1. Alhamdu lillaahil lazee khalaqas samaawaati wal arda wa ja'alaz zulumaati wannoor; summal lazeena kafaroo bi Rabbihim ya'diloon
الْحَمْدُ لِلَّهِ الَّذِي خَلَقَ السَّمَاوَاتِ وَالْأَرْضَ وَجَعَلَ الظُّلُمَاتِ وَالنُّورَ ۖ ثُمَّ الَّذِينَ كَفَرُوا بِرَبِّهِمْ يَعْدِلُونَ
Praise be Allah, Who created the heavens and the earth, and made the darkness and the light. Yet those who reject Faith hold (others) as equal, with their Guardian-Lord.Recitation by Mishary Al-Alfasy
Name
This Surah takes its name from vv. 136, 138 and 139
in which some superstitious beliefs of the idolatrous Arabs concerning the
lawfulness of some cattle (an`am) and the unlawfulness of some others have been
refuted.
Period of Revelation
According to a
tradition of Ibn Abbas, the whole of the Surah was revealed at one sitting at
Makkah. Asma, a daughter of Yazid and a first cousin of Hadrat Mu'az-bin Jabl,
says, "During the revelation of this Surah, the Holy Prophet was riding on a
she-camel and I was holding her nose-string. The she-camel began to feel the
weight so heavily that it seemed as if her bones would break under it." We also
learn from other traditions that the Holy Prophet dictated the whole of the
Surah the same night that it was revealed.
Its subject-matter clearly
shows that it must have been revealed during the last year of the Holy Prophet's
life at Makkah. The tradition of Asma, daughter of Yazid, also confirms this. As
she belonged to the Ansar and embraced Islam after the migration of the Holy
Prophet to Yathrib, her visit to the Holy Prophet at Makkah must have taken
place during the last year of his life there. For before this, his relations
with those people were not so intimate that a woman from there might have come
to visit him at Makkah.
Occasion of Revelation
After determining the period of its revelation, it is easier to visualize the
background of the Surah. Twelve years had passed since the Holy Prophet had been
inviting the people to Islam. The antagonism and persecution by the Quraish had
become most savage and brutal, and the majority of the Muslims had to leave
their homes and migrate to Habash (Abyssinia). Above all, the two great
supporters of the Holy Prophet. Abu Talib and Hadrat Khadijah, were no more to
help and give strength to him. Thus he was deprived of all the worldly support.
But in spite of this, he carried on his mission in the teeth of opposition. As a
result of this, on the one hand, all the good people of Makkah and the
surrounding clans gradually began to accept Islam ; on the other hand, the
community as a whole, was bent upon obduracy and rejection. Therefore, if anyone
showed any inclination towards Islam, he was subjected to taunts and derision,
physical violence and social boycott. It was in these dark circumstances that a
ray of hope gleamed from Yathrib, where Islam began to spread freely by the
efforts of some influential people of Aus and Khazraj, who had embraced Islam at
Makkah. This was a humble beginning in the march of Islam towards success and
none could foresee at that time the great potentialities that lay hidden in it.
For, to a casual observer, it appeared at that time as if Islam was merely a
weak movement it had no material backing except the meager support of the
Prophet's own family and of the few poor adherents of the Movement. Obviously
the latter could not give much help because they themselves had been cast out by
their own people who had become their enemies and were persecuting them.
Topics
These were the conditions, when this discourse
was revealed. The main topics dealt with in this discourse may be divided under
seven headings:
Refutation of shirk and invitation to the creed of Tauhid.
Enunciation of the doctrine of the "Life-after- death." and refutation of
the wrong notion that there was nothing beyond this worldly life.
Refutation of the prevalent superstitions.
Enunciation of the fundamental
moral principles for the building up of the Islamic Society.
Answers to
the objections raised against the person of the Holy Prophet and his mission.
Comfort and encouragement to the Holy Prophet and his followers who were at,
that time in a state of anxiety and despondency because of the apparent failure
of the mission.
Admonition, warning and threats to the disbelievers and
opponents to give up their apathy and haughtiness. It must, however, be noted
that the above topics have not been dealt with one by one under separate
headings, but the discourse goes on as a continuous whole and these topics come
under discussion over and over again in new and different ways.
The
Background of Makki Surahs
As this is the first long Makki Surah in the
order of the compilation of the Quran, it will be useful to explain the
historical background of Makki Surahs in general, so that the reader may easily
understand the Makki Surahs and our references to its different stages in
connection with our commentary on them.
First of all, it should be noted
that comparatively very little material is available in regard to the background
of the revelation of Makki Surahs whereas the period of the revelation of all
the Madani Surahs is known or can be determined with a little effort. There are
authentic traditions even in regard to the occasions of the revelation of the
majority of the verses. On the other hand, we do not have such detailed
information regarding the Makki Surahs. There are only a few Surahs and verses
which have authentic traditions concerning the time and occasion of their
revelation. This is because the history of the Makki period had not been
compiled in such detail as that of the Madani period. Therefore we have to
depend on the internal evidence of these Surahs for determining the period of
their revelation: for example, the topics they discuss, their subject. matter,
their style and the direct or indirect references to the events and the
occasions of their revelation. Thus it is obvious that with the help of such
evidence as this, we cannot say with precision that such and such Surah or verse
was revealed on such and such an occasion. The most we can do is to compare the
internal evidence of a Surah with the events of the life of the Holy Prophet at
Makkah, and then come to a more or less correct conclusion as to what particular
stage a certain Surah belongs.
If we keep the above things in view, the
history of the mission of the Holy Prophet at Makkah can be divided into four
stages.
The first stage began with his appointment as a Messenger and
ended with the proclamation of Prophethood three years later. During this period
the Message was given secretly to some selected persons only, but the common
people of Makkah were not aware of it.
The second stage lasted for two
years after the proclamation of his Prophethood. It began with opposition by
individuals: then by and by, it took the shape of antagonism, ridicule,
derision,, accusation, abuse, and false propaganda then gangs were formed to
persecute those Muslims who were comparatively poor, weak' and helpless.
The third stage lasted for about six years from the beginning of the persecution
to the death of Abu Talib and Hadrat Khadijah in the tenth year of Prophethood.
During this period, the persecution of the Muslims became' so savage and brutal
that many of them were forced to migrate to Habash. Social and economic boycott
was applied against the Holy Prophet and the members of his family, and those
Muslims who continued to stay in Makkah were forced to take refuge in Shi'b-i-A'bi
Talib which was besieged.
The fourth stage lasted for about three years
from the tenth to the thirteenth year of Prophethood. This was a period of hard
trials and grievous sufferings for the Holy Prophet and his followers. Life had
become unendurable at Makkah and there appeared to be no place of refuge even
outside it. So much so that when the Holy Prophet went to Ta'if, it offered no
shelter or protection. Besides this, on the occasion of Haj, he would appeal to
each and every Arab clan to accept his invitation to Islam but met with blank
refusal from every quarter. At the same time, the people of Makkah were holding
counsels' to get rid of him by killing or imprisoning or banishing him from
their city. It was at that most critical time that Allah opened for Islam the
hearts of the Ansar of Yathrab where he migrated at their invitation.
Now
that we have divided the life of the Holy Prophet at Makkah into four stages, it
has become easier for us to tell, as far as possible, the particular stage in
which a certain Makki Sarah was revealed. This is because the Surahs belonging
to a particular stage can be distinguished from those of the other stages with
the help of their subject matter and style. Besides this, they also contain such
references as throw light on the circumstances and events that form the
background of their revelation. In the succeeding Makki Surahs, we will
determine on the basis of the distinctive features of each stage, and point out
in the Preface, the particular stage in which a certain Makki Surah was
revealed.
Subject :Islamic Creed.
This Surah
mainly discusses the different aspects of the major articles of the Islamic
Creed: Tauhid, Life-after-death, Prophethood and their practical application to
human life. Side by side with this, it refutes the erroneous beliefs of the
"opponents and answers their objections, warns and admonishes them and comforts
the Holy Prophet and his followers, who were then suffering from persecution.
Of course, these themes have not been dealt with under separate heads but
have been blended in an excellent manner.
Topics and their
Interconnection
These verses are of introductory and admonitory
nature. The disbelievers have been warned that if they do not accept the Islamic
Creed and follow the 'Light' shown by the Revelation from the All-Knowing and
All-Powerful Allah, they would go to the same doom as the former disbelievers
did. Their arguments for rejecting the Prophet and the Revelation sent down to
him have been refuted and a warning has been given to them that they should not
be deluded by the respite that is being granted to them. 1 - 12
These
verses inculcate Tauhid, and refute shirk which is the greatest obstacle in the
way of its acceptance. 13 - 24
In these verses, a graphic scene of the
life in the Hereafter has been depicted in order to warn the disbelievers of the
consequences of the rejection of the Articles of Faith. 25 - 32
Prophethood is the main theme which has been discussed from the point of view of
the Holy Prophet, his Mission, the limitations of his powers, the attitude
towards his followers and also from the point of view of the disbelievers. 33 -
73
In continuation of the same theme, the story of Prophet Abraham has
been related to bring home to the pagan Arabs that the Mission of Prophet
Muhammad, which they were opposing, was the same as that of Prophet Abraham
(Allah's peace be upon them). This line of argument was adopted because they
considered themselves to be his followers, especially the Quraish who were proud
of being his descendants as well. 74 - 90
Another proof of his
Prophethood is the Book, which has been sent down to him by Allah, for its
teachings show the right guidance in regard to creed and practice. 91 - 108
Divine restrictions have been contrasted with the superstitious restrictions
of the pagan Arabs in order to show the striking differences between the two and
thus prove the Quran to be a Revealed Book. 109 - 154
The Jews, who were
criticized in vv. 144 - 147 along with the pagan Arabs, have been urged to
compare the teachings of the Quran with those of the Torah so that they might
recognize their similarity and give up their lame excuses against it, and adopt
its Guidance to escape the retribution on the Day of Resurrection. 155 - 160
This is the conclusion of the discourse: the Holy Prophet has been
instructed in a beautiful and forceful manner to proclaim fearlessly the
articles of the Islamic Creed and their implications. 161 - 165
It should be noted that the addressees were the mushrik Arabs, who
acknowledged that the Creator of the earth and heavens and of the sun and the
moon is Allah, who brought about the day and night. None of them believed that
these were the works of Lat or Hubal or `Uzza or of any other god or goddess.
Therefore Allah admonished them, saying (so to speak), "O foolish people, when
you yourselves admit that the Creator of the heavens and earth and of the night
and day, is Allah, why do you, then, make others your gods, and prostrate before
them, make offerings to them, present your needs before them and invoke them for
help`" (Refer to E.N.2 of Al-Fatihah and E.N. 163, Al-Baqarah).
It may be
noted that Zulumat (plural of Zu1mat) has been used in contrast to nur (light,
singular form). It is because 'darkness is merely the absence of light and may
be of many kinds.
2Allah says that He has created man from "earth"
because each and every particle of the human body comes from the earth and from
nowhere else.
3"The other settled term" is the "Day of Resurrection",
when all human beings will be brought back to life and presented before Allah
for rendering the account of their life on the earth.
4The reference is
to the "news" of the successes that were to follow the emigration of the Holy
Prophet to Madinah. At the time of this revelation, neither the disbelievers nor
the Believers could ever imagine the nature of the "news" they were going to
receive. So much so that even the Holy Prophet himself was unaware of the kind
of successes the Muslims were going to achieve in the near future.
5The
ignorant objectors argued that if Muhammad (Allah's peace be upon him) was
really a Messenger from Allah, an angel ought to have come down from heaven to
declare to the people: "This is the Messenger of Allah, so obey him; otherwise
you shall be punished".
The ignorant objectors did not understand how the
Creator of the heavens and earth could leave His Messenger in such a plight as
to be maligned and stoned by his enemies. They argued that the Messenger of such
a Supreme Sovereign ought to have come with a large retinue or at least an angel
in attendance on him, to protect him from his enemies and to fill the people
with awe and to convince them of his Prophethood and to carry out his orders in
some supernatural ways.
6The first answer to their objection is that in
case Allah had sent down an angel, no respite would have been given them for
reforming themselves and mending their ways. They have been given a chance
because no angel has been sent to make the Reality so naked as to leave no
alternative for them but to believe. It is obvious that this would have defeated
the very purpose of their life in the world to undergo their test. That is why
no angel has been sent. Man should undergo his test and discover the unseen
Reality without actually seeing it, merely by the right use of his reasoning and
thinking powers, and then bring under control his own self and its lusts in
accordance with the dictates of that Reality. It is thus obvious that the
"Unseen" must remain unseen for the sake of that test.
The worldly life,
the period of that test, will remain so only as long as the "Unseen" remains
unseen. No sooner will the "Unseen" become evident than that "Period" will
automatically come to an end, and instead of test, it will be the time of the
result of the test. Therefore Allah is not granting your demand for an angel to
appear before you because Allah does not like to end the term of your test
before the expiry of the period of the test. (Refer also to E.N. 228, Al-Baqarah).
7The only other alternative was to send an angel in human form. Allah says
that if He had sent an angel in human form, they would have felt the same
difficulty in recognizing him as they were feeling in recognizing Muhammad
(Allah's peace be upon him). This, too, would have involved them in doubts.
Therefore it was for their own good that Allah had not sent an angel in
attendance on His Messenger.
