Section Two 
1 
This is the sūrah of the ṣalāh for the 
ummah which has practically adhered to it by reciting it in every offering of 
ṣalāh. The ummah has also transmitted the knowledge regarding the status of the 
sūrah through tawātur (historical transmission of knowledge through 
generality-to-generality). The Hadīth of khidāj and the following Hadīth also 
attests to this. The holy Prophet said that God says: “I (God) have distributed 
the ṣalāh between Me and My servant.”(Muslim, No: 395)  That it is the most 
appropriate supplication for the ṣalāh is also strengthened by the fact that 
the Prophet Jesus (sws) taught his disciples a similar supplication for the 
occasion. The Christians, however, lost and forgot parts of it. They have also 
lost the message it conveys. The Almighty says: “Also We covenanted with those 
who claimed to be Christians. But they disregarded part of what through which 
they were reminded (of religious truths).”(5:14)  
I intend to reproduce the supplication 
taught by Jesus (sws) in what follows so that its correspondence to the Qur’ānic 
fātiḥah is made clear. It will also help us appreciate the Qur’ānic eloquence. 
It finds mention in the Gospel of Luke as follows: 
It so happened that in a certain place, Jesus (sws) was at 
prayer. When he finished one of his disciples said, “Lord, teach us how to pray, 
as John taught his disciples.” He answered, “When you pray, say, “Father, in the 
heavens, glorified is Your name. Your kingdom shall definitely manifest itself 
and Your will shall prevail on the earth as it prevails in the heavens. Give us 
each day our daily bread. And forgive us our sins, for we too forgive all who 
owe us something. And do not bring us to the test but save us from evil.” (Luke 
11:1-4) 
Mathew 6:13 adds the following words to 
this prayer: 
“For Yours is the kingdom and the power and the glory, 
forever. Amen.” 
This last sentence is not found in most 
transcripts of Mathew. Perhaps they have taken it from the response of those 
offering prayer behind the imām and added it to the original.  
If you study these verses closely, you 
will learn that they remarkably resemble Sūrah al-Fātiḥah. The words, “father, 
in the heavens” are a result of a textual corruption. The original contained the 
words, “Our Lord”, as Jesus (sws) has been quoted as saying by God Almighty in 
the holy Qur’ān. The following statement has been attributed to him in Sūrah 
Āl-i ‘Imrān (3), Sūrah al-Mā’idah (5), Sūrah Maryam (19) and Sūrah al-Zukhruf 
(43). “Allah is my Lord and yours. Worship Him.” (3:51, 19:36) The words of the 
Gospel subḥānaka (Glory to You) parallel the Qur’ānic words al-ḥamdu lillāh 
(All gratitude is due to God). The only difference between the two expressions, 
however, is that the words subḥānaka are originally used to express 
glorification, whereas the words al-ḥamdu lillāh express glorification as well 
as gratitude.  
The words of Jesus (sws) “Your kingdom 
shall definitely manifest itself and Your will shall prevail on the earth as it 
prevails in the heavens” ask God to implement the Judgment. The Qur’ānic 
counterpart of this statement is the verse māliki yawm al-dīn (Lord of the Day 
of Judgment.) The Qur’ānic words express submission to and reliance on God. The 
Qur’ān avoids invocatory style because of the extraordinary weight of the matter 
besought. This reality has been explained in the following verse of Sūrah Shūrā: 
“Those who do not believe in the Judgment seek to hasten it while those who 
believe in it are fearful of it. And they know that it is bound to come.”(42:18)
 
Expressing this theme in invocatory 
style, however, suited Jesus (sws) because he was appointed to give glad tidings 
of the divine rule to manifest after him in the form of the Prophetic mission of 
Muḥammad (sws) who was entrusted with the task to make this happen. Through the 
Prophet Muḥammad (sws), God revealed and perfected His sharī‘ah. He revealed 
all such parts of the sharī‘ah which he had till then kept secure for His 
servants. There are many verses in the Gospels which indicate that by the 
kingdom of heaven, the Prophet Jesus (sws) meant the advent of Prophet Muḥammad 
(sws). I will explain this issue under my commentary on the Qur’ānic verse: “And 
giving the good news of a Messenger who will come after me, his name being 
Aḥmad.” (61:6)  
It needs to be appreciated that after 
the kingdom of heaven was established by the Prophet Muḥammad (sws), the only 
part of it that is still left is the establishment of the Last Judgment.  This 
is why he did not beseech it. Rather he showed an optimistic expectation for it 
after he expressed gratitude to God, and after he mentioned His lordship and 
mercy. This can be understood with the help of a famous ḥadīth qudsī (sayings 
attributed to God by Muḥammad). The Prophet (sws) says that God says: “I have 
distributed the ṣalāh between Me and My servant.” The ḥadīth goes on to 
mention that when God’s servant utters the words “Master of the Day of 
Judgment”, God responds: “My servant has submitted himself to Me.” This is a 
very beautiful form of showing reliance on God and submitting oneself to Him. 
