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ISLAM: *
THE LAHORE
AHMADIYYA MOVEMENT: *
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> The
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> Chapter 9 -- Not a Prophet . Chapter
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How then did the misunderstanding arise? When Ahmad laid claim to Promised Messiahship on the ground of his being the like of Jesus Christ, an objection was brought forward that Jesus Christ was a prophet and that none but a prophet could be his like. The following answer to this objection is met with in the first book in which a claim to Promised Messiahship is advanced: "Here, if it be objected that the like of Christ must also be a prophet because Christ was a prophet, the reply to this in the first place is that our Lord and Master has not laid it down that the coming Messiah shall be a prophet; nay, he has made it clear that he shall be a Muslim and shall be bound by the law of Islam like ordinary Muslims . . . Besides this, there is no doubt that I have come as a muhaddath from God, and muhaddath is, in one sense, a prophet, though he does not possess perfect prophethood; but still he is partially a prophet, for he is endowed with the gift of being spoken to by God, matters relating to the unseen are revealed to him, and, like the revelation of prophets and apostles, his revelation is kept free from the interference of the devil, and the kernel of the law is disclosed to him, and he is commissioned just like the prophets, and like prophets it is incumbent on him that he should announce his claim at the top of his voice." (Tauzih Maram, pp. 9-10)
"I make a public declaration in this house of God, the mosque, that I believe in the finality of prophethood of the Last of the Prophets (may peace and the blessings of God be upon him), and that I consider the person who denies the finality of prophethood to be a faithless man and one outside the pale of Islam." (Manifesto, copied in Din al-Haq, p.29) These are only a few of the numerous statements made by Hazrat Ahmad clearly denying any claim to prophethood. It is further explained in these statements that, when he called the muhaddath "in one sense a prophet", he was using the word "prophet" in a literal sense, not in its proper or technical sense, and this is also called a metaphorical use of the word. It was the height of folly on the part of his opponents, and no less is it on the part of his followers belonging to the Qadian section, to take the word in a real sense when the person who uses it expressly states it to have been used in a metaphorical sense. This position he maintained to the last. Thus, in one of his last writings, the Haqiqat al-Wahy, published less than a year before his death, he wrote: "This servant does not say aught by what the Holy Prophet said, and he does not go a single step out of his guidance; and he says that God has called him a prophet by His revelation, and I have been called so by the tongue of our Messenger, Mustafa; and he means naught by prophethood but that he is frequently spoken to by God . . . and we do not mean by prophethood what is meant by it in the former Scriptures." (Haqiqat al-Wahy, Supplement, p. 16) These few quotations should set all doubts at rest with regard to Ahmads alleged claim to prophethood. He claimed to be only a muhaddath, but, as the word nabi (prophet) occurred in some of his revelations, as also in a hadith of the Holy Prophet in relation to the coming Messiah, he explained that it was used metaphorically, not in the real sense of the word, and that metaphorically a muhaddath could be called a prophet because he was spoken to by God. Therefore, wherever he used the word "prophet" regarding himself, it was in a metaphorical sense. Never did he mean by it that he was a prophet in the real sense of the word, but only that he was spoken to by God; and that God speaks to His servants in this umma is a fact generally admitted by all Muslims. Book's
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> The
Founder of the Ahmadiyya
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> Chapter 9 -- Not a Prophet
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