The Qur'an in many places challenges the people to produce a surah like it. It appears that the Christian missionaries who call the challenge irrelevent or an utterly subjective criterion are pretty much unaware of how the Arabic poetry and prose compares with the Qur'an. This article is devoted to deal with one aspect of the Qur'anic challenge of produce a surah like it. What is meant by surah like it with respect to the Arabic prose and poetry?
The verses of the Qur'an dealing with the challenge are given below (Hilali and Muhsin Khan's Translation):
Say: "If the mankind and the jinns were together to produce the like of this Qur'an, they could not produce the like thereof, even if they helped one another." [Qur'an 17:88]
Say: "If the mankind and the jinns were together to produce the like of this Qur'an, they could not produce the like thereof, even if they helped one another." [Qur'an 17:88]
And if you (Arab pagans, Jews, and
Christians) are in doubt concerning that which We have sent down (i.e.
the Qur'an) to Our slave (Muhammad Peace be upon him ), then
produce a surah (chapter) of the like thereof and call your witnesses
(supporters and helpers) besides Allah, if you are truthful. [Qur'an
2:23]
And this Qur'an is not such as could ever be
produced by other than Allah (Lord of the heavens and the earth), but
it is a confirmation of (the revelation) which was before it [i.e. the
Taurat (Torah), and the Injeel (Gospel), etc.], and a full explanation
of the Book (i.e. laws and orders, etc, decreed for mankind) - wherein
there is no doubt from the the Lord of the 'Alamin (mankind, jinns,and
all that exists).
Or do they say: "He (Muhammad(P))
has forged it?" Say: "Bring then a surah (chapter) like unto it, and
call upon whomsoever you can, besides Allah, if you are truthful!"
[Qur'an 10:37-38]
Or they say, "He (Prophet Muhammad(P))
forged it (the Qur'an)." Say: "Bring you then ten forged surah
(chapters) like unto it, and call whomsoever you can, other than Allah
(to your help), if you speak the truth!" [Qur'an 11:13]
Or do they say: "He (Muhammad(P))
has forged it (this Qur'an)?" Nay! They believe not! Let them then
produce a recital like unto it (the Qur'an) if they are truthful.
[Qur'an 52:33-34]
cAbdur Rahim Green mentions that:
These are the sixteen al-Bihar (literally "The Seas", so called because of the way the poem moves, according to its rhythmic patterns): at-Tawil,
al-Bassit, al-Wafir, al-Kamil, ar-Rajs, al-Khafif, al-Hazaj,
al-Muttakarib, al-Munsarih, al-Muktatab, al-Muktadarak, al-Madid,
al-Mujtath, al-Ramel, al-Khabab and as-Saria'. So the challenge is to produce in Arabic, three lines, that do not fall into one of these sixteen Bihar,
that is not rhyming prose, nor like the speech of soothsayers, and not
normal speech, that it should contain at least a comprehensible
meaning and rhetoric, i.e. not gobbledygook. Now I think at least the
Christian's "Holy spirit" that makes you talk in tongues, part of your
"Tri-Unity" of God should be able to inspire one of you with that!
To begin with; the Arabic language and Arab
speech are divided into two branches. One of them is rhymed poetry. It
is a speech with metre and rhyme, which means every line of it ends
upon a definite letter, which is called the 'rhyme'. This rhymed poetry
is again divided into metres or what is called as al-Bihar,
literally meaning 'The Seas'. This is so called because of the way the
poetry moves according to the rhythmic patterns. There are sixteen al-Bihar viz; at-Tawil,
al-Bassit, al-Wafir, al-Kamil, ar-Rajs, al-Khafif, al-Hazaj,
al-Muttakarib, al-Munsarih, al-Muktatab, al-Muktadarak, al-Madid,
al-Mujtath, al-Ramel, al-Khabab and as-Saria'. Each one rhymes
differently. For metres of Arabic poetry please see please see Lyall's
book Translations Of Ancient Arabian Poetry, Chiefly Pre-Islamic.[1]
He discusses al-Kamil, al-Wafir, al-Hajaz, at-Tawil, al-Bassit, al-Khafif and al-Madid briefly.[2]
The other branch of Arabic speech is prose,
that is non-metrical speech. The prose may be a rhymed prose. Rhymed
prose consists of cola ending on the same rhyme throughout, or of
sentences rhymed in pairs. This is called "rhymed prose" or sajc. Prose may also be straight prose (mursal).
