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Seal of the Prophets

Seal of the Prophets (Arabic: خاتم النبيين, romanizedkhātam an-nabīyīn or khātim an-nabīyīn; or Arabic: خاتم الأنبياء, romanizedkhātam al-anbiyā’ or khātim al-anbiyā), is a title used in the Qur'an and by Muslims to designate the Islamic prophet Muhammad as the last of the prophets sent by God.

The title is applied to Muhammad in verse 33:40 of the Qur'an, with the popular Yusuf Ali translation reading:

Muhammad is not the father of any of your men, but (he is) the Messenger of Allah, and the Seal of the Prophets: and Allah has full knowledge of all things.

Term variations

There is a difference among the schools of Qur'anic recitation regarding the reading of the word خاتم in verse 33:40 – it can be read as either khātim or khātam. Of the ten qirā’āt (readings, methods of recitation) regarded as authentic – seven mutawātir and three mashhūr – all read خاتم in this verse with a kasrah on the tāʼ (خاتِم, khātim) with the exception of 'Asim, who reads with a fatḥah on the tāʼ (خاتَم, khātam).[1][2][3][4] The reading of al-Hasan, a shadhdh (aberrant) recitation, is also khātam.[1][2]

The recitation that has become prevalent in most of the world today is Hafs 'an 'Asim – that is, the qirā’ah of 'Asim in the riwāyah (transmission) of his student Hafs.

Hadith

Final brick metaphor

In a well-known hadith reported by Abu Hurayrah, Jabir ibn Abd Allah, Ubayy ibn Ka'b, and Abu Sa‘id al-Khudri, and recorded by al-Bukhari, Muslim ibn al-Hajjaj, al-Tirmidhi, Ahmad ibn Hanbal, al-Nasa'i, and others, Muhammad compared the relationship between himself and the previous prophets to a building missing a single brick.[1][5][6] In Sahih al-Bukhari it is reported by Abu Hurayrah that Muhammad said, "My similitude in comparison with the prophets before me is that of a man who has built a house nicely and beautifully, except for a place of one brick in a corner. The people go about it and wonder at its beauty, but say: 'Would that this brick be put in its place!' So I am that brick, and I am the seal of the prophets" (fa’anā ’l-labinah, wa anā khātamu ’n-nabīyīn). This hadith is narrated with similar wording in Sahih Muslim, Musnad Ahmad ibn Hanbal, as-Sunan al-Kubra of al-Nasa'i, and Sahih Ibn Hibban.[7][8][9] In Mu'jam al-Awsat, al-Tabarani narrated a variant wording of the hadith with the last statement being, "So I am that [brick], I am the seal of the prophets, there is no prophet after me" (fa’anā dhālika, anā khātamu ’n-nabīyīn, lā nabīya ba‘dī).[10] Ibn Hibban also has a variant ending with "I was the place of that brick, with me the [line of] messengers is sealed" (fakuntu anā mawḍi‘u tilka ’l-labinah, khutima biya ’r-rusul).[11] In Sahih Muslim and Musnad Ahmad the hadith is also reported by Jabir ibn Abd Allah, with the last statement being "So I am the place of that brick, I have come and sealed the [line of] prophets" (fa’anā mawḍi‘u ’l-labinah, ji’tu fakhatamtu ’l-anbiyā’).[12][13] Abu Dawud al-Tayalisi in his Musnad has from Jabir, "So I am the place of that brick, with me the [line of] prophets is sealed" (fa’anā mawḍi‘u ’l-labinah, khutima biya ’l-anbiyā’).[14]

Other hadith

In another hadith, Muhammad prophesied the appearance of a number of false prophets before the day of judgement, while asserting his status as the seal of the prophets.[1] It is reported by Thawban ibn Kaidad that Muhammad said, "The Hour will not be established until tribes of my ummah (community) unite with the idolaters, and until they worship idols. And in my ummah there will be thirty liars, each of whom will claim to be a prophet, (but) I am the seal of the prophets, there is no prophet after me."[5][15][16][17] Hudhayfah ibn al-Yaman reports that Muhammad said, "In my ummah there will be twenty-seven liars and dajjals, among whom are four women, (but) I am the seal of the prophets, there is no prophet after me".[5][18]

Classical lexicons

According to the authoritative dictionary Lisan al-Arab of Ibn Manzur,

The khitām of a group of people, the khātim of them, or the khātam of them, is the last of them, according to al-Lihyani. And Muhammad is khātim of the prophets. At-Tahdhib (of al-Azhari): Khātim and khātam are among the names of the Prophet. And in the Qur'an: "Muhammad is not the father of any of your men, but he is the Messenger of Allah and khātim of the prophets," that is, the last of them. And: It was also recited as khātam. And the saying of al-'Ajjaj, "Blessed to the prophets is this khātim," is based on the well-known recitation, with a kasrah (khātim). And also among his names is al-‘āqib, and its meaning is "last of the prophets."[19]

According to Taj al-Arus of al-Zabidi,

Khātam: The last of a people, like khātim. And with this definition is the saying in the Qur'an, "khātam of the prophets," that is, the last of them.[20]

Further,

And among the names of the Prophet are khātam and khātim, and he is the one who sealed prophethood by his coming.[20]

Traditional interpretation

The title is generally regarded by Muslims as meaning that Muhammad is the last in the series of prophets beginning with Adam.[21][22][23] The belief that a new prophet cannot arise after Muhammad is shared by both Sunni and Shi'a Muslims.[24][25] Some of the most prominent historical Sunni texts on creed (aqidah) explicitly mention the doctrine of finality of prophethood.[26] For example, in al-Aqidah at-Tahawiyyah it is asserted that "Every claim to the prophetic office after his is a delusion and a wandering desire."[27][28] In another popular work, al-Aqidah an-Nasafiyyah, it is stated, "The first of the prophets is Adam and the last is Muhammad."[29]

Academic views

Hartwig Hirschfeld doubted the authenticity of the verse 33:40 and claimed it to be of late origin.[30] Yohanan Friedmann states that Hirschfeld's arguments "that the title khatam an-nabiyyin is unusual, that it only appears once in the Qur'an, that the word khatam is not Arabic…do not seem valid arguments against the authenticity of the verse."[1]

