79. Every nation which rises in place of one that falls, can perceive the misdeeds which brought about the preceding nation's fall. Were such a people to make use of their reason, to appreciate the false ideas and misdeeds which led to the undoing of those who once strutted abroad in vainglory, they would have realized that the Supreme Being Who had once punished them for their misdeeds and deprived them of power and glory had not ceased to exist. Nor has that Supreme Being been deprived of the power to inflict a punishment on the people of the present times, a power with which He smote the nations of the past. Nor has God become bereft of the capacity to dislodge the wicked nations of today in the manner He did in the past.
80. Those people who derive no lesson from history, who thoughtlessly pass over the ruins of the past, remaining engrossed in heedlessness, are deprived by God of the capacity to think correctly and to pay due attention to the counsel of well-wishers. Such is the God-made law of nature that if someone closes his eyes, not even a single ray of sun-light will reach his sight. Similarly, if someone is bent upon closing his ears none can make him hear even a word.
81. The purpose behind the 'sealing of hearts' mentioned in the preceding verse is also explained in the present verse. It is clear from the two verses that the 'sealing of hearts' means that man's capacity to hear and understand the truth is seriously, impaired because of the operation of natural, psychological laws. Because of these laws, once a person turns away from the truth because of his irrational prejudices and the dominance of lust, he becomes enmeshed in his own obstinacy and adamance. With the passage of time this adamance is compounded to such an extent that despite all rational and empirical evidence in support of the truth, he continues to reject it.
82. The statement that 'We did not find most of them true to their covenants' signifies the general propensity of people not to honour their commitments. They are neither faithful to the primordial covenant which they made with God see (al-A'raf 7: 172) which is binding on every mortal as God's servant and creature, nor faithful to the collective covenant which is binding on every human being as a member of the human fraternity. Nor are men generally faithful to the commitments which they make to God in hours of distress or in moments when their moral instincts are awake and astir. Violation of any of these covenants has been termed fisq (transgression).
83. The stories narrated in the Qur'an bring home unmistakenly the point
that people who reject God's Message are not spared; rather they are destroyed.
In narrating at length the story of Moses, Pharaoh and the Israelites, the Qur'an
provides some important lessons for the unbelieving Quraysh, the Jews, and also
the believers.
The Quraysh are advised that the apparently large differences in the numerical
strength of the forces of truth and falsehood in the early phase of the Islamic
movement should not lead them to entertain any, kind of illusion. History, provides
ample testimony that the Message of truth has always had a very humble beginning.
That its proponent, initially, is in the hopelessly small minority of one; in
fact, one in the whole world. He then proceeds, despite his resource lessness,
to challenge the hegemony of falsehood, to declare war against it, despite the
fact that falsehood is backed by powerful states and empires. And ultimately
the truth triumphs. The Quraysh are also reminded that all conspiracies hatched
against the Prophets and all the means employed to suppress the Message of truth
are ultimately foiled. They are further told that God grants long terms of respite
to the evil-doing nations so that they might mend their ways and reform themselves.
But when they persistently disregard all warnings and learn no lesson from instructive
events, He smites them with an exemplary punishment.
Some further lessons are meant to be conveyed to those who believed in the Prophet
(peace be on him). First, that they should not feel disheartened by the paucity
of resources, nor be overawed by the impressive numerical strength, pomp and
grandeur of their enemies. Nor should they lose heart if they find that God's
help does not come at the expected hour. Second, that those who follow in the
footsteps of the Jews are bound, ultimately, to be seized by the same curse
which afflicted the Jews.
As for the Israelites, they are warned against the evil effects of clinging
to falsehood. Illustrations of this were provided by important events in their
own history. They are also asked to purge the Message of the earlier Prophets
of all accretions and distortions and to restore it to its original purity.
84. 'They dealt with Our signs unjustly' refers to their rejection of God's signs and to the fact that they dismissed them as sheer sorcery. If a person scoffs at a beautiful couplet, and dubs it as amateurish rhyming, this amounts to committing an offence against poetry itself. Likewise, to brand those extraordinary acts of God as sorcery and magic - even though magicians declared that those acts were beyond their ability - constitutes a serious offence not only against God's signs but also against common sense and truth.
