The Nature of Revelation?
Revelation is where God imparts whatever knowledge He wills to those
whom He chooses to receive it. God gives this knowledge to them in order for
them to convey it to whomever else He wishes.
All the Messengers of God experienced revelation. God says:
“Verily, We have sent Revelation to you (O Muhammad) as
We have sent Revelation to Noah and the prophets who
came after him. We had sent revelation to Abraham,
Ishmael, Isaac, Jacob, the Tribes, Jesus, Job, Jonah, Aaron,
and Solomon. And to David We gave the Psalms. And
Messengers We have told you about before, and
Messengers We have not told you about – and to Moses We
spoke directly.” (Quran 4:163)
The possibility of divine revelation cannot be denied by anyone who
believes in the existence of God and in His omnipotence. God maintains His
creation in any manner that pleases Him. The connection between the Creator
and his Creation is by way of His Messengers, and these Messengers only
know what God wants from them by way of revelation, either directly or
indirectly. The rational mind cannot dismiss the possibility of revelation, since
nothing is difficult for the all-powerful Creator.
The Nature of Revelation
Revelation is not a personal experience that a Prophet brings forth from
within himself. It is not a spiritual state that a person can attain by doing
certain meditations or spiritual exercises. Quite the contrary, revelation is a
communication between two beings: one that speaks, commands, and gives,
and another who is addressed, commanded, and receives. Prophet Muhammad,
may the mercy and blessings of God be upon him – as with every Prophet –
never confused himself with the One who gave the revelation to him. As a
human being, he felt his weakness before God, feared God’s wrath if he should
disobey, and hoped for God’s mercy.
He sought help from God, submitted to what he was commanded to do, and
was on occasion even sternly reprimanded by God. The Prophet admitted his
absolute inability to alter even one word of God’s Book. God says:
“And when Our clear signs are recited to them, those who
hope not for a meeting with Us say: ‘Bring a Quran other
than this or change it.’ Say (O Muhammad): ‘It is not for
me to change it of my own accord. I only follow what is
revealed to me. I fear, if I were to disobey my Lord, the
punishment of an awful day.’ Say: ‘If God had willed, I
would not have recited it to you nor would He have made it
known to you. I have lived with you a whole lifetime before
it came to me. Have you no sense?’” (Quran 10:15-16)
This should make perfectly clear the difference between the essence,
attributes, and ways of the Creator and those of His Creation.
The Prophet took great care to maintain a distinction between his own
speech (the Hadeeth) and the direct speech of God, though both were the result
of revelation. For this reason, in the early period of revelation, he used to
prohibit anything that he uttered to be written down except for the Quran. This
preserved for the Quran its distinctiveness as being the very word of God,
unmixed with the speech of people.
The Prophet would also make a distinction in his own speech between his
own opinions and what came from God as revelation.
He said: “I am only a human being like yourselves. Opinions can be right
or wrong. But, when I say to you that God said something, then know that
I will never attribute something false to God.”
The Prophet had no hand in the revelation that he received. Revelation is a
force external to the being of the Prophet. He was not able to manipulate it in
any way. This is supported by the fact that certain crises would befall the
Prophet or one of those around him that required an immediate solution, but he
found no verse of Quran to recite to the people. He had to remain silent and
wait, sometimes in desperation, until God, in His wisdom, revealed what was
needed.
A good example of this is the time when Aishah, the wife of the Prophet
was accused of adultery by some of the hypocrites, though she was innocent.
People began to say things that were painful for the Prophet until his heart was
about to burst. He was unable to prohibit this. All he could say was:
“O Aishah, I have heard this or that. If you are innocent, then God will
show your innocence, and if you fell into sin, then seek God’s
forgiveness.”
A whole month passed like this before the revelation came down declaring
Aishah’s innocence and exonerating the household of the Prophet.
In brief, revelation has nothing to do with the choices and wishes of the one
who receives it. It is an unusual, external occurrence. It is a force of
knowledge, because it gives knowledge. It is free from error. It comes only
with the truth and guides only to what is right.
How revelation comes to the angels and to the Messengers
In the Quran it is mentioned that God speaks to the angels. God says:
“And (remember) when your Lord revealed to the angels:
‘Verily I am with you, so keep firm those who have
believed’…” (Quran 8:12)
Revelation to the angels happens by God speaking to them and the angels
hearing from Him.
Revelation comes to God’s human Messengers either directly or through an
intermediary. In the case of an intermediary, it is the angel Gabriel who brings
the revelation. There are two ways that this occurs:
1. The angel would come to him with a voice like the clanging of a bell. This
is the severest way revelation would come to the Messenger. Such a harsh
sound demands the full attention of the one being addressed with it. When
the revelation came in this manner, it was extremely demanding upon all of
the Messenger’s faculties.
2. The angel would come to him in the form of a man. This was easier than
the previous way, since the form of the angelic Messenger was familiar to
the human Messenger and easier to relate to.
Both of these ways are mentioned by the Prophet in his answer to al-
Haarith b. Hishaam when he asked how the revelation came to him. God’s
Messenger said:
“Sometimes he comes to me like the clanging of a bell, and this is the most
difficult for me. It weighs upon me and I commit to memory what he
says. And sometimes the angel comes to me in the form of a man and
speaks to me and I commit to memory what he says.”
Revelation without an intermediary happens in two ways:
1. A good dream: Aishah relates:
“It began as a good dream during sleep. He would not have a dream
except that it would come as clear as day.”
This was to prepare God’s Messenger to receive revelation while awake.
The whole Quran was revealed while the Prophet was awake.
The story of Abraham when he was commanded to sacrifice his son
demonstrates how a dream can be revelation that must be acted upon. God
says:
“So We gave him glad tidings of a forbearing boy. And
when he was old enough to walk with him, he said: ‘My
son, I have seen in a dream that I am sacrificing you. So
look, what do you think?’ He said: ‘O my father, do what
you are commanded. By God’s will, you shall find me to be
among those who are patient.’ Then, when they had both
submitted themselves and he had laid him prone on his
forehead, We called out to him: ‘O Abraham, you have
fulfilled the dream.’ Thus do We reward the righteous.
That was indeed a manifest trial. And We ransomed him
with a great sacrifice. And We left for him a goodly
remembrance for later generations. Peace be upon
Abraham! Thus indeed do We reward the righteous.
Verily, he was one of Our believing servants.” (Quran
37:101-111)
If that dream had not been revelation that had to be obeyed, Abraham
would never have gone forward to sacrifice his son, but in fact he almost did
so. He was only stopped because God commanded him to stop and ordered
him to sacrifice something else instead.
The good dream is not only for the Prophets. It remains for the believers,
even though it is not revelation. God’s Messenger said:
“Nothing remains of prophecy except for glad tidings.” When he was
asked what these glad tidings were, he said: “Dreams.”
2. God speaking directly from behind a barrier: This happened to Prophet
Moses. God says:
“When Moses came to Our appointed meeting, his Lord
spoke to him…” (Quran 7:143)
God also says:
“…And God spoke to Moses directly.” (Quran 4:164)
This also happened to Prophet Muhammad on the night of his Journey and
Ascension when he was taken up into the heavens and his Lord spoke to him.
All of these ways of receiving revelation are mentioned in the Quran. God
says:
“It is not for a human being that God should speak to him
except as revelation or from behind a barrier, or by
sending a Messenger who reveals by His leave whatever He
wishes. Verily, He is All-Knowing, All-Wise.” (Quran
42:51)