Tafsir Ishraq al-Ma'ani
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Introduction | Wiki
1. Al-Fatihah
2. Al-Baqarah
3. Al-Imran
4. Al-Nisa
5. Al-Maidah
6. Al-Anam
7. Al-Araf
8. Al-Anfal
9. Al-Taubah
10. Yunus
11. Hud
12. Yusuf
13. Al-Rad
14. Ibrahim
15. Al-Hijr
16. Al-Nahl
17. Bani Israil
18. Al-Kahf
19. Maryam
20. Ta-Ha
21. Al-Anbiya
22. Al-Hajj
23. Al-Muminun
24. An-Nur
25. Al-Furqan
26. Ash-Shuara
27. An-Naml
28. Al-Qasas
29. Al-Ankabut
30. Ar-Rum
31. Luqman
32. As-Sajdah
33. Al-Ahzab
34. Saba
35. Fatir
36. Yasin
37. As-Saffat
38. Saad
39. Az-Zumar
40. Al-Mumin
41. Ha-Meem-As-Sajdah
42. AShura
43. Az-Zukhruf
44. Ad-Dukhan
45. Al-Jathiyah
46. Al-Ahqaf
47. Muhammad
48. Al-Fath
49. Al-Hujurat
50. Al-Qaf
51. Adh-Dhariyat
52. At-Tur
53. An-Najm
54. Al-Qamar
55. Al-Rahman
56. Al-Waqiah
57. Al-Hadid
58. Al-Mujadalah
59. Al-Hashr
60. Al-Mumtahinah
61. As-Saff
62. Al-Jumuah
63. Al-Munafiqun
64. Al-Taghabun
65. At-Talaq
66. At-Tahrim
67. Al-Mulk
68. Al-Qalam
69. Al-Haqqah
70. Al-Maarij
71. Nuh
72. Al-Jinn
73. Al-Muzzammil
74. Al-Muddhththir
75. Al-Qiyamah
76. Ad-Dahr
77. Al-Mursalat
78. An-Naba
79. An-Naziat
80. Abas
81. At-Takwir
82. Al-Infitar
83. At-Tatfif
84. Al-Inshiqaq
85. Al-Buruj
86. At-Tariq
87. Al-Ala
88. Al-Ghashiyah
89. Al-Fajr
90. Al-Balad
91. Ash-Shams
92. Al-Lail
93. Ad-Duha
94. Al-Inshirah
95. At-Tin
96. Al-Alaq
97. Al-Qadr
98. Al-Bayyinah
99. Az-Zilzal
100. Al-Adiyat
101. Al-Qariah
102. At-Takathur
103. Al-Asr
104. Al-Humazah
105. Al-Fil
106. Al-Quraish
107. Al-Maun
108. Al-Kauthar
109. Al-Kafirun
110. An-Nasr
111. Al-Lahab
112. Al-Ikhlas
113. Al-Falaq
114. An-Nas
1. Al-Fatihah Page 1 1. Al-Fatihah بِسْمِ In (the) name اللّٰهِ (of) Allah الرَّحْمٰنِ the Most Gracious الرَّحِیْمِ the Most Merciful اَلْحَمْدُ All praises and thanks لِلّٰهِ (be) to Allah رَبِّ (the) Lord الْعٰلَمِیْنَۙ (of all) the worlds الرَّحْمٰنِ The Most Gracious الرَّحِیْمِۙ the Most Merciful مٰلِكِ Master یَوْمِ (of the) Day الدِّیْنِؕ (of) [the] Judgment اِیَّاكَ You Alone نَعْبُدُ we worship وَ اِیَّاكَ and You Alone نَسْتَعِیْنُؕ we ask for help اِهْدِنَا Guide us الصِّرَاطَ (to) the path الْمُسْتَقِیْمَۙ the straight صِرَاطَ (The) path الَّذِیْنَ (of) those اَنْعَمْتَ You have bestowed (Your) Favors عَلَیْهِمْ ۙ۬ۦ on them غَیْرِ not (of) الْمَغْضُوْبِ those who earned (Your) wrath عَلَیْهِمْ on themselves وَ لَا and not الضَّآلِّیْنَ۠ (of) those who go astray
(1:1) (All) praise belongs to Allah8 the Sustainer9 of the Worlds, 10
(1:2) The Compassionate, the Merciful. 11
(1:3) Lord of the Day of Judgement. 12
(1:4) Thee alone do we worship, 13 and Thy help alone do we seek. 14
(1:5) Guide us15 unto the straight path, 16
(1:6) The path of those Thou has favored, 17
(1:7) Not of those who earned Thy anger, nor of those who lost the way. 18 (Amin) 19
1. In its origin, the word surah stands for height, elevation (Majidi). The present divisions or chapters of the Qur'an have been so called perhaps because they raise the reader from one stage (of knowledge and spiritual advancement) to another (higher) stage (Qurtubi).
