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Part of the series on
Qur'anic exegesis
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| Most famous |
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Sunni:
Shi'a:
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| Sunni tafsir |
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| Shi'a tafsir |
- Al-Mizan Fi Tafsir al-Qur'an
- Holy Quran (puya)
- Majma' al-Bayan
- Nur al-Thaqalayn
- al-Safi
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| Sufi tafsir |
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| Mu'tazili
tafsir |
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| Terms |
| *Asbab al-nuzul |
A tafsir ( (Arabic: تفسير) tafsīr, Arabic "interpretation") is Qur'anic exegesis or commentary. Someone who writes tafsir is a mufassir ( (Arabic: مفسر) mufassir, plural (Arabic: مفسرون)
mufassirūn).
Sources of Tafsir
The five traditional sources for commentary of the Qur'an are:
- The Qur'an. This is regarded as the highest form of tafsir, on the belief that the Qu'ran is the word of Almighty God and
authoritative when it explains itself. A related Muslim belief is that the Qur'an is free of contradiction, and that apparent
inconsistencies in its message are inevitably resolved through closer study of the Qur'anic text.
- The hadith. Muslims believe that Muhammad was sent, among other reasons, to explain and clarify the Qur'an to people. The accounts of Muhammad's
teaching recorded in the hadith collections thus contain much tafsir of the Qur'an, under titles such as "Meaning of Qur'anic
verses." An authenticated hadith is regarded the second highest form of tafsir, because the Islamic prophet is explaining it --
but many of these traditions are disputed.
- The reports of the Sahaba. The Sahaba, or companions of Muhammad, also interpreted and taught
the Qur'an. If Qur'anic explication is absent, and there is no authentic tradition deriving from Muhammad, then a consensus of
the companions may be helpful in interpreting a certain verse. Scholars have an obligation to follow that consensus.
- The reports of those who learned from the companions. These people grew up in an environment with people who had known the
Prophet, so their insight is the next in line of the sources of tafsir. (In addition, the recorded practice of those who lived in
the Prophet's city of Medina carry special weight in the Maliki school.)
- Reason. A qualified scholar's personal reasoning (deductive logic and personal evaluation of arguments) is the final method
of understanding the Qur'an; it exists in conjunction with the other four. See Ijtihad. Early
caliphs are strongly associated with this method of tafsir.
The approaches of tafsir
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There are various approaches to interpret the Qur'an--
- Interpretation of the Qur'an by the Qur'an: Because of the close interrelatedness of the verses of the Qur'an with one
another, the Qur'anic verses explain and interpret one another.[1] Many verses or words in the Qur'an are explained or further clarified in other verses of the Qur'an.
[2] Tafsir
al-Mizan is an example of this kind.
- Interpretation of the Qur'an by the Hadith: In this approach the most important external aids used in interpreting the
meanings of the Qur'an are the hadith — the collected oral traditions upon which Muslim scholars
(the ulema) based Islamic history and law. While certain hadith —
the hadith qudsi — are thought to reflect noncanonical words spoken by God to Muhammad,
Muslims do not consider these to form any part of the Qur'an.
- Interpretation of the Qur'an by the History: Most commentators considered it extremely important for commentators to explain
how the Qur'an was revealed -- when and under which circumstances. Much commentary, or tafsir,
was dedicated to history. The early tafsir are considered to be some of the best sources for Islamic history. Famous early
commentators include at-Tabari and Ibn
Kathir.
(These classic commentaries usually include all common and accepted interpretations; modern fundamentalist commentaries like
that written by Sayyed Qutb tend to advance only one of the possible interpretations.)
Commentators feel fairly sure of the exact circumstances prompting some verses, such as surat Iqra, or many parts, including ayat 190-194, of surat al-Baqarah. In other
cases (eg surat al-Asr), the most that can be said is which city the Prophet was living in at the time (dividing between Makkan and
Madinan suras.) In some cases, such as surat al-Kawthar, the details of the circumstances are disputed, with different traditions giving different
accounts.
- Theologies approach: Theologists are divided into myriad of sects; and each group clung to the verse that seems to support
its belief and try to explain away what was apparently against it.
