What about the ways verses conclude?
This relates to the qualities of miraculousness which the Qur’an displays
through its summaries and its unique style of using God’s Beautiful Names by
way of concluding many of its verses.
The Qur’an of miraculous explanation generally concludes the verses with
summaries. These summaries either comprise certain Divine Beautiful Names in
which the contents of the verses originate, or contain in epitome the whole
meanings of the verses or all-comprehensive principles concerning the main
aims of the Qur’an, or confirm and corroborate the verses or incite the mind
to meditation. In these summaries are, therefore, traces from the elevated
wisdom of the Qur’an or drops from the water of life of Divine guidance or
sparks from the lightning of the miraculousness of the Qur’an.
I will point out briefly only ten of the numerous traces and, of the many
examples of several aspects of each trace, I will mention only one, and
append a brief statement of the meaning of one truth out of many contained
in each example.
Most of those traces are found together in most of the verses and form a
real design of miraculousness. Also, most of the verses I will mention as
examples are also examples for most of the traces. With respect to the
verses already mentioned in the previous Words, I will content myself with a
short reference to the meanings of those of them cited as examples here.
• With its miraculous expression, the wise Qur’an spreads out before the
eyes the acts and works of the Majestic Maker. Then it concludes either with
the Divine Name or Names which originate those acts and works, as with proof
of one of the essential aims of the Qur’an like Divine Unity or the
Resurrection.
For example:
• In the verse, He it is who created for you all that is in the earth.
Then turned He to the heaven, and fashioned it as seven heavens. He is the
Knower of all things.(2:29), in a manner to build up to a particular result
or important goal, the verse mentions the most comprehensive works which
testify to Divine Knowledge and Power through their purposes and order, and
concludes with the Name, the Knower.
• While in the verse, Have We not made the earth a cradle, and the
mountains masts? And We have created you in pairs. ... Surely the Day of
Decision is a time appointed. (78:6-8, 12), it mentions the mighty acts and
tremendous works of Almighty God, and concludes with the Day of
Resurrection, which is the Day of Judgment.
• The Qur’an lays out before the eyes of mankind the works of Divine art
without specifying the Divine Name which originates each of those works, and
concludes with either mentioning the Names together or referring them to the
intellect.
For example:
• Say: ‘Who provides for you from the sky and the earth, or who owns all
hearing and sight (of which you have a portion); and who brings forth the
living from the dead and brings forth the dead from the living; and who
rules and directs all affairs?’ They will say: ‘God’. Then say: ‘Will you
not then fear (God) and keep your duty (concerning both this world and the
next)? Such then is God, Your Lord, the Truth. (10:31–2)
• At the beginning, it says: ‘Who is it who, having prepared the heaven
and earth as two sources of your provision, sends rain from there and brings
forth grains from here? Can anyone else other than God subjugate the heaven
and the earth as two stores of your provision? That being so, praise and
thanksgiving are due to Him exclusively.’
• In the second part it means: ‘Who is it who owns your eyes and ears,
which are the most precious among the parts of your bodies? From which shop
or factory did you buy them? It is only your Lord Who is able to give you
those subtle faculties of hearing and sight, and it is also He who creates
and nurtures you. Therefore, there is no Lord save He and it is only He Who
deserves worship.’
• In the third part, it signifies: ‘Who is it who gives life to the dead
earth every spring and quickens hundreds of thousands of species that died
in the previous autumn or winter? Who else other than the Truth, the Creator
of the whole universe, is able to do that? For sure, only He does that.
Moreover, as He gives life to the earth, He will also raise you to life
again after your death, and send you to a Supreme Tribunal.’
• In the fourth part it explains: ‘Who else other than God can administer
this vast universe with perfect order like a palace or a town? Since no one
other than God can do that, the Power Which governs easily the whole of the
universe with all its spheres, is so perfect and infinite that It feels no
need for any partners and helpers. The One Who governs the vast universe,
does not leave smaller creatures to other hands. Therefore, you must admit
God willingly or unwillingly.’
Thus, the first and fourth parts suggest God, while the second suggests
the Lord, and the third suggests the Truth. Understand from this the
miraculousness in Such then is God, your Lord, the Truth. After presenting
the mighty acts of Almighty God, and the important products of His Power,
the Qur’an mentions the Names God, the Lord, and the Truth, and thereby
points out the origin of those acts and products.
