6.8: Legitimacy of Hagar
and Ishmael p2
Abraham was eighty six years old
when Ishmael was born (Genesis 16:16). When
Abraham reached ninety-nine years of age, Ishmael
was thirteen years old and remained the only son of Abraham.
Now, God promises to establish his covenant with
all of Abraham's "seed" without exception:
"And I will establish my covenant between
me and thee and thy seed after thee in their generations for an
everlasting covenant, to be a God unto thee, and to thy seed
after thee. And I will give unto thee, and to thy seed after
thee, the land wherein thou art a stranger, all the land of
Canaan, for an everlasting possession; and I will be their
God.."
Genesis 17:7-8.
God now informs Abraham that his covenant
shall be given through circumcision, so Abraham immediately
circumcises himself and Ishmael, the father of the Arabs
(Genesis 17:23), thus establishing God's covenant with Ishmael.
The significance of circumcision was also
noted by Biblical scholars as being not merely an external act:
"This was His own sign and seal that Israel
was a chosen people. Through it a man's life was linked with
great fellowship whose dignity was it's high consciousness that
it must fulfill the purpose of God"
Interpreter's Bible, p. 613
To this day, all Muslims practice
circumcision. The "sign and seal" (Romans 4:11) of the Abrahamic
covenant.
We notice that God's covenant
was promised to be with Abraham's "seed." But if
we read Genesis 21:13 we will find that Ishmael is
Abraham's "seed":
"And also of the son of the
bondwoman......he is thy seed."
The same arguments can be made for God's
covenant with Abraham
"the Lord made a covenant with Abram,
saying, Unto thy seed have I given this land, from the river of
Egypt unto the great river, the river Euphrates."
Genesis 15:18
As we can see, this covenant
was intended to be of the same generality as God's covenants
with Noah (Genesis 9:8-17), and David (2 Samuel 7; 23:5). God's
covenant was intended to be a covenant with those who are
obedient to Him and follow his command, not a covenant that
makes a certain group of people genetically superior and closer
to God even from before their birth, such that they are his
"chosen children," and God's prophethood and message can only
come from their lineage.
When Abraham reached one hundred
years of age, God blessed him with a second son, Isaac
(Genesis 21:5). Isaac was born to him through his first wife,
Sarah. The Bible tells us that because of Sarah's jealousy that
Ishmael may inherit with her own son Isaac
(Genesis 21:10), she had Abraham cast out Hagar and
Ishmael and send them to the wilderness of "Paran"
(genesis 21:21). We are told that she was particularly angry
with what she considered to be a mockery on the part of Ishmael
towards her own son Isaac. This incident is alleged to have
occurred after Isaac was weaned (remember this) as narrated in
Genesis 21:8.
Sarah now allegedly ordered Abraham
to cast Hagar and Ishmael out,
(apparently, in Abraham's tribe, children who mock their
brothers and sisters are to be thrown out in the nearest desert
along with their mothers) Abraham obeyed Sarah and cast the
"bondwoman" and her son in the desert and was blessed by God who
told him to "hearken unto her voice." Abraham gave Hagar
provisions and water and put her child "Ishmael" upon her
shoulder and left them in the wilderness of Beer Sheba in
Southern Palestine. When they ran out of water, an angel
appeared and conveyed to her the words of God: "Arise, lift
up the lad, and hold him in thine hand; for I will make him a
great nation." God then showed her a well of water and they
drank. Ishmael dwelt in the wilderness of "Paran"
and begat twelve sons one of whom was called "Kedar."
As mentioned in 6.4, the Arabic form of the word Paran is
Faran or Pharan. It means "two who migrated." It
appears that the place took it's name from Hagar and Ishmael who
came there as two refugees.
