Chapter 2: Surat Al-Baqarah (The Cow), verses 252-253


Translation:

“These are the revelations of God which we recite to you in all truth; and most surely you are one of the Prophets. Of these Prophets, we have exalted some over others; some of them are those to whom God spoke directly, while others He raised to a lofty status. We gave Jesus, the Son of Mary, clear signs and strengthened him with the Holy Spirit. Had God pleased, those who succeeded them would not have fought against one another after clear commands had come to them, but they disagreed among themselves, then some of them believed and some of them disbelieved. Yet had God pleased, they would not have fought against one another, but God does what He wills” (2:252-253).

Commentary:

When God sends one of His Messengers to bring the truth to mankind, He marks this event with His unmistakable signs, so that the bearer of His message should be recognized immediately as His legitimate emissary. Yet, in spite of this, there are always some who give no credence to his words.

Primarily, those who have refused to believe in latter-day Prophets are individuals who entertain the fixed notion that none can surpass the Prophets of old. They consequently see no reason to make a re-appraisal of their current beliefs, and feel under no obligation to believe in any subsequent Messenger sent to the world by the Almighty. They cling to the personal excellence of Prophets whose names have been hallowed by tradition, seeing it as an absolute virtue, instead of as a special, God-given endowment designed to meet the varying exigencies of the different historical periods in which they lived. This very way of thinking has made it difficult—sometimes impossible—to appreciate the qualities of new Prophets on their successive missions. For instance, believers in Moses rejected Jesus. Followers of the latter disbelieved in Muhammad, on all of whom be peace and God’s blessings. In the case of Moses, his followers held him to be greater than all other Prophets, because he had had the distinction of being addressed directly by God. Believers in Jesus considered him peerless because he had been born to a Virgin Mother.

Since the passing of the Final Prophet, those who have come to reform and revitalize the Muslim community have fared no better than the successive Prophets at the outset of their separate missions. That is, they have been treated with a complete lack of respect, as creatures of no account whatsoever, for the simple reason that their contemporaries remain preoccupied with whatever has been accepted as piety in the past, and feel in no need of further religious counselling.

When communities begin to go into a decline, it is largely as a result of their preoccupations having become exclusively worldly in nature. Yet they do not wish to forfeit their ‘right’ to salvation, and attach themselves mentally to hallowed religious personalities as a form of psychological defence. They fondly imagine that the lofty status of their saintly patrons will ensure their redemption in the next world, no matter how unethical their conduct has been in this world.

It is this false sense of security which gives such people the audacity to oppose those who call them to God. It is imaginable that God might have arranged human destiny in such a way that man, having no freedom to demur, was obliged invariably to bow to His will. But this was not part of God’s scheme for mankind. God gave man freedom of action in order to put him to the divine test: He wished to see if man could find his way to his Maker, without ever coming face to face with Him. For this reason, man is required to be able to recognize the word of God, albeit uttered by the human tongue. It is, therefore, only with correct religious guidance that man will ever be able to penetrate the veil of outward forms in order to reach the hidden, inner truth.

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