
The Baptism Of John And Jesus Only A Type Of Religious
Marking "Sibghatullah"
"The (indelible religious) marking of Allah. And who
marks better than Allah! And for Him we are worshipers."
(Qur'an 2:138)
It is a
great pity that the Evangelists have not left us a
complete and detailed account of the sermon of John the
Baptist; and assuming they ever did, it is nothing short
of a crime on the part of the Church not to have preserved
its text. For it is impossible to imagine the mysterious
and enigmatic words of the Baptist in their present shape
could have been understood even by the most erudite among
his audience We know that the Jewish doctors and lawyers
asked him to explain himself upon various points and to
make his declarations more explicit and plain (John i.
19-23 and v. 33). There is no doubt that he elucidated
those vital points to his hearers, and did not leave them
in obscurity; for he was "a burning and enlightening
candle," who "gave witness concerning the truth" (John v.
33, 35). What was this witness, and what was the nature of
the truth about which that witness was given? And what
makes it still more obscure is the fact that each
Evangelist does not report the same points in identical
terms. There is no precision about the character of the
truth; was it about the person of Christ and the nature of
his mission, or was it about the Messenger of Allah as
foretold by Jacob (Gen. xlix.)? What were the precise
terms of John's witness about Jesus, and about the future
Prophet who was his superior?
In the
third article of this series (1) I offered ample proofs
that the Prophet foretold by the Baptist was other than
Jesus Christ; and in the fourth article (2) we find
several arguments in favor of the Messenger of Allah as
being a superior and more powerful Prophet than John.
Those arguments, in my humble opinion, and in my solid
conviction, are logical, true, and conclusive. Each of
those arguments could be easily developed so as to make a
voluminous book. I am fully conscious of the fact that
these argumentations will present a jarring sound to the
fanatical ears of many a Christian. But truth exalts
itself and extols him who propagates it. The truth about
which John gave witness, as quoted above, we
unhesitatingly believe to be concerning Prophet Muhammad.
Prophet John gave two witnesses, one about the "Shliha
d'Allaha" - according to the then Palestinian dialect,
which means the "Messenger of Allah" - and the other about
Jesus, whom he declared to have been born of the Holy
Spirit and not of an earthly father; to be the true
Messiah who was sent by Allah as the last great Jewish
Prophet to give a new light and spirit to the Law of
Moses; and to having been commissioned to teach the Jews
that their salvation rested on submitting to the great son
of Ishmael. Like the old Jews who threw into disorder
their Scriptures, the new Jews of the Christian Church, in
imitation of their forefathers, have corrupted their own.
But even these corruptions in the Gospels cannot conceal
the truth.
------------Footnote: (1). Vide Islamic Review for March -
April, 1930. (2). Ibid., May, 1930. ------------ end of
footnote
The
principal point which constitutes the power and the
superiority of the Prince of the Messengers of Allah is
the baptism with the Holy Spirit and with fire. The
admission by the author of the Fourth Gospel that Prophet
Jesus and his disciples also used to baptize with water
simultaneously with John the Baptist is an abrogation de
facto of the parenthetical note that "Jesus did not
baptize himself, but his disciples only" (John iii. 23 and
iv. 1, 2). But granting that he himself did not baptize,
the admission that his disciples did, while yet initiates
and unlearned, shows that their baptism was of the same
nature as that of John's. Considering the fact that Jesus
during the period of his earthly mission administered that
rite exactly as the Baptist was doing at the streams or
pools of water, and that he ordered his disciples to
continue the same, it becomes as evident and as clear as a
barn door that he was not the person intended by the Crier
in the Wilderness when he foretold the advent of a
powerful Prophet with the baptism of the Spirit and fire.
