- Literal Meaning: It literally means "the path" or "the way to a watering places. Since in rather dry weather of Arabia, find scarce water was ab uphill task, the word literally means finding places for water.
- Technical Definition: However when it comes to usage of this word in the Islamic terminology, it refers to the divine law, commandments, and principles ordained by Allah (SWT) for humanity, covering belief, worship, ethics, and daily life.
The verse 17
وَءَاتَيْنَٰهُم بَيِّنَٰتٍ مِّنَ ٱلْأَمْرِ ۖ فَمَا ٱخْتَلَفُوٓا۟ إِلَّا مِنۢ بَعْدِ مَا جَآءَهُمُ ٱلْعِلْمُ بَغْيًۢا بَيْنَهُمْ ۚ إِنَّ رَبَّكَ يَقْضِى بَيْنَهُمْ يَوْمَ ٱلْقِيَٰمَةِ فِيمَا كَانُوا۟ فِيهِ يَخْتَلِفُونَ
And We gave them clear proofs of the matter [of religion]. And they did not differ except after knowledge had come to them - out of jealous animosity between themselves. Indeed, your Lord will judge between them on the Day of Resurrection concerning that over which they used to differ.
In the 17th verse, Allah says He gave the Children of Israel:
- Clear teachings,
- Revelation,
- Knowledge,
- and guidance,
Yet, they fell into division after knowledge came to them, out of rivalry, jealousy, and selfish conflict. This completely in tangent to the Divine teachings of unity, mutual respect and honour and bondage.
Verse 18 That is why Allah says to Prophet Muhammad ﷺ: “Then We placed you upon a clear Sharī‘ah/path in religion, so follow it and do not follow the desires of those who do not know.”
How scholars correlate them The classical commentators generally see verse 18 as:
- A lesson drawn from verse 17, and
- A warning to the Muslim ummah not to repeat the same error.
Thematic flow between the two verses
- Verse 17:
- Knowledge alone did not save previous communities
- The Children of Israel were not condemned because they lacked revelation.
- Rather: They had knowledge, Scripture (Torah) and guidance - yet they split and corrupted religion because of: Ego, rivalry, worldly interests, sectarianism, and desires (ahwā’).
- This is crucial - The problem was not ignorance alone — it was desire overriding truth.
- Verse 18: Therefore, this verse was revealed with a caution to follow revelations — not desires
- Implication “Then” (ثُمَّ) links the verses directly. The implication is:
- Since earlier communities deviated after receiving knowledge, you, O Muhammad ﷺ, must remain firmly upon the revealed path.
- So verse 18 becomes both: An instruction and a preventive warning.
- Ibn Kathir’s linkage Ibn Kathir is of the opinion that the sequence is intentional, thus explicitly connects these two verses this way:
- Allah mentions how previous nations differed after receiving knowledge. (verse 17)
- Then (verse 18) Allah tells the Prophet ﷺ:
- "You have now been given a clear Sharī‘ah." - that is the path well defined and ordained from Allah.
- Therefore - Stay committed to it and do not follow the desires that caused earlier people to deviate.
- Al-Razi notes something subtle:
- Verse 17 says: They differed after knowledge came.
- Verse 18 says: Do not follow desires.
- Why this order? Because Razi argues:
- Deviation is not always caused by lack of evidence,
- Often people already know the truth,
- But desires distort judgment.
- So the Qur’an is diagnosing a moral-spiritual problem, not merely an intellectual one.
- The contrast between “knowledge” and “desire”
- Concise summary
- Verse 45:17 explains how earlier religious communities received divine knowledge but became divided because of selfish desires and rivalry.
- Verse 45:18 follows directly by instructing the Prophet ﷺ to remain firmly upon the revealed Sharī‘ah and not follow those same destructive desires.
- Together, the verses teach that: The greatest threat to religious truth is not lack of knowledge alone, but allowing ego and desire to override revelation.
- Therefore Muslims must avoid repeating earlier divisions.
- Abul A'la Maududi emphasizes the civilizational meaning of the verse. He argues:
- Islam is not merely a private spirituality - rather it is a complete way of life ordained by God
- Muslims are warned not to replace divine principles with:
- Social trends
- Nationalism
- Cultural pressures
- and Purely secular ideologies
- He interprets “do not follow desires” broadly as abandoning divine ethics for human-made systems.
- Al-Tabari says: “Sharī‘ah” here means a clear method and path in religion. The Prophet ﷺ was given a complete and evident system from Allah
- Tabari emphasizes that “Those who do not know” refers to people lacking true knowledge of God’s guidance.
- Therefore, believers should not:
- Follow opinions unsupported by revelation
- Compromise truth for popular trends or pressures
- Islam is a clear divinely guided path - that is “Sharī‘ah” means a revealed way of life from Allah.
- Revelation should guide human life And NOT:
- Social fashion,
- Political pressure,
- Ego
- or uninformed opinion.
- “Desires” (ahwā’) are spiritually dangerous: In Qur’anic language, “desire” often means:
- impulses,
- biases,
- arrogance,
- selfish inclinations, when they override truth.
- Knowledge is tied to revelation The verse contrasts: Those who truly know, with those driven mainly by desire.
May Allāh (سبحانه و تعالى) help us understand Qur'ān and follow the Sunnah of Prophet Muhammad ﷺ, which is embodiment of commandments of Allah contained in the Qur'ān. May Allah help us to be like the ones He loves and let our lives be lived helping others and not making others' lives miserable or unlivable. May all our wrong doings, whether intentional or unintentional, be forgiven before the angel of death knocks on our door.
- Selected verses from selected Surahs of Al-Qurʾān for compiled verses from other surahs.
- Selected Verses from Al Qur'an about a Specific Subject (Reference Page) to know more about what Qur'an says about specific subjects
- Selected Verses from the Qur'an.