Jesus (sws) would also do the same at the end of his supplications. 
The statement, “Give us each day our 
daily bread” is an example of a parable, a very frequent feature of Jesus’s (sws) 
statements. Here he has used bread as expressive of the Holy Spirit, which 
descended with what constituted sustenance for the life of the pious and the 
virtuous. It is to this interpretation of a symbolic expression that Jesus (sws) 
himself referred to shortly following the supplication itself. It is customary 
for Jesus (sws) to explain the nature of his parables in the end. He says: “If 
you, then, evil as you are, know how to give your children what is good for 
them, how much more will your heavenly Father (the Supreme Lord) grant of the 
Holy Spirit to those who ask him!” (Mathew 7:11) At another occasion he said, 
“(Scripture says) that man cannot live on bread alone; he lives on every word 
that God utters.” (Mathew 4:4) The implication is that man lives by the will of 
God and by His command. This entails that your true life lies in adhering to and 
following His sharī‘ah. Jesus (sws) refers to the statement of Moses (sws): “To 
teach you that man cannot live on bread alone but lives by every word that comes 
from the mouth of the Lord.” (Deuteronomy, 8:3)  
The above shows that Jesus’ (sws) 
supplication: “Give us each day our daily bread,” means, “Grant us that upon 
which our eternal life depends.” This asks for the spirit of guidance leading to 
the straight path. Jesus (sws) himself has explained the straight path in his 
explanation of the ṣalāh supplication. He says, “Enter by the narrow gate. The 
gate is wide that leads to perdition; there is plenty of room on the road, and 
many go that way; but the gate that leads to life is small and the road is 
narrow, and those who find it are few.” (Mathew 7:13-4) We see that Jesus (sws) 
gave the example of a narrow path for the road leading to spiritual life. This 
is the straight path which leads a servant to his Lord, the source of all life. 
Know that true life is the love of God 
in the most secret recesses of the heart. It is obtained by following the 
guidance which the Prophets of God have shown us. A similar statement has been 
mentioned in the holy Qur’ān. The Almighty says: “Can he who was once dead then 
We gave him life and made for him a light whereby he walks among men be like him 
whose condition is that he is in utter darkness whence he cannot come forth?” 
(6:122) 
God has, in these verses, called the 
belief in God life, and has rendered following the sharī‘ah as walking in that 
light. Both of these always go together. They are inseparable. God has said: 
“Whoever holds firmly to Allah will be shown the straight path,” (3:101) This 
explains the evangelical statement, as is evidenced by the statement of Jesus (sws) 
which is quoted by the Qur’ān repeatedly. Jesus (sws) has been quoted to have 
said, “Allah is my Lord and yours. Worship Him. This is the straight path,” 
(3:51) The implication is that worshipping the one God is the straight path.  
Worshipping God includes following Him, as shall be explained soon. The above 
discussion proves that this part of the supplication taught by Jesus (sws) can 
be compared with our prayer to God: “guide us to the straight path.”  
Jesus (sws) in his statement: “And 
forgive us our sins, for we too forgive all who owe us something,” (Luke 11:3-4) 
seeks God’s forgiveness through adopting the responsibility of forgiveness on 
himself.   
