116. People used to ask the Prophet (peace be on him) many questions which
were of no practical relevance to either religious or day-to-day affairs. Once,
for instance, a person asked the Prophet (peace be on him) in the presence of
a crowd: 'Who is my real father?' Likewise, many people used to ask unnecessary
questions about legal matters. By these uncalled for inquiries they sought knowledge
of matters which had for good reasons, been deliberately left undetermined by
the Law-giver. In the Qur'an, for example. Pilgrimage had been declared obligatory.
A person who became aware of this came to the Prophet (peace be on him) and
inquired: 'Has it been made obligatory to perform it every year?' To this the
Prophet (peace be on him) made no reply. When he inquired for the second time
the Prophet (peace be on him) again stayed silent. On being asked for the third
time, he said: 'Pity on you! Had I uttered "Yes" in reply to your question,
it would have become obligatory to perform it every year. And then you would
not have been able to observe it and would have been guilty of disobedience.'
(See Bukhari, 'Riqaq', 22; 'Zakah', 53; I'tisam', 3; 'Adab', 6; Muslim, 'Aqdiyah',
10, 11, 13, 14; Darimi, 'Riqaq', 38; Muwatta', 'Kalam', 20; Ahmad b. Hanbal,
Musnad, vol. 2, pp. 327, 360, 367; vol. 4, pp. 246, 249, 250, 251, 255 - Ed.)
The Prophet (peace be on him) discouraged people from being over-inquisitive
and unnecessarily curious about every question. We find in the Hadith the following
saying from the Prophet (peace be on him): 'The worst criminal among the Muslims
is the one who inquired about something which had not been made unlawful, and
then it was declared so, because of his inquiry.' (Bukhari, I'tisam', 3; Muslim,
Fada'il', 132, 133; Abu Da'ud, 'Sunnah', 6 - Ed.) According to another tradition
the Prophet (peace be on him) said: 'God has imposed upon you certain obligations,
do not neglect them; He has imposed certain prohibitions, do not violate them;
He has imposed certain limits, do not even approach them; and He has remained
silent about certain matters - and has not done so out of forgetfulness - do
not pursue them.' (See Towards Understanding the Qur'an, vol. I,
(Surah 2, n. 110 - Ed.)
In both these traditions an important fact has been called to our attention.
In matters where the Law-giver has chosen to lay down certain injunctions only
broadly, without any elaborate details, or quantitative specifications, He has
done so not because of neglect or forgetfulness. Such seeming omissions are
deliberate, and the reason thereof is that He does not desire to place limitations
upon people, but prefers to allow them latitude and ease in following His commandments.
Now there are some people who make unnecessary inquiries, cause elaborately
prescribed, inflexibly determined and restrictive regulations to be added to
the Law. Some others, in cases where such details are in no way deducible from
the text, resort to analogical reasoning, thereby turning a broad general rule
into an elaborate law full of restrictive details, and an unspecified into a
specified rule. Both sorts of people put Muslims in great danger. For, in the
area of belief, the more detailed the doctrines to which people are required
to subscribe, the more problematic it becomes to do so. Likewise, in legal matters,
the greater the restriction, the greater the likelihood of violation.
117. Some people first indulged in hair-splitting arguments about their laws and dogma, and thereby wove a great web of credal elaborations and legal minutiae. Then they became enmeshed in this same web and thus became guilty of dogmatic errors and the violation of their own religious laws. The people referred to here are the Jews, and the Muslims who followed in their footsteps and left no stone unturned, despite the warnings contained in the Qur'an and in the sayings of the Prophet Muhammad (peace be on him).
118. Just as, in the Indian subcontinent, cows, oxen and goats are set free
after being consecrated either to God or to some idol or shrine or to some saintly
person, and just as people consider it prohibited either to put them to work,
to slaughter them or to derive any other kind of benefit from them, so the Arabs
of the Jahiliyah period also let loose certain animals after consecrating them.
Such animals were variously named.
Bahirah was the name of a female camel which had already borne five young, the
last of which was a male. The practice was to slit the ear of such a camel and
then let her loose. Thereafter no one could ride her, use her milk, slaughter
her or shear her hair. She was entitled to graze and drink water wherever she
liked.
Sa'ibah was the name of either a male or female camel which had been let loose
after consecration as a mark of gratitude in fulfilment of a vow taken for either
the recovery from some ailment or delivery from some danger. In the same way
the female camel which had borne ten times, and each time a female, was also
let loose.
Wasilah. If the first kid born to a goat was a male, it was slaughtered in the
name of the deities; but if it was a female, it was kept by the owners for themselves.
If twins were born and one of them was a male and the other a female goat, the
male was not slaughtered but rather let loose in the name of the deities. This
male goat was called wasilah.
Ham. If the young of camels in the second degree of descent had become worthy
of riding they were let loose. Likewise, if ten offspring had been borne by
a female camel she was also let loose, and called ham.
119. What is stressed here is that rather than occupying himself unduly with
examining faults in the belief and conduct of others, a man should pay greater
attention to a critical examination of his own conduct. His primary concern
should be with his own faith and conduct. If a man is himself obedient to God,
observes his duties to Him and to His creatures including his duty to promote
what is good and forbid what is evil, and lives according to the dictates of
righteousness and honesty, he has fulfilled his obligation and if others persist
either in false beliefs or in moral corruption their errors cannot harm him.
This verse in no way means that a man should care only for his own salvation
and should remain unconcerned with the reform of others. Abu Bakr removed this
misconception in one of his sermons when he remarked: 'You recite this verse
but interpret it erroneously. I have heard the Messenger of Allah (peace be
on him) say that when people see corruption but do not try to change it; and
when they see a wrong-doer commit wrong but do not prevent him from doing so,
it is not unlikely that God's chastisement will seize them all. By God, it is
incumbent upon you that you bid what is good and forbid what is evil or else
God will grant domination upon you to those who are the worst among you. They
will greatly chastise you and then when your righteous ones pray to God, their
prayers will not be answered.'
120. That is, pious, straightforward and trustworthy Muslims.
That is, non-Muslims - Ed.
121. This shows that the testimony of non-Muslim witnesses in cases involving Muslims is appropriate only when no Muslim is available as a witness.