8That is, those, who ridicule the Message,
should travel through the land and see the remains, and study the history of the
former peoples. These will bear witness to the horrible end of those who behaved
in the way they are behaving towards Muhammad (Allah's peace be upon him).
9It is a nice way of cornering the mushrikin. At first Allah tells His
Messenger to ask them, "Whose is all that is in the heavens and the earth?" The
questioner put the question and waited for an answer. But they kept silent
because their answer could neither be in the negative nor in the affirmative.
They could not deny this because they themselves believed that `all belongs to
Allah.' But they could not affirm this because in that case, they themselves
would have supplied the adversary with an argument against their own creed of
shirk. After putting them in this critical position, Allah enjoined His
Messenger to say, "All belongs to Allah."
10This contains a subtle
argument: all those, whom the mushrikin have made their gods besides Allah,
stand in need of nourishment from their devotees, not to speak of giving
nourishment to them. No Pharaoh can set up his grandeur unless his subjects pay
taxes and make offerings to him; no saint becomes worthy of worship, unless his
worshipers build a grand mausoleum for him; no god becomes a god unless his
devotees make his idol and set it up in a grand temple and decorate it with
ornamentation. Thus, all the artificial gods stand in need of their servants. It
is the Lord of the universe alone, Who does not stand in need of anyone's help
but all others stand in need of Him, and it is His Godhead alone that does not
stand in need of any prop from anyone whatsoever, but supports itself.
11That is. "Allah is a witness that I have been appointed a Messenger by Him and
whatever I say is from Him."
12Mere guess-work or speculation does not
suffice for testifying to anything: none can testify to a thing with certainty
without the necessary knowledge about it. The question implies: "Do you really
have the knowledge that there is any other Sovereign with authority than Allah,
Who is worthy of service and worship?"
13That is, "You may, if you so
like, give false testimony without any knowledge, but, as for me, I cannot give
such a testimony."
14It means that those, who possess the knowledge of
revealed Books, know it for certain that there is only One God, Who has no
partner in His Godhead. Therefore they can discern the right creed about Allah
from among many different kinds of other creeds' and theories about Godhead,
just as any person can identify his own child from among many thousands of other
children.
15"False allegation" is the claim that there are many other
partners with Allah in His Godhead who have divine attributes and powers and are
thus worthy of worship. It is also false to allege that Allah Himself has made
such and such His special courtiers and has enjoined (or at least approved) that
Divine attributes should be ascribed to them and that they should be treated
with reverence, like Allah.
16"Allah's Signs" are all those signs that
point to the fact that there is only One God in the universe and that all others
are His servants. These signs are spread all over the universe. They are found
in the person of man himself and in the character and the great achievements of
the Prophets and in the revealed Books. That is why the one, who, in the
presence of all these "Signs," ascribes Divine attributes to others and
considers them worthy of Divine rights, is in fact guilty of gross iniquity. It
is indeed a great injustice that one should ascribe such Divine attributes to
others without any evidence, knowledge, observation and experience merely on the
basis of guess-work or the traditions of the forefathers. As a result of this
false creed, he does injustice to Truth, to Reality, to his own self and to
everything and everyone he deals with in this universe.
17Here Allah has
ascribed to Himself the cause of the defects produced in their faculties of
understanding, hearing and seeing, for everything that takes place in the world
under the Natural Law does, in fact, take place by the command of Allah because
He is the Author of that Law. Therefore the resultant effects of the working of
that Law, in fact, take place by the will and order of Allah. The obdurate
disbelievers do not understand, do not hear and do not see the Truth, even
though they seem to listen to the Message of the Messenger, because their
obduracy, their prejudice and their unwillingness have, according to the law of
Nature, dulled their faculties. The law is that if one is bent upon obduracy and
does not adopt the attitude of a righteous person, all the doors of his heart
automatically get locked against every kind of trth that goes against his lusts.
When this natural process is described in the human language, it will be said,
"The doors of the heart of such and such a person are locked." But God, without
Whose Command and Leave nothing whatsoever can happen, will describe the same
like this, "We have locked the doors of the heart of such and such a person."
This is because a human being will describe the thing as it seems to happen,
whereas Allah states the true nature of the happening.
18This is the
excuse that the foolish people put forward for rejecting the Message. They say,
"There is nothing new in the Message towards which the Messenger is inviting us.
This is the same old Message that we have been hearing before." According to
these foolish people, in order to be true, a Message must also be new because
according to them that which is old cannot be we. Whereas the fact is that the
Message has always been one and the same and will ever remain so. The Messengers
of Allah, who had been coming from the earliest times for the guidance of
mankind, have always been communicating the same Message; likewise, the Holy
Prophet was also presenting the same old Message. Of course, only those, who
being devoid of Divine Light, cannot see the aforesaid eternal reality, might
invent something new and by forging some theories present them as truth, saying,
"We have a new Message, which has never been given by anyone before us."
19Their desire, that, if they could return to this world again, they would
believe in the Message, will not be the outcome of any right thinking and
reasoning or any real change of their hearts and minds, but will be the result
of witnessing the Reality after which even the most obdurate disbeliever dare
not deny it.
20This does not mean that the life in this world is not real
and earnest and has been created merely for sport and pastime without any
serious purpose. What it means is that compared with the everlasting life in the
Hereafter, the short transitory life in this world is like sport and pastime,
which are diversions from serious work, to which one has to return after
recreation. Moreover, this worldly life has been likened to sport and pastime,
because here are many things of deceptive appearances that are liable to involve
in misunderstanding those people, who lack common-sense and vision, and help
them assume false positions so as to make life mere sport and pastime. For
instance, the role of a ruler in this worldly life is, in fact, not any
different from that of an actor who plays the role of a king on the stage, wears
a crown and gives commands which are obeyed like those of a real king; whereas,
in fact, he has no powers of a real king and is deposed, imprisoned and killed
by the order of the director; likewise many other such dramas are being
performed on the stage of this world day and night all around us. There is `the
court' of a `saint' or a goddess, where the needs are being "fulfilled",
whereas, in fact, that `court' has no such power. Then there is another actor
who performs the feats of divining the unseen and the future; whereas, in fact,
none possesses such knowledge. Still another poses to be the nourisher of
others, when in fact, he himself stands in need of obtaining provisions from
others. There is still another who poses as if he has the power of bestowing
honor and benefit or of inflicting disgrace and loss and behaves arrogantly as
if he were the absolute master of all around him. In fact, he himself is utterly
powerless and helpless, for a little turn of fortune can dethrone him from the
high pedestal of greatness to the lowest depths of disgrace. So much so that he
might even be at the feet of those very people, over whom he was ruling as a
despot. All these dramas that are being played on the stage of life are abruptly
brought to an end by death. Then everyone will cross over to the other world and
see for himself everything in its true color; then all the misunderstandings of
the life of this world shall be removed and everyone will be shown the real
worth of what he had earned for the Life-after-death
21The fact is that
all the people of his tribe regarded the Holy Prophet Muhammad (upon whom be
peace) truthful and honest up to the time he had not begun to recite the
Revelations of Allah before them. They falsified him only when he began to
deliver to them the Message of Allah. Even then, there was none who dared charge
Muhammad, the Man, with falsehood; nay, even his bitterest enemies never accused
him of having ever told a lie concerning any worldly matter. It was Muhammad,
the Prophet, whom they charged with falsehood. So much so that even Abu Jahl,
who was the bitterest of all his enemies never accused him of falsehood.
According to a tradition related by Hadrat 'Ali, Abu Jahl himself declared
during a conversation with the Holy Prophet, "We do not call you a liar; but
regard as false what you are presenting. " On the occasion of the Battle of Badr,
Akhnas bin Shariq asked Abu Jahl in private, "There is no third person here
besides us two. Tell me the truth whether you regard Muhammad as a truthful man
or as a liar." He answered, "By God, Muhammad is a truthful person and has never
told a lie in his life, but if Bani Qusayy, who have already the privilege of
being the bearers of the national flag and the providers of water to the
pilgrims and the keepers of the keys of the Ka bah, should also be acknowledged
as the recipients of Prophethood, what would then be left for the rest of the
Quraish?" For this very reason Allah is comforting His Prophet, saying, "It is
not you whom they are rejecting as an impostor but it is Our Message which they
are rejecting; when We are forbearing everything and giving them respite after
respite, why should you show any kind of anxiety'?"
22The "Law" referred
to here is the Law of Allah concerning the conflict between the right and the
wrong. According to this Law, it is essential that the righteous should be tried
for along period to stand their test in order to prove their fortitude, their
righteousness, their spirit of sacrifice and their fidelity, their limn belief
in their Faith and their complete trust in Allah. For this they must pass
through afflictions and hardships in order to develop those high moral qualities
which can be learned only by going through this hard and tough course, for with
these weapons alone, they are required to win the battle against falsehood.
When, according to this Law, they prove their competence, then will Allah's help
come at the right moment to support them and this help cannot be brought about
before its time by anyone.
23Whenever the Holy Prophet felt that his
people did not accept the Message in spite of his continuous preaching, he
cherished the desire that Allah Might send such a clear Sign that they should
have no alternative left but to accept his Message. In this verse Allah has
admonished His Messenger against cherishing any such desire, so as to say, "Do
not show impatience at their obduracy, but go on performing your mission
persistently in the way and order We are laying down for it. If this mission had
to be performed by means of miracles, could We not Ourselves have done so? But
We know that this method is not suitable for bringing about that intellectual
and moral revolution and for the establishment of that righteous society for
which you have been appointed a Messenger. If, however, you cannot endure the
heart-burning caused by their indifference and rejection and if you imagine that
a tangible Sign, that might appeal to them, is required to break this inert
state of their minds, then you should yourself try to bring about such a Sign:
you may, if you can, go deep down into the bowels of the earth or ascend up to
the heavens for this purpose, but you should not expect from Us that We would
fulfill this desire of yours, for there is no room for it in Our scheme."
24This is to impress that it is not the purpose of Allah that all human
beings should be forced to accept the Guidance somehow or other. Had it been so,
He would have created them in such a way that they would have been righteous by
birth like angels. Then there would have been no need of sending the Prophets
and the Books and of making the Believers enter into a conflict with the
disbelievers for the gradual establishment of the Way of Allah. But Allah does
not desire this. On the contrary, He intends that the Truth should be presented
to the people in a rational way so that those, who are convinced of it, may
adopt it without any coercion, and then mold their characters in accordance with
it to prove their moral superiority over the disbelievers. In this way they
would go on attracting the best among the people towards it till they succeeded
in establishing the Way by virtue of their high ideals, best principles of life,
pure characters and strong arguments and with resolute struggle with the
disbelievers. Then Allah assures them of the guidance and help they need and
deserve at any stage. But if one wishes that, instead of this natural process,
Allah should adopt some supernatural method and eradicate false ideas from the
minds of the people and bring in pure ones instead and establish the righteous
civilization in place of the evil ones, he should know that Allah will not do
this for this will be against the wisdom of the scheme of His creation of Man.
He has created Man as a responsible being granted him powers to exploit the
things of the world and given him the freedom of action-both good and evil-and
granted him a definite term for the preparation of the test and fixed the time
for the declaration of the result of the test to punish or reward him according
to his efforts.
25"Those, who listen to it... " are the people whose
conscience is alive, who try to judge rationally between right and wrong, and
who do not deliberately and obdurately lock the doors of their hearts. "Those
who are dead..." are the people who blindly follow a way and are not ready to
leave it and follow any other way even though that may manifestly be the Right
Way.
26''Sign" means a tangible miracle. Allah says that the reason why
he is not showing a Sign is not that He is unable to do so but for another
reason whose wisdom they do not understand. (See E.N. 6).
27That is, "If
you are really serious in your demand of seeing a Sign in order to judge whether
the Message of this Prophet is true or false, you should see and ponder over the
innumerable Signs that are found in abundance all around you. For instance, if
you consider animal life, you will see that the structure of the bodies of each
species of birds and beasts suits its functions immensely well; the qualities
and characteristics that have been ingrained in its nature help to fulfill all
its needs; the provision of its nourishment has been arranged in a wonderful
way; and the course of its life has been so predetermined that it cannot
transgress its limits in any way whatever. Allah also sees that each and every
animal, nay, even the smallest insect, is being looked after, protected and
guided, wherever it be, for the performance of the functions pre-destined for
it. In short, you will find that its structure suits it well; it has been given
inherent powers that help provide its needs: excellent provisions have been made
for its food. The process of its birth, procreation and death has been going on
according to a regulated fixed scheme. If you give a careful consideration to
this Sign alone, you will realize that the teachings of this Prophet about the
Oneness of God and His attributes and the way of life based on these to which he
invites you are absolutely we. Yet you neither try to see with open eyes these
Signs nor listen to the Message this Prophet is conveying to you. As a result,
you have been involved in ignorance and, therefore, desire to see some wonderful
miracle for mere pastime. "
28This is how Allah lets them go astray: (1)
He holds back the opportunity for observing His Signs from the one who chooses
to remain in ignorance; (2) He keeps hidden the pointers to the Reality from the
one who is a victim of prejudices, even though he should see His Signs, and lets
him remain involved in misunderstandings and move farther and farther away from
the Reality. On the contrary, He guides the seeker after truth to the Right Way
by affording him the opportunity to make use of his knowledge for the purpose of
discovering the Reality, and showing him the signs guiding towards it. We daily
notice instances of these types. There are millions of people before whose eyes
countless Signs are spread in their own persons and in the universe, but they
see them like animals and do not learn any lessons from them. Then there are the
physicists, chemists, zoologists, botanists, biologists, geologists,
astronomers, physiologist, anatomists, historians, archaeologists, social
scientists, etc., who observe such Signs as may enlighten the minds and the
hearts with Faith, but they seem to see no "Sign" to lead them to the Reality,
just because they begin their study with prejudiced minds, merely for the sake
of material gains. Not only this, but every Sign leads them to atheism,
disbelief, materialism and nature worship. In contrast to them, there are those,
who observe the wonders of the universe and the phenomena of Nature with open
eyes and open hearts, and find the Signs of God all round them: SO much so that
they can see His Sign in each and every green leaf.
