6.5: Isaiah's vision
Isaiah saw a vision of two riders.
"And he saw a chariot [with] a couple of
horsemen, a chariot of asses, [and] a chariot of camels .."
Isaiah 21:7
Who was the rider upon the ass? Every Sunday
school student will tell us that this was a prophecy of Jesus (pbuh),
as stated in John:
"And Jesus, when he had found a young ass,
sat thereon; as it is written,"
John 12:14
but who is the promised prophet who would ride
the camel? If it is not Muhammad (pbuh) then this prophecy has
yet to be fulfilled. Let us read on...
"And, behold, here cometh a chariot of men,
[with] a couple of horsemen. And he answered and said, Babylon
is fallen, is fallen; and all the graven images of her gods he
hath broken unto the ground."
Isaiah 21:9
Babylon did indeed fall before Islam and the
Islamic nation under the guidance of Muhammad (pbuh) did indeed
succeed in eradicating the worship of idols from Babylon
replacing it with the worship of God alone. In fact, the Muslims
were the only believers in the God of Isaiah to ever succeed in
fulfilling this prophesy (see chapter 10). Continuing ...
"The burden upon Arabia ..."
Isaiah 21:13
What does the word "burden" mean? Let us ask
the Scofield Study Bible:
"�which also means an oracle is a word
sometimes used in the prophetical writings to indicate a divine
message of judgment"
Scofield Study Bible New King James Version,
note 1, p. 792
So the Muslims of Arabia (and subsequently
Muslims everywhere) would be assigned the burden of God's
message.
"The inhabitants of the land of Tema
brought water to him that was thirsty, they prevented with their
bread him that fled. For they fled from the swords, from the
drawn sword, and from the bent bow, and from the grievousness of
war"
Isaiah 21:14-15
Tema, according
to John McKenzie's dictionary of the Bible is
"a place name and tribal name of Arabia; a
son of Ishmael.... The name survives in Teima, an oasis of the
part of the Arabian desert called the Nefud in N Central
Arabia."
This word, Tema, is the name of the ninth son
of Ishmael (the father of the Arabs), in Genesis 25:13-15 we
read:
"And these are the names of the sons of
Ishmael, by their names, according to their generations: the
firstborn of Ishmael, Nebajoth; and Kedar, and Adbeel, and
Mibsam, And Mishma, and Dumah, and Massa, Hadar, and Tema,
Jetur, Naphish, and Kedemah"
Strong's concordance tells us that this name
was also applied to the land settled by Tema the son
of Ishmael. It goes on to explain how this word is
"probably of foreign derivation". Indeed, this word,
Teima, is an Arabic word which means
"Barren desert". It remains the name of a city in the Arabian
peninsula just north of "Al-Madinah
Al-Munawarah," or "Madinah" for short (Please see Map 1, page
440). Muhammad (pbuh) and his companions were given sanction to
migrate. They departed Makkah during the night and
left all of their possessions behind. Upon reaching Madinah they
were greeted by it's citizens with open arms and Muhammad (pbuh)
assigned each one of the Muhajireen (citizens of Makkah) to one
of the Ansar (citizens of Madinah) to house and feed
them until they could strike out on their own. This became the
first year of the Arab "Hijra" (Emigration) calendar used in
Islamic countries to this day.
"For thus hath the LORD said unto me,
Within a year, according to the years of an hireling, and all
the glory of Kedar shall fail. And the residue of the number of
archers, the mighty men of the children of Kedar, shall be
diminished: for the LORD God of Israel hath spoken [it]."
Isaiah 21:16-17
Kedar*
is the second son of Ishmael, the
father of the Arabs:
"And these are the names of the sons of
Ishmael, by their names, according to their generations: the
firstborn of Ishmael, Nebajoth; and Kedar, and Adbeel, and
Mibsam."
Genesis 25:13
Kedar is also synonymous with all of Arabia in
general, as in Ezekiel:
"Arabia, and all the princes of Kedar."
Ezekiel27:21
The Arabs of Makkah, the capital
of the paganistic tribes of Arabia of the day, were indeed
defeated by the Muslims in the second year after their forced
immigration from Makkah to Madinah
(The Hijra). This victory signaled the turning point for Islam
and a transition from a position of weakness to one of power and
victory (for more, please read chapter 10).
It should be pointed out here that, as
mentioned at the beginning of this chapter, the children of
Israel, from the tribe of Levi, were distinctly aware
of this prophesy. Indeed this is the very reason why they had
begun to immigrate from the lush and fertile pastures of their
holy land of Israel to the barren parched deserts of Arabia,
specifically to Madinah and the
surrounding areas of Khaibar, Tema, and others.
Because they knew that this is where the final prophet would
appear. As mentioned above, these children of the Jews were
constantly threatening the Arab inhabitants of Madinah (the
tribes of Al-Aws and Al-Kazraj) with his impending arrival and
how they would follow him and, through his leadership, they
would utterly destroy these Arabs. They had hoped that this
prophet would be from their tribe and that their presence in
this location might facilitate this hope.
When their awaited prophet finally did come,
they rejected him. They wanted a Jewish prophet from their own
tribe and not an Arab from the sons of Ishmael.
Thus, they allowed their pride to come between them and the
truth which they recognized. However, their efforts were not
totally in vain. So continuous were their efforts in threatening
the inhabitants of Madinah with the
final prophet's imminent arrival that when Muhammad (pbuh)
finally did come, the inhabitants of Madinah immediately
recognized him and hastened to follow him before the Jews. These
inhabitants of Madinah would later become among those very first
followers of Muhammad (pbuh) who would one year later go on to
fulfill the prophesy of Isaiah by defeating the "mighty men of
Kedar" in the very first battle of the Islamic
nation, the battle of Badr.