Frants Buhl accepted the traditional meaning of last prophet.[31]

Josef Horovitz suggested two possible interpretations of khatam an-nabiyyin: the last prophet or the one who confirms the authenticity of the previous prophets.[32] Heinrich Speyer agreed with Horovitz.[33]

According to Alford T. Welch, the traditional Muslim belief that Muhammad is "last and greatest of the prophets" is most likely based on a later interpretation of 33:40.[34]

The first modern academic to have studied in detail the history of the doctrine of finality of prophethood is Yohanan Friedmann.[35] In his seminal article, Finality of Prophethood in Sunni Islam (1986), he concluded that although the notion of finality of prophethood "eventually acquired an undisputed and central place in the religious thought of Islam," it was contested during the first century AH.[1] He states, "While it is true that the phrase khatam an-nabiyyin is generally interpreted as meaning 'the last prophet', the exegetical tradition and other branches of classical Arabic literature preserved material which indicates that this now generally received understanding of the Qur'anic phrase is not the only possible one and had not necessarily been the earliest."[1][35] Due to this Friedmann states that the meaning of khatam an-nabiyyin in its original Qur'anic context is still in doubt.[1]

Wilferd Madelung takes Friedmann's findings into consideration in observing that the original Qur'anic meaning of the term is not entirely certain.[35][36] However, in a more recent paper he states, "Most Muslims at the time no doubt understood it to mean that he was to be the last prophet and Islam was the final religion, as Muslims have commonly understood it ever since."[37]

Carl W. Ernst considers the phrase to mean that Muhammad's "imprint on history is as final as a wax seal on a letter."[38]

David Powers, also making use of Friedmann's research, believes that the early Muslim community was divided over the meaning of the expression, with some understanding it to mean he fulfilled or confirmed the earlier Christian and Jewish revelations, while others understood it as signifying that Muhammad brought the office of prophethood to a close. He suggests that the Qur'anic text underwent a series of secondary omissions and additions which were designed to adapt the text to the dogma of finality of prophethood, and that the idea of finality only became the prevailing interpretation (alongside the notion of confirmation or fulfilment) by the end of the 1st century AH / 7th century.[35][39] In a review of Powers' book, Gerald Hawting goes further, suggesting that the development of the doctrine was not complete before the 3rd century AH / 9th century.[35][40] Madelung comments that Power's argument, that verses 36–40 are a later addition dating from the generation after Muhammad's death, is "hardly sustainable."[37]

Uri Rubin holds that the finality of prophethood is a Qur'anic idea, not a post-Qur'anic one, and that the expression khatam an-nabiyyin implies both finality of prophethood and confirmation. In response to Powers and other modern scholars sceptical of the early origin of the doctrine, Rubin concludes from his study "that, at least as far as Sura 33 is concerned, the consonantal structure of the Qur'anic text has not been tampered with, and that the idea of finality of prophethood is well-represented in the text, as well as in the earliest available extra-Quranic materials." Rubin reexamines the early extra-Qur'anic texts cited by Friedmann and other modern scholars, and concludes that rather than indicating that the notion of finality of prophethood is late, the texts confirm the early origin of the belief. He concludes that "there is no compelling reason to assume that the Muslims of the first Islamic century originally understood the Qur'anic khatam an-nabiyyin in the sense of confirmation alone, without that of finality."[35]

Official mandates

In Pakistan voters before voting and leaders before assuming their offices have to declare in writing and take an oath of finality of prophethood, (i.e. Khatm-i-Nabuwat); any one not subscribing is considered claiming otherwise and a non-Muslim and may face persecution and loss of opportunities.[41] Quranic verses and Ahadith pertaining to the finality of prophethood have to be displayed prominently in Government offices, and at entrances to districts along highways.[42]

On 22 June 2020, the Government of Pakistan made it mandatory that term (Urdu: خاتم النبیین, romanizedKhátaman Nabiyín) be added to the name of Islamic prophet Muhammad in textbooks and official documents[43][44][45][46] where previously it was passed on 15 June in the Sindh Assembly.[47][48][49] In October 2021 Punjab, Pakistan provincial assembly recommended inclusion of oath of Khatm-i-Nabuwat in the Nikah (marriage) documents.[50]

Similarly, the Khatumo administration based in Buuhoodle and centred on the Sool, central Sanaag and Ayn regions of northern Somalia, claims its title is derived from the Quranic injunction of Khatam an-Nabiyyin.[51]

Ahmadiyya interpretation

The Ahmadiyya Community believe that Muhammad brought prophethood to perfection and was the last prophet to have brought a complete and comprehensive universal law for humanity, but prophethood subordinate to Muhammad is still open.[52][53] New prophets may be born, but they must be seen as subordinate to Muhammad and cannot create any new law or religion.[54] Mirza Ghulam Ahmad, who founded the movement in Qadian, India in 1889, is believed to be the promised Messiah and Mahdi. He claimed a kind of prophethood, believed he had been divinely appointed to revive and universally establish Islam, but not to have add to or change the laws of God or Muhammad.[55] This has caused controversy between Ahmadis and more mainstream Muslims, who accuse them of denying the finality of prophethood.[56][57][58] Ahmadiyya Muslims are subjected to considerable persecution for their beliefs.[59]

