt
that all can be said to refer to the Prophet. Perhaps you will be reluctant to
accept this from the viewpoint of expression (`ibara); then let it be
from the viewpoint of subtle allusion (ishara)."
al-Qari said in Sharh al-shifa'
(1:505, Mecca ed.): "It has also been said that both the Light and the Book
refer to Muhammad, because just as he is a tremendous light and the source of
all lights, he is also a book that gathers up and makes clear all the secrets."
He also said (1:114, Madina ed.): "And what objection is there to predicate both
nouns to the Prophet, since he is in truth an immense Light due to the
perfection of his appearance among all light, and he is a Manifest Book since he
gathers up the totality of secrets and he makes evident all laws, situations,
and alternatives."
·
Allah said: "The likeness of His
light is as a niche wherein is a Lamp (the lamp in a glass, the glass as it were
a glittering star) kindled from a Blessed Tree, an olive that is neither of the
East nor of the West, whose oil wellnigh would shine, even if no fire touched
it; Light upon Light." (24:35)
Suyuti said in al-Riyad al-aniqa:
Ibn Jubayr and Ka`b al-Ahbar said: "What is meant by the second light is the
Prophet because he is the Messenger and the Expositor and the Conveyor from
Allah of what is enlightening and manifest." Ka`b said: "Its oil wellnigh would
shine because the Prophet wellnigh would be known to the people even if he did
not say that he was a Prophet, just as that oil would send forth light without a
fire."
Ibn Kathir comments on this verse in his
Tafsir by citing the report through Ibn `Atiyya whereby Ka`b al-Ahbar
explained Allah's words: yakadu zaytuha yudi'u wa law lam tamsashu nar as
meaning: "Muhammad is nearly manifest as a Prophet to people, even if he did not
declare it."
Qadi `Iyad said in al-Shifa' (English
p. 135): Niftawayh said regarding the words of Allah: "Its oil almost gives
light when no fire has touched it" (24:35): "This is the likeness that Allah has
made of His Prophet. He said that the meaning of the ayat was that this
face almost indicated his Prophethood even before he had received the Qur'an, as
Ibn Rawaha said:
Even if there had not been clear signs among
us,
His face would have told you the news."
Among those who said that the
meaning of mathalu nurihi -- the likeness of His Light -- is the Prophet
Muhammad, upon him blessings and peace: Ibn Jarir al-Tabari in his Tafsir
(18:95), Qadi `Iyad in al-Shifa', al-Baghawi in Ma`alim al-Tanzil
(5:63) in the margin of al-Khazin, from Sa`id ibn Hubayr and al-Dahhak, al-Khazin
in his Tafsir (5:63) Suyuti in al-Durr al-manthur (5:49), Zarqani
in Sharh al-mawahib (3:171), al-Khafaji in Nasim al-riyad (1:110,
2:449),
al-Nisaburi in Ghara'ib
al-Qur'an (18:93) said: "The Prophet is a light and a light-giving lamp."
al-Qari in Sharh al-shifa' said: "The
most apparent meaning is to say that what is meant by the light is Muhammad."
·
Allah said: "O Prophet! Truly We have
sent you as a Witness, a Bearer of glad tidings, and a Warner, and as one who
invites to Allah by His leave, and as a Lamp spreading Light." (33:45-46)
Qadi al-Baydawi said in his Tafsir: "It
is the sun due to His saying: We have made the sun a lamp; or, it could be a
lamp."
Ibn Kathir states in his Tafsir: "His
saying: and a light-giving lamp, that is: your status shows in the truth you
have brought just as the sun shows in its rising and illuminating, which
none denies except the obdurate."
Raghib al-Asfahani in al-Mufradat
(1:147) said: "The word [lamp] is used for everything that illumines."
al-Zarqani in Sharh al-mawahib
(3:171) said: "He was named lamp because from the one lamp take the many
lamps, and its light is no wise diminished."
·
`Abd Allah ibn Rawaha al-Ansari --
the great-grandson of the poet Imru' al-Qays -- said of the Prophet:
law lam takun fihi ayatun mubina
lakana manzaruhu
yunabbi'uka bi al-khabari
Even if there were not, concerning him,
clear and evident
signs, yet the sight
of him would have told you the news.
Ibn Hajar narrated it in al-Isaba
(2:299) and said: "This is the most beautiful verse of poetry by which the
Prophet was ever praised." Ibn Sayyid al-Nas said of him in Minah al-madh
(p. 166):
He was killed as a martyr on the day of
Mu'ta in Jumada 8 before the conquest of Mecca. On that day he was one of the
commanders. He was one of the poets who did good and who used to fend off harm
from Allah's Messenger. It was concerning him and his two friends Hassan (ibn
Thabit) and Ka`b (ibn Zuhayr) that was revealed the verse: "Except those who
believe and do good deeds and remember Allah abundantly." (The Poets 26:227).
Hisham ibn `Urwa narrated from his father
that the latter said: I never saw anyone more aggressive or faster in his poetry
than `Abd Allah ibn Rawaha. I heard Allah's Messenger say to him one day:
"Recite some poetry appropriate to the moment, while I look at you." He rose up
then and there and said:
inni tafarrastu fika al-khayra a`rifuhu
wallahu ya`lamu anna ma khanani
al-basaru
anta al-nabiyyu wa man yuhramu shafa`atahu
yawma al-hisabi laqad azra bihi
al-qadaru
fa thabbat allahu ma ataka min hasanin
tathbita
musa wa nasran kalladhi nusiru
I foresee for you immense good, of this I am
certain.
