Quran
and Evolution
By
Dr
Ghayur Ayub
According to science, earth came into existence about 4.6
billion years ago. In the beginning, it was like a ball of molten rocks with
scorching temperature and atmosphere filled with turbulent dust. With passage
of time the dust started to solidify due to gravitational pull making dry clay
which continued to swirl with thundering noise.
In the following
one billion years, with the drop of temperature, water condensed making clouds
and initiating torrential rains, violent storms and lightning full of
radiation. Continuous rains washed the atmospheric gasses and clay pouring them
down into newly formed sea where they settled at the bottom and were converted
into inorganic and organic compounds. As the earth gradually cooled and
torrential storms slowed down, the water from sea started to evaporate leaving
behind a viscous liquid of organic compounds at the bottom of the sea known as
`Primordial Soup'
Constant floods of
radiation of organic compounds for the next 3 billion years resulted in
formation of chains of nucleic and amino acids which settled down on the thick,
wet, sticky and muddy surface of the 'Primordial Soup'
One billion years later, the earth
further cooled down to around 100 Celsius. Scientists tell us that as a result
of constant radiation, the two adjacent mineralized fluids composed primarily
of fat and sulphate formed a double layered membrane. This membrane folded on
itself, making a cell. This was the creation of unicellular life on earth. Put
it simply, had there been no membrane there would have been no life. That is
how, life began on planet earth according to science.
What does Quran say about creation of
life? Does it speak about such changes in chronological order? The answer is
yes. Does it mean Quran is a book of science? The answer is no. It is not a
book of science but a book of 'signs' which stimulates our intellect to
understand science through 'signs'.
Let us start
with a verse which in its unique Quranic style challenges our intellect about
our existence in pre-life non-existence, “Do
not man remember that We created him before, while he was naught?” This means three
things. First, man was existing in a non-life form such as dust, clay or any
other form of matter. Second, man existed in a life form other than human such
as hominid. Third, man existed in both forms at different cosmic time-frame. We
should remember that cosmic time is different from the time we perceive on
earth.
Either way,
Quran is hinting at evolution. To make it clearer, it goes step by step;
1. “He created you
of dust,” Here, Quran is pointing at the time when the earth atmosphere was
filled with dust.
2. When the dust turned
into dry clay, floating in air with thundering sound, Quran states, “We created man from sounding clay,”.
3. As evolution continued and the earth
took a rocky shape covered with clay, Quran says, “Allah is He who has made everything He created better, and He began the
creation of the human (being) out of clay” Remember at this stage Quran is
using the word clay instead of sounding clay and using the word began meaning
by it is pointing at the cosmic time when the clay settled down on the surface
of earth. To link it with such time it further says, “He is Who has created you from clay, then he spent a term of time (away
from you), and (it is) a specific term he determined. Yet, you doubt (his
ability)!” The important point in this verse is that Quran uses the Arabic
word 'bada'a' which means that human
creation happened as part of a process that had a beginning and not just at
once. The same meaning is found in another verse which says, “Were We then fatigued with the first
creation? Yet are they in doubt with regard to a new creation”.
4. Then, Quran goes further in
evolutionary steps when it talks about the wet, sticky clay which scientists
link with the surface of Primordial Soup, “Indeed,
We created men from sticky clay” Or when it says, “We created the human being from stinking, smooth, (and wet) clay.”
5. Science tells us that at this stage of evolution, fat
and sulphate made a double layered impermeable membrane. Quran also talks of
such impermeable membrane but calls it a 'Barrier'
when it says, “He has let free the two
bodies of flowing water meeting together between them is a Barrier, which they
do not transgress”. In another verse, Quran goes one step further and
becomes more specific when it says, “It
is He who has let free the two bodies of flowing water, one palatable and sweet
and other salty and bitter. Yet has He made a barrier between them. A partition
that is forbidden to be passed”. In this verse Quran has symbolized the
mineralized fluid composed of fat as sweet and palatable and the other composed
of sulphate as salty and bitter. Also, it gives a classification to the passage
across the barrier by calling it 'forbidden'.
