13818 lines
784 KiB
Plaintext
13818 lines
784 KiB
Plaintext
550 AD
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THE KORAN
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Translated by E.H. Palmer
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THE OPENING CHAPTER
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(I. Mecca.)
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IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
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Praise belongs to God, the Lord of the worlds, the merciful, the
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compassionate, the ruler of the day of judgment! Thee we serve and
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Thee we ask for aid. Guide us in the right path, the path of those
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Thou art gracious to; not of those Thou art wroth with; nor of those
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who err.
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THE CHAPTER OF THE HEIFER
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(II. Medina.)
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IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
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ALIF LAM MIM. That is the book! there is no doubt therein; a guide
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to the pious, who believe in the unseen, and are steadfast in
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prayer, and of what we have given them expend in alms; who believe
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in what is revealed to thee, and what was revealed before thee, and of
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the hereafter they are sure. These are in guidance from their Lord,
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and these are the prosperous. Verily, those who misbelieve, it is
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the same to them if ye warn them or if ye warn them not, they will not
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believe. God has set a seal upon their hearts and on their hearing;
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and on their eyes is dimness, and for them is grievous woe. And
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there are those among men who say, 'We believe in God and in the
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last day;' but they do not believe. They would deceive God and those
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who do believe; but they deceive only themselves and they do not
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perceive. In their hearts is a sickness, and God has made them still
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more sick, and for them is grievous woe because they lied. And when it
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is said to them, 'Do not evil in the earth,' they say, 'We do but what
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is right.' Are not they the evildoers? and yet they do not perceive.
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And when it is said to them, 'Believe as other men believe,' they say,
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'Shall we believe as fools believe?' Are not they themselves the
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fools? and yet they do not know. And when they meet those who believe,
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they say, 'We do believe;' but when they go aside with their devils,
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they say, 'We are with you; we were but mocking!' God shall mock at
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them and let them go on in their rebellion, blindly wandering on.
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Those who buy error for guidance, their traffic profits not, and
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they are not guided. Their likeness is as the likeness of one who
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kindles a fire; and when it lights up all around, God goes off with
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their light, and leaves them in darkness that they cannot see.
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Deafness, dumbness, blindness, and they shall not return! Or like a
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storm-cloud from the sky, wherein is darkness and thunder and
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lightning; they put their fingers in their ears at the thunder-clap,
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for fear of death, for God encompasses the misbelievers. The lightning
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well-nigh snatches off their sight, whenever it shines for them they
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walk therein; but when it is dark for them they halt; and if God
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willed He would go off with their hearing and their sight; verily, God
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is mighty over all.
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O ye folk! serve your Lord who created you and those before you;
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haply ye may fear! who made the earth for you a bed and the heaven a
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dome; and sent down from heaven water, and brought forth therewith
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fruits as a sustenance for you; so make no peers for God, the while ye
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know!
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And if ye are in doubt of what we have revealed unto our servant,
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then bring a chapter like it, and call your witnesses other than God
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if ye tell truth. But if ye do it not, and ye shall surely do it
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not, then fear the fire whose fuel is men and stones, prepared for
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misbelievers. But bear the glad tidings to those who believe and
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work righteousness, that for them are gardens beneath which rivers
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flow; whenever they are provided with fruit therefrom they say,
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'This is what we were provided with before,' and they shall be
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provided with the like; and there are pure wives for them therein, and
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they shall dwell therein for aye.
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Why, God is not ashamed to set forth a parable of a gnat, or
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anything beyond; and as for those who believe, they know that it is
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truth from the Lord; but as for those who disbelieve, they say,
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'What is it that God means by this as a parable? He leads astray
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many and He guides many;'- but He leads astray only the evildoers; who
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break God's covenant after the fixing thereof, and cut asunder what
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God has ordered to be joined, and do evil in the earth;- these it is
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who lose.
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How can ye disbelieve in God, when ye were dead and He made you
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alive, and then He will kill you and then make you alive again, and
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then to Him will ye return? It is He who created for you all that is
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in the earth, then he made for the heavens and fashioned them seven
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heavens; and He knows all things.
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And when thy Lord said unto the angels, 'I am about to place a
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vicegerent in the earth,' they said, 'Wilt Thou place therein one
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who will do evil therein and shed blood? we celebrate Thy praise and
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hallow Thee.' Said (the Lord), 'I know what ye know not.' And He
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taught Adam the names, all of them; then He propounded them to the
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angels and said, 'Declare to me the names of these, if ye are
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truthful.' They said, 'Glory be to Thee! no knowledge is ours but what
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Thou thyself hast taught us, verily, Thou art the knowing, the
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wise.' Said the Lord, 'O Adam declare to them their names;' and when
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he had declared to them their names He said, 'Did I not say to you,
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I know the secrets of the heavens and of the earth, and I know what ye
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show and what ye were hiding?' And when we said to the angels,
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'Adore Adam,' they adored him save only Iblis, who refused and was too
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proud and became one of the misbelievers. And we said, 'O Adam
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dwell, thou and thy wife, in Paradise, and eat therefrom amply as
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you wish; but do not draw near this tree or ye will be of the
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transgressors. And Satan made them backslide therefrom and drove
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them out from what they were in, and we said, 'Go down, one of you the
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enemy of the other, and in the earth there is an abode and a provision
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for a time.' And Adam caught certain words from 'his Lord, and He
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turned towards him, for He is the compassionate one easily turned.
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We said, 'Go down therefrom altogether and haply there may come from
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me a guidance, and whoso follows my guidance, no fear is theirs, nor
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shall they grieve. But those who misbelieve, and call our signs
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lies, they are the fellows of the Fire, they shall dwell therein for
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aye.'
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O ye children of Israel! remember my favours which I have favoured
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you with; fulfil my covenant and I will fulfil your covenant; me
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therefore dread. Believe in what I have revealed, verifying what ye
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have got, and be not the first to disbelieve in it, and do not
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barter my signs for a little price, and me do ye fear. Clothe not
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truth with vanity, nor hide the truth the while ye know. Be
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steadfast in prayer, give the alms, and bow down with those who bow.
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Will ye order men to do piety and forget yourselves? ye read the Book,
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do ye not then understand? Seek aid with patience and prayer, though
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it is a hard thing save for the humble, who think that they will
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meet their Lord, and that to Him will they return.
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O ye children of Israel! remember my favours which I have favoured
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you with, and that I have preferred you above the worlds. Fear the day
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wherein no soul shall pay any recompense for another soul, nor shall
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intercession be accepted for it, nor shall compensation be taken
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from it, nor shall they be helped.
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When we saved you from Pharaoh's people who sought to wreak you evil
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and woe, slaughtering your sons and letting your women live; in that
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was a great trial for you from your Lord. When we divided for you
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the sea and saved you and drowned Pharaoh's people while ye looked on.
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When we treated with Moses forty nights, then ye took the calf after
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he had gone and ye did wrong. Yet then we forgave you after that;
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perhaps ye may be grateful. And when we gave Moses the Scriptures
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and the Discrimination; perhaps ye will be guided. When Moses said
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to his people, 'O my people! Ye have wronged yourselves in taking this
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calf; repent unto your Creator and kill each other; that will be
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better for you in your Creator's eyes; and He turned unto you, for
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He is the compassionate one easily turned.' And when ye said to Moses,
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'O Moses! we will not believe in thee until we see God manifestly,'
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and the thunderbolt caught you while ye yet looked on. Then we
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raised you up after your death; perhaps ye may be grateful. And we
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overshadowed you with the cloud, and sent down the manna and the
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quails; 'Eat of the good things we have given you.' They not wrong us,
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but it was themselves they were wronging. And when we said, 'Enter
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this city and eat therefrom as plentifully as ye wish; and enter the
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gate worshipping and say 'hittatun. So will we pardon you your sins
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and give increase unto those who do well.'
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But those who did wrong changed it for another word than that
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which was said to them: and we sent down upon those who did wrong,
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wrath from heaven for that they had so sinned.
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When Moses, too, asked drink for his people and we said, 'Strike
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with thy staff the rock,' and from it burst forth twelve springs; each
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man among them knew his drinking place. 'Eat and drink of what God has
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provided, and transgress not on the earth as evildoers.'
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And when they said, Moses, we cannot always bear one kind of food;
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pray then thy Lord to bring forth for us of what the earth grows,
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its green herbs, its cucumbers, its garlic, its lentils, and its
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onions.' Said he, 'Do ye ask what is meaner instead of what is best?
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Go down to Egypt,- there is what ye ask.' Then were they smitten
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with abasement and poverty, and met with wrath from God. That was
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because they had misbelieved in God's signs and killed the prophets
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undeservedly; that was for that they were rebellious and had
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transgressed.
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Verily, whether it be of those who believe, or those who are Jews or
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Christians or Sabaeans, whosoever believe in God and the last day
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and act aright, they have their reward at their Lord's hand, and there
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is no fear for them, nor shall they grieve.
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And when we took a covenant with you and held the mountain over you;
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'Accept what we have brought you with strong will, and bear in mind
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what is therein, haply ye yet may fear.'
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Then did ye turn aside after this, and were it not for God's grace
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towards you and His mercy, ye would have been of those who lose. Ye
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know too of those among you who transgressed upon the Sabbath, and
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we said, 'I Become ye apes, despised and spurned.'
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Thus we made them an example unto those who stood before them, and
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those who should come after them, and a warning unto those who fear.
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And when Moses said to his people, 'God bids you slaughter a cow,'
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they said, 'Art thou making a jest of us?' Said he, 'I seek refuge
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with God from being one of the unwise.' They said, 'Then pray thy Lord
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for us to show us what she is to be.' He answered, 'He saith it is a
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cow, nor old, nor young, of middle age between the two; so do as ye
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are bid.' They said, 'Pray now thy Lord to show us what her colour
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is to be.' He answered, 'He saith it is a dun cow, intensely dun,
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her colour delighting those who look upon her.'
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Again they said, 'Pray thy Lord to show us what she is to be; for
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cows appear the same to us; then we, if God will, shall be guided.' He
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answered, He saith, it is a cow, not broken in to plough the earth
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or irrigate the tilth, a sound one with no blemish on her.' They said,
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'Now hast thou brought the truth.' And they slaughtered her, though
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they came near leaving it undone.
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When too ye slew a soul and disputed thereupon, and God brought
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forth that which ye had hidden, then we said, 'Strike him with part of
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her.' Thus God brings the dead to life and shows you His signs, that
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haply ye may understand.
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Yet were your hearts hardened even after that, till they were as
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stones or harder still, for verily of stones are some from which
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streams burst forth, and of them there are some that burst asunder and
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the water issues out, and of them there are some that fall down for
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fear of God; but God is never careless of what ye do.
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Do ye crave that they should believe you when already a sect of them
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have heard the word of God and then perverted it after they had
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understood it, though they knew?
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And when they meet those who believe they say, 'We believe,' but
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when one goes aside with another they say, 'Will ye talk to them of
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what God has opened up to you, that they may argue with you upon it
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before your Lord? Do ye not therefore understand?' Do they not then
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know that God knoweth what they keep secret and what they make known
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abroad?
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And some of them there are, illiterate folk, that know not the Book,
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but only idle tales; for they do but fancy. But woe to those who write
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out the Book with their hands and say 'this is from' God; to buy
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therewith a little price! and woe to them for what their hands have
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written, and woe to them for what they gain!
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And then they say, 'Hell fire shall not touch us save for a number
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of days.' Say, 'Have ye taken a covenant with God?' but God breaks not
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His covenant. Or do ye say of God that which ye do not know?
