Al-mizan an Exegesis of the Qur'an (volume One)

Chapter 15 : 2:49-61

And when We delivered you from Pharaoh's people, who subjected you to severe torment, killing your sons and sparing your women, and in this there was a great trial from your Lord (49). And when We parted the sea for you, so We saved you and drowned the followers of Pharaoh while you watched by (50). And when We appointed (a time of) forty nights with Mûsâ, then you took the calf (for a god) after him and you were unjust (51) ; then We pardoned you after that so that you might give thanks (52). And when We gave Mûsâ the book and the distinction that you might walk aright (53). And when Mûsâ said to his people: "O my peo­ple! you have surely been unjust to yourselves by taking the calf (for a god), therefore turn to your Creator (penitently) and kill your people, that is best for you with your Creator; so He turned to you (mercifully), for surely He is the Oft­returning (with mercy), the Merciful" (54). And when you said: "O Mûsâ! we will not believe in you until we see Allâh manifestly, " so the punishment overtook you while you looked on (55); then We raised you up after your death that you may give thanks (56) . And We made the clouds to give shade over you and We sent to you manna and quails: Eat of good things that We have given you; and they did not do Us any harm, but they did harm their own selves (57). And when We said: "Enter this city, then eat from it a plen­teous (food) wherever you wish, and enter the gate making obeisance, and say, forgiveness, We will forgive you your wrongs and give more to those who do good (to others) (58). But those who were unjust changed it for a saying other than that which had been spoken to them, so We sent up­on those who were unjust a pestilence from heaven, be­cause they transgressed (59). And when Mûsâ prayed for drink for his people, We said: "Strike the rock with your staff. " So there gushed from it twelve springs; each tribe knew its drinking place: "Eat and drink of the provisions of Allâh and do not act corruptly in the land, making mis­chief" (60). And when you said: "O Mûsâ! we cannot bear with one food, therefore pray to your Lord on our behalf to bring forth for us out of what the earth grows, of its herbs and its cucumbers and its garlic and its lentils and its onions. He said: "Will you exchange that which is better for that which is worse? Enter a city, so you will have what you ask for. " And abasement and humiliation were brought down upon them and they returned with Allâh's wrath; this was so because they disbelieved in the signs of Allâh and killed the prophets unjustly; this was so because they disobeyed and exceeded the limits (61).

COMMENTARY

QUR’?N: and sparing your women: They left your women alive in order that they (i.e. the women) might serve them. "al-Istihyâ "' () means to wish someone to remain alive. The word may also mean: They behaved indecently with the women until they (i.e. the women) lost their modesty.

"Yasûmûnakum" () translated here as "they subjected you to", literally means, they imposed upon you.

QUR’?N : And when We parted the sea for you: al-Farq () is opposite of al-jam' (); the words mean to separate and to gather, respectively. The same is the case of al-fasl () vis-a-vis "al-wasl" (). To separate the sea means to part its water. "Bikum" (), translated here as "for you", may also mean, "soon on your entering the sea".

QUR’?N : And when We appointed (a time of) forty days with Mûsâ: The same event has been described in Chapter 7 in these words: And We appointed with Mûsâ a time of thirty nights and completed them with ten (more), so the appointed time of his Lord was complete, forty nights (7 :142) . This verse mentions the total duration of the two promises together, as a tradition says.

QUR’?N : therefore turn to your Creator (penitently): al-Bâri’ () is one of the beautiful names of Allâh, as Allâh says: He is Allâh, the Creator, the Maker, the Fashioner; His are the most beautiful names. . . (59:24). This name has been used three times in the Qur’ân: twice in the verse under discussion and once in Chapter 59, quoted just above. Perhaps Allâh used this name here because it was most suitable in the context of the event described. While it is nearer in meaning to al-Khâliq ( = the Creator) and al-Mûjid ( = the Inventor), it is derived from bara'a, yabra'u, bar'an ( = he separated, he separates, to separate). Allâh thus separates His creation from in­existence, or He separates man from the earth. This name in this context conveys the following idea: No doubt it is very hard to repent by killing your own people. But Allâh, Who now orders you to destroy yourselves by killing, is the same God who had created you. He was pleased to create you when it was good for you; and now He has decreed that you should kill your own people, and this order too is good for you. How can He decide anything for you except that which is good, and He is your Maker and Creator. The phrase, "your Creator", points to a special relation which they have with Him, and it emphasizes the fact that the given command is not for revenge; it is based on divine love, in order to purify them.

