Introduction

1. Revelation:

It was Ramadan.

It was one night at the end of Ramadan.

The Prophet was alone in the cave 1 in Mount Hira'.

In that solitude, 2 now so dear to him, he heard a voice, an angelic 3 voice.

It was the voice of Jibril.

The Angel said, "Recite 4 !" and the Prophet's answer was, "I am not a reciter." 5

Thus the Prophet later on told his wife and Companions: "Then the Angel took me and held me tightly in his embrace 6 until he had reached the limits of my endurance 7 . Then he released me and said: "(Recite!) I said, (I am not a reciter), and again he embraced me until he had reached the limits of my endurance."

The Angel held the Prophet tightly the third time, then released him, and said:

"Recite; and your Lord is the Most Bountiful. He has created man from a clot 8 of blood. He Who has taught by the pen. Taught man what he knew not."

The Prophet recited these words after the Angel, and he said later on, "It was as if the words were written on my heart".

Revelation is the Divine source of our knowledge. It is really the source of know1edge for all creatures, because the word revelation in Arabic means what we call innate 9knowledge to "animate" 10 beings, like ants and bees, even to "inanimate"11 `objects like clouds and seas, and the earth and the heavens.

One form of revelation to mankind is granted to the faithful among men and women alike: Zakaria and Maryam. A higher form was granted Musa, when Allah spoke to him "from behind a veil 12 and a third form is when an angel is sent as a messenger to the human messenger. This is how the final form of revelation took place to the final Prophet and Messenger, the Prayers of Allah and His Peace be upon him.

Innate knowledge in mankind is always true, but is most of the time clouded and obstructed 13 by instinctive inclinations for worldly enjoyment. Knowledge from nature around us is incomplete so long as our senses cannot perceive the whole truth even in things nearest to us. That is why Divine revelation is the surest source of true knowledge.

The heavenly Messenger, Jibril, saw the Prophet quite often, and the last time he saw him for a long time was in the last Ramadan before the Prophet's death, when the Prophet recited the whole Qur'an in the presence of Jibril. That was the last angelic visit, and the last recitation of the complete Qur'an by the Prophet.

2. Al-Qur'an:

Al-Qur'an is not the first revelation from Allah, but it is the last. Like the other Books before it, Al-Qur'an is a Book of guidance, not only to Muslims, but to humanity as a whole. Al-Qur'an does not refute 14 all of the Books before it, because two of the Books before them, the To-rah and the Gospel have guidance and light. But Al-Qur'an replaces these two Books and all Books before them, because much of the light and guidance in these two Books has been obscured by human heresie's 15 and the darkness of historical dissension 16 and interpolation' 17

The way the Prophet explained and applied the teachings of Al-Qur'an is called the "Sunnah"and Al-Qur'an and Sunnah are the laws that guide Muslims in all spheres of life: personal and social, in all the affairs of the individual and the state, in war and peace. Thus Al-Qur'an and Sunnah summarize the whole life of the Prophet from birth to death.

3-The Eternal Message:

At the age of forty, Muhammad was entrusted with a message to the worlds:

"And We have not sent you except as a mercy to the worlds". (Al-Anbiya" 107).

These worlds include mankind, and other creatures as invisible as the jinn and as barely understood by mankind as those creatures that swarm 18 the whole universe around us. Before he was forty, he had been known as an honest man, who could be entrusted with the honor of settling the dispute between the various tribes of Makkah about placing the "Black Stone" when they decided to rebuild Al-Ka'bah in the Sanctified Mosque. He was also known for his aversion 19 for the idols 20 that were hanging in Al-Ka'bah. He never prayed to any of them. These idols went on hanging there until Makkah opened its gates to him in the 8th year of the establishment of the first Muslim State in Al-Madinah. That was the time when he destroyed these idols, saying:

"And say: Truth has come and untruth has vanished; surely untruth has ever been bound to vanish". (Al-Isra'-81).

Thus the first thing he came to teach the world is monotheism: the Oneness of Allah. This monotheism was not the choice of one of the idols that were hanging in Al-Ka'bah, and exalting him above all the others and preaching his worship, as some orientalists 21 claim. Nor is it the unity of God, which may be interpreted in various ways as some like to interpret it as a trinitarian 22 creed 23 contrary to the very concept of Oneness. In Al-Qur'an, Allah (Exalted be His name) is both One and Absolute: One since He cannot be two or three or more; and He is also Absolutesince He cannot be conceived to be part of anything else or to beget or be begotten. This is the idea behind one of the shortest Suras of Al-Qur'an.

"Say: He is Allah, the One Allah, the Eternally Absolute. He did not beget and He was not begotten .And no one has ever been His compeer."

The immense significance of this surah cannot be over-emphasized; it is the corner-stone of the whole edifice 24 of Islam in its laws for the individual and the state in that Memorable Decade. That Memorable Decade was a vindication 25 of Revelation, a trail blazer 26 for the noblest in man, establishing the Imperial City under the inimitable leadership of the Prophet, manifesting the peak 27 of human achievement under the Divine Eye, setting the Moral Code for all ages to come, and holding illimitable dominion over 28 human destiny.