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Mary in Islam

Maryam bint Imran (Arabic: مَرْيَم بِنْت عِمْرَان, romanizedMaryam bint ʿImrān, lit.'Mary, daughter of Imran') is revered in Islam as the only woman named in the Quran, which refers to her seventy times and explicitly identifies her as the greatest woman to have ever lived.[1][2][3] In the Quran, her story is related in three Meccan surahs (19, 21, 23) and four Medinan surahs (3, 4, 5, 66). The nineteenth Surah, Maryam, is named after her. The Quran refers to Mary more often than the Bible.[4]

Maryam
مَرْيَم
Mary
Titleal-Qānitah (the Woman who submits to God)
al-Sājidah (the Woman who prostrates to God)
al-Rāki’ah (the Woman who bows to God)
al-Sa’ima (the Woman who fasts)
al-Ṭāhirah (the Purified)
al-Ṣiddīqah (the Truthful)
al-Mustafia (the Chosen)
Personal
Bornc. 20 BCE
Diedc. 100–120 CE
Resting placeMary's Tomb, Kidron Valley (possibly)
ReligionIslam
ChildrenIsa (son)
Parents
Muslim leader
PredecessorYahya
SuccessorIsa
Mary's relation to John and Zechariah
Mary and Jesus in a Persian miniature[5]

According to the Quran, Mary's parents had been praying for a child. Their request was eventually accepted by God, and Mary's mother became pregnant. Her father Imran had died before the child was born. After her birth, she was taken care of by her maternal uncle Zechariah. According to the Quran, Mary received messages from God through the archangel Gabriel. God informed Mary that she had miraculously conceived a child through the intervention of the divine spirit, though she was still a virgin. The name of her child is chosen by God, being Isa (Jesus), who would be the "anointed one", the Promised Messiah. As such, orthodox Islamic belief has upheld the virgin birth of Jesus,[6] and although the classical Islamic thinkers never dwelt on the question of the perpetual virginity of Mary,[6] it was generally agreed in traditional Islam that Mary remained a virgin throughout her life, with the Quran's mention of Mary's purification “from the touch of men” implying perpetual virginity in the minds of many of the most prominent Islamic fathers.[7]

Mary is believed to have been chosen by God, above all "the women of the worlds" in Islam.[6] She is referred to by various titles in the Quran, with the most prominent being al-Qānitah.

Family

The Quran calls Mary "the daughter of Imran"[8] and it mentions that people called her a "sister of Aaron (Harun)".[9] Her mother, mentioned in the Quran only as the wife of Imran, prayed for a child and eventually conceived.[10] According to al-Tabari, Mary's mother was named Hannah (Arabic: هنا), and Imran (Arabic: عمران), her husband, died before the child was born.[11] Expecting the child to be male, Hannah vowed to dedicate him to isolation and service in the Temple.[10] However, Hannah bore a daughter instead, and named her Maryam.[12][13][14]

In the Quran

Mary is mentioned frequently in the Quran,[15] and her narrative occurs consistently from the earliest chapters, revealed in Mecca, to the latest verses, revealed in Medina.

Birth

The birth of Mary is narrated in the Quran with references to her father as well as her mother. Mary's father is called Imran. He is the equivalent of Joachim in Christian tradition. Her mother, according to al-Tabari, is called Hannah,[11] which is the same name as in Christian tradition (Saint Anne). Muslim literature narrates that Imran and his wife were old and childless and that, one day, the sight of a bird in a tree feeding her young aroused Anne's desire for a child. She prayed to God to fulfill her desire[16] and vowed, if her prayer was accepted, that her child would be dedicated to the service of God.

According to Iraqi scholar and translator, N.J. Dawood, the Quran confuses Mary mother of Jesus with Mary the sister of Moses, when it refers to the father of Mary, the mother of Jesus, as Imran, which is the Arabic version of Amram, who is shown to be the father of Moses in Exodus 6:20.[17] Dawood, in a note to Quran 19:28, where Mary the Mother of Jesus is referred to as the "Sister of Aaron", and Aaron was the brother of Mary sister of Moses, states: "It Appears that Miriam, Aaron's sister, and Maryam (Mary), mother of Jesus, were according to the Koran, one and the same person."[18] Although Islamic studies of the beginning of the 20th century tended to see this as a mistake in genealogy, in more recent Islamic Studies of the 21st century the general consensus is, according to Angelika Neuwirth, Nicolai Sinai & Michael Marx, that the Quran does not make a genealogical error but instead makes use of Typology.[19] This is, following Wensincks conclusion, supported by the figurative speech of the Quran and the Islamic tradition:

Maryam is called a sister of Hārūn and the use of these three names Imrān, Hārūn and Maryam, has led to the supposition that the Kur'ān does not clearly distinguish between the two Maryams of the Old and the New Testaments. It is not necessary to assume that these kinship links are to be interpreted in modern terms. The words "sister" and "daughter", like their male counterparts, in Arabic usage can indicate extended kinship, descendance or spiritual affinity. Muslim tradition is clear that there are eighteen centuries between the Biblical Amram and the father of Maryam.[20][21]

Similarly, Stowasser concludes that "to confuse Mary the mother of Jesus with Mary the sister of Moses and Aaron in Torah is completely wrong and in contradiction to the sound Hadith and the Qur'anic text as we have established".[22][23]

 
Mary and the infant Jesus in a 15th-century manuscript, Baghdad

The Quranic account of Mary's birth does not affirm an Immaculate Conception for Mary as Islam does not accept the doctrine of original sin, or an inherited fault in humans, as it is found in Christianity.[24][25]

Early years

The Quran does not, specifically, point to the fact that Mary lived and grew up in a temple as the word miḥ'rāb in Quran 3:36 in its literal meaning refers to a private chamber[26][27] or a public/private prayer chamber.[28] The definitive idea of Mary growing up in a temple derived via external literature (i.e. see the narration below by Ja'far al-Sadiq). She was placed under the care of the prophet Zakariya, the husband of Hannah's sister and Mary's maternal uncle and caretaker.[29]: 16  As often as Zechariah entered Mary's prayer chamber, he found her provided with food[30] and he would ask her where she received it from, to which she would reply that God provides to whom He wills. Scholars have debated as to whether this refers to miraculous food that Mary received from God or whether it was normal food. Those in favor of the former view state that it had to be miraculous food, as Zechariah being a prophet, would have known that God is the provider of all sustenance and thus would not have questioned Mary, if it was normal food.