We, as Muslims, have a very similar narration
of the same sequence of events in the Qur'an. However, in the
Qur'an, the details differ from the narration of the Old
Testament. Muslims respect Abraham, Sarah, Hagar,
Isaac, and Ishmael (pbut) as very
decent, moral and pious people. Muslims believe that the prophet
Abraham (pbuh) received a revelation from God to take Hagar and
her BABY, Ishmael, to a barren desert in Northern
Arabia (Paran), more specifically to the future
location of Makkah, and to leave them there. When
Abraham began to leave, Hagar called out to him "where are you
leaving us?" After repeating the question three times she asked
him "Did God command you to do this?" Abraham answered "yes." So
Hagar said: "Then He will not forsake us." When Hagar and her
baby ran out of water she began to fear for her baby's life and
took to running back and forth between the two hills of "Al-Safa"
and "Al-Marwa" in search of water. Meanwhile, God sent an angel
who caused water to gush out of the earth for them. This became
the water of the well of "Zamzam" which the
pilgrims of Makkah drink from today. Once water was found in
this place the Bedouins began to settle there and it became the
city of Makkah. Centuries later, Muhammad (pbuh), the prophet of
Islam, was born to the descendants of Ishmael. The rites of
hastening between the two hills of "Al-Safa" and "Al-Marwa" have
been preserved in the Muslim's yearly pilgrimage
to Makkah even to this day.
The major differences in the Biblical and the
Qur'anic narrations are that the OT claim that Hagar
was (originally) left in Beer Sheba and not Paran as
stated by the Muslims, and that this occurred when Ishmael
was not a baby, but a fully grown teenager.
This Old Testament narration can be found to
contain obvious modifications from the following analysis:
According to the Bible, Abraham was eighty six
years old when Ishmael was born (Genesis 16:16).
He was one hundred years old when Isaac was born
(Genesis 21:5). This makes Ishmael fourteen years older than
Isaac. The above expulsion of Ishmael and his mother is alleged
to have occurred after Isaac was weaned (Genesis 21:8). Muslims
wean their children after two years. Biblical scholars tell us
that babies were weaned about the age of three. This makes
Ishmael at least seventeen years old at the time of the alleged
mockery and expulsion. The profile of Ishmael in Genesis 21:14-19 however, is one of a small baby and not that of a full
grown teenager of seventeen years. Let us study it.
1) According to the New Revised Standard
Version of the Bible which was compiled from manuscripts more
ancient than those of the King James Version of the Bible, the
verse of Genesis 21:14 reads "..putting [it] on her shoulder,
along with the child." Did Abraham put a
seventeen year old boy on Hagar's shoulder? It would
be more logical for him to put Hagar on Ishmael's
shoulder if he were, as claimed, seventeen years old at the
time. So Ishmael must have been a baby at the time.
2) In Genesis 21:15 we read "and she cast
the child under one of the shrubs." Did Hagar
"cast" a seventeen year old teenager under a shrub? This too is
consistent with a baby and not a full-grown teenager.
3) We read in Genesis 21:16 that Hagar
sat far away from Ishmael so as not to see him die
before her own eyes. Is this the profile of a full-grown
teenager who should, more appropriately be worried about his
mother or of a helpless baby?
4) In Genesis 21:17 we read the angel's
command to Hagar: "Arise, lift up the lad, and
hold him in thine hand;" Who would be more capable of
lifting the other up, Hagar or her seventeen year old teenage
son? This too is the profile of a little baby.
5) Throughout this story we are drawn a
picture of Hagar doing this, and Hagar doing that,
and Hagar worrying, and Hagar weeping, and so on while Ishmael
sits where he was "cast," under the shrub. Would a full grown
teenager of seventeen sit under a shrub and wait for his mother
and himself to die while his mother looked for water for him, or
would he have her sit in the shade while he went in search of
water
6) Even the angel did not address both of them
but only Hagar, the only one who would understand.
Once again the profile of a baby and not a seventeen year old
teenager.
7) Ishmael is always referred to
as "the child" and "the lad" in the story. Do people usually
refer to seventeen year old teenagers as "child" and "lad"?
8) In Genesis 21:20 we read that after
this incident, "God was with the lad; and he grew, and dwelt
in the wilderness, and became an archer." Is this a profile
of a fully developed teenager or a child who is growing up,
learning, and developing?
