In
The Name of Allah, the Beneficent and the Most Merciful
Volume 1: Surah Baqarah, Verse 62

Surely those who believe, and those who are Jews, and the Christians,
and the Sabaeans, whoever believes in Allāh and the Last Day and does
good, they shall have their reward from their Lord, and there is no fear
for them, nor shall they grieve (62).
*
* * * *
COMMENTARY
The verse first mentions the believers, and then says, "whoever
believes in Allāh . . ." The context shows that the latter phrase refers
to the real belief, the true imān, and that the word, "those who
believe", (mentioned at first) refers to those who call themselves
believers. The verse says that Allāh gives no importance to names, like
the believers, the Jews, the Christians or the Sabaeans. One cannot get a
reward from Allāh, nor can he be saved from punishment, merely by giving
oneself good titles, as they, for example, claim that: no one will
enter the Garden except he who was a Jew or a Christian (2:111). The
only criterion, the only standard, of honour and happiness is the real
belief in Allāh and the Day of Resurrection, accompanied by good deeds. It
should be noted that Allāh did not say, ‘whoever of them believes';
otherwise it would have accorded some recognition to these titles, and
would have implied that there was, after all, some benefit in acquiring
these names.
This theme has been repeatedly expounded in the Qur’ān. The honour
and felicity depend entirely on true and sincere servitude; no name, no
adjective, can do any good unless it is backed by correct belief and good
deeds. This rule is applicable to all human beings, right from the
prophets to the lowest rank. Look how Allāh praises His prophets with all
beautiful and excellent attributes, and then says: and if they had set
up others (with Him) certainly what they did would have become
ineffectual for them (6:88). Also, He describes the high
status and great prestige of the Holy Prophet and his companions, and then
ends it with these words: Allāh has promised those among them who
believe and do good, forgiveness and a great reward (48:29). Ponder on
the significance of the phrase "among them".
Then we find that Allāh had given a man some of His signs but he
went astray: and if We had pleased, We would certainly have exalted him
thereby, but he clung to the earth and followed his low desire . . .
(7 :176) .
There are many verses clearly showing that the honour and respect
with Allāh depends on reality, not on appearance.
TRADITIONS
Salmān al-Fārisi said: "I asked the Prophet (s.a.w.a.) about the
people of that religion which I followed (prior to Islam), and I described
their (way of) prayer and worship. Then it was revealed: Surely those
who believe, and those who are Jews. . . " (ad-Durru 'l-manthūr)
The author
says: Various other traditions with different chains of narrators, say
that this verse was revealed about the people of Salman.
Ibn Faddal said: "I asked ar-Rida (a.s.) why "an-Nasārā" (=
the Christians) were given that name. He said: 'Because they were from a
village called an-Nāsirah (= Nazarath) in
Syria. Maryam and `Isa settled
there after they returned from
Egypt.'
" (Ma`āni '1-akhbār)
The author
says: We shall comment on this tradition when writing on the stories of
`Isa (a.s.) in Chapter 3 (The House of `Imrān) , God willing.
The same tradition says that "al-Yahūd" (= the Jews) got
this name because they are descended from Yahūda, son of Ya'qūb.
(ibid.)
The Imām said: "The Sabaeans are a people, neither Zoroastrian nor
Jews, neither Christians nor Muslims; they worship the stars and planets.
(at-Tafsir, al-Qummi)
The author says:
It is idol-worship of a special type; they worshipped only the
idols of the stars, while others worshipped whatever idol caught their
fancy.
A
HISTORICAL DISCUSSION
Abū Rayhān at-Bīrūnī writes in his book al- ‘āthāru 'l-bāqiyah:
"The earliest known among them (i.e., the claimants of prophethood
was Yudhasaf.
He appeared in
India at the
end of the first year of the reign of Tahmurth; and he brought the Persian
script. He called to the Sabaean religion, and a great many people
followed him. The Bishdadian kings and some of the Kayanis who resided in
Balkh held the sun, the moon, the stars and the planets together with
other elements in high esteem and believed that these luminaries were very
sacred. It continued until Zoroaster appeared at the end of the thirtieth
year of Peshtasav's reign. The remnants of those Sabaeans are now in
Harrān, from which they have got their new name, Harrāniyyah. Also it is
said that this nomenclature refers to Harān, son of Tārukh (Terah) and
brother of Ibrāhīm (a.s.), as he allegedly was one of their religious
leaders and its staunchest follower.
"Ibn Sancala, the Christian, has written a book against Sabaeans.
In that book he has attributed many ridiculous things to this
Harān. For example, he
describes the Sabaeans' belief about Ibrāhīm (a.s.) in these words:
“Ibrāhīm (a.s.) was removed from their community because a white spot had
appeared on his foreskin, and the Sabaeans believed that a person having a
white spot was unclean, and avoided mixing with such person. To remove
that defect, Ibrāhīm cut his. foreskin, i.e. circumcised himself. Then he
entered one of the temples; and lo! an idol called out to him: "O Ibrāhīm!
you went away from us with one defect and came back with two; get out and
do not ever come back to us." Ibrāhīm was enraged; he smashed the idols;
and went out. After some time, he felt remorse for what he had done, and
decided to sacrifice his son on the altar of Jupiter, as it was their
custom to kill their children to please the deities. When Jupiter was
convinced of the sincerity of his repentance, it sent a lamb to him to
slaughter in place of his son.”