Imam Ja'far al-Sadiq narrates that when Maryam was grown, she would go into the mihrab and put on a covering so no one saw her. Zechariah went into the mihrab and found that she had summer fruit in the winter and winter fruit in the summer. He asked "From whence is this?" She said, "It is from Allah. Indeed, Allah provides for whom He wills without account"[3:37].[29]: 16–17 

Annunciation

 
Annunciation in The Remaining Signs of Past Centuries, folio 162v. Bibliothèque nationale de France, Département des manuscrits, Arabe 1489.

The virgin birth of Jesus is supremely important in Islam, as one of the most important miracles of God. The first explicit mention of an annunciation foreshadowing the birth of Jesus is in Quran 19:20 where Mary asks Gabriel (Jibril) how she will be able to conceive, when no man has touched her. Gabriel's reply assures Mary that for God all things are easy and that Jesus's virgin birth will be a sign for mankind.[31] The birth is later referred in Quran 66:12,[32] where the Quran states that Mary remained "pure", while God allowed a life to shape itself in Mary's womb. A third mention of the annunciation is in Q3:42–43, where Mary is also given the glad tidings that she has been chosen above all the women of creation.[33]

Commentators on the Quran remark on the last verse that Mary was as close to a perfect woman as there could be, and she was devoid of almost all failings.[34] Although Islam honors numerous women, including Hawwa, Hagar, Sarah, Asiya, Khadijah, Fatimah, Ayesha, Hafsa many commentators[35] followed this verse in the absolute sense, and agreed that Mary was the greatest woman of all time.[34] Other commentators, however, while maintaining that Mary was the "queen of the saints", interpreted this verse to mean that Mary was the greatest woman of that time and that Fatimah, Khadijah and Asiya were equally great.[34][36] According to exegesis and literature, Gabriel appeared to Mary, who was still young in age, in the form of a well-made man with a "shining face" and announced to her the birth of Jesus. After her immediate astonishment, she was reassured by the angel's answer that God has the power to do anything.[34] The details of the conception are not discussed during these Angelic visits, but elsewhere the Quran states (Quran 21:91)[37] and 66:12[32]) that God breathed "His Spirit" into Mary while she was chaste.[38][39]

Virgin birth

 
Mary shaking the palm tree for dates during the pains of labor. Parallels to this legend are found in the Gospel of Pseudo-Matthew, but linked to the flight to Egypt.[40]

According to the Quran, Mary was chosen twice by the Lord: "O Mary! Verily Allah has chosen you and purified you and chosen you above the women of the worlds" (Quran 3:42); and the first choosing was her selection with glad tidings given to Imran. The second was that she became pregnant without a man, so in this regard, she was chosen over all other women in the world.[29]: 16 

The Quran narrates the virgin birth of Jesus numerous times. In chapter 19 (Maryam), verses (ayat) 17–21,[41] the annunciation is given, followed by the virgin birth in due course. In Islam, Jesus is called the "spirit of God" because he was through the action of the spirit, but that belief does not include the doctrine of his pre-existence, as it does in Christianity.[42] Quran 3:47 also supports the virginity of Mary, revealing that "no man has touched [her]".[43] Quran 66:12[32] states that Jesus was born when the spirit of God breathed upon Mary, whose body was chaste.[44]

According to the Quran, the following conversation transpired between the angel Gabriel and Mary when he appeared to her in the form of a man:

And mention, [O Muhammad], in the Book [the story of] Mary, when she withdrew from her family to a place toward the east. And she took, in seclusion from them, a screen. Then We sent to her Our spirit, and he represented himself to her as a well-proportioned man. She said, "Indeed, I seek refuge in the Most Merciful from you, [so leave me], if you should be fearing of Allah." He said, "I am only the messenger of your Lord to give you a pure boy." She said, "How can I have a boy while no man has touched me and I have not been unchaste?" He said, "Thus [it will be]; your Lord says, 'It is easy for Me, and We will make him a sign to the people and a mercy from Us. And it is a matter [already] decreed.'[19:16-21]

The Quran's narrative of the virgin birth is somewhat different from that in the New Testament. The Quran states that when the pains of childbirth came upon Mary, she held onto a nearby palm tree, at which point a voice came from "beneath the (palm-tree)" or "beneath her", which said " "Grieve not! for thy Lord hath provided a rivulet beneath thee; "And shake towards thyself the trunk of the palm-tree: It will let fall fresh ripe dates upon thee."[45] The Quran goes on to describe that Mary vowed not to speak to any man on that day,[46] as God was to make Jesus, who Muslims believe spoke in the cradle, perform his first miracle. The Quran goes on to narrate that Mary then brought Jesus to the temple, where immediately she began to be taunted by all the men, excluding Zechariah, who believed in the virgin birth. The Israelites questioned Mary how she came to be with child whilst unmarried, to which Mary pointed to the baby Jesus. It was then that, according to the Quran, the infant Jesus began to speak in the cradle, and spoke of his prophecy for the first time.[47]

According to Imam Ja'far al-Sadiq, Jesus the son of Mary used to cry intensely as a child, so that Mary was at wits end regarding his profuse crying. He said to her, "Get some of the bark of that tree, make a tonic from it and feed me with it." When he drank it, he cried intensely. Mary said, "What sort of prescription did you give me?" He said, "Oh my mother! Knowledge of prophet-hood and weakness of childhood."[29]: 23 