• An example of how the Qur’an urges the intellect to reflect on the
works of God and recognize Him: Surely in the creation of the heavens and
the earth, and the alternation of night and day, and the ships sailing on
the sea for the benefit of mankind, and the water which God sends down from
the sky, thereby reviving the earth after its death, and dispersing all
kinds of beasts therein, and (in His) directing and disposal of the winds,
and the clouds subjugated between heaven and earth: are signs for people who
use their intellects. (3:26–7)
The verse enumerates the works and manifestations of Divine creation—like
the manifestation of Divine Sovereignty in the creation of the heavens and
the earth; of Divine Lordship in the alternation of night and day, which
demonstrate the perfection of Almighty God’s Power and the grandeur of His
Lordship, and testify to His Oneness; the manifestation of Mercy in subduing
the sea and the ship which are of great use for the social life of mankind;
the manifestation of the greatness of Power in sending water from the sky
down to the earth and thereby reviving the earth together with its
innumerable creatures and making it like an exquisite place of resurrection
and gathering; the manifestation of Power and Compassion in creating
innumerable varieties of beasts from simple earth; the manifestation of
Mercy and Wisdom in charging the winds to serve in pollination of plants and
the respiration of animate beings; and the manifestation of Lordship in
accumulating and dispersing the clouds (which are the means of Mercy) and
suspending them between the heavens and the earth—like assembling and then
dispersing an army for rest. After enumerating all these works and
manifestations of Divine acting without mentioning the Names originating
them, the verse concludes: are signs for people who use their intellects,
and urges the intellect to reflect fully on the truths they contain.
• It sometimes occurs that the Qur’an describes the acts of Almighty God
in detail, and then concludes with a summary. Through detailed description
it gives conviction, then impresses them on the mind through summary.
For example:
• So will your Lord choose you, and teach you the interpretation of
dreams, and all social and natural phenomena, and perfect His blessing upon
you and upon the family of Jacob, as He perfected it formerly on your
forefathers Abraham and Isaac; surely your Lord is All-Knowing, All-Wise.
(12:6)
This verse points to the Divine blessings on the Prophet Joseph and his
father and forefathers, and says: ‘He has distinguished you with Prophethood
among mankind and, by connecting the chain of Prophets to yours, made your
lineage the most honored and prominent among all other lineages. He has also
made your house a place of education and guidance where knowledge of God and
Divine wisdom are taught, and combined in you, through that knowledge and
wisdom, felicitous spiritual sovereignty of the world with eternal happiness
in the Hereafter. He will equip you—Joseph—with that knowledge and wisdom
and make you a dignified ruler in the world and a noble Prophet and a wise
guide.’ By concluding with Surely Your Lord is All-Knowing, All-Wise, the
verse summarizes all those blessings and means: ‘His Lordship, Wisdom and
eternal Knowledge require that, as with your father and forefathers, He
shall also manifest through you His Names the All-Knowing and the All-Wise.’
• Say: ‘O God, Master of the Kingdom, You give the Kingdom to whom You
will, and seize the Kingdom from whom You will, You exalt whom You will and
You abase whom You will; in Your hand is the good; You are Powerful over
everything. You make the night to enter into the day and You make the day to
enter into the night, You bring forth the living from the dead and You bring
forth the dead from the living, and You provide whoever You will without
measure. (3:26–7)
These verses point out God’s execution of His Laws in the social life of
mankind and in the universe. They emphasize that honor and degradation,
wealth and poverty directly depend on Almighty God’s Will and Choice. Down
to the most insignificant happenings in the realm of multiplicity, nothing
is out of the domain of Divine Will, and there is no place for chance.
After pointing out this essential principle specifically, the verse
continues by affirming that man’s provision, which is most essential to him
in his worldly life, originates directly from the treasury of Mercy of the
Real Provider, and means: ‘Your provision is dependent on the vitality of
the earth, the revival of which is possible through the coming of spring.
Only the One Who has subdued the sun and the moon, and alternates night and
day, can bring spring. If this is so, then again only the One Who fills the
whole surface of the earth with fruits, is able to give one an apple as
provision, and become one’s real provider.’
Finally, by concluding with and You provide whomever You will without
measure, the verses summarize all those acts that they had previously
described in detail, and affirm that the One Who provides you without
measure does all those things.
