What We Hold Sacred
The Qur'an — The recited word, unchanged since revelation
In a cave outside Mecca, a man who could not read received the first word: Iqra—Recite. What flowed was not his own voice but the voice of the One. The Qur'an is not about God; it is from God. Each verse, each surah, is revelation preserved in Arabic exactly as it was given—recited at dawn and dusk, memorized by millions, inscribed in gold on the walls of mosques, carried in the heart. Bismillah ar-Rahman ar-Rahim—In the name of Allah, the Most Merciful, the Most Compassionate—begins every chapter but one. The Qur'an is the transcendent secret at the heart of Islam: the word that bridges heaven and earth, the mercy that speaks before judgment, the guidance that does not change. Muslims do not worship the book; they worship through it. The Qur'an is the light by which they walk.