29In answer to the
demand of the disbelievers for a Sign, they were told that there was not one
Sign, but innumerable Signs scattered all around them and their attention has
been drawn in v. 38 to study the mystery of the life of any bird or beast and
they would find Sign of God. Now in v. 40-42, they have been directed to another
Sign that they can fmd in their own selves. When some affliction befalls a man
or death confronts him with all its dreads, then he sees no refuge in any other
than Allah. On such occasions even the most confirmed polytheists forget their
gods and invoke Allah's help. Likewise the most obdurate atheists, in their
utter helplessness, involuntary pray to Allah for rescue, this Sign-man's own
state of mind is being presented here as a pointer to the Reality, for this is a
clear proof of the existence of One God, and of the urge of God-worship that has
been embedded deep in the heart of every human being. Though it might have been
kept suppressed by negligence and ignorance, sometimes it comes to the surface
under the stimulus of some misfortune.
Ikrimah, son of Abu Jahl, who was
an arch enemy of Islam, was led towards Islam by witnessing such a Sign. When
the Holy Prophet conquered Makkah, 'Ikrimah fled to Jaddah and sailed for
Abyssinia. During the voyage, there came a furious storm which threatened to
sink the boat. At first the passengers began to invoke their gods and goddesses
for help. But when the storm became so violent that they feared that the boat
was going to sink. they all cried out, "This is not the time to call any open
except Allah, because He alone can save us. " This opened the eyes of `Ikrimah
and the locked doors of his heart: "If there is none here except Allah to help
us, how can there be any to help us in any other place? This is what Muhammad
(Allah's peace be upon him) has been teaching us for the last twenty years any
we have been fighting it out with him". That as the most decisive moment in the
life of `Ikrimah. He made a solemn pledge with Allah to this effect: "If I
escape from this storm, I will directly go to Prophet Muhammad Allah's peace be
upon him) to become a follower of his." Allah rescued him from that storm and he
fulfilled his pledge. He not only became a Muslim, but spent the rest of his
life in the service of Islam by performing Jihad.
30"... and set a seal
upon your hearts" means" ...deprive you of the powers of thinking and
understanding.
31This verse removes the silly notions about Prophethood
and answers the absurd objections raised against the claim of Prophethood by
Muhammad (Allah's peace be upon him). The foolish people have always had the
silly notion that a Prophet of Allah must be supernatural and capable of
performing wonderful miracles. For instance, they expected that a whole mountain
should turn into a mass of gold at his bidding: that the earth should throw out
treasures by his orders: that he should be able to tell the people all about
their past and future: that he should be able to locate a lost thing and
foretell whether a sick person will get well or die and whether a pregnant woman
will give birth to a male or a female. They also believed that such a person
should be above the common human limitations. They could not conceive anyone to
be a prophet, if he suffered from hunger or thirst and needed sleep, or, if he
had wife and children and went to the bazaar to buy and sell the necessities of
life, or, if he was sometimes forced to borrow money or was involved in poverty
and indigence.
When Muhammad (Allah's peace be upon him) put forward the
claim that he was a Messenger of Allah, his contemporaries wanted to test his
claim with the touch-stone of such silly notions. They would ask him questions
about the unseen things and demand supernatural miracles from him. They would
also raise the objection that he was merely a common man, who needed food and
drank water like them: who had wife and children and who moved about in the
bazaars. In answer to these things, Allah told His Prophet to inform them that
he never claimed to be supernatural; his only claim was that he was following
the Revelations he received from Allah and that he should be judged by that
standard only.
32The question is meant to bring home to them this fact:
"I have seen with my own eyes and experienced directly the realities I am
presenting to you, and I have gained their accurate knowledge through
Revelation; therefore my evidence is that of an eye witness. On the contrary,
you are blind with regard to those realities: all your notions concerning them
are based on guess-work and speculation or on the blind following of others.
Therefore the difference between you and me is the same as of the man who is
able to see and the one who is blind. That is what gives me superiority over you
and not that I possess the treasures of God or have the knowledge of the unseen
or that I am free from the common human limitations."
33That is, "You
should pay special attention only to those who believe that One Day they shall
have to go before Allah to render an account of their deeds and who do not
cherish any such false hopes that somebody's intercession and help will save
them. It is because this "Admonition" can produce good effect only on such
people and not on those who are so absorbed in the enjoyment of the pleasures of
this world that they never think of their death or of going before Allah.
Likewise, this "Admonition" will fall flat on those who are making merry in this
world, deluding themselves into believing that no harm will come to them in the
Hereafter because of their `spiritual' relation with such and such a saint or
because such and such a holy person will intercede with Allah in their behalf or
because such a one has already made atonement for them. Obviously, no admonition
can be beneficial to such people."
34In this passage Allah has answered
one of the objections that me big chiefs of the Quraish used to raise in regard
to the followers of the Holy Prophet. They would say that none but the lowest
stratum of society, consisting of slaves, menials and the like, had accepted
Islam: they would taunt him of having such companions as Bilal, `Ammar, Suhaib,
Khabbab, etc., and ask in a jeering way, "Are these the only (honorable) people
from amongst us, upon whom Allah has showered His blessings?" They did not rest
content with making fun of their poor condition, but also passed stinging
remarks about their past shortcomings, saying. "Just have a look at the past
history of such and such people, who are today forming the "pious" group of the
believers." Allah has advised His Prophet not to be disheartened by their unkind
remarks.
35That is, "If they had done something wrong in the past, they
themselves shall be accountable for it and not you, for everyone shall get the
reward of the good or evil one has done. Therefore, no good deed of yours will
be put to their credit, nor will you be burdened with any evil deed of theirs.
They come to you merely as seekers after truth and it will be injustice to look
down upon them and drive them away."
36That is, "By bestowing the
blessing of Islam at the outset on the poor and indigent and those who held a
low position in society, We have involved the upper rich and proud class in
trial."
37Allah has told his Messenger to console those of His followers
who had committed heinous sins during the days of "ignorance" by inspiring them
with the assurance that He forgives and treats leniently those who repent and
mend their ways and, therefore, the taunts of the enemies of Islam need not
worry them about what they had done in the past.
38In order to understand
the significance of v. 55, we should keep in view v. 37 in which the
disbelievers asked, "Why has no Sign been sent down to this Prophet from his
Lord?" In the subsequent passage (vv. 38-54) several manifest Signs have been
cited to show that there is no lack of Signs but the disbelievers do not want to
see them. Then in v. 55 such people have been warned, as if to say, "In this way
We make Our Signs clear, plain and manifest so that those, who persist in their
disbelief inspire of those Signs, should prove themselves to be guilty ones. For
they choose the way of deviation deliberately, not because there is a lack of
Signs to show the Right Way but because they do not want to see the Signs."
39This alludes to the demand of the opponents for the scourge of Allah with
which they were being threatened. They said, "Why does a scourge not come down
upon us, when we are openly denying and defying you? If you have been really
sent by Allah, then anyone, who denied and insulted you, would have been
swallowed by the earth or stricken dead by lightning. How is it that the
Messenger of Allah and his followers are undergoing untold afflictions and
sufferings, while their tormentors are enjoying their lives merrily?"
40Angels who keep strict watch over each and everything a man does or thinks of
and maintain a complete record of all this.
41That is, "You yourselves
are a witness that Allah alone is All-Powerful: He alone has the sole authority
and your prosperity and adversity wholly lie in His power and He alone is the
maker of your destinies. That is why you turn to Him in your affliction, when
you find that no other means of rescue has been left for you. In the face of
this clear Sign, you have set up, without any reason or rhyme, others as
partners in His Godhead. You live on His provisions but treat others as your
providers: you get help from Him in your need, but set up others as your helpers
and protectors: He rescues you from your distress, yet you regard others
(besides Him) as your rescuers: it is He Whom you humbly invoke in your
affliction, yet you take your offerings to others when he removes it. In short,
you witness the proofs of His Godhead, day and night, yet you serve and bow down
before others.
42It is a warning to those who had become very bold in
their enmity with the Truth because no scourge from Allah was in sight. They are
being warned that the scourge of Allah does not take long to come. A gust of
wind can destroy them all at once. A sudden shake of an earthquake can sink
their Habitations under ground. A spark can set on fire the magazines of enmity
and involve clans, nations and countries in endless blood feuds. Therefore, "If
no scourge is coming on you, this should not make you so bold and neglectful as
to go on treading blindly the way you are following without discerning whether
it is right or wrong. Instead you should take advantage of the respite that is
being given and of the Signs that are being presented to you and recognize the
Reality and follow the Right Way."
43That is, "It is no part of my duty
to make you see what you would not see and to make you understand what you would
not understand; nor am I responsible for bringing down a scourge on you, if you
would not see or understand it. The only duty that has been assigned to me is to
make plain to you the distinction between Truth and falsehood. Now that I have
done my duty and you have rejected the Truth, the evil consequences of which I
have been warning you will appear in due course."
44That is, "If you
ever forget this instruction and keep sitting in the company of such people."
45Here very important practical instructions have been given to the
pious people. Their first and foremost duty is to save themselves from any
disobedience of Allah; they should not worry unnecessarily about the disobedient
people, for they are not responsible for their disobedience. They should not,
therefore, impose it upon themselves as an obligation that they have to convince
them anyhow by argument and to refute their absurd objections. Their only duty
is to present the Truth before them. Then, if they do not accept it, the pious
people should not waste their time and energy by entering into useless polemical
disputes, discussions and argumentations with the disbelievers. Instead, they
should spend their time and energy in educating and training and reforming those
who are sincere seekers after the Truth.
46Here very important practical
instructions have been given to the pious people. Their first and foremost duty
is to save themselves from any disobedience of Allah; they should not worry
unnecessarily about the disobedient people, for they are not responsible for
their disobedience. They should not, therefore, impose it upon themselves as an
obligation that they have to convince them anyhow by argument and to refute
their absurd objections. Their only duty is to present the Truth before them.
Then, if they do not accept it, the pious people should not waste their time and
energy by entering into useless polemical disputes, discussions and
argumentations with the disbelievers. Instead, they should spend their time and
energy in educating and training and reforming those who are sincere seekers
after the Truth. grand purpose behind it. It must, therefore, come to an end at
the appointed time and then be resurrected so that the Creator may take account
of all that has been done in it and ultimately build the Next World on the
results of that reckoning.
That this world has been created for a purpose
has also been mentioned at other places in the Qur'an in different ways:
(a) "Lord, You have not created all this in vain....." (Al-`Imran, III: 91).
(b) "We have not created the heavens and the earth and all that is between
them for mere fun." (Al-Anbiya', XXI: 16).
(c) "Do you think that We have
created you without any purpose and that you will never be brought back to Us?"
(AI-Mu'minun, XXIV: 115).
(2) The whole universe has been built on the
solid foundations of the Truth. Everything in it is based on just, wise and
right laws and there is no room for injustice and folly and falsehood to take
root and bear fruit in it. One should not, however, be misled by the partial and
temporary successes of falsehood. At times Allah may allow the worshipers of
falsehood opportunity to try their worst for the success of falsehood and
injustice and wrong ways in order to show that all their efforts shall
ultimately fail and every worshiper of falsehood will see at the Last Reckoning
that all the efforts made for the success of this unholy cause had gone utterly
waste.
(3) Allah has created the universe in truth and is ruling over it
by His own personal right. He wields authority here because of His personal
right as its Creator; one should not, therefore, be misled by seeing others
holding authority over the affairs of the world. In fact, no one has, nor can
have, any right to rule here, for no one has any right whatever over anything in
the universe.
47It is beyond our comprehension to understand the real
nature of the blowing of the Trumpet. What we learn from the Qur'an is that on
the Day of Resurrection when the first Trumpet shall be blown by the Command of
Allah, everyone and everything shall perish. Then after this (Allah alone knows
how long after this) the second Trumpet shall be blown; then everyone from the
beginning of the creation to its end, shall be brought back to life and mustered
in the Plain of Resurrection. In short, on the first blowing of the Trumpet, the
present system of the universe shall be destroyed and on its second blowing the
new system, different in form and with different laws, shall be created.
48It does not mean that today Sovereignty is not His. What it means is this:
"On that Day the curtain, that is covering the Reality today, will be lifted and
it will become apparent that all those who seemed to wield authority or were
supposed to wield it, had absolutely no authority, and that Sovereignty wholly
belongs to Allah alone, Who is the Creator of the universe
49Ghaib is all
that is hidden from the naked eye and cannot be seen and Shahadat is all that is
visible to it.
50Ghaib is all that is hidden from the naked eye and
cannot be seen and Shahadat is all that is visible to it. peace be upon him) and
deprived them of the satisfaction they had with the creed of shirk. This meant
to show that the Prophet Muhammad (Allah's peace be upon him) and his followers
were in the position of Prophet Abraham and their opponents were in that of the
ignorant people who had a dispute with him. The argument was so subtle that it
took, so to speak, the wind out of their sails and put them in such an awkward
position that they did not know what to answer. This showed beyond all doubt
that they were following a way opposed to that of Abraham (Allah's peace be upon
him) whom they held in great reverence and regarded as their ancestor and
Prophet. Thus they were placed in the awkward position of his opponents.