• The Qur’an sometimes mentions God’s creation and creatures in a certain
series, and by showing that there is a purposeful order and balance in their
existence and life, it is as if it gives a kind of radiance and brightness
to them. Then it points to the Divine Name or Names originating that order,
which, like mirrors, reflect Him. It is as if those creatures mentioned were
each a word and the Names were the meanings of those words, or the creatures
were each a fruit and the Names were their seeds or substantial parts.
For example:
• We created man of an extraction of clay, then We set him, a sperm, in a
safe lodging, then We created the sperm drop into something suspended (on
the wall of the womb), and We created that suspended thing into something
like a lump of flesh chewed, and We created of the lump bones, and We
clothed the bones in muscular tissue, and then We built him in another
creation. So blessed be God, of the highest and most blessed degree of
creating. (23:12–4)
The Qur’an mentions the curious, extraordinary and wonderful,
well-ordered, well-proportioned stages of man’s creation in such a manner
that, as if in a mirror, So blessed be God, of the highest and most blessed
degree of creating is seen in it, and whoever reads or listens to it cannot
help but utter that phrase of blessing. It is a fact that one of the scribes
whom God’s Messengers employed to record the Revelations he received uttered
this phrase before the Messenger recited it, so that he wondered whether he
too was receiving Revelation. Whereas it is the perfect order, coherence and
clarity of the verses that they led to that phrase even before its
recitation.
• Surely your Lord is God, Who created the heavens and the earth in six
days—then set Himself upon the Supreme Throne, covering the day with the
night, pursuing each other urgently—and the sun, and the moon, and the stars
subservient, by His command. Truly, His are the creation and the command.
Blessed be God, the Lord of the Worlds. (7:54)
Through this verse, the Qur’an demonstrates the tremendousness of God’s
Power and the Sovereignty of His Lordship by indicating how, like soldiers,
the sun, the moon and the stars are obedient to His commands; and the
Majesty of the All-Powerful One seated on the Throne of Lordship, Who, by
making night and day continuously follow each other like ribbons or lines of
white and black, inscribes the sign of His Lordship on the pages of the
universe. Therefore, whoever reads or hears this verse feels eagerness to
utter Blessed be God, the Lord of the Worlds. That means this phrase is the
summary of the preceding lines in the context, its substance or seed or
fruit.
• The Qur’an sometimes mentions certain physical or material things or
substances which are of various qualities and subject to change and
disintegration. Then, it connects them—and thereby transforms them in order
to change them into stable, unchanging realities—to certain universal and
permanent Divine Names of light, or concludes with a summary urging
reflection and taking a lesson.
For example, the verse,
• And He taught Adam the names, all of them; then He presented them unto
the angels and said, ‘Now tell me the names of these, if you speak truly.’
They said, ‘Glory be to You! We know not save what You have taught us.
Surely You are the All-Knowing, the All-Wise.’ (2:31–2)
The verses mention first the particular reality that what made Adam
superior to the angels in deserving rule of the earth in the name of God was
the knowledge given to Him as a Divine gift, and then the defeat of the
angels before Adam with regard to knowledge. The Qur’an concludes its
description of that event with two universal Names of God: You are the
All-Knowing, the All-Wise. That is, the angels acknowledge: ‘Since You are
the All-Knowing and the All-Wise, You instructed Adam in the names and made
him superior to us through the knowledge You gave him. You are also the
All-Wise, and therefore give us what You give according to our capacities
and give him superiority because of the capacity he has.’
While in the verses,
• And surely in the cattle there is a lesson for you; We give you to
drink of what is in their bellies, between filth and blood, pure milk, sweet
to drinkers. And of the fruits of the palms and the vines, you take
therefrom a strong drink and a provision fair. Surely in that is a sign for
a people who understand. And your Lord inspired the bee, saying: ‘Take for
yourself, of the mountains, houses, and of the trees, and of what they are
building. Then eat of every kind of fruit, and follow the ways of your Lord
easy to go upon.’ Then comes there forth out of their bellies a fluid of
diverse hues wherein is healing for man. Indeed in this there is a sign for
a people who reflect. (16:66–9)
After demonstrating that Almighty God has made for men some of His animal
creatures like sheep, goats, cows, and camels each a source of pure and
delicious milk, and some of His vegetable creatures like date-palms and
vines, the tables of sweet, pleasant, and delicious bounties, and some of
the miracles of His Power like the bee, a producer of sweet drink wherein is
healing, in order to urge men to compare with these other similar gifts to
reflect and take lessons, the verses conclude with Indeed in this there is a
sign for a people who reflect.
