I believe for sure that Rasulu'LLah Muhammad(swa) Is the best of all the prophets(asw) . But is there any envidence in the Quran or Sunna to support this ? There is an aya in quran which says 'we(i) don't diffetiance(nufariq) amoung them(the prophets).
Praise be to Allaah.
(1)
Allaah says (interpretation of the meaning):
“We
make no distinction between one another of His Messengers”
[al-Baqarah
2:285].
Ibn
Katheer said in his Tafseer of this aayah:
The believers believe in all the Prophets and Messengers,
and the books revealed from heaven to the slaves of Allaah, the Messengers
and Prophets; they do not differentiate between any of them, believing
in some and rejecting others. Rather they regard all of them as truthful,
righteous, rightly-guided and guiding to the path of goodness, even
though some of them abrogated the laws of others, until all of them
were abrogated by the sharee’ah of Muhammad, the Seal of the Prophets
and Messengers, upon whose sharee’ah the Hour will cone.(Tafseer
Ibn Katheer, 1/736)
With
regard to the superiority of some of the Prophets over one another,
Allaah has told us of this, when He said (interpretation of the meaning):
“Those
Messengers! We preferred some of them to others; to some of them Allaah
spoke (directly); others He raised to degrees (of honour)”[al-Baqarah
2:253]
Allaah tells us that some of
them are several degrees above others, hence the chosen ones among the
Messengers are “those of strong will”. Allaah says (interpretation of
the meaning):
“And
(remember) when We took from the Prophets their covenant, and from you
(O Muhammad), and from Nooh (Noah), Ibraaheem (Abraham), Moosaa (Moses),
and ‘Eesa (Jesus) son of Maryam (Mary). We took from them a strong covenant”[al-Ahzaab
33:7]
And
Muhammad
(peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) is the best of them. This
is indicated by the fact that he was their imaam on the night of the
Mi’raaj, because no one but the best is put forward. More evidence that
he is the best of them comes from Abu Hurayrah, who said: “The Messenger
of Allaah (peace and blessings
of Allaah be upon him) said: ‘I will be the leader of the sons of Adam
on the Day of Resurrection, and the first one for whom the grave will
be opened, and the first to intercede, and the first whose intercession
will be accepted.’”
(Narrated
by Muslim, al-Fadaa’il, 4223)
Al-Nawawi
said in his commentary on Saheeh Muslim:
The
phrase “I will be the leader of the sons of Adam on the Day of Resurrection
and the first one for whom the grave will be opened, and the first to
intercede, and the first whose intercession will be accepted”: al-Harawi
said: the leader (sayyid) is the one who surpasses his people
in goodness. Someone else said: He is the one to whom they turn at times
of calamity and hardship, so he takes care of them, carries their burdens
and protects them.
The
phrase “the Day of Resurrection” – even though he is their leader in
this world and in the Hereafter. The reason for this specific mention
is that on the Day of Resurrection his position of leadership will become
apparent to everyone, and there will no longer be anyone who disputes
or stubbornly rejects it, unlike the case in this world when the kings
of the kuffaar and the leaders of the mushrikeen competed with him.
The scholars said, he (peace and
blessings of Allaah be upon him) did not say ““I will be the leader
of the sons of Adam” out of pride. Indeed, that is clearly stated in
the famous hadeeth narrated by compilers other than Muslim: “I will
be the leader of the sons of Adam, and I am not boasting.” Rather, he
said it for two reasons. The first was in obedience to the command of
Allaah (interpretation of the meaning): “And proclaim the Grace of your
Lord”, and the second was that it was part of the message that he was
commanded to convey in totality to his ummah so that they would
acknowledge his status and believe in him, and do as he commanded, and
respect him (peace and blessings
of Allaah be upon him) as required by his status and as Allaah commanded
them. This hadeeth implies that he is superior to all of creation, because
the view of Ahl al-Sunnah is that human beings, i.e., the people of
obedience and piety, are superior to the angels, and he
(peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) is superior to human beings
and to others. With regard to the other hadeeth – “Do not differentiate
between the Prophets” – it may be responded to in five ways. The first
is that he (peace and blessings
of Allaah be upon him) said this before he knew that he was the leader
of the sons of Adam; then when he came to know he spoke of it. The second
is that he said it out of politeness and humility. The third is that
the prohibition refers to the kind of differentiation that leads to
undermining the position of the one who is less preferred. The fourth
is that the prohibition applies to the kind of differentiation that
leads to dispute and fitnah (tribulation), as is well known in the reason
for the hadeeth. The fifth is that the prohibition applies only in the
case of prophethood itself, not to superiority within the ranks of the
Prophets; rather, it applies to superiority in characteristics and other
virtues, so it is essential to believe in that. Allaah says (interpretation
of the meaning):
“Those Messengers! We preferred some of them to others…”
[al-Baqarah
2:253]
And
Allaah knows best.
