Al-Quran could even affect a mountain
Tafheem
ul Quran - Surah 59 Al-Hashr, Ayat 21-21
(Quran 59:21) Had We sent down this
Qur'an upon a mountain you would indeed have seen it humbling itself and
breaking asunder out of fear of Allah.[1] We propound such parables to people
that they may reflect.
Notes
[1].
The parable means that if a huge creation like a mountain had the sense and
knowledge that it had been made responsible and accountable, like man, before
Allah Almighty, for its deeds, it would have trembled from the fear of it.
But
how heedless, senseless and thoughtless is the man, who understands the Quran,
and has known the whole truth through it, yet he is neither seized by any fear
nor feels worried as to what answer he would make to his God about the
responsibilities that have been placed on him. On the contrary, when he reads
the Quran, or hears it being read, he remains un-moved as if he were a lifeless
and senseless stone, which is not supposed to hear and see and understand
anything.
(For
further explanation, see (E.N. 120 of Surah Al-Ahzab).
[E.N.120].
In the end, Allah wants man to realize his real position in the world; if in
that position he regarded the life of the world as mere fun and sport and
adopted a wrong attitude carelessly, he would only be working for his own doom.
Here,
the word “Amanat” (trust) implies Khilafat (caliphate) which, according to the
Quran, man has been granted in the earth. The inevitable result of the freedom
given to man to choose between obedience and disobedience, and the powers and
authority granted him over countless creations for using that freedom, is that
he himself be held responsible for his voluntary acts and should deserve
rewards for his righteous conduct and suffer punishment for his evil conduct.
Since man has not attained these powers by his own efforts but has been granted
these by Allah, and he is answerable before Allah for their right or wrong use,
these have been described by the word Khilafat at other places in the Quran,
and by Amanat here.
In
order to give an idea of how important and heavy this “trust” (Amanat) is,
Allah says that the heavens and the earth, in spite of their glory and
greatness, and the mountains, in spite of their size and firmness, could not
have the power and courage to bear it. But man, the weak and frail man, has
borne this heavy burden on his tiny self.
The
presentation of the trust before the earth and the heavens and their refusal to
bear it and their being afraid of it may be true literally, or it may have been
said so metaphorically.
We
can neither know nor can comprehend Allah’s relationship with His creations.
The earth and the sun and the moon and the mountains are dumb, deaf and
lifeless for us but they may not be so for Allah. Allah can speak to each of
His creations and it can respond to Him, though its nature is incomprehensible
for us. Therefore, it is just possible that Allah, in fact, might have
presented this heavy trust before them, and they might have shuddered to see
it, and they might have made this submission before their Master and Creator.
“Lord,
we find our good and our convenience only in remaining as Your powerless
servants: we do not find courage to ask for the freedom to disobey and do
justice to it, and then suffer Your punishment in case we cannot do justice to
it.” Likewise, it is also quite possible that before this present life Allah
might have given another kind of existence to mankind and summoned it before
Himself, and it might have willingly undertaken to accept the delegated powers
and authority. We have no rational argument to regard this as impossible. Only
such a person, who might have made a wrong estimate of his mental and
intellectual powers and capabilities, can think of regarding it as impossible.
However,
this is also equally possible that Allah may have said so allegorically. In
order to give an idea of the extraordinary importance of the matter, He may
have depicted the scene as if the earth and the heavens and the mountains like
the Himalayas were present before Him on one side and a 5 to 6 foot man, on the
other. Then Allah might have asked:
“I
want to invest someone of My creation with the power that being a subject of My
Kingdom, it may acknowledge My Supremacy and obey My commands of its own free
will; otherwise it will also have the power to deny Me, even rebel against Me.
After giving him this freedom I shall so conceal Myself from him as if I did
not exist at all. And to exercise this freedom I shall invest him with vast
powers, great capabilities, and shall give him dominion over countless of My
creations so that he may raise any storm that he may in the universe. Then I
shall call him to account at an appointed time. The one who will have misused
the freedom granted by Me, will be made to suffer a most terrible punishment;
and the one who will have adopted My obedience in spite of all chances and
opportunities for disobedience, will be raised to such high ranks as no
creation of Mine has ever been able to attain. Now tell, which of you is ready
to undergo this test?”
Hearing
this discourse a hush might have prevailed for a while all through the
universe. Then one huge creation after the other might have bowed down and
submitted that it should be excused from the severe test. Then, at last, this
frail creation might have risen and submitted: “O my Lord, I am ready to
undergo this test. I shall brave all the dangers inherent in the freedom and
independence only in the hope that I shall be blessed with the highest office
in Your Kingdom if I pass the test.”
By
imagining this scene through his heart’s eye only can man judge exactly what
delicate position he holds in the Universe? Allah in this verse has called the
person unjust and ignorant, who lives a carefree life in the place of test, and
has no feeling at all of how great a responsibility he is shouldering, and what
consequences he will encounter of the right or wrong decisions that he makes in
choosing and adopting an attitude for himself in the life of the world. He is
ignorant because the fool holds himself as responsible to no one; he is unjust
because he is himself preparing for his doom and is also preparing the doom of
many others along with him.
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