6. The science tells us that the life of a cell depends on
non-permeability of its wall for certain ionic substances which is governed by
strict laws of Nature. According to Quran, the Divine power does the same thing. The science links the membrane with creation of
unicellular life in water which led to the other forms of life such as plant,
animal and human. The Quran also links this phenomenon with plant, animal and
human life.
Let us see how;
7. Quran says all
forms of life started in the sea, “...and
We made every living thing out of water? Will they not then believe?”. As
one can see, here Quran is talking about creation of life in general. Then, it
becomes specific about plants, animals and human respectively in chronological
order.
8. About the plants
it says, “He has let free the two bodies of flowing water meeting together between
them is a Barrier, which they do not transgress.....Pearls and corals come
forth out of the twain.” Scientists
recently discovered that corals are animals and precursors of algae which are
plants. It is important to note that Quran has linked the 'barrier' which is
the precursor of life to corrals and thus to plants and animals 1400 years ago.
10. Then,
Quran talks about the animals by saying, “Allah
has created every animal out of water.” Then, it categorises them and takes
them out of the sea and puts them on land by saying, “ Of them (is a category which) walks upon its belly, (another which)
walks upon two legs, and ( a third which) walks upon four. Allah creates what
He wills. Allah is Able to do everything (he wants)”
11. We have just
seen, how life was created in water and evolved into plants and animals. But
what about man?
12. Keeping the chronological sequence,
Quran links man's creation with water after talking about his creation from
dust, sounding clay, clay and wet clay by saying, “He it is Who has created man of water.” From there, it goes further and links his life with
plant pointing at the process of evolution, “And Allah has caused you to grow out of the earth like plants”
13. Then, it talks about step-wise evolutionary make-up of
man by saying; “It
is He Who created you, fashioned you perfectly, and made you with the right
proportions (straightened you up, to walk in an upright position)” In this verse Quran uses three verbs; first 'khalaqa for
creation; second 'sawwa' for fashioning man perfectly; and third 'adala' for
putting man in right proportion like making him walk in upright position. The
first is linked with the first cell; the second is pointing at change from
unicellular to multi-cellular such as plants, animals and hominids; the third
is linked to refining the man by separating it from other hominids. Ibn Kathir
explains this verse using a Hadith from Prophet Muhammad which says that God
created humans in the right proportion and made them walk in a balanced and
upright position, which allowed them to walk between the two cold places such
as North and South Poles.
14. In another
verses Quran says, “O mankind, what
has deceived you concerning your Lord, the Generous, Who created you,
proportioned you, and balanced you? In whatever form (image) He willed, He put
you together (assembled you)” Some Muslim scholars see a link in this
verses between hominid (Homo erectus) and modern man (Homo sapiens sapiens).
They argue that the Arabic verb, 'rakkaba', used in this verse can be
translated into 'putting together' or 'assembling'. Thus, the word may refer to
assembling human beings by using genetic materials from other organisms, in
order for humans to be better than their closest primates. They compare such
'assembling' by God, to the scientists using genetic engineering and
introducing changes in existing organisms. Ibn Kathir explains the Arabic word
'rakkaba' by saying that the fertilized egg carries all the genetic
characteristics of humans all the way from the first creation. Talking about it
further, scholars such as, Ekremah, Abu Saleh, and Quotada added that some
people may even have a feature of primates as their faces may look like monkeys
pointing to the fact that human being is the product of a long line of genetic
traits.
15. Quran also gives
messages on evolutionary diversity in creation when it says, "I have indeed created you before, when
you were nothing". Then it says, “Has
there not been a long period of time, when man was nothing, (not even) mentioned?”.
Then it says, "Say: travel in the
earth and see how He originated the first creation, then God creates the latter
creation; surely God has power over all things". It further says, "What is the matter with you that you
fear not the greatness of God, when you see that it is He that has created you
in diverse stages?"
16. It was verses like these which made the great Sufi Mavlana Rumi uttered;
“I died from
minerality and became vegetable;
And from vegetativeness I died and
became animal.
I died from animality and became man.
Then why fear disappearance through
death?
Next time I shall die
Bringing forth wings and feathers like
angels;
After that, soaring higher than angels –
What you cannot imagine, I shall be that”
Here, Rumi goes beyond the present human
form and is talking about an
evolutionary continuity in some other
unimaginable form.
The End
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