51That is, "Just as the phenomena of Nature are daily before your eyes and
the Signs of God are being shown to you, so were these before Abraham (Allah's
peace be upon him). But you, like blind men, do not see anything inspite of
looking at them. The same stars, the samemoon and the same sun rise and set
before your eyes, but they leave you, as far away from the Reality at the time
they set as you were at the time they rose. But when Abraham saw with his mind's
eyes these very phenomena of Nature, he reflected upon them and came to know of
the Reality.
52In order to understand the true nature of the dispute
between the Prophet Abraham and his people mentioned in this passage and others
in the Qur'an, one should keep in view the religious and social conditions of
his time. Now that Ur, the brith place of the Prophet Abraham, has been
unearthed by modern archaeologists, it has helped reveal the real conditions
prevailing in that land during that age. Sir Leonard Woolley has published the
results of this research in this regard in his book, "Abraham", London, 1935. A
resume of the same, (which has been translated into English from the
Tafhim-ul-Qur 'an, is given below:
It has been estimated that round about
the year 2100 B.C. which is now generally regarded by scholars as the period of
Prophet Abraham, the population of Ur was nearly 250,000; it might even have
been 500,000. It was a flourishing industrial and business center. On the one
side, it attracted trade goods from as far off places as Pamir and Nilgiri, and
on the other, it had trade relations with Anatolia. The State, whose capital it
was, extended a little less to the north and a little more to the west of modern
' Iraq. The people were mostly craftsmen and merchants by profession. The
inscriptions of the age that have been deciphered from the archaeological
remains show that they had a materialist outlook on life; their main object of
life was to amass wealth and make merry. They practiced usury and were wholly
absorbed in business. They regarded one another with suspicion and resorted to
litigation on minor grounds. Their prayers to their gods generally consisted of
supplications for long life, prosperity and flourishing business. The population
was divided into three classes:
(1) The Amelu : This was the highest
class which consisted of the priests, state officials and military officers,
etc.
(2) The Mushkenu : These were the merchants, craftsmen, and farmers.
(3) The Ardu : The slaves.
The Amelu class enjoyed special
distinctions and privileges: they had greater rights both in the criminal and in
the civil law than those of other people and their life and property were held
sacred and precious.
Such was the city and the society in which the
Prophet Abraham opened his eyes. According to the Talmud, he was a member of the
Amelu class, and his father was the chief official of the state (Please see also
Al-Baqarah: E.N. 290).
The tablets excavated at Ur mention the names of
about 5,000 gods. Each city had its own god and also a special deity, who was
regarded as the chief god or the city god and was entitled to greater reverence
than the others. The city god of Ur was "Nannar" (the moon god) and scholars of
the later ages have also called this city "Qamrinah" after that god. The other
big city was "Larsah" which afterwards became the seat of government instead of
Ur; its chief god was "Shamash" (the sun god). Under these chief gods there were
many minor gods also, most of whom had been adopted from among the stars and
planets and a few from among the earthly objects. People thought that their
prayers for less important things were granted by these minor gods. The symbols
of all these heavenly and earthly gods and goddesses had been formed in the
shape of idols and all rites of worship were performed before them.
The
idol of "Nannar" had been kept in a grand shrine built on the highest peak at Ur
and near it the sanctuary of his wife "Ningil" had been built. The shrine of "Nannar"
was just like a royal palace where every night a different female worshiper
would go and become his bride. Thus there lived a large number of women in the
shrine who had been dedicated to the god and their position was no better than
religious prostitutes. The woman who would sacrifice her virginity in the name
of the "god" was regarded very respectable. The common belief was that a women
must surrender herself at least once in her lifetime to another man "in the way
of god" in order to attain salvation. It is obvious that the people to benefit
most from this religious prostitution were the male priests themselves.
"Nannar"
was not merely a god; he was the biggest landlord of the country, the biggest
merchant, the biggest craftsman and the chief executive of the country's
political life, for a very large number of gardens, houses and fields had been
dedicated to his shrine. Besides the income from these sources, farmers,
landlords and merchants also brought their offerings of corn, milk, gold, cloth,
etc., to the shrine. Naturally there was a big staff to look after these
offerings.
Many factories were run and business on a large scale was done
on behalf of the Temple. The highest court of justice had been established in
the shrine and the priests acted as judges and their judgments were regarded as
from "God". The royal dynasty also derived its sovereignty from "Nannar", who
was the real sovereign. The king ruled over the country on his behalf and was,
therefore, himself raised to the rank of a deity and worshiped like the other
gods.
The dynasty which was ruling over Ur in the time of the Prophet
Abraham had been founded by Ur-Nammu who in 2300 B.C. had established a vast
empire, which extended to Susa in the east and to Lebanon in the west. It was
from him that the dynasty received the title of Nammu which became Namrud in
Arabic. After the emigration of the Prophet Abraham this dynasty and this nation
were visited by continuous disasters. Their downfall was hastened by the
destruction of Ur and the capture of Namrud along with the idol of Nannar by the
people of Elam. Then the Elamis established their rule at Larsah which dominated
over the land of Ur also. The last blow was dealt by Babylon, which had grown
powerful under an Arab dynasty and brought both Larsah and Ur under its control.
As a result of this downfall, the people of Ur lost their faith in Nannar who
had failed to protect them from humiliation, shame and ruin.
Nothing can
be said with certainty about the response the people of this !and made to the
teachings of the Prophet Abraham after his emigration, but the law promulgated
in 1910 B.C. by Hamurabi (Amraphel of Gen. xiv), king of Babylon, bears evidence
that it had been influenced directly or indirectly by the Guidance of
Prophethood. A pillar inscribed with this complete Code was discovered by a
French archaeologist in 1902 A.D. and its English version was published in 1903
A.D. by C. H. W. John under the title, "'The Oldest Code of Law." Most of the
principles and details of this Law and the Law of the Prophet Moses, are, in
general, alike.
If the results of the archaeological research, which has
been carried out so tar, are correct, one thing that clearly stands out is that
shirk was not merely a religious belief and basis of polytheistic rituals with
the people of Abraham but it was indeed the very basis of their economic,
cultural, political and social system of life. In contrast to this, the Message
of the Prophet Abraham not only clearly struck at the root of idol-worship, but
also hit hard upon the sovereignty and worship of the royal dynasty and the
social, economic and political status of the priests and nobles and the
collective life of the whole country. Therefore, the acceptance of his
invitation had far-reaching implications: It called for a complete metamorphosis
of the prevailing social pattern and demanded its re-construction on the basis
of Tauhid. That is why, as soon as the Prophet Abraham (Allah's peace be upon
him) began to deliver the Message, the common people and the nobles, the priest
class and Nimrod, all stood up together to suppress his voice which gave rise to
the bitter dispute, mentioned in the Qur'an.
53In vv. 76 - 78, the way
of thinking which led the Prophet Abraham (Allah's peace be upon him) to the
Reality before his appointment as a Messenger of Allah has been stated. It
teaches that if a person uses his brain and eyes rightly, he can reach the
Reality, even if he is born and bred, like Prophet Abraham, in surroundings
surcharged with shirk in which one might have had no chance of learning anything
about the Oneness of God. The only condition is that one makes the right sort of
observation of the phenomena of Nature and reflects upon them carefully and
exercises one's reasoning to reach the truth by a connected, logical train of
thought. It appears from the preceding verse that the Prophet Abraham, from the
beginning of his conscious life, was surrounded by the people, who worshiped the
stars, the moon and the sun. It was, therefore, natural that the starting point
of his search for the truth should be the question: Can any of these objects
really be the Lord and Sustainer? That is why his thinking centered round this
question and when he discovered that all the gods of his people were bound
tightly by an un-alterable law and were revolving in accordance with it, he came
to the inevitable conclusion that none of these gods possessed, in the least,
any quality that might entitle it to be the Lord. The Lord and Sustainer is only
that One, Who has created them and bound them to His own obedience.
The
wording in which the event has been couched, has generally given rise to an
objection. "When the night outspread over him, he saw a star and said.... I am
not one of those who set up partners with God. " The question arises in the mind
of the common reader: Did the night not outspread over Prophet Abraham every day
of his life ever since he was a child and did he not see the stars, the moon and
the sun rise and set before this particular occasion? Though he saw them every
night, it is obvious that he began to deliberate like this only when he had
attained his maturity. Why has then the event been described in such a way
("...... When the night outspread over him) as to give rise to the doubt as if
he had never seen the stars and the moon and the sun ever before this? As such
an assumption cannot hold good in ordinary circumstances, some people have had
to invent an extraordinary story to remove this seeming anachronism. They say
that the Prophet Abraham was born and brought up in a cave, where it was
arranged that he should not see the stars, the moon and the sun before he
attained his maturity. The matter, however, is so simple that it does not need
the invention of a fantastic story to explain it. It can be easily understood by
a well-known incident in the life of Newton. One day when he saw an apple fall
down from the tree to the ground, his mind suddenly turned to the problem: Why
do things fall down to the ground? At last his deliberation led him to formulate
and prove the law of gravity. Here, too, the question might arise: Had not
Newton ever seen anything falling to the ground before this incident? it is
obvious that he must have seen many things fall to the ground many times before
this. How is it then, that the fall of that particular apple on that particular
day stirred up that particular mental activity which the daily fall of hundreds
of things to the ground had not roused before this? The simple answer is that
the minds are not always excited in the same way by the same kind of
observations. Many a time, it so happens that one sees a thing over and over
again but that does not stir up one's mind to any mental activity; then there
comes a moment when the sight of that very thing diverts the mental activity
towards a particular problem. Or, if one's mind is engaged in the solution of a
problem and one suddenly catches sight of a particular thing which had always
been before one's eyes, it excites the mind to a mental activity that helps
solve the problem. The same thing happened in the case of the Prophet Abraham.
Nights came and passed away, the stars, the moon and the sun rose and set for
years, but on one particular night the observation of one particular star
excited that mental activity which led him to the central Reality of the Oneness
of God. It may be that ever since he attained maturity, he might have been
thinking over the problem of the worship of the stars, the moon and the sun,
because this was the religion of his people and on this was based the whole
system of the life of that community. Then one night the observation of the star
suddenly excited the mental activity that helped him solve the problem. It is
also possible that the observation of the star was the starting point of that
mental activity.
In this connection, there is another possible doubt that
must also be removed. Was the Prophet Abraham guilty of shirk (even though
temporarily), when seeing the star and the moon and the sun severally, he said,
"This is my Lord." A little thinking will convince one that he was not at all
guilty of shirk for in his search for Reality, a seeker-after-truth has,
inevitably, to pass through several stages of deliberations about shirk.
Therefore, what determines his creed is not the temporary deliberation but the
direction of one's research and the ultimate destination where he stops. These
intervening stages of deliberation have to be made by every seeker-after-truth
in his search for Reality. These are made for the sake of research and should
not be taken as the final decision. The deliberation about any form of shirk is
in a questioning manner and is not its practice. When a seeker-after-truth stops
to deliberate about anything and says, "It is so," it is not his final judgment.
What he means to say is, "Is it so?¦ That is why he proceeds further in his
research as soon as he gets a negative answer at any of these stages.
54The Prophet Abraham asked the mushrikin to remember the fact that his Lord,
whom they also acknowledged as their Lord, had the knowledge of everything and
was fully aware of what they were doing. Then he posed the question in order to
rouse them from their heedlessness towards the Message and use their
common-sense to consider the reality.
The Arabic word tadhakkur contains
this sense.
55Some commentators are of the opinion that the people of
Prophet Abraham did not believe in Allah or were ignorant of His existence and
regarded their gods as the sole masters of the universe. Accordingly, they have
based their comments of this passage and others about Prophet Abraham on this
assumption. Obviously, they are wrong because the whole passage clearly shows
that those people did not deny Allah as the Creator of the earth and heavens,
but were guilty of associating others with Allah in His Godhead and Sovereignty.
This is clear from these and other words of the Prophet Abraham:
''there
is no reason why I should fear those whom you have made partners with Allah."
Moreover, the manner, in which he mentions Allah, while addressing his people,
shows that they also believed in Allah but associated other partners with Him as
well.
The word zulm that occurs in v. 82 stands for shirk as translated.
When some Companions mistook it for sinfulness, the Holy Prophet himself removed
their misunderstanding saying, "Here it means shirk."
In . this
connection, it will also be interesting to note that this most important event
of the life of Prophet Abraham which has been described in this para and which
was the starting point of his great Mission, has not been mentioned at all in
the Bible. The Talmud, however, mentions it, but it differs from the Qur'an in
two things:
(1) In it the order is "from the sun to the stars and to God"
but it is the other way round in the Qur'an.
(2) It states that, when he
said about the sun, "This is my Lord," he worshiped it also at the same time and
did the same with the moon.
56That is, "Even if the above-mentioned
people had been guilty of shirk like you, they would never have been exalted to
such high ranks. This is because shirk is such a heinous sin that it destroys
good works. It is just possible that any such person might have won fame as a
great conqueror by ruthless destruction, or might have amassed fabulous wealth
by foul means and become a notorious wealthy man like Korah or done some
infamous thing and won name for himself but he could never have won the exalted
position of being the leader of the pious and the right guided. They won the
unique distinction of being the source of virtue and guidance for the whole
world because they scrupulously avoided shirk and steadfastly followed the way
of God-worship.