The Fatimid Ismaili jurist Qadi al-Nu’man holds that the virgin birth of Jesus is meant to be interpreted symbolically. In his interpretation, Mary was the follower (lāḥiq), of the Imam Joachim (‘Imran). However, when Joachim realized that she was not suited for the Imamah, he passed it to Zechariah, who then passed it to John the Baptist. Meanwhile, Mary received spiritual inspiration (mādda) from God, revealing that he would invite a man [to the faith] who would become an exalted Speaker (nāṭiq) of a revealed religion (sharīʿa). According to al-Nu’man, the verses “She said: Lord! How can I have a child when no man has touched me?” (Quran 3:47) and “neither have I been unchaste” (Quran 19:20) are symbolic of Mary's saying, “How can I conduct the invitation (daʿwa) when the Imam of the Time has not given me permission to do so?” and “Nor shall I be unfaithful by acting against his command”, respectively. To this, a celestial hierarch replies “Such is God. He creates [i.e., causes to pass] what he wills” (Quran 3:47).[48]

Islamic tradition

Mary is one of the most honored figures in Islamic theology, with Muslims viewing her as one of the most righteous women to have lived as per the Quranic verse, with reference to the Angelical salutation during the annunciation, "O Mary, God has chosen you, and purified you; He has chosen you above all the women of creation."[49]. A minority of Muslims also view her as a prophet.[50] Muslim women look upon her as an example and are known to visit both Muslim and Christian shrines. Muslim tradition, like Christian, honors her memory at Matariyyah near Cairo, and in Jerusalem. Muslims also visit the Bath of Mary in Jerusalem, where Muslim tradition recounts Mary once bathed, and this location was visited at times by women who were seeking a cure for barrenness.[51] Some plants have also been named after Mary, such as Maryammiah, which, as tradition recounts, acquired its sweet scent when Mary wiped her forehead with its leaves. Another plant is Kaff Maryam (Anastatica), which was used by some Muslim women to help in pregnancy, and the water of this plant was given to women to drink while praying.

Islamic literature does not recount many instances from Mary's later life, and her assumption is not present in any Muslim records. Nevertheless, some contemporary Muslim scholars, an example being Martin Lings, accepted the assumption as being a historical event from Mary's life.[52] One of the lesser-known events which are recorded in Muslim literature is that of Mary visiting Rome with John and Thaddeus (Jude), the disciples (al-Hawāriyūn) of Jesus, during the reign of Nero.[53]

Qadi al-Nu'man, the twelfth century Ismaili Muslim jurist and luminary, in his book on the esoteric interpretation of faith, Asās al-Ta'wīl, talks about the spiritual birth (milad al-bātin) of Jesus, as an interpretation of his story of physical birth (milad al-zāhir). He says that Mary, the mother of Jesus, was a metaphor for someone who nurtured and instructed Jesus, rather than physically giving birth to him. He also pointed out that Zachariah (The Imam of the Time) appointed Mary as one of his proofs (sing. hujja).[48]

Titles

  • Qānitah: Mary is so-called in Quran 66:12.[32] The Arabic term implies the meaning, not only of constant submission to God but also absorption in prayer and invocation, meanings that coincides with the image of Mary spending her childhood in the temple of prayer. In this way, Mary personifies prayer and contemplation in Islam.
  • Siddiqah: She who confirms the truth or She who has faith. Mary is called Siddiqah twice in the Quran (Q5:73–75 and Q66:12).[32][54] The term has also been translated, She who believes sincerely completely.
  • Sājidahا: She who prostrates to God in worship. The Quran states: "O Mary! Worship your Lord devoutly: prostrate yourself".[55] While in Sujud, a Muslim is to praise God and glorify Him. In this motion, which Muslims believe to be derived from Marian nature, hands, knees, and the forehead touch the ground together.
  • Rāki’ahا: She who bows down to God in worship. The Quran states: "O Mary! Bow down in prayer with those men, who bow down." The command was repeated by angels only to Mary, according to the Muslim view. Ruku' in Muslim prayer during prayer has been derived from Mary's practice.
  • Tāhirah: She who was purified.[56]
  • Mustafiahا: She who was chosen. The Quran states: "O Mary! God has chosen you and purified you and again he has chosen you above all women of all nations of the worlds".[56]
  • Sa’imah: She who fasts. Mary is reported to fast one-half of a year in some Muslim traditions.

Many other names of Mary can be found in various other books and religious collections. In Hadith, she has been referred to by names such as Batul, Adhraa' (Ascetic Virgin), and Marhumah (Enveloped in God's Mercy).[57]

Legacy

Mosques named after Mary:

  1. Mary Mother of Jesus Mosque in Hoppers Crossing, Victoria, Australia.[58]
  2. Mosque Maryam (Mary), the Nation of Islam National Center, Chicago, IL
  3. Qal'bu Maryam Women's Mosque (Heart of Mary), Berkeley, CA
  4. Maryam Umm Eisa (Mary Mother of Jesus), Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates[59]
  5. Mariam Al-Batool Mosque (Virgin Mary) in Paola, Malta
  6. Mary (Ahmadiyyah) Mosque in Galway, Ireland.