The seed of sectarian differences was sown in academic theories or, more often than not, in blind following and national or
tribal prejudice; but it is not the place to describe it even briefly. However, such exegesis should be called adaptation, rather
than interpretation. There are two ways of interpreting a verse - One may say: "What does the Qur’an say?" Or one may say: "How
can this verse be explained, so as to fit on my belief? " The difference between the two approaches is quite clear. The former
forgets every preconceived idea and goes where the Qur’an leads him to. The latter has already decided what to believe and cuts
the Qur’anic verses to fit on that body; such an exegesis is no exegesis at all.[3]
- Philosophic approach: The philosophers try to fit the verses on the principles of Greek
philosophy (that was divided into four branches: Mathematics, natural science, divinity and practical subjects including
civics). If a verse was clearly against those principles it was explained away. In this way the verses describing metaphysical
subjects, those explaining the genesis and creation of the heavens and the earth, those concerned with life after death and those about resurrection, paradise and hell were distorted to conform with the said philosophy. That philosophy was admittedly only a set of conjectures -
unencumbered with any test or proof; but the Muslim philosophers felt no remorse in treating its views on the system of skies,
orbits, natural elements and other related subjects as the absolute truth with which the exegesis of the Qur'an had to
conform.[4]
- Scientific approach:Some people who are deeply influenced by the natural and social sciences followed the materialists of
Europe or the pragmatists. Under the influence of those anti-Islamic theories, they declared that the religion's realities cannot
go against scientific knowledge. one should not believe except that which is perceived by any one, of the five senses; nothing
exists except the matter and its properties. What the religion claims to exist, but which the sciences reject -like The Throne,
The Chair, The Tablet and The Pen - should be interpreted in a way that conforms with the science; as for those things which the
science is silent about, like the resurrection etc., they should be brought
within the purview of the laws of matter; the pillars upon which the divine religious laws are based - like revelation, angel, Satan, prophethood, apostleship, Imamah (Imamate) etc. - are spiritual things, and the spirit is a development of
the matter, or let us say, a property of the matter; legislation of those laws is manifestation of a special social genius, who
ordains them after healthy and fruitful contemplation, in order to establish a good and progressive society. They believe one
cannot have confidence in the traditions, because many are spurious; only those traditions may be relied upon which are in
conformity with the Book. As for the Book itself, one should not explain it in the light of the old philosophy and theories,
because they were not based on observations and tests - they were just a sort of mental exercise which has been totally
discredited now by the modem science. [5]
- Sufistic: It's an interpretation of the Qur’an which includes attribution of
esoteric or mystic meanings to the text by the
interpreter. In this respect, its method is different from the conventional exegesis of the
Qur’an, called tafsir. Esoteric interpretations do not usually
contradict the conventional (in this context called exoteric) interpretations; instead, they
discuss the inner levels of meaning of the Qur'an. A hadith from Mohammad which states that the Qur’an has an inner meaning, and that this inner
meaning conceals a yet deeper inner meaning, and so on (up to seven levels of meaning), has sometimes been used in support of
this view [8], [9].
Islamic opinion imposes strict limitations on esoteric interpretations specially when interior meaning is against exterior
one.[6]
Esoteric interpretations are found mainly in Sufism and in the sayings (hadiths) of Shi'a Imams and the teachings of the Isma'ili sect. But the Prophet and the lmams gave importance to its exterior as much as to its interior; they
were as much concerned with its revelation as they were with its interpretation. [7]
Genres of Tafsir
- Asbāb al-nuzūl: defining the "occasions of revelation" of the suras.
- Naskh: dealing with the abrogation of one Qur'anic verse by another.
Prohibited Tafsir
" please take into account only those ahadees that have been given proper references i.e the time and situation in which the
hadees was revealed by the holy prophet."
Muslims believe that it is prohibited to perform Qur'anic interpretation using solely one's own opinion. This, they base on an
authenticated hadith of Muhammad which states that it is prohibited.
Imam al-Ghazali (qs), how-ever, qualifies this tradition, with the following under-standing, "The truth is that prophetic
Traditions (akhbar) and statements of the Prophet's companions and of other pious Muslims in early Islam (athar) prove that
for men of understanding there is wide scope in the meanings of the Qur'an. Thus 'Ali (may God be pleased with him!) said,
"except that God bestows understanding of the Qur'an upon a man." If there is no meaning other than that which is related [from
Ibn 'Abbas and other exegetes] what is that understanding of the Qur'an [which is bestowed upon a man]? The Prophet (may God
bless him and greet him) said, "Surely the Qur'an has an outward aspect, an inward aspect, a limit and a prelude." This is
also related. by Ibn Mas'ud on his own authority and he is one of the scholars of Qur'anic interpretation. [If there are no
meanings of the Qur'an besides the outward ones], what is the meaning of its outward aspect, inward aspect, limit and prelude?
