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Praise be to Allaah.
Firstly:
Allaah delegated the preservation of the Torah and Gospel to their scholars and
monks, based on the evidence of the verse (interpretation of the meaning):
“Verily, We did send down the Tawraat (Torah) [to Moosa (Moses)], therein was
guidance and light, by which the Prophets, who submitted themselves to Allaah’s
Will, judged for the Jews. And the rabbis and the priests [too judged for the
Jews by the Tawraat (Torah) after those Prophets], for to them was entrusted the
protection of Allaah’s Book, and they were witnesses thereto”
[al-Maa'idah 5:44].
Allaah did not guarantee to preserve them as He guaranteed to preserve the
Qur’aan. There are a number of reasons for that:
1.
Allaah wanted the Qur'aan to remain the eternal Book and the law that would
abide until the Day of Resurrection. Allaah says (interpretation of the
meaning):
“And We have sent down to you (O Muhammad صلى الله عليه وسلم) the Book (this
Qur’aan) in truth, confirming the Scripture that came before it and Muhaymin
(trustworthy in highness and a witness) over it (old Scriptures)”
[al-Maa'idah 5:48].
There is no need for the previous Books to be preserved, especially since the
time of the Qur’aan was close to the time of the Gospel, and there were only six
hundred years between them.
2.
That was to be a test for those who had been given the Book – would they play
their role in preserving the Scripture? Would they believe in what it said?
Would they follow the Messenger, the Unlettered Prophet, whom they found
mentioned in the Torah and Gospel? Or would they persist in their stubbornness
and distort, conceal and falsify?
3.
This was also a test for all the followers of Christianity until the Day of
Resurrection. They can see that their Book in which they believe is not free of
distortions, doubts and loss, and they can see that the Book of the Final
Messenger Muhammad (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) has been
preserved and transmitted by so many from so many that no one can doubt its
authenticity, so that calls them to believe in the clear Book, the Holy Qur’aan.
Secondly:
During the Jaahiliyyah, before the coming of the Prophet (peace and blessings of
Allaah be upon him), the people were polytheists (mushrikeen) and
idol-worshippers, and most of them had no real religion or decent laws, except a
few who followed the way of the Messiah (peace be upon him), such as Waraqah ibn
Nawfal, and a few Haneefs who followed the religion of Ibraaheem, who shunned
shirk, idols, alcohol and immorality, and prostrated to Allaah alone, the Lord
of the Worlds, such as Zayd ibn ‘Amr ibn Nufayl, of whom it is narrated in a
saheeh report in al-Bukhaari (3614) that he said: “I will not eat of that which
you slaughter on your stone altars, and I will not eat anything but that over
which the name of Allaah has been mentioned.” And he also used to say: “O
Quraysh, by Allaah, there is no one among you who is following the religion of
Ibraaheem except me.” He used to try to stop people burying their daughters
alive, and he would say to a man who wanted to kill his daughter: Do not kill
her; I will sponsor her. And he would take her and when she grew up he would say
to her father: If you wish, I will give her to you, and if you wish, I will
sponsor her. Narrated by al-Bukhaari (3616).
And Allaah knows best.
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