Gallery

See also

References

  1. ^ Qur'an 3:42; cited in Stowasser, Barbara Freyer, “Mary”, in: Encyclopaedia of the Qurʾān, General Editor: Jane Dammen McAuliffe, Georgetown University, Washington DC.
  2. ^ J.D. McAuliffe, Chosen of all women
  3. ^ J.-M. Abd-el-Jalil, Marie et l'Islam, Paris 1950
  4. ^ Esposito, John. What Everyone Needs to Know About Islam. New York: University Press, 2002. P31.; cf. Stowasser, Barbara Freyer, “Mary”, in: Encyclopaedia of the Qurʾān, General Editor: Jane Dammen McAuliffe, Georgetown University, Washington DC.
  5. ^ Enzyklopadie des Islam English translation of German article about "Maria" at eslam.de
  6. ^ a b c Stowasser, Barbara Freyer, “Mary”, in: Encyclopaedia of the Qurʾān, General Editor: Jane Dammen McAuliffe, Georgetown University, Washington DC.
  7. ^ e.g. Rāzī, Tafsīr, viii, 46
  8. ^ Clooney S.J., Francis X., "What Islam really teaches about the Virgin Mary", America, December 18, 2015
  9. ^ Quran 19:28
  10. ^ a b Quran 3:35
  11. ^ a b Ayoub, Mahmoud M. (2013-05-21). The Qur'an and Its Interpreters: Volume 2: Surah 3. Islamic Book Trust. p. 93. ISBN 978-967-5062-91-9.
  12. ^ Wheeler, Brannon M. (2002). Prophets in the Quran: an introduction to the Quran and Muslim exegesis. Continuum International Publishing Group. pp. 297–302. ISBN 0-8264-4957-3.
  13. ^ Da Costa, Yusuf (2002). The Honor of Women in Islam. LegitMaddie101. ISBN 1-930409-06-0.
  14. ^ Quran 3:36
  15. ^ Lejla Demiri, "Mary in the Qur’an" pp. 9-11 L’OSSERVATORE ROMANO, 51st year, No. 29 (2556) Friday, 20 July 2018. → Download pdf file here [1]
  16. ^ Quran 3:31
  17. ^ Dawood, N J (1956). The Koran. London: Penguin Books. p. 53. ISBN 9780141393841.
  18. ^ Dawood, N J (1956). The Koran. London: Penguin Books. p. 306. ISBN 9780141393841.
  19. ^ Michael Marx: Glimpses of a Mariology in the Qur'an; in: A. Neuwirth, Nicolai Sinai, Michael Marx (Hrsg.): The Qur'ān in Context. Historical and Literary Investigations into the Qur'ānic Milieu. Leiden 2011. pp. 533–563.
  20. ^ Arent Jan Wensinck: Maryam. In: A. J. Wensinck, J. H. Kramers (Hrsg.): Handwörterbuch des Islam. pp. 421–423.
  21. ^ A. J. Wensinck (Penelope Johnstone), "Maryam" in C. E. Bosworth, E. van Donzel, W. P. Heinrichs & Ch. Pellat (Eds.), The Encyclopaedia Of Islam (New Edition), 1991, Volume VI, p. 630.
  22. ^ B. F. Stowasser, Women In The Qur'an, Traditions, And Interpretation, 1994, Oxford University Press: New York, p. 393-394.
  23. ^ Aliah Schleifer, Mary The Blessed Virgin Of Islam, 1998, op. cit., p. 36.
  24. ^ Cleo McNelly Kearns. (2008), The Virgin Mary, Monotheism and Sacrifice, New York: Cambridge University Press, p. 254–5
  25. ^ Malik Ghulam Farid, et al. (1988) Āl ʻImrān, The Holy Quran with English Translation and Commentary Vol. II, p.386–8, Tilford: Islam International
  26. ^ "Corpus Quran Surah 34:13 maḥārība referred to as an elevated chamber".
  27. ^ Quran translation by Yusuf Ali. "Quran".
  28. ^ "The Quranic Arabic Corpus". Every time Zechariah entered upon her in the prayer chamber
  29. ^ a b c d Qa'im, Mahdi Muntazir (2007). Jesus Through the Qur'an and Shi'ite Narrations (bilingual ed.). Queens, New York: Tahrike Tarsile Qur'an. pp. 14–15. ISBN 978-1879402140.
  30. ^ Quran 3:37
  31. ^ Quran 19:20–22 Sura 19:20 She said: "How shall I have a son, seeing that no man has touched me, and I am not unchaste?"
    19:21 He said: "So (it will be): Thy Lord saith, 'that is easy for Me: and (We wish) to appoint him as a Sign unto men and a Mercy from Us':It is a matter (so) decreed."
    19:22 So she conceived him, and she retired with him to a remote place.
  32. ^ a b c d e Quran 66:12
  33. ^ Quran 3:37–38
  34. ^ a b c d Bosworth, C.E. et al., The Encyclopaedia of Islam, Volume VI: Mahk-Mid, Brill: 1991, p. 629
  35. ^ Two such commentators were al-Razi and al-Qurtubi.
  36. ^ R. Arnaldez, Jesus fils de Marie prophete de l'Islam, Paris 1980, p. 77.
  37. ^ Quran 21:91
  38. ^ Islam: A Guide for Jews and Christians by F. E. Peters 2005 Princeton University Press ISBN 0-691-12233-4, p. 23.
  39. ^ Holy people of the world: a cross-cultural encyclopedia, Volume 1 by Phyllis G. Jestice 2004 ISBN 1-57607-355-6 pages 558–559
  40. ^ Leirvik, Oddbjørn (2010-05-27). Images of Jesus Christ in Islam: 2nd Edition. A&C Black. pp. 21, 33. ISBN 978-1-4411-8160-2.
  41. ^ Quran 19:17–21 Pickthall translation
  42. ^ Christianity, Islam, and the West by Robert A. Burns, 2011, ISBN page 32
  43. ^ Quran 3:47
  44. ^ Understand My Muslim People by Abraham Sarker 2004 ISBN 1-59498-002-0 page 127
  45. ^ Quran 19:24–25
  46. ^ Quran 19:26
  47. ^ Quran 19:27–33
  48. ^ a b Virani, Shafique (2019). "Hierohistory in Qāḍī l-Nuʿmān's Foundation of Symbolic Interpretation (Asās al-Taʾwīl): The Birth of Jesus". Studies in Islamic Historiography: 147–169. doi:10.1163/9789004415294_007. ISBN 9789004415294. S2CID 214047322.
  49. ^ Qur'an 3:42; cf. trans. Arberry and Pickthall; Stowasser, Barbara Freyer, “Mary”, in: Encyclopaedia of the Qurʾān, General Editor: Jane Dammen McAuliffe, Georgetown University, Washington DC.
  50. ^ Beyond The Exotic: Women's Histories In Islamic Societies, pg. 402. Ed. Amira El-Azhary Sonbol. Syracuse: Syracuse University Press, 2005. ISBN 9780815630555
  51. ^ T. Canaan, Muhammaden Saints and Sanctuaries in Palestine, in Journal of the Palestine Oriental Sac., iv/1–2, 1924, 1–84
  52. ^ Muhammad, M. Lings, pg. 101
  53. ^ Bosworth, C.E. et al., The Encyclopaedia of Islam, Volume VI: Mahk-Mid, Brill: 1991, p. 631
  54. ^ Quran 5:73–75
  55. ^ Quran 3:43
  56. ^ a b Quran 3:42
  57. ^ Khattan, Rahib; The Blessed names of Sayyidatina Maryam, pg 111
  58. ^ "Masjid Maryam (Virgin Mary) – Hoppers Crossing, Victoria". Foursquare.com. Retrieved 2013-11-03.
  59. ^ "UAE names Abu Dhabi mosque after Mary, mother of Jesus". Newsweek. 15 June 2017.