'Ali (may God show regard to his face!) said, "If I so will I can certainly load seventy camels with the exegesis of the Opening
Sura of the Book." What then is the meaning of this statement of 'Ali, when the outward exegesis of this sura is extremely short
us [and can be set forth in a few pages]? Abu Darda' said, "One cannot [fully] understand the religion until one sees the
Qur'an from different perspectives." A certain religious scholar said, "For every Qur'anic verse there are sixty thousand
understandings [comprehensible to man]. The understandings of it which remain [incomprehensible to man] are even more than these
in number." [1]
The Qur'an, the utmost authority on Islam asserts that the word was sent to all of mankind and it is up to the whole of
mankind to receive it and sincerely ponder upon its meaning. Islam acknowledges no "clergy" nor monopolisation of "The Word of
God", Islam only acknowledges the "knowledgeable" ones from among a community of people, the "Ulama" or scholars. In the Qur'an,
God exhorts mankind to "think" and "ponder" and "realise" for themselves, thereby awakening true belief inside each and every
human being.
[1] The Recitation and Interpretation of the Qur'an: Al-Ghazali's Theory by Muhammad Abul Quasem Univ of Mayala Press,
Malaysia, CHAPTER FOUR, UNDERSTANDING THE QUR'AN, AND ITS EXPLANATION BY PERSONAL OPINION WHICH HAS NOT COME DOWN BY
TRADITION
Major Mufassireen
Major Tafsirs of the Qur'an include:
- Ibn Kathir: "Tafsir ibn Kathir" - A classic
tafsir, considered a summary of the earlier Tafseer by Ibn Jarir (at-Tabari). It is especially popular because it uses
'hadith' to explain each verse and chapter of the Qur'an.
- Fakhr al-Din al-Razi: "Mafatīh ul-Ghayb" also known as "Tafsir Kabir" - A
voluminous work covering many aspects including science and medicine. Ibn Taymiyyah once
critically said of this tafsir that it "contains everything but tafsir".
- Qazi Abu Saud al-Hanafi: "Irshad ul Aql as-Saleem ila Mazaya al-Qur'an al-Kareem" also known
as "Tafsir Abu Saud".
- Imam Abu Abdullah al-Qurtubi: "al-Jāmi' li Aḥkām il-Qur'an" by the famous Maliki jurist of Cordoba. This 10-volume tafsir is a commentary on the
Qur'anic verses dealing with legal issues. Although the author was a Maliki, he also presents legal opinions of other major schools of Islamic
jurisprudence; thus it is popular with jurists from all of the schools of Islamic law. One
volume of this tafsir was translated into English by Aisha Bewley.
- Qaḍi Abu Bakr ibn al-Arabi: "Aḥkam al-Qur'an" - Known as 'Qaḍi ibn al-Arabi' (ibn Arabi
the judge) to distinguish him from the famous Sufi ibn Arabi,
he was a Maliki jurist from Andalusia (Muslim Spain) His tafsir was published in 3 volumes and contains commentary on the legal rulings of the Qur'an according to the Maliki school.
- al-Jaṣṣaṣ: "Aḥkam al-Qur'an" - Based on the legal rulings of the Hanafi school of Islamic law. This was published in 3 volumes and remains popular
amongst the Hanafis of India, the Middle East and Turkey.
- ‘Allama Mahműd Alusi al-Hanafi: "Tafsir Ruh ul-Ma'ani fi Tafsir il-Qur'an al-Azim wa Saba'
al-Mathani" - Also known as Ruh ul Ma'ani.
- Allama Tabataba'i: Tafsir Al-Mizan - A
20-volume work using the methodology of explaining the Qur'an through the Qur'an.
- Ismail Hakki Bursevi: "Ruh al-Bayan" - 10-volume Arabic work by the founder of the Hakkiyye
Jelveti Sufi order.
- Ibn Ajibah: "Tafsir ibn Ajibah" - 2-volume work by Sidi ibn Ajibah, a Moroccan Sheikh of the Darqarwi Shadhili Sufi order.
- "Tafsir al-Baghawi" - A popular tafsir amongst Sunni Muslims.
- "Tafsir al-Baydawi" - Shortened version of the above tafsir printed in 2 volumes. In Turkey
it is often published with marginal notes by an unknown Turkish Sheikh called 'Konyawi' in 7 volumes.
- "Tafsir ibn Atiyyah" - A tafsir popular in North West Africa.
- "Tafsir ibn al-Jawzi" - Written by the great Hanbali
polymath.
- "Tafsir an-Nasafi" - Written by the great Hanafi theologian Nasafi and published in 2
volumes.
- "Tafsir Abu Hayyan" also called "Bahr al-Muhit" - This tafsir is in several volumes and contains many stories that some
commentators consider to be unreliable. However, it is popular in North Africa as it originated from Andalusia.