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Yea! whoso gains an evil gain, and is encompassed by his sins, those
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are the fellows of the Fire, and they shall dwell therein for aye! But
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such as act aright, those are the fellows of Paradise, and they
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shall dwell therein for aye!
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And when we took from the children of Israel a covenant, saying,
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'Serve ye none but God, and to your two parents show kindness, and
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to your kindred and the orphans and the poor, and speak to men kindly,
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and be steadfast in prayer, and give alms;' and then ye turned back,
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save a few of you, and swerved aside.
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And when we took covenant from you, 'shed ye not your kinsman's
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blood, nor turn your kinsmen out of their homes:' then did ye
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confirm it and were witnesses thereto. Yet ye were those who slay your
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kinsmen and turn a party out of their homes, and back each other up
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against them with sin and enmity. But if they come to you as
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captives ye ransom them!- and yet it is as unlawful for you to turn
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them out. Do ye then believe in part of the Book and disbelieve in
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part? But the reward of such among you as do that shall be. nought
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else but disgrace in this worldly life, and on the day of the
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resurrection shall they be driven to the most grievous torment, for
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God is not unmindful of what ye do.
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Those who have bought this worldly life with the Future, the torment
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shall not be lightened from them nor shall they be helped.
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We gave Moses the Book and we followed him up with other apostles,
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and we gave Jesus the son of Mary manifest signs and aided him with
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the Holy Spirit. Do ye then, every time an apostle comes to you with
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what your souls love not, proudly scorn him, and charge a part with
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lying and slay a part?
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They say, 'Our hearts are uncircumcised;' nay, God has cursed them
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in their unbelief, and few it is who do believe. And when a book
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came down from God confirming what they had with them, though they had
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before prayed for victory over those who misbelieve, yet when that
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came to them which they knew, then they disbelieved it,- God's curse
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be on the misbelievers.
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For a bad bargain have they sold their souls, not to believe in what
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God has revealed, grudging because God sends down of His grace on
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whomsoever of His servants He will; and they have brought on
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themselves wrath after wrath and for the misbelievers is there
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shameful woe.
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And when they are told to believe in what God has revealed, they
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say, 'We believe in what has been revealed to us;' but they disbelieve
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in all beside, although it is the truth confirming what they have.
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Say, 'Wherefore did ye kill God's prophets of yore if ye were true
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believers?
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Moses came to you with manifest signs, then ye took up with the calf
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when he had gone and did so wrong. And when we took a covenant with
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you and raised the mountain over you, 'Take what we have given you
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with resolution and hear;' they said, 'We hear but disobey;' and
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they were made to drink the calf down into their hearts for their
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unbelief. Say, 'An evil thing is it which your belief bids you do,
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if ye be true believers.' Say, 'If the abode of the future with God is
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yours alone and not mankind's: long for death then if ye speak the
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truth.' But they will never long for it because of what their hands
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have sent on before; but God is knowing as to the wrong doers.
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Why, thou wilt find them the greediest of men for life; and of those
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who associate others with God one would fain live for a thousand
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years,- but he will not be reprieved from punishment by being let
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live, for God seeth what they do.
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Say, 'Who is an enemy to Gabriel? for he hath revealed to thy heart,
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with God's permission, confirmation of what had been before, and a
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guidance and glad tidings to believers. Who is an enemy to God and His
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angels and His apostles and Gabriel and Michael?- Verily, God is an
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enemy to the unbelievers. We have sent down to thee conspicuous signs,
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and none will disbelieve therein except the evildoers. Or every time
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they make a covenant, will a part of them repudiate it? Nay, most of
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them do not believe.
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And when there comes to them an apostle confirming what they have, a
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part of those who have received the Book repudiate God's book, casting
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it behind their backs as though they did not know. And they follow
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that which the devils recited against Solomon's kingdom;- it was not
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Solomon who misbelieved, but the devils who misbelieved, teaching
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men sorcery,- and what has been revealed to the two angels at Babylon,
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Harut and Marut; yet these taught no one until they said, 'We are
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but a temptation, so do not misbelieve.' Men learn from them only that
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by which they may part man and wife; but they can harm no one
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therewith, unless with the permission of God, and they learn what
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hurts them and profits them not. And yet they knew that he who
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purchased it would have no portion in the future; but sad is the price
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at which they have sold their souls, had they but known. But had
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they believed and feared, a reward from God were better, had they
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but known.
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O ye who believe! say not 'rahina,' but say 'unthurna,' hearken; for
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unto misbelievers shall be grievous woe.
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They who misbelieve, whether of those who have the Book or of the
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idolaters, would fain that no good were sent down to you from your
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Lord; but God specially favours with His mercy whom He will, for God
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is Lord of mighty grace.
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Whatever verse we may annul or cause thee to forget, we will bring a
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better one than it, or one like it; dost thou not know that God is
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mighty over all? Dost thou not know that God's is the kingdom of the
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heavens and the earth? nor have ye besides God a patron or a help.
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Do ye wish to question your apostle as Moses was questioned
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aforetime? but whoso takes misbelief in exchange for faith has erred
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from the level road.
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Many of those who have the Book would fain turn you back into
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misbelievers after ye have once believed, through envy from
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themselves, after the truth has been made manifest to them; but pardon
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and shun them till God brings His command; verily, God is mighty
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over all.
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Be ye steadfast in prayer, and give alms; and whatsoever good ye
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send before for your own souls, ye shall find it with God, for God
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in all ye do doth see.
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They say, 'None shall enter Paradise save such as be Jews or
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Christians;' that is their faith. Say thou, 'Bring your proofs, if
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ye be speaking truth.'
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Aye, he who resigns his face to God, and who is kind, he shall
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have his reward from his Lord, and no fear shall be on them, and
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they shall not grieve.
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The Jews say, 'The Christians rest on nought;' and the Christians
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say, 'The Jews rest on nought; and yet they read the Book. So, too,
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say those who know not, like to what these say; but God shall judge
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between them' on the resurrection day concerning that whereon they
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do dispute.
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But who is more unjust than he who prohibits God's mosques, that His
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name should not be mentioned there, and who strives to ruin them? 'Tis
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not for such to enter into them except in fear, for them is disgrace
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in this world, and in the future mighty woe.
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God's is the east and the west, and wherever ye turn there is
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God's face; verily, God comprehends and knows.
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They say, 'God takes unto Himself a son.' Celebrated be His
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praise! Nay, His is what is in the heavens and the earth, and Him
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all things obey. The Originator of the heavens and the earth, when
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He decrees a matter He doth but say unto it, 'BE,' and it is.
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And those who do not know (the Scriptures) say, Unless God speak
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to us, or there comes a sign. So spake those before them like unto
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their speech. Their hearts are all alike. We have made manifest the
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signs unto a people that are sure.
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We have sent thee with the truth, a bearer of good tidings and of
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warning, and thou shalt not be questioned as to the fellows of hell.
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The Jews will not be satisfied with thee, nor yet the Christians,
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until thou followest their creed. Say, 'God's guidance is the
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guidance;' and if thou followest their lusts after the knowledge
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that has come to thee, thou hast not then from God a patron or a help.
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They to whom we have brought the Book and who read it as it should
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be read, believe therein; and whoso disbelieve therein, 'tis they
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who lose thereby.
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O children of Israel! remember my favours with which I favoured you,
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and that I have preferred you over the worlds. And fear the day when
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no soul shall pay a recompense for a soul, nor shall an equivalent
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be received therefrom, nor any intercession avail; and they shall
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not be helped.
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And when his Lord tried Abraham with words, and he fulfilled them,
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He said, 'Verily, I will set thee as a high priest for men.' Said
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he, 'And of my seed?' God said, 'My covenant touches not the
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evildoers.'
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And when we made the House a place of resort unto men, and a
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sanctuary, and (said) take the station of Abraham for a place of
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prayer; and covenanted with Abraham and Ishmael, saying, 'Do ye two
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cleanse my house for those who make the circuit, for those who pay
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devotions there, for those who bow down, and for those too who adore.'
|
|
When Abraham said, 'Lord, make this a town of safety, and provide
|
|
the dwellers there with fruits, such as believe in God and the last
|
|
day!' (God) said, 'And he who misbelieves, I will give him but
|
|
little to enjoy, then will drive him to the torment of the fire, an
|
|
evil journey will it be.'
|
|
And when Abraham raised up the foundations of the House with
|
|
Ishmael, 'Lord! receive it from us, verily, thou art hearing and
|
|
dost know. Lord! and make us too resigned unto Thee, and of our seed
|
|
also a nation resigned unto Thee, and show us our rites, and turn
|
|
towards us, verily, Thou art easy to be turned and merciful. Lord! and
|
|
send them an apostle from amongst themselves, to read to them Thy
|
|
signs and teach them the Book and wisdom, and to purify them;
|
|
verily, Thou art the mighty and the wise.'
|
|
Who is averse from the faith of Abraham save one who is foolish of
|
|
soul? for we have chosen him in this world, and in the future he is
|
|
surely of the righteous.
|
|
When his Lord said to him, 'Be resigned,' he said, 'I am resigned
|
|
unto the Lord of the worlds.'
|
|
And Abraham instructed his sons therein, and Jacob (saying), 'O my
|
|
sons! verily, God has chosen for you a religion, do not therefore
|
|
die unless ye be resigned.'
|
|
Were ye then witnesses when Jacob was facing death, when he said
|
|
to his sons, 'What will ye serve when I am gone?' They said, 'We
|
|
will serve thy God, the God of thy fathers Abraham, and Ishmael, and
|
|
Isaac, one God; and we are unto Him resigned.'
|
|
That is a nation that has passed away, theirs is what they gained;
|
|
and yours shall be what ye have gained; ye shall not be questioned
|
|
as to that which they have done.
|
|
They say, 'Be ye Jews or Christians so shall ye of Abraham be
|
|
guided.' Say, 'Not so! but the faith of Abraham he was not of the
|
|
idolaters.'
|
|
Say ye, 'We believe in God, and what has been revealed to us, and
|
|
what has been revealed to Abraham, and Ishmael, and Isaac, and
|
|
Jacob, and the Tribes, and what was brought to Moses and Jesus, and
|
|
what was brought unto the Prophets from their Lord; we will not
|
|
distinguish between any one of them, and unto Him are we resigned.'
|
|
If they believe in that in which ye believe, then are they guided;
|
|
but if they turn back, then are they only in a schism, and God will
|
|
suffice thee against them, for He both hears and knows.
|
|
The dye of God! and who is better than God at dyeing? and we are
|
|
worshippers of Him.
|
|
Say, 'Do ye dispute with us concerning God, and He is our Lord and
|
|
your Lord? Ye have your works and we have ours, and unto Him are we
|
|
sincere.'
|
|
Do ye say that Abraham, and Ishmael, and Isaac, and Jacob, and the
|
|
Tribes were Jews or Christians? Say, 'Are ye more knowing than God?
|
|
Who is more unjust than one who conceals a testimony that he has
|
|
from God? But God is not careless of what ye do.
|
|
That is a nation that has passed away; theirs is what they gained,
|
|
and yours shall be what ye have gained; ye shall not be questioned
|
|
as to that which they have done.
|
|
The fools among men will say, 'What has turned them from their
|
|
qiblah, on which they were agreed?'
|
|
Say, 'God's is the east and the west, He guides whom He will unto
|
|
the right path.' Thus have we made you a middle nation, to be
|
|
witnesses against men, and that the Apostle may be a witness against
|
|
you.
|
|
We have not appointed the qiblah on which thou wert agreed, save
|
|
that we might know who follows the Apostle from him who turns upon his
|
|
heels although it is a great thing save to those whom God doth
|
|
guide. But God will not waste your faith, for verily, God with men
|
|
is kind and merciful.
