Articles




Reference to the Bible


Is it justifiable for Muslims to quote the Bible or refer to it? There appears to be two common and extreme misconceptions about the Muslims’ attitudes toward the Bible:


1. that Muslims base their faith in full or in part on the Bible;


2. that Muslims reject the Bible in total and accept no single word of it.


For Muslims, the Qur’an is the last but not the only holy book revealed by Allah to mankind through His messengers.1 It is, however, the only holy book which remained fully intact from the time of its revelation until the present time. Not only is the full text of the Qur’an available, but it is also available in the full and exact form as uttered by the Prophet Muhammad (Peace and Blessing be upon him)2 at the time of its revelation and in the original language in which it was revealed (Arabic). No addition, deletion, or interpolation found its way into the Qur’an. For Muslims, the Qur’an is the only


1 Allah in Arabic means The One and Only God, Creator, Lord and Sustainer of the Universe. Unlike the English term “God,” the term is not subject to gender (male or female) or to plurality: a befitting and consistent emphasis on the transcendence and Divine Majesty of the Creator.


2 Peace and blessing are sent upon the Prophet Muhammad and to all prophets and messengers who preceded him as an expression of love and respect for him.


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remaining authoritative and authentic revelation available to mankind; authoritative because an objective study of the Qur’an clearly shows its divine origin; and authentic because of the conclusive evidence that it remained intact and was transmitted to us as it was revealed without being mixed with human and philosophical ideas and doctrines. As such, Muslims do not need any other scriptures to base their faith on, either in full or in part.


On the other hand, it is erroneous to think that Muslims reject the Bible in total and do not accept a single passage of it. There are at least two reasons for this:


1st. One of the main articles of faith in Islam is the belief in all prophets and messengers sent before the advent of the last of them, Prophet Muhammad. This also necessitates believing in the holy books revealed to those prophets in the original forms of their revelation;3


2nd. According to the Qur’an all prophets were Muslims (i.e. those who consciously and lovingly submitted to the will of Allah), what they thought was nothing but earlier versions of Islam (conscious and loving submission to Allah) and their followers were Muslims as well.4 The fact that the


3 The Qur’an 2:285. See also the Qur’an 2:136, 176; 3:3, 84; 5:84.


4 See for example the Qur’an 3:67; 2:128, 133; 3:52; 10:84; 17:31; 22:78; 3:19, 85.


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transmissions of earlier revelations, prior to the Qur’an suffered from inaccuracies and misinterpretations does not justify a total and categorical rejection of such scriptures. There are bound to be some passage or portions of the Bible whose essence, if not wording, need not be rejected by Muslims.


Criterion of Acceptance


What is the Muslim basis or criterion for accepting or not accepting portions or passages from the Bible?


The Qur’an itself provides such criterion:


“And unto you We have revealed the Scripture with the truth confirming whatever Scripture was before it, and a watch over It… ” (The Qur’an 5:48)


This emphasizes two main aspects of the Qur’an:


1st. The Qur’an confirms those teachings or passages of previous scriptures which remained intact.5


2nd. The Qur’an is the last complete, authoritative and authentic revelation. It is the final arbiter and the only criterion to correct any inaccuracy or misinterpretation which might have occurred in the transmissions of scriptures. It helps in discovering human additions to or interpolations of previous


5 In the Qur’an, Prophet Muhammad was directed to invite the Israelites: “Say: Produce the Torah and read it (unto us) if you are truthful.” (The Qur’an 3:93) See also 5:68-69b, 71; 48:29.


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revelations, even as it reveals possible deletions which might have taken place through the centuries prior to its revelation (the Qur’an). Indeed, one of the names of the Qur’an is al-Furqān (the criterion which distinguishes between right and wrong, truth and falsehood).


It follows therefore that a Muslim has no reason to reject the essence of any passage in the Bible if such a passage is confirmed by the Qur’an.6 For example, we read in the New Testament a reiteration of one of the Ten Commandments:


“And Jesus answered him. The first of all commandments is hear, O Israel; the Lord our God is one Lord” (Mark 12:29)


A Muslim who reads this passage in the Bible and compares it with the Qur’an can find no objection to its essence. After all the Qur’an confirms:


“Say He is Allah, the One and Only (God).” (The Qur’an 112:1)


If, however, a Muslim reads in the Bible (or other scriptures) accusations of major moral sins levied against


6 See for example the Qur’an 2:185; 25:1. On the confirmation in the Qur’an of previous revelations we read: “And this Qur’an is not such as could ever be invented in despite of Allah; but it is a confirmation of that which was before it and an exposition of that which is decreed for mankind — Therein is no doubt — from the Lord of the Worlds.” (10:37) See also Qur’an 12:111; 2:89, 101; 6:92; 46:12; 2:41, 91, 97; 35:31; 46:30.


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great prophets or doctrines which are totally negated in the Qur’an, the Muslim accepts only the qur’anic version as the original unadulterated truth, revealed by Allah (God). Likewise, if the Bible (or other scriptures) contains apparent prophecies about the advent of Prophet Muhammad, and if the Qur’an confirms that fact, then there is nothing unusual or objectionable in referring to such prophecies.


Qur’anic Reference to Prophecies


Is there any conclusive basis for claiming that the Bible did contain prophecies about the advent of the Prophet Muhammad?


The Original revelations given to prophets in the past contained a complete and clear profile of the advent of Prophet Muhammad. Even in its present form(s) the Bible still contains several such prophecies as will be shown in the forthcoming chapters. It is useful, however, to start off by documenting the above statement.


A. Describing true believers, the Qur’an states:


“Those who follow the messenger, the Prophet who can neither read nor write, whom they will find described in the Torah and the Gospel (which are with them). He will enjoin on them that which is right and forbid them that which is wrong. He will make lawful for them all good things and prohibit for them only the foul; and he will relieve them of


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the burden and the fetters that they used to wear. Then those who believe in him, and honor him, and help him, and follow the light which is sent down with him: they are the successful.” (The Qur’an 7:157)


This ayah (passage) indicates that the characteristic as well as the teaching of that “Apostle, the unlettered Prophet” were


mentioned in the “Torah” and the “Gospel.”


B. Quoting Prophet Jesus (peace be upon him), the Qur’an states:


“And when Jesus, son of Mary said: O children of Israel: Lo! I am the messenger of Allah unto you, confirming that which was (revealed) before me in the Torah, and bringing good tidings of a messenger who came after me, whose name is Ahmad. Yet when he has come unto them with clear proofs, they say: This is mere magic.”7 (The Qur’an 61:6)


An interesting aspect of this ayah is that it indicates that in the original revelation uttered by Prophet Jesus, even the name of the long-awaited messenger: Ahmad, which is another of Prophet Muhammad. This issue will be further discussed later on.


7 Additional reference in the Qur’an include 2:89 (the Israelites expected a new prophet to come); 2:146-147 (the people of the book clearly knew him “truth or profile of Prophet Muhammad” as they know their sons); and 3:81 (Allah took covenant of the Prophets to believe and render help “personally or through their followers” to the messenger who will come confirming what was revealed to them.


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Name or Signs?


It follows therefore that a Muslim has no reason to reject the essence of any passage in the Bible if such a passage is Turning to the Bible, some hasten to ask: I read the Bible several times, but never saw the name Muhammad; what is the justification for the title “Muhammad in the Bible?”


Many Christian theologians find no difficulty in pointing out what they consider as clear prophecies of the advent of Jesus. Where in the Old Testament does the name Jesus appear? Nowhere! The main question is whether or not the profile of “that prophet” to come was materialized, and who fits that profile?


The profile of Prophet Muhammad was so clear to many Jews and Christian among his contemporaries that many embraced Islam accepted him as the fulfillment of numerous Biblical prophecies.