- "Tafsir al-Jalalayn" - The great Shafi
Sheikh Jalal ud-Din Siyuti wrote 2 tafsirs - one named "Jalalayn" and the other "ad-Durr
al-Manthur". Both are published (the second in several volumes) and the Jalalayn is very popular with Muslims all over the world due to its simplicity.
Modern Mufassireen
- Mufti Muhammad Shafi'i: A detailed and comprehensive commentary of the Quran written in Urdu,
and has been translated to English. The author is the father of Mufti Taqi Usmani.
Popular among Muslims, it is published in 8 volumes, and addresses many modern issues. All 8 volumes are available in English
here.
- Maulvi Abdul Qadeer Siddiqui: Tafseer-e-Siddiqui (in Urdu). Written
early last century by the former dean of theology of Osmania University. As a professor of Arabic and theology, he attempted to bring the Quranic Arabic
to Urdu as well as address some critical current issues.
- Ahmed Raza Khan Barelvi: Kanzul Iman (in Urdu). Written by the founder of the Barelvi
School of thought in India. This tasfeer is written from a traditional Non-Wahhabi point of
view defending the current beliefs and practicing against that of the Wahhabi movement.
- Sayyed Qutb: In the Shade of the Qur'an - Many praise it as a modern tafsir of the
Qur'an. However, many critics including some Wahhabi and Salafi scholars say that Qutb had little Islamic knowledge and did tafsir in his own opinion. It has also been
attacked for not containing the classical tafsir style (using the above mentioned sources).
- Sayyid Abul Ala Maududi: Tafhim al-Qur'an, complete in 6 volumes written in Urdu.
Translation Towards Understanding the Qur'an is awailable in English.
Also translated in Malayalam, Kannada.
- Amin Ahsan Islahi: Tadabbur-i Qur'an - written by Indian/Pakistani scholar. Based
on idea of the nazm (thematic and structural coherence) in the Qur'an.
- Muhammad Al-Ghazzali, a recent Egyptian scholar who died in 2001 (not the
Imam Al-Ghazali): "A Thematic Commentary on the Qur'an" - A
tafsir that tries to explore the themes that weave through the entire Qur'an as well as the main
theme of each surah.
- Bediuzzaman Said Nursi Isharatul I'jaz, and the Risalei Nur. The former written in Arabic (translated into Arabic and
English) in the classical exegesis style, with special emphasis to combining linguistical nuances with theological depth.
Consists of one volume only, addressing the exegesis of the first chapter and part of the second chapter of the Quran. The
latter, Risale-i Nur, written mainly in Turkish, is a larger work, with four main volumes. It consists of extensive exegesis of
certain verses and explanation of the fundamentals of how to approach the Quran. This work is written in a more accessible style
to the general public and is translated to many languages. http://www.risaleinur.com.tr, http://www.nursistudies.com Nursi also wrote Muhakamat in Arabic (also translated into
Turkish) which outlines in a sophisticated manner the hermeneutics of the Quran. Mathnawi al Nuriya, written in Arabic (abridged
Turkish translation and also a non-academic English rendition is available),can also be considered an exegetical work in that it
contains his deep reflections on different verses of the Quran. Born toward the end of Ottoman State, Nursi, an erudite exegete
and theologian, died in 1960 in modern Turkey.
Tafsir in other languages
Tafsir was almost always written in Arabic but during the 20th century with the
emergence of modern states, the need was felt by Muslims to write commentaries in local languages
so that those who do not know Arabic can still have access to the meaning of the Qur'an.
The following are a list of tafsirs that have been written in non-Arabic languages.
- Elmalili tefsir: Published in 10 volumes it remains the most popular tafsir in the Turkish
language.
- Omer Bilmen: Author of an 8-volume tafsir written in the first half of XX. century. The language used is an old form of
Turkish that many Turks find difficult to understand.
- Konyali Tefsir. A voluminous tafsir written in simple Turkish language but less
popular than the Elmalili tafsir.
- Tafsir Urwa-Tul-Wusqa, published in Urdu in
eight volumes.
- Muhammad Amani Maulavi's Tefsir in Malayalam language (spoken in Kerala, an Indian state ). This Tefsir is published in 4 volumes by
Kerala Nadvathul Mujahideen.
Imam Ahmad Raza Khan Barelavi(r.a) Translation [kanz-ul-iman] is written in Urdu language, it is a famous and most authentic
translation in Urdu in sub contenant.
Sources
- ^ [1]
- ^ [2]
- ^ [3]
- ^ [4]
- ^ [5]
- ^ [6]
- ^ [7]
See also
- [10] Tafseer
Urwa-Tul-Wusqa
External links
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