QUR’?N: that is best for you with your Creator: This and the preceding verses (that enumerate their transgressions and sins) are addressed to the whole Jewish nation, although the sins were committed by only some groups of them and not by all. Obviously it is because they were very much united as a nation; if one did a thing, others were pleased with it. It was because of this feeling of their national unity that one group's action is attributed to the whole nation. Otherwise, not all the Israelites had killed the prophets, nor had all of them indulged in the calf-worship, or committed other sins mentioned herein. It proves that the order, "kill your people", actually meant, kill some of your people, i.e., the calf-worshippers. It may also be inferred from the words, "you have surely been unjust to yourselves by taking the calf for worship", and the words, "that is best for you with your Creator" (which apparently is the final part of the speech of Mûsâ).

The words, "so He turned to you (mercifully)", prove that their repentance was accepted. Tradition says that their repent­ance was accepted and sin forgiven when only a few of them had been killed. This forgiveness before the order was fully complied with shows that the command was given as a trial. The case is somewhat similar to the dream of Ibrâhîm (a.s.) and his being told to sacrifice Ismâ’î1; before he could reach the ultimate stage, he was told, O Ibrâhîm! You have indeed made the vision come true (37 :104 -105) . Likewise, Mûsâ (a.s.) told his people "turn to your Creator (penitently) and kill your people, that is best for you with your Creator", and Allâh confirmed the order, yet He took the killing of some as equal to the execution of all, and informed them that their repentance was accepted, "so He turned to you (mercifully)".

QUR’?N: a pestilence from heaven: "ar-Rijz" ( = punishment) .

QUR’?N: do not act corruptly: "Lâ ta'thaw" () is derived from al-`ayth and al-`athy () it means the biggest chaos and mischief.

QUR’?N: and its cucumbers and its garlic: "al-Khiyar" () is cucumber; "al-fum" () is garlic or wheat.

QUR’?N: and they returned with Allâh's wrath: "Bâ'û" ( = they returned).

QUR’?N: this was so because they disbelieved: It gives the rea­son of preceding statement; and the next sentence, "this was so because they disobeyed and exceeded the limits" is the reason of that reason. Their disobedience and perennial excesses caused them to reject the signs of Allâh and kill the prophets. Allâh says in another verse: Then evil was the end of those who did evil, because they rejected the signs of Allâh and used to mock them (30:10). How was the disbelief caused by disobedience? One of the coming traditions explains it.

TRADITIONS

Abû Ja'far (a.s.) said about the words of Allâh: and when We appointed (a time of) forty nights with Mûsâ: "It was thirty nights in the (divine) knowledge and measure, then some­thing else happened (to show that it was not the final decree) and Allâh added ten more; and in this way the appointed time of his Lord, the first and the last, was completed forty days." (al-`Ayyâshî )

The author says: This tradition supports what we have mentioned earlier that the forty was the total of the two ap­pointed times.

`Alî (a.s.) said about the words of Allâh: and when Mûsâ said to his people: "0 my people! you have surely been unjust to yourselves. . . ": "They asked Mûsâ: `How should we repent?' He said: `Some of you should kill the others.' Thereupon, they took the knives and everyone started killing (the others), even his brother, father and son, without caring, by God! whom he killed. (It continued) till seventy thousand of them were killed. Then Allâh revealed to Mûsâ: `Tell them to stay their hands;' and he who was killed was forgiven and he who remained, his repentance was accepted. " (ad-Durru 'l-manthûr)

The Imâm said: "Mûsâ (a.s.) went to the appointed place and time, and then came back to his people; and they had started worshipping the calf; then he told them: ‘0 my people! you have surely been unjust to yourselves by taking the calf (for worship), therefore turn to your Creator (penitently) and kill your people, that is best for you with your Creator.' They asked him: `How should we kill our people?' Mûsâ said to them: `Tomorrow every­one of you should come to Baytu '1-Maqdis[^4] with a knife or a piece of iron or a sword; when I ascend the pulpit of the Children of Israel you should all keep your faces hidden, so that nobody should recognize the other at his side; then you should kill each other.' Thus seventy thousand of those who had worshipped the calf assembled in Baytu '1-Maqdis. When Musa finished praying with them and ascended the pulpit, they started killing each other. (This continued) until Jibrîl came down and said: `Now tell them, O Mûsâ! to stop killing (each other), because Allâh has ac­cepted their repentance.' And (by that time) ten thousand of them had been killed. And Allâh revealed: that is best for you with your Creator; so He turned to you (mercifully), for surely His is Oft­returning (with mercy), the Merciful. "(at-Tafsîr, al-Qummi)