|
|
We see thee often turn about thy face in the heavens, but we will
|
|
surely turn thee to a qiblah thou shalt like. Turn then thy face
|
|
towards the Sacred Mosque; wherever ye be, turn your faces towards it;
|
|
for verily, those who have the Book know that it is the truth from
|
|
their Lord;- God is not careless of that which ye do.
|
|
And if thou shouldst bring to those who have been given the Book
|
|
every sign, they would not follow your qiblah; and thou art not to
|
|
follow their qiblah; nor do some of them follow the qiblah of the
|
|
others: and if thou followest their lusts after the knowledge that has
|
|
come to thee then art thou of the evildoers.
|
|
Those whom we have given the Book know him as they know their
|
|
sons, although a sect of them do surely hide the truth, the while they
|
|
know.
|
|
The truth (is) from thy Lord; be not therefore one of those who
|
|
doubt thereof.
|
|
Every sect has some one side to which they turn (in prayer); but
|
|
do ye hasten onwards to good works; wherever ye are God will bring you
|
|
all together; verily, God is mighty over all.
|
|
From whencesoever thou comest forth, there turn thy face towards the
|
|
Sacred Mosque, for it is surely truth from thy Lord; God is not
|
|
careless about what ye do. And from whencesoever thou comest forth,
|
|
there turn thy face towards the Sacred Mosque, and wheresoever ye are,
|
|
turn your faces towards it, that men may have no argument against you,
|
|
save only those of them who are unjust; and fear them not, but fear me
|
|
and I will fulfil my favours to you, perchance ye may be guided yet.
|
|
Thus have we sent amongst you an apostle of yourselves, to recite to
|
|
you our signs, to purify you and teach you the Book and wisdom, and to
|
|
teach you what ye did not know; remember me, then, and I will remember
|
|
you; thank me, and do not misbelieve.
|
|
O ye who do believe! seek aid from patience and from prayer, verily,
|
|
God is with the patient. And say not of those who are slain in God's
|
|
way (that they are) dead, but rather living; but ye do not perceive.
|
|
We will try you with something of fear, and hunger and loss of
|
|
wealth, and souls and fruit; but give good tidings to the patient, who
|
|
when there falls on them a calamity say, 'Verily, we are God's and,
|
|
verily, to Him do we return.' These, on them are blessings from
|
|
their Lord and mercy, and they it is who are guided.
|
|
Verily, Zafa and Merwah are of the beacons of God, and he who
|
|
makes the pilgrimage unto the House, or visits it, it is no crime
|
|
for him to compass them both about; and he who obeys his own impulse
|
|
to a good work,- God is grateful and doth know.
|
|
Verily, those who hide what we have revealed of manifest signs and
|
|
of guidance after we have manifested it to men in the Book, them God
|
|
shall curse, and those who curse shall curse them too. Save those
|
|
who turn and do right and make (the signs) manifest; these will I turn
|
|
to again, for I am easy to be turned and merciful.
|
|
Verily, those who misbelieve and die while still in misbelief, on
|
|
them is the curse of God, and of the angels, and of mankind
|
|
altogether; to dwell therein for aye; the torment shall not be
|
|
lightened for them, nor shall they be looked upon.
|
|
Your God is one God; there is no God but He, the merciful, the
|
|
compassionate.
|
|
Verily, in the creation of the heavens and the earth, and the
|
|
alternation of night and day, and in the ship that runneth in the
|
|
sea with that which profits man, and in what water God sends down from
|
|
heaven and quickens therewith the earth after its death, and spreads
|
|
abroad therein all kinds of cattle, and in the shifting of the
|
|
winds, and in the clouds that are pressed into service betwixt
|
|
heaven and earth, are signs to people who can understand.
|
|
Yet are there some amongst mankind who take to themselves peers
|
|
other than God; they love them as they should love God while those who
|
|
believe love God more. O that those who are unjust could only see,
|
|
when they see the torment, that power is altogether God's! Verily, God
|
|
is keen to torment.
|
|
When those who are followed clear themselves of those who followed
|
|
them, and see the torment, and the cords are cut asunder, those who
|
|
followed shall say, 'Had we but another turn, then would we clear
|
|
ourselves of them as they have cleared themselves of us.' So will
|
|
God show them their works; for them are sighs, and they shall not come
|
|
forth from out the fire.
|
|
O ye folk! eat of what is in the earth, things lawful and things
|
|
good, and follow not the footsteps of Satan, verily, to you he is an
|
|
open foe. He does but bid you evil and sin, and that ye should speak
|
|
against God what ye do not know.
|
|
When it is said to them, 'Follow what God has revealed,' they say,
|
|
'Nay, we will follow what we found our fathers agreed upon.' What! and
|
|
though their fathers had no sense at all or guidance-?
|
|
The likeness of those who misbelieve is as the likeness of him who
|
|
shouts to that which hears him not, save only a call and a cry;
|
|
deafness, dumbness, blindness, and they shall not understand.
|
|
O ye who do believe! eat of the good things wherewith we have
|
|
provided you, and give thanks unto God if it be Him ye serve. He has
|
|
only forbidden for you what is dead, and blood, and flesh of swine,
|
|
and whatsoever has been consecrated to other than God; but he who is
|
|
forced, neither revolting nor transgressing, it is in no sin for
|
|
him; verily, God is forgiving and merciful.
|
|
Verily, those who hide what God has revealed of the Book, and sell
|
|
it for a little price, they shall eat nothing in their bellies save
|
|
fire; and God will not speak to them on the day of resurrection, nor
|
|
will He purify them, but for them is grievous woe.
|
|
They who sell guidance for error, and pardon for torment, how
|
|
patient must they be of fire!
|
|
That (is), because God has revealed the Book with truth, and
|
|
verily those who disagree about the Book are in a wide schism.
|
|
Righteousness is not that ye turn your faces towards the east or the
|
|
west, but righteousness is, one who believes in God, and the last day,
|
|
and the angels, and the Book, and the prophets, and who gives wealth
|
|
for His love to kindred, and orphans, and the poor, and the son of the
|
|
road, beggars, and those in captivity; and who is steadfast in prayer,
|
|
and gives alms; and those who are sure of their covenant when they
|
|
make a covenant; and the patient in poverty, and distress, and in time
|
|
of violence; these are they who are true, and these are those who
|
|
fear.
|
|
O ye who believe! Retaliation is prescribed for you for the slain:
|
|
the free for the free, the slave for the slave, the female for the
|
|
female; yet he who is pardoned at all by his brother, must be
|
|
prosecuted in reason, and made to pay with kindness.
|
|
That is an alleviation from your Lord, and a mercy; and he who
|
|
transgresses after that for him is grievous woe.
|
|
For you in retaliation is there life, O ye possessors of minds! it
|
|
may be ye will fear.
|
|
It is prescribed for you that when one of you is face to face with
|
|
death, if he leave (any) goods, the legacy is to his parents, and to
|
|
his kinsmen, in reason. A duty this upon all those that fear.
|
|
But he who alters it after that he has heard it, the sin thereof
|
|
is only upon those who alter it; verily, God doth hear and know.
|
|
And he who fears from the testator a wrong intention, or a crime,
|
|
and doth make up the matter between the parties, it is no sin to
|
|
him; verily, God is forgiving and merciful.
|
|
O ye who believe! There is prescribed for you the fast as it was
|
|
prescribed for those before you; haply ye may fear. A certain number
|
|
of days, but he amongst you who is ill or on a journey, then (let
|
|
him fast) another number of days. And those who are fit to fast may
|
|
redeem it by feeding a poor man; but he who follows an impulse to a
|
|
good work it is better for him; and if ye fast it is better for you,
|
|
if ye did but know.
|
|
The month of Ramadhan, wherein was revealed the Koran, for a
|
|
guidance to men, and for manifestations of guidance, and for a
|
|
Discrimination. And he amongst you who beholds this month then let him
|
|
fast it; but he who is sick or on a journey, then another number of
|
|
days;- God desires for you what is easy, and desires not for you
|
|
what is difficult,- that ye may complete the number, and say, 'Great
|
|
is God,' for that He has guided you; haply ye may give thanks.
|
|
When my servants ask thee concerning me, then, verily, I am near;
|
|
I answer the prayer's prayer whene'er he prays to me. So let them
|
|
ask me for an answer, and let them believe in me; haply they may be
|
|
directed aright.
|
|
Lawful for you on the night of the fast is commerce with your wives;
|
|
they are a garment unto you, and ye a garment unto them. God knows
|
|
that ye did defraud yourselves, wherefore He has turned towards you
|
|
and forgiven you; so now go in unto them and crave what God has
|
|
prescribed for you, and eat and drink until a white thread can be
|
|
distinguished by you from a black one at the dawn. Then fulfil the
|
|
fast until the night, and go not in unto them, and ye at your
|
|
devotions in the mosques the while. These are the bounds that God
|
|
has set, so draw not near thereto. Thus does God make manifest His
|
|
signs to men, that haply they may fear.
|
|
Devour not your wealth among yourselves vainly, nor present it to
|
|
the judges that ye may devour a part of the wealth of men sinfully,
|
|
the while ye know.
|
|
They will ask thee about the phases of the moon; say, 'They are
|
|
indications of time for men and for the pilgrimage.' And it is not
|
|
righteousness that ye should enter into your houses from behind
|
|
them, but righteousness is he who fears; so enter into your houses
|
|
by the doors thereof and fear God; haply ye may prosper yet.
|
|
Fight in God's way with those who fight with you, but transgress
|
|
not; verily, God loves not those who do transgress.
|
|
Kill them wherever ye find them, and drive them out from whence they
|
|
drive you out; for sedition is worse than slaughter; but fight them
|
|
not by the Sacred Mosque until they fight you there; then kill them,
|
|
for such is the recompense of those that misbelieve.
|
|
But if they desist, then, verily, God is forgiving and merciful.
|
|
But fight them that there be no sedition and that the religion may
|
|
be God's; but, if they desist, then let there be no hostility save
|
|
against the unjust.
|
|
The sacred month for the sacred month; for all sacred things
|
|
demand retaliation; and whoso transgresses against you, transgress
|
|
against him like as he transgressed against you; but fear ye God,
|
|
and know that God is with those who fear.
|
|
Expend in alms in God's way and be not cast by your own hands into
|
|
perdition; but do good, for God loves those who do good.
|
|
And fulfil the pilgrimage and the visitation to God; but if ye be
|
|
besieged, then what is easiest for you by way of gift. But shave not
|
|
your heads until your gift shall reach its destination; and he amongst
|
|
you who is sick or has a hurt upon his head, then the redemption is by
|
|
fasting or by alms or by an offering. But when ye are safe again, then
|
|
let him who would enjoy the visitation until the pilgrimage (bring)
|
|
what is easiest as a gift. And he who cannot find (anything to bring),
|
|
then let him fast three days on the pilgrimage and seven when ye
|
|
return; these make ten days complete. That is, for him whose family
|
|
are not present in the Sacred Mosque; and fear God and know that God
|
|
is keen to punish.
|
|
The pilgrimage is (in) well-known months: whosoever then makes it
|
|
incumbent on himself (let him have neither) commerce with women, nor
|
|
fornication, nor a quarrel on the pilgrimage; and whatsoever of good
|
|
ye do, God knoweth it; then provide yourself for your journey; but the
|
|
best provision is piety. Fear ye me ye who possess minds.
|
|
It is no crime to you that ye seek good from your Lord; but when
|
|
ye pour forth from 'Arafat, remember God by the sacred beacon.