Further question pertaining to the possible mention of Muhammad’s name will be discussed later.


Biblical Prophecies About Jesus


Does that previous discussion mean that all prophecies which were believed to have been fulfilled in Prophet Jesus were actually fulfilled in Prophet Muhammad instead? There is no reason to rule out the possibility that some of the Old Testament prophecies were in fact fulfilled in Prophet Jesus. This does not


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constitute a problem for the Muslims. On the authority of the Qur’an alone, the Muslims accept Jesus as a legitimate and major prophet of Allah. The same was reiterated in the sayings of Prophet Muhammad. There are, however, several Old Testament prophecies which were for a long time misinterpreted so as to apply to Jesus. Such prophecies do in fact refer to Prophet Muhammad. One of such prophecy is in Deut. 18:18 to be discussed later. Analysis and reinterpretation of such prophecies should in no way reflect negatively on the honored and revered status of Jesus in the hearts of the Muslims. It is rather a declaration of the truth which would have been proclaimed by Jesus himself if he was among us today.


Main Elements in Muhammad’s Profile


What then are the elements of the “profile” of Prophet Muhammad as depicted in the Bible? That profile includes six crucial elements:


 The lineage of the prophet,


 His characteristic,


 The location from which he was to come,


 The revelation which was to be given to him,


 Events which were to take place in his lifetime, and


 The time when he was to come.


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I: Lineage of “That Prophet”


Prophet Abraham: Common Father


Jews, Christians, and Muslims claim a common father, Prophet Abraham, the patriarch of monotheism. What does his family tree look like? A simple look at it may help show some of the key figures in the Abrahamic family tree.8


Abraham married Sarah. From the union they had the following in their progeny the following prophets: Isaac, Jacob, Joseph, Moses, David, Solomon and Jesus. Abraham married Hagar. From their union they had in their progeny the following prophets: Ishmael and Muhammad. According to the Bible, Abraham was first married to Sarah who happened to be a barren woman and bore him no children (Gen. 16:1). In the chronology of the Book of Genesis, God made an important promise to Abraham, even before any child was born to him:


“And I will make of thee a great nation, and I will bless thee, and make thy name great; and thou shalt be a blessing. And I will bless them that bless thee: and in thee shall all families of the earth be blessed.” (Gen. 12:2-3)


8 According to Genesis 25:1 Prophet Abraham (peace be upon him) was also married to Keturah after the death of Sarah. The emphasis in the present context, however, is on Abraham’s first two sons, the blessing of whom was specified both in the Qur’an and the Bible as will be shown shortly.


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In a later chapter in the Book of Genesis (Gen. 16) we are told In a later chapter in the Book of Genesis (Gen. 16) we are told that Sarah gave Abraham a handmaid (Hagar) to be his wife, in the hope that she may bear a child to Abraham.9 Hagar did bear Abraham’s first child whose name, Ishmael (peace be upon him), meaning “God hears,” was given by the angels (Gen. 16:11). For the following fourteen years, Ishmael was Arbaham’s only child. After the birth of Ishmael and before the birth of Isaac, God’s promise to bless the families of the earth through Abraham's descendants was repeated:


“As for me, behold, my covenant is with thee, and thou shalt be a father of many nations.” (Gen. 17:4)


Another pleasant surprise was in store for Abraham. In his old age, his first wife Sarah was to bear him another child, Isaac (peace be upon him) (Gen. 21:5).


The Bible tells us that because of jealousy, Sarah asked her husband Abraham to cast out Ishmael and his mother Hagar (Gen. 21:21).


Gods promise to bless the descendants of Abraham was indeed realized. Through Abraham’s second son Isaac came the Israelite prophets, including Jacob,


9 It should be noted that polygamous marriages were not uncommon among the Israelites, including some of the Israelite prophets. Even "The Friend of God," Prophet Abraham, who was blessed by God and through whom the families of earth were blessed (Gen. 12:2-3, 17:4), had a polygamous marriage and certainly for a good cause.


