- Types of Interpretation
All praise is for Allah Who sent
down the Qur'an to His servant so that he may be a warner to the worlds; and
blessings be on him whom He sent as a witness, and a bearer of good news and a
warner, and as one inviting to Allah by His permission, and as a light-giving
torch; and on his progeny from whom Allah kept away the uncleanliness and whom
He purified a thorough purifying.
* * *
In this article we shall describe
the method adopted in this book to find out the meanings of the verses of the
Qur'an. at-Tafslr (exegesis), that is, explaining the meanings of the Qur'anic
verse, clarifying its import and finding out its significance, is one of the
earliest academic activities in Islam. The interpretation of the Qur'an began
with its revelation, as is clear from the words of Allah:
Even as We have sent among you an
Apostle from among you who recites to you Our communications and purifies you
and teaches you the Book and the wisdom and teaches you that which you did not
know (2 :151).
The first exegetes were a few
companions of the Prophet, like Ibn 'Abbas, 'Abdullah ibn 'Umar, Ubayy (ibn
Ka'b) and others. (We use the word, 'companion', for other than 'Ali(A.S.);
because he and the Imams from his progeny have an unequaled distinction - an
unparalleled status, which we shall explain somewhere else. Exegesis in those
days was confined to the explanation of literary aspects of the verse, the
background of its revelation and, occasionally interpretation of one verse
with the help of the other. If the verse was about a historical event or
contained the realities of genesis or resurrection etc., then sometimes a few
traditions of the Prophet were narrated to make its meaning clear. The same
was the style of the disciples of the companions, like Mujahid, Qatadah, Ibn
Abi Layla, ash-Sha'bi, as-Suddi and others, who lived in the first two
centuries of hijrah.
They relied even more on
traditions, including the ones forged and interpolated by the Jews and others.
They quoted those traditions to explain the verses which contained the stories
of the previous nations, or which described the realities of genesis, for
example, creation of the heavens and the earth, beginning of the rivers and
mountains, the "Iram" (the city of the tribe of 'Ad), of Shaddad the so-called
"mistakes" of the prophets, the alterations of the books and things like that.
Some such matters could be found even in the exegesis ascribed to the
companions. During the reign of the caliphs, when the neighboring countries
were conquered, the Muslims came in contact with the vanquished people and
were involved in religious discussions with the scholars of various other
religions and sects.
This gave rise to the theological
discourses, known in Islam as `Ilmuu 'l-kalam. Also, the Greek philosophy was
translated into Arabic. The process began towards the end of the first century
of hijrah (Umayyad's period) and continued well into the third century
('Abbasid's reign). This created a taste for intellectual and philosophical
arguments in the Muslim intelligentsia. At the same time, at-tasawwuf Sufism,
mysticism) raised its head in the society; and people were attracted towards
it as it held out a promise of revealing to them the realities of religion
through severe self-discipline and ascetical rigoursinstead of entangling them
into verbal polemics and intellectual arguments. And there emerged a group,
who called themselves people of tradition, who thought that salvation depended
on believing in the apparent meanings of the Qur'an and the tradition, with-
out any academic research. The utmost they allowed was looking into literary
value of the words. Thus, before the second century had proceeded very far,
the Muslim society had broadly split in four groups: The theologians, the
philosophers, the Sufis and the people of tradition There was an intellectual
chaos in the ummah and the Muslims, generally speaking, had lost their
bearing.
The only thing to which all were
committed was the word, "There is no god except Allah, and Muhammad (s.a.w.a.)
is the Messenger of Allah'. They differed with each other in everything else.
There was dispute on the meanings of the names and attributes of Allah, as
well as about His actions; there was conflict about the reality of the heavens
and the earth and what is in and on them; there were controversies about the
decree of Allah and the divine measure; opinions differed whether man is a
helpless tool in divine hands, or is a free agent; there were wranglings about
various aspects of reward and punishment; arguments were kicked like ball,
from one side to the other concerning the realities of death, al-barzakh
intervening period between death and the Day of Resurrection); resurrection,
paradise and hell. In short, not a single subject, having any relevance to
religion, was left without a discord of one type or the other. And this
divergence, not unexpectedly, showed itself in exegesis of the
Qur'an. Every group wanted to
support his views and opinions from the Qur'an; and the exegesis had to serve
this purpose. The people of tradition explained the Qur'an with the traditions
ascribed to the companions and their disciples. They went ahead so long as
there was a tradition to lead them on, and stopped when they could not find
any such tradition (provided the meaning was not self-evident). They thought
it to be the only safe method, as Allah says:
... and those who are firmly
rooted in knowledge say:'
"We believe in it, it is all
from our Lord ... " (3:7) .