The word is also used for the walls or fortifications of a city which is perhaps another reason for this usage since each surah encompasses many ayat (verses of the Qur'an) within itself (Majidi), and guards them from spilling into other parts of the Qur'an. The Qur'an has 114 chapters and the present arrangement, obviously mechanical, is tawqifi ( تَوقيفي ), i.e., ordered by the Prophet himself, who was, in all such matters, acting under Divine guidance. The arrangement therefore cannot be altered. The 'suwar, (plural of surah), as also each verse with those that precede or follow, have a subtle relationship with each other in their present order and need a penetrating mind to unravel their interconnection. Imam Razi and Thanwi paid attention to explaining the relationship.
2. The names of the chapters are also "tawqifi."
This surah ‑ al‑Fatihah ‑ has many other names of which at least two are commonly mentioned: Umm al‑Qur'an, and Sab` al‑ Mathani.
As for the names of the chapters, sometimes they bear relationship with the theme and contents of the chapters, but sometimes they do not. Often a word of the surah has been picked out as its name, e.g., Al‑Baqarah.
مكية
3. That is, it was revealed during the Makkan period and not necessarily in Makkah. There is no consensus among the scholars over many of the chapters whether they are Makkan or Madinan. Even when there is consensus, not the whole surah can be said to be certainly of this or that period. For, both the Makkan and Madinan chapters can contain a verse or more of the other period. Further, there are certain verses that were revealed twice: once during the Makkan and again during the Madinan period. There are possibilities of certain chapters also having been revealed twice. In fact, about this chapter itself, a second opinion is that it was revealed a second time at Madinah (Qurtubi).
Marked differences in language, style, diction and subject matter can be noticed between those passages that were revealed before hijrah and those after. However one cannot work the other way round and treat the differences as criteria to decide if certain verses are Makkan or Madinan, or fix the meaning in their light: a mistake often committed by contemporary commentators. Only those parts of the Qur'an are for certain Makkan or Madinan that have an authentic report in support. Where such reports do not exist, it is anybody's guess. Further, even with a firm report about the period of revelation, it is very difficult to establish whether a particular portion was revealed during the 'early', 'middle' or 'last' days of the Makkan or Madinan period. Trying to fix up the period of revelation in such cases therefore can have its basis only in conjectures. However, since religion cannot be based on conjectures, it is best to avoid such exercises. Again, analogies such as: "Since the verses under discussion are Makkan, and since such and such 'are' the subject matter of the Qur'an of the Makkan period, this is the kind of meaning that can be deduced from these verses," are invalid. Where found, it can only betray pre‑conceived ideas (Au.).
4. Ayah in the original (the smallest unit of a surah) stands for a sign or miracle: as if every verse of the Qur'an is a sign of Allah (swt) and a miracle in itself. A word of the original, for instance, forgotten by one who knows the whole verse by heart cannot be substituted with an equivalent word to complete the verse, without he himself feeling that it is unlike the original in structure and meaning.
As the chapters, the present arrangement of the verses is also tawqifi. The Prophet (saws) used to dictate the verses in this order, recite them (in and out of Prayers) in this order, as well as recite the whole of the Qur'an once in a year to Jibril in the month of Ramadan in the same order (Au.).
The total number of verses in the Qur'an is six thousand two hundred and odd: there being some differences over the count. (Manahil al‑`Irfan) Majid mentions on the authority of Al-Itqan fi `Uuom al-Qur'an that they total 6,616. Of words, he gives the total as 77,934, of the letters as 323,760, drawing attention to the pains the lovers of the Qur'an have borne with pleasure.
5. Shayatin are from the Jinn who are corporeal beings created from fire. They are endowed with reason. They multiply and grow in numbers just like other living creatures. Of the Jinn some have submitted to Allah (swt), others have not. Those that have not submitted are called Shayatin (sing. Shaytan). Although invisible to human eye, occasional contacts are not ruled out. According to one opinion (in `Umdatu al‑Qari ‑ Badruddin `Ayni), they can run through the human body. The opinion itself is based on a hadith (Au.).
