Prophet Ibrahim’s Debate with King Nimrod
Abstract
This article discusses the debate between Prophet Ibrahim and Nimrod, a Babylonian king mentioned in the Qur'an. It highlights the message that Allah is the ultimate owner of sovereignty and power, granting it to whom He wills. Nimrod, arrogant due to his kingship, proclaimed himself a living god, symbolizing the rise of absolutism and the divine-right theory in history. Kings and rulers have used these two ideas to claim that they were appointed by God and are thus above the law. Nimrod challenged Ibrahim with his claims, but Ibrahim firmly rejected him and invited people to worship the Almighty alone.
Ibrahim's argument centered on the concept that only Allah has the power to create, give life, and cause death. Nimrod, being unable to create ex nihilo, was cornered by Ibrahim's logic. Ibrahim further challenged Nimrod by asking him to bring the sun from the west, exposing his limitations and incapacity to control celestial bodies. Nimrod's speechlessness hinted at his realization of the true power of Allah, but he resorted to violence instead of admitting defeat.
This article highlights the clash between monotheism and polytheism, emphasizing Ibrahim's victory in undermining Nimrod's claims and shaking the foundation of the polytheistic creed. It also touches on the opposing views regarding Ibrahim's argument and concludes by stating that those who choose wrongdoing and injustice are not guided, as they consciously reject guidance and virtue.
The Qur’an mentions prophet Ibrahim’s debate with a person whom Allah had given sovereignty (al-Baqarah, 258). The debate was concerning Ibrahim’s Lord. According to most commentators of the Qur’an, that person was Nimrod, a Babylonian king. The debate took place, most probably, following Ibrahim’s destruction of the idols and before he was cast into the fire (al-Anbiya’, 51-70).
Following are some observations on the event:
Allah is the Owner of all Sovereignty
About Nimrod, the Qur’an says that it was Allah who had given him sovereignty (al-mulk). Here an important message is presented, namely that Allah is the Owner of all sovereignty, authority, and power. He gives sovereignty to whom He wills and takes it away from whom He wills (Quran 3:26).
Sovereignty is a test from Allah which is loaded with heavy responsibilities. Allah tests certain people with it, just as He tests others with the lack of it. As a double-edged sword, sovereignty is intrinsically neither a privilege nor a source of pride. Nor is it a sign that Allah loves a person, or favors him over others.
In the same vein as everything else, sovereignty can be a cause of a person’s success or failure in his earthly assignments. Certainly, Nimrod belonged to the latter category. He was so blinded by his authority and power that he not only became a hard-core nonbeliever and tyrant, but also he regarded himself as a living god.
The debate between Nimrod and Ibrahim occurred because Ibrahim rejected Nimrod and his nonsensical claims. He believed in Almighty Allah alone and was inviting his people to do the same. With the debate, Nimrod challenged both Almighty Allah and Ibrahim as His messenger.
The Genesis of Absolutism and the Divine-Right Theory
Nimrod was the first ruler in history who combined absolutism - which was rooted in unlimited absolute sovereignty - with the notion of the divine rights of kings. He initiated the idea and instantaneously became its most extreme manifestation. The trend signified the culmination of mankind’s deviation from the path of monotheism (tawhid) to the abyss of polytheism (shirk).
As a result, rulers were held as absolute sovereigns. They wielded supreme dictatorial authority, residing above the jurisdiction of every regulation, law, legislature and tradition. They derived their authority directly from god(s), ruling through the Mandate of Heaven.
Every now and then, a ruler – like Nimrod - would elevate himself to the level of divinity. This proved a good and effective way to impose individual programs and control the masses. Ordinary people’s rights were denied and manipulated. They were mere subjects (subordinates, multitudes, and mortal servants).
Hence, such rulers were sovereign deities on earth, operating either on behalf of or independently from god(s) in Heaven. At times, they were also seen as direct descendants of god(s).
After Nimrod, monarchical absolutism by divine right became very popular and widespread. It was a common practice in ancient Egypt (Pharaohs), Mesopotamia, India, and China. Later, to varying degrees, most European monarchs also followed suit. For example, Louis XIV of France (d. 1715) is said to have proclaimed: “I am the State.”