External links

  • Our Lady and Islam: Heaven's Peace Plan, an article by Father Ladis J. Cizik, Blue Army National Executive Director. Part of All About Mary, an encyclopedic tool for information on Mary, the Mother of Christ, compiled by the University of Dayton's Marian Library/International Marian Research Institute, the world's largest repository of books, artwork and artifacts devoted to Mary and a pontifical center of research and scholarship.
  • The Qur'an and Mary, part of All About Mary, an encyclopedic tool for information on Mary, the Mother of Christ, compiled by the University of Dayton's Marian Library/International Marian Research Institute.
  • Jesus and The Virgin Mary in Islam By Juan Galvan
  • Mary from Sufi Islam perspective

mary, islam, this, article, about, other, uses, saint, mary, disambiguation, virgin, mary, disambiguation, other, persons, named, maryam, maryam, name, maryam, bint, imran, arabic, ان, romanized, maryam, bint, ʿimrān, mary, daughter, imran, revered, islam, onl. This article is about Mary in Islam For other uses see Saint Mary disambiguation and Virgin Mary disambiguation For other persons named Maryam see Maryam name Maryam bint Imran Arabic م ر ي م ب ن ت ع م ر ان romanized Maryam bint ʿImran lit Mary daughter of Imran is revered in Islam as the only woman named in the Quran which refers to her seventy times and explicitly identifies her as the greatest woman to have ever lived 1 2 3 In the Quran her story is related in three Meccan surahs 19 21 23 and four Medinan surahs 3 4 5 66 The nineteenth Surah Maryam is named after her The Quran refers to Mary more often than the Bible 4 Maryamم ر ي م MaryTitleal Qanitah the Woman who submits to God al Sajidah the Woman who prostrates to God al Raki ah the Woman who bows to God al Sa ima the Woman who fasts al Ṭahirah the Purified al Ṣiddiqah the Truthful al Mustafia the Chosen PersonalBornc 20 BCE NazarethDiedc 100 120 CE JerusalemResting placeMary s Tomb Kidron Valley possibly ReligionIslamChildrenIsa son ParentsImran father Hannah mother Muslim leaderPredecessorYahyaSuccessorIsaMary s relation to John and ZechariahMary and Jesus in a Persian miniature 5 According to the Quran Mary s parents had been praying for a child Their request was eventually accepted by God and Mary s mother became pregnant Her father Imran had died before the child was born After her birth she was taken care of by her maternal uncle Zechariah According to the Quran Mary received messages from God through the archangel Gabriel God informed Mary that she had miraculously conceived a child through the intervention of the divine spirit though she was still a virgin The name of her child is chosen by God being Isa Jesus who would be the anointed one the Promised Messiah As such orthodox Islamic belief has upheld the virgin birth of Jesus 6 and although the classical Islamic thinkers never dwelt on the question of the perpetual virginity of Mary 6 it was generally agreed in traditional Islam that Mary remained a virgin throughout her life with the Quran s mention of Mary s purification from the touch of men implying perpetual virginity in the minds of many of the most prominent Islamic fathers 7 Mary is believed to have been chosen by God above all the women of the worlds in Islam 6 She is referred to by various titles in the Quran with the most prominent being al Qanitah Contents 1 Family 2 In the Quran 2 1 Birth 2 2 Early years 2 3 Annunciation 2 4 Virgin birth 3 Islamic tradition 4 Titles 5 Legacy 6 Gallery 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksFamilyThe Quran calls Mary the daughter of Imran 8 and it mentions that people called her a sister of Aaron Harun 9 Her mother mentioned in the Quran only as the wife of Imran prayed for a child and eventually conceived 10 According to al Tabari Mary s mother was named Hannah Arabic هنا and Imran Arabic عمران her husband died before the child was born 11 Expecting the child to be male Hannah vowed to dedicate him to isolation and service in the Temple 10 However Hannah bore a daughter instead and named her Maryam 12 13 14 In the QuranMain article Maryam surah Mary is mentioned frequently in the Quran 15 and her narrative occurs consistently from the earliest chapters revealed in Mecca to the latest verses revealed in Medina Birth The birth of Mary is narrated in the Quran with references to her father as well as her mother Mary s father is called Imran He is the equivalent of Joachim in Christian tradition Her mother according to al Tabari is called Hannah 11 which is the same name as in Christian tradition Saint Anne Muslim literature narrates that Imran and his wife were old and childless and that one day the sight of a bird in a tree feeding her young aroused Anne s desire for a child She prayed to God to fulfill her desire 16 and vowed if her prayer was accepted that her child would be dedicated to the service of God According to Iraqi scholar and translator N J Dawood the Quran confuses Mary mother of Jesus with Mary the sister of Moses when it refers to the father of Mary the mother of Jesus as Imran which is the Arabic version of Amram who is shown to be the father of Moses in Exodus 6 20 17 Dawood in a note to Quran 19 28 where Mary the Mother of Jesus is referred to as the Sister of Aaron and Aaron was the brother of Mary sister of Moses states It Appears that Miriam Aaron s sister and Maryam Mary mother of Jesus were according to the Koran one and the same person 18 Although Islamic studies of the beginning of the 20th century tended to see this as a mistake in genealogy in more recent Islamic Studies of the 21st century the general consensus is according to Angelika Neuwirth Nicolai Sinai amp Michael Marx that the Quran does not make a genealogical error but instead makes use of Typology 19 This is following Wensincks conclusion supported by the figurative speech of the Quran and the Islamic tradition Maryam is called a sister of Harun and the use of these three names Imran Harun and Maryam has led to the supposition that the Kur an does not clearly distinguish between the two Maryams of the Old and the New Testaments It is not necessary to assume that these kinship links are to be