THE THIRD SURAH AL-'IMRAN – INTRODUCTION: THE MESSAGE The Message of The Quran translated and explained by Muhammad Asad The Third Surah Al-'Imran (The House of 'Imran) Medina Period THIS SURAH is the second or (according to some authorities) the third to have been revealed at Medina, apparently in the year 3 H.; some of its verses, however, belong to a much later period, namely, to the year preceding the Prophet's death (10 H.). The title "The House of 'Imran" has been derived from references, in verses 33 and 35, to this common origin of a long line of prophets. Like the preceding surah, this one begins with the mention of divine revelation and men's reactions to it. In Al-Baqarah the main stress is laid on the contrasting attitudes of those who accept the truth revealed by God and those who reject it; the opening verses of Al-'Imran, on the other hand, refer to the inclination of many misguided believers to interpret the allegorical passages of the Qur'an - and, by implication, of the earlier revealed scriptures as well - in an arbitrary manner, and thus to arrive at esoteric propositions which conflict with the true nature and purpose of the divine message. Since the deification of Jesus by his later followers is one of the most outstanding instances of such an arbitrary interpretation of a prophet's original message, the surah relates the story of Mary and Jesus, as well as of Zachariah, the father of John the Baptist, all of whom belonged to the House of 'Imran. Here the Qur'an takes issue with the Christian doctrine of the divinity of Jesus: he himself is quoted as calling upon his followers to worship God alone; his purely human nature and mortality are stressed again and again; and it is described as "inconceivable that a human being unto whom God had granted revelation, and sound judgment, and prophethood, should thereafter have said unto people, 'Worship me beside God'" (verse 79). The principle of God's oneness and uniqueness and of man's utter dependence on Him is illumined from many angles, and leads logically to the problem of man's faith and to the temptations, arising out of human frailty, to which that faith is continually exposed: and this brings the discourse to the subject of the battle of Uhud - that near-disaster which befell the small Muslim community in the year 3 H., and provided a wholesome, if bitter, lesson for all its future development. More than one-third of Al-'Imran deals with this experience and the many-sided moral to be derived from it. IF YOU LIKED IT PLEASE PASS IT TO OTHERS PLEASE JOIN MY GROUP by visiting Group Home Page:
ISLAMIC EDUCATIONAL – INFORMATIVE – LITERATURE & MORAL/MODEST ARTICLES – FOR MUSLIM UMMAH. Sister Linda Flis Ahmed is a new revert to Islam – has created Islamic Yahoo Group: Asdiqaa_Muslimin @yahoogroups.com Asdiqaa_Muslimin@yahoogroups.com : Please join the group & Share your contributions. (operating from The U.K) English – Urdu - Arabic Asdiqaa_Muslimin promotes mainly comparative religion & the true essence of Islam, which is PEACE. Muslims who are educating others about Islam must do so in the manner prescribed by the Qur'an and the Sunnah. Please JOIN: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Asdiqaa_Muslimin Read more on http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Asdiqaa_Muslimin
|
Search This Blog
Friday, 13 January 2012
[Yaadein_Meri] THE MESSAGE: 3RD. SURAH - AL-'MRAN: INTRODUCTION
__._,_.___
MARKETPLACE
.
__,_._,___
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment