In early times, people believed that the earth is flat. For centuries,
men were afraid to venture out too far, lest they should fall off the
edge. Sir Francis Drake was the first person who proved that the earth
is spherical when he sailed around it in 1597. Consider the following
Qur’aanic verse regarding the alternation of day and night: “Seest thou
not that Allah merges Night into Day And He merges Day into Night?”
[Al-Qur’aan 31:29]
Merging here means that the night slowly and gradually changes to day and vice versa. This phenomenon can only take place if the earth is spherical. If the earth was flat, there would have been a sudden change from night to day and from day to night.
The following verse also alludes to the spherical shape of the earth: “He created the heavens And the earth In true (proportions): He makes the Night Overlap the Day, and the Day Overlap the Night.” [Al-Qur’aan
39:5]
The Arabic word used here is Kawwara meaning ‘to overlap’ or ‘to coil’– the way a turban is wound around the head. The overlapping or coiling of the day and night can only take place if the earth is spherical.
The earth is not exactly round like a ball, but geo-spherical i.e. it is flattened at the poles. The following verse contains a description of the earth’s shape:
“And the earth, moreover, Hath He made egg shaped.” [Al-Qur’aan79:30]
The Arabic word for egg here is dahaha, which means an
ostrich-egg. The shape of an ostrich-egg resembles the geo-spherical
shape of the earth. Thus the Qur’aan correctly describes the shape of
the earth, though the prevalent notion when the Qur’aan was revealed was
that the earth is flat.
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