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The Light of the Prophet
by Dr. Mostafa al-Badawi
"Allah is the light of the heavens and the
earth . . . "[1]
The Light is one of the ninety-nine Beautiful Names of Allah.
Light is that by which things become known. Things may exist
in the dark, but they cannot be seen. Light may be physical,
such as the light of the sun or the moon, or intelligible,
like the light of the intellect. The latter is that which
illuminates the darkness of ignorance with the light of
knowledge. Total darkness is non-existence, thus light is
that which brings created beings out of non-existence into
existence. It is the creative act of Allah and this is one of
the meanings of "Allah is the light of the heavens and the
earth . . . " The other meaning is that every light in
the universe is but a reflection of His mercy, every
knowledge a reflection of His knowledge and so on. "Allah
created His creation in darkness," said the Prophet, may
Allah’s blessings and peace be upon him, "then He sprayed
them with His light. Those whom this light reached became
rightly guided, while those it did not went astray."[2] And
he also said, as recorded by Muslim, "Allah, August and
Majestic is He, wrote the destinies of creation fifty
thousand years before He created the Heavens and the earth.
His throne was on the water. Among what He wrote in the
Remembrance, which is the Mother of the Book, was: Muhammad
is the Seal of the Prophets."
The Mother of the Book is the source of all
knowledge, including the Divine Scriptures. It is the
essential knowledge of Allah before He created creation. This
is why it is said to have been written fifty thousand years
before the creation of the cosmos, a symbolic number, since
without stars and planets there cannot be days and years as
we understand them. Allah conceived His creation in the
darkness of non-existence, then with the light of His
creative act brought them out into existence. Thus the First
Light was created, a being appearing against the dark
background of non-existence. "The first thing that Allah
created was the Intellect,"[3] said the Prophet, may Allah’s
blessings and peace be upon him. He also said, "The first
thing that Allah created was the Pen," which amounts to the
same thing, since the first intellect is the primordial light
in its passive aspect as recipient of the knowledge of what
is to be, while the Pen is the primordial light in its active
aspect of writing this knowledge on the Guarded Tablet at
Allah’s command. "The first thing that Allah created was the
Pen and He said to it: Write! So it wrote what is to be
forever."[4] From this First light all of creation, with all
its varied forms and meanings till the end of time unfolds.
This primordial light is what is called the
Light of the Prophet, may Allah’s blessings and peace be upon
him, since he is the created being who received the major
share of it.
This light was also the origin of the lights
of all other Divine Messengers, of the angels, then of all
other beings. This is how the Prophet, may Allah’s blessings
and peace be upon him, could say, "I was a Prophet when Adam
was still between spirit and body."[5] The power of this
light made the Prophet’s radiation so powerful, once he
appeared on earth, that Allah calls him in the Qur’?n "an
illuminating lamp." Allah describes the sun and the moon
in the Qur’?n in like manner explaining what He means when He
says that He made the Prophet "an illuminating lamp".
He says, Exalted is He:
"Have you not seen how Allah created seven
heavens, one upon another, and set the moon therein for a
light and the sun for a lamp?"[6]
Here he calls the sun a lamp, since its light is self
generating, but He calls the moon a light, since it
but reflects the light of the sun. He also says: " . . .
and We appointed a blazing lamp . . . "[7] The
sun’s light being extremely hot, and, "Blessed is He who
has set in the sky constellations and has set among them a
lamp and an illuminating moon,"[8] emphasizing that the
moon’s light is light with little heat. When He says to His
Prophet: " O Prophet! We have sent you as a witness, a
bearer of good tidings and of warning, as a caller to Allah
by His leave and as an illuminating lamp,"[9] we are to
understand that He made the Prophet’s light powerful like the
sun’s, yet cool and gentle like the moon’s.
Some of the Prophet’s Companions were given to
see this light as even brighter than both the sun and moon,
for when they walked with him they noticed that he cast no
shadow on the ground.[10] Those who saw him in the full moon
noticed that his blessed face was brighter than the moon,[11]
and one of his Companions, the Lady Rubayyi‘, when asked to
describe him, said, "My son, had you seen him, you would have
seen the sun shining."[12]
The light of the Prophet shone at all levels,
it filled the material, intermediary, and spiritual worlds,
dispelled the darkness of ignorance and disbelief, and is
destined to shine across the ages till the end of time.
That this light was physical as well as
spiritual was borne witness to most amply by those who saw
him. The Lady ‘A‘isha related how she saw the whole room fill
with light one night, then it disappeared, while the Prophet
continued to call upon his Lord. Then the room was filled
with a more powerful light which disappeared after a while.