Allah knows that my sight never betrayed me.
You are the Prophet, and whoever is deprived
of your intercession
On the Day of Reckoning, his destiny is
disgrace.
May Allah make firm all the good that He
gave you,
With a firmness like Musa's and
the same victory.
Upon hearing this the Prophet said to him:
"And you also, may Allah make you firm, O Ibn Rawaha." Hisham ibn `Urwa
continued: Allah indeed made him firm with the staunchest firmness. He died as a
martyr, and Paradise was opened for him and he entered it.
Ibn Abi al-Dunya cited from Abu al-Darda'
that he used to say, after Ibn Rawaha's death: "O Allah, I seek refuge in You
lest my maternal uncle `Abd Allah ibn Rawaha should loathe me when I meet him."
Suyuti mentioned it in Sharh al-sudur (p. 265).
As an attribute of Allah it is
Dhu al-Nur which means the Creator of light and the Illuminator of the
heavens and the earth with His lights, as well as the illuminator of the hearts
of the believers with guidance. Nawawi said in Sharh Sahih Muslim, in his
commentary on the Prophet's du`a which begins: "O Allah, you are the light of
the heavens and the earth and yours is all praise..." (Book of Salat al-musafirin
#199):
The scholars said that the meaning of "You
are the light of the heavens and the earth" is: You are the One who illuminates
them and the Creator of their light. Abu `Ubayda said: "Its meaning is that by
Your light the dwellers of the heavens and the earth obtain guidance." al-Khattabi
said in his commentary on Allah's name al-Nur: "It means the One by Whose
light the blind can see and the lost can be guided, whence Allah is the light of
the heavens and the earth, and it is possible that the meaning of al-Nur
is: Dhu al-nur, and it is incorrect that al-Nur be an attribute of
Allah's Essence, for it is only an attribute of action (sifatu fi`l),
that is: He is the Creator of light." Others said: "The meaning of the light of
the heavens and the earth is: The disposer of their sun and moon and stars."
·
Ibn `Umar narrated that the Prophet
said: "Allah the Exalted created creation in a darkness (fi zulmatin);
then He cast upon them from His Light. Whoever was touched by that Light, he
is guided, and whoever was missed by it is misguided. Therefore I say that
the Pen is dry (and all is) in Allah's foreknowledge."
Narrated by Tirmidhi with a good
chain in the Sunan (hasan), Ahmad in two places in his Musnad,
Tabarani, al-Hakim in his Mustadrak, and Bayhaqi in the Sunan al-kubra.
Ibn `Arabi al-Maliki in his commentary on Tirmidhi entitled `Aridat al-ahwadhi
(10:108) confirmed the latter's grading and comments on the hadith: "It is clear
from it that each one receives of that Light to the extent of what he has been
granted out of the general and the specific... in the heart and in the limbs."
The above hadith and its explanation
by Qadi Ibn al-`Arabi show that the characteristic of Believers is light, and
the Prophet is the first of the Believers and the one who can be more than
anybody else characterized as light -- including the angels who are formed of
light -- and only someone deficient in their belief would deny that he was
assuredly the first and the foremost of all creation to be touched by Allah's
light when He cast it, to an extent in which no angel, no Prophet, and no
jinn rivals him.
The above brings to light the
pitfalls of the literalism of Ibn Taymiyya when he claimed in his essay on
tasawwuf in Majmu`at al-fatawa (11:94, 18:366) that the Prophet could not
possibly be made of light on the grounds that human beings are created from
earth into which the spirit is blown, while angels alone are created from light.
To support his view, he cites the hadith from `A'isha in Muslim whereby the
Prophet said:
·
"The angels were created from light,
the jinn from smokeless fire, and Adam from what was described to you
(i.e. in the Qur'an)."
However, to deduce from the
above that a human being can never be characterized as a light is precisely what
Iblis presumed when he disobeyed Allah on the pretense that smokeless fire is a
nobler and higher element than earth. Furthermore, it contradicts the authentic
hadith of Ibn `Umar narrated by Tirmidhi instead of elucidating it as would be
required for a correct and comprehensive understanding of the subject.
The correct view is that
Prophets are a brand of human beings superior to the angels with respect to the
light and the other gifts bestowed on them by Allah, whether general or
particular, in their hearts or in their limbs, to use Ibn al-`Arabi al-Maliki's
language. This is explicited by Qadi `Iyad in al-Shifa' (English p.
277-278) with regard to the Prophets' angelic inward qualities:
Prophets and Messengers are intermediaries
between Allah and His creation. They convey His commands and prohibitions, His
warning and threat to His creatures and they acquaint them with things they did
not know regarding His command, creation, majesty, power and His Malakut.
Their outward form, bodies and structure are characterized by the qualities of
men as far as non-essential matters such as illnesses, death and passing away
are concerned and they have human traits.
But their souls and inward
parts have the highest possible human qualities, associated with the Highest
Assembly, which are similar to angelic attributes, free of any possibility of
alteration or evil. Generally speaking the incapacity and weakness connected
with being human cannot be associated with them. If their inward parts had been
human in the same way as their outward, they would not have been able to receive
revelation from the angels, see them, mix and sit with them in the way other
mortals are unable to do.
