Another verse
about the creation of the heavens is as follows:
"Do not the Unbelievers see that the heavens and the earth were
joined together (as one unit of creation), before We clove them asunder, and
We made from water every living thing. Will they not then believe?" (The
Qur'an, 21:30)
The word ratq translated as "sewn to" means "mixed in
each, blended" in Arabic dictionaries. It is used to refer to two
different substances that make up a whole. The phrase "we unstitched" is the
verb fataqa in Arabic
and implies that something comes into being by tearing apart or destroying
the structure of ratq.
The sprouting of a seed from the soil is one of the actions to which this
verb is applied.
Let us take a
look at the verse again with this knowledge in mind. In the verse, sky and
earth are at first subject to the status of ratq. They are separated (fataqa) with one coming out of the other. Intriguingly, when
we remember the first moments of the Big Bang, we see that a single point
included all the matter in the universe. In other words, everything,
including "the heavens and earth" which were not created yet, was
included in this point in a condition of ratq. This point exploded violently, causing its matter
to fataqa and in
the process created the structure of the whole universe.
When we
compare the expressions in the verse with scientific findings, we see that
they are in perfect agreement with each other. Interestingly enough, these
findings were not arrived at until the 20th century.
The picture represents the Big Bang, which revealed once again that
God created the universe from nothingness. The Big Bang is a theory that has
been proven with scientific evidence. Although some scientists tried to
advance alternative theories against the Big Bang, scientific evidence caused
the theory to be completely accepted by the scientific community.
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