" ‘Abdu '1-Masīh ibn Ishāq al-Kindī wrote a book in reply of a book
by ‘Abdullah ibn Ismā'īl al-Hāshimī. In that book `Abdu '1-Masīh writes
about the Sabaeans:
"’It is generally believed that they indulge in human sacrifice,
although nowadays they cannot do so openly. But so far as our own
information goes, they are monotheists who believe that God is free from
every defect and evil, they describe God in negative, not positive, terms;
for example, they say: Allāh cannot be defined or seen, He is not unjust
or oppressive. According to them, the beautiful divine names may be used
for God, but only in an allegorical sense, because no divine attribute can
truly describe the reality. They believe that the management of all
affairs is done and controlled by the sky and the heavenly bodies; the sky
and those bodies are living things having the characteristics of speech,
hearing and sight. They revere the light and the luminaries. One of their
legacies is the dome above the niche in the Umayyid mosque of
Damascus; it was their prayer
house, and at that time even the Greeks and the Romans followed the same
religion. Then it came under Jewish control and they turned it into a
synagogue. Later, the Christians took it over and converted it into a
church. Then came the Muslims, and they changed it into a mosque. The
Sabaeans had their numerous places of worships, and their idols were
named after various names of the sun, and shaped with fixed patterns, as
has been described by Abu Ma'shar al-Balkhi in his book, The Houses of
Worship. For example, there was the temple of Ba'lbak which housed
the idol of the sun; of Qirān, which was related to the moon and built in
the moon's shape, like a shawl worn over head and shoulders. And there is
a village nearby, Salamsīn by name; it is a corruption of its original
name, (Sanam Sīn = the idol of the moon). Likewise, another village is
called Tara'ūz, that is, the gate of venus. They do also claim that the
Ka'bah and its idols belonged to them, and that the Meccan
idol-worshippers were of the Sabaean religion. According to them the
idols, Lat and `Uzza, represented Saturn and Venus. They have many
prophets in their hierarchy, most of them being the Greek philosophers,
for example, Hermes of Egypt, Agadhimun, Walles, Pythagoras and Babaswar
(maternal grandfather of Plato) and many others like them. Some of them do
not eat fish - lest it be spume; nor poultry, because it is always hot.
Also, they do not use garlic, because it creates headache and burns the
blood and semen (which is the source of continuity of the human race); and
they avoid beans, because it dulls the intelligence and also because it
had first sprouted in a human skull. They observe three compulsory
prayers: at sunrise (eight rak `at) ; at noon (five rak`at) ;
and at the third hour of the night.
"’They prostrate three times in each rak`ah. Also, they observe two
optional prayers - at the second and ninth hours of the day.
" `They pray with taharah and wudu '; they take bath after
janābah; but they do not circumcise their children because they
have not been told to do so. Most of their laws concerning marital and
penal codes are like the sharī `ah of Islam; while the rules about
touching a dead body are similar to Torah's. They offer sacrifices to the
stars, their idols and the temples; the sacrificial animals are killed by
the priests and witch-doctors, who read in it the future of the man who
offers the sacrifice and answer to his questions.
" 'Hermes is sometimes called ldris, who is mentioned in Torah as
Akhnukh. Some of them say that Yudhasaf was Hermes.
" ‘Some others have said that the present-day Varraniyyah are not
the real Sabaeans; rather these are mentioned in the books as heathens and
idolaters. The Sabaeans were those Israelites who stayed behind at
Babylon when their majority
returned to Jeruselem in the reigns of Cyrus and Artaxerxes. They were
favorably disposed to Zoroastrian beliefs, as well as to the religion of
Nebuchadnezzar. What resulted from this exercise was a mixture of Judaism
and Zoroastrianism - like the Samaritans of Syria. Most of them are found
in Wasit and the rural areas of Iraq around Ja'far and Jāmidah; they trace
their genealogy to Enosh, son of Seth. They criticize and oppose the
Harraniyyah and their religion. With exception of a few things, there is
no similarity between the two religions: The Sabaeans face towards the
North Pole in their prayers, while the Harraniyyah face towards the South
Pole.
" ‘Some people of the book have said that Methuselah had a son
(other than Lamech), named Sābī, whom the Sabaeans have descended from.
The people, before the sharī`ah spread and before Yudhasaf appeared
on the scene, followed Samanian beliefs; they lived in the eastern part of
the world and worshipped idols. Their remnants are found in
India, China and Taghazghaz,
and the people of Khurasan call them Shamnan. Their relics, places of
worship and idols are seen in eastern Khurasan adjoining India. They
believe in eternity of the universe and transmigration of soul. According
to them, the sky is falling down in an endless vacuum, and that is why it
is moving round and round.’
"According to some writers, a group of them rejects the theory of
eternity of the universe and says that it came into being one million year
ago."
The author says:
All the above description has been taken from the book of al-Biruni.
The opinion, attributed to some writers, that Sabaeans' religion was a
mixture of Judaism and Zoroastrianism flavored with some elements of
Harraniyyah's beliefs, seems better suited in this context; after all, the
verse obviously enumerates the groups which followed a divinely inspired
religion.
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