6. In common parlance everything that has a rebellious nature is called Shaytan. When `Umar (ra) was given a horse that he could not bring to control, he dismounted saying: 'You gave me a Shaytan' (Sabuni).
Shayatin are man's eternal sworn enemies, vowed to preventing him from regaining his lost position with his Lord, and accepting no compromise or peace‑deal with him. Every individual has (at least) one Shaytan accompanying him. Even the Prophet, on whom be peace, had one accompanying him, but Allah had subdued him to him. It is their inducements, evil suggestions and physical harm that we are taught to seek refuge from. To pronounce this formula [al‑ta`awwudh ( التَّعَّوُّذ )] before every recitation of the Qur'an is, according to the majority of scholars, Sunnah (Ma`arif). It is also useful to say these words against every Satanic impulse or distraction. The following hadith may be noted:
A Muslim must treat the Shayatin and their spiritual and physical harm seriously. The Prophet has said as in Bukhari:
Kalbi comments: "There are four things that distract a man from Allah: Satan, the self, the world, and the people. The defense against 'Satan' is in seeking Allah's refuge and in opposing every suggestion made by him; against the 'self' in treating it harshly; against the 'world' in indifference (to its pains and pleasures); and against the 'people' in withdrawal."
The Bible has a curious formula for driving away the demons. It says (Tobit 6: 16, 17):
"... you shall take live ashes of incense and lay upon them some of the heart and liver of the fish, so as to make a smoke. Then the demon will smell it and flee away, and will never again return" (Au.).
7. That this formula, known as the basmalah ( بَسْمَلَة ), is a verse of the Qur'an there can be no difference of opinion, in view of the verse 30 of al‑Namal. But whether it is part of every surah with which it opens (except for a solitary exception), is disputed. In any case, saying the basmalah before recitation of the Qur'an is Sunnah. Further, coming as it does, here at the beginning of the Qur'an it sets right man's relationship with Allah (Sayyid Qutb).
Its meaning is: 'I begin (this act) in the name of Allah, dependent on Him, placing trust in His Mercy, seeking His help for its completion and aiming to win His approval.' A report as found in the Sahih of Muslim says:
أَعوذُ بِعِزَّةِ اللهِ وقُدرَتِهِ مِنْ شَرِّ ما أَجِدُ وأُحاذِرُ.
"I seek refuge with the Might and Power of Allah from what I find and what I am fearful of" (Qurtubi).
Majid says: "Contrast with this unreservedly monotheistic introductory formula of Islam the glaringly polytheistic introductory formula of Christianity:‑ 'In the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost.'"
8. Allah: "According to the best authorities is a proper noun par excellence without derivation, from which no plural can be formed. It denotes none but the One Unique God, the Absolute, Supreme, Tender, Mighty, Gracious, Benign and Compassionate" (Majid).
He it is, with all His qualities and attributes, who is in the minds of two persons when they speak to each other about Him, even if they happen to be of different faiths and holding corrupt concepts about Him. A Christian may say that he believes in a God who is a third of the Trinity, or the atheist that there is no such reality as God. But when the two use the word, they both mean the One, the Supreme, who has no partners in his Being or in His attributes ‑ Allah of Arabic. In other words, Allah is in the subconscious of every human being and not 'God' of English or its equivalent in other languages. The word therefore cannot be translated, although it may be convenient to use the word 'God' atome places, especially when it is the unbelievers who speak out His name.
9. "Al‑Rabb": Sustainer is a poor substitute for this word since in Arabic it signifies (Majidi), a being who creates a thing and then develops it gradually, in steps, until it has achieved its optimum development.
Asad writes: "The Arabic expression rabb embraces a wide complex of meanings not easily expressed by a single term in another language. It comprises the ideas of having a just claim to the possession of anything and, consequently, authority over it, as well as of rearing, sustaining and fostering anything from its inception to its final completion."
10. "`Alamun" is plural of the collective noun `alam, of which itself no singular form is available. It is derived from `alamah (which means a sign) since `alam signifies that there is a Creator who brought it in being (Sabuni).