The above analysis clearly exhibits evidence
of human modification to the text of this story. The claim that
Ishmael mocked Isaac and that this had
anything to do with Hagar's journey is an obvious
fabrication since Isaac was not even born yet when this story
occurred (Ishmael was still a baby). The reason for Hagar's
journey was not Sarah's jealousy, Ishmael's mockery, or the
racial superiority of Sarah. It was only the command of God,
pure and simple. In an effort to keep all prophets of God
Israelites, even God himself is alleged to have submitted to,
and even blessed the alleged jealous whims of Sarah. Further, if
such elaborate additions to the story could be inserted into the
text, then how much simpler to change the original journey to
Paran to take a detour into Beer Sheba.
The Interpreter's Bible compares the
texts of Genesis 21:14-19 with Genesis 16:1-16 and draws the
following conclusion:
"The inclusion in Genesis of both stories
so nearly alike and yet sufficiently different to be
inconsistent, is one of the many instances of the reluctance of
the compilers to sacrifice any of the traditions which has
become established in Israel."
As damaging and conclusive as this proof of
the modification of the Old Testament is, still, it pales to
insignificance before the much more devastating proof of this
same fact to be found in section 2.3.
Someone may now object: well then, the verses
stating Abraham's age must be the ones which have
been (unintentionally) modified. This is a valid theory,
however, the problem with this theory is that first of all,
these numbers were spelled out in letters and not written
using numerals. Second, the transmitters of the Old Testament
(the Jews) claim that every word and every
letter was faithfully counted and
preserved and thus, they can confidently claim that it would be
impossible for unintentional errors to creep in, even by
accident.
We also notice that even in the New Revised
Standard version of the Bible, Genesis 16:16 and 21:5 state the
same ages mentioned above. Is this not proof of the Qur'an's
claim that the previous books of God were tampered with by the
hands of the unscrupulous few?
It now becomes evident that sometime after God
sent down the Old Testament, someone decided that they did not
want the Arab descendants of Ishmael to be
included in God's covenant with Abraham.
They wanted it exclusive to the Jewish branch of his
descendants. Therefore, the Old Testament was "corrected" in
order to show that God's intent was that His covenant be with
the Jews only.
Now that we see that the original covenant of
God was with all of the children of Abraham (pbuh) without
exception, then we are left with another question: The Bible
describes in great detail the fulfillment of God's promise to
Abraham through Isaac which was fulfilled in Jacob,
Joseph, Moses, David, Solomon, and
Jesus (pbut). But what of his promise to Abraham
through Ishmael? God does not renege on his
promises, so how was it fulfilled? The Bible is, for the most
part, silent about the promise to the Ishmaelites. Why? Because
just as Jesus (pbuh), during the time of the Old Testament had
not yet come and there were only prophesies of his coming
containing unmistakable signs but no detailed stories of his
life, in the same manner, both the Old and New Testament contain
unmistakable prophesies of Muhammad (pbuh) but no in-depth
analyses and stories. The Interpreter's Bible admits that
the Ishmaelites and other descendants of Abraham were
"somehow participating in the Abrahamic covenant"
(page 616). The coming of Muhammad (pbuh), the descendant of
Ishmael, is the fulfillment of this promise.
Some people will claim that even though
Ishmael was Abraham's "seed," still,
"seed" is a lesser designation than "son," and only Isaac
was Abraham's "son." However, the Bible also bears witness to
the fact that Ishmael was Abraham's "son":
"And Abraham took Ishmael his son."
Genesis 17:23
Not only that, but the Bible tells us that
Ishmael remained the legitimate son of Abraham until even after
his death,
"Then Abraham gave up the ghost, and died
in a good old age, an old man, and full [of years]; and was
gathered to his people. And his sons Isaac and Ishmael
buried him in the cave of Machpelah"
Genesis 25:8-9
So was Ishmael a lesser "son"
than Isaac because Isaac's mother was Abraham's
wife while Hagar was not? Once again, let us read
the Bible:
"And Sarai Abram's wife took Hagar her
maid....and gave her to her husband Abram to be his wife.."
Genesis 16:3
So the Bible also bears witness that Hagar was
Abraham's legitimate wife. In fact, if this were not the case
then we would be labeling prophet Abraham an adulterer. A
serious accusation indeed.