|
|
Remember Him how He guided you, although ye were surely before of
|
|
those who err.
|
|
Then pour ye forth from whence men do pour forth and ask pardon of
|
|
God; verily, God is forgiving and merciful.
|
|
And when ye have performed your rites, remember God as ye remember
|
|
your fathers, or with a keener memory still.
|
|
There is among men such as says, 'Our Lord! give us in this
|
|
world;' but of the future life no portion shall he have.
|
|
And some there be who say, 'Our Lord! give us in this world good and
|
|
in the future good; and keep us from the torment of the fire!'
|
|
These,- they have their portion from what they have earned; for
|
|
God is swift at reckoning up.
|
|
Remember God for a certain number of days; but whoso hastens off
|
|
in two days, it is no sin to him, and he who lingers on it is no sin
|
|
to him,- for him who fears. So fear ye God and know that unto Him
|
|
shall ye be gathered.
|
|
There is among men one whose speech about the life of this world
|
|
pleases thee, and he calls on God to witness what is in his heart; yet
|
|
is he most fierce in opposition unto thee. And when he turns away,
|
|
he strives upon the earth to do evil therein, and to destroy the tilth
|
|
and the stock; verily, God loves not evil doing. And when it is said
|
|
to him, 'Fear God,' then pride takes hold upon him in sin; but hell is
|
|
enough for him! surely an evil couch is that.
|
|
And there is among men one who selleth his soul craving, those
|
|
things that are pleasing unto God and God is kind unto His servants.
|
|
O ye who believe! enter ye into the peace, one and all, and follow
|
|
not the footsteps of Satan; verily, to you he is an open foe. And if
|
|
ye slip after that the manifest signs have come to you, then know that
|
|
God is the mighty, the wise.
|
|
What can they expect but that God should come unto them in the
|
|
shadow of a cloud, and the angels too? But the thing is decreed, and
|
|
unto God do things return.
|
|
Ask the children of Israel how many a manifest sign we gave to them;
|
|
and whoso alters God's favours after that they have come to him,
|
|
then God is keen at following up.
|
|
Made fair to those who misbelieve is this world's life; they jest at
|
|
those who do believe. But those who fear shall be above them on the
|
|
resurrection day. God gives provision unto whom He will without
|
|
account.
|
|
Men were one nation once, and God sent prophets with good tidings
|
|
and with warnings, and sent down with them the Book in truth, to judge
|
|
between men in that wherein they disagreed; but none did disagree
|
|
therein save those who had been given it after that manifest signs had
|
|
come to them, through greed amongst themselves; and God guided those
|
|
who did believe to that truth concerning which they disagreed by His
|
|
permission, for God guides whom He will unto the right path.
|
|
Did ye count to enter Paradise, while there had nothing come to
|
|
you like those who passed away before you; there touched them violence
|
|
and harm, and they were made to quake, until the Apostle and those who
|
|
believed with him said, 'When (comes) God's help? Is not God's help
|
|
then surely nigh?'
|
|
They will ask thee what they are to expend in alms: say, 'Whatsoever
|
|
good ye expend it should be for parents and kinsmen, and the orphan
|
|
and the poor, and the son of the road; and whatsoever good ye do,
|
|
verily, of it God knows.'
|
|
Prescribed for you is fighting, but it is hateful to you. Yet
|
|
peradventure that ye hate a thing while it is good for you, and
|
|
peradventure that ye love a thing while it is bad for you; God
|
|
knows, and ye,- ye do not know!
|
|
They will ask thee of the sacred month,- of fighting therein. Say,
|
|
'Fighting therein is a great sin; but turning folks off God's way, and
|
|
misbelief in Him and in the Sacred Mosque, and turning His people
|
|
out therefrom, is a greater in God's sight; and sedition is a
|
|
greater sin than slaughter.'
|
|
They will not cease from fighting you until they turn you from
|
|
your religion if they can; but whosoever of you is turned from his
|
|
religion and dies while still a misbeliever; these are those whose
|
|
works are vain in this world and the next; they are the fellows of the
|
|
Fire, and they shall dwell therein for aye.
|
|
Verily, those who believe, and those who flee, and those who wage
|
|
war in God's way; these may hope for God's mercy, for God is forgiving
|
|
and merciful.
|
|
They will ask thee about wine and el maisar, say, 'In them both is
|
|
sin and profit to men; but the sin of both is greater than the
|
|
profit of the same.'
|
|
They will ask thee what they shall expend in alms: say, 'The
|
|
surplus.' Thus does God manifest to you His signs; haply ye may
|
|
reflect on this world and the next! They will ask thee about
|
|
orphans: say, 'To do good to them is best.' But if ye interfere with
|
|
them- they are your brethren, and God knows the evildoer from the well
|
|
doer; and if God will He will surely trouble you. Verily, God is
|
|
mighty, wise.
|
|
Wed not with idolatrous women until they believe, for surely a
|
|
believing handmaid is better than an idolatrous woman, even though she
|
|
please you. And wed not to idolatrous men until they believe, for a
|
|
believing slave is better than an idolater, even though he please you.
|
|
Those invite you to the fire, but God invites you to paradise and
|
|
pardon by His permission, and makes clear His signs to men; haply they
|
|
may remember.
|
|
They will ask thee about menstruation: say, 'It is a hurt.' So
|
|
keep apart from women in their menstruation, and go not near them till
|
|
they be cleansed; but when they are cleansed come in to them by
|
|
where God has ordered you verily, God loves those who turn to Him, and
|
|
those who keep themselves clean.
|
|
Your women are your tilth, so come into your tillage how you choose;
|
|
but do a previous good act for yourselves, and fear God, and know that
|
|
ye are going to meet Him; and give good tidings unto those who do
|
|
believe.
|
|
Make not God the butt of your oaths, that ye will keep clear and
|
|
fear and make peace amongst men, for God both hears and knows.
|
|
He will not catch you up for a casual word in your oaths, but He
|
|
will catch you up for what your hearts have earned; but God is
|
|
forgiving and clement.
|
|
Those who swear off from their women, they must wait four months;
|
|
but if they break their vow God is forgiving and merciful.
|
|
And if they intend to divorce them, verily, God hears and knows.
|
|
Divorced women must wait for themselves three courses; and it is not
|
|
lawful to them that they hide what God has created in their wombs,
|
|
if they believe in God and in the last day. Their husbands will do
|
|
better to take them back in that (case) if they wish for
|
|
reconciliation; for, the same is due to them as from them; but the men
|
|
should have precedence over them. God is mighty and wise.
|
|
Divorce (may happen) twice; then keep them in reason, or let them go
|
|
with kindness. It is not lawful for you to take from them anything
|
|
of what you have given them, unless both fear that they cannot keep
|
|
within God's bounds. So if ye fear that ye cannot keep within God's
|
|
bounds there is no crime in you both about what she ransoms herself
|
|
with. These are God's bounds, do not transgress them; and whoso
|
|
transgresses God's bounds, they it is who are unjust.
|
|
But if he divorce her (a third time) she shall not be lawful to
|
|
him after that, until she marry another husband; but, if he divorce
|
|
her too, it is no crime in them both to come together again, if they
|
|
think that they can keep within God's bounds. These are God's bounds
|
|
which He explains to a people who know.
|
|
When ye divorce women, and they have reached the prescribed time,
|
|
then keep them kindly, or let them go in reason, but do not keep
|
|
them by force to transgress; for whoso does that, he is unjust to
|
|
his own soul: and do not take God's signs in jest; and remember
|
|
God's favours to you, and what He has sent down to you of the Book and
|
|
wisdom, to admonish you thereby; and fear God, and know that God
|
|
doth all things know.
|
|
When ye divorce women, and they have reached their prescribed
|
|
term, do not prevent them from marrying their (fresh) husbands, when
|
|
they have agreed with each other reasonably. That is what he is
|
|
admonished with who amongst you believes in God and in the last day.
|
|
That is more pure for you and cleaner. But God knows, and ye know not.
|
|
Mothers must suckle their children two whole years for one who
|
|
wishes to complete the time of suckling; and on him to whom it is born
|
|
its sustenance and clothing are incumbent; but in reason, for no
|
|
soul shall be obliged beyond its capacity. A mother shall not be
|
|
forced for her child; nor he to whom it is born for his child. And the
|
|
same (is incumbent) on the heir (of the father). But if both parties
|
|
wish to wean, by mutual consent and counsel, then it is no crime in
|
|
them. And if ye wish to provide a wet-nurse for your children, it is
|
|
no crime in you when you pay what you have promised her, in reason.
|
|
Fear God, and know that God on what ye do doth look.
|
|
Those of you who die and leave wives behind, let these wait by
|
|
themselves for four months and ten days; and when they have reached
|
|
their prescribed time, there is no crime in them for what they do with
|
|
themselves in reason; for God of what ye do is well aware.
|
|
Nor is there any crime in you for that ye make them an offer of
|
|
marriage, or that ye keep it secret, in your minds. God knows that
|
|
ye will remember them; but do not propose to them in secret, unless ye
|
|
speak a reasonable speech; and resolve not on marriage tie until the
|
|
Book shall reach its time; but know that God knows what is in your
|
|
souls; so beware! and know that God is forgiving and clement.
|
|
It is no crime in you if ye divorce your women ere you have yet
|
|
touched them, or settled for them a settlement. But provide
|
|
maintenance for them; the wealthy according to his power, and the
|
|
straitened in circumstances according to his power, must provide, in
|
|
reason;- a duty this upon the kind.
|
|
And if ye divorce them before ye have touched them, but have already
|
|
settled for them a settlement; the half of what ye have settled,
|
|
unless they remit it, or he in whose hand is the marriage tie remits
|
|
it; and that ye should remit is nearer to piety, and forget not
|
|
liberality between you. Verily, God on what ye do doth look.
|
|
Observe the prayers, and the middle prayer, and stand ye attent
|
|
before God.
|
|
And if ye fear, then afoot or on horseback; but when ye are in
|
|
safety remember God, how He taught you while yet ye did not know.
|
|
Those of you who die and leave wives, should bequeath to their wives
|
|
maintenance for a year, without expulsion (from their home); but if
|
|
they go out, there is no crime in you for what they do of
|
|
themselves, in reason; but God is mighty and wise.
|
|
And divorced women should have a maintenance in reason,- a duty this
|
|
on those that fear. Thus does God explain to you His signs; haply ye
|
|
may understand.
|
|
Dost thou not look at those who left their homes by thousands, for
|
|
fear of death; and God said to them 'Die,' and then He quickened
|
|
them again? Verily God is Lord of grace to men, but most men give no
|
|
thanks.
|
|
Fight then in God's way, and know that God both hears and knows.
|
|
Who is there that will lend to God a good loan? He will redouble
|
|
it many a double; God closes His hand and holds it out, and unto Him
|
|
shall ye return.
|
|
Dost thou not look at the crowd of the children of Israel after
|
|
Moses' time, when they said to a prophet of theirs, 'Raise up for us a
|
|
king, and we will fight in God's way?' He said, 'Will ye perhaps, if
|
|
it be written down for you to fight, refuse to fight?' They said, 'And
|
|
why should we not fight in God's way, now that we are dispossessed
|
|
of our homes and sons? But when it was written down for them to
|
|
fight they turned back, save a few of them, and God knows who are
|
|
evildoers. Then their prophet said to them, 'Verily, God has raised up
|
|
for you Talut as a king;' they said, How can the kingdom be his over
|
|
us; we have more right to the kingdom than he, for he has not an
|
|
amplitude of wealth?' He said, 'Verily, God has chosen him over you,
|
|
and has provided him with an extent of knowledge and of form. God
|
|
gives the kingdom unto whom He will; God comprehends and knows.'
