113. The reference is to the polytheists of Arabia.
114. Places of worship should properly remain in the custody of devout and God-fearing people, so that even if bad people did go there they would be deterred from committing misdeeds through fear of punishment. This is a subtle reference to the wrong perpetrated by the unbelievers of Makka, who had barred their own compatriots - the Muslims - from worshipping in the House of God.
115. God is neither eastern nor western. East and west, north and south, and indeed all places and directions are His, though He is not confined to any particular place or direction. Hence, if any place or direction is fixed for worship this does not mean that God dwells there. Likewise, changes in the direction of Prayer is not a proper subject for controversy and dispute.
116. That is, God is neither limited, mean, narrow-minded, nor poor in resources. All such notions about God, which arise from considering Him as essentially similar to human beings, are erroneous. God's realm is boundless and so is His vision and the range of His benevolence and mercy. Moreover, God's knowledge is all-embracing. He knows who remembers Him, as well as where, when and why he does that.
117. What they meant was that God should either appear before them Himself, tell them plainly that the Qur'an was a revelation from Him, and proclaim His injunctions, or cause them to see some extraordinary sign that would convince them that whatever Muhammad (peace be on him) told them was from Him.
118. The fact is that the misguided people of the time of the revelation of the Qur'an did not raise any objection or make any demands essentially different from those of the misguided people of the past. From the remote past till today, error and misguidedness seem to have the same character, so the same doubts and objections are repeated over and over again.
119. The demand that God should speak to them directly was too absurd even to be answered. The question dealt with here concerns the demand for a sign that would convince them of the Truth. In response to this it is pointed out that many signs do exist, but all such signs are of profit only to those who are inclined to believe. As for those who are bent on disbelief, what sign can be shown to them, and to what avail?
120. Why speak of other signs when the most conspicuous sign of Truth is the very person of Muhammad? Let us recall his life before the commencement of his prophethood, the conditions existing in the area where, and the people among whom, he was born, the manner in which he was brought up and spent the first forty years of his life, and then his glorious achievements as a Prophet. What further signs could we want in support of his message?
121. The cause of their disconcertment with the Prophet (peace be on him) was not that they were earnest seekers after the Truth which the Prophet had failed to make clear to them. The real cause of their unhappiness was that he had not resorted to hypocrisy and trickery, in regard to religious matters, that unlike them he did not pursue self-interest and self-indulgence under the facade of godliness and piety, that he did not twist religious principles and injunctions without scruple, as the Jews were wont to do in order to make them suit their desires and fancies, that he did not resort to the chicanery and duplicity which characterized the religious life of the Jews. As a result, it was no use trying to appease them. For unless the Muslims were prepared to assume the attitude and orientation of the Jews and to follow all their errors in belief and practice, there was no question of their being able to bring about any reconciliation with them.
122. This refers to the pious element among the People of the Book. Since these people read the Book with sincerity and honesty of purpose, they are inclined to accept whatever they find to be true according to it.
123. A fresh subject is now broached. In order to appreciate it fully, the
following should be clearly borne in mind:
(1) After Noah, Abraham was the first Prophet appointed by God to spread the
universal message of Islam. At the outset, he journeyed for many years from
Iraq to Egypt, and from Syria and Palestine to various parts of Arabia inviting
people to serve and obey God. Later he appointed deputies in various regions
to carry on his mission. He sent his nephew Lot to Transjordan, his son Isaac
to Syria and Palestine, and his eldest son Ishmael to Arabia. Then he built,
in Makka, the shrine called the Ka'bah which subsequently, and under God's own
command, was made the centre of the prophetic mission.
(2) Abraham's progeny descended in two main branches. One of these, the Children
of Ishmael, lived in Arabia. The Quraysh and other Arabian tribes belonged to
this branch of Abraham's line. Even those Arabian tribes which were not related
to him by blood identified themselves with Abraham, since they had been influenced
in varying degrees by his religious ideas. The other branch consisted of the
Children of Isaac. In this branch there arose a great number of Prophets, for
example Jacob, Joseph, Moses, David, Solomon, John, and Jesus. Since Jacob was
called Israel, his offspring came to be known as the Children of Israel. Other
peoples who accepted their faith as a result of preaching either lost their
former identity and became assimilated with them, or remained separate from
them ethnically but identified with them religiously. At the time when decadence
flourished this branch of the Abrahamic family gave birth first to Judaism,
and subsequently to Christianity.
(3) The true mission of Abraham was to invite people to obey God and to mould
the entire system of individual and collective life according to Divine Guidance.
He was himself obedient to God and followed the teaching received from Him,
and constantly strove to spread it and make all human beings live in obedience
to it. It was because of this that he was appointed the religious leader and
guide of the whole world. After his death, the task of guiding the world was
entrusted to the branch which had issued from Isaac and Jacob, and which came
to be known as the Children of Israel. It is in this branch that many Prophets
were born. It was also this branch which was given the knowledge of the Straight
Way, and was designated to lead all the nations of the world along that Way.
It is of this favour that God again and again reminds these people.
In the time of Solomon this branch took Jerusalem as the centre of its mission.
Jerusalem maintained its central position for all devotees of God and remained
the qiblah (direction) in which all worshippers of God were required to turn
in their Prayer.
(4) While addressing the Children of Israel in the last ten sections, God set
forth the criminal record of the Jews, exposed their decadent state at the time
of the revelation of the Qur'an, and made it clear to them that they had totally
lacked gratitude to God for His favours and bounties. Not only had they ceased
to guide the world, but had turned away from Truth and righteousness to such
an extent that nearly all of them had lost the capacity to do good and to respond
to Truth.
(5) It is also intimated that the religious leadership of all mankind is not
an exclusive privilege of Abrahamic blood, but rather the fruit of Abraham's
sincere obedience and service to God, to which he had wholly consecrated himself.
Only those who follow the way of Abraham, and guide the world along that way,
are therefore entitled to the position of guidance and leadership. And since
the Jews had abandoned it and become incapable of carrying out the mission of
Abraham they were being removed from that position.
(6) At the same time it is hinted that the non-Israelite peoples who identified
themselves with Abraham through Moses and Jesus had also veered from the way
of Abraham. The same was true of the polytheists of Arabia, who felt proud of
belonging to Abraham and Ishmael and based this pride on lineage alone. For,
so far as their faith and conduct were concerned, they had not even the remotest
tie with Abraham and Ishmael. They did not deserve, therefore, to be entrusted
with the religious leadership of the world.
(7) It is also made clear that by God's will a Prophet, for whose advent Abraham
and Ishmael had once prayed, was born in the other branch of the Abrahamic family,
i.e. the Ishmaelites. The way propounded by this Prophet is exactly the same
as that by Abraham, Isaac, Ishmael, Jacob and in fact all the Messengers. His
followers also confirm the truth of all those designated in the past to serve
as God's Messengers, and call mankind to the same message those Messengers preached
earlier. Thus, leadership now naturally devolves on those who follow this Prophet.
(8) This proclamation of a transfer of leadership naturally called for the proclamation
of a change in the direction of Prayer. As long as the Israelites held the reins
of the world's religious leadership, Jerusalem remained the centre of the mission
of Islam and the qiblah of truth-loving people. The Arabian Prophet (peace be
on him) as well as his followers had accepted Jerusalem as the qiblah until
God duly proclaimed the removal of the Jews from their position of leadership.
With this proclamation Jerusalem ceased to enjoy its central position. So it
was proclaimed that from then on the centre of God's true religion would be
the place from which the message of the Prophet Muhammad (peace be on him) had
radiated. Since in the past it had been the centre of the mission of Abraham
(peace be on him), it was difficult even for the polytheists and for the People
of the Book to deny that the Ka'bah had a greater right to be made the qiblah.
There was thus every reasonable ground for the decision to change the qiblah
and its opponents could only object out of irrational adamance.
(9) The proclamation that the followers of the Prophet Muhammad (peace be on
him) had been designated to the religious leadership of mankind, and that the
Ka'bah would now be the focal point of man's religious life, was followed by
directives (beginning with( verse 153)and continuing to the end of the surah)
addressed to the Muslims. These directives were aimed at enabling the Muslims
to acquit themselves creditably of the duties laid upon their shoulders as the
bearers of this mission.
124. At various places the Qur'an enumerates the severe tests through which Abraham passed. It was only after these had been completed successfully that he was able to establish his worthiness to serve as the religious guide and leader of all mankind. From the moment when the truth was revealed to him till the moment he died, his life was a continuous tale of sacrifice and suffering for his cause. There is no conceivable object of man's love and attachment in the world which Abraham did not sacrifice for the sake of the truth. Likewise, there is no conceivable danger which instinctively frightens man which Abraham did not encounter for the sake of the Truth.
