One useful way to unearth the wisdom that Islam may hold for all of us would be to look at Muhammad in his own place and time. So, let’s head that way.
Muhammad was born around 570 CE into Arabia’s tribal society. Built on rigid hierarchies where power and wealth determined everything, this was a predatory and corrupt environment indeed, with a few small cliques of winners and a lot of losers. Blood feuds between tribes could span generations, with violence answering violence endlessly. Those feuds created a lot of widows and orphans, who had no protections or rights. Neither, for that matter, did the poor.
Mecca, Muhammad’s birthplace, centered on the Kaaba, an ancient shrine housing 360 idols that drew polytheistic pilgrims from the region’s various tribes. The city’s elite, having grown rich from this religious tourism, had every incentive to maintain the unjust status quo.
Muhammad was marked by loss: his father died before his birth, his mother when he was six. Raised by his grandfather, then his uncle Abu Talib, he became known for his honesty and concern for the discarded. At 25, he married Khadijah, a wealthy widow 15 years his senior. For 24 years, until her death, he remained devoted to her alone.
At 40, while meditating in a cave outside Mecca, Muhammad experienced something that changed everything. Muslims believe the Angel Gabriel appeared with the first words of the Qur’an. Terrified, Muhammad returned to Khadijah, who reassured him: this is real, and you can do what you’re being asked to do.
Over 23 years, revelations continued, creating the foundations of a new way of life. Muhammad’s message was startling: there is one God – Allah – and before this God, all people are absolutely equal. No intermediaries, no privileged class, no tribal advantages.
More than a theology, this was a blueprint for rebuilding society. The revelations created Islam’s comprehensive framework. By the end of Muhammad’s life, this would comprise, aside from the declaration that there is no God but Allah:
Salah – Five daily prayers, bringing the community together.
Zakat – Obligatory charity, ensuring wealth circulated and the vulnerable were protected.
Sawm – The Ramadan fast, reminding everyone what hunger felt like.
Hajj – The pilgrimage where all wore simple white garments, a show of their equality before God.
These were tools for building something new: a community united by shared purpose, bound by principles applying equally to everyone. As Muhammad taught the practices revealed to him, the slaves, merchants, women, and dispossessed who listened to him suddenly found themselves part of something that said their lives had equal worth and took real measures to make sure they were looked after.
Immediately seeing the threat posed to them by the ideas being put about by Muhammad, the Meccan elite started persecuting him and his followers. By 622 CE, some of them were plotting Muhammad’s assassination.
Meanwhile, to the north of Mecca, the city of Medina was beset by tribal conflicts. It invited Muhammad, by now something of a noted figure in the region if still an outsider, as a neutral arbiter. In the Hijra – the migration – Muhammad and his modest band of followers slipped away to Medina. This journey marks Year 1 of the Islamic calendar. Tellingly, Islam dates itself not from revelation but from community-building, from when ideals took concrete form.
In Medina, the impossible happened. Refugees, converts, and existing residents – Muslims, Jews, and pagans – came together under the Constitution of Medina, one of the world’s first written constitutions. It guaranteed rights for all residents and established due process for disputes. And local tribe by local tribe, the ranks of the Muslim community steadily grew.
Eight years after fleeing as persecuted refugees, Muhammad marched back toward Mecca with 10 thousand followers.
Mecca surrendered without bloodshed. Muhammad entered the Kaaba, removed those 360 idols, and rededicated it to the one God. Then he granted general amnesty. Those who had persecuted him, driven him out, tried to kill him: forgiven.
This was confidence rather than weakness. Muhammad understood that breaking cycles of retaliation mattered more than revenge. Within a year, most of Arabia embraced Islam, drawn by the same vision that had won over Muhammad’s earliest followers.
The foundation built on the principles Muhammad espoused proved remarkably durable. Within a century, Islamic civilization stretched from Spain to India and China.