If their bodies and outward
parts had been marked by angelic attributes as opposed to human attributes, the
mortals to whom they were sent would not have been able to speak with them as
Allah has already said. Thus they have the aspect of men as far as their
bodies and outward parts are concerned, and that of angels in respect of their
souls and inward parts.
It is doubtful that Ibn Taymiyya
did not understand the aspects of the question elaborated by Qadi `Iyad. In
fact, after denying that Prophets are made of light like the angels, Ibn
Taymiyya goes to state the known position of Ahl al-Sunna that Prophets
-- chief among them the Seal of Prophets -- manifest a rank not reached by the
angels:
Allah manifests some of His Power and Wisdom
through righteous human beings, saints and prophets, which He does not manifest
through the angels, for He combines in the former group qualities which are
scattered among other creation. Thus He creates the man's body from the Earth
and his spirit from the Highest Company, and this is why it is said, "Man is a
microcosm, and a copy of the greater Universe."
Muhammad is the Chief of the Children of
Adam, the Best of Creation, the noblest of them in the sight of Allah. This is
why some have said that "Allah created the Universe due to him," or that "Were
it not for him, He would have neither created a Throne, nor a Footstool, nor a
heaven, earth, sun or moon." However, this is not a hadith on the authority of
the Prophet... but it may be explained from a correct aspect.
Ibn Taymiyya goes on to
elaborate his proofs for the truth of the saying that Allah created the Universe
due to the Prophet, and we have quoted the continuation of his discourse above,
in the chapter on the names Muhammad and Ahmad (#1-2).
·
The Companion `Abd al-Rahman ibn `Awf
recited the following poetry about the Prophet:
ala anna khayra al-nasi fi al-ardi kullihimi
nabiyyun jala `anna shukuka al-tarajjumi
nabiyyun ata wa al-nasu fi `unjuhiyyatin
wa fi sadafin fi zulmati al-kufri
mu`timi
fa aqsha`a bi al-nuri al-mudi'i zalamahu
wa
sa`adahu fi amrihi kullu muslimi
Verily, the best of all humankind on the
earth
is a Prophet who removed from us the doubts
of
skepticism,
A Prophet who came while people were wrapped
in
haughtiness
and in the pitch-black darkness of the night
of
disbelief:
Whereupon he dispelled this darkness with
abundant light
and in this matter he was helped by each
of those
who submitted.
Ibn Sayyid al-Nas narrated it in Minah
al-madh (p. 176).
·
The Prophet's uncle al-`Abbas ibn `Abd
al-Muttalib said to him: "O Messenger of Allah, I wish to praise you." The
Prophet replied: "Go ahead -- nay, may Allah adorn your mouth with silver!" He
said:
Before you came to this world you were
blessed in the shadows and in the repository (i.e. loins) in the time when they
(Adam and Eve) covered themselves with leaves.
Then you descended to the earth, neither as
a human being, nor as a piece of flesh, nor as a clot,
But as a drop that boarded the ark when the
flood destroyed the eagle and the rest of the idols:
A drop that progressed from the loins to the
wombs in the succession of the worlds and the heavens
Until the Preserver of All made your immense
honor issue in the highest summit of the line of Khindif.
And then, when you were born, a light
rose over the earth until it illuminated the horizon with its radiance.
We are in that
illumination and that original light and those paths of guidance -- and thanks
to them pierce through.
Ibn Sayyid al-Nas narrated it with his
isnad through al-Tabarani and al-Bazzar in Minah al-madh (p.
192-193), also Ibn Kathir in al-Sira al-nabawiyya (ed. Mustafa `Abd
al-Wahid 4:51), and `Ali al-Qari in his Sharh al-Shifa' (1:364) says it
is narrated by Abu Bakr al-Shafi`i and Tabarani, and cited by Ibn `Abd al-Barr
in al-Isti`ab and Ibn al-Qayyim in Zad al-ma`ad.
The Companions many times compared the
Prophet to a light or a harbinger of light, particularly a sun and a moon, chief
among them his poet, Hassan ibn Thabit al-Ansari:
·
tarahhala `an
qawmin faddalat `uqulahum
wa halla `ala qawmin bi nurin
mujaddadi
He left a people who preferred their
minds over him
and he dawned on a people with a light
made new.
·
mata yabdu fi
al-daji al-bahimi jabinuhu
yaluhu mithla misbahi al-duja
al-mutawaqqidi
Whenever his forehead emerged in
pitch-black darkness
it would shine like the
blazing luminary of dark night.
Bayhaqi narrated the two verses
in Dala'il al-nubuwwa (1:280, 302). The latter verse is also narrated Ibn
`Abd al-Barr in al-Isti`ab (1:341) and al-Zarqani in Sharh al-mawahib
(1:91). Hassan also said, as we have already quoted above:
Nor has Allah created among his creatures
One more faithful to his sojourner or his
promise
Than he who
was the source of our light.
·
Abu `Ubayda ibn Muhammad ibn `Ammar
ibn Yasir said: I said to al-Rubayyi` bint Mu`awwadh: "Describe for me Allah's
Messenger." She replied: "If you saw him you would say: The sun is rising."
Bayhaqi narrates it with his isnad in
Dala'il al-nubuwwa (1:200), and Haythami in Majma` al-zawa'id
(8:280) says that Tabarani narrates it in al-Mu`jam al-kabir and al-Awsat
and that its narrators have been declared trustworthy.
·
Ka`b ibn Malik said: "I greeted the
Prophet and there was lightning in his face. Whenever the Prophet was
happy, his face would be illuminated as if it were a piece of the moon."
Bukhari and Muslim narrated it, as well as
Ahmad in his Musnad. Bayhaqi in Dala'il al-nubuwwa (1:301) relates
these descriptions of the Prophet by the Companions and others:
·
When the Prophet left Mecca and
emigrated to Madina his aunt, `Atika bint `Abd al-Muttalib, recited the
following -- although, Bayhaqi said, she still followed the religion of the
Quraysh:
`aynayya juda bi al-dumu`i al-sawajimi
`ala al-murtada kal-badri
min ali Hashimi
My eyes have overflowed with
streaming tears shed
for the Uniquely
Chosen One, the Full Moon
of
the House of Hashim.
·
Abu Bakr al-Siddiq described the
Prophet thus:
aminun mustafa li al-khayri
yad`u
ka daw'i al-badri zayalahu
al-zalamu
A trustworthy one, chosen,
calling to goodness,
Resembling the light
of the full moon set off from darkness.
·
While `Umar would recite the
following:
law kunta min shay'in siwa basharin
kunta al-mudi'a li laylat
al-badri
If you were anything other than
a human being
You would be the
light in the night of a full moon.
Bayhaqi narrated the above in
Dala'il al-nubuwwa (1:301-302) and relates that `Umar added after saying the
above: "The Prophet was like this, and no one other than he was like this." See
the complete text of `Atika bint `Abd al-Muttalib's praise below (#545-550).
·
Jami` ibn Shaddad said: One of our
men was called Tariq. [al-Qari: "This is Ibn Shihab Abu `Abd Allah al-Muharibi,
a Companion who narrated from the Prophet.] He related that he had seen the
Prophet at Madina and the Prophet had asked: "Do you have anything with you to
sell?" We replied: "This camel." The Prophet said: "How much?" We said: "So many
wasqs [about 240 double-handed scoops] of date." He took its rein and
went to Madina. Tariq and his companion said: "We have sold to a man and we do
not even know who he is!" One of the women with us said: "I will guarantee the
price of the camel. I saw the face of a man like the full moon. He will
not cheat you." In the morning, a man brought us the dates and said: "I am the
messenger of the Messenger of Allah. He bids you eat of these dates and weigh
until you have full weight." We did so.
Qadi `Iyad narrates it in al-Shifa'
(English p. 135). Suyuti in Manahil al-safa (p. 114 #515) and al-Qari in
Sharh al-shifa' (1:525) refer it to al-Bayhaqi.
·
Ibn `Abbas related that the Prophet
said while in prostration: "O Allah, place light in my heart, light in my
hearing, light in my sight, light on my right, light on my left, light in front
of me, light behind me, light above me, light below me, and make light for me,"
or he said: "Make me light." Salama said: I met Kurayb and he reported
Ibn Abbas as saying: "I was with my mother's sister Maymuna when the Messenger
of Allah came there, and then he narrated the rest of the hadith as was narrated
by Ghundar and said the words: "Make me light," beyond any doubt.
Muslim narrates it in his
Sahih, book of Salat al-musafirin. Imam Ahmad in his Musnad
also narrates it with a strong chain, but with the reverse order of the first
narration cited above, resulting in the wording: "... and make me light,"
or he said: "Make light for me." Ibn Hajar in Fath al-bari (1989 ed.
11:142) mentions a narration in Ibn Abi `Asim's Kitab al-du`a which
states: "And grant me light upon light" (wa hab li nuran `ala nur).
There are many sound narrations of this hadith mentioning other parts of the
Prophet's person. Ibn Hajar states that Abu Bakr ibn al-`Arabi numbered the
items for which the Prophet supplicated for light in himself at twenty-five in
the totality of the sound narrations of that hadith. Among them are:
Light in the Prophet's heart
Light in the Prophet's tongue
Light in the Prophet's hearing
Light in the Prophet's eyesight
Light in the Prophet's six directions:
right, left, front, back, above, and below
Light in the Prophet's soul
Light in the Prophet's chest
Light in the Prophet's sinew
Light in the Prophet's flesh
Light in the Prophet's blood
Light in the Prophet's hair
Light in the Prophet's skin
Light in the Prophet's bones
Light in the Prophet's grave
"Enhance light for me."
"Give me abundant light."
"Give me light upon light."
"Make me light."
The Prophet first appeared to his mother in
the form of a light that lit the world for her until she could see the palaces
of Syria from her place in Mecca:
·
`Irbad ibn Sariya and Abu Imama said
that the Prophet said: " I am the supplication of my father Ibrahim, and the
good tidings of my brother `Isa. The night I was delivered my mother saw a
light that lit the castles of Damascus so that she could see them."
It is narrated by al-Hakim in
his Mustadrak (2:616-617), Ahmad in his Musnad (4:184), and
Bayhaqi in Dala'il al-nubuwwa (1:110, 2:8). Ibn al-Jawzi cites it in
al-Wafa' (p. 91, ch. 21 of Bidayat nabiyyina sallallahu `alayhi wa sallam),
and Ibn Kathir in Mawlid rasul Allah and his Tafsir (4:360).
