Textual Proofs
which support
the Prophethood
of Muhammad
In the Name of Allah,
the Most Gracious,
the Most Merciful
Textual Proofs which
support the Prophethood
of Muhammad
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Proofs from the Qur’an:
01 God, the Exalted, says:
“Muhammad is not the father of [any]
one of your men, but he is the
Messenger of Allah and last of the
prophets. And ever is Allah, of all
things, Knowing.” (33:40)
02 Jesus gave the glad
tidings of Prophet
Muhammad in the Gospel.
God, the Exalted, says:
“And [mention] when Jesus, the son of
Mary, said, ‘O children of Israel, indeed
I am the messenger of Allah to you
confirming what came before me of
the Torah and bringing good tidings of
a messenger to come after me, whose
name is Ahmad.’ But when he came to
them with clear evidences, they said,
‘This is obvious sorcery!’” (61:6)
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Proofs from the Sunnah:
said: صلى الله عليه وسلم The Prophet
“My example and the example of the
Prophets before me is like a man who
built a house, which he built and
perfected except for the space of one
brick. People would go round the
house and stare in awe at its perfection
and say, ‘Had it not been for this
said, ‘I am that صلى الله عليه وسلم space!’ The Prophet
brick. I am the last of Prophets.’”
(Bukhari)
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Previous Scriptures:
Ataa’ ibn Yasaar said, “I met Abdullah
ibn Amr ibn Al-Aas and I asked him:
‘Tell me about the description of the
in the Torah.’ He صلى الله عليه وسلم Messenger of God
replied, ‘He is described in the Torah
with some of what he is described in
the Qur’an: ‘We have indeed sent you
as a witness (over mankind) and one
who gives glad tidings, and warns
others, and one who protects and
safeguards the commoners. You are
My slave and Messenger. I called you
Mutawakkil (The Trusted One). You are
neither ill-mannered, nor rude, nor do
you raise your voice. You do not pay
evil with evil; rather, you forgive and
pardon. I will not collect his soul until I
guide the nations, and until they say,
‘There is no true god worthy of being
worshipped except God alone,’ and
until they clearly see the Truth.’”
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Ata said, “I met Ka’b, the Rabbi, and
asked him about this narration, and he
did not differ with Abdullah ibn Amr
ibn Al-Aas except for a minor difference
in the wording of the narration.” (Baihaqi)
Abdul-Ahad Dawud said, “... I have
tried to base my arguments on portions
of the Bible which hardly allow for any
linguistic dispute. I would not go to
Latin, Greek, or Aramaic, for that
would be useless. I just give the
following quotation in the very words
of the Revised Version as published by
the British and Foreign Bible Society.
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We read the following words in the
Book of Deuteronomy chapter 18,
verse 18:
‘I will raise them up a prophet from
among their brethren, like unto thee;
and I will put my words in his mouth.’
If these words do not apply to Prophet
Muhammad, they still remain
unfulfilled. Prophet Jesus himself
never claimed to be the Prophet
alluded to. Even his disciples were of
the same opinion. They looked to the
second coming of Jesus for the
fulfillment of the prophecy. So far it is
undisputed that the first coming of
Jesus was not the advent of the
“prophet like unto thee,” and his
second advent can hardly fulfill the
words. Jesus, as is believed by the
Church, will appear as a Judge and
not as a lawgiver. Yet, the promised
one has to come with a “fiery law” in
“his right hand.”
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In ascertaining the personality of the
promised prophet, the other prophecy
of Moses is, however, very helpful
where it speaks of the shining forth of
God from Paran, the mountain of
Makkah. The words in the Book of
Deuteronomy, chapter 33, verse 2,
read as follows:
“The Lord came from Sinai, and rose
up from Seir unto them; he shined
forth from mount Paran, and he came
with ten thousand saints; from his right
hand went a fiery law for them.”
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In these words, the Lord has been
compared with the sun. He comes
from Sinai, he rises from Seir, but he
shines in his full glory from Paran,
where he had to appear with ten
thousand saints, carrying a fiery law in
his right hand. None of the Israelites,
including Jesus, had anything to do
with Paran. Hagar, with her son
Ishmael, wandered in the wilderness
of Beersheba, who afterwards dwelt in
the wilderness of Paran (Gen. 21, 21).