57Here it has been stated that three things had been
bestowed on the Prophet: (1) The Book, Divine Guidance. (2) The Judgment the
good sense to understand that Guidance and the capability to apply its
principles to the affairs of life and the God-given ability to form correct
opinions about the problems of life. (3) The Prophethood the office of guiding
the people in accordance with the Divine Guidance.
58That is,it does not
matter at all, if these disbelievers and mushrikin have rejected the Guidance of
Allah. We have raised a Community of the Believers, who appreciate fully the
worth of this blessing.
59The context in which the words, "Allah has not
sent down anything to any man," occur and their refutation clearly show that
these were the words of the Jews. They uttered these words when the disbelievers
and the mushrikin of Arabia asked them, "Tell us whether the Word of Allah has
really been sent down to this man, Muhammad," This question had arisen because
the Holy Prophet claimed, " I am a Prophet and the Book is being sent down to
me." The Quraish and the mushrik Arabs turned to the Jews because they possessed
the Book and believed in the Prophets and could speak with authority. Therefore,
their answer provided the opponents with a strong weapon against Islam and they
repeated the answer as an argument to dissuade the people from it. That is why
their answer has been cited here and refuted.
Here a possible doubt
should also be removed: How can a Jew, who believes that the Torah had been sent
down by God, say, "Allah has not sent down anything to any man?" A little
thinking will show that a person in his obduracy often utters such things as are
against his fundamental principles merely to refute his opponent. As the Jews
were bent upon refuting his claim to Prophethood, they had been so blinded by
their opposition to the Holy Prophet Muhammad (upon whom be peace), that in
denying his Prophethood they even denied the very office of Prophethood.
"Those people formed quite a wrong estimate of Allah ... "means that they
committed a grave error in evaluating His powers and wisdom. For the person who
says: "Allah has not sent down the knowledge of the Truth and Guidance for
life," makes either of the two wrong estimates: (1) He believes that Allah has
not power to send down Revelation to any man, and this is a wrong estimate of
the powers of Allah; (2) He thinks that though Allah has given man intelligence
and authority to exploit the resources of nature, He has made no arrangement for
his right guidance, but has left him to act indiscriminately in the world, and
this is a wrong estimate of the wisdom of Allah.
60This answer is meant
for the Jews, who had furnished the disbelievers and the mushrikin with the
arguments that "Allah has not sent down anything to any man..." To refute their
objection it has particularly been pointed out that the Torah was sent down to
Moses by Allah, for they themselves believed and could not deny that the Torah
had been sent down to Moses by Allah . Thus, it was by itself a refutation of
their assertion that "Allah has not sent down anything to any man.." It also
proved at least that the Word of God can be sent down to a man, as it had been
sent down to Moses.
61After showing in the preceding verse (91) that the
Word of God can be sent down to a man and that it had actually been sent down to
Moses, a man, the Qur'an in this verse proceeds to prove that the Word, which
has been sent down to Muhammad (Allah's peace be upon him), is actually the Word
of God. Four things have been put forward as a proof thereof:
(1). It is
a blessed Book: it presents the best principles for the welfare and true success
of man; it teaches the right creeds and inculcates all kinds of virtues and
exhorts the people of follow a high standard of morality for leading a pure
life. At the same time, it does not teach in any way whatsoever any vice
selfishness, narrow-mindedness, cruelty, obscenity and the like, which you have
interpolated in abundance in your sacred Books.
(2). It does not present
anything different form the Guidance contained in the former Scriptures: nay, it
testifies to the same teaching that had been presented in them.
(3). This
Book aims to fulfill the very object for which the former Books had been sent,
that is, to shake up and rouse those people who had become forgetful of the
noble object for which they had been created, and to warn them of the evil
consequences of their wicked ways.
(4). The Message of this Book has not
attracted those from among mankind who are the worshipers of this world and
slaves of their lusts, but only such people as are able to see the higher things
of life beyond the narrow bounds of their worldly life. Then the most obvious
characteristic of the revolution that this Book has brought about in their lives
is that they stand out conspicuously among the people around them for their
piety and God-worship. Is it possible for any book invented by an impostor, who
has the audacity to say that it is from Allah, to produce such excellent
results?
62That is, it is Allah Who splits open the seed and the
fruitstone under ground and causes those to grow into plants or trees.
63It means that Allah creates living creatures out of lifeless matter and
discharges lifeless matter out of living creatures.
64That is, "We have
made clear the Signs which show conclusively that there is only One Allah and
that none else has the Divine attributes or powers and none else is entitled to
any of the Divine rights. However, those who lack knowledge cannot reach the
Reality by means of these Signs; only those who observe the phenomena of Nature
in a rational way can attain this precious wealth. "
65That is, Allah
has created the whole human race from one single being, Adam, who was the first
man.
66That is "Only Men of understanding can find clear Signs of the
Reality in the creation of human race and in the different functions allotted to
man and woman for its reproduction at the different stages of human life from
birth to death. But those, who live like animals and hanker after the
fulfillment of the lusts of the flesh, can see nothing worthwhile even in these
Signs."
67That is, in spite of these clear Signs, some people have set
up as His partners some hidden beings that are merely the creations of their own
imagination and whims. They have gone so far in their ignorance as to allot
different powers and duties to them in the management of the universe and in
determining the destiny of man. For instance, one has been made the good of rain
and another of vegetation; one is the goddess of wealth and another of disease,
etc. Such absurd beliefs have been prevalent among all polytheistic peoples
about spirits, devils, monks, gods and goddesses.
68The pagan Arabs
called the angels "daughters" of God. Likewise some mushrik communities have
invented even a genealogical tree of gods and goddesses descending from God.
69In the sentence, "I am not a keeper over you," Allah is speaking in the
first person on His Prophet's behalf. Just as the second person in the Qur'an
denotes different people at different places, so the first person also denotes
different beings at different places. As is well known, in some places, the
second person is the Holy Prophet or the Believers or the people of the Book,
and at other places it is the disbelievers or the mushrikin or the Quraish or
the Arabs or the human beings in general, though the Qur'an is meant to be the
guidance for all mankind, Likewise at some places, the first person is Allah
Himself and at others it is the angel, the bearer of the Revelation, or a group
of angels, or the Prophets or the Believers, though, in every case, the Words
are of Allah. However, one can determine the real "person" with the help of the
context.
The meaning of the sentence. "I am not a keeper over you," is :
"My only duty is to present the guidance before you. Then it is for you to open
your eyes to see it or to keep your eyes shut like a blind man. It is not my
duty to force open the eyes of those, who deliberately keep them shut and to
make them see what they do riot see."
70The different ways of expression,
in which the Revelation has been couched, are a test for the people, because
they help to discriminate the counterfeit from the genuine. The same thing has
already been stated in Al-Baqarah, II: 26, in connection with the mention of
insignificant things like flies, gnats, etc. in the parables of the Qur'an. Just
as the mention of these insignificant things helps the seekers in finding the
Truth, in the same way the different ways of expression help those, who have
knowledge and make use of it, to think deeply about their aims and objects and
learn lessons for their own good. On the contrary, those people, who are
bigoted, pay no attention to the subject-matter, but begin to think on other
lines. For instance, they begin to conjecture how this illiterate man can
compose such excellent discourses. Thus, instead of judging the Qur'an from its
excellent themes to be the Revelation from Allah, they turn to every other
possible source and say, "You have learned this from such and such a one." Then
in the "light" of this so-called successful "Research" into the source of the
Qur'an, they conclude that it could not be the Book of God.
71It means:
"You have been appointed to invite the people to the Message and not to keep
watch over them like a police inspector. Therefore your only duty is to present
the Message to the people and try, your best to convince them of the Truth.
After that, if someone does not accept the Truth, leave him alone. You have not
been appointed to force the people to accept it so as to leave no worshiper of
falsehood within the range of your Prophethood. Therefore you should not worry
yourself and try to make them open their eyes which they have deliberately shut.
If Allah had, in His Wisdom, willed that there should remain no worshiper of
falsehood, He would not have entrusted you with this task. He could have made
each and every human being a follower of the Truth, merely by a single word of
His Command. But this is not the object of the creation of man. The real object
is that man be given the freedom of choice between the Truth and falsehood: And
then by presenting the light of the Truth before him, he be tested which one of
the two he chooses. Now the right course for you is to follow the Right Way
yourself and to invite others to follow it. Then you should make those, who
accept it, your friends and not to forsake them in any case, even though they
are very insignificant in the eyes of the worldly people. On the other hand, you
should leave those alone who do not accept it and let them go to the evil end to
which they themselves want to go and persist in doing so."
72The
followers of the Holy Prophet (upon whom be peace) have been advised not to lose
their balance in zeal for preaching but to remain within proper limits when
engaged in discussions and polemics with the non-Muslims and to refrain from
offending against their creeds and from vilifying their leaders and objects of
worship, for this will repel and alienate them all the more from the Truth.
73Allah has ascribed their deeds to Himself, for everything that takes place
in accordance with the Laws of Nature does, in fact, happens by the command of
Allah. (Please refer to E.N. 17 above). As Allah is the Author of all the Laws
of Nature, everything happens by His Command: therefore, Allah says, "We have
made the deeds of every people seem fair to them." The human beings would,
however, express the same thing, saying, "This has happened according to the Law
of Nature. "
74Here "Sign" stands for such a tangible miracle seeing
which they should have no alternative left but to acknowledge that Muhammad
(Allah's peace be upon him) was a true Prophet appointed by Allah.
75That is, "I have no power to bring about and present Signs, for these are
entirely in the power of Allah and He may or may not show them."
76These
words are addressed to those Muslims, who ardently wished (and sometimes even
expressed their wish) that their misguided brethren should be shown such a Sign
as might bring them to the Right Way. To this Allah has answered, 'You should
realize that they would not believe even if a Sign were shown to them, for this
demand is merely a pretext for their disbelief.
77That is, there has been
no change in their mentality since the first time they heard and rejected the
Message of the Prophet Muhammad (Allah's peace be upon him). They are still
following the same crooked and perverted way of looking at the Message and,
therefore, are unable to see and understand it rightly.
78That is, "As
they are not going to reject falsehood and accept the Truth by making a free and
deliberate choice, the only alternative left for making them follow it is that
Allah should force it upon them: He should change their nature so as to deprive
them of the freedom of thought and action like other species which have not been
made responsible for what they do. But this is against the wisdom of the object
for which Allah has created man. You should not, therefore, expect that Allah
would make them believers by His supernatural intervention."
79Allah is
consoling His Messenger, so as to say, "You should not worry at all about the
united and active antagonism of the satans from among men and jinn against your
Mission. This is not a new thing only happening to you for it has always been
happening like this to the Messengers. Whenever a Messenger came to show the
Right Way, all the satanic powers girded up their loins to make his Mission a
failure.
"Charming things" are all those devices, schemes, suspicions,
objections, etc., that are employed by the satans to excite and incite the
common people against the Message and the Messenger who invites them to the
Truth. Then all these things have been called the means of deceit and delusion
as a whole, for all the weapons that the opponent use against the Truth are, in
fact, deceptions not only for others but also for the deceivers themselves,
though they appear to be very useful and effective weapons.
80We have
already explained in E.N. 73 above the fact of this matter, but the fine
distinction between Allah's "will" (mashiyat) and His approval (rada) should
also be kept in mind; otherwise there might arise very serious
misunderstandings. It must be clearly understood that nothing whatsoever can
happen without the "will" and permission of Allah, for no incident can happen,
unless Allah makes room for it in His vast scheme and provides means for its
happening. But it does not necessarily mean that Allah also. approves of and is
pleased with that incident. For instance, no thief can commit theft, no murderer
can kill, no tyrant can be tyrannical, no breaker of peace can cause disorder,
no unbeliever can disbelieve and no mushrik can commit shirk, etc., etc.,
without the "Will" of Allah. Likewise, no believer can have Faith and no pious
person can be pious unless it be the "Will" of Allah; yet He is not pleased with
the first kind of bad deeds, whereas He is pleased with and approves of and
likes the second kind of good deeds. It is true that the "Will" of Allah is
working for an ultimate great good, but that can only come about by means of a
conflict between light and darkness, good and bad, peace and disorder.
Therefore, He allows, for the sake of His great good designs, the necessary
freedom both to the powers of obedience and to those of disobedience, of piety
and sin, of Prophethood and the forces of evil, so that both might be allowed to
perform the deeds of their own choice and to those of His creatures (men and
jinn) who have been delegated with a limited authority and the consequent
responsibility. Everyone is free to make a choice of good deeds or of bad deeds
for himself in this world. Both the good and the bad people are allowed to have
the necessary means, as far as it suits and fits into the Divide Design, but
only those who make a choice of good works merit His pleasure and approval, for
Allah likes that His servants should make the right use of their freedom of
choice and adopt good instead of evil.
In this connection, it will be
worthwhile to understand why Allah mentions over and over again that it is by
His "Will" that the enemies of Truth have been allowed to carry on their
nefarious activities. This is to impress upon the Holy Prophet, and through him
on his followers, that the nature of their work is different from that of the
angels, who carry out the Commands of Allah without meeting with any resistance.