Haythami cites it in Majma` al-zawa'id (8:221) and said Tabarani and
Ahmad narrated it, and Ahmad's chain is fair (hasan). See for Ahmad's
complete text Bisharatu `Isa (#454).
Ibn Ishaq in his history of the early
Muslims narrates something similar in a longer form as related in Ibn Hisham's
epitome entitled Sirat Rasul Allah (Dar al-wifaq ed. 1/2:166):
·
Ibn Ishaq said: Thawr ibn Yazid
related to me from one of the scholars, and I do not reckon it is other than
Khalid ibn Ma`dan al-Kala`i, that a small group of the Prophet's Companions said
to him: "O Messenger of Allah, tell us about yourself." He replied: "Yes. I am
the supplication of my father Ibrahim, and the good tidings of my brother `Isa,
and my mother saw, when she delivered me, that a great light issued from her
and lit the castles of Syria for her. I was nursed by the Banu Sa`d ibn Bakr.
While I was with a brother of mine besides our dwellings, feeding the sheep, two
men came to me wearing very white clothes and carrying a contained of gold
filled with snow. Then they took me and they opened my chest, removed my heart,
opened it, and removed from it a black clot which they threw away. Then they
washed my heartand my chestwith the snow until they purified them. Then one of
them said to the other: Weigh him against ten of his Community. He did, and I
outweighed them. Then he said: Weigh him against a hundred of his Community. He
did, and I outweighed them. Then he said: Weigh him against a thousand of his
Community. He did, and I outweighed them. Then he said: Leave him, for by Allah
if you weighed him against all of his Community he would outweigh them. [Tabari
added:] Then they hugged me close to their chests and kissed my head between the
eyes and said: O Beloved, do not fear, verily if you knew the good that is to
take place through you, you would be pleased.
It is also related by Tabari in
his History. Thawr ibn Yazid and Khalid ibn Ma`dan are trustworthy narrators
from whom Bukhari and many others took hadith.
Qadi `Iyad said in his book al-Shifa',
in the chapter on the nobility of the Prophet's lineage:
·
Ibn `Abbas
said that the spirit of the Prophet was a light in front of Allah two thousand
years before he created Adam. That light glorified Him and the angels glorified
by his glorification. When Allah created Adam, he cast that light into his loins.
Suyuti said in Manahil al-safa
(p. 53 #128): "Ibn Abi `Umar al-`Adani relates it in his Musnad." In
Takhrij ahadith sharh al-mawaqif (p. 32 #12) Suyuti cites it with the
wording: "The Quraysh were a light in front of Allah." Ibn al-Qattan in his
Ahkam (1:12) narrates it in the following form, although `Abd Allah al-Ghimari
in Irshad al-talib rejects the latter as a forgery:
·
`Ali ibn al-Husayn from his father
from his grandfather said that the Prophet said: "I was a light in front of
my Lord for fourteen thousand years before He created Adam."
Something similar is narrated by Imam Ahmad
in his Fada'il al-Sahaba (2:663 #1130), Dhahabi in Mizan al-i`tidal
(1:235), and al-Tabari in al-Riyad al-nadira (2:164, 3:154). Related to
the above are the following reports:
·
`Amr ibn `Abasa said that the Prophet
said: "Verily, Allah created the spirits of His servants two thousand years
before He created His servants. Then whichever among them recognized each other
came close, and whichever did not, stayed apart."
Suyuti in Takhrij ahadith
sharh al-mawaqif (p. 31 #10) says that Ibn Mandah narrated it, while Haytami
in his Fatawa hadithiyya says that it is extremely weak.
·
Ibn `Abbas explained taqallubak
-- "your translation" -- in the verses "[Your Lord] Who sees you when you stand,
and your translation among those who prostrate themselves" (26:218-219), as
"your descent through the loins of your ancestors." It is narrated from Ibn `Abbas
by al-Hakim in al-Mustadrak (2:338) and is the explanation retained by
Ibn Mardawayh, al-Razi, Suyuti, and others.
al-Shahrastani in his Kitab al-milal wa
al-nihal (2:238) said: "The light of Muhammad went from Ibrahim to
Isma`il. Then that light passed through all his children, until it arrived
at `Abd al-Muttalib... and with the blessing of this light Allah repelled
Abraha's harm" (wa bibarakati dhalik al-nur dafa` allahu ta`alaa sharra
Abraha).
Suyuti cites the above in
several of his books, such as Masalik al-hunafa' (p. 40-41) which we
translated below under the attribute Karim al-tarafayn (#485), also his
al-Duruj al-munifa (p. 16) and his al-Ta`zim wa al-minna (p. 55),
all three of which were written to show the bases on which the Prophet's two
parents are considered to be in Paradise by the majority of the scholars.
·
al-Zuhri narrated: `Abd Allah ibn `Abd
al-Muttalib was the most handsome man that had ever been seen among the Quraysh.