In the declaration: “You alone do we 
worship and You alone we ask for help,” we seek God’s help by practicing every 
good deed and avoiding every evil one. Thus we refer to forgiveness and reward 
for doing good for our Lord. We do not directly ask God for these things, in 
consideration of many important facts. We do not say: “Help us.” We do not even 
say: “Help us for we are your loyal servants.” We mention an intermediary 
metonymically. We say that we do not hold anyone other than You as a deity 
worthy of our worship. Then we refer to two intermediaries. Thus our statement: 
“You alone we ask for help,” in itself is an intermediary. We do not rely on one 
as a source of help. Then these two intermediaries are the greatest sources of 
help. For the noblest action is belief in the unicity of God. Someone among the 
People of the Book asked Jesus (sws): “Which commandment is the most important 
of all?” Jesus (sws) replied that the first is: “Hear O Israel, the Lord our God 
is the only Lord; love the Lord your God with all your heart, with all your 
soul, with all your mind, and with all your strength.” “There exists no 
commandment greater than these.” (Mark, 12:29-30) He pleads to the Book of Moses 
(sws). Tawḥīd (belief in one God) is the most important teaching of all the 
Prophets, as has been clearly put in the Qur’ān. Refer to Sūrah Hūd beside 
others. 
The statement: “And do not bring us to 
the test but save us from evil” (Luke, 11:14) means keep us safe from trials so 
that we do not stumble after having stood firm. If we fall in some evil, bring 
us out of it. Save us. This supplication indeed corresponds to the state of the 
Israelites. Many such verses in the Gospels seek safety from trial, considering 
the weakness of the Israelites and the frequent tests they were put through.
 
However, testing the humans is a sunnah 
(way) of God. None can remain entirely safe from trials. For God says: “The one 
who created life and death in order to test who among you is best in 
deeds.”(67:2) Similarly 29:2-3 reads: “Do men think that they will be left alone 
on saying, ‘We believe’, and that they will not be tested? We did test those 
before them, and Allah will certainly know those who are true from those who are 
false.”(29:2-3) 
The Qur’ān informs us that even the 
prophets and messengers were tested and tried. God Almighty says: “And remember 
that Abraham (sws) was tried by his Lord with certain commands, which he 
fulfilled: He said: “I will make you an imam (leader) to the nations.” (2:114) 
Adam (sws) too was tried through the tree. Noah (sws) was tried through his son. 
God said: “I give you counsel, lest you act like the ignorant!” (11:46) Then 
Noah (sws) entered God’s refuge and sought forgiveness from his Lord. Similarly, 
God says concerning David (sws): “And David gathered that We had tried him: he 
asked forgiveness of his Lord.”(38:24) Regarding Solomon (sws) God says: “And We 
did try Solomon (sws): We placed on his throne a body (without life); but he did 
turn (to Us).”(38:34) The way Moses (sws) and Aaron (sws) were put to trial has 
been mentioned in detail in the Torah. Both could not lead their nation to final 
triumph and died before the Israelites crossed the river of Jordan. God purified 
them both in this worldly life. You can learn how Jesus (sws), Job (sws), and 
Joseph (sws) were tried. Just read through the cries of Job (sws) in his book. 
The Prophet Yaḥyā (sws) was killed. The above introduces us to the fact that 
the Prophets too were tried and tested in their lives. Through we do not know 
the details of the trials of all the Prophets in the divine books and historical 
resources, yet we can learn from the Qur’ān that all must have been put through 
tests and trials. For the holy Qur’ān says: “Who created life and death in order 
to test who among you is best in deeds.” (67:2) 
Jesus (sws), however, in spite of 
knowing that testing and trying humans, including the Prophets, is the sunnah of 
God, fears God and seeks concession for his nation. He appreciates the weakness 
of his nation and seeks God’s refuge from His trials. He himself was tried by 
God for forty days. We can even say that he remained under trial all his life 
till God helped him and raised him up. This has been reported in the Qur’ān. “O 
Jesus! I am going to take you and raise you to Myself and save you from the 
rejecters.” (3:55) 
The ummah of Jesus (sws) too was tested 
and tried frequently. God, however, strengthened those among them who truly 
believed. Such trials of the Christians have been alluded to in Sūrah Burūj of 
the holy Qur’ān. Many incidents in their life corroborate this.  