It was held that God had bestowed temporal power on political rulers. They were free to do as they pleased, engendering unprecedented genres of cruelty and despotism. Opposing the practice - coupled with opposing the fixed and irrational dogmas of the Church – was the main goal of the Age of Enlightenment in Europe.
The aim was to overthrow absolute monarchies and replace them with republics and forms of government that would promote popular sovereignty, such as liberal democracies. The French Revolution was the most significant milestone in that evolutionary process. That explains why freedom and equality constitute the mantra of modern civilization.
Needless to say that since day one, Islam opposed absolute hereditary monarchies. It is likewise noteworthy that whenever the true Islamic spirit weakened, Muslim rulers became inclined to monarchical absolutism. Every so often, some of them yet resort to the divine-right theory, while desperately trying to secure an acceptable level of legitimacy for their rule. Both the Umayyads and Abbasids were in part guilty of this development.
Indeed, all forms of political and religious absolutism are, at the same time, forms of Nimrod-ism.
The Strength of Ibrahim’s Argument
In the debate, Ibrahim, apparently answering a question or an objection, says to Nimrod that his Lord is the one who gives life and causes death, to which Nimrod replies that he gives life and causes death.
The question that immediately arises is why Ibrahim mentioned “giving life” before “causing death” when in another context he mentioned “causing me to die” before “bringing me to life” (Quran 26:81).
The answer – and Allah knows best – is that in Nimrod Ibrahim confronted a non believing tyrant who claimed to be a living god, representing both the supernatural and sovereign Godhead. Ibrahim wanted to bring home that it was exclusively Allah who creates things and gives life, and does so out of nothing (ex nihilo), without model or material, and after no pre-existing similitude or pattern.
All existing things are the outcome of this heavenly inimitable process, and all the forthcoming things will be subjected to the same. After that, logically, it is only Allah who is entitled to sustain them and to bring them to an end whenever He so willed.
Death denotes the end of a current existential paradigm that presides over all existence. After death comes resurrection (another form of giving life). Nonetheless, Nimrod did not believe in the Hereafter, so it was at once unnecessary and unproductive to bring it up.
In this manner, Ibrahim instantaneously cornered Nimrod. He could not say to be in charge of life and death because he was not able to create ex nihilo anything. The most he could do was to use, re-use, fashion, process and manipulate what was already there, none of which however could amount to the acts of authentic creation and the giving of life.
Nimrod himself being a segment of the life phenomenon, and being nothing but a creation, could not transcend the bounds of created existence, nor could he behave outside the prescribed physical laws. And since he did not give life, he could not take it away either.
All this sounded simple and clear. However, Nimrod was so much bogged down in arrogance, ignorance and idiocy that the words “simple” and “clear” lost their innate meanings. He had his own vocabulary, as it were, resulting from the world of his egocentric fantasies and self-delusions.
Nimrod is thus said to have brought forward two prisoners, both of whom had been sentenced to death. He then set one of them free and killed the other one, implying thereby that he gave the former life (because he had been earlier sentenced to death) and caused the other one to die (because he was alive and did not have to die, were it not for Nimrod’s self-governing decision).
Elevating the Argument to Another Level
Having realized how irresponsible, shallow and foolish Nimrod’s thinking – and conduct – was, Ibrahim decided to elevate his argument to another level, both conceptually and literally. He said to Nimrod: “Allah brings up the sun from the east, so bring it up from the west.” It was at this point that Nimrod became dumbfounded and overwhelmed.
What Ibrahim did to Nimrod was as Follows
People like Nimrod dwell in their exclusive worlds and spheres, pertaining not merely to their dealings with others, but as well to their own psychological, intellectual and spiritual wellbeing. Nobody has courage to question them, let alone shake them up and expand their horizons. If somehow that happens, such people instantly start displaying symptoms of insecurity, self-doubt and confusion. They become stunned and horrified as they never prepared themselves for the “impossible” and “worthless”. Their ivory towers start crumbling.
