51. The adversaries are told that they can observe God's signs in the phenomena of the universe, just as Abraham could. The difference is that they see nothing, as if they were blind, whereas Abraham saw with open eyes. The sun, moon and stars which rise and set before their eyes day after day and night after night witness them as misguided at their setting as at their rising. Yet the same signs were observed by the perceptive Abraham, and the physical phenomena helped him arrive at the Truth.
52. To obtain a full understanding of this section, as well as of those verses
which mention the dispute between Abraham and his people, it is necessary to
cast a glance at the religious and cultural condition of the latter. Thanks
to recent archaeological discoveries, not only has the, city where Abraham is
said to have been born been located, but a good deal of information is also
available about the condition of the people of that area during the Abrahamic
period. We reproduce below a summary of the conclusions which Sir Leonard Wooley
arrived at as a result of the researches embodied in his work, Abraham (London,
1935).
It is estimated that around 2100 B.C., which is now generally accepted by scholars
as the time of the advent of Abraham, the population of the city of Ur was at
least two hundred and fifty thousand, maybe even five hundred thousand. The
city was a large industrial and commercial metropolis. Merchandise was brought
to Ur from places as far away as Palmir and Nilgiri in one direction, and in
the other it had developed trade relations with Anatolia. The state, of which
this city was the capital, extended a little beyond the boundaries of modern
Iraq in the north, and exceeded its present borders further to the west. The
great majority of the population were traders and craftsmen. The inscriptions
of that period, which have been discovered in the course of archaeological research,
make it clear that those people had a purely materialistic outlook on life.
Their greatest concern was to earn the maximum amount of wealth and enjoy the
highest degree of comfort and luxury. Interest was rampant among them and their
devotion to money-making seemed all-absorbing. They looked at one another with
suspicion and often resorted to litigation. In their prayers to their gods,
too, they generally asked for longer life, prosperity and greater commercial
success, rather than for spiritual growth, God's pardon and reward in the Hereafter.
The population comprised three classes of people: (1) amelu, the priests, the
government and military officers; (2) mushkinu, the craftsmen and farmers; and
(3) the slaves.
The people of the first class mentioned, i.e. amelu, enjoyed special privileges.
In both criminaI and civil matters, their rights were greater than those of
the others, and their lives and property were deemed to be of higher value.
It was in such a city and in such a society that Abraham first saw the light
of day. Whatever information we possess with regard to him and his family through
the Talmud shows that he belonged to the amelu class and that his father was
the highest functionary of the state. See also Towards Understanding the Qur'an,
vol. 1, (Surah 2, n.290).
In the inscriptions of Ur there are references to about five thousand deities.
Each city had its own deity. Each city had a chief deity which it considered
its chief protector and, therefore, that deity was considered worthy of greater
reverence than all the others. 'The chief deity of Ur was Nannar (the moon god),
and it is for this reason that the city later became known as Kamarina. The
other major city was Larsa, which replaced Ur as the capital of the kingdom.
Its chief deity was Shamash (the sun god). Under these major deities there was
a myriad of minor deities which had generally been chosen from among the heavenly
bodies - stars and planets. People considered them responsible for granting
their innumerable minor prayers. Idols had been carved in the image of these
celestial and terrestrial gods and goddesses and were made objects of ritual
worship.
Qamar is the Arabic word for 'moon'- Ed.
The idol of Nannar had been placed in a magnificent building on the top of the
highest hill. Close to it was the temple of Nin-Gal, the wife of Nannar. The
temple of Nannar resembled a royal palace. Every night a female worshipper went
to its bedroom, adorned as a bride. A great number of women had been consecrated
in the name of this deity and their position was virtually that of religious
prostitutes. The woman who would sacrifice her virginity for the sake of her
'god' was held in great esteem. For a woman to give herself to some unrelated
person 'for the sake of God' was considered a means to salvation. Needless to
say, it was generally the priests who made most use of this institution. Nannar
was not merely a deity, but the biggest landlord, the biggest trader, the biggest
industrialist and the most powerful ruler. Many orchards, buildings and huge
estates had been consecrated to his temple. In addition to this, cereals, milk,
gold, cloth, etc., were brought as offerings to the temple by peasants, landlords
and merchants, and there was a large staff in the temple to receive the offerings.