Once the legitimacy of Hagar as
Abraham's wife and Ishmael as his
son has been established, now the objection of many becomes that
Isaac was a better and truer son of
Abraham because he was the son of the free woman not the
bondwoman. However, this claim is not supported by the law of
the Old Testament. According to this law, the first born son was
to have double portions of
honor, and even inheritance, and this right could not be
affected by the status of his mother.
"If a man have two wives, one beloved, and
another hated, and they have born him children, [both] the
beloved and the hated; and [if] the firstborn son be hers that
was hated: Then it shall be, when he maketh his sons to inherit
[that] which he hath, [that] he may not make the son of the
beloved firstborn before the son of the hated, [which is indeed]
the firstborn: But he shall acknowledge the son of the hated
[for] the firstborn, by giving him a double portion of all that
he hath: for he [is] the beginning of his strength; the right of
the firstborn [is] his."
Deuteronomy 21:15-17
In the same Interpreter's Bible we read
the following comment on the above verses:
"However, the law of the first-born had
ancient sanction, and so long as it was accepted justice
demanded that mere favoritism not be allowed to deprive the
eldest son of his rights."
The Dictionary of the Bible says:
"However deeply rooted [polygany] was
before the exile may be seen from the parable of Ezk. 23, which
represents Yahweh as the husband of two wives. The law of Dt 21:15-17 which is parallel to several Mesopotamian laws,
protects the 'hated' wife and her children especially if she has
borne the firstborn son (hated here means less loved)..."
The Dictionary of the Bible, John McKenzie, S.
J., Collier books, p. 549
Abraham was eighty six years old (Genesis 16:16) when Ishmael was born and was one hundred years old
(Genesis 21:5), when he was blessed with a second son, Isaac (pbuh).
So Isaac was fourteen years younger than his older brother
Ishmael, the first-born son of Abraham.
It should further be noted here that a similar
occurrence is narrated in the Old Testament regarding a slave
girl named Ruth and a landowner named Boaz (Ruth,
chapters 3 and 4). Ruth, a widowed slave girl, was married to
Boaz and gave him a son named Obed. Obed went on to
become the founder of the royal line of Jews who, according to
the Old and New Testament, were the ancestors of both King
David and Jesus Christ peace be upon them
both (for example Matthew 1:5-16). Not only that, but according
to the same Old Testament, Ruth was a Moabitess (Ruth 2:2).
Moabite women, according to the Old Testament, were women used
to lure Israelite men into immorality and the worship of the
pagan god Baal (for a related story, please read
section 5.2).
So, if a slave woman of a nation of such ill
repute among the Jews as the Moabites is given legitimacy among
the Jews and can even go on to become the ancestor and mother of
their greatest prophets and leaders and indeed Jesus Christ (pbuh)
himself, then why is a whole branch of prophet Abraham's
children cast off simply because their mother too was a slave
girl?
Further, it is well known that fully six of
the tribes of Israel trace their ancestry through the second
wife of Jacob (Israel), Rachel, and two of his
concubines, Bilhah, and Zilpah. Nowhere in the Bible is it
mentioned that these six tribes are disqualified from God's
covenant simply because their mother was the
"second" wife of Jacob or one of his concubines.
Jacob M. Myers, a professor at the
Lutheran Theological Seminary and a contributor to
Interpreter's Dictionary of the Bible, is a well recognized
leading expert on the Old Testament. In his book Invitation
to The Old Testament (pp. 26) he states the following
regarding the Nuzi laws of marriage of Abraham's
(pbuh) time:
"Archaeological discoveries help us to fill
in the details of the biblical narrative and to explain many of
the otherwise obscure references and strange customs that were
commonplace in Abraham's world and
time...... A Nuzi marriage contract provides
that a childless wife may take a woman of the country and marry
her to her husband to obtain progeny But she may not drive out
the offspring even if she later has children of her own. The
child born of the handmaid has the same status as the one born
to the wife. That is why, when Sarah wanted to drive out Hagar
and Ishmael, it was quite objectionable to Abraham
-because of the legal custom of the religion from which he came,
he was reluctant to do so. It required a special divine
dispensation to act contrary to that custom." We have
already seen how the "special divine dispensation" was a
forgery.
