In the name of Allah, Most Gracious, Most Merciful
Now
This is the first challenge
now specifically i want to go through
the last section/part of the verse
which says
Kullun Fee falakin yasbaHoon
now initially want to do, was go through 
A detailed grammatical and linguistic analysis 
of this section which is composed of:
Four word
You have 2 nouns ( 2 Isms)
one verb
and one preposition
but I realized it was going to take too
long. The words used are precise 
God Willing, in future videos I will be
explaining the precision of the language
that Allah (Most High) has used in this
particular verse
I really honestly believe that this
challenge is IMPOSSIBLE!
The Challenge is open to everybody
To produce something better than the Quran
and, people might think that this is
subjective, but..
i really doubt that anybody can not see 
the actual superiority of the Quran
as opposed to the words of human beings
becuase they're two different types of
speech
We have the speech of someone who is 
very limited in knowledge, 
vocabulary
in every aspect. And then you have 
someone who is the creator of the
Heavens and the Earth. Who has created
EVERYTHING
Obviously
They're going to be a world apart
I'm going to touch on one aspect of this
section of this verse
Where we get the translation 
"All the celestial bodies"
because
these bodies where not discovered back then
people didn't know that the were other
Moons and other Suns
Because we know a Sun is just a star, and we 
know there are millions of stars out there
so the Sun is one of these stars
so
let's get to the language
so Allah (Most High) uses the word
KULLUN
"KULLUN" means
"Every"
or "All"
so if I said ....
every student
There is a word coming after EVERY
every (student) or every (book)
every (man)
every (person). You need a word to 
come after EVERY or ALL
to complete it
if you just say 'every"
you're waiting for the speaker to 
add something
to make sense of what you mean by
"every"
if i said give me every
every what?
now
What the Quran does
is that it actually
just says "every"
but at the same time
In Arabic what you can do is, 
When you
omit that word
You put an extra vowel mark 
known as Tanween
so KULLUN (as opposed to KULLU)
So this vowel mark actually
indicated that there is a word
omitted
and that's what is happening in
the verse
A question to ask is why was this
omitted
and what meanings does this give
so, to understand this a bit better, what
is actually happening is that this 
creates ambiguity and generalization
and we also at the same time need to
look at the context
to undertstand this ambiguity 
It's talking about the sun 
and moon
now
what we can do actually
is go through the classical 
commentaries of the Quran
by classical scholars
We have 2 classcial commentaries which 
both say the same thing
I have quoted one of them
They say relatively the same thing
and have put only one up
This is from te first reference
Which is AL Kashaaf by Allamah 
AZamakhshari
Who is from the 11th century A.D
so that's like 900 years ago
so What he is saying there; I will
translate the meaning....
so you have to remember this..
All they knew back then was that
there was one sun 
and there was one moon
So these scholars are saying
that the language
indicates that there are SUNS 
and MOON (the plural)
Would he refer to them by a 
pronoun?
So in the verse we have a pronoun 
that is not mentioned
so in other words what's happening here
It refers to EVERY
celestial body
at the same time, what the verse is
saying:
and this is another point of the language
is we have
FEE FALAKIN, which is a prepostional 
phrase
and that should of come after this
verb
YASBAHOON(to swim) 
I'm not going to explain why this verb
was used in this video
but just quickly
FEE FALAKIN
being put first
creates what is known as "Al Ikhtsaas"
(specification)
That every celestial body is ONLY...
FEE FALAKIN, i'll explain this later
means "a rounded course"
It's a rounded course that one swims 
along
and what's saying is that every
celestial body 
is in no other motion except for 
this rounded motion
for a rounded motion
and the indefinitness of FALAKIN
indicates that each one has its own
rounded course. Not that its the same 
rounded course for every body
but that each one has its own rounded
course
God willing, I will explain all this
in greater detail in future videos
I will be looking forward to see the 
reposnses
and overlooking forward to explain 
this verse in greater detail
because there is actually much
more to say