85. 'Pharaoh' literally means 'the offspring of the sun-god'. The ancient
Egyptians called the sun 'Ra', worshipped it as their supreme deity', and Pharaoh
- Ra's physical manifestation and representative - was named after it. It was
for this reason that all Egyptian rulers claimed their authority on the basis
of their association with Ra, and every ruler who mounted the Egyptian throne
called himself Pharaoh, trying thereby to assure his people that he was their
supreme deity.
It may be noted that the Qur'anic narrative regarding Moses refers to two Pharaohs.
The first of these was one during whose reign Moses was born and in whose palace
he was brought up. The second Pharaoh to Whorn reference is made is the one
whom Moses invited to Islam and who was asked to liberate the Israelites. It
is this latter Pharaoh who was finally drowned. Modern scholarship is inclined
to the view that the first Pharaoh was Rameses 11 who ruled over Egypt from
1292 B.C. to 1225 B.C. while the second Pharaoh was Minpetah, his son, who had
become a co-sharer in his father's authority during the latter's lifetime and
who, after his death, became the fully-fledged ruler of Egypt. This, however,
is not fully established since Moses, according to the Egyptian calendar, died
in 1272 B.C. In any case these are merely historical conjectures. It is quite
difficult to establish a clear chronological framework owing to discrepancies
in the Egyptian, Israeli and Christian calendars.
86. Moses was sent to Pharaoh to invite him to two things; first, to surrender himself to God (i.e. Islam); and second, to release the Israelites - who were already Muslims - from his oppressive bondage. The Qur'an refers occasionally to both these objectives, and occasionally confines itself to mentioning either of the two.
87. Moses was granted these two miraculous signs in order to provide testimony
to his being a Messenger of God, the creator and sovereign of the universe.
As we have mentioned earlier, whenever the Prophets introduced themselves as
God's Message-bearers, people asked them to produce some miraculous sign, to
perform something supernatural. In response to those demands the Prophets produced
what the Qur'an terms as 'signs', and which are called 'miracles' by theologians.
Those who tend to play down the supernatural character of such signs or miracles,
and who try to explain them in terms of natural laws of causation, in fact attempt
to build a mid-way house between believing and disbelieving in the statements
of the Qur'an. Such an approach can hardly be considered reasonable. What it
does demonstrate, however, is how such people can be pulled in two opposite
directions. On the one hand, they are not inclined to believe in a Book which
abounds in narrations of a supernatural kind. On the other hand, being born
followers of their ancestral religion, they are not inclined to reject the Book
which carries supernatural narrations.
With regard to miracles, there are two basic questions that people should ask
themselves. Did God, after creating the universe and establishing a system of
natural causations therein, suspend Himself such that it is no longer possible
for Him to interfere in the workings of the universe? Or does He still hold
the reins to His realm in His owns Hands so that His command is enforced every
moment, and He does retain the power to alter the shape of things and the normal
course of events - either partially or fully, - as and when He wills?
It is impossible for those who respond in the affirmative to the first question
to accept the idea of miracles. For clearly miracles do not fit in with their
concept of God and the universe. Honesty demands that instead of indulging in
far-fetched explanations of Qur'anic statements on miracles, such people should
clearly declare that they do not believe in the Qur'an. For quite obviously
the Qur'an is explicit, even quite emphatic in affirming the former concept
of God.
As for those who, being convinced by Qur'anic arguments, respond in the affirmative
to the second question regarding God and the universe, for them there is no
difficulty in accepting miracles. Let us take the instance mentioned in verse
107, namely, that the rod of Moses turned into a serpent. Now, there are those
who believe that serpents can come into being only through one process - the
known biological process. Such people are bound to reject the statement that
Moses' rod changed into a serpent and later reverted to its original shape.
On the contrary, if you are fully convinced that it is God's command alone which
causes life to arise from lifeless matter, and that God has full power to confer
whichever kind of life He wills, the transformation of the rod into a serpent
and its subsequent reversion to its original state is no stranger than the transformation
of any other lifeless matter into a living entity. The fact that the latter
happens virtually every day whereas the former took place only a few times in
history is not enough to declare the first as incredibly, strange and the second
as 'natural'.