Further, while Ishmael was the
first begotten son of Abraham, we notice that Obed
was the tenth grandson of Abraham (The Old and New
Testament genealogies differ in the actual names). So, if Obed
is given such legitimacy in the Old Testament as being a
legitimate father in their most royal line, even though he is
the son of a bondwoman, then Ishamel's claim to this legitimacy
is much older and more pronounced.
Once Ishmael has been proven to
be a legitimate son of Abraham and not only equal
to Isaac, but according to the law of the Jews,
deserving of double the portion of honor and inheritance
allotted to Isaac, then the final objection becomes that Isaac
was specifically chosen to be the child of promise. In A
Dictionary of Biblical tradition in English literature, we
read:
"St. Augustine, in De civitate Dei (15.2),
equates Ishmael "born in the course of nature," with the flesh
and Isaac, "born in fulfillment of a promise" with the spirit.
For Augustine, Ishmael exists outside the realm of God's grace;
for this reason, and because of their enforced wanderings in the
desert, he associates Ishmael and Hagar with Cain."
As we have already seen, God's covenant
was with the "seed" of Abraham (pbuh), among whom
was Ishmael. Secondly, there are many verses which
specifically single out Ishmael for God's blessing. After the
birth of Ishmael and before the birth of Isaac, God
repeats his promise to Abraham to bless all the earth through
his progeny.
"As for me, behold, my covenant [is] with
thee, and thou shalt be a father of many nations."
Genesis 17:4
Also, "And also of the son of the bondwoman
(Hagar) will I make a nation, because he [is] thy seed.
......... I will make him a great nation."
Genesis 21:13
So, not only is Ishmael a legitimate son of
Abraham, but God Almighty promised to bless Ishmael's
descendants just as he would in the future promise to bless
Isaac's descendants. Further, God's covenant of circumcision
with Abraham was fulfilled in Ishmael long before the birth of
Isaac.
As has already been demonstrated in chapters
one and two, the Bible has been modified extensively over the
ages to the point that even conservative scholars now admit that
it's ancient copies contain many thousands of "variant readings"
between one-another. Many examples have been presented. As seen
in chapter two, thirty two conservative
Biblical scholars backed by fifty cooperating denominations bore
witness to the "many" and "serious" errors contained in the
current King James Bible. Even the original ancient manuscripts
themselves contain many differences and conflictions. Whole
passages show up in some "ancient manuscripts" while being
completely missing from older ones. Even geographical locations
are changed from one ancient copy to the next. All Bibles
in existence today are the result of very extensive cutting and
pasting from these various manuscripts with no single ancient
copy being the definitive reference. Even at that, all
Bibles in existence today still contain countless examples of
very serious contradictions of founding Christian doctrine (see
chapter two, and also chapter one).
In the Interpreter's Bible we read:
"Many Israelites did not want a God who
would be equally the God of all nations on the Earth. They did
not want one who would be impartial Holiness. They wanted a God
who would be partial to them. So we read in Deuteronomy of the
demands for a complete extermination of all non-Israelite people
of Palestine (Deuteronomy 7:2) and as to the carrying out of
that injunction read the harsh sentences of Deuteronomy 20:10-17."
Is it possible, in light of the overwhelming
evidence beginning to come to light of the modification of the
Old Testament, that the transmitters of this book (Genesis) made
certain modifications to favor their own people? We have already
seen the evidence.
Such verses as Genesis 17:21 and Genesis 21:21 do not exclude Ishmael
from God's covenant
as some claim. The example of this is one who says: "I love my
parents" and then a few days later says "I love my mother." Does
this mean that he does not love his father? Since God had
already consecrated his covenant between Abraham
and his son Ishmael years before the birth of Isaac,
and Abraham had already circumcised Ishmael so that he might
receive God's covenant, therefore, it was necessary to reaffirm
that Isaac was not left out of this covenant even though it was
established after the birth of Ishmael but before his own birth.
Many people point to the verse of Genesis 22:2 as proof that Isaac
was the only legitimate son of
Abraham. We read:
"And he (God) said, Take now thy son, thine
only [son] Isaac, whom thou lovest, and get thee into the land
of Moriah; and offer him there for a burnt offering upon one of
the mountains which I will tell thee of."