Many a factory had been established on behalf of the temple. Large-scale trading
was also carried out on its behalf. All these activities were conducted by the
priests in the name of the deity. Moreover, the country's main court was also
located in the temple. The priests functioned as judges and their judgements
were equated with those of God. The authority of the royal family was derived
from Nannar. The concept was that Nannar was the true sovereign and that the
ruler of the country governed merely on his behalf. Because of this relationship,
the king himself was raised to the rank of a deity and was worshipped.
The founder of the dynasty which ruled over Ur at the time of Abraham was Ur-Nammu.
In 2300 B.C. he had established an extensive kingdom, stretching from Susa in
the east to Lebanon in the west. Hence the dynasty acquired the name 'Nammu',
which became Nimrud in Arabic. After the emigration of Abraham, both the ruling
dynasty and the nation of Ur were subjected to a succession of disasters. Firstly,
the Elamites sacked Ur and captured Nimrud along with the idols of Nannar. Later
on, an Elamite state was established in Larsa which governed Ur as well. Later
still, Babylon prospered under a dynasty of Arabian origin and both Larsa and
Ur came under its hegemony. These disasters shook the people of Ur's faith in
Nannar, for he had failed to protect them.
It is difficult to say much, with certainty, about the extent of the subsequent
impact of the teachings of Abraham on these people. The laws which were codified
by the Babylonian King Hammurabi in 1910 B.C. show the impress of the prophetic
influence, whether direct or indirect. An inscription of this code was discovered
in 1902 by a French archaeologist and its English translation by C. H. W. John
was published in 1903 under the title The Oldest Code of Law. Many articles
of this code, both fundamental principles and substantive laws, bear some resemblance
to the Mosaic Law.
If the conclusions of these archaeological researchers are correct, it becomes
quite evident that polytheism did not consist merely of a set of religious beliefs
and polytheistic rites, it rather provided the foundation on which the entire
order of economic, cultural, political and social life rested. Likewise, the
monotheistic mission which was undertaken by Abraham was not merely directed
against the practice of idol-worship. It had far wider implications, so much
so that it affected the position of the royal family both as rulers and deities.
It also affected the social, economic and, political status and interests of
the priestly class, and the aristocracy in general, and in fact the entire fabric
of the social life of the kingdom. To accept the teaching of Abraham meant that
the entire edifice of the existing society should be pulled down and raised
anew on the basis of belief in the One God. Hence, as soon as Abraham launched
his mission, ordinary people as well as the privileged classes, ordinary devotees
as well as Nimrud. rose at once to oppose and suppress it.
53. Here some light is thrown on the mental experience through which Abraham
passed in the beginning and which led him to an understanding of the Truth before
prophethood was bestowed on him. This experience shows how a right-thinking
and sound-hearted man, who had opened his eyes in a purely polytheistic environment
and had received no instruction in monotheism, was ultimately led to discover
the Truth by careful observation of, and serious reflection on the phenomena
of the universe. The account of the conditions prevailing among the people of
Abraham shows that when he began to think seriously the scene was dominated
by the worship of the heavenly bodies - the moon, the sun and the stars. It
was natural, therefore, that when Abraham began his quest for the Truth, he
should have been faced with the question: Is it possible that any of these -
the sun, the moon and the stars - is God? He concentrated his reflection on
this central question and by observing that all the gods of his nation were
bound by a rigid law under which they moved about like slaves, he concluded
that those so-called gods were not possessed of even a shadow of the power of
the One True Lord, Who alone had created them all and had yoked them to serve
His will.
The Qur'anic passage describing Abraham's reactions on observing first a star,
then the moon, and finally the sun, has puzzled some readers because the words
seem to suggest that Abraham had never before witnessed these common phenomena.