Baháʼí Faith view

The Baháʼí Faith regards Muhammad as a Manifestation of God and as the Seal of the Prophets,[60] but does not believe Revelation or Scripture from God has ended. In particular, Baháʼís regard the end-times prophecies of Islam (and other faiths) as being both metaphorical and literal,[61] and see the Báb and Bahá'u'lláh as fulfilling these prophetic expectations. The latter of these is the founder of the Baháʼí religion, which considers Islamic law as secondary or tertiary to its own. Muhammad is seen as ending the Adamic cycle, also known as the Prophetic cycle, which is stated by Bahá'is to have begun approximately 6,000 years ago,[62][63] and the Báb and Bahá'u'lláh as starting the Baháʼí cycle, or Cycle of Fulfilment, which will last at least five hundred thousand years with numerous Manifestations of God appearing throughout this time.[64][65] Moreover, Mirza Husayn 'Ali Nuri Bahá'u'lláh gave the Title "King of the Messengers" (sultán al-rusul) to the Báb, and the "Sender of the Messengers" (mursil al-rusul) to himself. Additionally, the Kitáb-i-Íqán shows the Islamic concept of the oneness of the prophets and the Hadith, "knowledge is a single point, which the foolish have multiplied,"[66] to reveal that the term "Seal of the Prophets", like Alpha and Omega, apply to all the prophets: "Whilst established upon the seat of the 'first', they occupy the throne of the 'last'."[67] In summary, these interpretive and legal differences have caused the Bahá'ís to be seen as heretics and apostates by some Muslims, which has led to their persecution in different countries.[citation needed]

References

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  4. ^ "Comparison of Ayat by Riwayat – Surah al-Ahzab v.30". nQuran.com (in Arabic).
  5. ^ a b c as-Suyuti. Durr al-Manthur. 33:40.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location (link)
  6. ^ الشواهد (Corroborating narrations for this hadith). Islamweb.com.
  7. ^ Sahih al-Bukhari. Kitab al-Manaqib. Hadith 44. Sunnah.com
  8. ^ Muslim, Sahih Muslim, Kitab al-Fada'il, Hadith 24, Sunnah.com
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  10. ^ at-Tabarani, Mu'jam al-Awsat, #3382, Islamweb.net
  11. ^ Ibn Hibban, Sahih Ibn Hibban, #6543, Islamweb.net
  12. ^ Muslim, Sahih Muslim, Kitab al-Fada'il, Hadith 26, Sunnah.com
  13. ^ Muslim, Sahih Muslim, #4247; Ahmad ibn Hanbal, Musnad Ahmad ibn Hanbal, #14593, Islamweb.net
  14. ^ Abu Dawud at-Tayalisi, Musnad Abi Dawud at-Tayalisi, #1884, Islamweb.net
  15. ^ at-Tirmidhi. Jami' at-Tirmidhi. Kitab al-Fitan. Hadith 62. Sunnah.com
  16. ^ Abu Dawud as-Sijistani. Sunan Abi Dawud. Kitab al-Fitan wal-Malahim. Hadith 13. Sunnah.com
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    • p.45: والخاتَم آخر القوم كالخاتِم ومنه قوله تعالى وخاتم النبيين أي أخرهم
    • p.48: ومن أسمائه صلى الله عليه وسلم الخاتَم والخاتِم وهو الذي خَتَم النبوة بمَجِيئه
  21. ^ Esposito, John L., ed. (2003). "Khatam al-Nabiyyin". The Oxford Dictionary of Islam. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 171. Khatam al-Nabiyyin: Seal of the prophets. Phrase occurs in Quran 33:40, referring to Muhammad, and is regarded by Muslims as meaning that he is the last of the series of prophets that began with Adam.
  22. ^ Mir, Mustansir (1987). "Seal of the Prophets, The". Dictionary of Qur’ānic Terms and Concepts. New York: Garland Publishing. p. 171. Muḥammad is called "the seal of the prophets" in 33:40. The expression means that Muḥammad is the final prophet, and that the institution of prophecy after him is "sealed."
  23. ^ Hughes, Thomas Patrick (1885). "K͟HĀTIMU 'N-NABĪYĪN". A Dictionary of Islam: Being a Cyclopædia of the Doctrines, Rites, Ceremonies, and Customs, Together with the Technical and Theological Terms, of the Muhammadan Religion. London: W. H. Allen. p. 270. K͟HĀTIMU 'N-NABĪYĪN (خاتم النبيين). "The seal of the Prophets." A title assumed by Muhammad in the Qur'ān. Surah xxxiii. 40: "He is the Apostle of God and the seal of the Prophets." By which is meant, that he is the last of the Prophets.
  24. ^ Goldziher, Ignác (1981). "Sects". Introduction to Islamic Theology and Law. Translated by Andras and Ruth Hamori from the German Vorlesungen über den Islam (1910). Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press. pp. 220–221. ISBN 9780691100999. Sunnī and Shī'ī theology alike understood it to mean that Muhammad ended the series of Prophets, that he had accomplished for all eternity what his predecessors had prepared, that he was God's last messenger delivering God's last message to mankind.
  25. ^ Martin, Richard C., ed. (2004). "'Ali". Encyclopedia of Islam and the Muslim World. Vol. 1. New York: Macmillan. p. 37.
  26. ^ Yasin, R. Cecep Lukan (18 February 2010). "The Twelver Shi'i Understanding on the Finality of Prophethood". Al-Jami'ah: Journal of Islamic Studies. 48 (1). doi:10.14421/ajis.2010.481.129-164.
  27. ^ Elder, E.E. (1933). "Al-Ṭaḥāwī's 'Bayān al-Sunna wa'l-Jamā'a'". The Macdonald Presentation Volume. Princeton University Press: 129–144.
  28. ^ Aḥmad ibn Muḥammad aṭ-Ṭaḥāwī. متن العقيدة الطحاوية / Matn al-‘Aqīdah aṭ-Ṭaḥāwīyah  (in Arabic) – via Wikisource. وكل دعوى النبوة بعده فغَيٌّ وهوى