Genesis 22:2
What is going on here? On the one hand we have
verses such as Genesis 16:15, Genesis 17:23, Genesis 17:25,
Genesis 17:26, and Genesis 25:9...etc. which clearly confirm the
fact that not only was Ishmael
the first born son
of Abraham and a legitimate son, but he remained so until the
day Abraham died and was buried. On the other hand we have
Genesis 22:2 which claims that Isaac, Abraham's second son is
the only son of Abraham.
To understand this we need to go back to the
Qur'anic version of this story. In the Qur'an we are told that
Abraham (pbuh) was deprived children until his old
age whereupon he was given Ishmael, his first born
son. Up until this point the Qur'an and the Old Testament are in
agreement. It stands to reason that after having been deprived
an heir for so long Abraham would become extremely attached to
his only begotten son Ishmael. For all he knew then he very
likely might not be blessed with any more children before his
death. We are now told in the Qur'an that Allah (God) Almighty
decided to test Abraham's faith. He therefore decided to set up
a test for Abraham in the one thing which he held most dear to
his heart in all of this world: His only
son. When Ishmael reached the age of striving, God Almighty
showed Abraham a vision wherein he was to sacrifice his only son
Ishmael to God. Abraham went to Ishmael and asked his opinion on
this matter. This was not an attempt by Abraham to escape the
command of God, but only an attempt to better prepare his son.
Ishmael replied to his father: "O my father, Do as you are
commanded. You shall, by Allah's will, find me to be among the
patient."
We are told that the devil then came to
Abraham, Hagar, and Ishmael
in turn trying to convince each one to disobey the command of
Allah. Each one in turn did not respond to him and cast stones
at him till they drove him away. This act is also preserved to
this day in the Muslim pilgrimage to Makkah
in the symbolic act of stoning the three pillars called the "jamarat."
Abraham took his son Ishmael
and placed him on the ground facing down so that he would not
have to look at him. Just when he was about to sacrifice Ishmael
God sent an angel to Abraham to stop him and to provide him with
a ram as an alternate sacrifice in place of his son as a reward
for his sincere intentions. He then further rewarded Abraham
with Isaac, a great and pious prophet as a second
son. This story can be found in the Qur'an. Abraham prayed:
"My Lord! grant me (a son) of the
righteous. So We gave him tidings of a gentle son(Ishmael). And
when he was old enough to strive with him, he said: O my dear
son, I have seen in a dream that I must sacrifice you. So look,
what do you think? He said: O my father! Do that which you are
commanded. Allah willing, you shall find me of the steadfast.
Then, when they had both surrendered (to Allah), and he had
placed him upon his forehead, We called unto him: O Abraham: You
have (already) fulfilled the vision. Lo! thus do We reward the
good. Lo! that verily was a clear test. Then We ransomed him
with a tremendous victim. And We left for him among the later
folk (the salutation):'Peace be unto Abraham!' Thus do We reward
the good. Lo! he is one of Our believing slaves. And We gave him
tidings of the birth of Isaac, a Prophet of the righteous. And
We blessed him and Isaac. And of their seed are some who do
good, and some who plainly wrong themselves. And We verily gave
grace unto moses and Aaron, And saved them and their
people from the great distress, And helped them so that they
became the victors. And We gave them the clear Scripture And
showed them the right path. And We left for them, among the
later folk (the salutation): 'Peace be unto Moses and Aaron!'
Lo! thus do We reward the good. Lo! they are two of our
believing slaves."
The noble Qur'an in Al-Safat(37): 100-113
We notice that the major difference in the
Qur'anic and Biblical versions is that the Qur'an affirms that
it was Ishmael (The father of the Arabs) who was
to be sacrificed, while the Old Testament claims that Isaac
(The father of the Jews) was the one to be sacrificed. However,
if we study the verse of Genesis 22:2 we will find the words "thy
son, thine only [son]." Isaac was never Abraham's
only son. As we have seen, Ishmael was born before Isaac and
remained (according to the testimony of the Bible) the
legitimate son of Abraham until AFTER his death. As we
have already proven, the story of God's command to cast out
Ishmael and his mother due to Ishmael's alleged mockery is a
fabrication. The only son of Abraham who was ever Abraham's
"only" son was Ishmael. This was during the fourteen year period
after the birth of Ishmael but before the birth of Isaac. Notice
how by changing this one word from "Ishmael" to "Isaac" an
entire branch of Abraham's descendants (the Arabs) are
conveniently excluded from God's covenant and it
becomes exclusive to the Jews? Once Ishmael is reinstated as the
one mentioned in Genesis 22:2 then the stories in the Bible
begin to make sense once again.