interpreted in modern terms The words sister and daughter like their male counterparts in Arabic usage can indicate extended kinship descendance or spiritual affinity Muslim tradition is clear that there are eighteen centuries between the Biblical Amram and the father of Maryam 20 21 Similarly Stowasser concludes that to confuse Mary the mother of Jesus with Mary the sister of Moses and Aaron in Torah is completely wrong and in contradiction to the sound Hadith and the Qur anic text as we have established 22 23 Mary and the infant Jesus in a 15th century manuscript Baghdad The Quranic account of Mary s birth does not affirm an Immaculate Conception for Mary as Islam does not accept the doctrine of original sin or an inherited fault in humans as it is found in Christianity 24 25 Early years The Quran does not specifically point to the fact that Mary lived and grew up in a temple as the word miḥ rab in Quran 3 36 in its literal meaning refers to a private chamber 26 27 or a public private prayer chamber 28 The definitive idea of Mary growing up in a temple derived via external literature i e see the narration below by Ja far al Sadiq She was placed under the care of the prophet Zakariya the husband of Hannah s sister and Mary s maternal uncle and caretaker 29 16 As often as Zechariah entered Mary s prayer chamber he found her provided with food 30 and he would ask her where she received it from to which she would reply that God provides to whom He wills Scholars have debated as to whether this refers to miraculous food that Mary received from God or whether it was normal food Those in favor of the former view state that it had to be miraculous food as Zechariah being a prophet would have known that God is the provider of all sustenance and thus would not have questioned Mary if it was normal food Imam Ja far al Sadiq narrates that when Maryam was grown she would go into the mihrab and put on a covering so no one saw her Zechariah went into the mihrab and found that she had summer fruit in the winter and winter fruit in the summer He asked From whence is this She said It is from Allah Indeed Allah provides for whom He wills without account 3 37 29 16 17 Annunciation Annunciation in The Remaining Signs of Past Centuries folio 162v Bibliotheque nationale de France Departement des manuscrits Arabe 1489 The virgin birth of Jesus is supremely important in Islam as one of the most important miracles of God The first explicit mention of an annunciation foreshadowing the birth of Jesus is in Quran 19 20 where Mary asks Gabriel Jibril how she will be able to conceive when no man has touched her Gabriel s reply assures Mary that for God all things are easy and that Jesus s virgin birth will be a sign for mankind 31 The birth is later referred in Quran 66 12 32 where the Quran states that Mary remained pure while God allowed a life to shape itself in Mary s womb A third mention of the annunciation is in Q3 42 43 where Mary is also given the glad tidings that she has been chosen above all the women of creation 33 Commentators on the Quran remark on the last verse that Mary was as close to a perfect woman as there could be and she was devoid of almost all failings 34 Although Islam honors numerous women including Hawwa Hagar Sarah Asiya Khadijah Fatimah Ayesha Hafsa many commentators 35 followed this verse in the absolute sense and agreed that Mary was the greatest woman of all time 34 Other commentators however while maintaining that Mary was the queen of the saints interpreted this verse to mean that Mary was the greatest woman of that time and that Fatimah Khadijah and Asiya were equally great 34 36 According to exegesis and literature Gabriel appeared to Mary who was still young in age in the form of a well made man with a shining face and announced to her the birth of Jesus After her immediate astonishment she was reassured by the angel s answer that God has the power to do anything 34 The details of the conception are not discussed during these Angelic visits but elsewhere the Quran states Quran 21 91 37 and 66 12 32 that God breathed His Spirit into Mary while she was chaste 38 39 Virgin birth Mary shaking the palm tree for dates during the pains of labor Parallels to this legend are found in the Gospel of Pseudo Matthew but linked to the flight to Egypt 40 According to the Quran Mary was chosen twice by the Lord O Mary Verily Allah has chosen you and purified you and chosen you above the women of the worlds Quran 3 42 and the first choosing was her selection with glad tidings given to Imran The second was that she became pregnant without a man so in this regard she was chosen over all other women in the world 29 16 The Quran narrates the virgin birth of Jesus numerous times In chapter 19 Maryam verses ayat 17 21 41 the annunciation is given followed by the virgin birth in due course In Islam Jesus is called the spirit of God because he was through the action of the spirit but that belief does not include the doctrine of his pre existence as it does in Christianity 42 Quran 3 47 also supports the virginity of Mary revealing that no man has touched her 43 Quran 66 12 32 states that Jesus was born when the spirit of God breathed upon Mary whose body was chaste 44 According to the Quran the following conversation transpired between the angel Gabriel and Mary when he appeared to her in the form of a man And mention O Muhammad in the Book the story of Mary when she withdrew from her family to a place toward the east And she took in seclusion from them a screen Then We sent to her Our spirit and he represented himself to her as a well proportioned man She said Indeed I seek refuge in the Most Merciful from you so leave me if you should be fearing of Allah He said I am only the messenger of your Lord to give you a pure boy She said How can I have a boy while no man has touched me and I have not been unchaste He said Thus it will be your Lord says It is easy for Me and We will make him a sign to the people and a mercy from Us And it is a matter already decreed 19 16 21 The Quran s narrative of the virgin birth is somewhat different from that in the New Testament The Quran states that when the pains of childbirth came upon Mary