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"Say (O Muhammad): O mankind! if you are
in doubt about my religion, then (know that) I do not worship those
whom you worship besides Allah but I worship Allah, Who causes you to
die, and I am commanded that I should be of the believers." (Qur'an
10:104)
This verse can be regarded in two ways - in it's basic meaning and a
possible deeper meaning. One meaning is that this verse is a simple
statement of clarification about the Prophet - that his religion (his
"din") is to not worship any but Allah and to be a believer.
This verse opens with a command - God commands the Prophet to state a
truth about himself - to reveal to the people information about his
state and condition and his relation to God. This truth can be
understood at different levels. One level is the simple statement of a
fact - that the Prophet does not worship any but Allah - the other
level is a statement about the uniqueness of the Prophet - his
unparalleled stature and the high nature which he has infused in him.
Let's take a look at this verse with this in mind.
First - the Prophet does not state this information about himself (that
he worships only Allah) of his own volition - there is no
self-glorification or pride in his statement as he does not make it
from his own desire to proclaim his status. If that were the case then
it would be like Shaitan saying about his nature compared to Adam's
nature, "I am better than he - you created me of fire and him of clay."
It would be a statement of self-superiority.
Rather, the Prophet (s.a.) remains silent about his nature until he is
commanded to speak - this silence and reticence in the absence of a
direct command is a sign of his true servanthood. The Prophet is "abd"
(a servant) to God and so he only speaks when Allah issues a command,
telling the Prophet to reveal something about his own nature and status
and the nature of his religion. The Prophet is a servant who has been
taught by a great Master - he has vast knowledge and ability but in the
presence of his Master he remains silent about his own stature
following the etiquette of respect and the natural inclination of
loving deference to his Master. Till the Master commands him to speak,
he says nothing about his own self. So the word "Say" at the beginning
of this verse issues forth as an imperative command, a Divine order to
the Prophet to speak about something which might otherwise have
remained concealed.
The Prophet states three simple facts:
- that he does not worship anything that others might worship besides Allah - he worships only Allah
- that everyone will become aware of the true state of affairs after death (as Allah causes everyone to die and this death is a removing of veils and a return to Allah)
- that the Prophet is commanded to be a believer
Now these three simple statements are indicators of the astonishing
stature of Muhammad (s.a.).
He is commanded to make these statements to all of mankind - to humans
in general. The statements he makes are reminiscent of Sura Kafirun -
but one strong distinction is that Sura Kafirun was addressed
specifically to the disbelievers. This statement is addressed to all
mankind ("nas"). In Kafirun, a distinction is drawn between the
disbelievers and the Prophet. But here an amazing distinction is made
between the Prophet and "nas" - between the Prophet and humankind in
general. Through this technique the qur'an subtly honors the Prophet
elevating him and distinguishing him above all mankind.
But what kind of an elevation is it? It is an elevation tied to his unique relation to Allah, to an intimate connection, an attachment of true servanthood that makes the Prophet a perfect bondsman of Allah. God makes the Prophet say: "O mankind, if you are in doubt about my "din", about the path, the way upon which I walk - if you are in doubt that every aspect of my life, my "din" is devoted entirely to Allah, then know this: "I do not worship those whom you worship alongside Allah...."
Mankind's worship while it may include the worship of God, is lacking
the purity and exclusivity of worship that is signified in the
Prophet's relationship to God. The Prophet's worship does not turn or
deviate in the slightest from Allah, while the worship of others may
include the worship of Allah but may also encompass a broader arc so
that their worship is not free of the taint of shirk (associating worldly things
with God), whether that shirk is
a major or minor shirk, and whether it includes the worship of other
gods or simply links an aspect of their own ego or a favored ideology
to their worship of Allah. There are many levels and forms of shirk and most of mankind are not
free from some form of it, however mild that form may be. The Prophet's
spirit, his worship, is like a true compass that points only to God
without wavering. For others, they have a compass which points to Allah
but which deviates and wavers and is pulled in different directions
dpending on their environment, the presence of distracting metals and
local magnetic fields (worldly involvements and attractions).
But here, in this verse (verse 104), the Prophet is commanded to reveal
the purity of his worship - he does not associate - he does not commit shirk at any level. "O mankind! if
you are in doubt about my religion, then (know that) I do not worship
any whom you worship besides Allah, but I worship only Allah."
So there is first a negation - 'I do not worship anything of what you
worship in addition to Allah.' This a complete negation of any of the
kinds and types of shirk practised
consciously or unconsciously by any among mankind. Then there is the
positive statement - "I worship only
Allah." Before a pure tauhid can
exist, there must be the total negation of shirk. So he begins with the
negation of shirk and ends
with the affirmation of an untainted, pure tauhid.