• It sometimes occurs that a verse lays out many results and decrees of
Divine Lordship, and unites them with a bond of unity or inserts in them a
universal principle.
For example:
• God, there is no god but He, the Living, the Self-Subsistent. Slumber
overtakes Him not, nor sleep. To Him belongs all that is in the heavens and
what is in the earth. Who is there that shall intercede with Him save by His
leave? He knows what is before them (in time and space) and what is behind
them (in time and space), and they comprehend not anything of His Knowledge
save such as He wills. His Seat comprises the heavens and the earth; the
upholding of them oppresses Him not; He is the All-High, the Tremendous.
(2:255)
Together with proving the Divine Unity in ten ways of affirmation in ten
different colors in ten sentences or phrases, this verse called the Verse of
the (Supreme) Seat categorically and severely rejects and refutes
associating partners with God with the question Who is there that shall
intercede with Him save by His leave? Further, since there is in this verse
the manifestation of the Greatest Name of God, the meanings it contains
concerning Divine truths are of the highest degree, and it shows an act
expressive of Lordship in Its highest degree. Also, after mentioning the
all-encompassing preserving or upholding of God in the greatest degree—His
control of the whole of the heavens and the earth together at the same
time—as a bond of unity or an aspect of oneness, it summarizes the origins
of those great manifestations in He is the All-High, the Tremendous.
Another example:
• It is God Who has created the heavens and the earth, and sends down
from heaven water wherewith He brings forth fruits for your sustenance. And
He subjected to you the ships to run upon the sea at His commandment; and He
subjected to you the sun and moon constant upon their courses, and He
subjected to you the night and day, and gives you of all you ask Him. If you
count the bounties of God, you can never number them. (14:32–4)
Together with showing how Almighty God has created this vast universe
like a palace for man and how, making the heavens and the earth like two
servants of man, He sends down from heaven water to the earth to provide for
man, these verses also state that, in order that everyone in the world may
benefit from the fruits and grains raised in all the parts of the world and
that people may make their livelihood through bartering the products of
their labor, He has subjected ships to man. That is, He has created the sea,
the winds, and trees of which ships are made in such a form and with such
qualities that as if the wind were a whip, the ship a horse, and the sea a
desert lying under man’s feet. In addition to enabling men to have relations
with the whole of the earth through ships, He has also subdued mighty rivers
as natural means of transportation for men. Furthermore, in order to bring
about seasons and present to men His multifarious bounties produced in them,
the True Giver of Bounties has made the sun and the moon run on their
courses and created them like two obedient servants or two wheels to steer
that vast revolving machine. Besides, He has appointed the night as a cloak,
a cover for man’s rest and sleep, and the day, as a means of making his
livelihood.
Thus, after enumerating those favors of God, in order to show how broad
is the circle of those favors and how uncountable are the favors themselves,
the verses end in this summary: He gives you of all you ask Him. If you
count the bounties of God, you can never number them. That is, whatever man
has asked in the tongue of his capacity and natural neediness, God has given
it to him, His favors upon man are too many to enumerate. Certainly, if
those favors are presented to him on the table of the heavens and the earth
and the sun, the moon, the night, and the day are among those favors, then
of course it is impossible to count them.
• It sometimes occurs that in order to show that the apparent causes have
no creative part in bringing about the associated effect or result, the
Qur’an presents the purposes for the existence of something and the results
it yields.
It does so because the unconscious and ‘lifeless’ causes are only an
apparent veil, and extremely wise purposes and significant results can only
be willed and pursued by an All-Knowing and All-Wise One. Also, by
mentioning the purposes and results, the Qur’an demonstrates that although
the causes seem to inattentive eyes to be adjacent or attached to the
result, in reality there is a great distance between them. The causes are so
far from the creation of the result that even the greatest of the causes are
unable to invent a new result. Thus, in the great distance between the
causes and the result, the Divine Names appear as stars and connect them
with each other. Like the line of mountain peaks seeming to be meeting the
skirts of the sky on the horizon, although there is a vast space between in
which all the stars rise and set, there is likewise distance so great
between the causes and result that it can only be seen through the telescope
of faith and the light of the Qur’an.