she held onto a nearby palm tree at which point a voice came from beneath the palm tree or beneath her which said Grieve not for thy Lord hath provided a rivulet beneath thee And shake towards thyself the trunk of the palm tree It will let fall fresh ripe dates upon thee 45 The Quran goes on to describe that Mary vowed not to speak to any man on that day 46 as God was to make Jesus who Muslims believe spoke in the cradle perform his first miracle The Quran goes on to narrate that Mary then brought Jesus to the temple where immediately she began to be taunted by all the men excluding Zechariah who believed in the virgin birth The Israelites questioned Mary how she came to be with child whilst unmarried to which Mary pointed to the baby Jesus It was then that according to the Quran the infant Jesus began to speak in the cradle and spoke of his prophecy for the first time 47 According to Imam Ja far al Sadiq Jesus the son of Mary used to cry intensely as a child so that Mary was at wits end regarding his profuse crying He said to her Get some of the bark of that tree make a tonic from it and feed me with it When he drank it he cried intensely Mary said What sort of prescription did you give me He said Oh my mother Knowledge of prophet hood and weakness of childhood 29 23 The Fatimid Ismaili jurist Qadi al Nu man holds that the virgin birth of Jesus is meant to be interpreted symbolically In his interpretation Mary was the follower laḥiq of the Imam Joachim Imran However when Joachim realized that she was not suited for the Imamah he passed it to Zechariah who then passed it to John the Baptist Meanwhile Mary received spiritual inspiration madda from God revealing that he would invite a man to the faith who would become an exalted Speaker naṭiq of a revealed religion shariʿa According to al Nu man the verses She said Lord How can I have a child when no man has touched me Quran 3 47 and neither have I been unchaste Quran 19 20 are symbolic of Mary s saying How can I conduct the invitation daʿwa when the Imam of the Time has not given me permission to do so and Nor shall I be unfaithful by acting against his command respectively To this a celestial hierarch replies Such is God He creates i e causes to pass what he wills Quran 3 47 48 Islamic traditionMary is one of the most honored figures in Islamic theology with Muslims viewing her as one of the most righteous women to have lived as per the Quranic verse with reference to the Angelical salutation during the annunciation O Mary God has chosen you and purified you He has chosen you above all the women of creation 49 A minority of Muslims also view her as a prophet 50 Muslim women look upon her as an example and are known to visit both Muslim and Christian shrines Muslim tradition like Christian honors her memory at Matariyyah near Cairo and in Jerusalem Muslims also visit the Bath of Mary in Jerusalem where Muslim tradition recounts Mary once bathed and this location was visited at times by women who were seeking a cure for barrenness 51 Some plants have also been named after Mary such as Maryammiah which as tradition recounts acquired its sweet scent when Mary wiped her forehead with its leaves Another plant is Kaff Maryam Anastatica which was used by some Muslim women to help in pregnancy and the water of this plant was given to women to drink while praying Islamic literature does not recount many instances from Mary s later life and her assumption is not present in any Muslim records Nevertheless some contemporary Muslim scholars an example being Martin Lings accepted the assumption as being a historical event from Mary s life 52 One of the lesser known events which are recorded in Muslim literature is that of Mary visiting Rome with John and Thaddeus Jude the disciples al Hawariyun of Jesus during the reign of Nero 53 Qadi al Nu man the twelfth century Ismaili Muslim jurist and luminary in his book on the esoteric interpretation of faith Asas al Ta wil talks about the spiritual birth milad al batin of Jesus as an interpretation of his story of physical birth milad al zahir He says that Mary the mother of Jesus was a metaphor for someone who nurtured and instructed Jesus rather than physically giving birth to him He also pointed out that Zachariah The Imam of the Time appointed Mary as one of his proofs sing hujja 48 TitlesQanitah Mary is so called in Quran 66 12 32 The Arabic term implies the meaning not only of constant submission to God but also absorption in prayer and invocation meanings that coincides with the image of Mary spending her childhood in the temple of prayer In this way Mary personifies prayer and contemplation in Islam Siddiqah She who confirms the truth or She who has faith Mary is called Siddiqah twice in the Quran Q5 73 75 and Q66 12 32 54 The term has also been translated She who believes sincerely completely Sajidahا She who prostrates to God in worship The Quran states O Mary Worship your Lord devoutly prostrate yourself 55 While in Sujud a Muslim is to praise God and glorify Him In this motion which Muslims believe to be derived from Marian nature hands knees and the forehead touch the ground together Raki ahا She who bows down to God in worship The Quran states O Mary Bow down in prayer with those men who bow down The command was repeated by angels only to Mary according to the Muslim view Ruku in Muslim prayer during prayer has been derived from Mary s practice Tahirah She who was purified 56 Mustafiahا She who was chosen The Quran states O Mary God has chosen you and purified you and again he has chosen you above all women of all nations of the worlds 56 Sa imah She who fasts Mary is reported to fast one half of a year in some Muslim traditions Many other names of Mary can be found in various other books and religious collections In Hadith she has been referred to by names such as Batul Adhraa Ascetic Virgin and Marhumah Enveloped in God s Mercy 57 LegacyMosques named after Mary Mary Mother of Jesus Mosque in Hoppers Crossing Victoria Australia 58 Mosque Maryam Mary the Nation of Islam National Center Chicago IL Qal bu Maryam Women s Mosque Heart of Mary Berkeley CA Maryam Umm Eisa Mary Mother of Jesus Abu Dhabi United Arab Emirates 59 