In straight prose, the speech goes on and is not divided in cola, but
is continued straight through without any divisions, either of rhyme or
of anything else. Prose is employed in sermons and prayers and in
speeches intended to encourage or frighten the masses.[3] One of the
most famous speeches involving sajc is that of Hajjaj bin Yusuf in his first deputation in Iraq in post-Islamic and Quss bin Sa'idah in pre-Islamic times.
So, the challenge, as cAbdur Rahim Green mentions, is to produce in Arabic , three lines, that do not fall into one of these sixteen al-Bihar,
that is not rhyming prose, nor like the speech of soothsayers, and not
normal speech, that it should contain at least a comprehensible
meaning and rhetoric, i.e. not gobbledygook. Indeed
The Qur'an is not verse, but it is
rhythmic. The rhythm of some verses resemble the regularity of sajc,
and both are rhymed, while some verses have a similarity to Rajaz in
its vigour and rapidity. But it was recognized by Quraysh critics to belong to neither one nor the other category.[4]
t is interesting to know that all the pre-Islam and post-Islamic poetry collected by Louis Cheikho falls in the above sixteen metres or al-Bihar.[5] Indeed the pagans of Mecca repeated accuse Prophet Muhammad(P)
for being a forger, a soothsayer etc. The Arabs who were at the
pinnacle of their poetry and prose during the time of revelation of the
Qur'an could not even produce the smallest surah of its like. The
Qur'an's form did not fit into any of the above mentioned categories.
It was this that made the Qur'an inimitable, and left the pagan Arabs
at a loss as to how they might combat it as Alqama bin cAbd al-Manaf
confirmed when he addressed their leaders, the Quraysh:
Oh Quraish, a new calamity has befallen
you. Mohammed was a young man the most liked among you, most truthful
in speech, and most trustworthy, until, when you saw gray hairs on his
temple, and he brought you his message, you said that he was a sorcerer,
but he is not, for we seen such people and their spitting and their
knots; you said, a diviner, but we have seen such people and their
behavior, and we have heard their rhymes; you said a soothsayer, but he
is not a soothsayer, for we have heard their rhymes; and you said a
poet, but he is not a poet, for we have heard all kinds of poetry; you
said he was possessed, but he is not for we have seen the possessed,
and he shows no signs of their gasping and whispering and delirium. Oh
men of Quraish, look to your affairs, for by Allah a serious thing has
befallen you.
It is a well known fact that the Qur'an was
revealed in seven ahruf (or seven forms) to facilitate greater
understanding of it among the Arabs who had different dialects. This
was also to challenge them on their own grounds to produce a surah like
that of the Qur'an. The challenge became more obvious when none of the
seven major tribes could imitate it even in their own dialects as no
one could claim that it was difficult to imitate due to it not being in
their own dialect.[6]
What Do The Orientalists Say About The Inimitability Of The Qur'an?
E H Palmer, as early as 1880, recognized the unique style of the Qur'an. But he seem to have been wavering between two thoughts. He writes in the Introduction to his translation of the Qur'an:
E H Palmer, as early as 1880, recognized the unique style of the Qur'an. But he seem to have been wavering between two thoughts. He writes in the Introduction to his translation of the Qur'an:
That the best of Arab writers has never
succeeded in producing anything equal in merit to the Qur'an itself is
not surprising. In the first place, they have agreed before-hand that
it is unapproachable, and they have adopted its style as the perfect
standard; any deviation from it therefore must of necessity be a
defect. Again, with them this style is not spontaneous as with Muhammad
and his
contemporaries, but is as artificial as though Englishmen
should still continue to follow Chaucer as their model, in spite of the
changes which their language has undergone. With the Prophet,
the style was natural, and the words were those in every-day ordinary
life, while with the later Arabic authors the style is imitative and
the ancient words are introduced as a literary embellishment. The
natural consequence is that their attempts look laboured and unreal by
the side of his impromptu and forcible eloquence.[7]
The famous Arabist from University of Oxford, Hamilton Gibb was open upon about the style of the Qur'an. In his words:
...the Meccans still demanded of him a miracle, and with remarkable boldness and self confidence Mohammad appealed as a supreme confirmation of his mission to the Koran itself. Like all Arabs they were the connoisseurs of language and rhetoric. Well, then if the Koran were his own composition other men could rival it. Let them produce ten verses like it. If they could not (and it is obvious that they could not), then let them accept the Koran as an outstanding evident miracle.[8]
