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OUR MISSION:
UNCOVERING the original message of the Arabic Qur'an by using Lexicons compiled more than 1,000 years ago.

ISOLATING Fact from Fiction.


RECOVERING Hope and regaining the perspective where Humanity is one, God's Message is one, and our Future CAN become one we all look forward to!












© 2010 IQRATHECHALLENGE: INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY PROTECTED BY D.M.C.A. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

© 2010 IQRATHECHALLENGE: INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY PROTECTED BY D.M.C.A. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
Image: 14th C. Qur'an, Mamluk origin, Library of Congress; Rights obtained.

A BREAKTHROUGH project which helps understand the Qur'an AS REVEALED -not just 'as explained.'

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Tuesday, January 26, 2010

Day 23; HQ 2: 265-274; pages 45+46

Welcome Friends:  Ahlan wa sahlan!
Today’s reading (as well as tomorrow’s) is all about how BEST to spend ‘our’ wealth, and the resources we may ‘control.’ 
Although -in reality- it is NOT our wealth and we are only entrusted with it temporarily, we ARE fully responsible for it as long as it is within our reach (HQ57:7):
“BELIEVE in God and His Messenger, and spend (on others)
out of that of which He has made you trus­tees/successors:
for, those of you who have attained to faith and who spend freely
[in God’s cause] shall have a great reward.”

COMMENTS:
1. We stopped yesterday at verse 264 with a parable (about someone who spends for public recognition and does not believe in God), which continues today. 
Verse 265 provides contrast between that and: 
Spending out of a longing for God’s good pleasure, and in firmness of Self.  This is like a fertile garden on high ground upon which there is heavy rain.  It will yield its crop twofold- and will even be productive with a light shower or a sprinkling of dew.  
The difference is in the foundation, the quality of the land, our individual selves… and NOT in what falls upon us.  Hypocrisy is indeed incomparable to Genuineness.  
2. Since we are all ‘trustees/successors’ on earth, inheriting earth’s bounties to dispose of and regenerate for future benefit, the next verse (266) calls upon us to behave indeed as responsible parents would, giving each other AND leaving the next generation the best we can provide.  How would we feel in our weak old age, if we suddenly found all the wealth and gardens we’d left for our children… go up in flames?  That picture elicits our response, a potent realization to deal with now, when there STILL is something we can do about it!
3.   Although we might spend out of what we don’t need, Verse 267 deters us from giving things we do not like to others, or things we consider unpleasant/foul (خبيث).   This is so important; God addresses our innermost intentions here, for only He knows them well and can call our genuineness to account.
4. Verse 268 tells us of the ‘prodding’ we get from our base desires (the Deviant/Satan), in that generosity “would bring us to poverty,” or that we should indeed feel free to “breach the limits imposed upon us (by our higher conscience).” 
When we compare both translators’ rendering of ‘Fah-shaa’ (فحشاء), we find that Y. Ali calls it ‘unseemly conduct, while M. Asad says it is ‘to be niggardly’ or miserly.  They are both right; Y. Ali opted for the more precise definition, while M. Asad preferred the broader connotation which the word has come to mean. 
In Arabic,  (فحش)’fahasha’ denotes the spread of something outside its boundaries, and is only about something corrupt and repulsive.  Our Lexicon* also adds that some people have said that a miser is a 'faahish'  because miserliness is a person’s most repulsive trait (the lexicon considers this a 'broadened' concept).  Why is it a most repulsive trait?  Because by definition, miserliness goes against our being ‘Naas,’ the best of God’s creation, the social, cognizant beings, who comfort and support each other.*
5.   Verse 269 tells us the value of Wisdom; not a single word can we add to Yusuf Ali’s note 318!
Verses 270- 271, 273- 274 provide guidance on spending; in comparison with the spender for public recognition, Verse 271 tells us that it is best to give our gifts ‘sadaqaat’ to the poor privately, although allowing it to be known would also be good.
(‘Sadaqa’ usually refers to what we give as gifts, after we have already given the poor of our wealth what is rightfully theirs (Zakat).  The dues/Zakat are a RIGHT the poor have upon the wealthy.  Although we should not humiliate the poor by publicizing WHO gets the Zakat, it is believed to be a good idea to make it publicly known that the wealthy DO indeed pay their dues as good citizens.  That would encourage other wealthy people to pay their dues, and deflect the resentment or humiliation poor people might feel.)  See Y. Ali’s notes 319-322.
6.  Prophet Muhammad, peace upon him, is told in Verse 272 that he is NOT required to make sure people are guided (see HQ 28:56); well-explained by Muhammad Asad in note 260.  
7. As we have seen, the Qur’an considers us ‘trustees/successors,’ generation after generation, inheriting earth’s bounties and accountable for its use AND regeneration to provide continued benefit to all.
Some might ask: If that’s the case, then what, if anything, can we truly call ‘ours?’  (Even our bodies fall apart -despite our care- and disintegrate..) 
The answer is:
There is only one thing that remains OURS throughout.  It began before our Life in Proximity on earth (الحياة الدنيا), and will be carried into the Later, Final Life (الحياة الآخرة) .  
It is our Relationship with our Creator; a relationship WE DEFINE in this life by our intentions and deeds. 
Only when that Single, Essential, relationship remains sound, can all the other beautiful relationships we enjoy in this life…. live on to the next.