The author says: According to this tradition, the sentence, "that is best for you with your Creator", was said by Mûsâ (a.s.) and was also used in the divine speech. In this way, Allâh con­firmed the word of Mûsâ (a.s.), and made it clear that what had actually happened - the execution of ten thousand calf-worship­pers - was all that was intended from the very beginning; and that the order of Musa was carried out in full, and not partially. According to what appears from the wording of Mûsâ (a.s.) , it was best for them if all of them were killed; but only some of them got killed, not all. By repeating the same words, Allâh made it clear that what Mûsâ (a.s.) had meant from the words, "the best for you", was not the execution of all.

The same at-Tafsîr says about the words of Allâh: and We made the clouds to give shade over you: "When Mûsâ crossed the sea with the Israelites, they landed at a desert. They said: ‘O Mûsâ! you have really destroyed and killed us, by bringing us from an inhabited land to a desert where there is , either any shadow or tree nor even water.' At daytime a cloud appeared over them to protect them from the sun; and at right, manna came down to them, settling on leaves, trees and stones, and they ate it; and at dinner time roasted birds fell on their dinner­-spread, and when they finished eating and drinking, the birds (became alive and) flew away. And Mûsâ had a stone which he used to place in the midst of the station (of the caravan), striking it with his walking-stick and, lo! twelve springs gushed from it, as Allâh described, every spring going to the station of a particular tribe - and they were twelve tribes." (ibid.)

Abu l-Hasan al-Mâdî (a.s.) said about the words of Allâh: and they did not do Us any harm but they did harm their own selves: "Surely Allâh is too powerful and too unassailable to be harmed or to ascribe any harm to Himself. But He has joined us to Himself and took any injustice done to us as an injustice done to Him, and treated our love as His love; then He revealed it in a (verse of the) Qur’ân to His Prophet, and said: and they did not do Us any harm, but they did harm their own selves. The narrator says: "I said, `This is the revelation?' He said, `Yes."' (al- Kâfi )

The author says: Nearly the same thing has been narrated from al-Baqir (a.s.).

". . . too unassailable to be harmed ": It is the explanation of the Qur’ânic expression, "they did not do Us any harm"; the next sentence, "or to ascribe any harm to Himself", rejects also the opposite proposition. Allâh can neither be harmed nor does He do any injustice Himself. Why did the narrator ask the ques­tion, "This is the revelation?" Obviously, for a negative sentence to be plausible there should be a real or hypothetic possibility of a positive connection between the subject and its predicate. We do not say, "This wall does not see". Why? Because wall has no possible connection with seeing. Now, Allâh can have no possible connection at all with injustice or oppression. Therefore, the sentence, "they did not do Us any harm", would seem a super­fluous and implausible assertion, because there was no need for saying that Allâh could not be harmed nor did He harm anyone - unless it was meant to convey some fine point to the listeners. And that point is this: Great persons often speak on behalf of their servants and dependants; likewise, Allâh in this verse is speak­ing on behalf of Muhammad and his progeny (peace be on them all), joining them to Himself in this declaration.

as-Sâdiq (a.s.) recited the verse: this was so because they disbelieved in the signs of Allâh and killed the prophets unjustly; this was so because they disobeyed and exceeded the limits, and then said: "By God, they did not hit them with their hands, nor did they kill them with their swords; but they heard their talks and announced it (to their enemies); so the prophets were caught on that charge and killed; this was the killing, the exceeding the limit and the disobedience." (al-`Ayyâshî)

The author says: A similar tradition from the same Imâm is found in al-Kâfi. Apparently, the Imam inferred it from the words, "this was so because they disobeyed . . ." Needless to say that murder, and especially of the prophets, and rejection of the signs of Allâh cannot be termed as mere disobedience. It should be the other way round. But if we take the disobedience to mean disclosing the secrets then it would be perfectly right to say that they killed the prophets, because they (disobeyed them and) did not keep their secrets and thus delivered them into the hands of their enemies who killed them.