What makes Muslims believe that the Quran is not written by Prophet Muhammad? 
Does the Quran claim that it is from God? Could the Prophet have copied some 
portions of the Bible? Are there scientific facts in the Quran?

  
Muslims believe that Prophet Muhammad is not the author of the Quran. God is 
its Author. The following points bear the fact:
   
  1. First of all, the Quran itself, at a number of places and in different 
ways, says that it is a Revelation from God (Quran 56:77-80; 53:4; 20:4; 36:5; 
45:2; 32:2; 26:192-4; 16:102; 14:1; etc.). One of the claims runs thus: "This 
is indeed a Quran most honourable, a Book well-guarded...a Revelation from the 
Lord of the Worlds." (Quran 56:77-80)
   
  (Here, one ought to know the features of the Quran to understand the claim 
better. For instance, if the Quran had consisted of a number of books, and each 
book was made up of a number of chapters, then each of the books had to claim 
that it was from God in order to render the WHOLE volume as coming from God. 
But, this is fortunately not so with the Quran. The Quran is just ONE Book made 
up of 114 chapters. So, if the Quran claims, in any of its chapters, that the 
Book is from God, then the WHOLE Quran is from God. Yet, the Quran does not 
make the divine claim only once, but several times in different phrases and in 
different chapters.)
   
  2. The Prophet was unlettered. However, even if he was educated and had 
written the Quran, how could he be bold enough to make this statement: "Do they 
not consider (ponder over) the Quran (with care)? Had it been from other than 
God, they would surely have found therein discrepancies". (4:82) 
   
  Abdullah Yusuf Ali, commenting on this verse (verse 4:82) in his English 
translation of the Quran, says: "From a mere human point of view, we should 
have expected much discrepancy, because (1) Prophet Muhammad who promulgated it 
was not a learned man or philosopher, (2) it was promulgated at various times 
and in various circumstances, and (3) it is addressed to all grades of mankind. 
Yet, when properly understood, its various pieces fit together better than a 
jigsaw puzzle even when arranged without any regard to chronological order. 
There was just the One Inspirer and one inspired."
   
  3. If the Prophet had written the Quran - a Book par excellence - surely he 
would have claimed credit for it, but he did not. He could not claim what was 
not his. Indeed God says: "This Quran is not such as can be produced by anyone 
other than God." (10:37)
   
  4. The Quran took 23 years to complete. Had the verses of the Quran (which 
contains more than 6,000 verses) been written by the Prophet, he would have 
needed a number of drafts and the work would have needed editing, updating, 
etc. But this did not happen, yet the information is consistent throughout the 
Quran. The verses were taken down as dictated by the Prophet only once and no 
redrafting, editing or updating took place after that.
   
  5. At a number of stages during the 23-year period, challenges to reproduce, 
even a chapter of the Quran, were made. If the Prophet had written the Quran, 
he would not have made the challenges, for fear that the learned Arabs and 
eminent poets of his time would have taken up his challenges and shamed him. 
One of the challenges goes thus: "And if you are in doubt as to what We have 
revealed (from time to time) to Our servant (Muhammad), then produce a chapter 
like thereunto..." (2:23)
   
  6. The Quran says that the Prophet was not learned (62:2; 7:157-158). So, if 
the Prophet was educated in some institution but mentioned in the Quran that he 
wasn't, he would have been accused of being a liar and his mission would have 
fallen through.
   
  7. Even if the Prophet was learned, how could he have written such an 
inimitable Book of Information and Wisdom without resorting to consultation 
with prominent scholars and the best books from the best libraries in the 
world?! If he did this, it would surely have been known, since every move he 
made was known to people. The Prophet was a historical figure, not a 
mythological figure.
   
  8. The Prophet was the busiest and most active person in history. So, how 
could he have found the time to write (even if he were educated) such a 
comprehensive and extensive Book of Guidance which would have needed years of 
seclusion and concentration to complete?
   
  9. In the Quran, in Chapter 111, it is mentioned that Abu Lahab, one of the 
Prophet's uncles who was always against Islam, would never accept Islam. This 
Revelation came some ten years before the death of Abu Lahab. How could the 
Prophet have dared to write this chapter because all he (Abu Lahab) needed to 
do to prove that the Quran was not the Words of God, was to accept Islam 
dishonestly?
   
  10. The Prophet was mentioned by name in the Quran only five times whereas 
Jesus Christ's name was (honourably) mentioned 25 times. Could the Prophet go 
to such an extent of honouring someone more than himself if he had written the 
Quran?
   
  11. There is a chapter in the Quran entitled and dedicated to Mary, a Jew and 
the mother of Jesus Christ, while there is no chapter called, or dedicated to, 
the Prophet's own mother, Aminah, or daughter, Fatimah, nor were their names 
mentioned in the Quran. Could this have happened if the Prophet was the author 
of the Quran?
   
  12. Mary, the mother of Jesus Christ, is glorified in the Quran as a "woman 
of all nations". Why would the Prophet glorify a Jewish woman he had never seen 
and one from another race, saying that she was chosen (by God) above all women 
unless the formulation of the verses had nothing to do with the Prophet's own 
authorship but that he only repeated what was inspired to him by God?
   