...the Meccans still demanded of him a miracle, and with remarkable boldness and self confidence Mohammad appealed as a supreme confirmation of his mission to the Koran itself. Like all Arabs they were the connoisseurs of language and rhetoric. Well, then if the Koran were his own composition other men could rival it. Let them produce ten verses like it. If they could not (and it is obvious that they could not), then let them accept the Koran as an outstanding evident miracle.[8]
And in some other place, talking about the Prophet(P) and the Qur'an, he states:
Though, to be sure, the question of the
literary merit is one not to be judged on a priori grounds but in
relation to the genius of Arabic language; and no man in
fifteen hundred years has ever played on that deep-toned instrument with
such power, such boldness, and such range of emotional effect as
Mohammad did.[9]
As a literary monument the Koran
thus stands by itself, a production unique to the Arabic literature,
having neither forerunners nor successors in its own idiom. Muslims of
all ages are united in proclaiming the inimitability not only of its
contents but also of its style..... and in forcing the High Arabic idiom
into the expression of new ranges of thought the Koran develops a bold
and strikingly effective rhetorical prose in which all the resources
of syntactical modulation are exploited with great freedom and
originality.[10]
On the influence of the Qur'an on Arabic literature Gibb says:
The influence of the Koran on the development of Arabic Literature has been incalculable, and exerted in many directions. Its ideas, its language, its rhymes pervade all subsequent literary works in greater or lesser measure. Its specific linguistic features were not emulated, either in the chancery prose of the next century or in the later prose writings, but it was at least partly due to the flexibility imparted by the Koran to the High Arabic idiom that the former could be so rapidly developed and adjusted to the new needs of the imperial government and an expanding society.[11]
The influence of the Koran on the development of Arabic Literature has been incalculable, and exerted in many directions. Its ideas, its language, its rhymes pervade all subsequent literary works in greater or lesser measure. Its specific linguistic features were not emulated, either in the chancery prose of the next century or in the later prose writings, but it was at least partly due to the flexibility imparted by the Koran to the High Arabic idiom that the former could be so rapidly developed and adjusted to the new needs of the imperial government and an expanding society.[11]
As the Qur'an itself says:
And if ye are in doubt as to what We have revealed from time to time to Our servant, then produce a Sura like thereunto; and call your witnesses or helpers (If there are any) besides Allah, if your (doubts) are true. But if ye cannot- and of a surety ye cannot- then fear the Fire whose fuel is men and stones,- which is prepared for those who reject Faith. (Qur'an 2:23-24)
And if ye are in doubt as to what We have revealed from time to time to Our servant, then produce a Sura like thereunto; and call your witnesses or helpers (If there are any) besides Allah, if your (doubts) are true. But if ye cannot- and of a surety ye cannot- then fear the Fire whose fuel is men and stones,- which is prepared for those who reject Faith. (Qur'an 2:23-24)
Lastly, the beautiful style of the Qur'an is admired even by the Arab Christians:
The Quran is one of the world's classics which cannot be translated without grave loss. It has a rhythm of peculiar beauty and a cadence that charms the ear. Many Christian Arabs speak of its style with warm admiration, and most Arabists acknowledge its excellence. When it is read aloud or recited it has an almost hypnotic effect that makes the listener indifferent to its sometimes strange syntax and its sometimes, to us, repellent content. It is this quality it possesses of silencing criticism by the sweet music of its language that has given birth to the dogma of its inimitability; indeed it may be affirmed that within the literature of the Arabs, wide and fecund as it is both in poetry and in elevated prose, there is nothing to compare with it.[12]
The Quran is one of the world's classics which cannot be translated without grave loss. It has a rhythm of peculiar beauty and a cadence that charms the ear. Many Christian Arabs speak of its style with warm admiration, and most Arabists acknowledge its excellence. When it is read aloud or recited it has an almost hypnotic effect that makes the listener indifferent to its sometimes strange syntax and its sometimes, to us, repellent content. It is this quality it possesses of silencing criticism by the sweet music of its language that has given birth to the dogma of its inimitability; indeed it may be affirmed that within the literature of the Arabs, wide and fecund as it is both in poetry and in elevated prose, there is nothing to compare with it.[12]
The above sentences speak of themselves.
Summing up: Within the Arabic literature, either poetry or prose, there
is nothing comparable to the Qur'an. Muslims throughout the centuries
are united upon the its inimitability.