But they were mistaken. Allah has
not said in His Book that rational proof had no validity. How could He say so
when the authenticity of the Book itself depended on rational proof. On the
other hand, He has never said that the words of the companions or their
disciples had any value as religious proof.
How could He say so when there were
such glaring discrepancies in their opinions? In short, Allah has not called
us to the sophistry which accepting and following contradictory opinions and
views would entail. He has called us, instead, to meditate on the Qur'anic
verses in order to remove any apparent discrepancy in them. Allah has revealed
the Qur'an as a guidance, and has made it a light and an explanation of
everything. Why should a light seek brightness from others' light? Why should
a guidance be led by others' guidance? Why should "an explanation of
everything" be explained by others' words? The theologians' lot was worse all
the more. They were divided into myriads of sects; and each group clung to the
verse that seemed to support its belief and tried to explain away what was
apparently against it. The seed of sectarian differences was sown in academic
theories or, more often than not, in blind following and national or tribal
prejudice; but it is not the place to describe it even briefly. However, such
exegesis should be called adaptation, rather than explanation. There are two
ways of explaining a verse-One may say: "What does the Qur'an say?" Or one may
say: "How can this verse be explained, so as to fit on my belief? " The
difference between the two approaches is quite clear. The former forgets every
pre-conceived idea and goes where the
Qur'an leads him to. The latter has
already decided what to believe and cuts the Qur'anic verses to fit on that
body; such an exegesis is no exegesis at all. The philosophers too suffered
from the same syndrome. They tried to fit the verses on the principles of
Greek philosophy (that was divided into four branches: Mathematics, natural
science, divinity and practical subjects including civics). If a verse was
clearly against those principles it was explained away. In this way the verses
describing metaphysical subjects, those explaining the genesis and creation of
the heavens and the earth, those concerned with life after death and those
about resurrection, paradise and hell were distorted to conform with the said
philosophy.
That philosophy was admittedly only
a set of conjectures - unencumbered with any test or proof; but the Muslim
philosophers felt no remorse in treating its views on the system of skies,
orbits, natural elements and other related subjects as the absolute truth with
which the exegesis of the Qur'an had to conform. The Sufis kept their eyes
fixed on esoteric aspects of creation; they were too occupied with their inner
world to look at the outer one. Their tunnel-like vision prevented them from
looking at the things in their true perspective. Their love of esoteric made
them look for inner interpretations of the verses; without any regard to their
manifest and clear meanings. It encouraged the people to base their
explanations on poetic expressions and to use anything to prove
anything.
The condition became so bad that
the verses were explained on the-basis of the numerical values of their words;
letters were divided into bright and dark ones and the explanations were based
on that division. Building castle in the air, wasn't it? Obviously, the Qur'an
was not revealed to guide the Sufis only; nor had it ad- dressed itself to
only those who knew the numerical values of the letters (with all its
ramifications); nor were its realities based on astrological calculations. Of
course, there are traditions narrated from the Prophet and the Imams of
Ahlul-Bayt (A.S.) saying for example:
"Verily the Qur'an has an
exterior and an interior, and its interior has an interior upto seven (or
according to a version, seventy) interiors..".
But the Prophet and the Imams gave
importance to its exterior as much as to its interior; they were as much
concerned with its revelation as they were with its interpretation. We shall
explain in the beginning of the third chapter, "The Family of 'Imran", that
"interpretation" is not a meaning against the manifest meaning of the verse.
Such an interpretation should more correctly be called "misinterpretation".
This meaning of the word, "interpretation", came in vogue in the Muslim
circles long after the revelation of the Qur'an and the spread of Islam. What
the Qur'an means by the word, "interpretation", is some- thing other than the
meaning and the significance.
In recent times, a new method of
exegesis has become fashionable. Some people, supposedly Muslims, who were
deeply influenced by the natural sciences (which are based on observations and
tests) and the social ones (that rely on induction), followed the materialists
of Europe or the pragmatists. Under the influence of those anti-Islamic
theories, they declared that the religion's realities cannot go against
scientific knowledge; one should not believe except that which is perceived by
any one of the five senses; nothing exists except the matter and its
properties.
What the religion claims to exist,
but which the sciences reject-like The Throne, The Chair, The Tablet and The
Pen-should be interpreted in a way that conforms with the science; as for
those things which the science is silent about, like the resurrection etc.,
they should be brought within the purview of the laws of matter; the pillars
upon which the divine religious laws are based-like revelation, angel, Satan,
prophet- hood, apostleship, imamah (Imamate) etc.-are spiritual things, and
the spirit is a development of the matter, or let us say, a property of the
matter; legislation of those laws is manifestation of a special social genius,
who ordains them after healthy and fruitful contemplations, in order to
establish a good and pro- gressive society.