|
|
Then said to them their prophet, 'The sign of his kingdom is that
|
|
there shall come to you the ark with the shechina in it from your
|
|
Lord, and the relics of what the family of Moses and the family of
|
|
Aaron left; the angels shall bear it.' In that is surely a sign to you
|
|
if ye believe.
|
|
And when Talut set out with his soldiery, he said, 'God will try you
|
|
with a river, and he who drinks therefrom, he is not of mine; but
|
|
whoso tastes it not, he is of mine, save he who laps it lapping with
|
|
his hand.'
|
|
And they drank from it save a few of them, and when he crossed it,
|
|
he and those who believed with him, they said, 'We have no power
|
|
this day against Galut and his soldiery, 'those who thought that
|
|
they should meet their Lord said, 'How many a small division of men
|
|
have conquered a numerous division, by the permission of God, for
|
|
God is with the patient.'
|
|
And when they went out against a Galut and his soldiery, they
|
|
said, 'Lord, pour out patience over us, and make firm our steps, and
|
|
help us against the misbelieving people!'
|
|
And they put them to flight by the permission of God, and David
|
|
killed Galut, and God gave him the kingdom and wisdom, and taught
|
|
him of what He willed. And were it not for God's repelling men one
|
|
with another the earth would become spoiled; but God is Lord of
|
|
grace over the worlds.
|
|
These are the signs of God, we recite them to thee in truth, for,
|
|
verily, thou art of those who are sent.
|
|
These apostles have we preferred one of them above another. Of
|
|
them is one to whom God spake; and we have raised some of them
|
|
degrees; and we have given Jesus the son of Mary manifest signs, and
|
|
strengthened him by the Holy Spirit. And, did God please, those who
|
|
came after them would not have fought after there came to them
|
|
manifest signs. But they did disagree, and of them are some who
|
|
believe, and of them some who misbelieve, but, did God please, they
|
|
would not have fought, for God does what He will.
|
|
O ye who believe! expend in alms of what we have bestowed upon
|
|
you, before the day comes in which is no barter, and no friendship,
|
|
and no intercession; and the misbelievers, they are the unjust.
|
|
God, there is no god but He, the living, the self-subsistent.
|
|
Slumber takes Him not, nor sleep. His is what is in the heavens and
|
|
what is in the earth. Who is it that intercedes with Him save by His
|
|
permission? He knows what is before them and what behind them, and
|
|
they comprehend not aught of His knowledge but of what He pleases. His
|
|
throne extends over the heavens and the earth, and it tires Him not to
|
|
guard them both, for He is high and grand.
|
|
There is no compulsion in religion; the right way has been
|
|
distinguished from the wrong, and whoso disbelieves in Taghut and
|
|
believes in God, he has got hold of the firm handle in which is no
|
|
breaking off; but God both hears and knows.
|
|
God is the patron of those who believe, He brings them forth from
|
|
darkness into light. But those who misbelieve, their patrons are
|
|
Taghut, these bring them forth from light to darkness,- fellows of the
|
|
Fire, they dwell therein for aye.
|
|
Do you not look at him who disputed with Abraham about his Lord,
|
|
that God had given him the kingdom? When Abraham said, 'My Lord is
|
|
He who giveth life and death,' he said, 'I give life and death.'
|
|
Abraham said, 'But verily, God brings the sun from the east, do thou
|
|
then bring it from the west? And he who misbelieved was dumbfounded,
|
|
for God does not guide unjust folk.
|
|
Or like him who passed by a village, when it was desolate and turned
|
|
over on its roofs, and said, 'How will God revive this after its
|
|
death?' And God made him die for a hundred years, then He raised
|
|
him, and said, 'How long hast thou tarried?' Said he, 'I have
|
|
tarried a day, or some part of a day.' He said, 'Nay, thou hast
|
|
tarried a hundred years; look at thy food and drink, they are not
|
|
spoiled, and look at thine ass; for we will make thee a sign to men.
|
|
And look at the bones how we scatter them and then clothe them with
|
|
flesh.' And when it was made manifest to him, he said, 'I know that
|
|
God is mighty over all.'
|
|
And when Abraham said, 'Lord, show me how thou wilt revive the
|
|
dead,' He said, 'What, dost thou not yet believe?' Said he, 'Yea,
|
|
but that my heart may be quieted.' He said, 'Then take four birds, and
|
|
take them close to thyself; then put a part of them on every mountain;
|
|
then call them, and they will come to thee in haste; and know that God
|
|
is mighty, wise.'
|
|
The likeness of those who expend their wealth in God's way is as the
|
|
likeness of a grain that grows to seven ears, in every ear a hundred
|
|
grains, for God will double unto whom He pleases; for God both
|
|
embraces and knows.
|
|
Those who expend their wealth in God's way, then do not follow up
|
|
what they expend by taunting with it and by annoyance, these have
|
|
their hire with their Lord, and no fear is on them, neither shall they
|
|
grieve.
|
|
Kind speech and pardon are better than almsgiving followed by
|
|
annoyance, and God is rich and clement.
|
|
O ye who believe! make not your almsgiving vain by taunts and
|
|
annoyance, like him who expends what he has for the sake of
|
|
appearances before men, and believes not in God and the last day;
|
|
for his likeness is as the likeness of a flint with soil upon it,
|
|
and a heavy shower falls on it and leaves it bare rock; they can do
|
|
nought with what they earn, for God guides not the misbelieving folk.
|
|
But the likeness of those who expend their wealth craving the
|
|
goodwill of God, and as an insurance for their souls, is as the
|
|
likeness of a garden on a hill. A heavy shower falls on it, and it
|
|
brings forth its eatables twofold; and if no heavy shower falls on it,
|
|
the dew does; and God on what ye do doth look.
|
|
Would one of you fain have a garden of palms and vines, with
|
|
rivers flowing beneath it, in which is every fruit; and when old age
|
|
shall reach him, have weak seed, and there fall on it a storm wind
|
|
with fire therein, and it gets burnt?
|
|
Thus does God manifest to you His signs, mayhap ye will reflect.
|
|
O ye who believe! expend in alms of the good things that ye have
|
|
earned, and of what we have brought forth for you out of the earth,
|
|
and do not take the vile thereof to spend in alms,- what you would not
|
|
take yourselves save by connivance at it; but know that God is rich
|
|
and to be praised.
|
|
The devil promises you poverty and bids you sin, but God promises
|
|
you pardon from Him and grace, for God both embraces and knows. He
|
|
bringeth wisdom unto whom He will, and he who is brought wisdom is
|
|
brought much good; but none will remember save those endowed with
|
|
minds.
|
|
Whatever expense ye expend, or vow ye vow, God knows it; but the
|
|
unjust have no helpers. If ye display your almsgiving, then well is
|
|
it; but if ye hide it and bring it to the poor, then is it better
|
|
for you, and will expiate for you your evil deeds; for God of what
|
|
ye do is well aware.
|
|
Thou art not bound to guide them; but God guides whom He will; and
|
|
whatever good ye expend it is for yourselves, and do not expend save
|
|
craving for God's face.
|
|
And what ye expend of good, it shall be repaid you, and ye shall not
|
|
be wronged,- unto the poor who are straitened in God's way, and cannot
|
|
knock about in the earth. The ignorant think them to be rich because
|
|
of their modesty; you will know them by their mark, they do not beg
|
|
from men importunately; but what ye spend of good God knows.
|
|
Those who expend their wealth by night and day, secretly and openly,
|
|
they shall have their hire with their Lord. No fear shall come on
|
|
them, nor shall they grieve.
|
|
Those who devour usury shall not rise again, save as he riseth
|
|
whom Satan hath paralysed with a touch; and that is because they say
|
|
'selling is only like usury,' but God has made selling lawful and
|
|
usury unlawful; and he to whom the admonition from his Lord has
|
|
come, if he desists, what has gone before is his: his matter is in
|
|
God's hands. But whosoever returns (to usury) these are the fellows of
|
|
the Fire, and they shall dwell therein for aye. God shall blot out
|
|
usury, but shall make almsgiving profitable, for God loves not any
|
|
sinful misbeliever.
|
|
Verily, those who believe, and act righteously, and are steadfast in
|
|
prayer, and give alms, theirs is their hire with their Lord; there
|
|
is no fear on them, nor shall they grieve.
|
|
O ye who believe! fear God, and remit the balance of usury, if ye be
|
|
believers; and if ye will not do it, then hearken to the
|
|
proclamation of war from God and His Apostle; but if ye repent, your
|
|
capital is yours. Ye shall not wrong, nor shall ye be wronged.
|
|
And if it be one in difficulties, then wait for easy
|
|
circumstances; but that ye remit it as alms is better for you, if ye
|
|
did but know.
|
|
Fear the day wherein ye shall return to God; then shall each soul be
|
|
paid what it has earned, and they shall not be wronged.
|
|
O ye who believe! if ye engage to one another in a debt for a stated
|
|
time, then write it down, and let a scribe write it down between you
|
|
faithfully; nor let a scribe refuse to write as God taught him, but
|
|
let him write, and let him who owes dictate; but let him fear God
|
|
his Lord, and not diminish therefrom aught; but if he who owes be a
|
|
fool, or weak, or cannot dictate himself, then let his agent dictate
|
|
faithfully, and let them call two witnesses out from amongst their
|
|
men; or if there be not two men, then a man and two women, from
|
|
those whom he chooses for witnesses, so that if one of the two
|
|
should err, the second of the two may remind the other; and let not
|
|
the witnesses refuse when they are summoned; and let them not tire
|
|
of writing it, be it small or great, with its time of payment. That is
|
|
more just in the sight of God, and more upright for testimony, and
|
|
brings you nearer to not doubting. Unless, indeed, it be a ready-money
|
|
transaction between you, which ye arrange between yourselves, then
|
|
it is no crime against you that ye do not write it down; but bring
|
|
witnesses to what ye sell one to another, and let not either scribe or
|
|
witness come to harm, for if ye do it will be abomination in you;
|
|
but fear God, for God teaches you, and God knows all things. But if ye
|
|
be upon a journey, and ye cannot find a scribe, then let a pledge be
|
|
taken. But if one of you trust another, then let him who is trusted
|
|
surrender his trust, and let him fear God his Lord, and conceal not
|
|
testimony, for he who conceals it, verily, sinful is his heart: God
|
|
knows what ye do.
|
|
God's is what is in heaven and in the earth, and if ye show what
|
|
is in your souls, or hide it, God will call you to account; and He
|
|
forgives whom He will, and punishes whom He will, for God is mighty
|
|
over all.
|
|
The Apostle believes in what is sent down to him from his Lord,
|
|
and the believers all believe on God, and His angels, and His Books,
|
|
and His apostles,- we make no difference between any of His apostles,-
|
|
they say, 'We hear and obey, Thy pardon, O Lord! for to Thee our
|
|
journey tends. God will not require of the soul save its capacity.
|
|
It shall have what it has earned, and it shall owe what has been
|
|
earned from it. Lord, catch us not up, if we forget or make mistake;
|
|
Lord, load us not with a burden, as Thou hast loaded those who were
|
|
before us. Lord, make us not to carry what we have not strength for,
|
|
but forgive us, and pardon us, and have mercy on us. Thou art our
|
|
Sovereign, then help us against the people who do not believe!'