In Encyclopedia Judica Jerusalem,
volume 9, under the heading "Ishmael," we read:
"It is related that a renowned
traditionalist of Jewish origin, from Qurayza tribe and another
Jewish scholar who converted to Islam, told Caliph Omar ibn 'Abd
al-'Aziz (717-20) that the Jews were well informed that Ismail
(Ishmael) was the one who was bound, but they concealed this out
of jealousy."
"Verily, those who conceal that which Allah
has sent down of the Book and purchase a small gain therewith,
they eat into their bellies nothing but fire. Allah will not
speak to them on the Day of Resurrection, nor will He purify
them, and theirs will be a painful torment."
The noble Qur'an, Al-Baqarah(2):174
"And (remember) when Abraham and Ishmael
were raising the foundations of the House (the Ka'aba in Makkah),
(praying): Our Lord! Accept from us (this service). Verily! You,
only You, are the Hearer, the Knower. Our Lord! And make us
submissive unto You and of our offspring a nation submissive
unto You, and show us our ways of worship, and relent toward us.
Verily! You, only You, are the Relenting, the Merciful. Our
Lord! And send among them a messenger from among them who shall
recite unto them Your verses, and shall instruct them in the
Book and in wisdom and shall purify them. Verily! You, only You,
are the Mighty, the Wise. And who desires other than the path of
Abraham except he who befools himself? Truly, We chose him in
this world, and Verily! In the Hereafter he shall be among the
righteous. When his Lord said unto him: Surrender! (literally:
Be a 'Muslim') he said: I have surrendered (Literally: I have
become a 'Muslim') to the Lord of creation. The same did Abraham
enjoin upon his sons, and also Jacob, (saying): O my
sons! Verily! Allah hath chosen for you the (true) religion;
therefore die not save as men who have surrendered (Literally:
Have become 'Muslims'). Or were you witnesses when death came to
Jacob? When he said unto his sons: What will you worship after
me? They said: We shall worship your God and the God of your
fathers, Abraham and Ishmael and Isaac, One God, and
unto Him we have surrendered. That was a nation which has passed
away. They shall receive the reward of that which they earned,
and you of what you earned. And you will not be asked of what
they used to do. And they say: Be Jews or Christians, then you
will be rightly guided. Say: Nay, rather the religion of
Abraham, the upright, and he did not associate partners (with
Allah). Say: We believe in Allah and that which was revealed
unto us and that which was revealed unto Abraham, and Ishmael,
and Isaac, and Jacob, and the twelve sons of Jacob, and that
which was given to Moses and Jesus, and that which
the Prophets received from their Lord. We make no distinction
between any of them, and unto Him we have surrendered. And if
they believe in the like of that which you believe, then they
are rightly guided. But if they turn away, then they are in
discord, and Allah will suffice you against them. He is the
Hearer, the Knower. The religion of Allah!, and which religion
can be better than Allah's? and we are His worshippers. Say
(unto the People of the Scripture): Do you dispute with us
concerning Allah when He is our Lord and your Lord? Ours are our
works and yours your works. And we are sincere in worship to
Him(alone). Or do you say that Abraham, and Ishmael, and Isaac,
and Jacob, and the sons of Jacob were Jews or Christians? Say:
Do you know best, or does Allah? And who is more unjust than he
who hides the testimony which he has from Allah? And Allah is
not unaware of what you do. That was a nation which has passed
away. They shall receive the reward of that which they earned,
and you of what you earned. And you will not be asked of what
they used to do."
The noble Qur'an, Al-Baqarah(2):127-141
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