There is also a talk by Christian
missionaries that there are grammatical 'errors' in the Qur'an. In
retort, it can be mentioned that the Arab contemporaries of Muhammad(P)
were most erudite and proficient in the idiosyncrasies of Arabic
speech; and hence, if they had found any grammatical 'errors' in the
Qur'an, they would have revealed it when Muhammad(P) challenged
them with to do so. Therefore, since they did not take up his
challenge on this issue, we can be rest assured that no such grammatical
'errors' exist in the Qur'an.
Indeed the grammatical errors claimed by
Christian missionaries have been already discussed and refuted in a
reputed journal.[13] It turns out that lack of knowledge of intricate
constructions in classical Arabic by Christian missionaries gave rise to
so-called grammatical 'errors'.
I'jaz al-Qur'an (Or Inimitability Of The Qur'an) & Its Exposition
I'jaz literally means "the rendering incapable, powerless". It is the concept relating to the miraculous nature of the Qur'an. What consitutes this miracle is a subject that has engaged Muslims scholars for centuries. By the early part of the third century AH (ninth century CE), the word i'jaz had come to mean that quality of the Qur'an that rendered people incapable of imitating the book or any part; in content and form. By the latter part of that century, the word had become the technical term, and the numerous definitions applied to it after the tenth century have shown little divergence from the key concepts of the inimitability of the Qur'an and the inability of human beings to match it even challenged (tahiddi).[14]
Thus, the Islamic doctrine of i'jaz al-Qur'an consists in the belief that the Qur'an is a miracle (mu'jizah) bestowed on Muhammad(P). Both terms, i'jaz and mu'jizah come from the same verbal root. While mu'jizah is the active principle of a'jaza, i'jaz is its verbal noun.[15]
The early theological discussions on i'jaz introduced the hypothesis of sarfah ("turning away") and argued that the miracle consisted of God's turning the competent away from taking up the challenge of imitating the Qur'an. The implication of sarfah is that the Qur'an otherwise could be imitated. However, cAbd al-Jabbar (d. 1025 CE), the Mu'tazilite theologian rejected sarfah because of its obvious weaknesses.
I'jaz literally means "the rendering incapable, powerless". It is the concept relating to the miraculous nature of the Qur'an. What consitutes this miracle is a subject that has engaged Muslims scholars for centuries. By the early part of the third century AH (ninth century CE), the word i'jaz had come to mean that quality of the Qur'an that rendered people incapable of imitating the book or any part; in content and form. By the latter part of that century, the word had become the technical term, and the numerous definitions applied to it after the tenth century have shown little divergence from the key concepts of the inimitability of the Qur'an and the inability of human beings to match it even challenged (tahiddi).[14]
Thus, the Islamic doctrine of i'jaz al-Qur'an consists in the belief that the Qur'an is a miracle (mu'jizah) bestowed on Muhammad(P). Both terms, i'jaz and mu'jizah come from the same verbal root. While mu'jizah is the active principle of a'jaza, i'jaz is its verbal noun.[15]
The early theological discussions on i'jaz introduced the hypothesis of sarfah ("turning away") and argued that the miracle consisted of God's turning the competent away from taking up the challenge of imitating the Qur'an. The implication of sarfah is that the Qur'an otherwise could be imitated. However, cAbd al-Jabbar (d. 1025 CE), the Mu'tazilite theologian rejected sarfah because of its obvious weaknesses.
cAbd al-Jabbar rejects the doctrine of
sarfah for two main reasons. Firstly, because it contradicts the verse
of the Qur'an stating that neither jinn nor human can rival the Qur'an,
and secondly because it makes a miracle of something other than the
Qur'an, i.e., the sarfah, the prohibition from production, and not the
Qur'an itself. In addition to this, according to 'Abd al-Jabbar, the
doctrine of sarfah displays four major weaknesses:
- It ignores the well-known fact that the Arabs of Muhammad's time had acknowledged the superior quality of speech of the Qur'an;
- It is in direct conflict with the meaning of the verses of the Challenge;
- It implies that the Qur'an is not a miracle; and
- It asserts that the Arabs were out of their minds (khuruj 'an al-'aql).
