THE A.F.MORRISON MEMORIAL LIBRARY VI x~ TRUBNER'S ORIENTAL SERIES. BOOKS ON ORIENTAL SUByECTS LAO-TSZE, THE GREAT THINKER. By Major- General Q. O. Alexander. Crown 8vo, 6s. A companion volume to the same author's "Life of Confucius. " SULTAN MURAD V. : The Turkish Dynastic Mystery, 1876-1395. With Six Portrait*. By Djemaledpin Bky. Crown 8vo, 9s. net DICTIONARY AND GLOSSARY OF THE KORAN*. With Copious Grammatical References and Explanations of the Text By J. Prnrick. 166 pp., in double column, small 4to, cloth, 1873, 1, 13s. ARABIC-ENGLISH DICTIONARY, on a New System. By H. A. Salmone. 2 vols., 8v<>, half calf, 1890, 1, 16s. Vol. I. Arabic-English, xviii.-1254 pp. Vol. II. English-Arabic Key, referring every word to the Arabic equivalent in Vol. I., 179 pp AL-KORAN. Lithographed Arabic Text, vowel pointed, verses not numbered, according to Mussul- man custom ; printed in clear type on white paper, bound in full leather in Turkish style, 7s. 6d. Catalogue of Books on Arabic Language and Literature, Mohammedan Law, and Mohammedan Religion and t'ts Ui&tory. 32 pp. crown 8vo. Gratis on application. London Kkgan Paul, Tbench TrObner, k Co. LIE A COMPREHENSIVE COMMENTARY ON THE QURAN: COMPRISING SALE'S TRANSLATION AND PRELIMINARY DISCOURSE, WITH ADDITIONAL NOTES AND EMENDATIONS. TOGETHER WITH & Complete Entiei to tfje Eext, lirelimmarrj EKsconrge, anti jfroteg, By the Rev. E. M. WHERRY, M.A. VOL. II. LONDON: KEGAN PAUL, TEENCH, TRUBNER, & CO. L PATERNOSTER HOUSE, CHARING CROSS ROAD. 1896. The rights of translation and of reproduction are reserved. w /of Yfrt CONTENTS. CHAP. PAGE III. Entitled Sur al Imran (The Family op Imran) i IV. Entitled Surat un Nisa (Women) ... 64 V. Entitled Surat ul Maida (The Table) . .118 VI. Entitled Surat al Anam (Cattle) . . -159 VII. Entitled Surat al Araf (The Partition Wall) 201 VIII. Entitled Surat al Aufal (The Spoils) . . 248 IX. Entitled Surat al Tauba (Repentance, Im- munity) 273 X. Entitled Surat al Yunas (Jonah) . . .321 XI. Entitled Surat al Hud 342 XII. Entitled Surat al Yasup (Joseph) . . . 368 XIII. Entitled Surat al Raad (Thunder) . . . 396 4ti>*.'>OX THE QURAN. CHAPTEE III. ENTITLED SURAT AL IMRAN (THE FAMILY OF IMKAN). Revealed at Madina. INTRODUCTION. This chapter contains a variety of passages belonging to different periods. The revelations are, however, all of Madina origin, except- ing verses 26 and 27, which seem to be the remnant of a lost Makkan Sura. As to matter, the chapter may be divided into two portions. The first, extending to verse 1 20, relates to various matters of instruction and warning, suited to the circumstances of the Muslims during the period of prosperity intervening between the victory at Badr and the defeat at Ohod. The remainder of the chapter was intended to counteract the evils consequent upon the misfortunes of the Muslims at Ohod. Probable Date of the Revelations. Verses 1-25, 28-57, 66-94, and 98-120, belong to the period inter- vening between Ramadhan of a.h. 2 (Badr) and Shawwal of a.h. 3 (Ohod). Verses 26 and 27 are Makkan, but their date cannot be ascertained. Verses 58-65 allude to the visit of the Christians of Najran to Madina in a.h. 9. They probably belong to that year. Verses 95-97, referring to the rites of pilgrimage as fully estab- lished, must be referred to the later years of Muhammad's life, say a.h. 10. VOL. II. A CHAP. III.] ( 2 ) [INTROD. The remaining verses, 121-200, belong to a period immediately succeeding the battle of Ohod, and must therefore be referred to the latter part of A.n. 3 or the beginning of a.h. 4. Principal Subjects. God one and self-existent .... The Quran to be believed .... God omniscient Plain and obscure verses of the Qur&n The prayer of those versed in Quranic mystery The punishment of Pharaoh a warning to infidels The victory at Badr alluded to The faithful, their character and reward Islam the true religion The punishment of unbelievers eternal . God omnipotent and sovereign Obedience to God enjoined .... The Virgin Mary- -her conception nurtured by Za< luirias . .... John Baptist, his birth .... Christ announced to the Virgin his miracles apostles, &c Muhammad's dispute with the Christians of Najr&n The hypocritical Jews reproached . Prophets not to be worshipped God's curse on infidels ..... Almsgiving enjoined The Jews unlawfully forbid certain meats The Kaabah founded Muslims are warned against the friendship of Jews &c The lot of infidels and believers contrasted Muslims