One day he went out and was seen by a an assembly of the women of Quraysh. One
of them said: "O women of the Quraysh, which among you will marry this youth and
catch thereby the light that is between his eyes?" For verily there was a
light between his eyes. Thereafter Amina bint Wahb ibn `Abd Manaf ibn Zuhra
married him, and after he joined her she carried Allah's Messenger.
al-Bayhaqi narrated it in
Dala'il al-nubuwwa (1:87). Tabari in his Tarikh (2:243), Ibn al-Jawzi
in al-Wafa' (p. 82-83, ch. 16 of Abwab bidayati nabiyyina), and
Ibn Hisham narrated something similar but on the authenticity of which they
raise doubt (cf. Guillaume trans. p. 68-69):
·
It is alleged a woman of Banu Asad
who was the sister of Waraqa ibn Nawfal proposed to `Abd Allah, but he married
Amina bint Wahb instead and consummated his marriage. Then he left her presence
and met the woman who had proposed to him. He asked her why she did not make the
proposal that she made to him the day before; to which she replied that the
light that was in him the day before had left him, and she no longer had
need of him... She said: "When you passed me there was a white blaze between
your eyes and when I invited you you refused me and went to Amina, and she has
taken it away."
·
It is related that Jabir ibn `Abd
Allah said to the Prophet: "O Messenger of Allah, may my father and mother be
sacrificed for you, tell me of the first thing Allah created before all things."
He said: "O Jabir, the first thing Allah created was the light of your
Prophet from His light, and that light
remained (lit. "turned") in the midst of His Power for as long as He wished, and
there was not, at that time, a Tablet or a Pen or a Paradise or a Fire or an
angel or a heaven or an earth. And when Allah wished to create creation, he
divided that Light into four parts and from the first made the Pen, from the
second the Tablet, from the third the Throne, [and from the fourth everything
else]."
The judgments on this narration
vary greatly among the scholars. Their words are listed below under the
alphabetical listing of their names.
`Abd al-Haqq al-Dihlawi (d.
1052) the Indian hadith scholar cites it as evidence in Madarij al-nubuwwa
(in Persian, 2:2 of the Maktaba al-nuriyya edition in Sakhore) and says it is is
sahih (sound and authentic).
`Abd al-Hayy al-Lucknawi (d.
1304) the Indian hadith scholar cites it in his al-Athar al-marfu`a fi al-akhbar
al-mawdu`a (p. 33-34 of the Lahore edition) and says: "The primacy (awwaliyya)
of the Muhammadan light (al-nur al-muhammadi) is established from the
narration of `Abd al-Razzaq, as well as its definite priority over all created
things."
`Abd al-Razzaq (d. 211) narrates
it in his Musannaf according to Qastallani in al-Mawahib al-laduniyya
(1:55) and Zarqani in his Sharh al-mawahib (1:56 of the Matba`a al-`amira
edition in Cairo). There is no doubt as to the reliability of `Abd al-Razzaq as
a narrator. Bukhari took 120 narrations from him, Muslim 400.
`Abidin (Ahmad al-Shami d.
1320), the son of the Hanafi scholar Ibn `Abidin, cites the hadith as evidence
in his commentary on Ibn Hajar al-Haytami's poem al-Ni`mat al-kubra `ala al-`alamin.
Nabahani cites it in his Jawahir al-bihar (3:354).
`Ajluni (Isma`il ibn Muhammad d.
1162) in his Kashf al-khafa' (1:265 of the Maktabat al-Ghazali edition in
Beirut) narrates the hadith in its entirety from Qastallani in his Mawahib.
Alusi (al-Sayyid Mahmud) in his
commentary of Qur'an entitled Ruh al-ma`ani (17:105 of the Beirut
edition) said: "The Prophet's being a mercy to all is linked to the fact that he
is the intermediary of the divine outpouring over all contingencies [i.e. all
created things without exception], from the very beginnings (wasitat al-fayd
al-ilahi `ala al-mumkinat `ala hasab al-qawabil), and that is why his light
was the first of all things created, as stated in the report that "The first
thing Allah created was the light of your Prophet, O Jabir," and also cited is:
"Allah is the Giver and I am the Distributor." [See al-Qasim #261.] The
Sufis -- may Allah sanctify their secrets -- have more to say on that chapter."
Alusi also cites the hadith of Jabir as evidence in another passage of Ruh
al-ma`ani (8:71).
Bakri (Sayyid Abu al-Hasan Ahmad
ibn `Abd Allah, d. 3rd c.) in his book al-Anwar fi mawlid al-nabi Muhammad `alayhi
al-salat wa al-salam (p. 5 of the Najaf edition) cites the following hadith
from `Ali: "Allah was and there was nothing with Him, and the first thing which
He created was the light of His Beloved, before He created water, or the Throne,
or the Footstool, or the Tablet, or the Pen, or Paradise, or the Fire, or the
Veils and the Clouds, or Adam and Eve, by four thousand years."
Bayhaqi (d. 458) narrates it
with a different wording in Dala'il al-nubuwwa according to Zarqani in
his Sharh al-mawahib (1:56 of the Matba`a al-`amira in Cairo) and
Diyarbakri in Tarikh al-khamis (1:20).
Diyarbakri (Husayn ibn Muhammad d. 966): He
begins his 1,000-page history entitled Tarikh al-khamis fi ahwal
anfasi nafis with the words: "Praise be to Allah Who created the Light of
His Prophet before everything else," which is enough to disprove al-Ghumari's
exaggerated claim that "anyone who reads it will be convinced that the hadith is
a lie." Then Diyarbakri cites the hadith as evidence (1:19 of the Mu'assasat
Sha`ban edition in Beirut).
Fasi (Muhammad ibn Ahmad d. 1052) cites it
as evidence in Matali` al-masarrat (p. 210, 221 of the Matba`a al-taziyya
edition) and says: "These narrations indicate his primacy (awwaliyya) and
priority over all other creations, and also the fact that he is their cause (sabab)."