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Ishmael married an Egyptian woman,
and through his first born, Kedar, gave
descent to the Arabs who, from that
time till now, are the dwellers of the
wilderness of Paran. And if Prophet
Muhammad traces his descent to
Ishmael through Kedar, and he
appeared as a prophet in the
wilderness of Paran and re-entered
Makkah with ten thousand saints and
gave a fiery law to his people, is not
the prophecy above mentioned fulfilled
to its very letter?
The words of the prophecy in
Habakkuk are especially noteworthy.
His (the Holy One from Paran) glory
covered the heavens and the earth,
and was full of his praise. The word
“praise” is very significant, as the
name Muhammad literally means “the
praised one.” Besides the Arabs, the
inhabitants of the wilderness of Paran
had also been promised a Revelation:
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“Let the wilderness and the cities
thereof lift up their voice, the villages
that Kedar doth inhabit. Let the
inhabitants of the rock sing, let them
shout from the top of the mountains.
Let them give glory unto the Lord, and
declare His praise in the islands. The
Lord shall go forth as a mighty man, he
shall stir up jealousy like a man of war.
He shall cry, yea, roar. He shall prevail
against his enemies.” (Isaiah).
In connection with it, there are two
other prophecies worthy of note where
references have been made to Kedar.
In chapter 60 of Isaiah, verses 1-7, it
reads:
“Arise, shine for thy light is come, and
the glory of the Lord is risen upon
thee... The multitude of camels shall
cover thee, the dromedaries of Midian
and Ephah; all they from Sheba shall
come. All the flocks of Kedar shall be
gathered together unto thee, the rams
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of Nebaioth shall minister unto thee.
They shall come up with acceptance
on mine altar, and I will glorify the
house of my glory.”
The other prophecy is again in Isaiah
21, verses 13-17:
“The burden upon Arabia. In the forest
in Arabia shall ye lodge, O ye travelling
companies of Dedanim. The
inhabitants of the land of Tema brought
water to him that was thirsty, they
prevented with their bread him that
fled. For they fled from the swords and
from the bent bow, and from the
grievousness of war. For thus hath the
Lord said unto me, ‘Within a year,
according to the years of a hireling,
and all the glory of Kedar shall fail. And
the residue of the number of archers,
the mighty of the children of Kedar,
shall be diminished.’”
Read these prophecies in Isaiah in the
light of the one in Deuteronomy which
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speaks of the shining forth of God
from Paran.
If Ishmael inhabited the wilderness of
Paran, where he gave birth to Kedar,
who is the ancestor of the Arabs. And,
if the sons of Kedar had to receive
revelation from God. And, if the flocks
of Kedar had to come up with
acceptance to a Divine altar to glorify
“the house of my glory” where the
darkness had to cover the earth for
some centuries, and then that very
land had to receive light from God.
And, if all the glory of Kedar had to fail
and the number of archers, the mighty
men of the children of Kedar, had to
diminish within a year after the one
who fled from the swords and from the
bent bows - the Holy One from Paran
(Habakkuk 3, verse 3), is no one else
than the Prophet Muhammad. The
Prophet Muhammad is the holy
offspring of Ishmael through Kedar,
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who settled in the wilderness of Paran.
Muhammad is the only Prophet
through whom the Arabs received
revelation at the time when the
darkness, in the form of ignorance
regarding God, had covered the earth.
Through him, God shone from Paran,
and Makkah is the only place where
the House of God is glorified and the
flocks of Kedar come with acceptance
on its altar. The Prophet Muhammad
was persecuted by his people and had
to leave Makkah. He was thirsty and
fled from the drawn sword and the
bent bow, and within a year after his
flight, the descendants of Kedar meet
him at Badr, the place of the first battle
between the Makkans and the
Prophet. The children of Kedar and
their number of archers diminish and
all the glory of Kedar fails. If the Holy
Prophet is not to be accepted as the
fulfillment of all these prophecies, then
they will still remain unfulfilled.
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“The house of my glory” referred to in
Isaiah 60 is the house of God in
Makkah, and not the Church of Christ,
as thought by Christian commentators.