There are various opinions about the connotation of the term `alamun. But they all lead to the same meaning. The opinion of Ibn `Abbas' is that it is the worlds of the jinn and mankind that have been alluded to. Abu Sa`id al Khudri said: 'There are forty thousand worlds of Allah's creation. Our world, from one end to the other, is one of them.' Qatadah says: 'It includes all that there is apart from Allah' (Qurtubi). Yusuf `Ali says: 'There are many worlds ‑ astronomical and physical worlds, worlds of thought, spiritual worlds, and so on. In every one of them God is all in all.'
Another possible allusion could be to the seven firmaments (or universes) that Allah has mentioned in the Qur'an.
Finally, as we all know, everyone lives in a world of his own (Au.).
Any praise that is ever sung, whether for Allah (swt) or for anyone else, belongs in reality to Allah. Who is it but He who makes the idea click in the mind of an inventor? Who is it but He who steers the brush‑strokes of a painter? Who is it but He who flashes the right word in the mind of a writer? And whose creation it is but His, the material that they use, the laws they follow and the beauty that they imitate? In practice, therefore, when anything strikes us as good and beautiful, it is Allah (swt) who must be remembered with gratitude and it is He who must be praised.
`A'isha (ra) says that when a pleasant thing happened to the Prophet (saws) he would say (Ibn Majah):
A hadith (Ibn Majah) says that the best of dhikr is (the words):
In another hadith Rifa`ah b. Rafe` al‑Zuraqi reports (Bukhari, Muslim and others): "One day we were offering Prayers behind the Prophet. When he raised himself from the bow (ruku`) he said:
A man at the rear responded with:
When the Prayer was over, the Prophet enquired who the man was. 'It was me,' the man said. The Prophet said: 'I saw upwards of thirty angels vying to write down those words before the others would.'"
Another hadith (as in Musnad Ahmad) says the Prophet told them on that occasion that having taken it to the `Arsh, the two scribe‑angels were in confusion as to how to write down these words. Allah told them, "Write them down the way My slave said." (Ibn Kathir: Ibn Majah).
"Lord of the Worlds": That is, the God of Islam is 'not a tribal deity, nor the national God of any specially favored race or people, nor yet the narrow 'Lord of the Hosts', or the anthropomorphic 'our Father in heaven' (Majid).
He is not even the Lord of the Muslims in any specific sense, nor is He the Lord of those alone who believe in Him. He is the Lord of everyone and everything. He is the Creator, the Sustainer and the Nourisher of all: believers in Him and the unbelievers alike. He is the Lord, both of the worlds known to Man, as well as those not known to him. He is the Lord of the organic matter as well as the inorganic, of all times, past, present and future.
Also, He is not the God of Aristotle who created the world but has lost interest in its affairs (Sayyid), letting it run on its own by the first motion that He gave it. Rather, He drives it ‑ the whole as well as its every element ‑ on to a designed course, following a certain Plan which itself is determined by His boundless Wisdom. At our level, what else can we do but to offer praises to Him for the intricacy of the design, the delicacy of the balance and the beauty of the execution?! It is only one Allah who can do that. If there were many, the universe would fall apart (Au.).
Manazir Ahsan Geelani (an Indian scholar) has stated in his "The Spiritual Cosmos" that far from an actual world (of matter and spirit), even an imaginary one cannot remain intact without a sustainer paying constant attention to it. If you imagined, e.g., 'Australia' in your mind, with all its cities, people, mountains, lakes and deserts, then this Australia of your imagination will exist in your mind so long as you keep paying attention to it. If you did not, it will fall apart. What do you think of the actual world then? Can it last without a Rabb al‑ `aalamin?
According to some scholars, this verse is of greater merit (afdal) than the kalimah since it embodies both the unity of Allah as well as His praise (Qurtubi).
Qurtubi reports about Junayd that when someone said al‑hamdulillah before him he told him to complete it and say al‑hamdulillahi rabbi `al‑alamin. The man protested, "But (of) whatever (worth) is the`alamin that I should mention it along with the name of the Lord?" Junayd replied: "Brother! When both the created and the Creator are mentioned together, the 'created' will have no unwholesome effect on your heart."
Razi writes, in effect: "If you pondered over the wonders of the living and the non‑living, (how they are interrelated and supported by each other), you will begin to see a little of the 'Compassion' of our Lord at work in His creation, and in the various forms His 'sustenance' takes. It is then that a drop from the ocean of the meaning of the phrase, 'All praise to Allah, the Lord of the worlds,' will you have obtained."
"Strange it is," he adds a little further, "that Allah has other creations besides you. Whereas, you have no Sustainer besides Him. Yet He looks after you as if He has no other creation besides you; while you serve Him as if you have many other sustainers besides Him!"