Ghumari (`Abd Allah) in his Irshad al-talib
al-najib ila ma fi al-mawlid al-nabawi min al-akadhib (p. 9-12 of the Dar
al-furqan edition), commenting on Suyuti's words (quoted below) whereby the
hadith has no reliable chain: "This shows great laxity on the part of Suyuti,
which I thought him to be above. First, the hadith is not present in `Abd al-Razzaq's
Musannaf, nor in any of the books of hadith. Secondly : the hadith has no
chain of transmission to begin with. Thirdly: he has not mentioned the rest of
the hadith. It is mentioned in Diyarbakri's Tarikh, and anyone who reads
it will be convinced that the hadith is a lie about the Messenger of Allah."
This exaggerated conclusion is disproved by the fact that Diyarbarkri himself
does not consider it a lie since he cites the hadith in the first words of his
book.
Gilani (Shaykh `Abd al-Qadir, d. 561) in his
book Sirr al-asrar fi ma yahtaju ilayh al-abrar (p. 12-14 of the Lahore
edition) said: "Know that since Allah first created the soul of Muhammad
sallallahu `alayhi wa sallam from the light of His beauty, as He said: I
created Muhammad from the light of My Face, and as the Prophet said: The first
thing Allah created is my soul, and the first thing Allah created is the Pen,
and the first thing Allah created is the intellect -- what is meant by all this
is one and the same thing, and that is the haqiqa muhammadiyya. However,
it was named a light because it is completely purified from darkness, as Allah
said: There has come to you from Allah a Light and a manifest Book. It was also
named an intellect because it is the cause for the transmission of knowledge,
and the pen is its medium in the world of letters. The Muhammadan soul (al-ruh
al-muhammadiyya) is therefore the quintessence of all created things and the
first of them and their origin, as the Prophet said: I am from Allah and the
believers are from me, and Allah created all souls from me in the spiritual
world and He did so in the best form. It is the name of the totality of mankind
in that primordial world, and after its creation by four thousand years, Allah
created the Throne from the light of Muhammad himself sallallahu `alayhi wa
sallam, and from it the rest of creation." This book has now been translated
by Shaykh Tosun Bayrak al-Jerrahi as The Secret of Secrets (Cambridge:
Islamic Texts Society, 1994).
Halabi (`Ali ibn Burhan al-Din, d. 1044)
cites it as evidence in his Sira (1:31 of the Maktaba Islamiyya edition
in Beirut) and then states: "It provides evidence that he is the root of
everything that exists (in creation) and Allah knows best."
Haqqi (Isma`il, d. 1137) cites it as
evidence in his Tafsir entitled Ruh al-bayan and says: "Know, O
person of understanding, that the first thing Allah created is the light of your
Prophet... and he is the cause for the existence of everything that was brought
to existence, and the mercy from Allah upon all creatures... and without him the
higher and the lower worlds would not have been created." Yusuf al-Nabahani
mentions it in his Jawahir al-bihar (p. 1125).
Haytami (Ahmad ibn Hajar d. 974) states in
his Fatawa hadithiyya (p. 247 of the Baba edition in Cairo) that `Abd al-Razzaq
narrated it, and cites it in his poem on the Prophet's birth entitled al-Ni`mat
al-kubra `ala al-`alamin (p. 3).
Ibn al-Hajj al-Abdari (Muhammad ibn Muhammad
d. 736) in his book al-Madkhal (2:34 of the Dar al-kitab al-`arabi in
Beirut) cites it from al-Khatib Abu al-Rabi` Muhammad ibn al-Layth's book
Shifa' al-sudur in which the latter says: "The first thing Allah created is
the light of Muhammad, blessings and peace upon him, and that light came and
prostrated before Allah. Allah divided it into four parts and created from the
first part the Throne, from the second the Pen, from the third the Tablet, and
then similarly He subdivided the fourth part into parts and created the rest of
creation. Therefore the light of the Throne is from the light of the Prophet,
the light of the Pen is from the light of the Prophet, the light of the Tablet
is from the light of the Prophet, the light of day, the light of knowledge, the
light of the sun and the moon, and the light of vision and sight are all from
the light of the Prophet."
Isma`il al-Dihlawi (Shah Muhammad, d. 1246),
one of the leaders of the Wahhabi-influenced Deobandi school in the
Indo-Pakistani Subcontinent in one of his booklets entitled Yek rawzah
(p. 11 of the Maltan edition) says: "As indicated by the narration: The first
thing Allah created was my Light."
Jamal (Sulayman d. 1204) cites it as
evidence in his commentary on Busiri entitled al-Futuhat al-ahmadiyya bi al-minah
al-muhammadiyya (p. 6 of the Hijazi edition in Cairo).
Gangowhi (Rashid Ahmad) a leader of
the Wahhabi-influenced Deobandi school of India and Pakistan in his Fatawa
rashidiyya (p. 157 of the Karachi edition) said that the hadith was "not
found in the authentic collections, but Shaykh `Abd al-Haqq (al-Dihlawi) cited
it on the basis that it had some grounding of authenticity." Actually Shaykh `Abd
al-Haqq not only cited it but he said it was sound (sahih).
Jili (`Abd al-Karim, b. 766) in his Namus
al-a`zam wa al-qamus al-aqdam fi ma`rifat qadar al-bani sallallahu `alayhi wa
sallam cites it as evidence. Nabahani relates it in his Jawahir al-bihar
(see below).