The
characteristics of the Prophet
(peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) confirm that he is superior
to the rest of the Messengers. We will mention some of them which are
narrated in the Qur’aan and Sunnah:
Allaah
has singled out the Qur’aan, to the exclusion of other Books, to be
preserved. Allaah says (interpretation of the meaning):
“Verily,
We, it is We Who have sent down the Dhikr (i.e. the Qur’aan) and surely,
We will guard it (from corruption)”
[al-Hijr
15:9]
In the case of
the other Books, Allaah entrusted their protection to their people.
Allaah says (interpretation of the meaning]
“Verily,
We did send down the Tawraat (Torah) [to Moosa (Moses)], therein was
guidance and light, by which the Prophets, who submitted themselves
to Allaah’s Will, judged for the Jews. And the rabbis and the priests
[too judged for the Jews by the Tawraat (Torah) after those Prophets],
for to them was entrusted the protection of Allaah’s Book, and they
were witnesses thereto
[al-Maa’idah
5:44]
He
is the Seal of the Prophets and Messengers. Allaah says (interpretation
of the meaning):
“Muhammad
is not the father of any of your men, but he is the Messenger of Allaah
and the last (end) of the Prophets”
[al-Ahzaab
33:40]
He
is unique in that he was sent to all of mankind. Allaah says (interpretation
of the meaning):
“Blessed
be He Who sent down the criterion (of right and wrong, i.e. this Qur’aan)
to His slave (Muhammad) that he may be a warner to the ‘Aalameen (mankind
and jinn)”
[al-Furqaan
25:1]
Among
his unique characteristics in the Hereafter:
He
will be the owner of the “position of praise and glory (al-maqaam
al-mahmood)” on the Day of Resurrection. Allaah says (interpretation
of the meaning):
“And
in some parts of the night (also) offer the Salaah (prayer) with it
(i.e. recite the Qur’aan in the prayer) as an additional prayer (Tahajjud
optional prayer Nawaafil)
for you (O Muhammad). It may be that your Lord will raise you to Maqaam
Mahmood (a station of praise and glory, i.e., the honour of intercession
on the Day of Resurrection)”
[al-Israa’
17:78]
Ibn
Jareer said: most of the commentators said that is the position which
he (peace and blessings of Allaah
be upon him) will occupy in order to intercede for the people on the
Day of Resurrection, to ask that their Lord might grant them respite
from the great hardship that they are suffering on this Day.” (Tafseer
Ibn Katheer, 5/103)
And
he will be the leader of all of mankind on the Day of Resurrection,
as stated in the hadeeth quoted above.
He
will be the first one to cross al-Siraat with his ummah.
Al-Bukhaari narrated a lengthy hadeeth concerning that from Abu Hurayrah,
in which it says, “… and I will be the first one among the Messengers
to lead his ummah across it.” (al-Adhaan, 764).
Another
indication that he is the best of the Prophets is the fact that they
will not intercede, rather one of them will refer the people to another,
until ‘Eesa refers them to Muhammad
(peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him). He will say, “I (will do
it),” then he will step forward to intercede for everyone, and the first
and the last will praise him for that, the Prophets and the rest of
mankind.
His
unique characteristics, as mentioned in the ayaat and saheeh
ahaadeeth, are too many to mention in this brief summary; entire
books have been written on this topic.
See
Kitaab Khasaa’is al-Mustafa
(peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) bayna al-Ghulw wa’l-Jafaa’
by al-Saadiq ibn Muhammad, 33-79
To
sum up, we prefer our Prophet Muhammad
(peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) over all the other Prophets
and over all of mankind, because of the evidence that has been narrated
concerning that, whilst also respecting the rights of the other Prophets
and Messengers and believing in them and respecting them. And Allaah knows best.
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