Quote:
Originally Posted by Harsha Shah
5. This is Islam.
From your comments I was expecting a miracle account.
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5. Islam:
Perhaps we have different ideas about what constitutes a miracle
Why would the reference you used attributed to Al-Bara concerning an event over two centuries earlier
suggest anything out of the ordinary? Perhaps my imagination is deficient but I can't make out anything miraculous. You wrote
They are having many many eyewitnesses for the miracles that were performed by Mohammed.
They are in the Hadith. I am giving you an example. Al-Bara:
"We were one-thousand-and-four-hundred persons on the day of Al-Hudaibiya, and at Al-Hudaibiya
there was a well."
or words to that effect and, regardless of what the prophet was doing or how many people were watching him, for the life of me I can't see how there being fourteen hundred people who undoubtedly would become thirsty at some stage all in one place where there was a well is anything other than commonplace. Where else would they congregate?
1. Sahih al-Bukhari is a collection of hadith compiled by Imam Muhammad al-Bukhari (d. 256 AH/870 AD)
https://sunnah.com/bukhari
2. In O.P.
https://www.landoverbaptist.net/showpost.php?p=1255390&postcount=1