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF IMRAN'S FAMILY
|
|
(III. Medina.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
ALIF LAM MIM. God, there is no god but He, the living, the
|
|
self-subsistent. He has sent down to thee the Book, in truth,
|
|
confirming what was before it, and has revealed the law, and the
|
|
gospel before for the guidance of men, and has revealed the
|
|
Discrimination.
|
|
Verily, those who disbelieve in the signs of God, for them is severe
|
|
torment, for God is mighty and avenging.
|
|
Verily, God, there is nothing hidden from Him in the earth, nor in
|
|
the heaven; He it is who fashions you in the womb as He pleases. There
|
|
is no God but He, the mighty, the wise.
|
|
He it is who has revealed to thee the Book, of which there are
|
|
some verses that are decisive, they are the mother of the Book; and
|
|
others ambiguous; but as for those in whose hearts is perversity, they
|
|
follow what is ambiguous, and do crave for sedition, craving for
|
|
(their own) interpretation of it; but none know the interpretation
|
|
of it except God. But those who are well grounded in knowledge say,
|
|
'We believe in it; it is all from our Lord; but none will remember
|
|
save those who possess minds.
|
|
'O Lord! pervert not our hearts again when Thou hast guided them,
|
|
and grant us mercy from Thee, for Thou art He who grants. O Lord! Thou
|
|
shalt gather together men unto the day wherein is no doubt. Verily,
|
|
God will not depart from His promise.'
|
|
Verily, those who misbelieve, their wealth shall not help them,
|
|
nor their children, against God at all; and they it is who are the
|
|
fuel of the fire.
|
|
As was the wont of Pharaoh's people, and those before them, they
|
|
said our signs were lies, and God caught them up in their sins, for
|
|
God is severe to punish.
|
|
Say to those who misbelieve, 'Ye shall be overcome and driven
|
|
together to hell, an ill couch will it be.
|
|
'Ye have had a sign in the two parties who met; one party fighting
|
|
in the way of God, the other misbelieving; these saw twice the same
|
|
number as themselves to the eye-sight, for God aids with His help
|
|
those whom He pleases.' Verily, in that is a lesson for those who have
|
|
perception. Seemly unto men is a life of lusts, of women, and
|
|
children, and hoarded talents of gold and silver, and of horses
|
|
well-bred, and cattle, and tilth;- that is the provision for the
|
|
life of this world; but God, with Him is the best resort.
|
|
Say, 'But shall we tell you of a better thing than this?' For
|
|
those who fear are gardens with their Lord, beneath which rivers flow;
|
|
they shall dwell therein for aye, and pure wives and grace from God;
|
|
the Lord looks on His servants, who say, 'Lord, we believe, pardon
|
|
Thou our sins and keep us from the torment of the fire,' the
|
|
patient, the truthful, the devout, and those who ask for pardon at the
|
|
dawn.
|
|
God bears witness that there is no god but He, and the angels, and
|
|
those possessed of knowledge standing up for justice. There is no
|
|
God but He, the mighty, the wise.
|
|
Verily, (the true) religion in God's sight is Islam, and those to
|
|
whom the Book was given disagreed not until after that there was given
|
|
to them knowledge, through mutual envy. But whoso disbelieves in God's
|
|
signs, truly God is quick at reckoning up.
|
|
And if they would dispute with thee, then say, 'I turn my face
|
|
with resignation unto God, and whoso follows me.'
|
|
And say to those who have been given the Book, unto the Gentiles,
|
|
'Are ye, too, resigned' and if they are resigned, then are they
|
|
guided. But if they turn their backs, then thou hast only to preach,
|
|
and God looks on his servants.
|
|
Verily, those who disbelieve in God's signs, and kill the prophets
|
|
without right, and kill those from among men, who bid what is just,-
|
|
to them give the glad tidings of grievous woe! These are they whose
|
|
works are void in this world and the next, and helpers have they none.
|
|
Did ye not see those who have been given a portion of the Book? they
|
|
were called unto the Book of God to decide between them; and then a
|
|
sect of them turned their backs and turned away;- that is because they
|
|
say the fire shall not touch us save for a certain number of days. But
|
|
that deceived them in their religion which they had invented. How will
|
|
it be when we have gathered them together for a day whereof there is
|
|
no doubt, when each soul shall be paid what it has earned, and they
|
|
shall not be wronged?
|
|
Say, 'O God, Lord of the kingdom! Thou givest the kingdom to
|
|
whomsoever Thou pleasest, and strippest the kingdom from whomsoever
|
|
Thou pleasest; Thou honourest whom Thou pleasest, and abasest whom
|
|
Thou pleasest; in Thy hand is good. Verily, Thou art mighty over
|
|
all. Thou dost turn night to day, and dost turn day to night, and dost
|
|
bring forth the living from the dead, and dost provide for whom Thou
|
|
pleasest without taking count.'
|
|
Those who believe shall not take misbelievers for their patrons,
|
|
rather than believers, and he who does this has no part with God at
|
|
all, unless, indeed, ye fear some danger from them. But God bids you
|
|
beware of Himself, for unto Him your journey is.
|
|
Say, 'If ye hide that which is in your breasts, or if ye show it,
|
|
God knows it: He knows what is in the heavens and what is in the
|
|
earth, for God is mighty over all.'
|
|
The day that every soul shall find what it has done of good
|
|
present before it; and what it has done of evil, it would fain that
|
|
there were between itself and that a wide interval. 'God bids you
|
|
beware of Himself, but God is gentle with His servants.'
|
|
Say, 'If ye would love God then follow me, and God will love you and
|
|
forgive you your sins, for God is forgiving and merciful.'
|
|
Say, 'Obey God and the Apostle; but if ye turn your backs God
|
|
loves not misbelievers.'
|
|
Verily, God has chosen Adam, and Noah, and Abraham's people, and
|
|
Imran's people above the world,- a seed, of which one succeeds the
|
|
other, but God both hears and knows.
|
|
When Imran's wife said, 'Lord! I have vowed to Thee what is within
|
|
my womb, to be dedicated unto Thee, receive it then from me. Verily,
|
|
Thou dost hear and know.' And when she brought it forth she said,
|
|
'Verily, I have brought it forth a female'- but God knew best what she
|
|
brought forth; and a male is not like a female- 'I have called her
|
|
Mary, and I seek a refuge in Thee for her and for her seed from
|
|
Satan the pelted.'
|
|
And her Lord received her with a good reception, and made her grow
|
|
up with a good growth, and Zachariah took care of her. Whenever
|
|
Zachariah entered the chamber to her he found beside her a
|
|
provision, and said, 'O Mary, how hast thou this?' She said, 'It is
|
|
from God, for God provides for whom He pleases without count.'
|
|
Therefore prayed Zachariah to his Lord, and said, 'Lord, grant me from
|
|
Thee a good seed. Verily, Thou hearest prayer.' And an angel cried out
|
|
to him as he was standing praying in the chamber (and said) that
|
|
'God gives thee the glad tidings of John, to confirm the Word from
|
|
God,- of a chief and a chaste one, and a prophet from amongst the
|
|
righteous.'
|
|
He said, 'My Lord, how can there be to me a boy when old age has
|
|
reached me, and my wife is barren?' Said he, 'Thus God does what He
|
|
pleaseth.' He said, 'My Lord, make for me a sign.' He said, 'Thy
|
|
sign is that thou shalt not speak to men for three days, save by
|
|
gesture; but remember thy Lord much, and celebrate His praises in
|
|
the evening and the morning.'
|
|
And when the angels said, 'O Mary! verily, God has chosen thee,
|
|
and has purified thee, and has chosen thee above the women of the
|
|
world. O Mary! be devout unto thy Lord, and adore and bow down with
|
|
those who bow. That is (one) of the declarations of the unseen world
|
|
which we reveal to thee, though thou wert not by them when they
|
|
threw their lots which of them should take care of Mary, nor were ye
|
|
by them when they did dispute.'
|
|
When the angel said, 'O Mary! verily, God gives thee the glad
|
|
tidings of a Word from Him; his name shall be the Messiah Jesus the
|
|
son of Mary, regarded in this world and the next and of those whose
|
|
place is nigh to God. And he shall speak to people in his cradle,
|
|
and when grown up, and shall be among the righteous.' She said, 'Lord!
|
|
how can have a son, when man has not yet touched me?' He said, 'Thus
|
|
God creates what He pleaseth. When He decrees a matter He only says BE
|
|
and it is; and He will teach him the Book, and wisdom, and the law,
|
|
and the gospel, and he shall be a prophet to the people of Israel
|
|
(saying), that I have come to you, with a sign from God, namely,
|
|
that I will create for you out of clay as though it were the form of a
|
|
bird, and I will blow thereon and it shall become a bird by God's
|
|
permission; and I will heal the blind from birth, and lepers; and I
|
|
will bring the dead to life by God's permission; and I will tell you
|
|
what you eat and what ye store up in your houses. Verily, in that is a
|
|
sign for you if ye be believers. And I will confirm what is before you
|
|
of the law, and will surely make lawful for you some of that which was
|
|
prohibited from you. I have come to you with a sign from your Lord, so
|
|
fear God and follow me, for God is my Lord, and your Lord, so
|
|
worship Him:- this is the right path.'
|
|
And when Jesus perceived their unbelief, He said, 'Who are my
|
|
helpers for God?' Said the apostles, 'We are God's helpers. We believe
|
|
in God, so bear witness that we are resigned. Lord, we have believed
|
|
in what Thou hast revealed, and we have followed the Apostle, so write
|
|
us down with those which bear witness.' But they (the Jews) were
|
|
crafty, and God was crafty, for God is the best of crafty ones!
|
|
When God said, 'O Jesus! I will make Thee die and take Thee up again
|
|
to me and will clear thee of those who misbelieve, and will make those
|
|
who follow thee above those who misbelieve, at the day of judgment,
|
|
then to me is your return. I will decide between you concerning that
|
|
wherein ye disagree. And as for those who misbelieve, I will punish
|
|
them with grievous punishment in this world and the next, and they
|
|
shall have none to help them.' But as for those who believe and do
|
|
what is right, He will pay them their reward, for God loves not the
|
|
unjust.
|
|
That is what we recite to thee of the signs and of the wise
|
|
reminder. Verily the likeness of Jesus with God is as the likeness
|
|
of Adam. He created him from earth, then He said to him BE, and he
|
|
was;- the truth from thy Lord, so be thou not of those who are in
|
|
doubt. And whoso disputeth with thee after what has come to thee of
|
|
knowledge, say, 'Come, let us call our sons and your sons, and our
|
|
women and your women, and ourselves and yourselves: then we will
|
|
imprecate and put God's curse on those who lie.'
|
|
Verily, those are the true stories, and there is no god but God,
|
|
and, verily, God He is the mighty, the wise; but if they turn back,
|
|
God knows the evildoers.
|
|
Say, 'O ye people of the Book, come to a word laid down plainly
|
|
between us and you, that we will not serve other than God, nor
|
|
associate aught with him, nor take each other for lords rather than
|
|
God.' But if they turn back then say, 'Bear witness that we are
|
|
resigned.'
|
|
O people of the Book, why do ye dispute about Abraham, when the
|
|
law and the gospel were not revealed until after him? What! do ye
|
|
not understand? Here ye are, disputing about what ye have some
|
|
knowledge of; why then do ye dispute about what ye have no knowledge
|
|
of? God knows and ye know not.
|
|
Abraham was not a Jew, nor yet a Christian, but he was a 'Hanif
|
|
resigned, and not of the idolaters. Verily, the people most worthy
|
|
of Abraham are those who follow him and his prophets, and those who
|
|
believe;- God is the patron of the believers.
|
|
A sect of the people of the Book would fain they could lead you
|
|
astray, but they only lead themselves astray, and they do not
|
|
perceive.