88. The above account raises the question as to how a destitute member of
the slave Israeli nation could pose such a serious threat to an emperor as mighty
as Pharaoh. This is especially so when one considers that Pharaoh was not only
an absolute ruler over territory which stretched in one direction from Syria
to Libya and in the other from the Mediterranean coast to Ethiopia, but was
even considered a deity deserving of worship,
One might also wonder how the transformation of Moses' rod into a serpent could
he considered an event of such magnitude as to give rise to the fear that Moses
would overthrow the entrenched empire and unseat the royal family as well as
the entire ruling class. It might further seem strange that the mere declaration
of prophethood and the demand to liberate the people of Israel caused such a
furore even though no other political question had been touched upon.
The answer here lies in the fact that Moses' claim to prophethood implied the
call to total change, obviously, including political change. For if a person
lays claim to be God's Messenger, it implies that people obey him unreservedly.
For God's Messengers are not sent to the world to obey other human beings and
live in subordination to them; they rather ask others to accept them as their
leaders and rulers. It is this which explains why Pharaoh and his coteric felt
threatened by an all-out revolution -political, economic and social - when Moses
came forth with his call.
There remains the question as to why the claim to prophethood was considered
such a potential threat when Moses enjoyed the support of none except his brother,
Aaron, and his claim was reinforced by only two miracles - those of the shining
hand and the rod which turned into a serpent. This can be explained by two things.
First, that Pharaoh and his courtiers knew very well about Moses. All were aware
of his extraordinary abilities and his inherent calibre as a leader of men.
Also, according to the traditions of the Talmud and Josephus - provided they
are authentic -Moses had also learnt the martial arts and other skills which
were available only exclusively to royalty and which were required in connection
with their political and military leadership. Moreover, he had proved his mettle
as a good general during the expedition to Ethiopia. Furthermore, during the
course of his eight years of life in Midian - rigorous years in the desert working
as a shepherd - he had purged himself of all his weaknesses because of his association
with the Pharaonic svstern. Hence. when the Pharaonic court was confronted by
a mature, serene and pious man who came forth with the claim of prophethood,
it was obviously impossible for them to give short shrift to his claim. Second,
the miracles of the rod and the shining hand overawed Pharaoh and his courtiers
to such an extent they were almost convinced that Moses did indeed enjoy the
support of some supernatural power. That they were unnerved by the very first
proof of his prophethood is borne out by the contradictions in their charges
against Moses. On the one hand they dubbed Moses a sorcerer, and on the other
hand they accused him of plotting to banish them from their own land. It is
clear that had they taken Moses for a mere sorcerer, they would not have expressed
fears of political upheaval. For sorcery has never brought about any political
change in the world.
89. The plan of Pharaoh's courtiers clearly suggests that they knew the difference between mere sorcery and a miracle. They were well aware that miracles are effective and have the capacity to bring about actual transformation whereas sorcery results merely in optic illusion. Hence, they dubbed Moses a sorcerer so as to refute his claim to prophethood. They claimed instead that the transformation of the rod into a serpent was not a miracle; that it was rather a magical performance which could be undertaken by any sorcerer. Therefore, they asked all the sorcerers of the land to come together and display how rods could be magically transformed into serpents. They believed that such a magical show would remove the awesome effect created by Moses' miracles on the people, or at least sow doubts in their minds about those miracles.
90. It would be a mistake to believe that the rod of Moses swallowed up the rods and ropes cast by the other sorcerers and which had looked like serpents. The Qur'anic statement means that the rod of Moses swallowed up the falsehood faked by them. This clearly shows that wherever Moses' rod moved, it destroyed the magical effect which had caused the transformation of their ropes and rods. One blow of Moses' rod caused every other rod to revert to a rod, and every rope to revert to a rope. (For further elaboration see Tafhim al-Qur'an, (Ta Ha 20, n. 42)
91. Thus God turned the tables on Pharaoh and his courtiers they arranged the magic show in the hope that it would convince the people that Moses was just a sorcerer, and thus make them sceptical about his claim to prophethood. But the actual outcome was quite the opposite. The sorcerers who had been assembled were defeated. Not only that, it was also unanimously acknowledged that the signs displayed by Moses in support of his claim were not feats of magic. Rather, his signs rather manifested the might of God, the Lord of the universe, and hence could not be overcome by magic.
