229. There are two reasons why this query is addressed to the Children of Israel. In the first place, a group of living human beings provide a better source of instruction and admonition than mute archaeological findings. In the second place, the Israelites were a people who, having been endowed with Scripture and prophethood, were entrusted with the leadership of the world. By falling prey to worldliness, hypocrisy and other errors of belief and conduct they subsequently lost God's favour. A people entrusted with the task of universal leadership could derive no better lesson from another people than this one.
230. When ignorant people attempt to trace the history of 'religion' they
tend to the view that man began his life in the darkness of polytheisrn and
that in the course of time, corresponding to man's progress, this darkness gradually
receded and light increased till man arrived at monotheism.
The Qur'anic version, however, proclaims that man began his life in full light
of the Truth. God revealed this Truth to the very first man He created, one
to whom He intimated the right way of life for man. Thereafter the human race
remained on the Right Way for some time and lived as one community. Later, however,
people invented deviating ways. This did not happen because Truth had not been
communicated to them. The cause was rather that some people wilfully sought
to acquire privileges, benefits and advantages beyond their legitimate limits,
and thus subjected others to injustices. It was in order to enable people to
overcome this corruption that God sent His Prophets. These Prophets were not
sent to found separate religions in their own names and bring new religious
communities into existence. Rather the purpose of the Prophets was to illuminate
before people the Truth which they had allowed to be lost, and once again make
them into one community.
231. In between this verse and the one above comes a whole story which has been left untold, a story which is alluded to in the present verse and which is mentioned in some detail in the Makkan surahs of the Qur'an (these were revealed earlier than the present surah). The point emphasized here is that whenever the Prophets came into the world they, and their followers, were confronted with severe resistance from those in rebellion against God. At grave risk to themselves they strove to establish the hegemony of the true religion over the false ways of life. To follow this religion has, therefore, never been easy; it is not merely a matter of declaring one's faith and then sitting back in ease and comfort. On the contrary, the profession of faith has always demanded that one should strive to establish the religion, which one has adopted as one's faith, as a living reality and that one should spare no effort in undermining the power of the Devil who seeks to resist it.