11. Thus, the primary relationship of man with his Lord is that of mercy from His side. A hadith of Muslim says,
Both al‑Rahman and al‑Rahim have been derived from the same root rahmah and both can be translated as the Merciful, the Compassionate, the Kind, etc. Nevertheless, whatever word is chosen the translation will remain inaccurate. The words are intensive forms and, although the Most Merciful, the Most Compassionate, the Most Kind etc. would be more appropriate rendering; but, despite that, such a rendering will not be faithful to the original since the two can not be distinguished. For, although both are intensive forms, al‑Rahman follows the pattern that indicates intensity of a quality, but not necessarily its permanence, while al‑Rahim follows the pattern that indicates intensity as well as permanence.
Kaslan ( كَسْلان ), for instance means "very lazy," ta`ban ( تَعبان ) means "very tired," ghadban ( غَضبان ), "very angry," etc. But a person who is very lazy can become active, the very tired can regain his vigor, and the very angry will cool down to his normal temper. The forms do not promise permanence of qualities. This is applicable to the term "Al-Rahman" also.
In contrast, the other form indicates permanence in the quality while also expressing intensity, though not of the same order baligh ( بَليغ ) for instance is someone who is very eloquent and whose quality of eloquence is permanent. Shaji` ( شَجيع ), "courageous" is so called because his quality of courage is permanent. If it was not, he would not be called shaji`.
Now, Allah (swt) is Al‑Rahman, the compassionate whose compassion is soaring. Yet, His being 'Al‑Rahman' does not mean that His compassion will come down to the state of not being compassionate at some time in the future; for He is also 'Al‑Rahim' whose quality of compassion will not suffer any decline. In other words, 'Al‑Rahman' indicates that He is One whose Mercy is in a state of eruption, while 'Al‑Rahim' indicates that this state is permanent.
Shanqiti states an additional connotation: "Al‑Rahman expresses the quality of mercy that encompasses all creatures in this world: the believers as well as the unbelievers. In contrast, Al‑Rahim is a quality that will be manifest in the Hereafter in favor of the believers alone. This is the opinion of the majority of scholars. What is reported of Jesus Christ, on whom and on our Prophet be peace, also corroborates this meaning. He is reported to have said: "Rahman is the Rahman of the next world as well as of this. Rahim is the Rahiem of the Hereafter.
(It might be noted however, that the above is not a hadith: Au.).
The doubt over the terms Al‑Rahman and Al‑Rahim seem to be old. Al‑Tabari clarifies: "Now, if someone objects that if both Rahman and Rahim are derived from the same root rahmah, (and since both carry the same meaning), what was the point in the repetition? The answer is that the matter is not as he imagines. Rather, each of these two words has a specific connotation that is not carried by the other."
Ibn al-Qayyim advances another explanation, as quoted in Manar I. 48 and cited by Asad: "The term rahman circumscribes the quality of abounding grace inherent in, and inseparable from, the concept of Allah's Being, whereas rahim expresses the manifestation of that grace in, and its effect upon, His creation ‑ in other words, an aspect of His activity."
Sayyid Qutb comments: "The God of Islam does not pursue the humans of His creation with spite and anger, like the gods of Olympia in their violent outbursts, as portrayed by the Greek mythologists; nor does He play vengeful tricks on them as portrayed by the scribes of no less mythological Old Testament, an example of which is the story (of the Tower of Babel) narrated in the Torah."
[The story of the Tower of Babel to which Sayyid Qutb refers is in Genesis, Chap. 11, verses 1‑9. It is as follows:
"Now the whole earth had one language and few words, And, as men migrated from the east, they found a plain in the land of Shinar and settled there. And they said to one another, "Come, let us make bricks, and burn them thoroughly." And they had bricks for stone, and bitumen for mortar. Then they said, "Come, let us build ourselves a city, and a tower with its top in the heavens, and let us make a name for ourselves, lest we be scattered abroad upon the face of the whole earth." And the Lord came down to see the city and the tower, which the sons of men had built. And the Lord said, 'Behold, they are one people, and they have all one language; and this is only the beginning of what they will do; and nothing that they propose to do will now be impossible for them. Come, let us go down, and there confuse their language, that they may not understand one another's speech.' So the Lord scattered them abroad from there over the face of all the earth, and they left off building the city. Therefore its name was called Babel, because there the Lord confused the language of all the earth; and from there the Lord scattered them abroad over the face of all the earth": Au.].