Their Mission, requires that in their conflict with the wicked and rebellious
people, they should exert their utmost to make the Way of Allah dominant over
their ways. That is why it is the "Will" of Allah to allow such people as have
deliberately chosen the way of rebellion against Allah to exert their worst in
pursuance of their choice. Likewise, He allows the` Believers also full
opportunity to exert their utmost in the service and obedience of Allah that
they have deliberately chosen. Though He is pleased with and gives His help and
succor to the Believers and guides them to the Right Way because they do the
deeds He likes them to do, yet they should not expect that Allah will force, by
His supernatural intervention, the unbelievers to believe, if they do not want
to believe by their free choice; or that He will remove by force from their way
those satans amongst men and jinn who have deliberately chosen to use all the
powers of their hearts and minds and bodies against the Truth in order to block
its way. They should note it well that, if they sincerely intend to work for the
cause of truth, virtue and righteousness, they will have to prove this by
putting up hard struggle and exerting their utmost in their conflict with the
worshipers of falsehood. If Allah had willed to demolish falsehood and make the
Truth dominate by miracles, there was no need to entrust this work to the
Believers for in that case He Himself could have arranged the things so as to
leave no satan in the world and no room for shirk and disbelief to make their
appearance.
81The `speaker' in this sentence is the Holy Prophet and the
addressees are his followers, who desired that a Sign should be shown for the
conversion of the disbelievers. They have been told that no Sign will be shown,
for Allah had made all the realities plain in the Qur'an. As regards their
conflict with falsehood, He has decreed that the followers of the Truth will
have to exert for its domination in the natural way without expecting any
supernatural intervention from Him. The Holy Prophet has, therefore, been asked
to declare, "Should I, then, seek some authority higher than Allah to revise His
decree and to send down such a miracle as should force them to believe?" (Please
refer also to E.N. 76).
82That is, "These principles, that have been
laid down for the domination of the Truth, are not new ones which might have
been invented today to explain away the difficulties and obstacles of the Way.
All those people, who possess the knowledge of the Divine Books and are
acquainted with the Mission of the Prophets, will bear testimony that whatever
is being stated in the Qur'an is the very Truth, which is eternal and has never
changed. "
83The right thing for a seeker-after-truth is not to consider
what way the majority of the people are following because that is based on
guess-work instead of knowledge. Their beliefs, theories, philosophies,
principles of life and laws are the result of guess-work and are, therefore,
sure to mislead. In contrast to that, the way of life with which Allah is
pleased, can only be the Way which Allah Himself has taught. Therefore, the
seeker-after-truth should adopt that way and steadfastly follow it, even though
he is left alone on it.
84Among the many wrong things which the people
have adopted as religious laws without any Divine sanction are also the
restrictions they have imposed on the articles of food. That is why some people
have made certain things lawful whereas they are unlawful in the sight of God,
and certain other things unlawful, though Allah has declared them to be lawful.
In this connection, the most absurd thing on which some of the former people
insisted and on which some of the modern people also insist, is that if Allah's
name is pronounced at the slaughter of an animal, it is unlawful and if it is
slaughtered without mentioning Allah's name over it, it is quite lawful. In this
verse Allah has refuted such ideas and commanded the Muslims to discard all such
whims and superstitions which have been invented by the unbelievers and the
mushrikin and break all such restrictions which the people have imposed on
themselves against the Guidance of Allah, if they sincerely believe in it. They
should, therefore, make unlawful only that which Allah has made unlawful and
vice versa.
85Please see vv. 114-116, An-Nahl. Incidentally, this
reference also shows that Surah An-Nahl was revealed before Al-Anam.
86This is with reference to the different kinds of doubts and objections with
which the Jewish scholars used to poison the minds of ignorant Arabs against
Islam. According to a tradition of Hadrat `Abdullah bin `Abbas, one of the
objections taught by the Jews against the Prophet Muhammad (Allah's peace be
upon him) was: "How is it that the one killed by Allah (by natural death) should
be unlawful, while the other which is killed by us (by mentioning the name of
Allah) should be lawful?" This is an instance of the crooked attitude of those
so called people of the Book. They would invent and pose questions like this
before the common people so as to poison their minds with doubts and to arm them
with weapons to fight with the Truth.
87It is also shirk to acknowledge
the Godhead of Allah and at the same time follow the decrees and ways of those
who have turned away from Allah. The acknowledgment of the Oneness of Allah
demands that one should obey Allah in all aspects of one's life. So much so that
if a person believes that someone else also should be obeyed along with Allah,
he would be guilty of committing shirk in his creed. And if a person obeys such
people as arrogate to themselves the authority of making things lawful and
unlawful, in utter disregard of the Guidance of Allah, he would be guilty of
practical shirk.
88Here ".... who was first dead" means, "..... who was
first in a state of ignorance and lacked understanding;" likewise, ".... then
(he) was given life" means "then he was given knowledge and understanding and
was restored to that mental state which can recognize the Truth." And the fact
is that one who cannot distinguish between right and wrong and does not know the
Right Way, might be regarded as alive from the physical point of view, but he
does not enjoy that life which makes him a real human being. He is no doubt a
living animal, but he is not a living man. A living man is only he who can
distinguish between right and wrong, good and bad, righteous and unrighteous.
89That is, "How can you expect that a man, who has got real understanding of
life and recognizes clearly, by the light of Knowledge, the Straight Way from
among the countless crooked ways, would live a life like those who lack
understanding and blunder blindly into the darkness of ignorance and folly?"
90It is the Law of Allah that He makes their deeds seem fair to those who
refuse to be guided by the Light which is offered to them and who prefer to
tread the crooked paths, even though they are invited to the Right Way. Then
they begin to love darkness and like groping their way through it like the blind
and to be knocked about throughout their lives. Accordingly, every vice appears
to them worth enjoying and every piece of folly a gem of wisdom. After the
failure of such an experiment that produces mischief, they get ready for another
in the hope that the first failure was due to some "accidental" mistake that
will be avoided in future experiments.
91What they meant was: "We are
not going to believe in the claim of the Messengers that an angel came to them
with a Message from God, unless the angel comes directly to us to deliver the
Message of Allah."
92"He makes his breast wide open to Islam" means:
"Allah makes him fully convinced of the truth of Islam by removing from his mind
and heart every kind of doubt, suspicion, hesitation and indecision about
Islam."
93"Abode of peace": Heaven, the place of perfect peace and
happiness, where the dwellers will be immune from every kind of calamity and
misery.
94Here by the "jinn" are meant the "satans of jinn."
95That is, "Every one of us made an unfair use of the other and cheated him for
selfish ends."
96As Allah is All-Wise and All-Knowing, both punishment
and forgiveness will be based on wisdom and knowledge and, therefore, will be
reasonable and just. He will forgive only that wrongdoer, whom He knows not to
be personally responsible for his crime and liable to punishment.
97That
is, just as they were accomplices in their sins and crimes in the world, so they
shall also share the punishment in the Hereafter.
98That is, "We confess
that one Messenger after the other came from You and informed us of the Truth
but it was our own fault that we did not believe in what they said.''
99They themselves would confess that they were not ignorant of the Truth: it did
reach them but they deliberately rejected it.
100It means that Allah
does not desire to allow the guilty ones the opportunity to protest and say,
"You did not inform us of the Truth, nor did You send anyone to show us the
Right Way. But now when, in our ignorance we have adopted the wrong way, You are
going to punish us for it." In order to refute this argument, Allah sent His
Messengers and Books to fore-warn mankind and jinn, prior to the execution of
His Judgments. If, in spite of this, the people choose wrong ways and are
punished for this, they themselves are to blamed and not Allah.
101"Your
Lord is All-Sufficient": "He does not stand in need of any kind of help from
you, nor does He need anyone to look after His interests. Therefore, you can do
him no harm by your disobedience, nor can you do Him any good by your obedience.
Even if all of you rebel against Him, you cannot detract an iota from His
Kingdom; nor can you add an iota to it, if all of you decide to obey and worship
Him. He needs neither your obedience nor your offering. As a matter of fact, he
is showering His countless blessings on you without desiring anything in return
from you."
In the context in which the sentence, "He is
All-Compassionate", occurs, it implies two things. First, "It is only out of
compassion for you that Allah is showing you the Right Way and not for His own
interest. It will not serve any interest of His if you follow the Right Way and
keep away from the wrong ways: nor will it do Him any harm if you swerve from
it. As a matter of fact, you will be serving your own interest and avoiding harm
to yourselves by following it. Therefore, it is His kindness that He teaches you
the right conduct to enable you to attain higher ranks and restrains you from
wrong behavior that will throw you to the lowest depths of degeneration."
Second, "Your Lord. is not ruthless: He does not enjoy punishing you for
trifling offenses and errors. As a matter of fact; He is very kind and
sympathetic to all His creatures and rules over them with great compassion. That
is why He' forgives and forbears your shortcomings over and over again and shows
compassion and leniency to you even though you become guilty of disobedience,
sins and crimes. You impudently discard His Commandments, knowing well that He
is your Providence; yet He forgives and forbears and gives you respite after
respite, so that you may understand the Reality and mend your ways. Had He been
ruthless He could have destroyed you instantly and raised up another people to
replace you, or destroyed the whole human race and created another species. "
102That is, "Resurrection," when all human beings, from the first to the
last, shall be brought back to life and presented before their Lord for final
judgment.
103That is, "If you do not take the warning from Me and do not
give up your wrong ways, then you may go on following the ways of your choice,
and let me follow my way. Ultimately, both you and I will see the consequences."
104The preceding discourse (v. 135) ended with these words: "If these people
are not willing to accept your Admonition and insist on their ignorance, tell
them to act in their own way and that you will act according to your own way.
The Day of Judgment will surely come one day when they will know the
consequences of their conduct. Anyhow, this is certain that the workers of
iniquity will not be successful there." Now from here (vv. 136-146), instances
of their ignorance are being cited to tell them what their "iniquity" was in
which they persisted and from which they could not expect any success.
105They assigned a portion of the agricultural produce to Allah as a mark of
their gratitude because they believed that all land belonged to Allah Who caused
the crops to grow; likewise they set apart for Allah a portion of the animals
which were of great use to them because He was their Creator as well. But at the
same time, they also assigned a portion as offerings to the patron gods of their
family or clan, for they believed that Allah showed His kindness to them,
because their gods, goddesses, angels, jinn, stars and the souls of their dead
ancestors interceded with Him in their behalf. They also expected that in this
way they would continue their kindness to them. That is why Allah is first of
all taking them to task for the iniquity they were committing, so as to say, "It
is sheer ingratitude that you are making offerings to others of the things that
I have created and given you with My own mercy and grace. How is it, then, that
you are making others partners in the offerings of your gratitude to Me? Do you
think that I give these things to you because of the intercession of others?"
Then, by implication, Allah has rebuked them for dividing the shares between Him
and the partners set up by them with Him in accordance with their own
presumptions .This is because they have become their own law-makers and assign
to Allah and to others whatever share they deem proper , when in fact ,Allah is
the real giver of everything. Therefore, the portion to be assigned to Him in
gratitude should be determined by His Law, which should also decide the shares
of the other rightful claimants to it. It is thus clear that even that share,
which they arbitrarily set apart for Allah and distribute in the poor and
indigent, does not merit any worth and there is no reason why is should be
accepted by Allah.
106This implies a fine sarcasm. They have been rebuked
for the evil practices to which they resorted in order to reduce even that
portion which they themselves ear-marked for Allah, so as to increase the
portion set apart for their gods. This showed that they were far more interested
in their self-made gods than God. For instance, they would not mind if any fruit
or grain out of the share assigned to Allah happened to go to the other side,
but would return it, if anything happened to go to the share of Allah from the
share of their gods. In case of drought, if they were forced to make use of the
consecrated grain, they would use the share ear-marked for Allah but would not
touch the share of their gods for fear lest any misfortune should befall them on
account of its desecration. If there happened to be a deficiency in the share of
their gods, they would make it up from that of Allah's share, but in the reverse
case, they would not take even the smallest thing from the share of their gods
to make up for the deficiency in Allah's share. Obviously they would invent very
plausible excuses for this. For instance, they would say, "God is rich and can
afford to forgo any decrease in His share, but the case of gods is different
because they are not rich like Allah: therefore they inflict punishment even at
the slightest decrease in their share."
The root cause of these
superstitious practices was the different uses to which the two consecrated
shares were put. Allah's share was given to the beggars, the indigent, the
wayfarers, the orphans, etc., but the share consecrated to the gods went to the
priests directly or indirectly when it was offered to the gods in their temples.
That is why their selfish religious leaders had been, for centuries, impressing
on their ignorant followers that there was no harm, if any decrease occurred in
the share of Allah, but on no account should there be any decrease in the share
of their gods, "the beloved of God." On the contrary, it was rather commendable
that their share should continue to swell.
107Here the word shuraka
(associates) has been used in a different sense from the one employed in verse
136. There the ¦associates" meant the deities whose intercession they regarded
as a means of attaining to the blessings and made them partners with Allah in
offerings. But, on the contrary, in this verse "associates" implies the men and
devils, who had made the killing of their own children lawful and praiseworthy
for them. In the preceding verse they were guilty of shirk because they
associated others with Allah in His worship and devotion. Here they were guilty
of shirk because they accepted others besides Allah as law-givers and made them
Judges for deciding the lawful and the unlawful. According to Islam, a person
who accepts any law made by another than Allah as authoritative and follows it
and considers himself subject to the limits prescribed by it, is guilty of
making that being partner with Allah. Both these are acts of .shirk. one is
guilty of shirk whether or not one gives the title of lord or god to those to
whom one consecrates offerings or accepts and obeys the laws made by them.