It does not require much learning or an extraordinary
intelligence to understand the force of the argument -
namely, Jesus during his lifetime baptized not a single
person with the Holy Spirit and with fire. How, then, can
he be regarded as the Baptizer with the Holy Spirit and
with fire, or be identified with the Prophet foretold by
John? If words, sermons, and prophecies mean anything, and
are uttered in order to teach anything at all, then the
words of the Baptist mean and teach us that the baptism
with water would continue to be practiced until the
Appearance of the "Shilohah" or the Messenger of Allah,
and then it would cease and give place to the exercise of
the baptism with the Spirit and fire. This is the only
logical and intelligible conclusion to be deduced from the
preaching as recorded in the third chapter of the First
Gospel. The continuation of the Christian baptism and its
elevation to the dignity of a Sacrament is a clear proof
that the Church does not believe in a baptism other than
that which is performed with water. Logic, common sense,
and respect for any sacred writ ought to convince every
impartial reader that the two baptisms are quite different
things. The Prophet of the desert does not recognize the
baptism with fire in the baptism with water. The nature
and the efficacy of each baptism is distinctly stated and
defined. The one is performed by immersing or washing the
body with water as a sign or mark of repentance; and the
other is performed no longer by water but by the Holy
Spirit and the fire, the effect of which is a thorough
change of heart, faith, and feeling. One purifies the
body, the other enlightens the mind, confirms the faith,
and regenerates the heart. One is outward, it is Judaism;
the other is inward, it is Islam. The baptism of Prophets
John and Jesus washes the shell, but the baptism of the
Messenger of Allah washes the kernel. In short, the Judaeo-Christian
baptism is substituted by the Islamic "Ghusl" and "Wudhu"
- or the ablutions which are performed, not by a prophet
or priest, but by the believing individual himself. The
Judaeo-Christian baptism was necessary and obligatory so
long as the baptism of Allah - the Qur'anic "Sibghatullah"
- was anticipated; and when Prophet Muhammad thundered the
Divine Revelations of the Qur'an, then it was that the
former baptism vanished as a shadow.
The
extreme importance of the two baptisms deserves a very
serious consideration, and I believe the observations made
in this article must considerably interest both the
Muslims and other readers. For the point under discussion,
from a religious standpoint, is vital to salvation. The
Christians, I honestly maintain, are not justified in
perpetuating their baptism with water ad infinitum, since
their own Gospels foretell that it will be abrogated by
another one which will exclude the use of water
altogether. I submit the following observations to the
thoughtful and impartial judgment of my readers.
WHAT
BAPTISM IS AND WHAT IT IS NOT
(a) It
is within our rights to agree or to disagree with a
doctrine or a theory, but nothing can justify our conduct
if we deliberately distort and misrepresent a doctrine in
order to prove our own theory about it. To distort the
Scriptures is iniquitous and criminal; for the error
caused in this respect is irreparable and pernicious. Now
the baptism of John and Jesus is plainly described and
illustrated to us in the Gospels, and is entirely alien
and opposed to the baptism of the Churches.
We are
not positively certain about the original Hebrew or
Aramaic word for the Greek baptism. The Pshittha Version
uses the word "ma'muditha" from the verb "aimad" and
aa'mid," which means "to stand up like an a'muda" (a
pillar or column), and its causative form "aa'mid" "to
erect, set up, establish, confirm" and so on, but it has
no signification of "to immerse, dip, wash, sprinkle,
bathe, as the ecclesiastical baptism is supposed to mean.
The original Hebrew verbs "rahas" "to bathe", "tabhal'
(read "taval") "to dip, to immerse," might give the sense
conveyed by the Greek word "baptizo" - "I baptize." The
Arabic versions of the New Testament have adopted the
Aramaic form, and call the Baptist "al-Ma'midan," and "ma'mudiyeh"
for "baptism." In all the Semitic languages, including the
Arabic, the verb "a'mad" signifies in its simple or qal
form "to stand erect like a pillar," and does not contain
the meaning of washing or immersion; and therefore it
could not be the original word from which the Greek "baptismos"
is the translation. There is no necessary to argue that
both John and Jesus never heard of the word "baptismos" in
its Greek form, but that there was evidently another
Semitic nomenclature used by them.