"In contrast, the presence of these attributes in the basmalah and at the beginning of the opening chapter sets right the relationship of man with God. Is God the Omnipotent Creator and man the weak creature who must quietly submit and suffer this life? Is God the Law‑Maker whose natural laws work blindly with regard to him, taking no account of his hopes, fears and aspirations? Is God the ruthless Judge who does not differentiate between the sinner and the rebellious? Yes, the God of Islam is the Omnipotent Creator, the Law‑Maker, the Judge. But He is, first and foremost, "The Kind and The Merciful." Says a well known 'hadith': "When Allah had brought into being His creations, He wrote down in His Book, which lies with Him on the '`Arsh: 'My Mercy will overcome My Anger.'"
Sayyid's comment ends here.
12. "Deen" has several meanings. That of: religion, civil laws, obedience, etc. Here it signifies "rewards and punishments, or simply retribution." The Qur'an says elsewhere (51:6):
And a hadith – treated as Hasan by Tirmidhi - says:
Note the use of the word ( دان ) in this hadith.
The statement that He is the Lord of the Day of Judgment does not of course imply that He is not (the whole and sole) Lord of the worlds now. The Day of Judgment has been specifically mentioned because His absolute lordship will be apparent to everyone that day when no one else will possess lordship besides Him to any degree. The Sahihayn report:
Majid adds: "(It is on the Day of Judgment) when His sovereignty shall be more evident than ever, and manifest even to the worse scoffers. .... The verse completely repudiates the Christian doctrine that Christ, not God, would be judge: 'For the Father judgeth no man, but hath committed all judgment unto the Son' ‑ John 5:22".
To mention the Day of Judgment after the attributes Al‑Rahman and Al‑Rahim is perhaps to remind man that although Allah is Kind and Merciful, He has also to be just with all of His creations. Accordingly, He has appointed a Day when everyone will have to recompense for the wrongs he committed to others and draw retribution for the wrongs he suffered at the hands of others (Au.).
13. "`Ibadah" in Arabic is any act that suggests extensive humility and self‑abasement (Sabuni). Accordingly, tariq mu`abbad is that path which is well‑trodden, and ba`eer mu`abbad is a tamed camel.
In Islamic terminology it signifies deep feelings of love, humility, and fear. The meaning of the verse therefore is: 'We worship none but You, and place our trust in none but You.' The whole of the religion of Islam revolves around these two principles, the former negates any association with Allah (shirk) while the latter signifies trust and dependence on none other than Him (Ibn Kathir).
14. The meaning attributed to Ibn `Abbas however is that 'We worship none but You, and seek Your help alone in the execution of our acts of obedience as well as in all our other activities' (Ibn Jarir).
Ibn al-Qayyim says that the first half of the verse is related to the uluhiyyah aspect of Allah (swt) while the second to the rububiyyah aspect. He defines "the best act of worship" at any particular moment as that activity which aims at pleasing Allah (swt) and is the precise demand of the moment. It can be jihad, Prayers, attending to guests ... it can be anything, depending on the circumstances in which one finds himself.
Going back to the verse we can also say that it warns both of overt as well as covert association (shirk) with Allah. The first part: "We worship none but You," negates open association (shirk al‑jaliyy) such as to ascribe partners to Allah's Person; while the second: "We seek Your help," negates any secret association (shirk al‑khafiyy), such as to imagine that others also have a say in the affairs of the world (Au.).
The use of plural forms in the verbs in this verse and in the following is suggestive of the fact that even if a Muslim is individually engaged in the acts of worship, he remains strongly tied to the bonds of the community (Majidi).
15. After the praise and promise comes the supplication: "Guide us to the Straight Path." What is the meaning of the words 'Guide us' here, when said by those who already believe? It is: "Grant us steadfastness" (Ibn Jarir). A Muslim is, at all times and in all situations, in need of Allah's help in remaining steadfast on the Path of Allah (swt), in firmly establishing himself on it and in continuing with determination (Ibn Kathir).
It includes an understanding (ma`rifah) of the Path and perseverance in it, since the two are fruits of Allah's guidance, His attention and His kindness (Sayyid).
Ihdina has much wider significance than 'showing the way.' What the supplicant is asking for is not merely that the way be pointed out or verbally indicated to him, but that he may be, by the Divine grace, actually led on to his goal, ‑ the Guide, as if, accompanying the guided and leading him on and on' (Majid).
