pour down the rain whereby God vivifies the dead
land. In other passages, the springing up of the vegetation
and the sprouting of the seeds are described as the
acts of God. 'It was We who rained down the copious
rains; then cleft the earth with clefts, and caused
the upgrowth of the grain, and grapes and healing herbs,
and the olive and the palm, and enclosed gardens thick
with trees, and fruits and herbage for the service of
yourselves and your cattle.' 1
10. These means and the laws whereby they work out
His will, having Him as their fount and origin, remain
within His control, and He may sometimes dispense with
one or other of the secondary causes whereby, as a rule,
He works. Such dispensations manifest themselves in
those events which mankind calls miraculous. Thus, for
instance, the birth of Jesus was miraculous, for in
it God dispensed with secondary causes. 'She (Mary)
said, "How, O my Lord! shall I have a son, when
man hath not touched me?" He said, "Thus:
God will create what He will; when He decreeth a thing,
He only saith, Be, and it is." ' 2
The very fact that the birth of Jesus is noted in the
Qur'an as an exception, is sufficient proof that
Muhammad recognized that this is not the manner in which
God usually works. God's acts are not, as a rule,
immediate, but mediate by and through those laws by
which He has settled the course of nature; and those
vital powers of life with which He has endowed animals
and plants, and,
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