(b)
Considering the classical signification of the Greek "baptismos"
which means tincture, dye, and immersion," the word in use
could not be other than "Saba," and the Arabic "Sabagha,"
"to dye." It is a well-known fact that the Sabians,
mentioned in the Qur'an and by the early Christian Fathers
- such as Epiphanus and others - were the followers of
John. The very name "Sabians," according to the celebrated
Ernest Renan (La vie de Jesus, ch. vi), signifies
"Baptists." They practiced baptism, and like the old
Hassayi (Essenians, or al-Chassaites) and Ibionayi (Ebionites)
led an austere life. Considering the fact that their
founder, Budasp, was a Chaldean sage, the true orthography
of their name would be "Saba'i," i.e. "Dyers" or
"Baptists." A famous Chaldean or Assyrian Catholics of the
fourth century, Mar Shimon, was called "Bar Saba'i," "Son
of the Dyers." Probably his family belonged to the Sabin
religion. The Qur'an writes this name "Sabi'm"' with the
hamza vowel instead of ain as it is in the original
Aramaic "Saba'i," I am cognizant, however, of other
interpretations placed on the name "Sabian": some authors
suppose it to be derived from "Sabi'," the son of Sheth,
and others from the Hebrew "Saba," which means "army,"
because they used to have a kind of special devotion to
the stars as the host of heaven. Although they have
nothing in common with the Christian Churches, except
their peculiar 'Sab'utha," or Baptism, they are wrongly
called "the Christians of St. John-Baptist." The Qur'an,
as usual, writes all foreign names as they were pronounced
by the Arabs.
An
extensive and deep research in the religion of the Sabians,
who had almost overrun the Arab nation long before the
light of Islam shone with the appearance of the Holy
Prophet of Allah, will show us several truths. There were
three forms of baptism practiced by the Jews, the Sabians,
and the Christians. The Jewish baptism, which had no
origin in their sacred books, was invented chiefly for the
proselytes. Each religion had its definite baptismal
formula and a special ritual. The Jewish "Cohen" (priest)
baptized his convert in the Name of Allah; the Sabian in
the Name of Allah and of John; but the Christian "Qushlsha"
(in Arabic "qassis" or presbyter) baptized in the name of
the Father, of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost, in which
the names of Allah and of Jesus are not directly recited.
The diversity and the antagonism of the three baptismal
systems is apparent. The Jew, as a true Unitarian, could
not tolerate the name of John to be associated with that
of the Elohim; whereas the Christian formula was extremely
repugnant to his religious taste. There is no doubt that
the Christian baptism, with its sacramental character and
polytheistic taint, was abhorred also by the Sabians. The
symbol of the convenant between Allah and His worshipers
was not baptism but circumcision (Gen. xvii), an ancient
institution which was strictly observed, not only by the
three religions, but also by many pagan Arab tribes. These
diverse baptismal forms and rituals among the Semitic
peoples in the East were not an essential divine
institution but only a symbol or sign, and therefore not
strong and efficacious enough to supplant one another.
They all used water for the material of their baptism,
and, more or less, in similar form or manner. But each
religion adopted a different name to distinguish its own
practice from that of the other two. The original Aramaic
"Sab'urtha" - properly and truly translated into the Greek
"baptismos" was faithfully preserved by the Saba'ites (Sabians).
It appears that the Semitic Christians, in order to
distinguish their sacramental baptism from that of the
Sabaites, adopted the appellation of "ma'muditha" which,
from a linguistic point of view, has nothing whatever to
do with baptism or even with washing or immersion. It is
only an ecclesiatical coinage. Why "ma'muditha" was
adopted to replace "Sab'utha" is a question altogether
foreign to our present subject; but en passant, I may add
that this word in the Pshittha is used also for a pool, a
basin for ablution (John v.2). The only explanation which
may lead towards the solution of this problem of the "ma'muditha"
is the fact that John the Baptist and his followers,
including Jesus the son of Mary and his disciples, cause a
penitent or a proselyte to stand straight like a pillar in
a pool of water or in a river in order to be bathed with
water, hence the names of aa'mid" and "ma'muditha."
(c) The
Christian baptism, notwithstanding its fanfaronade
definitions, is nothing more or less than an aspersion
with water or an immersion in it. The Council of Trent
anathematizes anyone who would say that the Christian
baptism is the same as that of St. John's. I venture to
declare that the Christian baptism has not only no
spiritual character or effect, but it is also even below
the baptism of the Baptist. And if I deserve the anathema
of the Church for my conviction, I shall deem it as a
great honor before my Creator. I consider the pretensions
of a Christian priest about the baptism as a means of
purification of the soul from original sin and all the
rest of it as of a piece with the claims of a sorcerer.
The baptism with water was only a symbol of baptism with
the Holy Spirit and with fire, and after the establishment
of Islam as the official kingdom of God all the three
previous baptisms vanished and were abolished.
(d)
From the meager and scant account in the Gospels we cannot
get a positive definition of the true nature of the
baptism practiced by Prophets John and Jesus. The claim
that the Church is the depository of the Divine Revelation
and its true interpreter is as absurd as it is ridiculous
the claim that the baptized infant or adult receives the
Holy Spirit and becomes a child of God.