Ibn Qayyim adds: "Hidayah has another function: It is to be led to Paradise on the Day of Judgment."
In other words, it is tawfiq (divine inducement, or inclination to submit oneself to a greater degree and depth, and grant of power to do that), which is sought along with the delineation of the path that will finally lead to Paradise. It can be added that as a rule, when a man follows up with a good deed after the previous one, it is a sign that he has been granted tawfeeq, and (Thanwi, elsewhere), that the previous one was accepted by Allah.
Hidayah:
Imam Raghib al‑Asfahani has defined the term well in his 'Mufradat al‑Qur'an.' It can be rendered in modern terms in the following manner: There are four kinds and levels of guidance. One which has been given to all the creations of Allah: the inanimate objects (such as the mountains, rivers, stars, galaxies, atoms, radio waves, physical laws, etc.: Au.), beings incapable of reasoning (such as the animals, viruses, plants, organic matter, etc.), and the rational beings such as mankind and the jinn. All these obey Allah (swt) by doing what fulfills the purpose of their creation, following the laws to which they are bound, and (in the case of the living) following the instinct they have been given to preserve and multiply. In this sense they are all on a hidayah, although it is a low level of hidayah. The Qur'an says (87: 1‑3):
At another place it said (20: 49, 50):
In both the above examples it is the first level and basic degree of guidance that has been alluded to: a guidance that no one and nothing misses.
The second kind of guidance is that which rational beings (mankind and jinn) are specially given through the Prophets in the form of the Revelations they bring from Allah (swt). Some accept this guidance, while others do not, since in this case there is no compulsion. However, if they reject it, they are not on hidayah of this second kind, though, obviously, they remain living by, and following the basic level of guidance.
The third kind is that which can be described as the willingness to travel up the path, and the creation by Allah (swt) of the "means" that make it easy to act and live by His guidance. It is also known as tawfiq. It is obtained by accepting the guidance sent by Allah (swt) through the Prophets and making an effort to live by its dictates. The more one does that, the more of tawfiq does he or she draw, with no end to the spiritual development. Conversely, the less one responds to the Call, the less tawfiq one receives. Faith (the second level of guidance) is the minimum requirement for drawing tawfiq. It is this kind of guidance or tawfiq that is meant in the following verses (47: 17):
And (29: 69):
This third kind of guidance has no limits. Each 'state' leads to the next and a higher one. It is in this sense that the Prophet (saws), who was himself a guide for others, was promised further guidance on the occasion of the fall of Makkah. The revelation that came down on that occasion said (48: 1-2):
But if the guidance sent by Allah through His prophets, revelations, or through other guided men is rejected, then there can be no further guidance. That is, a jump from the first to the third levels of guidance is ruled out. The Qur'an says (64: 11):
It is also said at several places (2: 64),
Finally, the fourth kind of hidayah is the one by which man will be ushered into Paradise. Allah said (7: 43),
Quote from Raghib ends here.
16. "Sirat al‑Mustaqim": The consensus of the scholars is that it is "that straight path which has no twists and bends in it" (Ibn Jarir). But there are various opinions about its exact significance here, although all opinions lead to the same meaning. `Ali (ra) reported that the Prophet (saws) said, "it is the Qur'an" alluding to this verse. Ibn `Abbas said it is "Islam." Abu al‑`Aliyyah said that it is "(the ways of) the Prophet and his two companions, Abu Bakr and `Umar" (Ibn Jarir). Mujahid said it is "the truth" (Ibn Kathir). Ibn Jarir sums up and says: "I believe it means, 'Help us to be steadfast with what is acceptable to You (O Allah), and motivate us to come up (whether they be words or deeds) with what You motivated those whom You favored before us.' Whoever is induced by Allah to do what He guided His favored ones to do, such as the Prophets, the 'siddiqun', the martyrs, and the righteous, is the guided one."
In a hadith reported by Al‑Nawas b. Sim`an the Prophet illustrated 'the Straight Path' in the following manner:
"The path is Islam. The walls are the lines delineating the lawful and the unlawful. The open doors are prohibitions of Allah. The caller at the entrance to the path is Allah's Book. And the one calling out at the other end of the path is Allah's admonisher that resides in every believer's heart" (Ibn Kathir on the authority of Ahmed, Tirmidhi and Nasa'i).