Mariam Al Batool Mosque Virgin Mary in Paola Malta Mary Ahmadiyyah Mosque in Galway Ireland Gallery Wall painting at Tomb of Mary Inside of the Tomb of Mary Outside view the Tomb of MarySee alsoJesus in Islam Surah Maryam Saint Mary Iranian film depicting the life of MaryReferences Qur an 3 42 cited in Stowasser Barbara Freyer Mary in Encyclopaedia of the Qurʾan General Editor Jane Dammen McAuliffe Georgetown University Washington DC J D McAuliffe Chosen of all women J M Abd el Jalil Marie et l Islam Paris 1950 Esposito John What Everyone Needs to Know About Islam New York University Press 2002 P31 cf Stowasser Barbara Freyer Mary in Encyclopaedia of the Qurʾan General Editor Jane Dammen McAuliffe Georgetown University Washington DC Enzyklopadie des Islam English translation of German article about Maria at eslam de a b c Stowasser Barbara Freyer Mary in Encyclopaedia of the Qurʾan General Editor Jane Dammen McAuliffe Georgetown University Washington DC e g Razi Tafsir viii 46 Clooney S J Francis X What Islam really teaches about the Virgin Mary America December 18 2015 Quran 19 28 a b Quran 3 35 a b Ayoub Mahmoud M 2013 05 21 The Qur an and Its Interpreters Volume 2 Surah 3 Islamic Book Trust p 93 ISBN 978 967 5062 91 9 Wheeler Brannon M 2002 Prophets in the Quran an introduction to the Quran and Muslim exegesis Continuum International Publishing Group pp 297 302 ISBN 0 8264 4957 3 Da Costa Yusuf 2002 The Honor of Women in Islam LegitMaddie101 ISBN 1 930409 06 0 Quran 3 36 Lejla Demiri Mary in the Qur an pp 9 11 L OSSERVATORE ROMANO 51st year No 29 2556 Friday 20 July 2018 Download pdf file here 1 Quran 3 31 Dawood N J 1956 The Koran London Penguin Books p 53 ISBN 9780141393841 Dawood N J 1956 The Koran London Penguin Books p 306 ISBN 9780141393841 Michael Marx Glimpses of a Mariology in the Qur an in A Neuwirth Nicolai Sinai Michael Marx Hrsg The Qur an in Context Historical and Literary Investigations into the Qur anic Milieu Leiden 2011 pp 533 563 Arent Jan Wensinck Maryam In A J Wensinck J H Kramers Hrsg Handworterbuch des Islam pp 421 423 A J Wensinck Penelope Johnstone Maryam in C E Bosworth E van Donzel W P Heinrichs amp Ch Pellat Eds The Encyclopaedia Of Islam New Edition 1991 Volume VI p 630 B F Stowasser Women In The Qur an Traditions And Interpretation 1994 Oxford University Press New York p 393 394 Aliah Schleifer Mary The Blessed Virgin Of Islam 1998 op cit p 36 Cleo McNelly Kearns 2008 The Virgin Mary Monotheism and Sacrifice New York Cambridge University Press p 254 5 Malik Ghulam Farid et al 1988 Al ʻImran The Holy Quran with English Translation and Commentary Vol II p 386 8 Tilford Islam International Corpus Quran Surah 34 13 maḥariba referred to as an elevated chamber Quran translation by Yusuf Ali Quran The Quranic Arabic Corpus Every time Zechariah entered upon her in the prayer chamber a b c d Qa im Mahdi Muntazir 2007 Jesus Through the Qur an and Shi ite Narrations bilingual ed Queens New York Tahrike Tarsile Qur an pp 14 15 ISBN 978 1879402140 Quran 3 37 Quran 19 20 22 Sura 19 20 She said How shall I have a son seeing that no man has touched me and I am not unchaste 19 21 He said So it will be Thy Lord saith that is easy for Me and We wish to appoint him as a Sign unto men and a Mercy from Us It is a matter so decreed 19 22 So she conceived him and she retired with him to a remote place a b c d e Quran 66 12 Quran 3 37 38 a b c d Bosworth C E et al The Encyclopaedia of Islam Volume VI Mahk Mid Brill 1991 p 629 Two such commentators were al Razi and al Qurtubi R Arnaldez Jesus fils de Marie prophete de l Islam Paris 1980 p 77 Quran 21 91 Islam A Guide for Jews and Christians by F E Peters 2005 Princeton University Press ISBN 0 691 12233 4 p 23 Holy people of the world a cross cultural encyclopedia Volume 1 by Phyllis G Jestice 2004 ISBN 1 57607 355 6 pages 558 559 Leirvik Oddbjorn 2010 05 27 Images of Jesus Christ in Islam 2nd Edition A amp C Black pp 21 33 ISBN 978 1 4411 8160 2 Quran 19 17 21 Pickthall translation Christianity Islam and the West by Robert A Burns 2011 ISBN page 32 Quran 3 47 Understand My Muslim People by Abraham Sarker 2004 ISBN 1 59498 002 0 page 127 Quran 19 24 25 Quran 19 26 Quran 19 27 33 a b Virani Shafique 2019 Hierohistory in Qaḍi l Nuʿman s Foundation of Symbolic Interpretation Asas al Taʾwil The Birth of Jesus Studies in Islamic Historiography 147 169 doi 10 1163 9789004415294 007 ISBN 9789004415294 S2CID 214047322 Qur an 3 42 cf trans Arberry and Pickthall Stowasser Barbara Freyer Mary in Encyclopaedia of the Qurʾan General Editor Jane Dammen McAuliffe Georgetown University Washington DC Beyond The Exotic Women s Histories In Islamic Societies pg 402 Ed Amira El Azhary Sonbol Syracuse Syracuse University Press 2005 ISBN 9780815630555 T Canaan Muhammaden Saints and Sanctuaries in Palestine in Journal of the Palestine Oriental Sac iv 1 2 1924 1 84 Muhammad M Lings pg 101 Bosworth C E et al The Encyclopaedia of Islam Volume VI Mahk Mid Brill 1991 p 631 Quran 5 73 75 Quran 3 43 a b Quran 3 42 Khattan Rahib The Blessed names of Sayyidatina Maryam pg 111 Masjid Maryam Virgin Mary Hoppers Crossing Victoria Foursquare com Retrieved 2013 11 03 UAE names Abu Dhabi mosque after Mary mother of Jesus Newsweek 15 June 2017 External links Wikimedia Commons has media related to Virgin Mary Our Lady and Islam Heaven s Peace Plan an article by Father Ladis J Cizik Blue Army National Executive Director Part of All About Mary an encyclopedic tool for information on Mary the Mother of Christ compiled by the University of Dayton s Marian Library International Marian Research Institute the world s largest repository of books artwork and artifacts devoted to Mary and a pontifical center of research and scholarship The Qur an and Mary part of All About Mary an encyclopedic tool for information on Mary the Mother of Christ compiled by the University of Dayton s Marian Library International Marian Research Institute Jesus and The Virgin Mary in Islam By Juan Galvan Mary from Sufi Islam perspective Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mary in Islam amp oldid 1144823583, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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