92. Faced with utter failure Pharaoh finally resorted to branding the whole
magic tournament as a conspiracy concocted by Moses and his accomplice sorcerers.
Under threat of death and physical torture he asked the sorcerers to confess
that they had acted in collusion with Moses. This last move by Pharaoh was ineffectual.
For the sorcerers readily agreed to endure every torture, clearly proving thereby
that their decision to accept Moses' message reflected their sincere conviction
and that no conspiracy was involved. Pharaoh was hardly left with any choice.
He, therefore, gave up all pretence to follow truth and justice, and brazenly
resorted to persecution instead.
The tremendous and instantaneous change which took place in the characters of
the sorcerers is also of significance. The sorcerers had come all the way from
their homes with the purpose of vindicating their ancestral faith and receiving
pecuniary reward from Pharaoh for overcoming Moses. However, the moment true
faith illumined their hearts, they displayed such resoluteness of will and love
for the truth that they contemptuously turned down Pharaoh's offer, and demonstrated
their full readiness to endure even the worst punishments for the sake of the
truth that had dawned upon them.
93. There were two periods of persecution. The first was during the reign of Rameses 11 and took place before Moses' birth, whereas the second period of persecution started after Moses' assumption to the office of prophethood. Common to both periods is the killing of the male issue of Israelites while the female was spared. It was a calculated design to rob the Israelites of their identity and to bring about their forcible assimilation. An inscription discovered during the archaeological excavations of 1896 probably belongs to this period. According to this inscription, Pharaoh Minpetah rounds off the narration of his achievements and victories in these words: 'The Israel have been exterminated, and no seed of them is left.' For further explanation see (al-Mu'min 40: 25)
94. Pharaoh's courtiers obstinately persisted in branding Moses' signs as
sorcery although they knew well that sorcery had nothing in common with the
miraculous signs granted to Moses. Even a fool would not he ready to believe
that the country-wide famine and the consistent decrease in agricultural output
could have been caused by magic. It is for this reason that the Qur'an says:
But when Our signs, which should have opened their eyes, came to them they said:
'This is clear sorcery! And they rejected those signs out of iniquity and arrogance
even though they were inwardly convinced of it'
(al-Naml 27: 13-14).
95. This probably refers to the torrential rain accompanied by hailstorm. While we do not totally exclude the possibility of other kinds of storms, we are inclined to the view, that it probably signifies hailstorm since the Bible specifically mentions that. (See Exodus 9: 23-4 - Ed.)
96. The word used in the text - qummal - denotes lice, fleas, small locusts, mosquitoes, and weevil. This rather general term has been used in the Qur'an probably to suggest that while men were afflicted with lice and fleas, weevil destroyed the barns. (Cf. Exodus 7-12. See also Tafhim al-ur'an, (al-Zukhruf 43, n. 43.)
97. The Israelites were made the inheritors of Palestine. This has been interpreted by some commentators of the Qur'an to mean that the Israelites were made the rulers of Egypt as well. This view, however, is neither supported by, the Qur'an nor by any other historical and archaeological evidence. We have, therefore, serious reservations about the correctness of this opinion. (See Tafhim a]-Qur'an, (al-Kahf 18, n. 57), and (al-Shuara' 26, n. 45)
98. The point at which the Israelites probably crossed the Red Sea lies somewhere
between the present Suez and Ismailia. After that they headed towards the south
of the Sinai peninsula along the coastal route. The western and northern regions
of the Sinai peninsula were then included in the Egyptian empire. In the southern
part of the peninsula, in the area lying between the present towns of Tur and
Abu Zanimah, there were copper and turquoise mines. Since these were of immense
value to the Egyptians, a number of garrisons had been set up to ensure their
security'. One such garrison was located at a place known as Mafqah, which also
housed a big temple. The ruins of this temple can still be found in the south-western
part of the peninsula. In its vicinity there was an ancient temple, dedicated
to the moon-god of the Semites. Passing by these places the people of Israel,
who had been subservient to the Egyptians for a long time and were thus considerably
Egyptianized in their outlook, felt the desire to indulge in idol-worship.