Kharputi (`Umar ibn Ahmad, d. 1299) in his
commentary on Busiri entitled Sharh qasidat al-burda (p. 73 of the
Karachi edition).
Maliki al-Hasani (Muhammad ibn `Alawi)
in his commentary on `Ali al-Qari's book of the Mawlid entitled Hashiyat al-Mawrid
al-rawi fi al-mawlid al-nabawi (p. 40) said: "The chain of Jabir is sound
without contest, but the scholars have differed concerning the text of the
hadith due to its peculiarity. Bayhaqi also narrated the hadith with some
differences." Then he quoted several narrations establishing the light of the
Prophet.
Nabahani (Yusuf ibn Isma`il) cites it as
evidence in al-Anwar al-muhammadiyya (p. 13), in his Jawahir al-bihar
(p. 1125 or 4:220 of the Baba edition in Cairo), and in his Hujjat Allah `ala
al-`alamin (p. 28).
Nabulusi (`Abd al-Ghani d. 1143) says in his
Hadiqa al-nadiyya (2:375 of the Maktaba al-nuriyya edition in Faysalabad):
"The Prophet is the universal leader of all, and how could he not be when all
things were created out of his light as has been stated in the sound hadith."
Nisaburi (Nizamuddin ibn Hasan, d. 728)
cites it as evidence in elucidation of the verse: "And I was ordered to be the
first of the Muslims" (39:12) in his Tafsir entitled Ghara'ib
al-Qur'an (8:66 of the Baba edition in Cairo).
Qari (Mulla `Ali ibn Sultan, d. 1014) cites
it in full in his book al-Mawlid al-rawi fi al-mawlid al-nabawi (p. 40),
edited by Sayyid Muhammad `Alawi al-Maliki. He also said in his Sharh al-Shifa,
in commenting upon the Prophet's title "as a Lamp spreading Light" (33: 46):
"Muhammad... is a tremendous light and the source of all lights, he is also a
book that gathers up and makes clear all the secrets... sirajan muniran
means a luminous sun, because of His saying: "He hath placed therein a great
lamp and a moon giving light" (25:61). There is in this verse an indication
that the sun is the highest of the material lights and that other lights are
outpourings from it: similarly the Prophet is the highest of the spiritual
lights and other lights are derived from him by virtue of his mediating
connection and pivotal rank in the overall sphere of creation. This is also
inferred from the tradition: "The first thing Allah created is my light."" (Sharh
al-Shifa 1:505)
Qastallani (Ahmad ibn Muhammad, d. 923)
narrates it in his al-Mawahib al-laduniyya (1:55 of the edition
accompanied by Zarqani's commentary).
Rifa`i (Yusuf al-Sayyid Hashim)
cites it as evidence in Adillat Ahl al-Sunna wa al-Jama`a al-musamma al-radd
al-muhkam al-mani` (p. 22): `Abd al-Razzaq narrated it.
Suyuti in al-Hawi li al-fatawi, in
the explanation of Sura al-Muddaththir: "It has no reliable chain"; and
in Takhrij ahadith sharh al-mawaqif: "I did not find it in that wording."
Thanwi (Ashraf `Ali), a leader of the
Wahhabi-influenced Deobandi school in the Indian Subcontinent, in his book
Nashr al-tib (in Urdu, p. 6 and 215 of the Lahore edition) cites it as
evidence on the authority of `Abd al-Razzaq, and relies upon it.
Zarqani in Sharh al-mawahib cites it
(1:56 of the Matba`a al-`amira edition in Cairo) and refers it to `Abd al-Razzaq's
narration in his Musannaf.
Zahir (Ihsan Ilahi), a leader of the Wahhabi-influenced
Deobandi school and declared enemy of the Barelwi school of Ahl al-Sunna
in Lahore, India, in his book Hadiyyat al-mahdi (p. 56 of the Sialkut
edition) says: "Allah began His creation with the Muhammadan light (al-nur
al-muhammadi), then He created the Throne over the water, then He created
the wind, then He created the Nun and the Pen and the Tablet, then He created
the Intellect. The Muhammadan Light is therefore a primary substance for the
creation of the heavens and the earth and what is in them... As for what has
come to us in the hadith: The first thing which Allah created is the Pen; and:
The first thing which Allah created is the Intellect: what is meant by it is a
relative primacy."
·
Anas relates that the Prophet said:
"The simile of the scholars of knowledge (al-`ulama') on the earth is the
stars in the sky by which one is guided in the darkness of the land and the sea.
When the stars are clouded over, the guides are about to be lost."
·
Ahmad narrated
it in his Musnad (3:157 #12606) with a chain containing Rishdin ibn Sa`d
who is weak. However, it is confirmed by the hadith in Muslim and Ahmad narrated
by Abu Musa al-Ash`ari whereby the Prophet said: "The stars are trust-keepers
for the heaven, and when the stars wane, the heaven is brought what was promised
(i.e. of the corruption of the world and the coming of the Day of Judgment); and
I am a trust-keeper for my Companions, so when I go my Companions will be
brought what was promised them (i.e. of fitna and division); and my
Companions are trustkeepers for my Community, so when they go my Community will
be brought what was promised to you (i.e. following hawa and vying for
dunya)."
© As-Sunna Foundation of America
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