5. People can learn a lesson from the tragic fate of those nations that spurned
God's Guidance. and instead followed the guidance of others; and they became
so degenerate that their very existence became an intolerable burden on the
earth. Eventually, God's scourge seized them. and the earth was cleansed of
their filthy existence.
The words uttered by, the evil-doers: 'We are indeed transgressors', emphasizes
two points, First, that it is pointless for one to realize and repent of one's
wrong-doing after the time for such repentance is past. Individuals and communities
who allow the term granted to them to be wasted in heedlesness and frivolity,
who turn a deaf car to those who invite them to the truth, have so often been
overtaken in the past by God's punishmet. Second, there are numerous instances
of individuals as well as communities which incontrovertibly prove that when
the wrong-doings of a nation exceed a certain limit, the term granted to it
expires and God's punishment suddenly overtakes it. And once a nation is subjected
to God's punishment, there is no escape from it. Since human history abounds
in such instances, there is no reason why people should persist in the same
iniquity, and repent only when the time for repentance has passed.
6. The words 'call to account' refers to the questioning people will be subjected
to on the Day of Judgement. For it is the reckoning on the Day, of Judgement
that really matters. Punishment dealt upon corrupt individuals and communities
in this world does not constitute their true punishment. Punishment in this
world is no more than what happens when a criminal, who has been strutting scot-free,
is suddenly arrested. The arrest constitutes no more than depriving the criminal
of the opportunity to perpetrate further crimes. The annals of history are filled
with instances where corrupt nations have been punished, proving that man has
not been granted absolute licence to go about doing whatever he pleases. Rather,
there is a Power above all that allows man to act freely but only to a certain
extent, no more. And when man exceeds those limits, that Power administers a
series of warnings in order that he might heed the warnings and give up his
wickedness. But when man fails totally to respond to such warnings, he is punished.
Anyone who considers the events of history, will conclude that the Lord of the
universe must have certainly appointed a Day of Judgement in order to hold the
wrong-doers to account for their actions and to punish them. That the Qur'an
refers to the recurrent punishment of wicked nations as an argument in support
of the establishment of the final judgement in the Hereafter is evidenced by
the fact that the present (verse- 6 )- opens with the word so'.
7. This shows that on the Day of Judgement Prophethood will be the main basis
of reckoning. On the one hand, the Prophets will be questioned about the efforts
they made to convey God's Message to mankind. On the other hand, the people
to whom the Prophets were sent will be questioned about their response to the
message. The Qur'an is not explicit about how judgements will be made with regard
to individuals and communities who did not receive God's Message. It seems that
God has left judgement - to borrow a contemporary judicial expression - reserved.
However, with regard to individuals and communities who did receive God's Message
through the Prophets, the Qur'an states explicitly, that they will have no justification
whatsoever to put forward a defence of their disbelief and denial, of their
transgression and disobedience. They are doomed to be east into Hell in utter
helplessness and dejection.