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False reports about the earth being placed on the back of a bull

Question: 114861

I came across a report which says that the earth is placed on the back of a bull, and when the bull moves its head, earthquakes happen. I think that I saw this in Ibn Katheer (2/39 and 1/50). Can you explain this?

Praise be to Allah, and peace and blessings be upon the Messenger of Allah and his family.

With regard to what the questioner has mentioned, there is no
proof to confirm it in the Holy Qur’an or in the saheeh Prophetic Sunnah.
The most that has been narrated concerning it is reports from some of the
Sahaabah and Taabi‘een. 

It was narrated from Ibn ‘Abbaas (may Allah be pleased with
him) that he said: The first thing that Allah created was the Pen, and it
wrote all that is to happen. Then water vapour was raised, from which the
heavens were created. Then the noon – i.e., the whale – was created, and the
earth was spread out on the back of the noon, and the earth moved and shook.
Then it was made steady with the mountains, and for that reason the
mountains boast to the earth. And he recited (interpretation of the
meaning): “Noon.
(These letters (Noon, etc.) are one of the miracles of the Quran, and none
but Allah (Alone) knows their meanings).By the pen and what the (angels)
write (in the Records of men)”
[al-Qalam 68:1]. 

This was narrated by ‘Abd al-Razzaaq in his Tafseer
(2/307); Ibn Abi Shaybah (14/101); Ibn Abi Haatim – as mentioned in
Tafseer Ibn Katheer (8/210); at-Tabari in Jaami‘ al-Bayaan
(23/140); al-Haakim in al-Mustadrak (2/540); and many others. All of
them narrated it via al-A‘mash, from Abu Zabyaan Husayn ibn Jundub, from Ibn
‘Abbaas. This is a saheeh isnaad. Al-Haakim said: This hadith is saheeh
according to the conditions of the two shaykhs (al-Bukhaari and Muslim),
although they did not narrate it. Adh-Dhahabi said in at-Talkhees [It
is saheeh] according to the conditions of al-Bukhaari and Muslim, as was
narrated from Mujaahid, Muqaatil, as-Suddi and al-Kalbi. See: ad-Durr al-Manthoor
(8/240); Tafseer Ibn Katheer (8/185) at the beginning of the
commentary on Soorat al-Qalam. 

This report – as you can see – is mawqoof and is the words of
Ibn ‘Abbaas. It is not the words of the Prophet (blessings and peace of
Allah be upon him). What is most likely to be the case is that Ibn ‘Abbaas
(may Allah be pleased with him) learned it from the words of Ka‘b al-Ahbaar
or from the books of Bani Israa’eel that contain many weird and strange
things and lies. This is indicated by the details mentioned in some of the
books of tafseer concerning this matter. 

Imam al-Baghawi (may Allah have mercy on him) said: 

The narrators said: When Allah created the earth and split it
(from the heavens), He sent from beneath the Throne an angel who came down
to earth until he reached beneath the seven earths, then he placed them on
his shoulders, with one of his hands in the east and the other in the west,
stretched out and holding the seven earths until he managed to get them
settled. His feet did not have a firm place to stand on, so Allah, may He be
glorified and exalted, sent down from al-Firdaws a bull that had forty
thousand horns and forty thousand feet, and He made the feet of the angel
stand on its hump, but his feet did not become settled firmly on it. So
Allah took a green emerald from the highest level of al-Firdaws, the
thickness of which was the distance of five hundred years, and He placed it
between the hump and the ear of the bull, so that the feet of the angel
could stand firm on it. The horns of that bull emerge from beneath the
layers of the earth, and its nostrils are in the sea. Every day it takes a
breath. When it exhales, the tide comes in towards the land, and when it
inhales, the tide goes out. The feet of the bull had no firm place to stand,
so Allah, may He be exalted, created a rock as thick as seven heavens and
seven earths, so that the feet of the bull could stand firm on it. This is
the rock that Luqmaan mentioned to his son when he said:
“O my
son! If it be (anything) equal to the weight of a grain of mustard seed, and
though it be in a rock, or in the heavens or in the earth, Allah will bring
it forth” [Luqmaan 31:16].
The rock was not stable, so Allah created a noon, which is a great whale,
and placed the rock on its back, and there is nothing else on its body. The
whale is on an ocean, and the ocean is carried on the back of the wind, and
the wind is carried by divine power. It was said that the entire world, with
everything on it, is only two letters (the kaaf and noon of the word kun,
meaning ‘Be!’); the Compeller, may He be glorified and exalted, said to it:
‘Be!’, and it was. 

