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This treatise illustrates Muhammad’s miraculous Messenger‑ship through more
than 300 miracles that he worked, and is a marvel because of the following:
(Note: All Traditions related in this treatise are from memory,
for I have no reference books to consult. If there are mistakes in the
wording, please correct them or consider them as paraphrases. According to
the prevailing opinion among Tradition scholars, such paraphrasing is
permissible.)
This treatise illustrates Muhammad’s miraculous Messenger‑ship through more
than 300 miracles that he worked, and is a marvel because of the following:
First: Although this treatise covers more than 100 pages and is based
on Traditions and narrations, I wrote it while in the countryside, working 2 or
3 hours each day. I finished it in 2 or 3 days, working completely from memory.
Second: Despite its length, this treatise does not bore the scribes or
lose any of its pleasantness in its readers’ eyes. In fact, it has aroused such
enthusiasm, even in some lazy scribes, that in these hard and distressing times
as many as copies have been hand‑written in this neighborhood within a year.[1]
Those aware of this treatise’s distinction conclude that it must be a wonder
coming from his Messengership’s miraculousness.
In the copies hand‑written by nine scribes, including one inexperienced and
unaware of tawafuq,[2] the
words referring to the Prophet were found to be arranged unintentionally beneath
one another throughout the treatise. This is the same in the Fifth Part for the
words referring to the Qur’an. The fair‑minded will not see this tawafuq
as mere coincidence, but rather as a mysterious sign and a wonder derived from
his miraculous Messengership. The essentials explained at the treatise’s
beginning are very important. The Prophetic Traditions related in it are all
authentic, according to the Traditionists, and report the most established
phenomena concerning his Messengership. To enumerate this treatise’s usefulness,
another one of the same length would be needed. Therefore we invite those who
desire to discover its usefulness to read it.
Said Nursi
[Said Nursi sometimes draws attention to his writings. This is not
done out of self‑praise. Rather, as a Muslim guide and inspired scholar
dedicated to explaining the pillars of Islamic belief, worship, and morality
as well as to establishing them in people’s minds and hearts, and being
completely confident of the truth of what he writes, he follows a style
required by guidance. We should keep this in mind, as well as the period
during which he wrote—a very hard time during which Islam was severely
attacked and Islamic activities were kept under strict control and banned.
(Tr.)]
[1] The Nur (Light)
treatises were hand-copied secretly until 1950, because the government of that
time treated religious people harshly and Islam with hostility. (Tr.)
[2] Tawafuq: God’s
arranging things and events so that His servants obtain a good effect, such as
the unintentional arrangement of key words one beneath the other on a page or in
the same place on different pages. (Tr.) |