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ARABIAN DOCTRINES AND PRACTICES | |
of Abraham's time, yet in the Holy Scriptures we find no mention of Mecca,
procession round the Kaaba, the Black Stone, the other Holy Places, etc.;
nor can there be any doubt that all these things were the gradual creation
of idol worshippers, and had no connection whatever with the faith
and tenets of Father Abraham. |
It is interesting also to note that some verses of the Qur'an have without
doubt been taken from poems anterior to Muhammad's assumption of the
prophetic office, in proof of which two passages in the Sabaa Moallaqât of
Imra'ul Cays etc. are quoted, in which several verses of the Qur'an occur,
such as, "The hour has come, and shattered is the moon."1 It was the
custom of the time for poets and orators to hang up their compositions
upon the Kaaba; and we know the Seven Moallaqât were so exposed. We are
told that Fatima, the Prophet's daughter, was one day repeating as she
went along, the above verse. Just then she met the daughter of Imra'ul
Cays, who cried out: "O that's what your father has taken from one of my
father's poems, and calls it something that has come down to him out of heaven";
and the story is commonly told amongst the Arabs until now. |
The connection between the poetry of Imra'ul Cays and the Qur'an is so
obvious that the Muslim cannot but hold that they existed with the
latter in the Heavenly Table from all eternity! What then will |
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he answer? That the words were taken from the Qur'an and entered in the poem,
an impossibility. Or that their writer was not really Imra'ul Cays, but some
other who, after the appearance of the Qur'an, had the audacity to quote them
there as they now appear; rather a difficult thing to prove![1]
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In concluding this chapter we have no difficulty in asserting with every
confidence that the customs, rites, and beliefs of the ancient Arabs, formed one
of the most important Sources of the Qur'an.
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