  29. ^ Elder, E.E. (1950). A Commentary on the Creed of Islam: Sa'd al-Dīn al-Taftāzānī on the Creed of Najm al-Dīn al-Nasafī. New York: Columbia University Press. p. 130.
  30. ^ Hirschfeld, Hartwig (1886). Beiträge zur Erklärung des Ḳorān (in German). Leipzig. p. 71. Cited by Friedmann.
  31. ^ Buhl, F. "Muhammad". Encyclopedia of Islam. p. 650a. Cited by Friedmann.
  32. ^ Horovitz, Josef (1926). Koranische Untersuchungen (in German). Berlin. p. 53. Cited by Friedmann.
  33. ^ Speyer, Heinrich (1931). Die Biblischen Erzählungen im Qoran (in German). Berlin. pp. 422–423. Cited by Friedmann.
  34. ^ Buhl, F.; Welch, A.T. "Muhammad". Encyclopedia of Islam (new ed.).
  35. ^ a b c d e f Rubin, Uri (2014). "The Seal of the Prophets and the Finality of Prophecy". Zeitschrift der Deutschen Morgenländischen Gesellschaft. 164 (1): 65–96.
  36. ^ Madelung, Wilferd (1997). The succession to Muhammad: a study of the early Caliphate. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 17. ISBN 9780521646963.
  37. ^ a b Madelung, Wilferd (2014). . The Institute of Ismaili Studies. Archived from the original on 12 October 2014. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help) An edited version of an article that originally appeared in the Proceedings of the 25th Congress of L’Union Européenne des Arabisants et Islamisants in 2013.
  38. ^ Ernst, Carl W. (2003). Following Muhammad: Rethinking Islam in the Contemporary World. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press. p. 80. ISBN 9780807855775.
  39. ^ Powers, David S. (2009). Muḥammad is Not the Father of Any of Your Men: The Making of the Last Prophet. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press. ISBN 9780812241785.
  40. ^ Hawting, G.R. (1 February 2011). "Muhammad Is Not the Father of Any of Your Men: The Making of the Last Prophet". Islamic Law and Society. 18 (1): 116–119. doi:10.1163/156851910X538396.
  41. ^ Desk, Web (27 October 2021). "Punjab Assembly backs including Khatm-i-Nabuwat oath in nikahnama". Aaj.tv. Retrieved 28 October 2021.
  42. ^ Reporter, The Newspaper's Staff (29 September 2021). "Punjab Assembly for display of Quranic verses on prophethood in govt offices". DAWN.COM. Retrieved 28 October 2021.
  43. ^ "قومی اسمبلی: نصابی کتب میں حضرت محمدﷺ کے نام کیساتھ خاتم النبیین لکھنے کی قرارداد منظور" [National Assembly: Resolution passed to write 'Khatam-un-Nabiyyin' with the name of Hazrat Muhammad (Peace Be Upon Him) in textbooks]. جنگ (in Urdu). 22 June 2020. from the original on 22 June 2020. Retrieved 24 June 2020.
  44. ^ "NA unanimously adopts resolution regarding 'Khatam-un-Nabiyeen'". MMNews. 23 June 2020. Retrieved 24 June 2020.
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  51. ^ Stremlau, Nicole. "Governance without Government in the Somali territories." Journal of International Affairs 71.2 (2018): 73-89.
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  56. ^ Andrea Lathan (2008) ‘The Relativity of Categorizing in the Context of the Aḥmadiyya’ Die Welt des Islams, 48 (3/4): p. 378. "It is primarily Ghulām Aḥmad’s prophetical claim based on his reinterpretation of the prophetology mentioned above that distinguishes the Aḥmadiyya Muslim Jamāʿat from the Muslim “mainstream”. In spite of the differentiation Ghulām Aḥmad had made between the two kinds of prophets and his acceptance of Muḥammad as the last law-bearing one, many of his adversaries consider his claim as an offence against the finality of Muḥammad."
  57. ^ G. Böwering et al. (2013) The Princeton Encyclopedia of Islamic Political Thought, Princeton: Princeton University Press, p.25
  58. ^ "In Pakistan, most say Ahmadis are not Muslim". 10 September 2013.
  59. ^ Persecution of the Ahmadiyya Community in Pakistan: An Analysis Under International Law and International Relations Harvard Human Rights Journal, Vol 16, September 2003
    Violent Dhaka Rally against Sect, BBC News
    Eight die in Pakistan Sect Attack, BBC News
    Sect offices closed in Pakistan, BBC News
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  61. ^ Baha'u'llah, Mirza Husayn 'Ali Nuri. "Commentary of the Surah of the Sun". bahai-library.com. Retrieved 30 March 2017.
  62. ^ Letter written on behalf of the Universal House of Justice to an individual believer, 13 March 1986. Published in Effendi, Shoghi; The Universal House of Justice (1983). Hornby, Helen (ed.). Lights of Guidance: A Baháʼí Reference File. Baháʼí Publishing Trust, New Delhi, India. p. 500. ISBN 81-85091-46-3.
  63. ^ Taherzadeh, Adib (1977). The Revelation of Bahá'u'lláh, Volume 2: Adrianople 1863–68. Oxford, UK: George Ronald. p. 352. ISBN 0-85398-071-3.
  64. ^ Seena Fazel and Khazeh Fananapazir (1993). "A Baháʼí Approach to the Claim of Finality in Islam". Journal of Baháʼí Studies. 5 (3): 17–40. doi:10.31581/jbs-5.3.2(1993).
  65. ^ "Personal Interpretation of the term 'Seal of the Prophets'". bahai-library.com.
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  67. ^ Baha'u'llah, Mirza Husayn 'Ali Nuri. "Kitab-i-Iqan". bahai.org. Retrieved 30 March 2017.