The extent to which the Israelites had become degenerated as a result of their
slavery may be gauged by Joshua's last address to the Israelites delivered seventy
years after their exodus from Epypt:
Now therefore fear the Lord, and serve him in sincerity and in faithfulness;
put away the gods which your fathers served beyond the River, and in Egypt,
and serve the Lord. And if you are unwilling to serve the Lord, choose this
day whom you will serve; whether the gods which your fathers served in the region
beyond the River, or the gods of the Amorites in whose land you dwell; but as
for me and my house, we will serve the Lord (Joshua 24: 14-15).
This shows that even though the Israelites had been taught and trained by Moses
for forty Years and by Joshua for twenty-eight years, they had still been unable
to purge their minds of those influences which had warped their outlook and
mentality during their period of bondage under Pharaoh. These Muslims had begun
to look upon idol-worship as natural. Even after their exodus, the sight of
a temple would incline them to indulge in the idolatrous practices which they
had observed among their former masters.
99. After the exodus of the Israelites from Egypt which marks, on the one
hand, the end of the constraints of slavery and on the other, the beginning
of their life as an independent nation, Moses was summoned by God to Mount Sinai
in order that he might receive the Law for Israel. He was initially summoned
for a period of forty days so that he might single-mindedly devote himself to
worshipping, fasting, meditation and reflection and thus develop the ability
to receive the revelation which was to put a very heavy burden upon him.
In compliance with God's command, Moses left the Israelites at the place now
known as the Wadi al-Shaykh which lies between Nabi Salih and Mount Sinai. The
place where the Israelites had camped is presently called
Maydan al-Rahah. At one end of the valley is a hillock where, according to local
tradition, the Prophet Salih pitched his tent after his migration from the land
of Thamud. A mosque built as a monument to the Prophet Salih still adorns the
landscape. Mount Harun is located at the other end of the valley where, again,
according to local tradition, the Prophet Harun (Aaron) stayed after his exasperation
with the Israelites because of their cow-worship. The top of the towering Mount
Sinai, standing 7,359 feet high, is mostly enveloped by clouds. The cave to
which Moses retired for forty days to devote himself to worship and meditation
is situated at the top of the mountain, and still attracts many pilgrims. Close
to the cave are a mosque and a church. Moreover, a monastery built in the Justinian
period stands even today at the foot of the mountain. (See Tafhim al-Qur'an,
(al-Naml 27: nn. 9-10).
100. Although Aaron was senior to Moses in age by three years, he was placed under the direction of the Prophet Moses and was required to assist him in connection with his mission, As explained elsewhere in the Qur'an, Aaron was not assigned independent prophethood; he was rather appointed a Prophet by God in response to Moses' prayer that he be appointed as his assistant. See (Ta Ha 20: 29-31 - Ed.)
101. The Bible categorically mentions that the tablets were of stone. The act of writing on these tablets is attributed in both the Qur'an and the Bible, to God. Nonetheless, it is not possible to ascertain whether the actual act of writing was as performed by God exercising His power directly, or by God in the sense of His assignment of the task to some angel or to Moses (cf. Exodus 31: 18, 32: 15-16; and Deuteronomyi, 5: 6-22).
102 The Israelites were asked to hold fast to the Law to follow it in its plain meaning, a meaning which can he grasped by an ordinary man of sound heart and good intent with the help of his common sense. This stipulation was added in order to discourage the chicanery and hair-splitting to which lawyers resort in order to accommodate the crooked aims of the people. The warning was necessary to emphasize that holding fast to the Law was not to be equated with following the chicanery of the lawyers.
103. The Israelites were told that on their way they would come across the ruins of earlier nations who had refused to turn to God and who had persisted in their evil way's. Observing those ruins would he instructive insofar as they eloquently spoke of the tragic end that meets those who indulge in such iniquity .