If one ponders over this supplication of 
Jesus (sws), one feels that perhaps Jesus (sws) foresaw such trials that his 
ummah was going to face. He might have concluded this by reflection on his own 
life. To have a full understanding of this issue, refresh in your mind what has 
happened to his ummah. There were many trials which they could not successfully 
bear. They let the trials overpower them till they reached such a desperate 
state that they lost hope of coming out of this state till the coming of the 
Last Prophet (sws). 
As for Jesus’s (sws) request to save 
him, God saved him in a better manner than he had asked for. However, in spite 
of this supplication for help, he was pleased with the will of God. The will of 
God is, it must be noted, better for the believers. This way Jesus (sws) too 
benefited from being pleased with God’s will. Just consider how he prayed while 
prostrating on the mount of Zaytūn. He prayed on the place called Gethsemane 
where he went into seclusion and separated himself from his followers and said: 
“O Lord, all things are possible to You. Take this cup away from me. Yet, I 
prefer Your will over mine. Let Your judgment prevail.” (Mark 14:34)   
 
He had, before going to pray, asked his 
disciples to do the same. They, however, fell asleep. He kept on visiting them 
again and again at intervals. Every time he found them asleep. Each time he went 
back to pray while he was sad and fearful, yet even through this he remained 
hopeful. 
Now imagine his reaction when he seemed to have lost all hope before 
crucifixion. He says: “My God, why have you forsaken me?” 
Imagine the time when the drink of death reached his lips and God removed it 
from him, delivered him and raised him unto Himself. In this manner the decision 
of the All Knowing God is implemented.  
In a like manner, God saved the true 
believers from among his ummah. They believed in Muḥammad (sws), the unlettered 
Prophet prophesied by Jesus (sws) himself. In future also, whoever among them 
believes in the Last Prophet (sws) shall also be delivered.  
Thus the Almighty accepted the prayers 
of Jesus (sws) concerning the true believers among his ummah. They entered Islam 
in multitudes. They will continue to embrace the faith. Regarding the wrongdoers 
among them, God did not accept his prayer, in the same way God dealt with the 
prayer of Abraham (sws) concerning his progeny. The holy Qur’ān says: “He 
(Abraham) said: ‘and my progeny?’ He (God) said: ‘My promise does not extend to 
the wrongdoers among them.’” (2:124) The above is thus an explanation of the 
words of Jesus (sws): “do not bring us to the test but save us.” 
It is obvious that this supplication by 
Jesus (sws) is another expression of his prayer to give him his daily bread. 
Bread refers to the Holy Spirit or the original guidance. Whomever God guides, 
He saves from trial. Such a blessed person is saved from spiritual evils. Thus 
we see that Jesus (sws) prayed for divine guidance. Then he explained it further 
and revealed to us that leading to this guidance is a difficult path of which 
the opening is a narrow door. This is this guidance which the Prophets of God 
bring. 
We need to appreciate that Jesus (sws) 
asked this in order to highlight and stress the high status of the sharī‘ah. 
This prayer also indicated his fear that his ummah might fall into error. He had 
before him the example of the Jews, who were being tested through the 
prophethood of Jesus (sws). They could have been blessed if they believed in 
him. They, however, rejected him and thus their misstep put them in waywardness 
which earned them the wrath of God. This has been clearly attested to by the 
Gospels and the holy Qur’ān. The Almighty says: “We covenanted with the Children 
of Israel and We sent to them Messengers. Whenever a messenger came to them with 
that which they did not desire some of them they denied and some they slew. They 
thought no evil would come of it, so they were wilfully blind and deaf. And 
afterward Allah turned in mercy toward them. Then again many of them are being 
willfully blind and deaf.” (5:70-1) 
Precisely the same way the words of the 
prayer “the path of those….,” are an extension to and further explanation of the 
sentence, “guide us to the straight path,”. These words stress and emphasize the 
guidance that the seeker is searching for in a precise manner. The besought 
guidance is, it is implied, the privilege which an earlier nation lost and for 
which it consequently earned the wrath of God. Since the holy Qur’ān is the most 
clear and concrete message of God, it has clarified the brief statement with a 
full explanation following it, so as not to leave any doubt concerning the 
nature of the guidance being sought. 
  
(Translated by Tariq Mahmood Hashmi) 
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