External links

  •   Quotations related to Seal of the Prophets at Wikiquote

seal, prophets, this, article, about, title, muhammad, related, name, mole, shoulderblade, shama, muhammadiyah, signet, ring, seal, muhammad, arabic, خاتم, النبيين, romanized, khātam, nabīyīn, khātim, nabīyīn, arabic, خاتم, الأنبياء, romanized, khātam, anbiyā,. This article is about the title of Muhammad For the related name of the mole on his shoulderblade see Shama il Muhammadiyah For his signet ring see Seal of Muhammad Seal of the Prophets Arabic خاتم النبيين romanized khatam an nabiyin or khatim an nabiyin or Arabic خاتم الأنبياء romanized khatam al anbiya or khatim al anbiya is a title used in the Qur an and by Muslims to designate the Islamic prophet Muhammad as the last of the prophets sent by God The title is applied to Muhammad in verse 33 40 of the Qur an with the popular Yusuf Ali translation reading Muhammad is not the father of any of your men but he is the Messenger of Allah and the Seal of the Prophets and Allah has full knowledge of all things Qur an 33 40 Contents 1 Term variations 2 Hadith 2 1 Final brick metaphor 2 2 Other hadith 3 Classical lexicons 4 Traditional interpretation 5 Academic views 6 Official mandates 7 Ahmadiyya interpretation 8 Bahaʼi Faith view 9 References 10 External linksTerm variations EditThere is a difference among the schools of Qur anic recitation regarding the reading of the word خاتم in verse 33 40 it can be read as either khatim or khatam Of the ten qira at readings methods of recitation regarded as authentic seven mutawatir and three mashhur all read خاتم in this verse with a kasrah on the taʼ خات م khatim with the exception of Asim who reads with a fatḥah on the taʼ خات م khatam 1 2 3 4 The reading of al Hasan a shadhdh aberrant recitation is also khatam 1 2 The recitation that has become prevalent in most of the world today is Hafs an Asim that is the qira ah of Asim in the riwayah transmission of his student Hafs Hadith EditFinal brick metaphor Edit In a well known hadith reported by Abu Hurayrah Jabir ibn Abd Allah Ubayy ibn Ka b and Abu Sa id al Khudri and recorded by al Bukhari Muslim ibn al Hajjaj al Tirmidhi Ahmad ibn Hanbal al Nasa i and others Muhammad compared the relationship between himself and the previous prophets to a building missing a single brick 1 5 6 In Sahih al Bukhari it is reported by Abu Hurayrah that Muhammad said My similitude in comparison with the prophets before me is that of a man who has built a house nicely and beautifully except for a place of one brick in a corner The people go about it and wonder at its beauty but say Would that this brick be put in its place So I am that brick and I am the seal of the prophets fa ana l labinah wa ana khatamu n nabiyin This hadith is narrated with similar wording in Sahih Muslim Musnad Ahmad ibn Hanbal as Sunan al Kubra of al Nasa i and Sahih Ibn Hibban 7 8 9 In Mu jam al Awsat al Tabarani narrated a variant wording of the hadith with the last statement being So I am that brick I am the seal of the prophets there is no prophet after me fa ana dhalika ana khatamu n nabiyin la nabiya ba di 10 Ibn Hibban also has a variant ending with I was the place of that brick with me the line of messengers is sealed fakuntu ana mawḍi u tilka l labinah khutima biya r rusul 11 In Sahih Muslim and Musnad Ahmad the hadith is also reported by Jabir ibn Abd Allah with the last statement being So I am the place of that brick I have come and sealed the line of prophets fa ana mawḍi u l labinah ji tu fakhatamtu l anbiya 12 13 Abu Dawud al Tayalisi in his Musnad has from Jabir So I am the place of that brick with me the line of prophets is sealed fa ana mawḍi u l labinah khutima biya l anbiya 14 Other hadith Edit In another hadith Muhammad prophesied the appearance of a number of false prophets before the day of judgement while asserting his status as the seal of the prophets 1 It is reported by Thawban ibn Kaidad that Muhammad said The Hour will not be established until tribes of my ummah community unite with the idolaters and until they worship idols And in my ummah there will be thirty liars each of whom will claim to be a prophet but I am the seal of the prophets there is no prophet after me 5 15 16 17 Hudhayfah ibn al Yaman reports that Muhammad said In my ummah there will be twenty seven liars and dajjals among whom are four women but I am the seal of the prophets there is no prophet after me 5 18 Classical lexicons EditAccording to the authoritative dictionary Lisan al Arab of Ibn Manzur The khitam of a group of people the khatim of them or the khatam of them is the last of them according to al Lihyani And Muhammad is khatim of the prophets At Tahdhib of al Azhari Khatim and khatam are among the names of the Prophet And in the Qur an Muhammad is not the father of any of your men but he is the Messenger of Allah and khatim of the prophets that is the last of them And It was also recited as khatam And the saying of al Ajjaj Blessed to the prophets is this khatim is based on the well known recitation with a kasrah khatim And also among his names is al aqib and its meaning is last of the prophets 19 According to Taj al Arus of al Zabidi Khatam The last of a people like khatim And with this definition is the saying in the Qur an khatam of the prophets that is the last of them 20 Further And among the names of the Prophet are khatam and khatim and he is the one who sealed prophethood by his coming 20 Traditional interpretation EditThe title is generally regarded by Muslims as meaning that Muhammad is the last in the series of prophets beginning with Adam 21 22 23 The belief that a new prophet cannot arise after Muhammad is shared by both Sunni and Shi a Muslims 24 25 Some of the most prominent historical Sunni texts on creed aqidah explicitly mention the doctrine of finality of prophethood 26 For example in al Aqidah at Tahawiyyah it is asserted that Every claim to the prophetic office after his is a delusion and a wandering desire 27 28 In another popular work al Aqidah an Nasafiyyah it is stated The first of the prophets is Adam and the last is Muhammad 29 Academic views EditHartwig