Enough said!


Tomorrow’s reading is from verse 275-282.

Peace unto all!

فحش: كلمةٌ تدلُّ على قُبحٍ في شيء وشَناعة. من ذلك الفحْش والفَحْشاء والفاحشة. يقولون: كلُّ شيء جاوَزَ قَدرَه فهو فاحش؛ ولا يكون ذلك إلاّ فيما يُتَكَرَّه. ويقولون: الفاحش: البخيل، وهذا على الاتِّساع، والبخلُ أقبحُ خِصال المرء.
"ناس" لفظ يخصّ من يأنس ويؤنس له.

Monday, January 25, 2010

Day 22; HQ 2: 257-264; pages 43+44

Welcome Friends:  Ahlan wa sahlan!

The ‘Tanzil’ website (click top-image) is wonderful, and I just heard that some of you are using its AUDIO, listening to the Arabic and trying to read with the recital after familiarizing yourselves with the meanings (from Yusuf Ali, Muhammad Asad, AND the Comments on this page).  WAY TO GO!

In yesterday’s reading we came upon ‘Aayatul Kursi- آية الكرسي -The Verse of Dominion/Knowledge’ a powerful verse, oft-repeated by us in times of need.  Its concepts indeed help us put matters into perspective:  Our problems diminish when we think of God and All we know about Him (which is minimal compared to Who He Is), and then realize that His Knowledge encompasses everything (HQ6:80; 20:98; 40:7), not just us and our problems.  We may be but a tiny part of the heavens and the earth He upholds, yet each one of us IS most important to Him.


COMMENTS:


1.      “God is (ولي) the Protector of/God is Near unto those who have faith…” (Y. Ali, M.Asad respectively).  This is one of those verses that elicit feelings of either anticipation or dread, depending on who the listeners are, and what deeds they have done.  Similar verses are HQ 47:6-11, which end with the statement:

“This, because God is the Protector of all who have attained to faith, whereas they who deny the truth have no protector. (11)

Do listen to Chapter 47 at the Tanzil website (click top image) and notice the distinct cadence to it.  It is called ‘the Sura of Muhammad.’

Some of you will notice that, as translation for ‘wali’ (ولي) in chapter 47, Muhammad Asad uses the word ‘protector,’ although he had earlier used ‘Near unto’ in 2:257!

2.      Verses 258, 260 take us back to Prophet Abraham, peace upon him.  More and more, as we read the Qur’an, we begin to understand the unique relationship this messenger had with God.  We also realize that the Qur’an always highlights one of Abraham’s most important virtues: his critical thinking!

The king (who was proud of his own power), began by arguing with Abraham, but was soon dumb-struck by Abraham’s challenge (verse 258).  In verse 260, God asks Abraham, ‘Haven’t you attained faith?’  Abraham says that he has indeed, but needs to set his mind at rest (Qalb).  Read Muhammad Asad’s comments, 256 and 257.  Both Yusuf Ali and Muhammad Asad understand this verse as referring to Abraham’s instant ‘taming’ of 4 birds, whereas others say that the birds flew back to him after he killed and dismembered them, and put them apart in pieces.  No matter; the Qur’an often refrains from giving details (it does not mention killing the birds or cutting them up) but narrates a story for us to learn a lesson.

3.      Prophet Abraham, peace upon him was a Thinker!  Some people are surprised to see the Qur’an show such high regard for reasoning and thinking, perhaps because they consider Faith and Reason diametrically opposed.  These two could indeed be opposed when one’s faith is blind, or if one is forced to submit to something or someone... but not here.  The Qur’an tells us again and again that faith is a degree of awareness.  We must NEVER be blinded, nor must we ever allow ourselves to be led.  Indeed, that would be Coercion, and there is no coercion in ‘Deen’ (accountability; matters of Faith), as in verse 256.  

Faith which survives trial, is Faith arrived at by Reason, and then sustained by both Reason and Spiritual discovery and growth.  That is why the Qur’an constantly addresses the former and seeks to enhance the latter.  Faith and Reason go hand in hand.

4.      The story in Verse 259 illustrates God’s Power in bringing the dead back to life.  Read Muhammad Asad’s note 253.  Yusuf Ali calls it the story of Ezekiel, note 304.

5.      The next three verses (261-263) discuss the returns and the virtues of spending one’s wealth in the cause of God.  The returns are shown to us in a way we readily understand; in planting one grain and seeing it multiply seven-hundred times; and God tops that for us, manifold.  (Y. Ali specifies it being a grain of corn, which is inaccurate.)

6.      HOWEVER:  True virtue is in spending and then making sure we refrain from reminders of our ‘generosity,’ or from following an act of ‘benevolence’ with a hurtful act.  Kindness and forgiveness are far more virtuous than any act of generosity on its own.

7.      The last verse compares empty acts (done for public recognition by people who do not believe in God) and the returns of such acts- as a barren rock which holds little soil that one might think would benefit from the rain, but actually gets washed away by it… and the parable continues in tomorrow’s reading.


Enough said!



Tomorrow’s reading is from verse 265-274.


Peace unto all!

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