56. This marks the beginning of the third discourse of this surah. Its contents invite the conclusion that the surah was revealed sometime between the battles of Badr and Uhud. The subjects of these three discourses are so closely interrelated that some commentators have wrongly understood the verses which follow to be part of the foregoing discourse. From the whole tenor of the discourse which now begins, however, it is evident that it is addressed to the Jews.
57. The invitation here is for the two parties to agree on something believed in by one of them, the Muslims, and the soundness of which could hardly be denied by the other party, the Christians. For this was the belief of their own Prophets and had been taught in their own scriptures.
58. That is, both Judaism and Christianity came into existence after the Torah and the Injil had been revealed; Abraham had lived much earlier than that. Thus it can easily be grasped that the religion of Abraham could not have been that of either Judaism or Christianity. If Abraham was on the right path and had attained salvation it is obvious that one need not follow either, Judaism or Christianity in order to be on the right path and to attain salvation. (See also (Surah 2, nn. 135 and 141 above.)
59. The word hanif denotes someone who turns his face away from all other directions in order to follow one particular course. We have tried to convey this sense through the expression: 'a Muslim, wholly devoted to God'.
60. Another rendering of this could be, 'and you yourselves bear witness'
to Muhammad's prophethood. However it is translated the sense remains the same.
In fact, the impeccable purity of the life of the Prophet, the astounding impact
of his teachings and training on the lives of his Companions, and the loftiness
of the teachings of the Qur'an all constituted such illustrious signs of God
that it was very difficult for anyone conversant with the lives of the Prophets
and the tenor of Divine Scriptures to doubt the prophethood of Muhammad (peace
be on him).
It is a fact that many Jews and Christians (especially their scholars) came,
to recognize in their hearts that Muhammad was the very Prophet whose coming
had been announced by the preceding Prophets. This fact was so overwhelming
that, despite their intransigence, they could not help but give verbal expression,
at times, to the truth of the Prophet's teachings. This is why the Qur'an repeatedly
blames them for maliciously misrepresenting the signs of God which they saw
with their own eyes and to which they themselves attested.