For example:
• Let man consider the food (he eats): We pour out the rains abundantly,
then We split the earth in fissures and therein make the grains grow, and
grapes, and fresh herbage, and olives, and palms, and enclosed gardens dense
with lofty trees, and fruits and pastures, provision for you and for your
cattle. (80:24-32)
After mentioning the miracles of Divine Power in a purposeful order,
through the phrase Provision for you and for your cattle, the verses draw
attention to the purpose without mentioning the causes, and prove that there
is a free Agent Who pursues that purpose along with the series of all those
causes and results, and that the causes are only a veil hiding Him from
manifest sight. Through the phrase, Provision for you and for your cattle,
the verses declare that the ‘material or natural’ causes have no creative
part in bringing about the results, and mean: The water necessary for your
and your cattle’s provision comes from the heaven. Since that water has no
ability to have mercy on you and your cattle and thereby provide for you, it
does not come by itself, rather it is sent down. Then, earth splits in
clefts for vegetation to grow in to provide for you. But unfeeling,
unconscious earth has no ability to consider your provision and have mercy
on you, and therefore does not split by itself; rather someone else opens
that ‘door’ to you and hands you your provision. Also, since pasturage and
trees are far from thinking about your provision and producing fruits and
grains out of mercy for you, in reality they are, as the verses demonstrate,
threads, ropes or cables which an All-Wise, All-Merciful One stretches out
from behind a veil to extend His bounties to living beings. Thus, in these
verses several Divine Names like the All-Merciful, the All-Compassionate,
the All-Provider, the All-Giver of Bounties, and the All-Magnificent
manifest themselves.
• Do you not see how God drives the clouds lightly, then gathers them
together, in piles and completes the circuit between them? Then you see the
rain issuing out of the midst of them. And He causes (clouds like) mountains
charged with hail to descend from the heaven, and He makes it to fall on
whom He wills, and from whom He wills He turns it aside. The brightness of
His lightning all but takes away the sight! God turns about the night and
the day. Truly, in that is a lesson for men of insight. God has created
every moving creature of water; some of them go upon their bellies; and some
of them go upon two feet, and some of them go on four feet; God creates
whatever He wills. Surely God is All-Powerful over all things. (24:43–5)
These verses explain the curious Divine disposals in sending the rain
from the accumulated clouds, which are among the most important of the
miracles of Divine Lordship and the most curious veils over the Divine
treasuries of Mercy. While the particles forming the clouds are scattered in
the atmosphere, they come together, like the assembling of a dispersed army
at the call of a trumpet, to form a cloud at the command of God. Then, like
small troops coming from different directions to form an army, God joins the
clouds together in a way to enable the completion of an electric circuit
between them, and causes those piled-up masses of clouds resembling
mountains and charged with either rain or snow or hail, to pour down the
water of life to all living beings on the earth.
The rain does not come down by itself. Rather, it is sent down because it
comes for certain purposes and according to need. While the atmosphere is
clear and nothing is seen in it by way of clouds, the mountain-like forms of
clouds, gathered like a striking assembly, do not assemble of their own
accord, but rather One Who knows the living beings with all their needs
gathers them together to send rain therefrom. Thus, all these events
together suggest several Divine Names like the All-Powerful, the
All-Knowing, the All-Disposer of Things, the All-Arranger, the
All-Upbringing, the All-Helper, and the Reviver.
• In order to convince the heart of the wonderful acts of God Almighty in
the Hereafter and to prepare the intellect to confirm them, the Qur’an
sometimes mentions His amazing actions in the world, or describes His
miraculous acts pertaining to the future and the Hereafter in such a manner
that we are convinced of them through something familiarly observed every
day.
For example:
• Does man not regard how We have created him of a sperm-drop? Yet lo, he
is a manifest adversary. And he has coined for Us a similitude, and has
forgotten his creation; he says, ‘Who will revive the bones when they have
rotted away?’ Say: ‘He will revive them Who originated them the first time;
He knows all creation, Who has made for you out of the green tree fire and
lo, from it you kindle.’ Is not He Who created the heavens and the earth
able to create the like of them? Yes indeed; He is the All-Creator, the
All-Knowing. His command, when He wills a thing, is to say to it ‘Be’, and
it is. So glory be to Him, in Whose hand is the dominion of everything, and
unto Him you will be returned. (36:77-83)
In the verses above, the Qur’an proves the raising of the dead in seven
or eight ways. First, it presents the first creation of people and means:
‘You see how you are created through the stages of a sperm-drop, something
suspended on the wall of the mother’s womb, something like a lump of chewed
flesh, the bones and the clothing of bones in muscular tissue. Then, as you
do witness this, how can you deny the other creation, the raising of the
dead, which is like the first one, even easier than it?’