As regards the killing of their children, the Arabs committed this sin with
three objects in view and the Qur'an has condemned all the three:
(1)
They killed their daughters in order to avoid the disgrace of having a
son-in-law, or lest they should fall into the hands of the enemy during the
clannish wars, or they should become a cause of disgrace for them in any other
way.
(2) They killed their children for economic reasons. They feared
lest the burden of their nourishment should become unbearable for them.
(3) They sacrificed their children at the altar of their gods to please them.
108The word "ruin" here is very meaningful. On the one hand, it implies
moral ruin, for the man who becomes so hard-hearted and cruel as starts killing
his own children, loses not only the tender qualities of humanity but also those
of animality; on the other, it also implies destruction of the human race and
one's own nation, for the inevitable result of the killing of children is
reduction of the population of one's own nation and consequently of the world as
a whole. Obviously, the nation which prevents the birth of its future supporters
and builders of its civilization and heirs of its heritage, or kills them as
soon as they are born, most surely falls into the abyss of destruction. Above
all, this inhuman cruelly to innocent children destroys all the chances of
success in the life-after-death because such a one who kills his own humanity,
nay, even his own animal instinct of love for offspring, and shows such enmity
with the human race and with one's own nation, most surely incurs the most
painful torture from Allah.
109Their religious leaders, their chiefs and
the elders of the clans and others who exercised any influence on them and who
claimed to be the followers of the Prophets Abraham and Ishmael, had been adding
different creeds, rites and practices to the pure religion taught by the
Prophets and causing confusion in the minds of the people about it. Yet the
common Arabs of the pre-Islamic period believed that they were following the
religion of their Prophets, which was the chosen religion of Allah, though it
had been utterly polluted. This was because no record of the real religion of
the Prophets had been preserved in their traditions or history or in any other
book and none could sift it from the additions and changes that had been made in
it afterwards.
110That is, "O Messenger, you need not worry about them,
if, in spite, of your admonitions, they insist on following the false ways they
have invented. All this has come to pass because it is the will of God that they
should be allowed to follow the way of their choice; otherwise they would not
have been able to do what they are doing."
111Here another self-made
religious regulation of the mushrik Arabs has been refuted. They used to make
vows to reserve certain cattle or the products of certain fields for some
particular temple or saint or deity and had made set rules for their use.
Accordingly, the right of the use of different kinds of offerings was reserved
for a particular kind of people. Allah has declared these to be acts of shirk
and warned them against these self-made laws, as if to say, "We will punish you
for making vows concerning offerings to others from provisions provided by Us,
because We have neither commanded you to make such vows nor prescribed
restrictions for their use. All these things have been invented by the
rebellious and arrogant people who shall be dealt with severely."
112We
learn from traditions that in certain forms of vows and offerings, it was not
considered right to pronounce the name of Allah over cattle. It was also
forbidden to ride on them during the Hajj journey, because one has to pronounce:
Labbaik, Allahumma labbaik: "I am present, O my Allah, I am present," during it.
Likewise, they insisted that Allah's name should not be mentioned while milking
them or riding them or slaughtering them or eating them.
113That is,
"These regulations were not prescribed by Allah, but they were following these
with the conviction that they had been prescribed by Allah. though they had no
authority from Allah for this thing. The only authority, they had, was that it
had been the practice of their forefathers."
114According to another
article of the self-made law of the Arabs about the cattle, consecrated by vows
and offerings, the males alone were allowed to eat of the flesh of the young
ones born from their wombs and the females were forbidden to eat of it. However,
if the young one was born dead or it died immediately after its birth, both the
males and the females could partake of it.
115That is, "Although those
people, who invented these rituals and customs, were your forefathers, your
religious leaders and your chiefs, yet the fact is that they were wrong and had
gone astray. Also it is a fact that those ways were wrong and they cannot become
right and sacred simply because these were invented by your forefathers and your
religious leaders, who permitted the inhuman slaughter of one's own children,
who made unlawful, without rhyme or reason, the pure provisions given by Allah
and who introduced innovations in religion and ascribed them to Allah. They
cannot be regarded as rightly guided by any stretch of imagination even though
they be your forefathers and leaders; they were certainly misguided and shall
bear the consequences of their evil ways."
116The original Arabic words
Jannat-im-ma iushat-in literally mean gardens of creepers, trellised, and has
been translated into vineyards; wa ghaira ma 'rushat-in literally mean gardens
of plants that are un-trellised and has been translated into gardens of up-right
trees.
117The original Arabic word farsh refers to animals (like sheep
etc.,) in the sense that they are of small size and almost touch the ground
while they are moving about, or in the sense that they are laid on the ground at
the time of slaughter, or in the sense that beds are made of their skins and
hair.
118From the context in which this verse (142) occurs, it is
obvious that Allah wills to impress three things: (1) "The gardens, the fields
and the animals you possess, have all been bestowed by Allah, and none else has
any share in this favor and, therefore, none else is entitled to any gratitude
for this." (2) "As none else has any share in this favor, these should be used
in accordance with the Law of Allah, and none else has any right to prescribe
limits for their use; therefore the one who observes the rituals prescribed by
any one other than Allah, transgresses the limits prescribed by Allah and
follows the ways of Satan." (3) "All these things have been created by Allah for
food and other uses for mankind and none has any right to make these unlawful
without "knowledge." Therefore Allah does not approve of the restrictions that
have been imposed on these things, as a result of superstitions and
presumptions.
119That is, "Your answer should be based on knowledge and
not on mere presumptions, superstitions or the traditions of your forefathers."
120The question whether some animals of the same family are lawful and
others unlawful, has been posed with such a detail so that the absurdity of
their superstitions may become obvious even to them. It is absurd on the face of
it that the male of the same family should be lawful and the female unlawful, or
conversely, the female should be lawful and the male unlawful, or the animal
should be lawful, but the young one of the same be unlawful: This is such a
nonsensical thing that no right thinking person, nay, no man in his senses, can
imagine that Allah could ever impose such unreasonable restrictions. It should
be noted that the method applied by the Qur'an to show the absurdity of the
superstitious practices of the Arabs can also be applied with equal force to
expose the folly of the superstitious practices of the other nations of the
world, which have imposed unreasonable restrictions on food and adopted inhuman
indiscriminations against other human beings.
121This subject has
already been dealt with in v. 173, AI-Baqarah, and in v. 3, Al-Ma`idah, and will
be further discussed in v. 115, An-Nahl below.
There appears to be a
little difference in the wording of this verse and that of v. 173, Al-Baqarah.
In the latter verse it is simply `blood' that is forbidden, but in this verse it
is the `blood' that has been shed, when an animal is wounded or slaughtered. The
addition of the word masfuh (that has been shed) merely explains the nature of
the `blood' and does not make any difference in the "Commandment" itself.
Likewise in v. 3 of Al-Ma'idah, some other things besides these four have also
been mentioned-the animals that have been strangled or beaten to death, or
killed by a fall, or mangled by a beast of prey. This, too, does not make any
difference in the "Commandment" in the two verses, because this is an
explanation which shows that the animals which are killed in that way should
also be considered as "carrion."
Now let us consider the various opinions
of the Jurists. Hadrat `Abdullah bin `Abbas and Hadrat `A'ishah were of the
opinion that, out of the animal food, only these four were unlawful and all
others were lawful. But there are several Traditions to the effect that the Holy
Prophet prohibited other animals besides these four or held them in detestation,
e.g., domestic donkeys and fanged beasts of prey and birds with claws. Therefore
most jurists do not consider the prohibition to be confined to these four things
only, but extend it to others; then there is also a difference of opinion among
the jurists about the prohibition or otherwise of certain animals. For instance,
Imam Abu Hanifah, Imam Malik and Imam Shafi`i declare the domestic donkey to be
unlawful, but there are others who assert that the domestic donkey, is not
unlawful and say that it was prohibited by the Holy Prophet on one occasion only
for some special reason. The Hanafi s consider the carnivorous beasts and birds
of prey and the animals that live on dead flesh to be absolutely unlawful, but
according to Imam Malik and Auza`i, the birds of prey are lawful and Laith
considers the cat to be lawful. According to Imam Shafi i. only those
carnivorous beasts are unlawful that (like the lion, wolf, tiger) attack man.
According to ' Ikrimah, the crow and the badger are both lawful. Then according
to the Hanafi s, all crawling creatures are unlawful, whereas Ibn AbiLaila, Imam
Malik and Auza' i consider the snake to be lawful.
A careful and critical
study of the above makes it quite clear that, in reality, only these four things
mentioned in the Qur'an are unlawful and that there are certain other animal
foods that are detestable in various degrees. Therefore those things, which
according to authentic Traditions were held in detestation by the Holy Prophet,
are almost unlawful, but those things about which there is a difference of
opinion among the jurists, their detestation is doubtful. As far as personal
detestation of certain things by some people is concerned, the Islamic Law does
not compel anyone to eat what one dislikes. The same applies to the detestation
of certain things by some groups or nations. Conversely, the Law does not allow
any person or community or nation to force others to consider as unlawful
anything that they detest, or to .prohibit its use to those who consider them
unlawful.
122That certain things were made unlawful for them as
punishment for their rebellion has been mentioned in the Qur'an at three places:
(1) "All the articles of food, which are lawful in the Muhammadan Law, were
also lawful for the children of Israel, except those which Israel had forbidden
for himself before the Torah was sent down. Say to them, Bring the Torah and
read out any passage from it (in support of your objection), if you are in the
right. " (Al- `Imran, 111):
(2) "It is because of the criminal attitude
of those who became Jews...... that We had made unlawful many pure things which
were formerly lawful for them". (An-Visa' IV:160)
(3) Here in this Surah,
in verse 146.
From the above three verses, we conclude that the
difference between the Muhammadan and the Jewish Laws in regard to the legality
or otherwise of animal food is based on two things. First, centuries before the
revelation of the Torah, the Prophet Jacob (Israel) had given up the use of
several things, and after him, his offspring also did the same. This went on for
such a long time that the jurists of the Jewish Law began to believe that those
things were unlawful in their religion. Accordingly, they inserted in the Torah
the prohibition of those things, the three of which were the camel, the hare and
the Coney. That is why the Torah, as contained in the existing Bible prohibits
their eating. (Levit. 11: 4-6 and Deut. 14:7). But, the open challenge of the
Qur'an to them to bring the Torah in proof thereof shows that the commandments
referred to above did not exist in the Torah at that time and were inserted
afterwards; otherwise the Jews would have at once accepted the challenge of the
Qur'an and presented the commandments thereof.
The second difference
between the two laws was caused by the rebellious attitude of the Jews against
the Divine Law. They became their own law-makers and made many things unlawful
by their hair-splitting and Allah let them remain involved in that
misunderstanding as a punishment. These things comprise two categories : (1)
Animals with claws such as the ostrich, the cuckoo, the swan, etc., and (2) the
fat of the cow and the goat, etc. Afterwards both kinds of "prohibitions" were
incorporated in the existing Torah. (Levit. 11 : 16-18, Deut. 14 : 14-17, Levit.
3 : 17, 7 : 22-23). But it is obvious from An - Nisa, IV : 160 that at first
these things were not unlawful i the Torah, but were made so after the Prophet
Jesus Christ. History also bears evidence that the existing Jewish Law was
formulated by Rabbi Judas at the end of the second century of the Christian Era.
Now let us consider the objection that might arise regarding the above
explanation. If these things were made unlawful in the manner explained above,
why has, then, Allah used the word harramna ("We prohibited") here in verse 130
and in verse 160 of An-Nisa In considering the objection, we should keep in mind
the two ways in which things are made unlawful by Allah. (1) He prohibits a
thing through a Messenger and a Book, and this is the blessing from Him. (2) He
sets false religious law-givers and counterfeit law-makers over His rebellious
servants and they declare pure things as unlawful. As such a prohibition' is the
curse of God and a punishment from Him, it has been attributed to Him.
123That is, "Your Lord has limitless Mercy and if even now you repent of your
disobedience and adopt the right way of obedience, He will forgive you. But if
you persist in your criminal and rebellious attitude, you should note it well
that none will be, able to ward off His wrath and punishment from you. "
124That is "The mushrikin will put forward the same old excuses to justify their
crime and wrong conduct which have always been put forward by the criminals and
wrong-doers of every age: they will say, `It is the will of Allah that we should
commit shirk and make some lawful things unlawful; for, if Allah had not so
willed, it would not have been possible for us to commit such acts. As we are
doing these things in accordance with the will of Allah, we are doing the right
thing. And if what we are doing is not right, Allah is to blame for it and not
we. We are bound by the will of Allah to do what we are doing because anything
other than this is beyond our power."
125In order to understand the
significance of this decisive answer to their lame excuse, let us analyze it:
(1) It warns: "The `will of God' has always been made an excuse by the criminals
of all ages to justify their wicked acts and erroneous conduct. This misled them
so much that they rejected the Truth and consequently met with ruin that
overtakes those who fight against the Truth." (2) "The excuse which you are
putting forward is not based on knowledge but on conjecture and guess-work. The
whole of your argument is based on hearsay about the will of Allah. You do not
understand the meaning of `the will of Allah' in regard to man. Therefore you
wrongly believe that if a thief commits theft he is not to be regarded as a
thief, because he had done this under `the will of Allah. Its real meaning is
that Allah will open for a man whatever way he would choose for himself -- the
way of gratitude or ingratitude, guidance or deviation, obedience or
disobedience. Then Allah will let the man do anything, good or bad, he chooses,
and will provide for its fulfillment the means that fit in His vast universal
designs. Therefore if you and your forefathers were allowed to commit shirk and
declare lawful things unlawful under the will of Allah, they had to bear its
consequences, for it does not mean that Allah approved of these things. Likewise
you shall be responsible and accountable for your wrong choice and for your evil
intentions and wicked deeds."