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Joseph, Moses, David, Solomon,10 and Jesus (peace be upon them all), the last Israelite prophet.11 Fulfillment of God’s promise through the Israelite branch of Abraham is clearly and abundantly articulated in the Bible. How was that promise fulfilled through the Ishmaelite branch of the Abrahamic family tree? Or was it fulfilled at all? Or has it yet to be fulfilled?


To start with, God does not renegade on His promises, nor does He forget them. It is interesting to note that while the Bible contains elaborate details about the Israelite branch, the Ishmaelite branch is virtually ignored. With the exception of a few references here and there,12 the Bible is virtually silent on the Ishmaelites.


If it is accepted that God does not renegade on His promise (a prerequisite of faith for any believer in God) then we are left with two possibilities:


A. that such promise of blessing which included the Israelites had been fulfilled;


B. that is yet to be fulfilled.


10 According to Muslim belief, David and Solomon (peace be upon them) were both prophets of God, not just "kings".


11 The Qur'an makes it clear that Jesus was one of the major prophets of God. For a further discussion of the Question of this questions see Jamal A. Badawi's Jesus in the Qur'an, Islamic Information Foundation (Forthcoming, Insha' Allah).


12 For example: That Ishmael (peace be upon him) had twelve sons of whom is "Kedar" (Gen. 25:13). Other mentions of "Kedar" will be discussed later on.


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It is well known that put of the descendants of Ishmael came the last great prophet of monotheism. Prophet Muhammad, whose followers constitute nearly one-fifth of the total world population in all corners of the earth.


After blessing the descendants of Isaac, the Israelites, for centuries with the spiritual leadership, and after many lapses and rebellion against God on their part, a final chance was given to them through the mission of the last Israelite prophet, Jesus. When Jesus too was rejected, it was now time in God’s plan to fulfill His promise to the Ishmaelite branch as well, the branch which remained obscure until it was made a “great nation”13 through the mission of the well-known Prophet Muhammad, a descendant of Abraham through Ishmael. That shift of prophethood and spiritual leadership to the Ishmaelite branch of Abraham’s descendants brought to completion the centuries-old promise of God to bless the families of the earth through Abraham, the father of monotheism and patriarch revered by Jews, Christians and Muslims.


To any unbiased mind, the above evidence alone suffices to show the connection between such great prophets as Abraham, Isaac, Ishmael, Moses, Jesus and Muhammad.


If such prophecies about the advent of Prophet Muhammad are that obvious, how is it that millions Bible


13 Specific reference to making a “great nation” of Ishmael appears in Genesis 21:13, 18. These key verses are discussed later on.


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readers could not come to such conclusion? Putting other reasons aside for now, it seems that a combination of erroneous notions and misinterpretations are partly to responsible for this situation.


Let’s analyze some of these notions.


Objections to the Inclusion of


Ishmael in God’s Covenant with Abraham


Were Ishmael and his descendants excluded from God’s promise and covenant? A common, yet erroneous, answer to this question is yes. A number of reasons are given:


A. Ishmael was not a legitimate son of Abraham.


According to the commentators of the Interpreter’s Bible:


“Ishmael, like Isaac, is descendants of Abraham; but Isaac is the child of ultimate promise, born to Sarah the true wife while Ishmael is born of the slave girl. Though he came of the stock of Abraham, yet it was right that he should be separated from the legitimate son.”14


This Argument cannot be supported logically, morally, or even on the basis of the available version of the Bible itself. Did the allege state of bondage of Hagar


14 Interpreter’s Bible, Abingdom Press. N.Y., 1952, volume 1, p. 605. Emphasis added.


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prevent her from being a legitimate wife of Abraham? Why was she not “true” wife? And if she were not a “true” wife like Sarah, what kind of wife was she?


