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Definition Clarification

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charmsahead View Drop Down
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    Posted: 31 October 2009 at 1:17pm
Salaamualikum All,
    Hope everyone is doing great. I had a quick question. What is the difference between the words Prophet and Messenger. I remember learning it when I was in Islamic School but I can't seem to remember. Please let me know if anyone remembers.

Thank you.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote seekshidayath Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 01 November 2009 at 2:06am
Walaikum Salam wa rahmatullah

Every Prophet {Rasool} is a messenger {nabi} but every messenger is not a Prophet.

A prophet is given divine law {Revelations] and a messenger is not given.

Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him) said: �All the descendants of Adam are sinners, and the best of sinners are those who repent."
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote charmsahead Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 01 November 2009 at 9:02pm
Thank you for clarifying.

JazakAllah Khair.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Saladin Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 03 November 2009 at 6:51am
Messengers & Prophets: What's the Difference?


Muslims hold the view that every nabi (prophet) is a rasul (messenger); and that every rasul is a nabi. As a matter of fact, those two words signify two aspects of the mission Allah Almighty has entrusted to every prophet and messenger; and we see no example or evidence in the Quran where one aspect alone is present in a person chosen by Allah as His Messenger or Prophet.

There are Muslims who argue that 'rasul' means one who was given a Book of Allah, or brought a Shariah or code of laws. However, I find that this doesn't explain why Prophet Ismail (Ishmael, peace be upon him) has been called a rasul in the Quran.

See this verse which reads what means;

*{And relate the story of Ishmael as mentioned in the Book. He was indeed true to his promises. And he was a Messenger, a Prophet.}* (Maryam 19:54)

The differentiation between the office of "prophethood" and "messengership" in a prophet is not really warranted by the Quran. Because, from the Quranic point of view, every rasul is nabi, and every nabi is a rasul. These two words are often used as interchangeable terms and represent two aspects of the same office and two functional responsibilities entrusted to the same person.

A Divinely appointed reformer is a rasul so far as he receives revealed messages from Allah; and he is a nabi in the sense that he conveys those messages to the people to whom he is sent.

Thus every rasul (messenger) is simultaneously a nabi (prophet), or has to perform as one, because after receiving Divine messages he conveys them to his people. And every nabi has got to be a rasul because he needs to convey to his people those messages which he has received from Allah Almighty. Only the functions of nabi follow those of rasul. First in his capacity as rasul he receives messages from God and then only in his capacity as nabi he conveys them to his people.

This is why everywhere in the Quran when these two words rasul and nabi occur in close conjunction, invariably the word nabi follows the word rasul because that is the natural order. For instance, see the verse:

*{And relate the story of Moses as mentioned in the Book. He was, indeed, a chosen one; and he was a Messenger, a Prophet.}* (Maryam 19:51)

 

That is to say, Moses was chosen as messenger first; so he received revealed messages from Allah Almighty; and then he conveyed those messages to his people and thus performed as a nabi.


In the foregoing paragraphs we have seen the difference in meaning between the words, 'rasul' and 'nabi'. Also we saw how those two words could be used interchangeably to refer to all the prophets of Allah. So, the answer to the first part of your second question is clear. We may say the first rasul and nabi was Adam (peace be upon him).


About the hadith quoted from Abu Dharr Al-Ghifari (may Allah be pleased with him), one version of the hadith reported by Abu Dharr is this one, though there are other slightly varying narrations:
 
"The Prophet (peace be upon him) was asked about the number of the prophets and messengers. He replied that there were 124,000 prophets among whom 315 were messengers." (Ahmad)

 

But scholars are of the view that this hadith is weak. And if we go by the words of this hadith, they would imply that there were prophets who did not receive messages from Allah, which is not acceptable. So, the distinction made between prophets and messengers in this manner has little basis.

 

Either way, Allah the Almighty has commanded us to respect and honor all His prophets alike, without making any distinction between one and another of them:

 

*{Say you: "We believe in Allah, and the revelation given to us, and to Abraham, Ishmael, Isaac, Jacob, and the Tribes, and that given to Moses and Jesus, and that given to (all) prophets from their Lord: We make no difference between one and another of them: And we bow to Allah (in Islam).}* (Al-Baqarah 2:136)

 

Also see this verse:



*{The Messenger believes in what has been revealed to him from his Lord, as do the men of faith. Each one (of them) believes in Allah, His angels, His books, and His messengers. "We make no distinction (they say) between one and another of His messengers." And they say: "We hear, and we obey: (We seek) Your forgiveness, our Lord, and to You is the end of all journeys.}*  (Al-Baqarah  2:285)

 

The foregoing verses mean that we have no right to differentiate or categorize Allah's prophets and messengers as to their degree, status or performance; nor should we discriminate one against another. Instead, our duty is to respect and honor them alike.

'Trust everyone but not the devil in them'
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Saladin Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 03 November 2009 at 6:56am
Also contemplate this - Was Mary a Prophetess?
'Trust everyone but not the devil in them'
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote tariqhaashmi Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 10 November 2009 at 5:08am
Difference between Nabi and Rasul
 
We know that the Holy Qur�an is not a dictionary. It only uses that word and leaves the reader to ascertain the meaning and to decide whether the word is used literally or as a term. Both the words (Nabi and Rasul) have been used in Qur�an in their literal meaning and as a term also. The Qur�an also uses them interchangeably in their literal meaning. However as terms these two words have been used in the Holy Qur�an with obvious distinction.

 

The word �Nabi� (literally one who warns) as a Qur�anic term refers to individuals selected by the Almighty for the specific purpose of delivering the message revealed to them from God and to remind people of the Day when they shall be presented before the Almighty and shall have to answer for their deeds. In other words, a Nabi is an individual who guides his people to the path of the Creator�s liking, in the light of the message revealed to him.

 

Rasul as a Qur�anic term is a special position given only to few of the Nabis. Every Nabi is not necessarily a Rasul. According to the details provided by the Qur�an regarding the position of the Rasul the following points can be derived:

 

God sends his messengers as symbols of His final judgment. A Rasul, in contrast to a Nabi is not just a deliverer of God�s message. In addition to being a deliverer of God�s message, he decides the fate of his addressees, on the basis of the response he receives from them. The Qur�an regarding messengers says:

Those who oppose God and His messengers shall be brought low. God has decreed: I will surely triumph, Myself and My Rusuls. God is most powerful, Mighty. (58:20-21)

 

The Holy Qur�an, in many of its narratives, tell us that every messenger�s addressees, after the truth is unveiled before them, if reject him are necessarily perished. Almighty makes it sure that that people are left with no excuse regarding the explanation and manifestation of the truth. Finally, when it becomes clear that a certain people does not reject that messenger because of any misunderstanding but merely because of their haughtiness and arrogance, Almighty punishes them. The students of the Holy Qur�an do not need any detail that the tails of Noah, Shoaib, and other exalted messengers of the Almighty clearly lead to the conclusion.

(based on Amin Ahsan Islahi's Tadabbur-e Qur'an)

Source: www.al-mawrid.org
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