125. This specifies that God's promise of the conferment of leadership applied only to those of Abraham's offspring who were righteous, and that the wrong-doers were naturally excluded. This also makes it clear that, just as the promise did not apply to the misguided Israelites, it did not apply to the polytheistic Ishmaelites.
126. 'Purify My House' does not merely mean keeping it clean of dirt and
filth. The real purity and cleanliness of the House of God rests in the fact
that in it the name of God alone should be glorified. If someone declares in
its sacred precincts that anything other than God is his Lord, his object of
worship and adoration, the dispenser of man's needs and requirements, the hearer
of man's supplications, then such a person is guilty of desecrating the House
of God.
This verse also contains a hint as to the evil-doing of the people of the Quraysh.
They boasted that they were the inheritors of the legacy of Abraham and Ishmael,
but instead of being faithful to that legacy, they actually trampled over it.
So, just as the Children of Israel were excluded from the promise made to Abraham,
so were the polytheistic children of Ishmael. (See also(n. 125 above - Ed.)
127. (Here a distinction is made between honouring a people by entrusting it with the religious leadership and guidance of the world, and bestowing on it an abundant means of livelihood - Ed.) When Abraham enquired who merited world leadership it was made clear to him that only his truly believing and righteous children, to the exclusion of the wrong-doing ones, were worthy of it. This occasioned God to clarify that the religious leadership of the world was quite distinct from its livelihood. Men of faith alone were entitled to the former, whereas both believers and unbelievers would be provided the latter. If someone enjoys abundant material wealth it should not be misconstrued to mean that God is necessarily pleased with him and that he has been designated by God to provide religious guidance to the world.
128. The term 'purification' used here embraces the purification of beliefs and outlook, morals, habits and customs, and social, cultural and political life; the purification of man's life in its totality.
129. This has been said in order to indicate that the advent of Muhammad (peace be on him) was in fact God's response to the prayer of Abraham (peace be on him).
130. 'Muslim' signifies he who bows in obedience to God, who acknowledges God alone as his Sovereign, Lord and Master, and the only object of worship, devotion and service, who unreservedly surrenders himself to God and undertakes to live his life in accordance with the guidance that has come down from Him. Islam is the appellation which characterizes the above -mentioned belief and outlook which constitutes the core and kernel of the religion of all the Prophets who have appeared from time to time among different peoples and in different countries since the very beginning of human life.
131. Jacob is especially mentioned since the Children of Israel were his direct descendants.
132. Din is a Qur'anic technical term, signifying the way of life, the system of conduct, and the code on which man bases his entire mode of thought and action. (For the author's views on din see his Four Basic Qur'anic Terms, tr. Abu Asad, Lahore, 1979, pp. 93-103 - Ed.)
133. In the Bible the events connected with the death of Jacob (peace be
on him) are narrated in detail. It is amazing that this narrative makes no reference
to his testament. However, the contents of the detailed testament embodied in
the Talmud greatly resemble the Qur'anic version. The Talmudic version reads
as follows:
'Serve the Lord your God, and He will deliver ye from all trouble, even as He
delivered your fathers.'
' . . . Teach your children to love God, and observe His commandments, in order
that their days may be prolonged, for God will guard those who do justly and
walk in righteousness through all His ways.'
And the sons of Jacob responded, 'All that you have commanded us, our father,
we will do. May God be with us!'
And Jacob answered: 'The Lord will be with you if ye depart not from His ways
to the right hand or to the left.'
(The Talmud Selections by H. Polano, London, Frederick Warne & Co., [1877],
pp. 113-14.)
134. What is being said here is that even though they might be their offspring
in terms of blood - relationship they had, in fact, no true relationship with
them. What right did they have to pretend to belong to them when they had departed
far from their way? For God would not ask people what their forefathers did;
it was rather about their own conduct and action that they would be questioned.
' Theirs is what they have earned ' is a characteristically Qur'anic expression.
What we ordinarily characterize as either 'action' or 'doing' is termed by the
Qur'an as 'earning'. The reason is that each and every human action has its
ultimate effect, whether or not it is good, and will have its manifestation
in God's approval or disapproval. It is this ultimate effect which is a man's
earning. Since the Qur'an considers this to be of paramount importance, it characterizes
man's actions as his 'earning'.