They have further said: One cannot
have confidence in the traditions, because many are spurious; only those
traditions may be relied upon which are in conformity with the Book. As for
the Book itself, one should not explain it in the light of the old philosophy
and theories, because they were not based on observations and tests-they were
just a sort of mental exercise which has been totally discredited now by the
modern science. The best, rather the only, way is to explain the Qur'an with
the help of other Qur'anic verses-except where the science has asserted
something which is relevant to it. This, in short, is what they have written,
or what necessarily follows from their total reliance on tests and
observations.
We are not concerned here with the
question whether their scientific principles and philosophic dicta can be
accepted as the foundation of the Qur'an's exegesis. But it should be pointed
out here that the objection which they have leveled against the ancient
exegetes -that theirs was only an adaptation and not the explanation- is
equally true about their own method; they too say that the Qur'an and its
realities must be made to conform with the scientific theories. If not so,
then why do they insist that the academic theories should be treated as true
foundations of exegesis from which no deviation could be allowed? This method
improves nothing on the discredited method of the ancients. If you look at all
the above-mentioned ways of exegesis, you will find that all of them suffer
from a most serious defect:
They impose the results of academic
or philosophic arguments on the Qur'anic meanings; they make the Qur'an
conform with an extraneous idea. In this way, explanation turns into
adaptation, realities of the Qur'an are explained away as allegories and its
manifest meanings are sacrificed for so-called "interpretations". As we
mentioned in the beginning, the Qur'an introduces itself as the guidance for
the worlds (3:96); the manifest light (4:174), and the explanation of every
thing (16:89). But these people, contrary to those Qur'anic declarations, make
it to be guided by extraneous factors, to be illuminated by some outside
theories, and to be explained by something other than itself! What is that
"something else"? What authority has it got? And if there is any difference in
various explanations of a verse and indeed there are most serious
differences-which mediator should the Qur'an refer to? What is the root-cause
of the differences in the Qur'an's explanations? It could not happen because
of any difference in the meaning of a word, phrase or sentence.
The Qur'an has been sent down in
plain Arabic; and no Arab (or Arabic-knowing non-Arab) can experience any
difficulty in understanding it. Also, there is not a single verse (out of more
than six thousand) which is enigmatic, obscure or abstruse in its import; nor
is there a single sentence that keeps the mind wandering in search of its
meaning. After all, the Qur'an is admittedly the most eloquent speech, and it
is one of the essential ingredients of eloquence that the talk should be free
from obscurity and abstruseness. Even those verses that are counted among the
"ambiguous" ones, have no ambiguity in their meanings; whatever the ambiguity,
it is in identification of the particular thing or individual from among the
group to which that meaning refers. This statement needs some elaborations:-
In this life we are surrounded by matter; even our senses and faculties are
closely related to it. This familiarity with matter and material things has
influenced our mode of thinking. When we hear a word or a sentence, our mind
races to its material meaning.
When we hear, for example, the
words, life, knowledge, power, hearing, sight, speech, will, pleasure, anger,
creation and order, we at once think of the material manifestations of their
meanings. Likewise, when we hear the words, heaven, earth, tablet, pen,
throne, chair, angel and his wings, and Satan and his tribe and army, the
first things that come into our minds are their material manifestations.
Likewise, when we hear the sentences, "Allah created the universe", "Allah did
this", "Allah knew it", "Allah intended it" or "intends it", we look at these
actions in frame of "time", because we are used to connect every verb with a
tense. In the same way, when we hear the verses:
and with Us is more yet (50:35), .
. . We would have made it from before Ourselves (21:17), . . . and that which
is with Allah is best. . . (62:11), . . . and to Him you shall be brought back
(2:28, etc.).
we attach with the divine presence
the concept of " place", because in our minds the two ideas are inseparable.
Also, on reading the verses:
And when We intend to destroy a
town (17 :16), And We intend to bestow a favour . . . (28: 5), And Allah
intends ease for you (2:185),
we think that the "intention" has
the same meaning in every sentence, as is the case with our own intention and
will. In this way, we jump to the familiar (which most often is material)
meaning of every word. And it is but natural. Man has made words to fulfill
his social need of mutual intercourse; and society in its turn was established
to fulfil the man's material needs. Not unexpectedly, the words became symbols
of the things which men were connected with and which helped them in their
material progress. But we should not forget that the material things are
constantly changing and developing with the development of expertise. Man gave
the name, lamp, to a certain receptacle in which he put a wick and a little
fat that fed the lighted wick which illuminated the place in darkness.