104. It is God's law that evil-doers do not and cannot take any lesson from the otherwise instructive events which they observe. The arrogance mentioned here refers to man's delusion that he is on a higher plane than God's creatures and servants. It is this which prompts him to disregard God's command and to adopt an attitude which suggests that he neither considers himself God's servant, nor God his Lord. Such egotism has no basis in fact; it is sheer vanity. For as long as man live on God's earth, what can justify his living as a servant of anyone other than the Lord of the universe? It is for this reason that the Qur'an declares this arrogance to be 'without any right'.
105. That the acts of such persons are vain and fruitless is evident from the fact that the acceptance of man's acts by God is subject to two conditions. First, one's acts should conform to the Law laid down by God. Second, man should be prompted by the desire to achieve success in the Hereafter rather than merely in this world. If these conditions are not fulfilled, a person's acts will be of no consequence. He who performs an act in defiance of God's guidance, is guilty of rebellion and is undeserving of God's reward. He who acts only to obtain worldly success, is neither entitled to nor should expect any reward from God in the Hereafter. If someone uses another person's land contrary to his wish, what else can he expect from him than punishment? The same holds true for he who deliberately uses someone's land, knowing well that he is not entitled to any produce after the restoration of that land to its owner. There is no justification for him to expect any share of the produce of that land.
106. Here reference is made to the forty days which Moses spent on Mount Sinai in compliance with God's command when his people remained in the plain at the foot of the mountain called Maydan al-Rahah.
107. Their cow-worship was another manifestation of the Israelites' slavish attachment to the Egyptian traditions at the time of the Exodus. It is well-known that cow-worship was widespread in Egypt and it was during their stay there that the Israelites developed this strange infatuation. The Qur'an also refers to their inclination to cow-worship: 'Their hearts were overflowing with love for the calf because of their unbelief' (al-Baqarah 2: 93). What is more surprising about their turn to idolatry is that it took place just three months after their escape from Egypt. During that time they had witnessed the parting of the sea, the drowning of Pharaoh, and their own deliverance from what otherwise seemed inescapable slavery, to the Egyptians. They knew well that all those events had taken place owing to the unmistakable and direct interference of the all-powerful God. Yet they had the audacity to demand that their Prophet should make for them a false god that they might worship. Not only that, soon after Moses left them for Mount Sinai, they themselves contrived a false god. Disgusted with such conduct on the part of the Israelites, some Prophets have likened their people to a nymphomaniac who loves all save her husband and who is unfaithful to him even on their nuptial night.
108. The above Qur'anic verse absolves Aaron of the charge levelled against
him by the Jews. According to the Biblical version of the story of calf-worship,
however, it was Aaron who had made the golden calf for the people of Israel.
To quote:
When the people saw that Moses delayed to come down from the mountain, the people
gathered themselves together to Aaron, and said to him, 'Up, make up gods who
shall go before us; as for this Moses, the man who brought us up out of the
land of Egypt, we do not know what has become of him.' And Aaron said to them,
'Take off the rings of gold which are in the ears of your wives, your sons,
and your daughters, and bring them to me.' So all the people took off the rings
of gold which were in their ears, and brought them to Aaron. And he received
the gold at their hand, and fashioned it with a graving tool, and made a molten
calf; and they said, 'These are your gods, O Israel, who brought you up out
of the land of Egypt.' When Aaron saw this, he built an altar before it; and
Aaron made proclamation and said, 'Tomorrow shall be a feast to the Lord.' And
they rose up early on the morrow, and offered burnt offerings and brought peace
offerings; and the people sat down to eat and drink, and rose up to play (Exodus
32: 1--6).
The Qur'an, however, refutes the above account at many places and points out
that it was Samiri the rebel of God rather than Aaron the Prophet who committed
that heinous sin. For details see (Ta Ha 20: 90 ff.)