By reminding man of His great favors to him through He has made for you
out of the green tree fire, Almighty God means: ‘The One Who bestows such
favors on you does not leave you to yourselves, so that you enter the grave
and lie there not to be raised again.’ Also He suggests: ‘While you see how
dead or dried trees are revived and turn green, how can you deem it unlikely
that wood-like bones will be revived again? Further, is He Who created the
heavens and the earth unable to create man, who is the fruit of the heavens
and the earth? Does One Who governs a huge tree attach no importance to the
fruit of that tree and leave it to others? Do you think that He will leave
man, the result of the tree of creation, to his own devices or to others and
thereby allow that tree of creation, all parts of which have been kneaded
with wisdom, to go to waste?’ Again He means: ‘The One Who will revive you
on the Day of Judgment is such that the whole of the universe is like an
obedient soldier before Him. It submits itself with perfect obedience to His
command of ‘Be!’, and it is. The creation of spring is as easy for Him as
the creation of a single flower. It is absolutely improper and irrational to
see Him as impotent and challenge His Power, saying: Who will revive the
bones?
Then, through the sentence So glory be to Him, in Whose hand is the
dominion of all things, the Qur’an signifies: ‘The dominion of everything is
in His hand; the keys to all things are with Him. He turns about the night
and the day, and winter and summer, as easily as turning over the pages of a
book. He is such an All-Powerful One of Majesty that like closing down one
of two houses and opening up the other, He closes one of the two worlds,
this one and the next, and opens the other.’ Since this is so and as the
result of all proofs, unto Him you will be returned. That is, He will raise
you out of your graves, and gathering all of you in the place of Mustering,
call you to account for whatever you did while in the world.’
Thus, all those verses prepare the mind and the heart to accept the
Resurrection because they show its like among the Divine acts in the world.
• The Qur’an sometimes mentions God’s acts in the other world in such a
manner that by suggesting their like in the world, it leaves no room for
denial or for deeming them improbable.
• For example, in the suras beginning with When the sun is folded up (al-Takwir,
81.1), and When the heaven is cleft asunder (al-Infitar, 82.1), and When the
heaven is split asunder (al-Inshiqaq, 84.1), the Qur’an describes the mighty
upheavals and Divine operations during the destruction of the world and the
Great Gathering in such a manner that, since man observes their like in
spring and autumn, and in some disastrous events like earthquakes and big
storms, he feels no difficulty in accepting these revolutions, which cause
dread to the heart and cannot be comprehended by the mind. Since it would be
too lengthy even to summarize the meaning of those suras, I shall be content
with pointing out a single verse as an example. The verse—
When the rolls of pages are laid open. (81:10)
states that on the Day of Judgment everyone will find the deeds he did in
the world, recorded in a roll of pages, laid open before him. Since this
seems so incredible on first hearing, the mind has great difficulty in
comprehending it. However, in the general revival observed in spring there
are many events similar to that laying open of the pages, as well as to
others which the sura mentions concerning the final destruction of the world
and the Resurrection. For every fruit-bearing tree or flowering plant has
deeds, actions, duties and its kind of worship which it does so as to
demonstrate the Divine Names manifested in it. All of its deeds (the cycles
of its life from germination to blossoming and yielding fruits) are recorded
in its seed or seeds to be exhibited in a subsequent spring on earth. As in
the tongue of its form and shape it displays the deeds of its source or
origin in the clearest way, so also through its branches, twigs, leaves,
flowers and fruits it lays open the pages of those deeds. Thus, the One Who
does this work before our eyes as the manifestations of His Names the
All-Wise, the All-Preserving, the All-Arranging, the All-Upbringing, and the
All-Subtle, is He Who says: When the rolls of pages are laid open.
• You can compare the other points with this and, if you are able,
understand them. However, in order to help you, I will explain the verse
When the sun is folded up (al-Takwir, 81.1).
Besides the brilliant metaphor in the expression ‘fold up’ (meaning
‘roll’ or ‘wrap up’) the verse also alludes to several related events.
• By drawing back first non-existence, then the ether, and then the
skies, like veils, Almighty God brought out of the treasury of His Mercy a
brilliant lamp like the sun to illuminate the world and displayed it to the
world. After the world is closed up, He will wrap up that brilliant in its
veils again and remove it.