She asked, "What is this light I saw?" he said, "Did you see
it. O ‘A‘isha?" "Yes!" she replied. He said, "I asked my Lord
to grant me my nation, so He gave me one third of them, so I
praised and thanked Him. Then I asked him for the rest, so He
gave me the second third, so I praised and thanked Him. Then
I asked Him for the third third, so He gave it to me, so I
praised and thanked Him." She said that had she wished to
pick up mustard seeds from the floor by this light she could
have.[13] In the famous description of Hind ibn Abi Hala, the
Prophet’s stepson from the Lady Khadija, "He was dignified
and awe inspiring, radiant like the radiance of the moon on
the night it is full…"[14] Ibn ‘Abbas described how he saw
light shining from between his front teeth.[15] Abu Qursafa,
as a boy, went to swear allegiance to the Prophet, together
with his mother and her sister. When they returned home they
told him, " My son, we have never seen the like of this man,
nor anyone better looking, cleaner dressed, or gentler in his
speech; and we saw as if light came out of his mouth." [16]
The Companion, Anas ibn Malik, may Allah be
pleased with him, described how, when the Prophet, may
Allah’s blessings and peace be upon him, first entered Madina,
everything in Madina became illuminated, then how, when he
died and was buried in ‘A’isha’s house, the light
disappeared. The phenomenon was so sudden that the Companions
were taken aback and began to doubt whether they had really
seen it at all.[17] This was only the light that radiated
from his blessed body, for Madina itself remained the city of
Light. Ab? Hurayra related how they were once praying the
night prayer of ‘isha’ with the Prophet, may
Allah’s blessings and peace be upon him, and how the
Prophet’s two grandsons, Hasan and Husayn climbed onto his
back when he went into prostration. When he was done, he
placed one of them on his right and the other on his left.
Abu Hurayra asked him, "Shall I take them to their mother?"
he replied, "No". Then a flashing light appeared from the
sky, at which he said, "go to your mother." The light
remained until they reached their house.[18] On another
occasion, Anas said that, he accompanied the Prophet, may
Allah’s blessings and peace be upon him, into the mosque
where they saw a group of people with their hands raised,
calling upon Allah. "Do you see in their hands what I see?"
the Prophet asked. "What is in their hands?" Anas replied.
"There is light in their hands," replied the Prophet. "Ask
Allah the Exalted to show it to me," said Anas. At the
Prophet’s request, Allah showed it to him.[19] Another
Companion, ‘Amr al-Aslami, said that once they were with the
Messenger of Allah, may Allah’s blessings and peace be upon
him, on a very dark night and lost sight of each other.
Suddenly ‘Amr’s fingers shone forth with light so that they
were able to round up their mounts and gather again. The
light did not subside until they had finished gathering.[20]
As for Abu ‘Abs, he used to pray all the ritual prayers with
the Prophet, then walk back to his dwelling, at Bani Haritha,
a few miles from the mosque. One dark rainy night, as he left
the mosque, his staff was made to shine forth with light, so
that he was able to walk safely back home.[21] On another
occasion, two of the Prophet’s well known Companions, Usayd
ibn Hudayr and ‘Abbad ibn Bishr, left the Prophet’s house
late on a dark night. The tip of the staff of one of them lit
up like a lamp and they were able to walk. When they came to
the place where they usually separated, the tip of the other
staff lit up as well.[22] Another Companion, al-Tufayl ibn
‘Amr al-Dawsi, related how, after his first visit to the
Prophet, when he accepted Islam and was about to return to
his tribe, he asked the Prophet for a sign to show to his
tribesmen, at which a light shone forth from his forehead. He
exclaimed, "Not here, O Messenger of Allah, they will think
it a curse!" So the Prophet moved the light to the tip of al-
Tufayl’s whip. He returned to his tribe with this sign and
most of them accepted Islam.[23]
Ka‘b ibn Zuhayr was a man from Muzayna, a
highly talented poet who used his talent against the Prophet
and his companions. Once Macca had been conquered, Ka`b
became a fugitive, aware that the Prophet had ordered him
executed. His brother, Bujayr, was a Muslim. He sent Ka`b a
message that he could only save his life if he came to the
Prophet repentant. Eventually Ka‘b agreed to this and came to
Madina. The Prophet forgave him, accepted his allegiance, and
gave him permission to recite the poem Ka`b had composed in
his praise. When he came to the passage,
The Messenger is a light that illuminates
An Indian blade, a sword of Allah, drawn
the Prophet took his mantle, his burda,
off his shoulders and put it on Ka‘b’s, signalling his
approval. The best swords of the time were Indian and the
connection between the sword and light is that the Arabs
signalled the way by standing on a rise and brandishing their
swords in the sun so that they flashed like mirrors.[24]
The light of the Prophet, may Allah’s
blessings and peace be upon him, manifested itself in his
parents before and during his birth. His biographers have
recorded that his father’s forehead shone with a light that a
certain women from Quraysh noticed. She knew that the
appearance of the Prophet of the End of Time was imminent and
felt that ‘Abdallah’s forehead signalled his being the
father. She offered herself to him, but he refused. Soon `Abdallah
married Amina and, once she became pregnant with the Prophet,
the light vanished from his forehead. He met the same woman
again and, noticing she no longer wanted him, asked her why.