17. This qualifies the path that was sought earlier. And those who have been favored by Allah (swt) are the ones mentioned in (4: 69):
The siddiqun of the above verse have been identified as those who are next only to the Prophets in righteousness and elevation, who remain absolutely true to their faith in every situation and on all occasions.
Referring to this verse Ibn Jarir makes another point worth noting. He says, "In this verse is the clear evidence that the obedience that the faithful demonstrate, is not their own achievement. Rather, it is by Allah's leave, and the tawfeeq granted."
Majid has another point to state: "By qualifying the straight path in the manner done here it is being hinted that the 'path' is not a hypothetical, imaginary or an ideal one. Rather it is a real and tangible one: one on which people have walked before and have met with success."
Thanwi draws attention to yet another possibility: A subtle hint is hidden in the words to the effect that it is essential to seek the company of those who have been favored by Allah. Mere study of books might not be enough.
The first half of this statement corroborates the stance of Shah Waliyyullah as in his Izaalatu al Khifa' (vol.1) ‑ Au.
Ibn Qayyim makes his usual outstanding remark. He writes: "Since the one who is seeking the straight path is asking for a path from which many drop out, and since man loves company and fears loneliness, Allah (swt), while pointing out the path, has also indicated the company that he may keep. That company is no less than that of the Prophets, the Truthful, the martyrs and the righteous. And no ordinary people are these, but such as those whom Allah (swt) has favored. The company may be few in numbers but is great in worth as against the drop‑outs who might be great in numbers but are of little worth."
18. If the previous verse qualified the "path" in positive terms, this last verse does it in negative terms. It is not the path of those who incurred anger, nor those who lost it. Who are they? The general consensus is that the allusion is to the Jews and Christians. The Qur'an says about the Jews (5: 60):
In another place it says about them (60: 13):
About the Christians the Qur'an says (5: 77):
The same explanation has come down from the Prophet (saws).
Majid adds: "It is a timid philosophy that hesitates to hate and condemn the evil and the evildoer in the strongest terms."
The strong condemnation herewith is nothing new for the Jews. The New Testament records Jesus (asws) addressing them in words: "O generation of vipers, how can ye, being evil, speak good things."
Ibn Qayyim again has some useful notes. He writes: "With respect to the knowledge of the Truth and deeds in its light, people can be divided into three categories: the 'favored ones' (mun`am `alayhim), those ‘who incurred anger’ (al-maghdubi `alayhim), and the 'misguided ones' (dallin). A man has either knowledge of the Truth, or he does not. Further, if he has the knowledge, either he lives by its demands or he does not. Thus you can have only three kinds of people and no more.
"Now, he who has the knowledge and lives by its demands is the 'favored' one. He is the one who purifies his self (ego) with useful knowledge and righteous deeds. He will prosper (91:9): 'Prosperous is he who purifies it.' In contrast, he who has knowledge but follows his base desires is the one ‘who earned the anger;' while he who is ignorant of the Truth altogether (since he lost it), is the 'misguided' one.
"It might also be noted that, 'those who earned the anger' are ‘the misguided ones’ too, as 'the misguided ones' are also those ‘who earned the anger.' Both ‘earned the anger' and both are 'misguided ones.' But the ones who refused to live by the guidance after they has received it are more deserving of anger than those who received it and then lost it. Hence the term ‘those who earned the anger’ has been used for the Jews, and the terms 'misguided ones' for the Christians."
19. "'Amin" means, "Accept it O Lord." It is reported of the Prophet (saws) through Abu Hurayrah (ra), that whenever he reached the last verse of surah al‑Fatihah in the Prayers, he said "'amin" in a voice that could be heard by those in the first row (Ibn Kathir on the authority of Abu Da'ud and Ibn Majah). The latter adds the words, "and the mosque would reverberate with the sound" (of those in the congregation) - Sabuni.
Abu Hurayrah (ra) also narrates a hadith al‑qudsi in which the Prophet said:
Tafsir Majidi draws a comparison of this chapter with the Christians' Lord's Prayer:
Our Father which art in heaven, Hallowed be thy name.
Thy kingdom come. Thy will be done in earth, as it is in heaven.
Give us this day our daily bread.
And forgive us our debts, as we forgive our debtors.
And lead us not in our temptation, but deliver us from evil: For thine is the kingdom, and the power, and the glory, for ever. Amen (Matthew 6: 8‑13).
The emphasis in the supplication above is, it should be obvious, on the daily bread.