Strange though it may appear, the Israelites maligned the characters of those
very people whom they believed to be the Messengers of God. The accusations
they hurled at them included such heinous sins as polytheism, sorcery, fornication,
deceit and treachery. Needless to say, indulgence in any of these sins is disgraceful
for even an ordinary believer and decent human being, let alone Prophets. In
the light of the history of Israeli morals, however, it is quite understandable
why they maligned their own Prophets. In times of religious and moral degeneration
when both the clergy and laity were steeped in sin and immorality, they tried
to seek justification for their misdeeds. In order to sedate their own consciences
they ascribed the very sins of which they were guilty to their Prophets and
then their own inability to refrain from sins on the grounds that not even the
Prophets could refrain.
The same characteristic is evident in Hinduism. When the Hindus reached the
lowest point in their moral degeneration, they produced a literature which presents
a very perverted image of Hindu ideals. This literature portrayed their gods,
hermits and monks as crass sinners. In doing so, they suggested that since such
noble people could not refrain from indulging in grave sins, ordinary mortals
are inevitably bound to commit them. Moreover, a person's indulgence in immoral
acts should not make him remorseful for the same acts were committed earlier
by their monks and hermits.
109. Moses was summoned for the second time to Mount Sinai along with seventy chiefs of the nation in order that they might seek pardon for their calf-worship and renew their covenant with God. Reference to this event is not found in the Bible and Talmud. They simply mention that Moses was summoned to receive new tablets as replacements for the ones he had thrown down and broken. (Cf. Exodus 34.)
110. When a people are put to the test it is an occasion of crucial importance for it helps to distinguish the righteous from the wicked. Like a winnow, it separates out of the mass the useful from the useless. Hence in his wisdom God subjects people to tests. Those who successfully pass through them, owe their success to the support and guidance they receive from God. As for those who are unsuccessful, their failure is the result of their not receiving that support and guidance. This does not detract from the fact that men neither arbitrarily receive or are denied God's support and guidance. Both extending and withholding support and guidance follow a rule which is based on wisdom and justice. The fact, however, remains that man can succeed in the test to which he is put only if God supports and guides him.
111. It is false to assume that the general rule underlying God's governance of His realm is that of wrath which is occasionally tempered with mercy and benevolence. On the contrary, the general rule is that of mercy and benevolence and wrath is the exception which is aroused when man's transgression and rebellion exceed all reasonable limits.
112. The preceding verse concludes God's response to Moses' prayer. This
was the appropriate moment to invite the Israelites to follow the Message preached
by the Prophet Muhammad (peace be on him). The upshot of what is being said
here is that people can even now attain God's mercy exactly as they could in
the past. These conditions require that people should now follow the Prophet
Muhammad (peace be on him), since refusal to follow a Prophet after his advent
amounts to gross disobedience to God. Those who do not commit themselves to
follow the Prophet (peace be on him) cannot attain the essence of piety, no
matter how hard they try to make a pretence of it by observing the minor details
of religious rituals generally associated with piety.
Likewise, the Israelites had been told that paying Zakah was essential to win
God's mercy. However, payment of Zakah is meaningless unless one supports the
struggle to establish the hegemony of truth which was being carried on under
the leadership of the Prophet (peace be on him). For unless one spends money
to exalt the word of God, the very foundation of Zakah are lacking, even if
a person spends huge amounts in the way of charity. They were also reminded
that they had been told in the past that God's mercy was exclusively for those
who believed in His Revelation. Now those who rejected the Revelation received
by Muhammad (peace be on him) could never be considered believers in Revelation
no matter how zealously they claim to believe in the Torah.
Reference to the Prophet (peace be on him) in this verse as umimi is significant
as the Israelites branded all other nations as Gentiles (ummis). Steeped in
racial prejudice, they did not consider members of other nations as their equals,
let alone accept any person not belonging to them as a Prophet. The Qur'an also
states the Jewish belief that they would not be taken to ask for whatever they
might do to non-Jews. See (Al'Imran 3: 75). Employing the same term which they
themselves had used, the Qur'an tells them that their destiny was linked with
the ummi Prophet. By obeying him they would become deserving of God's mercy.
As for disobedience to the Prophet (peace be on him). it would continue to arouse
God's wrath which had been afflicted upon them for centuries.
113. Pointed and repeated reference to the coming of the Prophet Muhammad (peace be on him) is made in the Bible. (See Deuteronomy 18: 19; Matthew 21: 33-46; John 1: 19-25; 14: 15-17, 25-30; 15: 25-26; 16: 7-15.)