That apparatus kept changing until
now it has become the electric bulb of various types; and except the name
"lamp" not a single component of the original lamp can be found in it.
Likewise, there is no resemblance in the balance of old times and the modern
scales -especially if we compare the old apparatus with the modern equipment
for weighing and measuring heat, electirc-current's flow and blood-pressure.
And the armaments of old days and the ones invented within our own times have
nothing in common, except the name. The named things have changed so much that
not a single component of the original can be found in them; yet the name has
not changed. It shows that the basic element that allows the use of a name for
a thing is not the shape of that thing, but its purpose and benefit. Man,
imprisoned as he is within his habitat and habit, often fails to see this
reality.
That is why al-Hashawiyyah and
those who believe that God has a body interpret the Qur'anic verses and
phrases within the fame-work of the matter and the nature. But in fact they
are stuck with their habit and usage, and not to the exterior of the Qur'an
and the traditions. Even in the literal meanings of the Qur'an we find ample
evidence that relying on the habit and usage in explanation of the divine
speech would cause confusion and anomaly. For example, Allah says:
Nothing is like a likeness of Him
(42:11); Visions comprehended Him not, and He comprehends (all) visions; and
He is the Knower of subtilities, the Aware (6:73); glory be to Him above what
they ascribe (to Him) (23:91; 37:159).
These verses manifestly show that
what we are accustomed to cannot be ascribed to Allah. It was this reality
that convinced many people that they should not explain the Qur'anic words by
identifying them with their usual and common meanings. Going a step further,
they sought the help of logical and philosophical arguments to avoid wrong
deductions. This gave a foot-hold to academic reasoning in explaining the
Qur'an and identifying the individual person or thing meant by a word. Such
discussions can be of two kinds:
i) The exegete takes a problem
emanating from a Qur'anic statement, looks at it from academic and
philosophical point of view, weighs the pros and cons and with the help of the
philosophy, science and logic decides what the true answer should be.
Thereafter, he takes the verse and fits it anyhow on that answer which, he
thinks, is right. The Muslim philosophers and theologians usually followed
this method; but, as mentioned earlier, the Qur'an does not approve of
it.
ii) The exegete explains the verse
with the help of other relevant verses, meditating on them together-and
meditation has been forcefully urged upon by the Qur'an itself-and identifies
the individual person or thing by its particulars and attributes mentioned in
the verse. No doubt this is the only correct method of exegesis. Allah has
said:
and We have revealed the Book to
you explaining clearly everything (16:89).
Is it possible for such a book not
to explain its own self? Also He has described the Qur'an in these
words:
a guidance for mankind and clear
evidence of guidance and discrimination (between wrong) (2:185);
and He has also said:
and We have sent down to you a
manifest light (4:174).
The Qur'an is, accordingly, a
guidance, an evidence, a discrimination between right and wrong and a manifest
light for the people to guide them aright and help them in all their needs. Is
it imaginable that it would not guide them aright in its own matter, while it
is their most important need? Again Allah says:
And (as for) those who strive hard
for Us, We will most certainly guide them onto Our ways (29:69).
Which striving is greater than the
endeavour to understand His Book? And which way is more straight than the
Qur'an? Verses of this meaning are very numerous, and we shall discuss them in
detail in the beginning of the third chapter, The Family of 'Imran. Allah
taught the Qur'an to His Prophet and appointed him as the teacher of the
Book:
The Faithful Spirit has descended
with it upon your heart that you may be of the warners, in plain Arabic
language (26 :193-4);
and We have revealed to you the
Reminder that you may make clear to men what has been revealed to them, and
that haply they may reflect ( 16: 44);... an Apostle ... who recites to them
His communications and purifies them, and teaches them the Book and the Wisdom
(62:2).
And the Prophet appointed his
progeny to carry on this work after him. It is clear from his unanimously
accepted tradition:
I am leaving behind among you two
precious things; as long as you hold fast to them you will never go astray
after me: The Book of Allah and my progeny, my family members; and these two
shall never separate from each other until they reach me (on) the
reservoir.
And Allah has confirmed, in the
following two verses, this declaration of the Prophet that his progeny had the
real know- ledge of the Book:
Allah only desires to keep away the
uncleanliness from you, O people of the House! and to purify you a (thorough)
purifying(33:33);
Most surely it is an honoured
Qur'an, in a Book that is hidden; None do touch it save the purified ones (56
:77-79).