|
|
O people of the Book! why do ye disbelieve in the signs of God,
|
|
the while ye witness them? O people of the Book! why do ye clothe
|
|
the truth with falsehood and hide the truth the while ye know? A
|
|
sect of the people of the Book say, 'Believe in what was revealed to
|
|
those who believed at the first appearance of the day, and
|
|
disbelieve it at the end thereof,'- that (others) may perchance go
|
|
back (from their faith)- 'do not believe save one who followeth your
|
|
religion.'
|
|
Say, 'Verily, the (true) guidance is the guidance of God, that one
|
|
should be given like what ye are given.' Or would they dispute with
|
|
you before your Lord, say, 'Grace is in the hand of God, He gives it
|
|
to whom he pleases, for God both comprehends and knows. He specially
|
|
favours with his mercy whom he pleases, for God is Lord of mighty
|
|
grace.
|
|
And of the people of the Book, there are some of them who, if thou
|
|
entrust them with a talent give it back to you; and some of them, if
|
|
thou entrust them with a dinar, he will not give it back to thee
|
|
except so long as thou dost stand over him. That is because they
|
|
say, We owe no duty to the Gentiles;' but they tell a lie against God,
|
|
the while they know.
|
|
Yea, whoso fulfils his covenant and fears,- verily, God loves
|
|
those who fear. Those who sell God's covenant and their oaths for a
|
|
little price, these have no portion in the future life. God will not
|
|
speak to them, and will not look upon them on the resurrection day,
|
|
and will not purify them; but for them is grievous woe.
|
|
And, verily, amongst them is a sect who twist their tongues
|
|
concerning the Book, that ye may reckon it to be from the Book, but it
|
|
is not from the Book. They say, 'It is from God, 'but it is not from
|
|
God, and they tell a lie against God, the while they know.
|
|
It is not right for a man that God should give him a Book, and
|
|
judgment, and prophecy, and that then he should say to men, 'Be ye
|
|
servants of mine rather than of God;' but be ye rather masters of
|
|
teaching the Book and of what ye learn.
|
|
He does not bid you take the angels and the prophets for your lords;
|
|
shall He bid you misbelieve again when you are once resigned?
|
|
And when God took the compact from the prophets '(this is) surely
|
|
what we have given you of the Book and wisdom. Then shall come to
|
|
you the Apostle confirming what is with you. Ye must believe in him
|
|
and help him.' He said, moreover, 'Are ye resolved and have ye taken
|
|
my compact on that (condition) They say, 'We are resolved.' He said,
|
|
'Then bear witness, for I am witness with you; but he who turns back
|
|
after that, these are sinners.'
|
|
What is it other than God's religion that they crave? when to Him is
|
|
resigned whosoever is in the heavens and the earth, will he or nill
|
|
he, and to him shall they return!
|
|
Say, 'We believe in God, and what has been revealed to thee, and
|
|
what was revealed to Abraham, and Ishmael, and Isaac, and Jacob, and
|
|
the tribes, and what was given to Moses, and Jesus, and the prophets
|
|
from their Lord,- we will make no distinction between any of them,-
|
|
and we are unto Him resigned. Whosoever craves other than Islam for
|
|
a religion, it shall surely not be accepted from him, and he shall, in
|
|
the next world, be of those who lose.'
|
|
How shall God guide people who have disbelieved after believing
|
|
and bearing witness that the Apostle is true, and after there come
|
|
to them manifest signs? God guides the unjust folk.
|
|
These, their reward is, that on them is the curse of God, and of the
|
|
angels, and of men together; they shall dwell therein for aye- the
|
|
torment shall not be alleviated from them, nor shall they be respited;
|
|
save those who repent after that, and act aright, for verily, God is
|
|
forgiving and merciful.
|
|
Verily, those who misbelieve after believing, and then increase in
|
|
misbelief, their repentance shall not be accepted; these are those who
|
|
err.
|
|
Verily, those who misbelieve and die in misbelief, there shall not
|
|
be accepted from any one of them the earth-full of gold, though he
|
|
should give it as a ransom. For them is grievous woe, and helpers have
|
|
they none.
|
|
Ye cannot attain to righteousness until ye expend in alms of what ye
|
|
love. But what ye expend in alms, that God knows.
|
|
All food was lawful to the children of Israel save what Israel
|
|
made unlawful to himself before that the law was revealed. Say, 'Bring
|
|
the law and recite it, if ye speak the truth.' But whoso forges
|
|
against God a lie, after that, they are the unjust. Say, 'God speaks
|
|
the truth, then follow the faith of Abraham, a 'hanif, who was not
|
|
of the idolaters.'
|
|
Verily, the first House founded for men was surely that at Bekkah,
|
|
for a blessing and a guidance to the worlds. Therein are manifest
|
|
signs,- Abraham's station, and whosoever enters in is safe. There is
|
|
due to God from man a pilgrimage unto the House, for whosoever can
|
|
find his way there. But whoso misbelieves- God is independent of the
|
|
worlds.
|
|
Say, 'O people of the Book! why do ye misbelieve in God's signs,
|
|
while God is witness of what ye do?'
|
|
Say, 'O people of the Book! why do ye turn from the way of God him
|
|
who believes, craving to make it crooked, while ye are witnesses?
|
|
But God is not careless of what ye do.'
|
|
O ye who believe! if ye obey the sect of those to whom the Book
|
|
was brought, they will turn you, after your faith, to unbelievers
|
|
again. How can ye misbelieve while unto you are recited the signs of
|
|
God, and among you is His Apostle? But whoso takes tight hold on
|
|
God, he is guided into the right way.
|
|
O ye who believe! fear God with the fear that He deserves, and die
|
|
not save ye be resigned.
|
|
Take tight hold of God's rope altogether, and do not part in
|
|
sects; but remember the favours of God towards you, when ye were
|
|
enemies and He made friendship between your hearts, and on the
|
|
morrow ye were, by His favour, brothers. Ye were on the edge of a
|
|
pit of fire, but he rescued you therefrom. Thus does God show to you
|
|
His signs, perchance ye may be guided; and that there may be of you
|
|
a nation who shall invite to good, and bid what is reasonable, and
|
|
forbid what is wrong; these are the prosperous.
|
|
Be not like those who parted in sects and disagreed after there came
|
|
to them manifest signs; for them is mighty woe, on the day when
|
|
faces shall be whitened and faces shall be blackened. As for those
|
|
whose faces are blackened,- 'Did ye misbelieve after your faith,
|
|
then taste the torment for your misbelief But as for those whose faces
|
|
are whitened, they are in God's mercy, and they shall dwell therein
|
|
for aye.
|
|
These are the signs of God. We recite them to you in truth, for
|
|
God desires not wrong unto the worlds.
|
|
God's is what is in the heavens and what is in the earth, and unto
|
|
God affairs return.
|
|
Ye were the best of nations brought forth unto man. Ye bid what is
|
|
reasonable, and forbid what is wrong, believing in God. Had the people
|
|
of the Book believed, it would have been better for them. There are
|
|
believers among them, though most of them are sinners.
|
|
They shall surely not harm you save a hurt; and if they fight you,
|
|
they shall show you their backs, then they shall not be helped.
|
|
They are smitten with abasement wherever they be found, save for the
|
|
rope of God and the rope of man; and they draw on themselves wrath
|
|
from God. They are smitten, too, with poverty; that is because they
|
|
did disbelieve in God's signs, and kill the prophets undeservedly.
|
|
That is because they did rebel and did transgress.
|
|
They are not all alike. Of the people of the Book there is a
|
|
nation upright, reciting God's signs throughout the night, as they
|
|
adore the while. They believe in God, and in the last day, and bid
|
|
what is reasonable, and forbid what is wrong, and vie in charity;
|
|
these are among the righteous.
|
|
What ye do of good surely God will not deny, for God knows those who
|
|
fear.
|
|
Verily, those who misbelieve, their wealth is of no service to them,
|
|
nor their children either, against God; they are the fellows of the
|
|
Fire, and they shall dwell therein for aye.
|
|
The likeness of what they expend in this life of the world, is as
|
|
the likeness of wind wherein is a cold blast that falls upon a
|
|
people's tilth who have wronged themselves and destroys it. It is
|
|
not God who wrongs them, but it is themselves they wrong.
|
|
O ye who believe! take not to intimacy with others than
|
|
yourselves; they will not fail to spoil you; they would fain ye came
|
|
to trouble,- hatred is shown by their mouths; but what their breasts
|
|
conceal is greater still. We have made manifest to you our signs,
|
|
did ye but understand.
|
|
Ye it is who love them, but they love not you; and ye believe in the
|
|
Book, all of it. But when they meet you they say, 'We believe;' and
|
|
when they go aside they bite their finger tips at you through rage.
|
|
Say, 'Die in your rage, for God doth know the nature of men's
|
|
breasts.'
|
|
If good luck touch you it is bad for them, but if bad luck befal you
|
|
they rejoice therein; yet if ye are patient and fear, their tricks
|
|
shall not harm you, for what they do God comprehends.
|
|
When thou didst set forth early from thy people to settle for the
|
|
believers a camp to fight;- but God both hears and knows;- when two
|
|
companies of you were on the point of showing cowardice; but God was
|
|
their guardian, for on God surely the believers do rely. Why! God gave
|
|
you victory at Bedr when ye were in a poor way; fear God, then,
|
|
haply ye may give thanks. When thou didst say unto the believers,
|
|
'Is it not enough for you that your Lord assists you with three
|
|
thousand of the angels sent down from on high? Yea, if ye are
|
|
patient and fear God, and they come upon you on a sudden, now, your
|
|
Lord will assist you with five thousand of His angels, (angels) of
|
|
mark. God only made this as glad tidings for you to comfort your
|
|
hearts withal,- for victory is but from God, the mighty, the wise;- to
|
|
cut off the flank of those who misbelieve, or make them downcast, that
|
|
they may retire disappointed.'
|
|
Thou hast nothing to do with the affair at all, whether He turn
|
|
towards them again or punish them; for, verily, they are unjust.
|
|
God's is what is in the heavens and in the earth. He forgives whom
|
|
He pleases, and punishes whom He pleases; for God is forgiving and
|
|
merciful.
|
|
O ye who believe! devour not usury doubly doubled, but fear God,
|
|
perchance ye may be prosperous; fear the fire which is prepared for
|
|
the unbelievers, and obey God and His Apostle, perchance ye may get
|
|
mercy. And vie with one another for pardon from your Lord, and for
|
|
Paradise, the breadth of which is as the heaven and the earth,
|
|
prepared for those who fear;- for those who expend in alms, in
|
|
prosperity and adversity, for those who repress their rage, and
|
|
those who pardon men; God loves the kind. Those who when they do a
|
|
crime, or wrong themselves, remember God, and ask forgiveness for
|
|
their sins,- and who forgives sins save God?- and do not persevere
|
|
in what they did, the while they know;- these have their reward:-
|
|
pardon from their Lord, and gardens beneath which rivers flow,
|
|
dwelling therein for aye; for pleasant is the hire of those who act
|
|
like this.
|
|
Incidents have passed before your time, go on then in the earth, and
|
|
see what was the end of those who called (the prophets) liars.
|
|
This is an explanation unto men, and a guidance and a warning unto
|
|
those who fear. Do not give way nor grieve, for ye shall have the
|
|
upper hand if ye but be believers.