The last sentence, "..... had Allah so
willed, He would have shown guidance to all of you," settles the issue
decisively. It implies: "Your argument, `had Allah willed, we would not have
committed shirk,' is incomplete. The complete thing will be this: `Had Allah
willed, He would have shown guidance to all of us." In other words, "You
yourselves do not intend to choose the right way, but you desire that Allah
should make you inherently righteous like angels. You should, however, note it
well, that Allah could have done so if He had so willed. But this is not His
will. Therefore He will let you go astray on the wrong way that you yourselves
have chosen to follow."
126That is, "If they understand the grave
responsibility of bearing witness and realize that one should bear witness only
to that thing of which one has knowledge, they will never testify that all their
self-imposed restrictions on food, that are current among them and according to
which such and such a one should not eat such and such a thing, have been
prescribed by Allah. But if these people do not realize the responsibility of
bearing witness and impudently give false evidence in the name of Allah, you
should not associate yourself with their falsehood. As a matter of fact, the
real object of challenging them to bear witness is to sort out the righteous
people, if any, from among them, and not that you should accept their false
testimony. It is expected that in response to the challenge to bear witness,
those, who have any righteousness left in them, will consider very seriously
whether the rituals they were following were really prescribed by Allah and if
they find no proof that these were sent down by Allah, they will give them up."
127That is, "The limits set by your Lord are not those which you have
imposed on yourselves, but they are the following which Allah has set for the
regulation of human life and which have always been the fundamental basis of all
Divine Laws." (Please compare these precepts with those contained in Exodus
chapter 20).
128One is guilty of shirk if: (a) one sets up another
besides Allah as god, or (b) one attributes to another any of those attributes
that naturally and exclusively belong to Allah, or (c) one sets up a partner
with Allah in His powers, or (d) in His rights.
According to (a), all
those creeds which set up partners with Allah in the essence of His Godhead
shall be shirk, e.g., the creed of Trinity of the Christians, the creed of
musrhik Arabs to believe in the angels to be daughters of God and to attribute
"Godhead" to their gods and goddesses and the members of the royal families.
According to (b), all those, who believe that someone other than Allah also
possesses one or some or all of the attributes which exclusively belong to
Allah, shall be guilty of shirk. For instance, it will be shirk if one believes
that someone knows all about everything including the "unseen" or hears
everything or is completely free from each and every defect and weakness, and is
infallible like Allah.
According to (c), one shall be guilty of shirk, if
one believes that someone else besides Allah is able to wield any one or all of
those powers that exclusively belong to Him. For instance, one shall be
committing shirk, if one believes that someone else besides Allah can, in a
supernatural way, benefit or harm or fulfill heeds or help or protect or defend,
or hear prayers, or make or mar destinies, or set the limits of lawful or
unlawful, proper or improper, or prescribe laws (shar a) for human life. These
shall be shirk, for all these things are the exclusive characteristics of
Godhead.
It shall be shirk under (d) if one surrenders to another any or
all of those rights to which Allah alone is entitled. For instance, Allah alone
has the right that man should stand with bound hands, bow and prostrate before
Him, or he should make vows and give offerings in His name alone or make
sacrifices as a mark of gratitude in acknowledgment of His greatness; He alone
has the right that He should be invoked to ward off troubles etc. Likewise,
Allah alone is entitled to all forms of worship, devotion and glory and He alone
has the right to be loved more than anyone or anything else and all other
affections should be sacrificed for His love. He alone should be feared so that
one would not dare displease or disobey Him openly and secretly. He alone has
the right to be obeyed unconditionally and unreservedly; and His Guidance alone
should be made the sole standard of judging right from wrong and none else
should be obeyed except in accordance with the obedience to Allah. If ever one
of these rights is surrendered to someone other than Allah, it will be setting
that one as a partner with Him, whether that one is given the title of god or
not.
129"Kind treatment" includes respect and honor, obedience and desire
to please and serve parents etc. , This right of the parents has been stated in
the Qur'an at several places immediately after the rights of Allah. This is a
clear proof that this right of the parents is only next to the right of Allah
and has priority over all human rights.
130The Arabic word fawahish
applies to all kinds of impure acts, whose obscenity is absolutely obvious. The
Qur'an declares adultery, sodomy, nudism, calumny, marriage with father's wife
as "indecencies." Besides these, theft, drinking and beggary have also been
included in the list of indecencies in the Traditions. Likewise, all other
obscene acts are also indecencies and the Divine Commandment demands that such
acts should neither be committed openly nor secretly.
131This is the
declaration of the sanctity of human life by Allah Who has made it inviolable as
a basic principle. As regards its destruction "by right", the Qur'an allows this
in three cases and the Holy Prophet added two more to these. The Qur'an makes it
lawful to take the life of the one:
(1) who is proved guilty of the
intentional murder of another person.
(2) who opposes Islam and obstructs
its establishment so as to leave no other alternative than to fight with him,
(3) who spreads disorder within the Islamic territory or exerts to overthrow
the established Islamic government.
Besides these, the Holy Prophet has
made it lawful to .take the life of the one:
(4) who, in spite of being
married, is proved guilty of adultery,
(5) who becomes an apostate and
deserts the Islamic Community.
These five are the only cases in which it
becomes lawful to take human life and there is no other case in which it becomes
lawful to take human life and there is no other case besides these in which
human life may be taken, be it that of a Muslim, or of a dhimmi, or of an
unbeliever.
132"The best way" will be the one which is based on
selflessness, good intentions and the welfare of the concerned orphan, and which
is not objectionable in the sight of God or man.
133"You shall use full
measure and a just balance,'' is a fundamental principle of the Divine Law:
Allah has added, "We charge one.....one can bear," to assure people that whoever
tries his very best to be just and right in measuring, weighing and carrying out
other trade transactions, will be absolved from his responsibility and will not
be taken to account, if in spite of his best efforts, there happens to be an
unintentional error.
134"Covenant with Allah" is: (i) The solemn
agreement which man makes with Allah, (i!) the solemn pledge which he makes with
another man in the name of Allah, and (iii) the natural compact that comes into
force as soon as one is born in the human society on Allah's earth.
The
first two kinds of covenants are intentional and optional, but the third one is
a moral and natural obligation. Though man has no option in the choice of the
third compact, yet it is as binding as the first two and should be honored as
'much. This is because Allah has given him life with extraordinary physical and
mental faculties and furnished the earth for his habitation and provided
nourishment, and limitless resources etc., for him. Naturally all this entails
some rights of Allah on him. Likewise it entails some, rights of the mother who
gives birth to and nourishes him and of the father who brings him up and of the
society that affords him many kinds of facilities and opportunities. All these
rights become, by their very nature, obligatory on him in varying degrees. It is
true that this "Covenant" of man with God and society has not been written in
any statute book, nevertheless it has been ingrained by Nature in each and every
particle of his body, which itself owes its very existence to this Covenant. A
reference to this has been made in Al-Baqarah, ti: 27: "....who break Allah's
Covenant after ratifying it: who cut asunder what Allah has ordered to be joined
and who produce chaos on the earth." It has again been mentioned in Al-A'raf,
VII: 172 to this effect: At the time of the creation of Adam, Allah brought
forth all his would-be descendants up to the Last Day, from the loins of
mankind, and trade them stand witnesses to the Covenant that He is their Lord.
135"..... you should follow this way because this is the Right Way."
This "Natural Covenant" demands that man should follow the Way shown by Allah,
because any deviation from it into the paths of rebellion or independence or in
the worship of another than Allah will be the first violation against that
Covenant, and will mislead one into other violations one after the other.
Besides, no man can fulfill the obligations of this most delicate, vast and
intricate Covenant unless one accepts Divine Guidance and follows it in every
aspect of life. "...... you should not follow other ways" because they will turn
you away from His Right Way which is the only Way which leads to His nearness,
pleasure and approval. Moreover, when the people deviate from His High Way, each
man has to make his own choice out of the hundreds of other ways. Thus the
people are scattered in all directions and there is bewilderment, confusion and
disorder among all mankind and this becomes a hindrance in the way of its real
progress and development (Please see also E.N. 35, Al-Ma'idah).
136".....
to believe in meeting with one's Lord" means that one should believe that one
shall have to render an account of one's deeds to one's Lord; therefore one
should live a life of responsibility. Here it may imply that the Torah was sent
(1) to produce a sense of responsibility among the Israelites themselves and (2)
to induce the other people to make a study of its high moral system of life, and
to observe the noble effects of its guidance and blessing on those who adopted
its teachings so that they may be convinced that a life of responsibility based
on the belief in the life of the Hereafter is far better than an irresponsible
life based on its rejection and this observation may convince them to believe in
the Hereafter.
137That is, to the Jews and the Christians.
138Here
"Ayat" are Allah's Revelations presented in the Holy Qur'an as well as His
Messenger's noble character and the pure lives of the Believers which clearly
distinguished them from the unbelievers, and also those wonderful phenomena of
Nature which the Qur'an was putting forward as proofs of the truth of its
Message.
139"Manifest Signs" are the signs of the Day of Resurrection or
some imminent scourge or some other Sign that tray unveil the Reality in such a
way as to leave no doubt about it and after which no more chance for test and
trial might be left.
140That is, if after seeing these "Manifest Signs" a
disbeliever repents of his disbelief and professes faith, such a conversion
shall be meaningless; likewise the one who professes to believe but adopts the
way of disobedience, shall be deemed to have no faith at all, because Faith and
Obedience can have any value only up to the time that the reality remains hidden
behind the curtain, and the prospect of a long life is ahead and the world with
all its allurements is deluding one into believing that there is no Allah and no
Hereafter; therefore, one should "Eat, drink and be merry."
141Though the
address is directed to the Holy Prophet, yet all the followers of the True
Religion are, through him, included in it. It means that the righteous people
should not follow the ways of those who became sects by causing divisions in the
True Religion, which has always been the same and is the same today. Its basic
principles are that Allah alone is the Deity and Lord of the whole Universe.
that none should be set up as His equal or partner in His attributes, powers or
rights, that there shall be the next world, in which all human beings shall have
to render the account of what they do in this world, and that they should mold
their lives in accordance with those broad fundamental principles that have been
taught by Allah through His Messengers and Books. This is the True Religion that
had been given to mankind from the very first day of its creation. As regards
the different religions and sects that came into existence afterwards, they were
the result of the changes that were made in the True Religion by different
people at different times. Some of them introduced new things into it, others
made changes in it to suit their lusts; still others mixed things in it because
of their exaggerated reverence. Then they tampered with its creed by mixing with
it their whims, their speculations and their philosophies. They changed it also
by adding to its commandments their innovations and their self-made laws and by
corrupting its regulations by hair-splitting and exaggerating the differences in
its details and by rendering important things unimportant and vice versa. They
went to two extremes: they adored some Prophets too much and opposed and
rejected others. In this way numerous new religions and sects came into
existence and divided humanity into fighting groups. Therefore it is essential
for a follower of the True Religion to have nothing to do with any of these
sects and to keep his own path clear of them.
142"Abraham's Way": This is
another distinctive characteristic of "the ever-True Faith." This has been given
preference to "Moses' Way" or "Christ's Way" because the followers of Moses and
Christ had applied the misnomers of ''Judaism" and "Christianity" to that "Way."
Moreover, the term "Abraham's Way" has been used because both the Jews and the
Christians acknowledged Abraham as a true Prophet. They also knew it well that
he died long before the births of Judaism and Christianity. The Arab mushrikin
also could not deny that his "Way" was the Right Way, for they believed that he
was a righteous man and in spite of their ignorance, they had to acknowledge
that the founder of the Ka'bah was a pious worshiper of Allah and not an
idolater.
143The Arabic word nusuk ("rites of worship") may mean animal
sacrifice as well as all other forms of prayer and worship.
144That is,
"When, in fact, Allah is the Lord of everything in the universe, how can any
other be my Lord? When I see that the whole of the universe submits to His Law
and I, too, being a part of the universe, have to submit to Him in my physical
life, how can then it be rational that I should seek another Lord for the
guidance of that part of my life for the conduct of which I have been given
common sense and option?"
145It means that everyone is responsible and
accountable for his own deeds and this responsibility can, on no account, be
shifted from one to the other.
146In this verse three realities have
been stated;
(1) That each and every thing in the universe belongs to
Allah and all human beings are His vicegerents on the earth in the sense that He
has entrusted many of His things to them and delegated powers to exploit them.
(2) That Allah has ascribed different ranks to His vicegerents in regard to
the trusts. He has entrusted some with a large number of His things, while
others with a small number and endowed some with a greater capacity for work
than others. Likewise there is a difference in the powers He has delegated to
them: nay, he has even given powers to some human beings over other human
beings.
(3) That this worldly life is merely a test and all the things
and powers that have been given as trusts are the means of the test. An accurate
record is being kept of how each man is making use of his trust and how far he
is exploiting these things in accordance with the terms of the trust and how he
is using or abusing his abilities, capabilities, etc. in this regard. The result
of his test will determine man's rank in the Next World.