• The sun is an official of God charged with spreading out its goods of
light and folding round the head of the world light and darkness
alternately. Each evening it gathers up its goods and conceals them and
sometimes it does little business because of the veil of a cloud, and
sometimes it withdraws to some degree from doing business due to the veil
the moon draws over its face, and closes its book of account for a short,
fixed time. A time will come and this official will resign from its post.
Even if there is no cause for its dismissal, due to the two black spots on
its face growing, as they have begun to do, through Divine command the sun
will draw back the light that it sends to the earth by Divine leave and wrap
it around its own head. God will order it: ‘You have no longer any duty to
carry out concerning the earth. Now go to Hell and burn those who, by
worshipping you, insulted an obedient official like you with disloyalty as
if you had claimed divinity.’ Through its black-spotted face, the sun
exhibits the meaning of the decree, When the sun is folded up.
• It sometimes occurs that the wise Qur’an mentions a particular purpose
and in order to urge the minds to think in universal terms, confirms and
establishes that purpose through Divine Names, which function as universal
rules.
For example:
• God has indeed heard the statement of the woman who argues with you
concerning her husband, and complains unto God, and God hears your
conversation. Surely God is All-Hearing, All-Seeing. (58:1)
The Qur’an says: ‘Almighty God is absolutely All-Hearing; He hears
everything. He even hears through His Name of Truth a wife arguing with you
and complaining about her husband, which which is a most particular matter.
A woman is most compassionate among human beings and a mine of care and
tenderness leading to self-sacrifice. So, as a requirement of His being the
All-Compassionate, Almighty God hears her complaint and heeds it as a matter
of great importance, and through His Name of Truth considers it seriously.’
Thus, by way of concluding a universal principle from a particular event,
One Who—not belonging to the realm of contingencies—hears and sees a
particular, minor incident among creatures, must of necessity hear and see
all things; One Who claims Lordship over the universe, must be aware of the
troubles of wronged insignificant creatures in the universe and hear their
cries. One Who is not aware of their suffering and does not hear their
lamentations cannot be the Lord. Thus, the sentence Surely God is
All-Hearing, All-Seeing, establishes those two mighty truths.
• Glorified be Who took His servant by night from the Sacred Mosque (Masjid
al-Haram), to Masjid al-Aqsa’ (in Quds), Whose neighborhood We have blessed,
that We might show him of Our signs. Surely He is the All-Hearing the
All-Seeing. (17:1)
After mentioning the Noble Prophet’s journey from Masjid al-Haram in
Makka to Masjid al-Aqsa’ in Quds, which was the first stage of His
Ascension, the verse concludes with Surely He is the All-Hearing, the
All-Seeing. The pronoun He can refer to either Almighty God or the Prophet,
upon whom be peace and blessings. If it refers to the Prophet, the meaning
will be: ‘This particular journey actually comprises a comprehensive
journey, a universal ascension, during which, as far as the Lote-tree of the
utmost boundary (where the realm of the created ends) and distance of two
bows’ length [which alludes to the final point of the nearness to God which
the Prophet acquired, and also refers to the utmost degree which one can
acquire in this spiritual journeying] he heard and saw the signs of the Lord
an amazing works of Divine art which were manifested before his eyes and
ears in the universal degrees of manifestations of Divine Names.’ Thus, the
verse presents that particular journey during which innumerable wonders were
witnessed as the key to a universal journey .
If the pronoun is taken to refer to Almighty God, the meaning will be:
‘In order to admit a servant of His to His Presence at the end of a journey
and to entrust to him a duty, He took him from Masjid al-Haram to Masjid al-Aqsa’
where He caused him to meet the Prophets who were gathered there. Then,
after demonstrating that he is the absolute heir to the principles of the
religions of all the Prophets, He caused him to travel through the realms of
His dominion in all their inner and outer dimensions, as far as the distance
of two bows’ length.’
The Prophet is indeed a servant, and made a particular journey to ascend
to God’s Presence, but together with him was a trust pertaining to the whole
universe, and a light which would change the color of the universe. Since
together with the Prophet was also a key to open the door to eternal
happiness, Almighty God describes Himself with the attributes of hearing and
seeing all things so as to demonstrate the world-wide purposes for the
trust, the light, and the key.