And the Prophet and the Imams from
his progeny always used this second method for explaining the Qur'an, as may
be seen in the traditions that have been narrated from them on exegesis, some
of which will be quoted in this book in appropriate places. One cannot find a
single instance in their traditions where they might have taken help of an
academic theory or philosophical postulate for explaining a verse.
The Prophet has said in a sermon:
"Therefore, when mischiefs come to confuse you like the segments of darkened
night, then hold fast to the Qur'an; as it is the intercessor whose
intercession shall be granted; and a credible advocate; and whoever keeps it
before him, it will lead him to the Garden; and whoever keeps it behind, it
will drive him to the Fire; and it is the guide that guides to the best path;
and it is a book in which there is explanation, particularization and
recapitulation; and it is a decisive (world), and not a joke; and there is for
it a manifest (meaning) and an esoteric (one); thus its apparent (meaning) is
firm, and its esoteric (one) is knowledge; its exterior is elegant and its
interior deep; it has (many) boundaries, and its boundaries have (many)
boundaries; its wonders shall not cease, and its (unexpected marvels shall not
be old. There are in it the lamps of guidance and the beacon of wisdom, and
guide to knowledge for him who knows the attributes.
Therefore, one should extend his
sight; and should let his eyes reach the attribute; so that one who is in
perdition may get deliverance, and one who is entangled may get free; because
meditation is the life of the heart of the one who sees, as the one having a
light (easily) walks in darkness; therefore, you must seek good deliverance
and (that) with little waiting .
'Ali (a.s.) said, inter alia,
speaking about the Qur'an in a sermon: "Its one part speaks with the other,
and one portion testifies about the other."
This is the straight path and the
right way which was used by the true teachers of the-Qur'an and its guides,
may Allah's blessings be on them all! We shall write, under various headings,
what Allah has helped us to understand from the honoured verses, by the above-
mentioned method. We have not based the explanations on any philosophical
theory, academic idea or mystical revelation. We have not put into it any
outside matter except a fine literary point on which depends the understanding
of Arabic eloquence, or a self-evident or practical premises which can be
understood by one and all. From the discussions, written according to the
above- mentioned method, the following subjects have become
crystal-clear:
1. The matters concerning the names
of Allah, and His attributes, like His Life, Knowledge, Power, Hearing, Sight
and Oneness etc. As for the Person of Allah, you will find that the Qur'an
believes that He needs no description.
2. The matters concerning the
divine actions, like creation, order, will, wish, guidance, leading astray,
decree, measure, compulsion, delegation (of Power), pleasure, displeasure and
other similar actions.
3. The matters concerned with the
intermediary links between Allah and man, like the Curtain, the Tablet, the
Pen, the Throne, the Chair, the Inhabited House, the Heavens, the Earth, the
Angels, the Satans, and the Jinns etc.
4. The details about man before he
came to this world.
5. The matters related to man in
this life, like the history of mankind, knowledge of his self, the foundation
of society, the prophethood and the apostleship, the revelation, the
inspiration, the book and the religion and law. The high status of the
prophets, shining through their stories, come under this heading .
6. The knowledge about man after he
departs from this world, that is, al-Barzakh.
7. The matters about human
character. Under this heading come the various stages through which the
friends of Allah pass in their spiritual journey, like submission, faith,
benevolence, humility, purity of intention and other virtues. (We have not
gone into details of the verses of the law, as more appropriately it is a
subject for the books of jurisprudence.) As a direct result of this method, we
have never felt any need to interpret a verse against its apparent meaning. As
we have said earlier, this type of interpretation is in fact
misinterpretation.
As for that "interpretation" which
the Qur'an has mentioned in various verses, it is not a type of "meaning"; it
is something else. At the end of the commentaries, we have written some
traditions of the Prophet and the Imams of Ahlul-Bayt ( a.s.), narrated by the
Sunni and Shi`ah narrators. But we have not included the opinions of the
companions and their disciples, because, first, there is too much confusion
and contradiction in them; and second, they are not vested with any authority
in Islam. On going through those traditions of the Prophet and the Imams
(peace be on them all!), you will notice that this "new" method of exegesis
(adopted in this book) is in reality the oldest and the original method which
was used by the Teachers of the Qur'an (peace of Allah be on them
all!).
Also, we have written separately
various topics - philosophical, academic, historical, social and ethical- when
there was a need for it. In all such discussions, we have confined our talk to
the basic premises, without going in too much detail. We pray to Allah, High
is He, to guide us and keep our talk to the point; He is the Best Helper and
the Best Guide.
* * *
(Allamah Tabataba'i, Al-Mizan, p.
3-16).