The flocks of Kedar, as mentioned in
verse 7, have never come to the
Church of Christ. And it is a fact that
the villages of Kedar and their
inhabitants are the only people in the
whole world who have remained
impenetrable to any influence of the
Church of Christ.
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Again, the mention of 10,000 saints in
Deuteronomy 33, verse 2 is very
significant. He (God) shined forth from
Paran, and he came with 10,000
saints. Read the whole history of the
wilderness of Paran and you will find
no other event, except for one, that
could fit this description. And that was
when Makkah was conquered by the
Prophet.
He came with 10,000 followers from
Madeenah and re-entered “the house
of my glory.” He gives the fiery law to
the world, which reduced to ashes all
other laws.
The Comforter - the Spirit of Truth -
spoken of by the Prophet Jesus was
also none other than the Prophet
Muhammad himself. It cannot be
taken as the Holy Ghost, as Church
theology says. “It is expedient for you
that I go away,” says Jesus, “for if I go
not away the Comforter will not come
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unto you, but if I depart, I will send him
unto you.” (John 16, verse 7)
The words clearly show that the
Comforter had to come after the
departure of Jesus, and was not with
him when he uttered these words. Are
we to presume that Jesus was devoid
of the Holy Ghost if his coming was
conditional on the going of Jesus?
Besides, the way in which Jesus
describes him clearly indicates that he
is a human being, not a ghost. “He
shall not speak of himself, but
whatsoever he shall hear, that he shall
speak.” Should we presume that the
Holy Ghost and God are two distinct
entities and that the Holy Ghost
speaks of himself and also what he
hears from God?
The words of Jesus clearly refer to
some messenger from God. Jesus
calls him the Spirit of Truth, and we
know that the people of Makkah used
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to also call Muhammad, “the Truthful”.
Moreover, the Qur’an also speaks of
Prophet Muhammad in the same
manner, “No, indeed, he has brought
the truth, and confirmed the
Messengers.” (37:37).
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Proofs from the New
Testament
There are a number of passages in the
New Testament which also clearly
صلى الله عليه وسلم refer to the coming of Muhammad
by implication through the nature of
his actions or functions.
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01 John the Baptist:
When he started baptizing, the Jewish
people sent priests to him to find out
who he was. “[He] confessed freely, ‘I
am not the Messiah.’ They asked him,
‘Then who are you? Are you Elijah?’
He said, ‘I am not.’ ‘Are you the
Prophet?’ He answered, ‘No.’ Finally
they said, ‘Who are you? Give us an
answer to take back to those who sent
us. What do you say about yourself?’...
Now the Pharisees who had been sent
questioned him, ‘Why then do you
baptize if you are not the Messiah, nor
Elijah, nor the Prophet?’” (John 1:20-25)
Thus, the Prophet is not Jesus,
because, firstly, Jesus was known as
the Messiah, and secondly, because
John the Baptist continued preaching,
baptizing and foretelling the coming of
the Prophet during the lifetime of
Jesus. Thus, it can only be Muhammad.
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02 Jesus:
The Prophet Jesus foretold the coming
of another Prophet, whose name
would be the “Paraclete”. In the
English translations, he is called the
“Comforter” or “Counselor”. It is
written that his teachings would last
forever: “I will pray the Father, and He
shall give you another Comforter, that
he may abide with you forever.” (John
14, verse 16)
The Greek word for Comforter,
periqlytos, means “illustrious,”
“renowned” and “praiseworthy,” and
this is exactly what the Arabic word
“Ahmed” means. It is confirmed in the
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Qur’an that the Prophet Jesus
prophesied that a Prophet named
“Ahmed” would come after him. God,
the Exalted, says:
“And [mention] when Jesus, the son of
Mary, said, ‘O children of Israel, indeed
I am the messenger of Allah to you
confirming what came before me of
the Torah and bringing good tidings of
a messenger to come after me, whose
name is Ahmad.’ But when he came to
them with clear evidences, they said,
‘This is obvious sorcery.’” (61:6)
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To download and read the complete book,
click on the cover picture here.
This is an excerpt
of a larger book titled
“The Messenger
of God Muhammad”
by Abd Ar-Rahman
bin Abd Al-Kareem Ash-Sheha.
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