And recall when your Lord said to the angels: I will place a vicegerent on earth. They said: Will You place therein one who will make mischief and shed blood therein while we celebrate Your praises and glorify You? Allah said: I know what you do not know.
And He taught Adam the names, all of them, then He set them before the angels, and said: Tell me the names of these, if you are right. They said: Glory to You! We have no knowledge except what You have taught us. Surely it is You alone Who are All-Knowing, All-Wise.
Allah said: O Adam! Tell them the names of those things. Then when he had told them the names of those things, Allah said: Did I not tell you that I know the secrets of the heaven and earth, and I know what you declare and what you conceal? And recall when We said to the angels: Prostrate before Adam. They prostrated: not so Iblis. He refused and was haughty, and he became one of the unbelievers. (Al-Baqarah 2:30-34)
The question as to how this universe and its inhabitants, especially man, came into being has always excited the human mind and imagination. For a faith community, this issue is of the utmost importance. For the answer to this question and the beliefs about creation dictate the relationship of the universe with the divine and man’s status and responsibilities. The stance on creation determines what life is, how man is expected to live it and what the ultimate end of everyone, including man, is.
In other words, such fundamental concepts as divinity, the purpose of life, man’s role, the Afterlife and divine guidance hinge on a community’s view of creation. It, thus, literally as well as metaphorically, constitutes the starting point for the comprehension and appreciation of the universe, its nature and purpose, its Creator and its final end. The self-evident truth that the One True God is to be credited with the creation of the universe has, however, been clouded, rather eclipsed by fallacious notions held by various communities both in the past and in our own times, about the origin of life.
The Greek version concerns itself only with the birth of a plethora of gods and goddesses, making no mention of man’s creation.
In ancient Egypt, “Nun” (the primeval water) was credited with the phenomenon of creation. The first Book of the Old Testament, Genesis (Chapters 1-11) offers a detailed yet insipid version. The Biblical account runs as follows:
“In the day that the Lord God made the earth and the heavens, when no plant of the field was yet in the earth, and no herb of the field had yet sprung up – for the Lord God had not caused it to rain upon the earth, and there was no man to till the ground; but a mist went up from the earth and watered the whole face of the ground.” (Genesis 2:4-6)
Man: God’s Most Honorable Creature
On studying the above, the reader gathers the odd impression that man was created only for the purpose of “tilling the ground”. Moreover, man does not seem to occupy any special place in the Biblical scheme of creation, for his birth is bracketed within the appearance of such ordinary objects of nature as plants and herbs. Nor was the earth provided with rain-water and plant life when man made his first appearance on the scene.
In other words, scant attention was paid to meeting man’s basic needs. The Biblical description of man’s creation is devoid, in equal measure, of any outstanding feature:
“Then the Lord God formed man of dust from the ground, and breathed into his nostrils the breath of life; and man became a living being.” (Genesis 2:7)
By contrast, a couple of adjectives – “pleasant to the sight”, and “good for food” – are employed for describing the tree of life.
In our times, under the pernicious influence of Darwinism, which maintains that the universe and all living beings have evolved over millions of years without any role for God, people have grown skeptical about the Scriptural version of creation. The Biblical account, in particular, is derided and pejoratively branded as creationism.
All such misconceptions are dispelled in the above Qur’anic passage which offers a coherent, reasoned and appealing account of creation.
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It is nothing short of a miracle that the
planet earth as created by Allah so long ago continues to provide
adequately for man’s sustenance.
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