If the
Greek word "baptismos" is the exact word for the Aramaic "Sab'utha"
or "Sbhu'tha," which I am sure it is, then the Arabic "Sibghat"
in the Qur'an, not only does it solve the problem and
uncover the veil hiding the mysterious prophecy of John
the Baptist,but also is a marvelous proof that the sacred
scripture of Islam is a direction Revelation of Allah, and
that His Prophet true and the real person whom John
predicted! The baptist ("Saba'a") plunges or immerses his
neophyte or an infant into a pond, as a dyer or a fuller
plunges a cloth or garment into a kettle of dye. It is
easily understood that baptism is not a "thara."
purification or washing, nor "Tabhala," an immersion nor
even a "rahsa," a bathing or washing, but "sab'aitha," a
dyeing, a coloring. It is extremely important to know
these distinctions. Just as a "saba'a," a dyer, gives a
new color to a garment by dipping it into a kettle of
tincture, so a baptist gives his convert a new spiritual
hue. Here we must make a fundamental distinction between a
proselyte Gentile and a penitent Jew and Ishmaelite Arab.
The former was formally circumcised, whereas thee latter
baptized only. By the circumcision a Gentile was admitted
into the family of Abraham, and therefore into the fold of
God's people. By baptism a circumcised believer was
admitted into the society of the penitent and reformed
believers. Circumcision is an ancient Divine institution
which was not abrogated by Prophet Jesus nor by Prophet
Muhammad. The baptism practiced by John and the Christ was
only for the benefit of the penitent persons among the
circumcised. Both these institutions indicated and
presented a religion. The baptism of John and of his
cousin Jesus was a mark of admission into the society of
the purified penitents who promised loyalty and homage to
Messenger of Allah whose coming they both foretold.
It
follows, therefore, that just as circumcision signified
the religion of Prophet Abraham and his adherents (his
slaves were also circumcised), so baptism signified the
religion of John and Jesus, which was a preparation for
the Jews and the Gentiles to accord a cordial reception to
the Messenger of Islam and to embrace his religion.
(e)
According to the testimony of St. Mark (i. 1-8), the
baptism of John had the character of the "remission of
sins." It is stated that "all the country of Judaea and
the inhabitants of Jerusalem went out to him and were all
baptized by him in the River Jordan while confessing their
sins." This is tantamount to saying that millions of the
penitent Jews confessed their sins, were baptized by the
Prophet, and then their sins were obliterated by the
waters of baptism. It is generally admitted that St.
Mark's Gospel is the oldest of the Four Gospels. All the
ancient Greek manuscripts do not contain the last twelve
verses added to chapter xvi. of this Gospel (verses 9-20).
Even in these supplementary verses the formula "in the
name of the Father, and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost"
is not inscribed. Jesus simply says: "Go and preach my
Gospel unto the whole world; he who believes and is
baptized shall live, and he who does not believe shall be
damned."
It is
evident that the baptism of Jesus was the same as that of
John's and a continuation of it. If the baptism of John
was a sufficient means of the remission of sins, then the
assertion that the "Lamb of God carries away the sins of
the world" (John i.) is exploded. If the waters of the
Jordan were efficacious enough to cleanse the leprosy of
Naaman through the prayer of the Prophet Elisha (2 Kings
v), and to remit the sins of the myriads through that of
the Prophet John, the shedding of the blood of a god would
be superfluous and, indeed, incompatible with the Divine
Justice.
There
is no doubt that until the appearance of Paul on the
scene, the followers of Jesus Christ practiced the
baptismal ritual of Prophet John the Baptist. It is
significant to note that Paul was a "Pharisee" belonging
to a famous Jewish sect - like that of the Saducess - whom
Prophets John and Jesus denounced as "the sons of the
vipers." It is also to be observed that the author of the
fifth book of the New Testament, called the "Acts of the
Apostles," was a companion of this Paul, and pretends to
show that those baptized by John the Baptist had not
received the Holy Spirit "and therefore were rebaptized
and then filled" with the Holy Spirit (Acts viii. 16, 17
and xix. 2-7), not through baptism in the name of Prophet
Jesus, but through the "laying of hands". It is clearly
stated in these quotations that the two baptisms were
identical in their nature and efficacy, and that they did
not "bring down" the Holy Spirit upon the person baptized
whether by John, Jesus, or in the name of either of the
two. By the "laying of their hands" of the Apostles upon a
baptized person the Holy Spirit touched his heart, to fill
it with faith and love of God. But this Divine gift was
granted only to the Messengers who were really prophets,
and cannot be claimed by their so-called successors.