As the prophesy requires, one year after
prophet Muhammad (pbuh) and his followers escaped from the
torture and persecution of the people of Kedar and
emigrated to Madinah, the men of
Makkah decided to once and for all put an end to
Muhammad (pbuh) and his followers. They assembled an army
consisting of 750 footmen and 200 horsemen, all of their very
best fighters, and all very well armed. The leaders of this army
consisted of the majority of the leaders of Kedar (see chapter
ten). They were confident of victory and bragged that after this
massacre they would be feared throughout all of Arabia.
The Muslims heard of this amassing of troops
and prepared as best they could. They collected 313 footmen with
two horses and seventy camels. The Muslims fought long and hard
with the men of Kedar and were finally granted
victory. This battle ended in the death of these leaders of
Kedar and a resounding victory for the Muslims.
In this battle, only fourteen Muslims and
seventy pagans from Kedar were killed. Twenty four
of those who died from Kedar were their leaders. In addition,
seventy others from Kedar were taken as prisoners and later
ransomed back to their people (for more see chapter ten).
This was the great turning point for the
Islamic nation. This battle could be said to have been the
beginning of the end for the reign of idolatry and paganism
within the land of Arabia. This Muslim nation would then go on
to expand to many other nations until it spread from Spain to
China, fulfilling many more prophesies in the Bible, including
Daniel 2:44, Genesis 15:18-21, and many others.
An unfortunate misconception which has managed
to creep into many Western beliefs is that Islam was only spread
through force and the sword. Today, however, this notion is
beginning to be recognized for the absurdity that it was. A
Christian missionary, Sir Thomas W. Arnold says:
"...of any organized attempt to force the
acceptance of Islam on the non-Muslim population, or of any
systematic persecution intended to stamp out the Christian
religion, we hear nothing. Had the caliphs chosen to adopt
either course of action, they might have swept away Christianity
as easily as Ferdinand and Isabella drove Islam out of Spain, or
Louis XIV made Protestantism penal in France, or the Jews were
kept out of England for 350 years. The Eastern Churches in Asia
were entirely cut off from communion with the rest of
Christendom throughout which no one would have been found to
lift a finger on their behalf, as heretical communions. So that
the very survival of these Churches to the present day is a
strong proof of the generally tolerant attitude of Mohammedan
[sic] governments towards them"
The Preaching of Islam, A History of the
Propagation of the Muslim Faith, Sir Thomas W. Arnold,
Westminster A. Constable & Co., London, 1896, p. 80.
"Against unbelievers he (Muhammad) enjoined
his followers to undertake a holy warefare, but only when
attacked. The earlier Moslem[sic] leaders did not try to impose
their faith upon other nations"
The History of Christianity in the Light of
Modern Knowledge, A Collective Work, Harcourt Brace and co., p.
520
Muslims did indeed wage many wars, just as
many Jews and Christians did both before and after this. Muslims
waged their wars in self-defense or in order to abolish
idolatry, tyranny, slavery, and oppression. Muslims were
commanded to not attack those who did not attack them, to not
cut down a fruit tree, to not kill the animals, to not take the
people's property, to not harm women or children or old people
so long as they did not fight with them, and to not burn crops.
When they were victorious, the Muslims were
commanded not to destroy the churches nor the synagogues, nor to
force the people to convert to Islam. The people were allowed to
continue to practice their religion without persecution or being
forced to convert (Compare for example with Numbers 31, and
Deuteronomy 20. Please also compare with the great Spanish
inquisitions).
"There is no compulsion in religion. The
right path is henceforth distinct from misguidance"
The noble Qur'an, Al-Bakarah(2):256.
If Islam was indeed spread by the sword and
not by it's spiritual appeal, then how do we explain, for
example, the fact that Islam is the religion of the majority of
the people of the country of Indonesia even though no Muslim
army ever set foot on their land and they can by no stretch of
the imagination be labeled as Arabs? The only contact these
people ever had with Islam was through Muslim traders who passed
through their lands.
If the truth were to be known, in almost every
single battle the Muslims ever participated in, they were almost
always vastly outnumbered. For example, when the Muslims finally
overthrew the pagan Byzantine superpower in the battle of Al-Yarmook
of the year 636 C.E., the Muslim army consisted of 40,000
fighters verses 200,000 solders in the Byzantine army. So
although many historians may like to attribute the fall of this
superpower to any number of factors such as claiming that they
were taxed and weary from previous battles with the Romans,
(while not claiming that the Muslims were taxed and weary from
their previous battles), and although they refuse to believe
that this victory could have come from the Almighty, still, one
needs to wonder if this victory were not through divine
intervention then how do we explain the fact that an
ill-equipped army of Bedouin sheep herders who were outnumbered
more than four to one could so resoundingly defeat one of the
two "superpowers" of their age?
"The extinction of race consciousness as
between Muslims is one of the outstanding achievements of Islam
and in the contemporary world. There is, as it happens, a crying
need for the propagation of this Islamic virtue."
The Genuine Islam, Vol. 1, George Bernard
Shaw, No. 81936.
"I have always held the religion of
Muhammad in high estimation because of its wonderful vitality.
It is the only religion which appears to me to possess that
assimilating capacity to the changing phase of existence which
can make itself appeal to every age. I have studied him-the
wonderful man and in my opinion far from being an anti-Christ,
he must be called the Savior of Humanity. I believe that if a
man like him were to assume the dictatorship of the modern
world, he would succeed in solving its problems in a way that
would bring it the much needed peace and happiness: I have
prophesied about the faith of Muhammad that it would be
acceptable to the Europe of tomorrow as it is beginning to be
acceptable to the Europe of today."
Hamilton Gibb, Whither Islam, London, 1932, p.
379.
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