QURAN ALFAJR: “Verse 177 Righteousness is not that you turn - TopicsExpress



          

QURAN ALFAJR: “Verse 177 Righteousness is not that you turn your faces to the East and the West; but righteousness is that one believes in Allah and the Last Day and the angels and the Book and the Prophets, and gives wealth, despite its love, to relatives, and to orphans, the helpless, the wayfarer, and to those who ask, and (spends) in (freeing) slaves and observes the prayers and pays the Zakah; and those who fulfil their promise when they promise and, of course, the patient in hardships and sufferings and when in battle! Those are the ones who are true and those are the God-fearing”. (Verse 177) THE QURAN ILLUSTRATED 16TH MARCH 2014: The chapters of Birr (the virtues) From this point onwards, the reader will find details of this comprehensive attribute of birr, the essence of which is obedience’. Many injunctions, in unison with suitable time and place, have been taken up as needed. Some of these are about Equal Retaliation, Will, Fasting, Jihad, Hajj, Spending, Menstruation, Ila, Oath, Divorce, Marriage, Post-divorce waiting period for women (Iddah), Dower (Mahr), while Jihad and Infaq (spending) in the way of Allah find re-stress, and some aspects of buying and selling and witnessing appear proportionate to their need. The finale is good tidings and the promise of mercy and forgiveness.When Baytullah, the House of Allah at Makkah was made the Qiblah of the Muslims in place of Baytul-Maqdis, the Jews and Christians and the Mushrikin, who were much too eager to find fault with Islam and Muslims, were stirred and they started coming up with all sorts of objections against Islam and the Holy Prophet (SAW), detailed answers to which have been given in verses that have appeared earlier. In the present verse, this debated issue has been closed in a unique manner when it was said that Faith cannot be restricted to the single aspect of turning to the West or the East when praying. These are directions in an absolute sense and thus cannot be turned into the very object of Faith to the total exclusion of other injunctions of the Shariah. It is also possible that this is addressed to Jews, Christians and Muslims at the same time, the sense being that real birr (righteousness) and thawab (merit) lies in obedience to Allah Almighty. The direction in which He wants us to turn automatically becomes merit-worthy and correct. In itself, the East or the West, or any other direction or orientation, has no importance or merit. Instead, the real merit comes out of ones obedience to the injunctions of Allah, no matter what the direction be. Upto the time the command was to turn towards the Baytul-Maqdis, the obedience to that command was an act deserving of merit, and now, when the command to turn towards the House of Allah at Makkah has come, obeying this command has become deserving of merit. As stated earlier during the discussion of linkage of verses, a new sequence begins from this verse where the main body of the text comprises of teachings and instructions for Muslims with answers to antagonists appearing there by implication. This is why this particular verse has been identified as very comprehensive in presenting Islamic injunctions. What follows through the end of Surah al-Baqarah is an explanation or elaboration of this verse. Given below is a detailed account of what the verse presents as a gist of the articles of faith, the modes of Allahs worship, dealings with people, and the moral principles. Foremost are the articles of faith. These were covered under man aamana billahi: That one believes in Allah. Then comes the act of following the articles of faith in ones deeds, that is, in Allahs worship and in dealings with people. Allahs worship is mentioned upto the end of wa aata al Zakât: And pays the Zakah, then, dealings with people were covered under wa muuofun al ahd : And those who fulfil their promise, concluding with / the mention of morals under al sabirin : The patient. The final statement is that those who follow all these injunctions are true Muslims and they are the ones who can be called God-fearing. While mentioning these injunctions, the verse has given a number of subtle but eloquent indications, for instance, the spending of wealth has been tied up with ala hubbihi; which has three possible meanings. Firstly, the pronoun in ‘hubhihi may refer to Allah Almighty, in which case, it would mean that in spending wealth one should not be guided by material motives or the desire to show off. Such spending should rather be done out of love for Allah Almighty, whose exalted majesty requires that this be done with perfectly un-alloyed sincerity (in the sense of the genuine Ikhlas of Arabic and not in the sense of some modern casual nicety). The second possibility is that this pronoun refers to wealth, in which case, it would mean that, while spending in the way of Allah, only that part of ones wealth and possessions which one loves will be deserving of merit. Giving out throw-aways in the name of charity is no charity, barring the option of giving it to somebody who can use it, which is better than simply throwing things away. The third possibility is that the pronoun refers to the infinitive ātā which emerges from the word ītā of the text, in which case, the meaning could be that one should be fully satisfied in the heart with what one spends, not that hands spend and the heart aches. Imam Al-Jassas has suggested the likelihood that all three meanings may be inclusive in the statement. It may be noted that, at this place, two forms of spending have been stated earlier which are other than Zakah. Zakah has been taken up after these two. Perhaps, the reason for this earlier mention could be the general negligence practiced in the liquidation of these rights on the assumption that the payment of Zakah is sufficient. This proves that financial obligations do not end at the simple payment of Zakah. There are occasions, other than those of paying Zakah, where spending out of ones wealth becomes obligatory and necessary (Jassas and Qurtubi). For instance, spending on your kin, when they have a valid excuse of not being able to earn their own living, is necessary; or there may be some needy person dying in poverty while you have already paid your Zakah, then, it becomes obligatory for you to save his life by spending your wealth on the spot. Similarly, building mosques and schools for religious education are all included in financial obligations. The difference is that Zakah has a special law of its own and it is obligatory to take full care in paying the Zakah in accordance with that law, under all conditions. While these other obligations depend on necessity and need; where needed, spending would become obligatory and where not needed, it will not be obligatory. Special Note: A careful look at the text of the verse will show that those on whom wealth has to be spent, that is, the relatives, orphans, the needy, the wayfarer and those who ask, have all been described in one distinct manner, while the last head on the list has been introduced in another manner. It is clear that by adding fi in fir riqab And (spends) in (freeing) slaves the purpose is to point out that the amount spent will not reach the hands of the slaves owned by somebody as their personal amount which they can spend at will. Instead, the amount has to be spent in buying slaves from their masters and setting them free. Hence, the translation: And (spends) in (freeing) slaves. After that, the statement: And observes the prayers and pays the Zakah appears in the same manner as everything else has been mentioned earlier. Now, in order to introduce the chapter of dealings, the style has been changed. And instead of using verbs, the nouns have been used. This denotes that one should have a continuing habit of fulfilling promises made. A chance fulfilment of a compact, something even a disbeliever or a sinner would accomplish once in a while is not enough to qualify a person for being included in the list. The reason why the keeping of promises has been chosen to represent dealings with people is simple. A little thought would show that staying by a contract entered into or the fulfilling of a promise made, is the essence of all dealings, such as buying and selling, leasing, renting and partnership. Similarly, while referring to the moral principles or the inner deeds, only Sabr (patience) is mentioned in the verse, because Sabr means to control the human self and guard it against evil. Even a little reflection can lead to the conclusion that Sabr is the very essence of all inner deeds; through it, high morals can be achieved and through it, low morals can be eliminated. Yet another change in style made here concerns the use of the wa sabirin word, and not wa Sabirun on the pattern of, wa muuofun; which appeared immediately earlier. Commentators call it nasb ala lmadh which means that the word madh (praise) is understood here and the word al-sabirin is its object. This means that among the righteous, the sabirin (the patient) are worthy of special praise since Sabr gives one special power to perform righteous deeds. In short. this verse holds in its fold important principles of all departments of Faith and its eloquent hints tell us the degree of importance of each one of them.”(Source Maarif al Quran, vol 1, pp 443,446)
Posted on: Sun, 16 Mar 2014 03:31:15 +0000

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