The text of the Bible, notwithstanding the possibilities of later insertions or changes, does not make such a claim. In Genesis 16:3, Hagar is described as Abraham’s wife.15


If Hagar was a legitimate wife of Abraham, there are no grounds whatsoever for questioning the legitimacy of her son Ishmael. Indeed the Bible refers to Ishmael as Abraham’s seed,16 who was the first-born child of Abraham.


Even if Hagar was a bondwoman, does that affect the rights and privileges of her son Ishmael? The answer can be found in the Bible itself. In Hebrew traditions, the first-born son was to have double portions of honor, even inheritance, and that right could not be changed due to the status of his mother. In the Interpreter’s Bible, we read the following commentary on Deut. 21:15-17:


“However, the law of the first-born had ancient sanction, and so long as it was accepted justice


15 “And Sarai, Abram’s wife, took Hagar her maid, the Egyptian, after Abram had dwelt ten years in the land of Canaan, and gave her to her husband Abram to be his wife.” (Genesis 16:3. Emphasis added.)


16 See for example Gen. 21:13. In other verses Ishmael is called as Abraham’s son: “And Hagar bore Abram a son; and Abram called his son’s name, which Hagar bore, Ishmael.” (Genesis 16:15, Emphasis is ours.); “And his sons Isaac and Ishmael buried him…” (Genesis 16:15, Emphasis is ours.)


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demanded that mere favoritism not be allowed to deprive the eldest son of his rights.”17


It should be noted that God does not subscribe to human attitudes of ethnic or racial superiority or exclusivism, much less the submergence of spiritual and human qualities of mankind because of a certain unfortunate state of bondage. The fallacy of Ishmael’s inferior status owing to his mother’s “inferior” social status is not only contrary to the Judaic law (e.g. Deut. 21:15-17), it is also contrary to the moral, humanitarian and universal nature of God’s revelation cherished by any believer in Him.


B. Only Isaac was the son of promise and covenant.


Sometimes reference is made to the following verses in the Book of Genesis:


“But My Covenant will I establish with Isaac” (Gen. 17:2)


“For in I Isaac shall thy seed be called” (Gen. 21:12)


An interesting question is raised here: Is it possible that writer(s) of this book (Genesis) inserted such statements to favor his own clan, himself being an Israelite?


According to the Interpreter’s Bible:


17 Interpreter's Bible, op. cit., volume 2, p. 461. Emphasis added.


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“Many Israelites did not want a God who would be equally the God all nations on the earth. They did not want one who would be impartial Holiness. They wanted a God who would be partial to them. So we read in Deuteronomy of demands for a complete extermination of all non-Israelites peoples of Palestine (Deut. 7:2) and as to the carrying out of that injunction read the harsh sentences of Deut. 20:10-17”18


The possibility of insertions introduced to the supposedly “original” text of revelation is a matter that many Biblical scholars readily admit, including scholars


18 Interpreter's Bible, op. cit. volume 1, p. 575. The citations referred to read in the Bible as follows: "And when the Lord your God gives them over to you, and you defeat them; then you must utterly destroy them; you shall make no covenant with them, and show no mercy to them.” (Deuteronomy 7:2); “When you draw near to a city to fight against it, offer terms of peace to it. And if its answer to you is peace and it opens to you, then all the people who are found in it shall do forced labor for you and shall serve you. But if it makes no peace with you, but makes war against you, then you shall besiege it; and when the Lord your God gives it into your hand you shall put all its males to the sword, but the woman and the little ones, the cattle, and everything else in the city, all its spoil, you shall take as a booty for yourselves; and you shall enjoy the spoils of your enemies, which the Lord your God has given you. Thus you shall do to all the cities which are very far from you, which are not cities of the nations here. But in the cities of these peoples that the Lord your God gives you for an inheritance, you shall save alive nothing that breathes, but you shall utterly destroy them, the Hittites and the Amorites, the Canaanites and the Perizzites, the Hivites and the Jebusites, as the Lord your God has commanded.” (Deuteronomy 20:10-17);


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who are earnest believers in Christianity such as the editors of and contributors to the Interpreter’s Bible.19


For example, the word “Egyptian” which appears in Genesis 16:3 in reference to Hagar is suspected to be an insertion and that Hagar was indeed a Bedouin and not an Egyptian woman.20


In addition to such a possibility, if not likelihood, of insertions in Gen. 17:21 and 21:2, they do not in themselves conclusively exclude Ishmael from the promise and covenant of God.