This doctrine, in fact,
implies that they could have produced a rival to the Qur'an, but simply
decided against doing so. It effectively calls into question either
their motives or their sanity. Therefore, according to cAbd al-Jabbar
the correct interpretation of sarfah is that the motives to rival the
Qur'an disappeared (insarafah) because of the recognition of the
impossibility of doing so.[16]
cAbd al-Jabbar insisted on
the unmatchable quality of the Qur'an's extra-ordinary eloquence and
unique stylist perfection. In his work al-Mughni (The Sufficient
Book), he argued that eloquence (fasahah) resulted from
the excellence of both meaning and wording, and he explained that there
were degrees of excellence depending on the manner in which words were
chosen and arranged in any literary text, the Qur'an being the highest
type.[17]
al-Baqillani (d. 1013 CE), in his systematic and comprehensive study entitled I'jaz al-Qur'an upheld the rhetorically unsurpassable style of the Qur'an, but he did not consider this to be a necessary argument in the favour of the Qur'an's uniqueness and emphasized instead the content of revelation.
al-Baqillani (d. 1013 CE), in his systematic and comprehensive study entitled I'jaz al-Qur'an upheld the rhetorically unsurpassable style of the Qur'an, but he did not consider this to be a necessary argument in the favour of the Qur'an's uniqueness and emphasized instead the content of revelation.
The choice and arrangement
of words, referred to as nazm was the focus of discussion by al-Jahiz,
al-Sijistani (d. 928 CE), al-Bakhi (d. 933 CE) and Ibn al-Ikhshid (d.
937 CE). al-Rummani and his contemporary al-Khattabi (d. 998 CE)
discussed the psychological effect of nazm of the Qur'an in their al-Nukat fi I'jaz al-Qur'an and Bayan I'jaz al-Qur'an, respectively.
The author who best elaborated and systematized the theory of nazm in his analysis of the i'jaz is cAbd al-Qahir al-Jurjani (d. 1078 CE) in his Dala'il al-I'jaz. His material was further organized by Fakhr ad-Din al-Razi (d. 1209) in his Nihayat al-I'jaz fi Dirayat al-I'jaz and put to practical purposes by al-Zamakhshari (d. 1144 CE) in his exegesis of the Qur'an entitled al-Kashasaf, rich in rhetorical analysis of the Qur'anic style.[18]
Hardly anything new has been added by later authors
The author who best elaborated and systematized the theory of nazm in his analysis of the i'jaz is cAbd al-Qahir al-Jurjani (d. 1078 CE) in his Dala'il al-I'jaz. His material was further organized by Fakhr ad-Din al-Razi (d. 1209) in his Nihayat al-I'jaz fi Dirayat al-I'jaz and put to practical purposes by al-Zamakhshari (d. 1144 CE) in his exegesis of the Qur'an entitled al-Kashasaf, rich in rhetorical analysis of the Qur'anic style.[18]
Hardly anything new has been added by later authors
.Is The Bible Inimitable?
Anyone who has read the history of the Bible as a text as well as the constantly changing canon at the whims of the leaders of the Church and some 300,000+ variant readings in the New Testament itself would suggest that no book in history enjoyed such as reputation. The process of serious editing through which the Christian Bible went through is unparalleled in its almost 2000 year history. This would itself make the Bible an inimitable book.
Anyone who has read the history of the Bible as a text as well as the constantly changing canon at the whims of the leaders of the Church and some 300,000+ variant readings in the New Testament itself would suggest that no book in history enjoyed such as reputation. The process of serious editing through which the Christian Bible went through is unparalleled in its almost 2000 year history. This would itself make the Bible an inimitable book.
As far as the language of
the Bible and its stylistic perfection is concerned, the Bible does not
make any such claim. Therefore, it not does challenge the mankind of
produce a few verses or a chapter like it. Further, it is a Christian
claim that the Bible contains scribal and linguistic errors. The
language in which the Greek New Testament was written is demotic Greek
which itself has little or no regard for grammatical rules of classical
Greek. Comparing the stylistic perfection of the Qur'an versus
stylistic imperfection of the Bible, von Grunebaum states:
In contrast to the stylistic perfection of the Kur'an with the stylistic imperfections of the older Scriptures the Muslim theologian found himself unknowingly and on purely postulative grounds in agreement with long line of Christian thinkers whose outlook on the Biblical text is best summed up in Nietzsche's brash dictum that the Holy Ghost wrote bad Greek.[19]
In contrast to the stylistic perfection of the Kur'an with the stylistic imperfections of the older Scriptures the Muslim theologian found himself unknowingly and on purely postulative grounds in agreement with long line of Christian thinkers whose outlook on the Biblical text is best summed up in Nietzsche's brash dictum that the Holy Ghost wrote bad Greek.[19]
Futher, he elaborates the position of Western theologians on the canonization process and composition of the Bible:
The knowledge of the Western theologian that the Biblical books were redacted by different writers and that they were, in many cases, accessible to him only in (inspired) translation facilitated admission of formal imperfections in Scripture and there with lessened the compulsive insistence on its stylistic authority. Christian teaching, leaving the inspired writer, under the guidance of the Holy Spirit, free in matters of style, has provided no motivation to seek an exact correlation between the revealed text on the one hand and grammar and rhetoric on the other. It thereby relieved the theologian and the critic from searching for a harmony between two stylistic worlds, which at best would yield an ahistoric concept of literary perfection and at worst would prevent anything resembling textual and substantive criticism of Revelation....
