Page 232 - Tafsir of surat at tawba repentance
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                                                 CONCLUSION


                           I  have  attempted  in  this  book  to  acquaint  the  English-speaking  reader  with

                       some  of  the  sciences  of  the  Qur’aan.  The  more  one  understands  of  the  Qur’aan
                       and applies in one’s life, the closer one comes to Allaah. I hope that Muslims will
                       steer the middle course between two unpleasant extremes. The first is to throw up
                       one’s  hands,  claiming  that  Islaamic  knowledge  is  not  the  business  of  the
                       layperson, and that it should be left to specialists in the field. This attitude has left
                       the  Muslim  masses  in  deep  ignorance  of  their  religion.  Whoever  is  not  busy
                       learning about Islaam  is  likely to be busy  in a wide variety of activities that will
                       be a cause  for regret on the Day of Judgment. This  attitude also  leads to a result
                       that  was  severely  criticized  in Soorah at-Tawbah. The  Jews  and  Christians  took
                       their priests and rabbis as  lords  in place of God by  blindly  following them when
                       they prohibited what God had  made  lawful  for them and  made  lawful that which
                       God had prohibited. 135
                           The second extreme is to consider oneself learned after having read a couple
                       of  books  on  Islaam.  Such  persons  feel  duty-bound  to  correct  the “mistakes”  of
                       those around them when they see them doing something they are unfamiliar with,
                       or  when  they  have  heard  somebody  somewhere  say  that  a  certain  practice  is
                       wrong, but they themselves have not studied the different positions of scholars on
                       the issue along with their evidences. I hope that this book will impress upon such
                       people  the  complexity  of  the  Islaamic  sciences,  especially  since  that  which  has
                       been  presented  here  is  the  tiniest  tip  of  an  iceberg  compared  to  what  has  been
                       written on the subject in Arabic.
                           I  would  hope  that  if  the  reader  gets  nothing  else  out of  the  book, that  he  or
                       she  will  leave  with  a  standard  by  which  to  measure  the  statements  of  those  who
                       are offering  interpretations of the Qur’aan. We  live  in a time when  non-Muslims
                       are very eager for the Muslims to reinterpret the sources of our deen. Fundamental
                       to such efforts is reinterpretation of the Qur’aan. Muslims are fairly wary of non-
                       Muslim  reinterpretations,  but  there  is  a  whole  reinterpretation  movement  being
                       advocated  by  Muslims.  This  movement,   which   is  especially  strong  among
                       Muslims  living  or  trained  in  the  West,  takes  many  assumptions  of  western
                       industrial  civilization  as  self-evident  truths  which  must  be  accommodated  in  the
                       Muslims’ understanding and practice of Islaam.



                       135
                          Soorah at-Tawbah (9):31.




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