had said, "And He breathed into him (of) something
which, and the knowledge of which, belongs to (or concerns)
Him alone." ' 1
The expression undoubtedly implies that God bestowed
on Adam, and still bestows on the individual members
of the human race (see xxxii. 8), something most closely
related to His own Being; and the action by which it
is bestowed (He breathed into him) symbolizes
the close connexion of its origin with the very mode
of the Divine Existence.
The statements of the Qur'an are not such as to
lead us to suppose that by the bestowal of 'His
Spirit' to man, is meant simply the bestowal of
life. The gift is something far greater. All animals
have life, but there is no suggestion that into them
God breathes of His Spirit.
It is the possession of this Spirit which raises man
far above all other created beings, so that even the
angels are commanded to come and bow in reverence before
Adam, the representative of God on earth.
We see then, in this passage, at least a suggestion,
that the Essential Being of God is Spiritual.
2. The second use of the word 'Spirit' which
we shall consider is found in those passages which speak
of it as the means whereby God reveals to man His purpose
and will, or, generally speaking, enters into personal
relations with him.
It is through the 'Spirit', that God reveals
His will to mankind, and inspires His prophets. 'Call
then on
|