The Islamic Golden Age, which ran from roughly the eighth to fourteenth centuries, set new civilizational standards. Islamic societies developed, among other things: regulated commerce built around the principle all parties to a contract must profit from it; due process in justice with courts accessible to all; and protection of personal rights, including property rights for women centuries before European women gained them.
These grew from Islam’s core principles: everyone is equal before God, learning is sacred, wealth should be both created and circulated. While Europe became adrift from much of the wisdom that had flourished in ancient Greece and Rome, Islamic cities bustled with trade, scholarship, and peace. And that’s because they were organized around the core insight of what Muhammad shared with the world: communities thrive when united by shared purpose, when principles apply equally to everyone, when law replaces arbitrary power. Today 1.9 billion Muslims live by these timeless principles – submission, compassion, and justice – while grappling with how to keep sacred texts from being weaponized.
When Muhammad and his followers were in Medina, they had to turn to arms to fight off hostile tribes. It was at this point he received the so-called Sword Verses, which gave Muslims a mandate to engage in martial violence against these adversaries.
Islamic scholars continue to debate how best to apply the teachings of those verses in a modern and fundamentally different world. Many Muslims read these Medinan verses about war as specific to survival there and then in the seventh century, not as universal commands. A minority of Muslims, however, apply them literally as being universal, fueling global tensions. And in doing so, they ride roughshod over all the values that turned Islam into a force for civilization and community all those centuries ago.
For the sake of those values of classical Islam, the urgent task, then, is to amplify the context-sensitive reading worldwide.
When have you been part of a community united by shared purpose and common values? What made that possible, and what did it enable you to accomplish together?
Tags Inspiration
This article speaks of the Constitution of Mecca giving rights for ALL residents – were there Christian believers there with equal rights. Then, in the Islamic golden age, women had property rights before that was true for European women. What happened??? Islamic women don’t have many rights now. There is one basic right and that is the right to live one’s life. That doesn’t seem to be observed in Nigeria these days with thousands of Christians being murdered in primitive, barbaric ways. Basically, can’t understand what this article about Muhammad and Islamic beginnings is trying to say. We all agree there is ONE GOD. And – God is a God of love.
This is a continuation of the author’s exploration of world religions. She could not ignore Islam, as it is a major religion. She tried to make it non-controversial and non-biased. Sometimes that’s difficult to achieve, we concur.
i think the author did a marvellous job being unbiased. i don’t think the article was meant to encompass ALL of Islam and its history and nuances … some of what people are complaining about are cultural differences … and some people live in a bubble and think we’ve all agreed on God … i don’t think so – i live in a country that celebrates being able to worship in one’s own way, and the ways are not the same, but i think there are many paths to the top of the mountain. no one truly ‘knows’, or it wouldn’t be ‘faith’, i think
So do I. She did a marvelous job, and her faith series is a great thought project. I hope many will re-read them and ponder the greater questions.
Yes, there was a small population of Christians in Medina when Muhammad brought the people together and developed the Constitution of Medina. They are explicitly mentioned, along with the Jews.
What I am trying to say is that Muhammad began his mission by preaching what were the basic beliefs of many monotheistic Arabs at that time. The difference being that he claimed to be the last prophet in the line of Abrahamic religions. The problem is that when he was in Medina he received the Sword Verses which do exhort believers to kill the apostates, nonbelievers, and create a world that is purely Islamic. I didn’t want to say that so clearly in my article, as I am trying to be as fair to Muhammad. The Qur’an is written so that Allah is speaking directly to the reader through the Angel Gabriel and Muhammad. It’s difficult not to take it personally.
Why did you post a sanitised depiction of Muhammad without acknowledging his 13 wives or his marriage to Aisha when she was a child? As a woman who promotes feminism, glossing over these aspects is disappointing and feels dismissive of the very real issues women face under certain interpretations of Sharia law. It comes across as disrespectful to your audience. You also know that offering an honest, unfiltered account can provoke anger from religious extremists, which makes the choice to publish a selective version even more frustrating.