Then he reveals his knowledge of the realities that are beyond this
world. The verse implies (esp. in the context of the earlier verses of
this sura) that after Allah causes people to die they will become aware
of the truth and will realize that devotion to anything but God is
self-deception. The Prophet is already well acquainted with these
realities. His perception and his being are awake in this world and the
next - his consciousness, his understanding, penetrates this world and
the next. So he knows the truth of what awaits us. Allah commands him
to say that which he knows through direct experience - that the entire
system of existence is under God's dominion - He causes to die and to
Him is the return. Death rather than some other aspect of God's power
or His signs is used to focus in on the root of the matter - the
connection between man and God, between life and afterlife and the
barrier of death which veils and separates the one from the other.
Finally, the Prophet's belief, his status as a mumin (believer) is by
the command of Allah. This is an exalted status. He is the complete and
perfect servant, even his belief emanating and linked to the command of
his Master. His trust is entirely in God, his iman is from the command
of God - the elevation of his spirit, his worship, his belief is from
God. He has placed his being entirely in the care of God and movements
of his ego are non-existent.
Most of mankind wander distracted and aimless through their lives, or are driven by compulsions of the ego or ambition, or are driven by myriad fears, or by the compulsions of society, or by the compulsion of their appetites and desires, or by the compulsion for power and control, moving step by step under the illusion of progress - under the illusion that they are walking of their own volition. So in this verse Allah commands the Prophet to reveal his inner state, the quality of his worship and his way of life - displaying the unique status of the Prophet, a status elevated above all of mankind.
God commands the Prophet to be a believer - one interpretation is that
the command issues forth, but people can turn away or follow according
to the dictates of free will. So God commands the Prophet and being a
true servant, he follows freely and willingly with perfection the
command of His Master. The other interpretation is that Allah commands
his belief and there is no choice in the matter, so the Prophet's iman,
like his infallibility, is Divinely ordained.
There is a verse in the qur'an that describes the variance in quality
of the plants of the earth and the fruits produced by them. "And some
plants We have ranked in exellence of produce above others, even though
they are watered with one water...." (Qur'an 13:4)
Though all of mankind are watered with the same water - the water of
the Spirit - yet some are ranked higher in exellence than others. In
this verse (v. 104) God is commanding the Prophet to display some small
and subtle hint of his unique excellence, and his elevated stature. An
elevated stature which arises out of his inner humility and his
absolute servanthood.
-Irshaad Hussain
"As man...seeks independence, he actually falls towards nothingness and away from his origin and principle – distancing himself and becoming more relative and limited. Hence existence includes and prefigures the idea of the fall (from Paradise).
On the moral
plane, this wish of man to “stand out” (to be independent) is to be
rebellious – to try to be a god
in his own “right”. On this same plane,
to accept the created nature of man and to accept to be a servant and
slave of
God is to try to give God something of what is His right and due and to
become
saintly and near to God. It is for this
very reason that one of the greatest and most prestigious titles of the
Prophet
Muĥammad, upon him and his Progeny be Peace, is ‘abd Allāh or “slave of
God”.
For the greater the awareness of man’s essential slavery, the nearer he
comes to the Divine Presence. Hence
Islam, as the final religion, while esoterically recognizing and
assenting to
the theomorphic nature of man, with just as much force, asserts his
servanthood
and his absolute need for exoteric rites and rituals to express and
realize
this servanthood. To accept one without
the other is to do great disservice to God’s wish to be known in
actu.
For it is the servant of God who - in realizing the Divine Names
manifesting in himself and his essential poverty with regards to them -
is able
to love, desire, know and worship God with all his heart, and with all
his soul,
and with all his mind, and with all his strength."
Anyone who reads the Qur'an is likely to be struck by the unique
nature of its construction, its unusual and constantly shifting rhythms
and the sudden transmutations and displacements in its subject matter.
At first this ever changing literary terrain seems an obstacle to
understanding, but the more time one spends with this book, the more
organic, the more natural the flow of its words feel. It is almost
like flying over an ever-changing landscape - rolling valleys
punctuated by jagged rocks, forests and plains giving way to upthrust
mountains, high plateaus broken by deep lakes, deserts sprinkled
with oasis' and cleft by canyons. Despite the variety of the forms,
despite the startling contrast of adjacent features, a complex organic
beauty underlies and unites all the various elements. These "tafsirs"
emerged from numerous brief scattered notes made while reading the
qur'an (along with numerous commentaries and the works of various
scholars whose profound analyses strongly effected my views) and
reflecting on its content. As well, for a number of years
I have participated in a hallakha, a qur'anic study circle, and many of
the
tafsirs presented here were originally researched for presentation at
that forum.