(f) If
the Gospels mean anything at all in their statements
concerning baptism, they leave behind the impression that
there was no difference between the two baptisms, except
that they were administered in the name of one or other of
the two Prophets. The Pharisee Paul or Saul of Tarsus has
not a single kind word about John the Baptist, who had
branded the sect of the Pharisees with the opprobrious
epithet "the children of the vipers." There is a tinge of
grudge against Prophet John and against the value of his
baptism in the remarks made by Luke in the "Acts of the
Apostles." And Luke was a disciple and companion of Paul.
The admission by Luke that the baptism in the name of
Jesus, too, was not carried out by the Holy Spirit is a
sure proof against the Church which has arbitrarily and
wantonly transformed it into a sacrament or a mystery. The
Church's baptism was a perpetuation of John's baptism and
nothing more; but the baptism with the Holy Spirit and
with fire was reserved only for Islam. The expression that
some twelve persons in Samaria "had not yet received the
Holy Spirit, because they were only baptized in the name
of our lord Jesus" Acts vii. 16, 17), is decisive to
frustrate the pretensions of the Church.
The
last three verses in the passage cited are held by many to
be an interpolation. They did not exist in the oldest
existing MS., which is, of course, the origin of all
subsequent versions of the Bible, including the Vulgate. A
document is absolutely unworthy of serious judicial notice
if a portion of it is proved to be a forgery. But here we
go a step farther for the said addition to the original
text is admitted to be such even by those who speak of its
genuineness.
But let
us take the prophecy as it stands. I need not say that it
speaks of things at which ordinary common sense can guess,
seeing that the events foretold are always occurring from
time to time in the course of nature. Pestilence and war,
famine and earthquakes have visited the world so often
that a mention of them in a prophecy as a sign of its
authenticity would deprive it of any importance it might
otherwise possess. Besides, the first followers of a new
faith are sure to meet with persecution, especially if
they chance to be of inferior social position. But apart
from this, the prophecy speaks in one strain of several
things, which may or may not occur together at any one
time. They have never yet so occurred. The persecution of
the disciples began immediately after the departure of
Jesus from Judaea. They were "delivered up to the
synagogues and into prison, and brought before kings and
rulers" for his name's sake. The prediction, however, did
not need a prophetic mind, since the persecution had
started even when Prophet Jesus was with his disciples.
These events were the natural sequel of teachings
distasteful to the Jews. The disciples no doubt bore every
conceivable hardship and trial with patience and courage,
but they were sure of the return of the Master in
accordance with his promise: "Verily I say unto you, that
this generation shall not pass, till all these things be
done." Belief in these words created a wonderful patience
in the generation referred to. But his words passed away
though the time did not come for the "heaven and the earth
to pass away." Moreover, the days of the disciples'
persecution did not witness any unusual phenomena in the
form of earthquake, fighting, or pestilence. Even in the
period immediately following, the prophesied four events
did not synchronize. In the last two scores of years of
the last two centuries we heard "of wars and commotions."
"Nation" did "rise against nation and kingdom against
kingdom." "Great earthquakes" were experienced in divers
places and famines and pestilence, but neither did the sun
become darkened nor the moon fail to give its light, which
things had to occur before "the coming of the Son of Man."
These words may be taken in a metaphorical sense, but in
that case, why should the Adventists look for the second
coming in its literal sense? Moreover, most of the
abovementioned phenomena have taken place at times when
those who preached and taught in the name of Jesus were
not likely, for political reasons, to be brought before
kings and rulers for punishment. On the contrary, they had
obtained free access into lands that had long been closed
against them. All of which goes to prove that either the
prediction is folklore or a legendary account of the
things of which Jesus spoke on different occasions. Either
he himself had had but a hazy notion of coming events, or
the recorders of his life, who wrote two centuries after,
mixed up hopelessly different things dealing with
different matters."
The Baptism Of John And Jesus Only A Type Of Religious
Marking "Sibghatullah"
http://islamicweb.com/bible/good15.htm