If Muhammad had made no claim to be a prophet, if he had been an idolater like the
Arabs in the "Days of Ignorance", if he had never learnt the will of God Most
High, the Merciful, the Gracious; the Holy, but had been a great and valiant warrior only,
like Timur-i-Lang (Tamerlane), intent only on making himself powerful and on indulging his
tastes for perfumes and women; then, in what respect—except to religious forms and
ceremonies and the dictation of the Qur'an to his amanuenses—would his conduct have
differed from what it actually was, in spite of his claim to be the Apostle of God? In
other words, In what respect was his conduct, in moral matters, better than that of such
conquerors as aim only at success in this world and enjoyment of sensual pleasures? Does
Muhammad's conduct in such matters as those which we have been considering, in chastity,
forgiveness of injuries, meekness, mercifulness, goodness, form any genuine proof that he
was Divinely commissioned as the Seal of the Prophets, God's last and most perfect
messenger to His creatures? Or is it necessary to believe his claim, in spite of his
conduct after this claim was first made?
III. As to the manner in which Inspiration is said to have come to Muhammad, we have
certain statements made by leading Muslim historians and in the Traditions which in
substance are held reliable by both Sunnis and Shi'ites. Ibn Ishaq, Ibn Hisham, Ibn Athir,
Husain ibn Muhammad (in his Khamis), the Turkish writer 'Ali Halabi, and others, give us
many details about this matter. The most valuable collection of Traditions upon the point
is found in the Mishkatu'l Masabih (Kitabu'l Fitan: Babu'l Bu'th wa Bada'il Wahy),
pp. 513-516.
We are told that he was raised up as an Apostle when forty years of age, and that the
call first came when he was in retirement with Khadijah in a cave in Mount Hira near
Mecca. Muhammad thought that the angel Gabriel came to him and bade him recite in the name
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