Hirschfeld doubted the authenticity of the verse 33 40 and claimed it to be of late origin 30 Yohanan Friedmann states that Hirschfeld s arguments that the title khatam an nabiyyin is unusual that it only appears once in the Qur an that the word khatam is not Arabic do not seem valid arguments against the authenticity of the verse 1 Frants Buhl accepted the traditional meaning of last prophet 31 Josef Horovitz suggested two possible interpretations of khatam an nabiyyin the last prophet or the one who confirms the authenticity of the previous prophets 32 Heinrich Speyer agreed with Horovitz 33 According to Alford T Welch the traditional Muslim belief that Muhammad is last and greatest of the prophets is most likely based on a later interpretation of 33 40 34 The first modern academic to have studied in detail the history of the doctrine of finality of prophethood is Yohanan Friedmann 35 In his seminal article Finality of Prophethood in Sunni Islam 1986 he concluded that although the notion of finality of prophethood eventually acquired an undisputed and central place in the religious thought of Islam it was contested during the first century AH 1 He states While it is true that the phrase khatam an nabiyyin is generally interpreted as meaning the last prophet the exegetical tradition and other branches of classical Arabic literature preserved material which indicates that this now generally received understanding of the Qur anic phrase is not the only possible one and had not necessarily been the earliest 1 35 Due to this Friedmann states that the meaning of khatam an nabiyyin in its original Qur anic context is still in doubt 1 Wilferd Madelung takes Friedmann s findings into consideration in observing that the original Qur anic meaning of the term is not entirely certain 35 36 However in a more recent paper he states Most Muslims at the time no doubt understood it to mean that he was to be the last prophet and Islam was the final religion as Muslims have commonly understood it ever since 37 Carl W Ernst considers the phrase to mean that Muhammad s imprint on history is as final as a wax seal on a letter 38 David Powers also making use of Friedmann s research believes that the early Muslim community was divided over the meaning of the expression with some understanding it to mean he fulfilled or confirmed the earlier Christian and Jewish revelations while others understood it as signifying that Muhammad brought the office of prophethood to a close He suggests that the Qur anic text underwent a series of secondary omissions and additions which were designed to adapt the text to the dogma of finality of prophethood and that the idea of finality only became the prevailing interpretation alongside the notion of confirmation or fulfilment by the end of the 1st century AH 7th century 35 39 In a review of Powers book Gerald Hawting goes further suggesting that the development of the doctrine was not complete before the 3rd century AH 9th century 35 40 Madelung comments that Power s argument that verses 36 40 are a later addition dating from the generation after Muhammad s death is hardly sustainable 37 Uri Rubin holds that the finality of prophethood is a Qur anic idea not a post Qur anic one and that the expression khatam an nabiyyin implies both finality of prophethood and confirmation In response to Powers and other modern scholars sceptical of the early origin of the doctrine Rubin concludes from his study that at least as far as Sura 33 is concerned the consonantal structure of the Qur anic text has not been tampered with and that the idea of finality of prophethood is well represented in the text as well as in the earliest available extra Quranic materials Rubin reexamines the early extra Qur anic texts cited by Friedmann and other modern scholars and concludes that rather than indicating that the notion of finality of prophethood is late the texts confirm the early origin of the belief He concludes that there is no compelling reason to assume that the Muslims of the first Islamic century originally understood the Qur anic khatam an nabiyyin in the sense of confirmation alone without that of finality 35 Official mandates EditSee also Majlis e Tahaffuz e Khatme Nabuwwat In Pakistan voters before voting and leaders before assuming their offices have to declare in writing and take an oath of finality of prophethood i e Khatm i Nabuwat any one not subscribing is considered claiming otherwise and a non Muslim and may face persecution and loss of opportunities 41 Quranic verses and Ahadith pertaining to the finality of prophethood have to be displayed prominently in Government offices and at entrances to districts along highways 42 On 22 June 2020 the Government of Pakistan made it mandatory that term Urdu خاتم النبیین romanized Khataman Nabiyin be added to the name of Islamic prophet Muhammad in textbooks and official documents 43 44 45 46 where previously it was passed on 15 June in the Sindh Assembly 47 48 49 In October 2021 Punjab Pakistan provincial assembly recommended inclusion of oath of Khatm i Nabuwat in the Nikah marriage documents 50 Similarly the Khatumo administration based in Buuhoodle and centred on the Sool central Sanaag and Ayn regions of northern Somalia claims its title is derived from the Quranic injunction of Khatam an Nabiyyin 51 Ahmadiyya interpretation EditMain article Prophethood Ahmadiyya The Ahmadiyya Community believe that Muhammad brought prophethood to perfection and was the last prophet to have brought a complete and comprehensive universal law for humanity but prophethood subordinate to Muhammad is still open 52 53 New prophets may be born but they must be seen as subordinate to Muhammad and cannot create any new law or religion 54 Mirza Ghulam Ahmad who founded the movement in Qadian India in 1889 is believed to be the promised Messiah and Mahdi He claimed a kind of prophethood believed he had been divinely appointed to revive and universally establish Islam but not to have add to or change the laws of God or Muhammad 55 This has caused controversy between Ahmadis and more mainstream Muslims who accuse them of denying the finality of