In other words, Ibrahim transported Nimrod to another level of actual reality, which was beyond his foolishness and manipulative powers. That level was compellingly genuine and real, and was unfolding beyond the domains of everything Nimrod had ever known. The immediate presence of that reality’s innumerable effects, yet its inaccessibility, intricacy and opacity, made Nimrod comprehend who he actually was and how (in)consequential his pretence was.
Nimrod was told if he claimed that it was he who brings life and death, then he could also rise to the next challenge. He who brings life and death is expected to control the whole of existence as well, and to create whatever was in it, including controlling celestial bodies and their movements. For instance, “the sun rises every day from the east. Therefore, if you were god, as you claimed, bringing life and death, then bring the sun from the west” (Ibn Kathir).
Nimrod’s being dumbfounded and overwhelmed was, in fact, a manner of realization, which he never openly admitted. It only increased his rebellion and cruelty. That is why he proceeded with throwing Ibrahim into the fire. This is indeed something like a realization of Pharaoh of which prophet Musa once reminded him: “Verily, you know that these signs have been sent down by none but the Lord of the heavens and the earth as clear evidence (proofs)” (Quran 17:102).
Nimrod was speechless. Such was not his choice, but rather, he was made to be. If he responded that he could bring the sun from the west, that would have been, by all accounts, plainly implausible and absurd, and would have exceeded even his own standards of irrationality and vanity. And if he, as the second option, declared that he could not do it, that would have meant an admission of defeat, which however did not exist in his book.
Hypothetically speaking, furthermore, Nimrod could have counter-challenged Ibrahim to implore his own God to bring the sun from the west. As a form of defense, he could send the ball into Ibrahim’s court.
But he did not. He knew if bringing the sun from the west was beyond his alleged powers, and the alleged powers of all deities (idols) his people associated with the supernatural and transcendent Godhead, then it must be that the same Godhead runs the universe and dictates the movement of the sun.
In that case – as yet another implicit realization of Nimrod – Ibrahim was closer to that Godhead than he and his polytheistic people. What if that Godhead was Ibrahim’s God, Nimrod must have dreaded.
Nimrod should have reasoned that challenging thus Ibrahim might have spelled a catastrophe in the debate. If challenged, Ibrahim could beseech his God and He could answer his prayer. The fallout of this sudden turn of events would have been of seismic proportions and would have brought about an end to Nimrod’s status and rule. It would have presaged the end of an ideology and an epoch. The matter was no longer about the debate but about sheer survival and the future.
Therefore, the best option was to cut the debate short and resort to violence and deceit instead, which were Nimrod’s best weapons and the weapons of all those who walk in his footsteps.
In addition, it should also be supposed that Ibrahim’s making recourse to the second part of the argument was a carefully premeditated course of action. That way he seems to have intended to score a double victory: one against Nimrod himself and the other against his polytheistic people.
As part of the people’s polytheistic beliefs and practices, they worshipped the sun, which was perhaps the greatest and most important god. Similarly, they worshipped the moon and stars. Nimrod’s purported divinity might have been allied with the divinity of the sun as well because it was in his interest to affiliate himself with the biggest and the best.
Hence, when Ibrahim used the very idea of the sun to overcome and silence Nimrod and his false claims, the double triumph was achieved emphatically. Not only was Nimrod defeated, but also the whole national creed was shaken to its foundations. They were all proven to be as untrue to themselves as they were extraneous to their alleged deities. If the sun was their god, it should have come somehow to their rescue.
Lastly, it needs to be pointed out that many people believe that in his debate Ibrahim employed two arguments, moving from a weaker to a stronger one. They then go to great lengths to justify such an approach and affirm its effectiveness. However, representing the minority, Fakhruddin al-Razi insists that there were no two arguments. There was only one, albeit with two dimensions that were mutually complementing each other.
The Quranic exposition of the event ends with the words: “Allah does not guide the wrongdoing (unjust) people” (Quran 2:258). This means that Nimrod, his people, and whoever adopts their life example, were not guided solely because they freely and consciously chose misguidance and wrongdoing over guidance and virtue, and injustice and oppression over justice and benevolence. They were not guided because they did not want to be, nor did they prepare themselves to be guided.
Topics: Iman (Faith And Belief), Prophet Ibrahim (Abraham) Values: Wisdom
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