135. In order to grasp the subtlety, of this remark two things should be
borne in mind. First, that in comparison to Islam, the primordial religion,
both Judaism and Christianity are later products. The name Judaism, as well
as the characteristic features and elaborate body of laws and regulations associated
with it. emerged during the third or fourth century, B.C. As for Christianity.
in the sense of the body of dogmas and theological doctrines which characterize
it, it came into existence long after Jesus (peace be on him). The question
that naturally arises is that, if man's guidance depends on following Judaism
or Christianity, how can Abraham and other Prophets and righteous people who
are accepted as having been rightly-guided even by the Jews and Christians be
considered so when they were born several centuries before the birth of Judaism
and Christianity? If they were rightly-guided from whom did they receive their
guidance? Obviously their source of guidance and inspiration was neither Judaism
nor Christianity since, in their times, these did not exist. So man's rectitude
does not depend on those characteristics which led to the rise of Jewish and
Christian particularisms; it rather depends on adopting that universal way to
Truth which has guided and inspired men throughout the ages.
Second. the Scriptures of the Jews and Christians attest that Abraham believed
that worship, adoration, service and obedience were due to God alone, and that
it was his mission to have none associated with God in His attributes and rights.
Since polytheistic elements had made inroads into Judaism and Christianity it
was obvious that both had strayed from the way of Abraham.
136. To make no distinction between the Prophets means not to hold some of them to he right and the others to be wrong, not to recognize some to have been the recipients of Divine revelation and the others not. All the Prophets sent by God invited men to the same Truth and to the same way. Hence for anyone who is really a lover of Truth it is necessary that he should recognize all of them to be its bearers. Those who believe in one particular Prophet and disbelieve in others do not in fact believe even in that particular Prophet in whom they, claim to believe, for they have not grasped the nature of that universal 'Straight Way' (al-sirat al-mustaqim) which was enunciated by Moses, Jesus and the other Prophets. When such people claim to follow a Prophet they, really mean that they do so out of deference to their forefathers. Their religion in fact consists of bigoted ancestor-worship and blind imitation of inherited customs rather than sincere adherence to the directives of any Prophet of God.
137. This verse can be translated in two ways. One of these is: 'We have taken on Allah's colour.' The other is: 'Take on Allah's colour.' On the eve of the advent of Christianity the Jews followed the practice of bathing everyone who embraced their religion. This ritual bath signified that all his previous sins had been washed away and that he had adopted a different colour for his life. This practice was subsequently taken over by the Christians and is termed 'baptism'. Not only converts but even new-born babies were baptized. The Qur'anic remarks here refer to this institution. The Qur'an says in effect: 'Of what use is this formal baptism? What really is worth doing is to adopt the colour of God, and it is not water that gives one this colour but actual service and devotion to God.'
138. The one principle that the Prophet and his followers unreservedly stood
for was that God alone should be served. Does that call for dispute and quarrel?
If anyone, it is the Muslims who are entitled to quarrel with the Jews and Christians,
for it is they rather than the Muslims who insist that others beside God should
also be made objects of service and adoration.
An alternative translation of this portion could be: 'Would you then dispute
with us for the sake of Allah?' In this case the meaning of the verse would
be that if their dispute was sincere, it was easy to put an end to it by, agreeing
to serve none but God.
139. They are told that everyone is responsible for his own conduct. If they have earmarked a part of their service and devotion to others than God, let them do so and see for themselves what it leads to. The Muslims did not want to keep them from error by force. As for themselves, they had consecrated their service, obedience and worship to God alone. If the Jews and Christians could bring themselves to recognize the right of the Muslims to do so, the dispute could automatically be brought to an end,
140. This remark is addressed to the ignorant mass of Jews and Christians who sincerely believed that all the Prophets belonged to their religious denomination.
141. This remark is addressed to the Jewish and Christian theologians who were not unaware that Judaism and Christianity, with their existing characteristics, had emerged at a relatively late period in history. They nevertheless considered Truth to he confined to their own religious sects. They also perpetuated the misunderstanding that man's ultimate happiness and success lay in following the beliefs, institutions and legal codes which had been developed by their jurists, theologians and mystics long after the Prophet of God had passed away. When these theologians were asked to which among their religious communities Abraham, Isaac, Jacob and other Prophets belonged, they evaded a reply. This was because they could not state categorically that they belonged to their own sect. On the other hand, they could not reply explicitly in the negative, for such an admission would have undermined the very basis of their claim that Truth was confined to their fold.