prophethood 56 57 58 Ahmadiyya Muslims are subjected to considerable persecution for their beliefs 59 Bahaʼi Faith view EditThe Bahaʼi Faith regards Muhammad as a Manifestation of God and as the Seal of the Prophets 60 but does not believe Revelation or Scripture from God has ended In particular Bahaʼis regard the end times prophecies of Islam and other faiths as being both metaphorical and literal 61 and see the Bab and Baha u llah as fulfilling these prophetic expectations The latter of these is the founder of the Bahaʼi religion which considers Islamic law as secondary or tertiary to its own Muhammad is seen as ending the Adamic cycle also known as the Prophetic cycle which is stated by Baha is to have begun approximately 6 000 years ago 62 63 and the Bab and Baha u llah as starting the Bahaʼi cycle or Cycle of Fulfilment which will last at least five hundred thousand years with numerous Manifestations of God appearing throughout this time 64 65 Moreover Mirza Husayn Ali Nuri Baha u llah gave the Title King of the Messengers sultan al rusul to the Bab and the Sender of the Messengers mursil al rusul to himself Additionally the Kitab i Iqan shows the Islamic concept of the oneness of the prophets and the Hadith knowledge is a single point which the foolish have multiplied 66 to reveal that the term Seal of the Prophets like Alpha and Omega apply to all the prophets Whilst established upon the seat of the first they occupy the throne of the last 67 In summary these interpretive and legal differences have caused the Baha is to be seen as heretics and apostates by some Muslims which has led to their persecution in different countries citation needed References Edit a b c d e f g h Friedmann Yohanan 1986 Finality of Prophethood in Sunni Islam Jerusalem Studies in Arabic and Islam 7 177 215 a b at Tabari Jami al Bayan fi Tafsir al Qur an in Arabic 33 40 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location link al Qurtubi al Jami al Ahkam al Qur an in Arabic 33 40 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location link Comparison of Ayat by Riwayat Surah al Ahzab v 30 nQuran com in Arabic a b c as Suyuti Durr al Manthur 33 40 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location link الشواهد Corroborating narrations for this hadith Islamweb com Sahih al Bukhari Kitab al Manaqib Hadith 44 Sunnah com Muslim Sahih Muslim Kitab al Fada il Hadith 24 Sunnah com al Bukhari Sahih al Bukhari 3293 Muslim Sahih Muslim 4246 Ahmad ibn Hanbal Musnad Ahmad ibn Hanbal 8959 an Nasa i Sunan al Kubra 10907 Ibn Hibban Sahih Ibn Hibban 6541 Islamweb net at Tabarani Mu jam al Awsat 3382 Islamweb net Ibn Hibban Sahih Ibn Hibban 6543 Islamweb net Muslim Sahih Muslim Kitab al Fada il Hadith 26 Sunnah com Muslim Sahih Muslim 4247 Ahmad ibn Hanbal Musnad Ahmad ibn Hanbal 14593 Islamweb net Abu Dawud at Tayalisi Musnad Abi Dawud at Tayalisi 1884 Islamweb net at Tirmidhi Jami at Tirmidhi Kitab al Fitan Hadith 62 Sunnah com Abu Dawud as Sijistani Sunan Abi Dawud Kitab al Fitan wal Malahim Hadith 13 Sunnah com at Tirmidhi Jami at Tirmidhi 2149 Abu Dawud as Sijistani Sunan Abi Dawud 3712 Ibn Hibban Sahih Ibn Hibban 7395 Islamweb net Ahmad ibn Hanbal Musnad Ahmad ibn Hanbal 22747 at Tabarani Mu jam al Awsat 5596 Mu jam al Kabir 2957 at Tahawi Mushkil al Athar 2493 Islamweb net Ibn Manẓur 1883 Written 1290 لسان العرب Lisan al Arab in Arabic Vol 15 Bulaq Miṣr Bulaq Egypt al Maṭba ah al Miriyah p 55 وخ تام الق و م وخات م ه م وخات م ه م آخر هم عن اللحياني ومحمد صلى الله عليه وسلم خات م الأنبياء عليه وعليهم الصلاة والسلام التهذيب والخات م والخات م من أسماء النبي صلى الله عليه وسلم وفي التنزيل العزيز ما كان محمد أبا أحد من رجالكم ولكن رسول الله وخات م النبيين أي آخرهم قال وقد قرئ وخات م وقول العجاج م بار ك للأنبياء خات م إنما حمله على القراءة المشهورة فكسر ومن أسمائه العاقب أيضا ومعناه آخر الأنبياء a b al Zabidi 2000 Written 1774 تاج العروس Taj al Arus in Arabic Vol 32 1st ed Kuwayt Kuwait al Majlis al Waṭani lith Thaqafah wa l Funun wa l Adab p 45 والخات م آخر القوم كالخات م ومنه قوله تعالى وخاتم النبيين أي أخرهم p 48 ومن أسمائه صلى الله عليه وسلم الخات م والخات م وهو الذي خ ت م النبوة بم ج يئه Esposito John L ed 2003 Khatam al Nabiyyin The Oxford Dictionary of Islam Oxford Oxford University Press p 171 Khatam al Nabiyyin Seal of the prophets Phrase occurs in Quran 33 40 referring to Muhammad and is regarded by Muslims as meaning that he is the last of the series of prophets that began with Adam Mir Mustansir 1987 Seal of the Prophets The Dictionary of Qur anic Terms and Concepts New York Garland Publishing p 171 Muḥammad is called the seal of the prophets in 33 40 The expression means that Muḥammad is the final prophet and that the institution of prophecy after him is sealed Hughes Thomas Patrick 1885 K HATIMU N NABiYiN A Dictionary of Islam Being a Cyclopaedia of the Doctrines Rites Ceremonies and Customs Together with the Technical and Theological Terms of the Muhammadan Religion London W H Allen p 270 K HATIMU N NABiYiN خاتم النبيين The seal of the Prophets A title assumed by Muhammad in the Qur an Surah xxxiii 40 He is the Apostle of God and the seal of the Prophets By which is meant that he is the last of the Prophets Goldziher Ignac 1981 Sects Introduction to Islamic Theology and Law Translated by Andras and Ruth Hamori from the German Vorlesungen uber den Islam 1910 Princeton New Jersey Princeton University Press pp 220 221 ISBN 9780691100999 Sunni and Shi i theology alike understood it to mean that Muhammad ended the series of Prophets that he had accomplished for all eternity what his predecessors had prepared that he was God s last messenger delivering God s last message to mankind Martin Richard C ed 2004 Ali Encyclopedia of Islam and the Muslim World Vol 1 New York Macmillan p 37 Yasin R Cecep Lukan 18 February 2010 The Twelver Shi i Understanding on the Finality of Prophethood Al Jami ah Journal of Islamic Studies 48 1 doi 10 14421 ajis 2010 481 129 164 Elder E E 1933 Al Ṭaḥawi s Bayan al Sunna wa l Jama a The Macdonald Presentation Volume Princeton University Press 129 144 Aḥmad ibn Muḥammad aṭ Ṭaḥawi متن العقيدة الطحاوية Matn al Aqidah aṭ Ṭaḥawiyah in Arabic