Both verse could be understood to refer to the relatively “near” future extending over centuries during which the covenant of God and the seeds of prophethood were to be mainly in the Israelite branch of Abraham’s family. Such limitation, however, does not mean or imply the exclusion of the descendants of Ishmael for good. When these two verses (Gen. 17:21 and 21:12) are examined within the context of other verses in the same book, it becomes evident that the Ishmaelites were included in God’s promise and His covenant with Abraham: God’s covenant with Abraham was made before the latter had any children (Gen. 12:2-3). It was


19 In the introduction to the Interpreter's Bible, it is stated: “…So our editors and contributors eagerly confess, as men under saving conviction, that God is Christ for us men, and for our salvation, came down . . . and was made man.”


The Bible was also described as “Present Wonder of heavenly truth,” Interpreter’s Bible, op. cit., vol. 1, p. xvii and xviii.


20 Interpreter's Bible, Ibid., vol. 1, p. 604.


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reiterated after the birth of Ishmael and before the birth of Isaac (Gen. 17:4).21 While Gen. 21:12 indicates that in Isaac shall Abraham’s seed, the very following verse (Gen. 21:13) calls Ishmael Abraham’s seed. As Isaac was blessed in the same book (Genesis), Ishmael is also specifically blessed and hence is included in God’s promise.


“…of the son of bondwoman (i.e. Ishmael) will make a great nation because he is thy seed” (Gen. 21:13)


The above promise was further confirmed a few verse later:


“Arise, lift up the lad, and hold him in thine hand; for I will make him a great nation.” (Gen. 21:18)


It may be noted here that when God speaks of “greatness,” He does not speak merely of numbers. “Greatness” in His own criterion is above all founded in faith, spiritual heritage and religious leadership.


B. The Son of Promise must be one or the other: Isaac or Ishmael.


This is typically expressed in a statement like the following:


21 Commenting on this chapter (Gen. 17) the Interpreter's Bible states at this point, Abraham was promised 3 things: to be the father of many nations; that God will be "God to you and your descendants after you; to possess the land of Canaan for everlasting possession." Ibid., vol. 1, p. 611.


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“Ishmael is set aside as the inheritor of the Covenant. The fact that the (supposed) elder son of Abraham did not become the heir of the divine Promise is accounted for in J2 by Hagar’s flight before the child’s birth (ch. 16), and in E by her expulsion with the child (21:9-21)…”22


One may inquire at this point: (i) Why should there be only one child as the heir of the divine promise? Why not both sons in view of the evidence discussed already? (ii) What type of divine justice punishes an innocent child because of his mother’s flight before he was even born (especially if that flight was prompted by the jealousy and mistreatment of Sarah)? (iii) What type of divine justice (or even common sense) is that which punishes an innocent child because he and his mother were “expelled” to satisfy Sarah’s ego and bless her jealousy? Was Sarah dictating her desires to God, too?


Why Were Ishmael and Hagar Taken Away?


If Muslims too believe that Hagar, (Abraham’s wife), and her son Ishmael were in a different location, what is their version of the story? And how does that version compare to Biblical version?


