Prophets of the Quran: An Introduction (part 1 of 2) |
Description: Belief in the prophets of God is a central part of Muslim faith. Part 1 will introduce all the prophets before Prophet Muhammad, may the mercy and blessings of God be upon him, mentioned in the Muslim scripture from Adam to Abraham and his two sons. By C. Mofty (© 2013 IslamReligion.com)Published on 22 Apr 2013 - Last modified on 22 Apr 2013 Viewed: 299 (daily average: 507) - Rating: Printed: 3 - Emailed: 0 - Commented on: 0 - Rated by: 1 Category: Articles > Beliefs of Islam > Stories of the Prophets |
The Quran mentions twenty five prophets, most of whom are mentioned
in the Bible as well. Who were these prophets, where did they live, who were
they sent to, what are their names in the Quran and the Bible, and what are some
of the miracles they performed? We will answer these simple questions.
Before we begin, we must
understand two matters:
a.
In Arabic two different words are used, Nabi
and Rasool. A Nabi is a prophet and a Rasool is a
messenger or an apostle. The two words are close in meaning for our
purpose.
b.
There are four men mentioned in the Quran about whom
Muslim scholars are uncertain whether they were prophets or not:
Dhul-Qarnain (18:83), Luqman (Chapter 31), Uzair (9:30),
and Tubba (44:37, 50:14).
1.
Aadam or Adam is the first prophet in Islam.
He is also the first human being according to traditional Islamic belief. Adam
is mentioned in 25 verses and 25 times in the Quran. God created Adam with His
hands and created his wife, Hawwa or Eve from Adam’s rib. He lived in
Paradise and was expelled from there to earth for disobedience. The story of
his two sons is mentioned once in Chapter 5 (Al-Maidah).
2.
Idrees or Enoch is mentioned twice in the
Quran. Other than that little is known about him. He is said to have lived in
Babylon, Iraq and migrated to Egypt and that he was the first one to write with
the pen.
3.
Nooh or Noah is mentioned 43 times in the
Quran. He is said to be from Kirk, Iraq. Polytheism (shirk) appeared for the
first time among his people who lived close to the present day city of Kufa, in
the south of Iraq. His wife was an unbeliever as mentioned in Chapter 66
(At-Tahrim). His son also choose disbelief and was drowned in the flood. The
story is found in Chapter 11 (Hud).
One of his great miracles was the Arc which he built on
God’s command that rested on Mt. Judi which is said to be between the
Syrian-Turkish border today near the city of Ayn Diwar.
4.
Hud is said to be Heber in English. He is
mentioned 7 times in the Quran. Hud is the first person to have spoken Arabic
and was the first Arab prophet. He was definitely sent to the people of
Aad in the area known as Al-Ahqaf which is around Hadramaut in
Yemen and the Ar-Rub al-Khali (the Empty Quarter). God destroyed them by a
fierce wind that blew for 8 days and seven nights.
5.
Salih is mentioned 9 times in the Quran. He
was an Arab prophet send to the people of Thamud who lived in an area
known as Al-Hijr between Hijaz and Tabuk. Al-Hijr was the ancient
name. Today, the place is known as “Madain Salih” in Saudi Arabia and is
a UNESCO world heritage site. They are magnificent structures literally carved
into rocks. The people demanded he produce a female camel out of the rocks to
prove his claim to being a prophet. He did, and warned them not to harm her,
but they killed her despite the warning of Salih. A loud shriek – saihah
- killed them all.
6.
Ibrahim or Abraham is mentioned 69 times in
25 chapters of the Quran. His father’s name was Aazar. They lived in the city
of Ur in the Chaldean kingdom. He escaped Ur to Harran, in the north of
the Arabian peninsula, in today’s Syria, when Nimrod, the king tried to burn him
alive. From Harran he went to Palestine with his wife Sarah and the son of his
brother, Lot (Loot in Arabic) and his wife. Due to a famine, they were
forced to move to Egypt.
He later returned with Lot to the south of Palestine,
Ibrahim settling in Bir Sab’a and Lot settled close to the Dead Sea.
Abraham then moved his second wife, Hagar, to Mecca
with his son Ishmael and left them there at God’s command. Mecca was a barren
land and the well of zamzam was provided by God for their survival. The
ancient tribe of Jurhum settled their due to zamzam. Abraham is said to
be buried in Hebron, Palestine.
7.
8. Abraham had two sons: Ishaq or
Issac and Ismael or Ishmael. Issac is mentioned 16 times
in the Quran whereas Ishmael is mentioned 12 times. Issac lived with his
father, Abraham, and died in Hebron, Palestine. God ordered Abraham to
sacrifice Ishmael. He went to Mecca with his parents and was left there with
his mother. Abraham visited Ishmael several times in Mecca, one of those times,
God ordered Abraham and Ishmael to build the Ka’bah (the Holy House). Ishmael
died in Mecca and was buried there. Issac is the fore-father of the Jews and
Ishmael is the forefather of the Arabs.
|
No comments:
Post a Comment