She replied that he no longer carried that light on his
forehead.[25] As for the Lady Amina, when she became
pregnant, she saw in a dream-vision that a light came out of
her that lit the land as far north as Syria.[26] She was also
told in her dream that she was pregnant with the master of
this nation and the sign of that would be that when she gave
birth to him she would see a light coming out with him that
would shine over Bosra in Syria. "When this happens", she was
told, "call him Muhammad!"[27] "I conceived him, " she said,
"and suffered no pain until delivery. When he came out of me,
a light came out with him that illuminated everything from
East to West…"[28] She also said, "I saw the night I gave
birth to him a light that illuminated the palaces of Syria so
that I saw them."[29] The Prophet later confirmed this,
saying, "My mother saw, when she gave birth to me, a light
that illuminated the palaces of Bosra."[30] This event is
also a very clear indication of the spiritual rank of the
Lady Amina, for to see the palaces of Bosra in Syria from
Macca demands the spiritual vision of sanctity. Later, the
Prophet’s uncle, ‘Abbas, praised him with a poem, on his
return from the Tabuk expedition, saying:
You, when you were born, the earth was lit
And with your light so was the sky
When his wet-nurse, Halima al-Sa‘dia, first
saw him, she laid her hand on him and he smiled. "When he
smiled," she said, "a light appeared from his mouth that rose
to the sky."[32]
Some of the hadiths we have quoted here have
strong chains of transmission, others have weaker ones.
However, we must remember that even the chain considered
weakest by Muslim traditionists, is quite acceptable as
historical proof to any professional historian on this
planet, being far stronger and better authenticated than
other ancient sources he works with. It is also well known
that weak traditions strengthen each other so as to become
acceptable. This is why those we have quoted here have been
accepted by leading scholars such as Ibn Kathir, Suyuti?,
Qadi ‘Iyad, Bayhaqi, and others.
Commenting on the verse of Qur’an,"There
has come to you a light from Allah and a clear Book,"[33]
the well-known scholar al-Alusi says that the light in
question is no other than the Prophet, may Allah’s blessings
and peace be upon him. He quotes the Follower, Qatada, as an
authoritative source for this opinion, as well as other well
known scholars, pointing out that this is the most logical
interpretation of the construction of the verse, Then he also
quotes those whose opinion differs from his in that they
believe that both the light and the Book refer to the Qur’an.
This he does because real Muslim scholars, as opposed to
pretenders and impostors, always quote, along with their own
opinions, the contrary opinions of other reputable scholars,
so weighing both in the most objective manner. Qadi ‘Iyad,
the famous author of al-Shifa’, is of the same
opinion as al-Alusi, an opinion, an opinion shared by other
famous commentators such as Tabari and Qurtubi.
Although the Prophet’s light is the most
powerful in the universe, since he is the nearest created
being to Allah, it is not the only one. Angels are made of
light, the Qur’an is light, the spirits of human beings are
light, faith is light, knowledge is light, the sun, the moon,
and the stars are also lights. The light of each human being
depends upon his faith, knowledge, and virtue. Thus the most
powerful lights are those of Divine Messengers, then those of
Prophets, saints, virtuous believers, and finally those of
sinful believers. This is the hierarchy of human beings. Both
the first and the last are human, all have lights, and all
are slaves of Allah, but the distance between the top of the
pyramid and its bottom is so great that those at the bottom,
in Paradise, will see those at the top as distant as, in this
world, we see the stars at night.[34]
1. Qur'an (24:35).
2. Tirmidhi.
3. Tirmidhi.
4. Tabarani and Abu Nu'aym.
5. Tirmidhi, Ahmad, Hakim and Bukhari in
Tarikh.
6. Qur'an (71:16)
7. Qur'an (78:13)
8. Qur'an (25:61)
9. Qur'an (33:45 - 46)
10. al-Hakim al-Tirmidhi
11. Tirmidhi
12. Tirmidhi
13. Abu Nu'aym in
Hilia
14. Tirmidhi in Shama'il, Bayhaqi,
Tabarani, and ibn Sa'd.
15. Tirmidhi in Shama'il, Darimi,
Bayhaqi, Tabarani, and ibn Asakir.
16. Tabarani.
17. Ahmad and ibn Majah.
18. Ahmad, Hakim, and Bazar.
19. Bukhari in Tarikh, Bayhaqi and Abu Nu'aym.
20. Bukhari in Tarikh, Bayhaqi and Tabarani.
21. Bayhaqi.
22. Bukhari
23. Ibn Hisham.
24. Ibn Ishaq |