The knowledge of the Western theologian that the Biblical books were redacted by different writers and that they were, in many cases, accessible to him only in (inspired) translation facilitated admission of formal imperfections in Scripture and there with lessened the compulsive insistence on its stylistic authority. Christian teaching, leaving the inspired writer, under the guidance of the Holy Spirit, free in matters of style, has provided no motivation to seek an exact correlation between the revealed text on the one hand and grammar and rhetoric on the other. It thereby relieved the theologian and the critic from searching for a harmony between two stylistic worlds, which at best would yield an ahistoric concept of literary perfection and at worst would prevent anything resembling textual and substantive criticism of Revelation....
In Christianity,
besides, the apology for the "low" style of the Bible is merely a part
of educational problem - what to do with secular erudition within
Christianity; whereas in Islam, the central position of the Kur'an, as
the focal point and justification of grammatical and literary studies,
was theoretically at least, never contested within the believing
community.[20]
That pretty much sums up the Bible, its stylistic perfection (or the lack of it!) and the position of Western theologians.
And Allah knows best!
ReferencesThat pretty much sums up the Bible, its stylistic perfection (or the lack of it!) and the position of Western theologians.
And Allah knows best!
[1] C J Lyall, Translations Of Ancient Arabian Poetry, Chiefly Pre-Islamic, Williams & Norgate Ltd., London, 1930.
[2] Ibid., pp. xlv-lii.
[3] Ibn Khaldun, The Muqaddimah, Franz Rosenthal (Translator), Volume III, Routledge & Kegan Paul, London, 1958, p. 368.
[4] A F L Beeston, T M Johnstone, R B Serjeant and G R Smith (Editors), Arabic Literature To The End Of The Ummayad Period, 1983, Cambridge University Press, p. 34.
[5] Louis Cheikho, Shucara' 'al-Nasraniyah, 1890-1891, Beirut.
[6] Abu Ameenah Bilal Philips, Tafseer Soorah al-Hujuraat, 1988, Tawheed Publications, Riyadh (Saudi Arabia), p. 28.
[7] E H Palmer (Tr.), The Qur'an, 1900, Part I, Oxford at Clarendon Press, p. lv.
[8] H A R Gibb, Islam - A Historical Survey, 1980, Oxford University Press, p. 28.
[9] Ibid., p. 25.
[10] H A R Gibb, Arabic Literature - An Introduction, 1963, Oxford at Clarendon Press, p. 36.
[11] Ibid., p. 37.
[12] Alfred Guillaume, Islam, 1990 (Reprinted), Penguin Books, pp. 73-74.
[13] M A S Abdel Haleem, Grammatical Shift For The Rhetorical Purposes: Iltifat & Related Features In The Qur'an, Bulletin of School of Oriental and African Studies, Volume LV, Part 3, 1992.
[14] Mircea Eliade (Editor in Chief), The Encyclopedia Of Religion, Volume 7, Macmillam Publishing Company, New York, p. 87, Under I'jaz by Issa J Boullata.
[15] Yusuf Rahman, The Miraculous Nature Of Muslim Scripture: A Study Of 'Abd al-Jabbar's I'jaz al-Qur'an, Islamic Studies, Volume 35, Number 4, 1996, p. 409.
[16] Ibid., pp. 415-416.
[17] The Encyclopedia Of Religion, Op.Cit, p. 88.
[18] Ibid.
[19] B Lewis, V L Menage, Ch. Pellat & J Schacht (Editors), Encyclopedia Of Islam (New Edition), 1971, Volume III, E J Brill (Leiden) & Luzac & Co. (London), p. 1020 (Under I'djaz).
[20] Ibid.
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