via Wikisource وكل دعوى النبوة بعده فغ ي وهوى Elder E E 1950 A Commentary on the Creed of Islam Sa d al Din al Taftazani on the Creed of Najm al Din al Nasafi New York Columbia University Press p 130 Hirschfeld Hartwig 1886 Beitrage zur Erklarung des Ḳoran in German Leipzig p 71 Cited by Friedmann Buhl F Muhammad Encyclopedia of Islam p 650a Cited by Friedmann Horovitz Josef 1926 Koranische Untersuchungen in German Berlin p 53 Cited by Friedmann Speyer Heinrich 1931 Die Biblischen Erzahlungen im Qoran in German Berlin pp 422 423 Cited by Friedmann Buhl F Welch A T Muhammad Encyclopedia of Islam new ed a b c d e f Rubin Uri 2014 The Seal of the Prophets and the Finality of Prophecy Zeitschrift der Deutschen Morgenlandischen Gesellschaft 164 1 65 96 Madelung Wilferd 1997 The succession to Muhammad a study of the early Caliphate Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 17 ISBN 9780521646963 a b Madelung Wilferd 2014 Social Legislation in Surat al Ahzab The Institute of Ismaili Studies Archived from the original on 12 October 2014 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help An edited version of an article that originally appeared in the Proceedings of the 25th Congress of L Union Europeenne des Arabisants et Islamisants in 2013 Ernst Carl W 2003 Following Muhammad Rethinking Islam in the Contemporary World Chapel Hill University of North Carolina Press p 80 ISBN 9780807855775 Powers David S 2009 Muḥammad is Not the Father of Any of Your Men The Making of the Last Prophet Philadelphia University of Pennsylvania Press ISBN 9780812241785 Hawting G R 1 February 2011 Muhammad Is Not the Father of Any of Your Men The Making of the Last Prophet Islamic Law and Society 18 1 116 119 doi 10 1163 156851910X538396 Desk Web 27 October 2021 Punjab Assembly backs including Khatm i Nabuwat oath in nikahnama Aaj tv Retrieved 28 October 2021 Reporter The Newspaper s Staff 29 September 2021 Punjab Assembly for display of Quranic verses on prophethood in govt offices DAWN COM Retrieved 28 October 2021 قومی اسمبلی نصابی کتب میں حضرت محمدﷺ کے نام کیساتھ خاتم النبیین لکھنے کی قرارداد منظور National Assembly Resolution passed to write Khatam un Nabiyyin with the name of Hazrat Muhammad Peace Be Upon Him in textbooks جنگ in Urdu 22 June 2020 Archived from the original on 22 June 2020 Retrieved 24 June 2020 NA unanimously adopts resolution regarding Khatam un Nabiyeen MMNews 23 June 2020 Retrieved 24 June 2020 NA Passes Historic Resolution To Write Khatam Un Nabiyyin With Prophet Muhammad s PBUH Name Parhlo 23 June 2020 Retrieved 24 June 2020 NA passes resolution to write Khatam un Nabiyeen with name of Prophet PBUH DialoguePakistan 23 June 2020 Retrieved 24 June 2020 Samar Azim 16 June 2020 Sindh Assembly passes unanimous resolution The News Archived from the original on 16 June 2020 Retrieved 24 June 2020 Sindh Assembly passes unanimous resolution TheWorld News 16 June 2020 Retrieved 24 June 2020 Mehmood Shahid 15 June 2020 Sindh Assembly unanimously passes resolution to make it mandatory to write Khatam un Nabiyyin with Hazrat Muhammad PBUH 92News Retrieved 24 June 2020 Reporter The Newspaper s Staff 27 October 2021 Punjab Assembly backs Khatm i Nabuwat oath in marriage documents DAWN COM Retrieved 28 October 2021 Stremlau Nicole Governance without Government in the Somali territories Journal of International Affairs 71 2 2018 73 89 Yohanan Friedmann Prophecy Continuous Aspects of Ahmadi Religious Thought and its Medieval Background Oxford University Press 2003 p 119 46 Finality of Prophethood Hadhrat Muhammad PUBH the Last Prophet Ahmadiyya Muslim Community Finality of Prophethood Hadhrat Muhammad PUBH the Last Prophet Ahmadiyya Muslim Community The Question of Finality of Prophethood The Promised Mehdi and Messiha by Dr Aziz Ahmad Chaudhry Islam International Publications Limited Andrea Lathan 2008 The Relativity of Categorizing in the Context of the Aḥmadiyya Die Welt des Islams 48 3 4 p 378 It is primarily Ghulam Aḥmad s prophetical claim based on his reinterpretation of the prophetology mentioned above that distinguishes the Aḥmadiyya Muslim Jamaʿat from the Muslim mainstream In spite of the differentiation Ghulam Aḥmad had made between the two kinds of prophets and his acceptance of Muḥammad as the last law bearing one many of his adversaries consider his claim as an offence against the finality of Muḥammad G Bowering et al 2013 The Princeton Encyclopedia of Islamic Political Thought Princeton Princeton University Press p 25 In Pakistan most say Ahmadis are not Muslim 10 September 2013 Persecution of the Ahmadiyya Community in Pakistan An Analysis Under International Law and International Relations Harvard Human Rights Journal Vol 16 September 2003Violent Dhaka Rally against Sect BBC News Eight die in Pakistan Sect Attack BBC News Sect offices closed in Pakistan BBC News Baha u llah Mirza Husayn Ali Nuri Gleanings from the Writings of Baha u llah bahai org Retrieved 17 April 2017 Baha u llah Mirza Husayn Ali Nuri Commentary of the Surah of the Sun bahai library com Retrieved 30 March 2017 Letter written on behalf of the Universal House of Justice to an individual believer 13 March 1986 Published in Effendi Shoghi The Universal House of Justice 1983 Hornby Helen ed Lights of Guidance A Bahaʼi Reference File Bahaʼi Publishing Trust New Delhi India p 500 ISBN 81 85091 46 3 Taherzadeh Adib 1977 The Revelation of Baha u llah Volume 2 Adrianople 1863 68 Oxford UK George Ronald p 352 ISBN 0 85398 071 3 Seena Fazel and Khazeh Fananapazir 1993 A Bahaʼi Approach to the Claim of Finality in Islam Journal of Bahaʼi Studies 5 3 17 40 doi 10 31581 jbs 5 3 2 1993 Personal Interpretation of the term Seal of the Prophets bahai library com Baha u llah Mirza Husayn Ali Nuri Kitab i Iqan bahai org Retrieved 30 March 2017 Baha u llah Mirza Husayn Ali Nuri Kitab i Iqan bahai org Retrieved 30 March 2017 External links Edit Quotations related to Seal of the Prophets at Wikiquote Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Seal of the Prophets amp oldid 1131560182, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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