I am trying to be fair to Muhammad. He must have been a charismatic, intelligent, and capable person. His treatment of women was enlightened for his time. Many of his wives were taken into his care for their protection.
The real problem is not with moderate, present-day Muslims, who I presume must have put the Qur’an into its time, the problem is with the present-day Jihadists who take the Qur’an literally, and accept the extortion to kill the infidel and apostate as applying to the present day. They are trying to take the whole world into the House of Peace, which is Islam.
Fair to Muhammad? For slaughtering Jews with his own hand? This is the most biased and untruthful display of historical FACTS.
When he executed the Jews of the Banu Qurayza tribe in Mecca, for treason because they sided with the Meccans against him, he was following the practice of his time, and as was laid down in the book of Deuteronomy in the Hebrew Bible.
the Koran says do no assimilate. Kill the infidel. Women are treated like chattel and gays are killed. You are giving a fairy tale version of Muslims
When I first read the Qur’an, I was appalled, because the commands to fight, kill the infidel, and kill the apostate are very clear and direct. That is how the Jihadists must experience it. However, I prefer to stand back and try to be fair to Islam. Not all Muslims are Jihadists, and their modern version of the religious world view incorporates the good ideas, and must put the Sword Verses into the past.
i think -like the Quara’an and the Bible and so many other scriptures- people warp them to their own ends. there are greedy people who will take any egalitarian system and make it ‘better’ … for themselves. sadly, this is people.
fortunately, we’ve had many men and women through the ages to get their words out that battle status quo. no, Mohammed wasn’t welcomed by the elite, nor was JesusChrist – even the Greek philosophers and early Astronomers caught hell.
but i do think the words and messages stand on their own, even today. in their starkness – the 99 names of Allah is what i began with. without embellishment, except for their beautiful calligraphy. now i’m learning Arabic
yes, beautiful sentiments, but -sadly- as i see echoed here, people aren’t open, and people hide their own motives too often. (p.s. – i’m a people, too, but i’m too busy working on me to figure it all out)
I agree, Beth, unfortunately some people take the idealistic ideas of the world views and twist them to use them for their own ends. I prefer to read the original sacred literature and find the useful and beneficial ideas that are in all religious world views, even Islam. I’m aware of what has been done with these ideologies by people other than the original inspired prophet, but that is not what interests me as much as the basic ideas.
Sorry, but this just doesn’t jibe / correspond to what we see in reality in multiple cities and countries.
I have received nothing but kindness from my Muslim neighbors. I was confined to a wheelchair for months and would not have had a hot meal if my Muslim neighbor had not cooked for me. She not only brought me food but visited every evening because she knew I was alone. On Easter, she made extra dishes and even included foil wrapped chocolates because she honored my tradition. I wonder how many of those cities/countries you’ve personally visited to have this opinion.
Hi Becky– I lived and worked in Saudi Arabia for a year. And have visited several other predominantly Muslim countries. Thank you.
I totally agree with you.
I studied and worked for 5 years in the part of London called Tower Hamlets and saw little or no integration, but a community living in parallel to the point it was unrecognisable as a part of London. When I was an undergraduate we were often asked if we would volunteer to assist children in local primary schools with language skills because they were being brought up in households where no English was spoken. That was 30 years ago now, friends tell me it has not improved.
Well done for calling that out Linda
Thanks for saying this, Linda! I was being very careful not to be too controversial. I’ve read the Qur’an, and it is written in such direct language that it would be difficult to put the Sword Verses into the past if you were impressionable. This is the root of the problem. Islamists can’t assimilate.
Thank you for your article. Sad to see the mean comments you received. I appreciate your fairness. I am a Muslim formerly Christian. I think people should study all religions with an open mind.
Thank you, Kim! I agree about keeping an open mind.