The Challenge of the QuranBy:
 
 
Dr. Bilal Philips
 
  
Islamic Propagation Office in Rabwah, Riyadh
 
 The Quranic challenge to produce a work similar to it, and the inability of 
its contemporaries to meet it.
By Dr. Bilal Philips
 
 
The Quran is not only unique in the way in which it presents its subject 
matter, but it is also unique in that it is a miracle itself. By the term 
“miracle,” we mean the performance of a supernatural or extraordinary event 
which cannot be duplicated by humans. It has been documented that Prophet 
Muhammad, may God praise him, challenged the Arabs to produce a literary work 
of a similar caliber as the Quran, but they were unable to do so in spite of 
their well-known eloquence and literary powers. 
 
The challenge to reproduce the Quran was presented to the Arabs and mankind in 
three stages:
 
 
l.     The Whole Quran
 
In the Quran, God commanded the Prophet to challenge all of creation to create 
a book of the stature of the Quran:
“Say: ‘If all mankind and the jinn would come together to produce the like of 
this Quran, they could not produce its like even though they exerted all and 
their strength in aiding one another.’”(Quran 17:88)
 
 
2.     Ten Chapters
 
Next, God made the challenge ostensibly easier by asking those who denied its 
divine origin to imitate even ten chapters of the Quran:
“Or do they say that he has invented it? Say (to them), Bring ten invented 
chapters like it, and call (for help) on whomever you can besides God, if you 
are truthful.”(Quran 11:13)
 
 
3.      One Chapter
 
This final challenge was to produce even a single chapter to match what is in 
the Quran, whose shortest chapter, al-Kawthar, consists of only three verses:
“And if you all are in doubt about what I have revealed to My servant, bring a 
single chapter like it, and call your witnesses besides God if you are 
truthful.”(Quran 2:23)
 
These challenges were not just empty words with no one caring to prove them 
wrong. Prophet Muhammads call to monotheism, to the abolition of idolatry in 
all its forms, and to the equality of slaves and their masters threatened the 
whole socio-economic framework of Mecca society in general, and the position of 
the ruling Quraishee tribe from which the Prophet came in particular. Mecca , 
the trading center of Arabia , as well as its spiritual center, desperately 
wanted to stop the spread of Islam. 
 
 
Yet all that the Prophets opponents had to do to crush the movement was to make 
up a single chapter like any one of those which the Prophet and his followers 
were reciting to the people. 
 
A number of Quraishee orators and poets tried to imitate the Quran, but they 
failed. 
 
They then resorted to offering him vast amounts of wealth, the position of king 
over them, and the most noble and beautiful of their women in exchange for his 
promise to stop inviting people to Islam. 
 
He responded to them by reciting the first thirteen verses of Chapter Fussilat, 
until they asked him to stop.[1]
 
The Quraish also resorted to torturing their slaves and relatives who had 
embraced Islam in a vain attempt to cause them to revert to paganism. Later 
they organized an economic boycott against the Prophet his followers and the 
members of his clan, Banu Hashim, in an attempt to starve them into submission. 
But even this plan eventually failed. 
 
Finally, they plotted to kill him in his home by sending armed young men from 
each of the clans of Quraish in order that the guilt of his murder be shared by 
all the clans, making revenge by the Prophets clan impossible.
 
However, Allah enabled the Prophet and his followers to flee Mecca and join a 
new band of converts who had arisen among the tribes of a city to the north 
called Yathrib. 
 
Islam spread rapidly through the clans of Yathrib, and within a year Muslims 
became the citys majority. Prophet Muhammad was then made the ruler, and the 
name of the city was changed to Medina an-Nabi (The City of the Prophet may God 
praise him), which was then shortened to “ Medina .” 
 
Over the next eight years, the clans of Mecca and its neighboring lands mounted 
a series of unsuccessful battle campaigns against the emerging Muslim state in 
Medina , which ended with the Muslim invasion of Mecca itself.
 
All of this bloodshed could have been avoided if only the Quraish and their 
allies had been able to produce a mere three lines of poetry or flowing prose 
similar to the shortest chapter of the Quran. Hence, there can be no doubt 
about the inimitability of the Qurans literary style, about the miracle of its 
rhyme and the marvel of its rhythm.
 
 
It has been suggested that the inimitability of the Quran is not necessarily 
unique, for great English poets like Shakespeare, Chaucer, or great poets in 
any language tend to have distinctly unique styles which set them apart from 
their contemporaries. 
 
However, if, for example, some leading poet of today were to make an in-depth 
study of Shakespeares writings and write a sonnet in Shakespeares style in old 
ink and on old paper, then claim that he had discovered a lost poem of 
Shakespeares, the literary world would probably accept this claim, even after 
careful study. 
 
Thus, even the greatest of poets could be imitated; no matter how unique his 
style was, just as the famous painters have been imitated. [In fact, some 
English scholars consider much of what has been attributed to Shakespeare to 
have been written by his contemporary, Christopher Marlowe.] 
 
 
The Quran, however, is way above this level, as attempts to forge chapters have 
been made throughout the ages, yet none has withstood close scrutiny. And, as 
was mentioned before, the incentive to imitate the Quran was more intense 
during the time of its revelation when literally skills were at their peak than 
at any other time, yet there was no successful attempt.
 

________________________________

Footnotes:
[1]Collected by al-Hakim, al-Bayhaqee, Aboo Yalaa and Ibn Hishaam, and declared 
Hasan by Ibrahim al-Alee in Sahih as-Seerah an-Nabaweeyah, p.64.
  
 
  
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In the name of Allah, the Most-Merciful, the All-Compassionate
 
"May the Peace and Blessings of Allah be Upon You"
 Praise be to Allaah, we seek His help and His forgiveness. We seek refuge with 
Allaah from the evil of our own souls and from our bad deeds. Whomsoever Allaah 
guides will never be led astray, and whomsoever Allaah leaves astray, no one 
can guide. I bear witness that there is no god but Allaah, and I bear witness 
that Muhammad is His slave and Messenger.
 
  
Bismillah Walhamdulillah Was Salaatu Was Salaam 'ala Rasulillah
As-Salaam Alaikum Wa-Rahmatullahi Wa-Barakatuhu


      

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