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in his commentary on Surah liv. 1, prefers 1 the view that the moon was actually split asunder because of the reading; وَقَدِ انْشَقّ آلْقَمَرُ (which,2 however, differs from that adopted to the usual text of the Qur'an) but he informs us that "It has been said that its meaning is, It will be split on the day of the Resurrection". Now there could be no doubt whatever about the matter, had it actually occurred, and were the Tradition 3 correct that states that Muhammad showed the people of Mecca the moon split in two, so that Mount Hira was visible between the parts, or, as another Tradition 4 says, one part appeared above the mountain and the tether beneath it. In the margin of the Mishkat an attempt is made to avoid the obvious difficulty caused by the fact that the world in general did not notice the strange sight. The writer of the note says that the event occurred at night when men were asleep, and in a moment, and that therefore it would not necessarily be observed in all parts of the world. (7) The expression "The Hour" (السّاعَةُ), with the definite Article, has a very distinct and special meaning in both the Qur'an and the Traditions.6 It always in them means the day of the Resurrection, as Al Baizawi admits. Now it is clear that the Resurrection Day was not near at the time when the Suratu'l Qamar was written, for this Surah was dictated a long time ago, before the Hijrah itself. Hence, as in this verse the Splitting of the Moon is said to be so closely associated with the Resurrection Day's approach, the meaning must be that, when the Resurrection draws nigh, the moon will be split. Both the verbs in the past tense in the verse


1 Vol. ii, p. 296.
2 This is Hudhaifah's reading, as Zamakhshari tells us in his commentary. He thus renders the verse: "The Hour has drawn nigh, and of the signs of its approach this has already arrived, that the moon has been split."
3 From Anas, Mishkat p. 516.
4 From Ibn Mas'ud: ibidem.
5 Compare Surahs xx, xxii, xlii, &c.
6 Compare Mishkat, pp. 464-469, &c., &c.
THE MIZANU'L HAQQ 313

are thus used with a future signification, which is a usual idiom in Arabic. We have seen that, even in Al Baizawi's time, some people thus explained the verse; and the very fact that we are still alive today, so many years later, shows that this sign of the approach of the Resurrection Day had not then appeared. Hence 'Abbasi well says that the Splitting of the Moon and the appearance of Dajjal will be signs of the nearness of the Resurrection, when they occur.

From all this we see that the Qur'an does not assert that Muhammad performed the miracle of Splitting the Moon. Therefore this verse cannot justly be quoted as a proof that he wrought such a miracle, nor can a miraculous event which has not yet occurred be adduced as a proof that Muhammad 1 was an Apostle sent by God.

The one other miracle of Muhammad which some suppose to be referred to in the Qur'an is an event which some assert to have occurred at the battle of Badr, though others deny this and say that it took place at the battle of Hunain, or at Uhud, or at Khaibar. It is said that a miracle is referred to in the words: "And thou threwest not when thou didst throw, but God threw " (Suratu'l Anfal—Surah viii.—ver. 17). Al Baizawi informs 2 us that Gabriel told Muhammad at Badr to cast a handful of earth at the Quraish. When the battle was joined, he threw some gravel in their faces, saying, "Let the faces be disfigured." Then their eyes all became full of the gravel, and they fled, pursued by the Muslims. When the latter were afterwards boasting of their victory and of the number they had slain, this verse is said to have been sent


1 In some Arabic editions of the Mu'allaqat, in a poem ascribed to Imra'u'l Qais, are found the words: (دَنَتِ آلْسّاعَةُ وَآْنْشَقّ آلْقَمَرُ), which exactly agree in meaning with the first verse of Suratu'l Qamar. As Imra'u'l Qais died about A.D. 540, considerably before Muhammad's birth, it is clear that he did not quote from the Qur'an. Some deny that the poem referred to is really by Imra'u'l Qais. But many of the 'Ulama' are puzzled about the matter.
2 Vol. i. p. 362.