  13. In the Quran, God is called "Allah" (in Arabic). He is also referred to 
by His Attributes, like the Cherisher, the Merciful, the Almighty. There are 99 
such Attributes but none of these is "Abba" (Father) by which the Arab 
Christians of the Prophet's time (and even today) refer to God. If the Prophet 
was the writer of the Quran, he would surely have used "Abba" as one of the 
names for God because of its familiarity and also because it was easier to say 
"Abba" than many of the Attributes.
   
  14. Although the Quran's objective is basically religious, it does touch on 
certain principles and laws governing the universe. A French scientist, Maurice 
Bucaille, in his book, "The Bible, the Quran and Science", says: "What 
initially strikes the reader confronted for the first time with a text of this 
kind (the Quran) is the sheer abundance of subjects discussed: the Creation, 
astronomy, the explanation of certain matters concerning the earth, and the 
animal and vegetable kingdoms, human reproduction ...I could not find a single 
error in the Quran. I had to stop and ask myself: if a man was the author of 
the Quran, how could he have written facts in the 7th Century AD that today are 
shown to be in keeping with modern scientific knowledge?''
   
  15. The Quran mentions a number of scientific facts which were unknown to the 
world then:
   
  http://youtube.com/watch?v=baOT0iMP3v0

http://youtube.com/watch?v=NpGs2SiBPCA

http://youtube.com/watch?v=R9VKKOXjYB4
   
  All these scientific facts were discovered only in the last couple of 
centuries whereas the Quran mentions them 14 centuries ago. How could the 
Prophet, even if he were educated, have known these fact centuries ahead of 
recent times? 
   
  16. Learned Arabs and other experts in the Arabic language acknowledge that 
the style, diction and rendering in the Quran far excels those in the Hadith. 
Those in the Quran are inimitable, proving that the Quran is authored by God.
   
  "Quran is a miracle of purity, of style, of wisdom and of truth." - Rev. R. 
Bosworth-Smith
   
  "Whenever I hear the Quran chanted, it is as though I am listening to music, 
underneath the flowing melody, there is sounding all the time the instant beat 
of a drum, it is like the beating of my heart." - A. J. Arberry
   
  "That inimitable symphony, the very sound of which move men to tears and 
ecstacy." - Marmaduke Picktall
   
  17. Umar, later to become Caliph, had wanted to kill the Prophet because of 
his (Islamic) teachings. One day, Umar heard his sister reading something - the 
sound, diction and meaning of which made him halt to listen. His sister, who 
had secretly converted to Islam, was reading (part of) the Quran. Umar realised 
that the Words he was listening to could not be the words of man. He submitted 
to Islam soon after.
   
  18. The Quran says: "If the whole of mankind and jinns (spirits) were to come 
together to produce the like of this Quran, they could not produce the like 
thereof even if backed up by each other with help and support." (17:88) This is 
a bold statement indeed. If the Prophet had written the Quran, would he as a 
human being, dare make such an explosive statement? Would this statement go 
unchallenged by the learned Arabs of his time?
   
  19. Prophet Muhammad, being an unlettered person, could not have written the 
Quran, a Book full of wisdom and one dealing with varied subject matters. The 
Quran categorically states: "This Quran is not such as can be produced by 
anyone other than God. (It is a Book) from the Lord of the Worlds." (10:37)
   
  20. Many of God's Prophets in the past had performed miracles either to prove 
that they were sent by God or to help people to achieve certain goals. However, 
as these miracles were for certain people of the time of the respective 
Prophets, they are neither tangible nor available today as a living proof. But 
the Quran is. It is a miracle by itself. When people asked Prophet Muhammad 
what miracle he had performed, the Prophet pointed to the Quran. Muslims regard 
the Quran as a living miracle because, among other reasons, it:
   
  *Strongly claims to be a Revelation from God,
   
  *Has no clear-cut contradiction or inconsistencies,
   
  *Is a Book par excellence in the provision of complete guidance for this life 
and the Hereafter,
   
  *Is available in the language (Arabic) as revealed to the Prophet,
   
  *Is inimitable in diction, sound and rendering,
   
  *Is accurate in its presentation of facts,
   
  *Has remained pure (without interpolation),
   
  *Has influenced the lives of people, and
   
  *Is responsible for the speedy spread of Islam, even now. 
   
  With regard to the Quran being a miracle from the point of view of its 
influence on people, Maulana Muhammad Ali in his book, "The Religion of Islam", 
says: "The Quran is a miracle because it brought about the greatest 
transformation that the world has ever witnessed - a transformation of the 
individual, of the family, of the society, of the nation, of the country, an 
awakening material as well as moral, intellectual and spiritual. It produced an 
effect, a hundred thousand times greater than that of any other miracle 
recorded of any Prophet; hence, its claim to be the greatest of all miracles is 
uncontestable and uncontested."
   
  Researches on the Quran have been made throughout these 14 centuries. More 
particularly, in recent years, in the wake of religious enquiries, Quranic 
scholars, scientists and mathematicians have each, in their own way and 
knowledge, discovered that the factual contents of the Quran as well as the 
arrangement of its Words and text point to the fact that the Quran is indeed 
the living miracle of Islam.
   
  Source: 
http://myafrica.wordpress.com/2006/10/30/what-makes-muslims-believe-that-the-quran-is-not-written-by-prophet-muhammad/


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  "The future religion of the educated, cultured and enlightened people will be 
Islam." 
                                      -- George Bernard Shaw

       
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