22 Interpreter's Bible, Ibid., vol. 1, p. 615. Emphasis added.


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The Muslim Version23


Prophet Abraham received instruction from God to take Hagar and her baby Ishmael to a specified barren and lifeless place in Arabia (Paran), more specifically to Makkah (Mecca). In the Qur’an, Abraham quoted:


“Our Lord! I have made some of my offspring to dwell in a valley without cultivation by thy sacred house; in order, O Lord, that they may establish prayer: So fill the hearts of some among men with love towards them, and feed them, and feed them with fruits: so that they may give thanks.” (The Qur’an 14:37)


23 The Muslim version of the settlement of Hagar and Ishmael (Peace be upon him) in “Paran” is not prompted by Sarah’s jealousy. This will be discussed later on. An interesting question on the above citation (Vol. 1, p. 615) is: Why are the editors referring to Ishmael as the “supposed” elder son of Abraham when the Bible itself present as a “fact”? What room for “supposition” is there? there? One wonders whether this is an example of negative attitudes towards the Ishmaelites; a continuation of the same bias that the editors of the Interpreter’s Bible did not seem excited about in vol. 1, p. 575 (see footnote #22). It should be acknowledged, however, that in some places, less biased statements were made. For example on the commentary on Gen. 17:4, it is stated: “God’s first promise is that Abraham shall be the father of a multitude of nations. This reference is not only to Israel but also to the Ishmaelites, the Edomites, and the nations whose eponymous ancestors are listed in 25:2-4, all of whom the document had claimed as descendants of Abraham, Interpreter’s Bible, Ibid., vol. 1, p. 609. Emphasis added.


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When Abraham began to leave Hagar and Ishmael alone in such barren wilderness, Hagar cried to him: “Where are you leaving us?” The questions was repeated three times but no answer was given by Abraham. Hagar then asked: “Did God ordain you to do this?” Abraham said: “Yes.” In complete faith and trust on God she responded: “Then, He will not suffer us to be lost.”


When Hagar ran out of water, she started to hasten between two little hills called as-Safa and al-Marwah in search of water or for any passing traveler. After she hastened seven times without success, she returned back to check on her baby (Ishmael) who was crying and kicking the ground with his heels. In this moment of despair and apparent certain death, a spring of water suddenly gushed forth from under Ishmael’s feet. That well later came to be known as the well of Zamzam. Since water is the most crucial element in desert life, some Bedouins began to settle around the well, gradually growing into the most important city in Arabia, Makkah (Mecca). Centuries later, out of the descendants of Ishmael came the last prophet of God, Prophet Muhammad24 who was born in Makkah (Mecca) some


24 This was the divine response to Abraham's prayer: "O my Lord! Make me one who establishes regular prayer, and also (raise such) among my offspring: Our Lord! and accept my prayer." (The Qur'an 14:40) =


= It is interesting to note that Islam requires the Muslim to establish regular prayers at least five times a day. Each of these prayers includes invocation of blessings upon Abraham and his descendants. (Compare


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five centuries after the mission of the last Israelite prophet Jesus.


It is interesting to note that until the present time, the hills of as-Safa and al-Marwah are still easily identifiable. Indeed, hastening between these two hills is part of the annual rites of hajj (pilgrimage) performed by innumerable pilgrims every year. This rite is actually performed partly in commemoration of Hagar’s search for water and it dates back to Ishmael, long before the advent of Prophet Muhammad. Likewise, the Well of Zamzam which miraculously gushed forth from under baby Ishmael’s feet is still gushing with water until this time. Hundreds of thousands of pilgrims to Makkah (recently more than two million) drink from it annually and many others drink from it year round.


The Biblical Version25


Sarah, Abraham's first wife was jealous of Hagar and her son Ishmael. She did not want Ishmael to inherit with her son Isaac as Ishmael was the son of the “bondwoman.” She was particularly angry because of


with Genesis 12:3). A more explicit prayer of Abraham is the following: “Our Lord! Send among them Apostle of their own, who shall rehearse your sign to them and instruct them and instruct them in scripture and wisdom, and sanctify: For you are the exalted in Might, the Wise.” (The Qur’an 2:129)


25 See Genesis 21:9-21.


Muhammad in the Bible



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