This misconception has made the whole narration such a riddle for some scholars
that they could only solve it by inventing the strange anecdote that Abraham
was born and grew to maturity in a cave and was thus deprived of the opportunity
to observe the heavenly bodies. What is said, however, is so plain that one
need not fall back on any such incident in order to comprehend it. It is well
known, for instance, that when Newton saw an apple fall from a tree in his orchard
this incident instantly raised in his mind the question: Why do things always
fall to the ground? As a result of his reflection on this question he arrived
at his theory of gravity. On reading this incident one might wonder if Newton
had never before seen anything fall to the ground! Obviously, he must have seen
things fall. For what reason, then, should the failing of an apple cause in
his mind a reaction quite different irom those caused by hundreds of earlier
observations of similar things failing? The answer is that a reflecting mind
does not react uniformly to similar observations. A man may observe something
over and over again without this observation creating any stir in his mind,
but then there comes a moment when suddenly the same observation agitates his
mind and his mental faculty begins to work in a different direction. It may
also happen that while a man's mind is wrestling with a problem, he encounters
something which is otherwise quite ordinary but which suddenly seems to provide
the key. Something to this effect happened with Abraham. Certainly, he was as
familiar as anyone else with nightfall and the ensuing daybreak. The sun, the
moon and the stars had all risen before his eyes in the past and had then disappeared
from sight. But on one particular day his observation of a star was to stimulate
his thinking in a certain direction and to lead him in the end to perceive the
truth of God's Oneness. It is possible that Abraham's mind was already engrossed
in reflecting on whether, and if so to what extent, the beliefs which served
as the foundation of the entire life-system of his people embodied the Truth.
when he spotted a star which provided him with the initial key to the solution
of the problem. It is also possible that the observation of a particular star
first set him thinking about the problem.
Another question that arises is whether Abraham's statements about the star,
the moon and the sun show that he lapsed into polytheism temporarily. The answer
must be that, while a seeker after the Truth may pause on the way to his goal,
what really matters is his direction and the end-point of his journey rather
than the intermediary stages. These stages are inevitable for every seeker of
the Truth. A man stops at them to inquire and question rather than to pronounce
his final judgement. During these stages of the quest a man may seem to express
the opinion: 'That is so', but what he is really doing is asking himself the
question: 'Is it really so?' When serious investigation leads to a negative
answer, he proceeds further and continues the quest. Hence, it would be wrong
to think of such a seeker having temporarily fallen victim to polytheism and
unbelief whenever he paused at an intermediary stage for critical reflection.
54. The word used here is tadhakkur which conveys the sense that somebody who had been either heedless or negligent of something suddenly wakes up to its true meaning. The purpose of Abraham's statement was to recall them to their senses by reminding them that their true Lord was not uninformed about their deeds, for His knowledge encompasses everything.
55. This entire section shows that those people did not deny the existence
of God as the creator of the heavens and earth. Their real guilt was that they
associated others in His attributes and His rights over man. In the first place,
Abraham himself clearly states that they associated others with God as His partners.
In the second place, the way in which Abraham mentions God in addressing these
people is suitable only for a people who did not deny the existence of God.
We must, therefore, regard as incorrect the opinion of those Qur'anic commentators
who try to explain this verse on the assumption that the people of Abraham either
denied or were unaware of the existence of God, and considered their own deities
to be the exclusive possessors of godhead.
The expression 'and did not tarnish their faith with wrong-doing' led some Companions
to the misapprehension that perhaps this 'wrong-doing' signified 'disobedience'.
But the Prophet (peace be on him) has made it clear that this wrong-doing signifies
shirk (associating others with God in His divinity). The verse means, therefore,
that they alone are fully secure and rightly-guided who believe in God and do
not mix their faith with any polytheistic belief and practice.
It is interesting to learn that this incident, which is the starting-point of
Abraham's prophetic career, has found no place in the Bible. It is mentioned
only in the Talmud. The Talmudic version, however, is different from the Qur'anic
version in two ways. First, in the Talmudic version Abraham's quest for the
Truth begins with the sun and then proceeds by way of the stars to his discovery
of the One True God. Second. it states that Abraham not only held the sun to
be his Lord but even worshipped it, and that the same happened in connection
with the moon.