114. The Prophet declares the pure things which they had forbidden as lawful, and the impure things which they had legitimized as unlawful.
115. The Israelites had fettered their lives by undue restrictions which had been placed on them by the legal hair-splitting of their jurists, the pietistic exaggerations of their spiritual leaders, the introduction of superstitions and self-contrived laws and regulations by, their masses. The Prophet, by relieving them of every unnecessary burden and releasing them from every unjustified restriction, in fact liberated their shackled lives.
116. This marks the resumption of the main theme of the discourse which had been interrupted by the parenthesis see (verses 157-8)calling people to affirm the prophethood of Muhammad (peace be on him).
117. The translators generally render the verse as the following:
Of the people of Moses there is a section who guide and do justice in the light
of truth. (Translation by Abdullah Yusuf Ali.)
They do so because, in their view, the present verse describes the moral and
intellectual state of the Israelites at the time when the Qur'an was revealed.
However, the context seems to indicate that the above account refers to the
state of the Israelites at the time of the Prophet Moses. Thus, the purpose
of the verse is to emphasize that even in the days of their calf-worship when
God rebuked them, all members of Israel were not corrupt; that a sizeable section
of them was righteous.
118. This refers to the organization of the people of Israel which has been mentioned in the Qur'an in (al-Ma'idah 5:12 )and also described, at length, in the Bible in Numbers. According to these sources, in compliance with God's command the Prophet Moses first conducted the census of the Israelites in the wilderness of Sinai. He registered their twelve tribes, ten of whom were descendants of the Prophet Jacob, and the remaining two descendants of the Prophet Joseph, as separate and distinct tribes. He appointed a chief for each tribe and assigned to him the duty to maintain moral, religious, social and military discipline within each tribe and to enforce the Law. The Levites, who were descendants of the Prophets Moses and Aaron, however, were organized as a distinct group entrusted with the task of providing religious guidance to all tribes.
119. This organization was one of the numerous favours which God had bestowed
upon the Israelites. Mention is made of three other favours bestowed upon them.
First, an extraordinary arrangement for their water supply was made in the otherwise
arid Sinai peninsula. Second, the sky was covered with clouds such that they
were protected from the scorching heat of the sun. Third, a unique meal, consisting
of manna and quails was sent down on them. Had this Divine arrangement, catering
as it did for the millions of wandering Israelites' basic necessities of life,
not been made, they would certainly have perished.
On visiting that land even today it is difficult to visualize how such an arrangement
providing shelter, food and water for millions of people was made. The population
of this peninsula standseven today at a paltry, 55,000 people. (it may be noted
that this statement was made in the fifties of the present century. However,
the present population of the Sinai is 200,000 - Ed.) If a five or six hundred
thousand strong army, were to camp there today, it would be quite a task for
those at the helm to provide the necessary supplies for the army. Little wonder,
then, that many scholars who belive neither in the Scripture nor in miracles,
rule out the historical accuracy of the event. For them, the people of Israel
camped in an area lying south of Palestine and north of Arabia. In view of the
physical and economic geography of the Sinai peninsula, they consider it totally
incredible that such a large population could have stayed there for years. What
has made these scholars even more sceptical about the event is the fact that
the Israelites were not then in a position to procure supplies from either the
Egyptians or the 'Amaliqah' who inhabited respectively the eastern and northern
parts of the peninsula, since both groups were hostile to them. It is against
this background that one may appreciate the immense importance of the favours
God conferred on the Israelites. Likewise, it also gives one some idea of the
blatant ingratitude of the people of Israel since they consistently defied and
betrayed God even though they had witnessed a great many divine signs. (See
Towards Understanding the Qur'an, vol. 1,
(al-Baqarah 2: nn. 72-3 and 76, pp.
76-7 - Ed.)
120. This alludes to their constant defiance and rebellion in face of God' favours which eventually brought about their destruction.
121. For details see Towards Understanding the Qur'an, vol. 1, (al-Baqarah 2: nn. 74-5, pp. 76-7).