• Praise be to God, the Creator of the heavens and the earth, Who
appoints the angels messengers with wings, two, three or four. He multiplies
in creation as He wills. Surely God is Powerful over all beings. (35:1)
This verse means: ‘By adorning the heavens and the earth in such a way
and demonstrating the works of His Perfection, their Majestic Creator causes
their innumerable spectators to extol and praise Him infinitely. He has also
decorated them with uncountable bounties so that the heavens and the earth
praise and exalt endlessly their Most Merciful Creator in the tongue of all
the bounties and those who receive them.’ The verse also shows that the
Majestic One Who has equipped the inhabitants of the earth—men and
animals—with the necessary limbs and faculties and birds with wings to
travel through the regions of the world, and Who has equipped angels, the
inhabitants of the heavens, with wings to fly and travel through the
heavenly palaces of stars and lofty lands of constellations, must of
necessity be powerful over all things. The One Who has given wings to a fly
with which to fly from one fruit to another and a sparrow to fly from one
tree to another, is He Who gives the wings with which to fly from Venus to
Jupiter and from Jupiter to Saturn. Furthermore, unlike the inhabitants of
the earth, angels are not restricted to particularity; they are not confined
by a specific limited space. Through the words two, three, or four. He
multiplies in creation as He wills, the verse suggests that the angels may
be present on four or more stars at the same time. Thus, by stating that God
has equipped angels with wings, which is a particular event, the Qur’an
points to the origin of a universal, tremendous power, and establishes it
with the summary, Surely God is Powerful over all things.
• It sometimes occurs that the Qur’an mentions the rebellious acts of man
and restrains him with severe threats. Then, in order that the severity of
threats should not cast him into despair, it concludes with certain Divine
Names which point to His Mercy, and consoles him.
For example:
• Say: Had there been gods besides Him, as they say, then they would
certainly have sought out a way against the Lord of the Supreme Throne.
Glorified is He, and high exalted above what they say! The seven heavens and
the earth and all that is therein glorify Him, and there is not a thing but
glorifies Him with praise; but you understand not their glorification.
Surely He is Ever-Clement, Most Forgiving. (42:4)
The verses mean: ‘Say: If, as you say, there had been partners with Him
in His Sovereignty, they would certainly have sought a hand in His absolute
rule over the creation and this would surely have caused disorder in the
universe. Whereas, every creature, universal or particular, big or small,
from the seven levels of the heavens to microscopic organisms, glorifies in
the tongue of the inscriptions of the Divine Names manifested on them, the
Majestic One signified by those Names, and declares Him to be free of
partners or like. In the same way as the heavens declare Him to be Holy and
testify to His Unity through their light-diffusing worlds of suns and stars,
and through the wisdom and order they display, the atmosphere also glorifies
and sanctifies Him through the ‘voice’ of clouds and its words of thunder,
lighting, and rain, and testifies to His Unity. Again, together with the
earth glorifying its Majestic Creator and declaring Him to be One through
its living words of plants and animate creatures, each tree also glorifies
Him and testifies to His Oneness through its words of leaves, flowers, and
fruits. Likewise, despite its smallness and particularity, the minutest of
creatures and the most particular of beings glorifies the All-Majestic One
many of Whose Names it displays through their inscriptions which it bears,
and testifies to His Unity.
Thus, the verses state that, while man is the issue and result of the
universe and a delicate fruit of it honored with ruling the earth in the
name of God, his unbelief and associating partners with God—in contrast to
the universe which, glorifying its majestic Creator with one voice and
testifying to His Oneness, carries out its duty of worship in perfect
obedience—is ugly and deserving of punishment. Then, in order not to cause
him to fall into utter despair and so show why, despite such an infinitely
ugly rebellion and crime, the All-Overwhelming One of Majesty gives respite
to man and does not pull down the world on him, they conclude with Surely He
is Ever-Clement and All-Forgiving, and leaves a door open for repentance and
hope of being forgiven.
Now understand from those foregoing signs of miraculousness that in the
summaries at the conclusions of the verses are many aspects of guidance and
gleams of miraculousness, that the greatest geniuses of eloquence have
bitten their fingers in utter astonishment and admiration at those authentic
forms, and concluding that it is not the word of man, believed with absolute
certainty in its being Revelation revealed. Together with the points and
qualities which have so far been mentioned, there are many further qualities
in some verses, such that even the ‘blind’ can see the impress of
miraculousness in their arrangement. |