Ka‘b al-Ahbaar said:

Iblees managed to reach the whale on whose back the earth is
carried and he whispered to it: Do you know what is on your back, O
Leviathan – the name of the whale – of nations, animals, trees and
mountains? If you shake them off, you will throw them off from your back.
Leviathan thought of doing that, but Allah sent a beast that entered his
nostrils and reached his brain, so the whale beseeched Allah because of it,
and Allah gave it permission to leave.

Ka‘b said: By the One in Whose hand is my soul, the whale is
looking at the beast and the beast is looking at the whale, in case the
whale wants to do that, in which case the beast is ready to jump back into
its nostrils. End quote.

Ma‘aalim at-Tanzeel
(8/186). There is a similar report in Tafseer al-Qurtubi (29/442).
The words of Ka‘b al-Ahbaar were narrated by Abu Nu‘aym in Hilyat al-Awliya’
(8/6), The commentators on Tafseer at-Qurtubi (1/385), both Dr
‘Abdullah ibn ‘Abd al-Muhsin at-Turki and Muhammad Ridwaan ‘Irqsoosi,
commented on this report and said: It is an Israa’eeli report (i.e., from
Jewish sources) for which there is no basis. It would have been better for
the author to keep such things out of his book. End quote.

Look at how the narrators added more details to the story,
then ultimately the matter can be traced back to Ka‘b al-Ahbaar, who was the
source of many weird things that are attributed to this religion.

Therefore al-Haafiz Ibn Katheer pointed out in al-Bidaayah
wa’n-Nihaayah (1/15) – after mentioning a number of weird reports,
including this hadith – that it is one of the Israa’eeliyyaat (reports from
Jewish sources) and said: In this report with this isnaad, as-Suddi mentions
many weird things; it is as if many of them came from the Israa’eeliyyaat.
End quote.

There are also some marfoo‘, munkar (odd) hadiths with
similar meanings, including the report narrated from Ibn ‘Umar, according to
which the Prophet (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him) said: “The
earth is above the water, and the water is above a rock, and the rock is on
the back of a whale whose flippers touch the Throne. The whale is on the
shoulders of an angel whose feet are standing on nothing.” This is a mawdoo‘
(fabricated) hadith. See: as-Silsilah ad-Da‘eefah (no. 294).

As none of these reports was proven to be sound or regarded
as part of religious teachings, and they are not mentioned in the Book of
Allah or in the Sunnah of His Messenger (blessings and peace of Allah be
upon him), the most that can be said concerning them is that they are
reports from some of the early generations, and it is clear that the source
of all of them is reports from Jewish sources. What we must do with regard
to such reports is refrain from confirming any of them, and delegate
knowledge of that to the Knower of the unseen, as the Messenger of Allah
(blessings and peace of Allah be upon him) taught us. It was narrated that
Abu Hurayrah (may Allah be pleased with him) said: The People of the Book
used to read the Torah in Hebrew and explain it in Arabic to the Muslims.
Therefore the Messenger of Allah (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him)
said: “Do not believe the people of the Book and do not disbelieve them.
‘Say
(O Muslims), “We believe in Allah and that which has been sent down to us
and that which has been sent down to Ibrahim (Abraham), Ismail (Ishmael),
Ishaq (Isaac), Ya‘qoob (Jacob), and to Al-Asbat (the twelve sons of Ya‘qoob
(Jacob)), and that which has been given to Moosa (Moses) and ‘Eesa (Jesus),
and that which has been given to the Prophets from their Lord. We make no
distinction between any of them, and to Him we have submitted (in Islam)’
[al-Baqarah 2:136].”

According to another report, the reason for refraining from
believing or disbelieving is explained as follows:

“Then if it is false you will not have believed it and if it
is true you will not have disbelieved it.” Narrated by Abu Dawood (3644) and
Ahmad (16774); classed as saheeh by al-Albaani in as-Saheehah (2800).

And Allah knows best.

Source

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