safe from the enmity of Jews and Chris tians Certain believing Jews commended for their faith Muslims not to make friends of Jews and Christians The battle of Ohod alluded to Disheartened Muslims encouraged . Usury forbidden The doom of calumniators of the apostles Islam not dependent on Muhammad for success The former prophets are examples of perseverance Unbelievers to be avoided .... Certain Muslims disobedient at Ohod 1,2 3.4 5,6 7 8,9 10, 12 3 14-18 19, 20 21-25 26,27 28-34 35-38 39-41 42-57 58-65 66-77 78-83 84-91 92 93-95 96,97 98-105 106-109 110-112 113-115 116-120 121, 122 123-129 130-136 137, 138 139-144 145-148 149-15 1 152-154 INTROD.] ( 3 ) [CHAP. III. The hypocrites rebuked .... Muslims slain at Ohod to enter paradise . Mild treatment of vacillating Muslims . The spoils of war to be honestly divided The faithful sifted by defeat at Ohod The joy of the Ohod martyrs in paradise Certain Muslims commended for faithfulness , The fate of unbelievers . The miser's doom ...... Scoffing Jews denounced they charge Muhammad with imposture ..... Meditations and prayers of the pious God's answer to the prayers of the pious . Certain believing Jews and Christians commended Exhortation to patience and perseverance . verses 155-157 n 158, 159 n 160, 161 j) 162-165 ;i 166-169 II 170-172 11 173-176 11 177-180 181 >i 182-190 i) 191-195 I) 196-198 ii 199 i< 200 IN THE NAME OF THE MOST MERCIFUL GOD. I! (1) A. L. M. (2) There is no God but God, the living, \\ -J. the self-subsisting : (3) he hath sent down unto thee the (I)' A. L. M. See note on chap. ii. ver. 1, and Prelim. Disc, p. 100. (2) There is no God but God, &c. These words express one half of the Muslim creed; they are said to have been delivered on the occasion of a visit to the Prophet by certain Christians from Najran. On being invited to join Islam, they professed their faith in Jesus the Son of God. To this Muhammad replied that they were unable to receive the true religion because of their having attributed to the Deity the human relationships of wife and son. The Christians declared their belief in the Sonship of Jesus, saying, " If God were not his father, who was ? " To this Muhammad replied, that, accord- ing to their own religion, God was immortal, and yet they believed that Jesus would taste of death ; that he ate and drank, slept and awoke, went and came, &c. This, he averred, could not be predi- cated of divinity. See Tafsir-i-Husaini in loco. According to the Tafsir-i-Raufi, this verse contains a distinct re- jection of the Christian doctrine of the Divinity of Christ as well as of the Trinity. The tradition handed down to the present genera- tion by these commentators, and, so far as I know, by all commen- tators of the Quran, confirms our interpretation of chap. ii. vers. 86, 116. Muhammad knew of no Trinity save that of God, Mary, and Jesus, and Muhammadan commentators know of no other Trinity, unless it be that of God, Jesus, and Gabriel see Tafsir-i-Raufi in loco probably a modern gloss of the Bible language, " Father, Son, and Holy Ghost," the term Holy Spirit, as found in the Quran, being CHAP. III.] ( 4 ) [SIPARA III. book of the Qurdn with truth, confirming that which was revealed before it ; for he had formerly sent down the law, and the gospel a direction unto men ; and he had also sent down the distinction between good and evil. (4) Verily those who believe not the signs of God shall suffer a grievous punishment; for God is mighty, able to revenge. (5) Surely nothing is hidden from God, of that which is on always understood to refer to the Angel Gabriel : see chap. ii. 253. No Christian would object to the statement upon which we are now commenting. It is a statement clearly set forth in our Scriptures. But if this statement is intended to refute the Christian doctrine concerning the person of Christ and the Trinity, what becomes of the claims set up for the Quran in this same verse as "confirming that which was revealed before it"? What are we to say of the inspiration of a prophet who seems to have been ignorant of the teaching of the Scriptures he professed to confirm ? If he were not ignorant of these doctrines, then what becomes of his character for integrity ? How he could be so ignorant of them, after personal intercourse with Christians as testified by tradition, as to attribute to them views never held by any sect however heretical, I confess myself unable to show. (3) He had formerly sent down the laic,