|
|
If a sore touch you, a sore like it has touched people: these are
|
|
days which we make to alternate amongst mankind that God may know
|
|
who it is that believe, and may take from you witnesses, for God loves
|
|
not the unjust; and that God may assay those who believe, and blot out
|
|
the misbelievers. Do ye think that ye can enter Paradise and God not
|
|
know those of you who have fought well, or know the patient? Why, ye
|
|
longed for death before ye met it! Now ye have looked upon it and ye
|
|
halt!
|
|
Mohammed is but an apostle; apostles have passed away before his
|
|
time; what if he die or is killed, will ye retreat upon your heels? He
|
|
who retreats upon his heels does no harm to God at all; but God will
|
|
recompense the thankful. It is not for any soul to die, save by
|
|
God's permission written down for an appointed time; but he who wishes
|
|
for the reward of this world we will give him of it, and he who wishes
|
|
for the reward of the future we will give him of it, and we will
|
|
recompense the grateful.
|
|
How many prophets have myriads fought against! yet they did not give
|
|
way at what befel them in God's way Nor were they weak, nor did they
|
|
demean themselves:- God loves the patient. And their word was only
|
|
to say, 'Lord, forgive us our sins and our extravagance in our
|
|
affairs; and make firm our footing, and help us against the
|
|
misbelieving folk!' and God gave them the reward of this world, and
|
|
good reward for the future too, for God doth love the kind.
|
|
O ye who believe! if ye obey those who misbelieve, they will turn
|
|
you back upon your heels, and ye will retreat the losers. Nay, God
|
|
is your Lord, He is the best of helpers. We will throw dread into
|
|
the hearts of those who misbelieve, for that they associate that
|
|
with God which He has sent down no power for; but their resort is
|
|
fire, and evil is the resort of the unjust.
|
|
God has truly kept His promise, when ye knocked them senseless by
|
|
His permission, until ye showed cowardice, and wrangled, and rebelled,
|
|
after he had shown you what ye loved. Amongst you are those who love
|
|
this world, and amongst you are those who love the next. Then He
|
|
turned you away from them to try you; but He has pardoned you, for God
|
|
is Lord of grace unto believers,- when ye went up and looked not round
|
|
upon any one, although the Apostle was calling you from your rear.
|
|
Therefore did God reward you with trouble on trouble that ye should
|
|
not grieve after what ye had missed, nor for what befel you, for God
|
|
is well aware of what ye do. Then He sent down upon you after
|
|
trouble safety,- drowsiness creeping over one company of you, and
|
|
one company of you getting anxious about themselves, suspecting
|
|
about God other than the truth, with the suspicion of the ignorant,
|
|
and saying, 'Have we any chance in the affair?' Say, 'Verily, the
|
|
affair is God's.' They conceal in themselves what they will not show
|
|
to thee, and say, 'If we had any chance in the affair we should not be
|
|
killed here.' Say, 'If ye were in your houses, surely those against
|
|
whom slaughter was written down, would have gone forth to fight even
|
|
to where they are lying now; that God may try what is in your
|
|
breasts and assay what is in your hearts, for God doth know the nature
|
|
of men's breasts.'
|
|
Verily, those of you who turned your backs on that day when the
|
|
two armies met, it was but Satan who made them slip for something they
|
|
had earned. But God has now pardoned them; verily, God is forgiving
|
|
and clement.
|
|
O ye who believe! be not like those who misbelieve, and say unto
|
|
their brethren when they knock about in the earth, or are upon a raid,
|
|
'Had they but been at home, they had not died and had not been
|
|
killed.' It was that God might make a sighing in their hearts, for God
|
|
gives life and death; and God on what ye do doth look.
|
|
And if, indeed, ye be killed in God's way or die, surely forgiveness
|
|
from God and mercy is better than what ye gather; and if ye die or
|
|
be killed it is to God ye shall be assembled. It was by a sort of
|
|
mercy from God thou didst deal gently with them, for hadst thou been
|
|
rough and rude of heart they had dispersed from around thee. But
|
|
pardon them, and ask forgiveness for them, and take counsel with
|
|
them in the affair. As for what thou hast resolved, rely upon God;
|
|
verily, God loves those who do rely. If God help you, there is none
|
|
can overcome you; but if He leave you in the lurch, who is there can
|
|
help you after Him? Upon God then let believers rely.
|
|
It is not for the prophet to cheat; and he who cheats shall bring
|
|
what he has cheated on the resurrection day. Then shall each soul be
|
|
paid what it has earned, and they shall not be wronged. Is he who
|
|
follows the pleasure of God, like him who has drawn on himself anger
|
|
from God, whose resort is hell? An evil journey shall it be! These are
|
|
degrees with God, and God sees what ye do.
|
|
God was surely very gracious to the believers, when He sent
|
|
amongst them an apostle from themselves, to recite to them His
|
|
signs, and purify them, and teach them the Book and wisdom, although
|
|
they surely were before his time in manifest error. Or when an
|
|
accident befals you, and ye have fallen on twice as much, ye say, 'How
|
|
is this?' Say, 'It is from yourselves. Verily, God is mighty over
|
|
all.'
|
|
And what befel you the day when the two armies met, it was by
|
|
God's permission; that He might know the believers, and might know
|
|
those who behaved hypocritically; for it was said to them, 'Come,
|
|
fight in God's way,' or 'repel (the foe);' they said, 'If we knew
|
|
how to fight we would surely follow you.' They were that day far
|
|
nigher unto misbelief than they were to faith. They say with their
|
|
mouths what is not in their hearts, but God doth know best what they
|
|
hid. Those who said of their brethren, whilst they themselves stayed
|
|
at home, 'Had they obeyed us they would not have been killed.' Say,
|
|
'Ward off from yourselves death, if ye do speak the truth.'
|
|
Count not those who are killed in the way of God as dead, but living
|
|
with their Lord;- provided for, rejoicing in what God has brought them
|
|
of His grace, and being glad for those who have not reached them yet,-
|
|
those left behind them; there is no fear for them, and they shall
|
|
not be grieved; glad at favour from God and grace, and that God
|
|
wasteth not the hire of the believers. Whoso answered to the call of
|
|
God and of His prophet after sorrow had befallen them, for those, if
|
|
they do good and fear God, is a mighty hire. To whom when men said,
|
|
'Verily, men have gathered round you, fear then them,' it only
|
|
increased their faith, and they said, 'God is enough for us, a good
|
|
guardian is He.' Then they retired in favour from God and grace; no
|
|
evil touched them; they followed the pleasure of God, and God is
|
|
Lord of mighty grace.
|
|
It is only that Satan who frightens his friends. Do not ye fear
|
|
them, but fear me, if ye be believers.
|
|
Let them not grieve thee who vie with each other in misbelief
|
|
Verily, they cannot hurt God at all. God wills not to make for them
|
|
a portion in the future life; but for them is mighty woe.
|
|
Verily, those who purchase misbelief for faith, they do not hurt God
|
|
at all, and for them is grievous woe.
|
|
Let not those who misbelieve reckon that our letting them range is
|
|
good for themselves. We only let them have their range that they may
|
|
increase in sin. And for them is shameful woe. God would not leave
|
|
believers in the state which ye are in, until He discerns the vile
|
|
from the good. And God would not inform you of the unseen, but God
|
|
chooses of His apostles whom He pleases. Wherefore believe ye in God
|
|
and His Apostle; and if ye believe and fear, for you is mighty hire.
|
|
And let not those who are niggard of what God has given them of
|
|
His grace, count that it is best for them;- nay, it is worse for them.
|
|
What they have been niggard of shall be a collar round their necks
|
|
upon the resurrection day. And God's is the heritage of the heavens
|
|
and the earth, and God of what ye do is well aware.
|
|
God heard the speech of those who said, 'Verily, God is poor and
|
|
we are rich.' We will write down what they said, and how they killed
|
|
the prophets undeservedly, and say, 'Taste ye the torment of burning;'
|
|
this shall they suffer for what their hands have sent on before;- for,
|
|
verily, God is no unjust one to His servants,- who say, 'Verily, God
|
|
has covenanted with us that we should not believe in an apostle
|
|
until he gives us a sacrifice which fire devours.'
|
|
Say, 'There have come to you apostles before me with manifest signs,
|
|
and with what ye talk about; why then did ye kill them, if ye speak
|
|
the truth?
|
|
And if they did call thee a liar, apostles before thee have been
|
|
called liars too, who came with manifest signs, and with scriptures,
|
|
and with the illuminating Book.
|
|
Every soul must taste of death; and ye shall only be paid your
|
|
hire upon the resurrection day. But he who is forced away from the
|
|
fire and brought into Paradise is indeed happy; but the life of this
|
|
world is but a possession of deceit. Ye shall surely be tried in
|
|
your wealth, and in your persons, and ye shall surely hear from
|
|
those who have had the Book brought them before you, and from those
|
|
who associate others with God, much harm. But if ye be patient and
|
|
fear,- verily, that is one of the determined affairs.
|
|
When God took the compact from those who have had the Book brought
|
|
them that 'Ye shall of a surety manifest it unto men, and not hide
|
|
it,' they cast it behind their backs, and bought therewith a little
|
|
price,- but evil is what they buy.
|
|
Count not that those who rejoice in what they have produced, and
|
|
love to be praised for what they have not done,- think not that they
|
|
are in safety from woe,- for them is grievous woe!
|
|
God's is the kingdom of the heavens and the earth, and God is mighty
|
|
over all.
|
|
Verily, in the creation of the heavens and the earth, and in the
|
|
succession of night and day, are signs to those possessed of minds;
|
|
who remember God standing and sitting or lying on their sides, and
|
|
reflect on the creation of the heavens and the earth. 'O Lord! thou
|
|
hast not created this in vain. We celebrate Thy praise; then keep us
|
|
from the torment of the fire! Lord! verily, whomsoever Thou hast
|
|
made to enter the fire, Thou hast disgraced him; and the unjust
|
|
shall have none to help them.
|
|
'Lord! verily, we heard a crier calling to the faith, "Believe in
|
|
your Lord," and we did believe. Lord! forgive us our sins and cover
|
|
our offences, and let us die with the righteous. Lord! and bring us
|
|
what Thou hast promised us by Thy apostles, and disgrace us not upon
|
|
the resurrection day; for, verily, Thou dost not break Thy
|
|
promises!' And the Lord shall answer them, 'I waste not the works of a
|
|
worker amongst you, be it male or female,- one of you is from the
|
|
other.
|
|
'Those who fled, and were turned out of their houses, and were
|
|
harmed in my way, and who fought and were killed, I will cover their
|
|
offences, and I will make them enter into gardens beneath which rivers
|
|
flow.' A reward from God; for God, with Him are the best of rewards.
|
|
Let it not deceive you that those who misbelieve go to and fro in
|
|
the earth. It is a slight possession, and then their resort is Hell;
|
|
an evil couch shall it be. But those who fear their Lord, for them are
|
|
gardens beneath which rivers flow, and they shall dwell therein for
|
|
aye,- an entertainment from God; and that which is with God is best
|
|
for the righteous.
|
|
Verily, of the people of the Book are some who do believe in God,
|
|
and in what has been revealed to you, and what was revealed to them,
|
|
humbling themselves before God, and selling not the signs of God for a
|
|
little price. These shall have their reward with their Lord; verily,
|
|
God is quick at reckoning up.
|
|
O ye who believe! be patient and vie in being patient, and be on the
|
|
alert, and fear God, that haply ye may prosper.
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF WOMEN
|
|
(IV. Medinah.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
O ye folk! fear your Lord, who created you from one soul, and
|
|
created therefrom its mate, and diffused from them twain many men
|
|
and women. And fear God, in whose name ye beg of one another, and
|
|
the wombs; verily, God over you doth watch.
|
|
And give unto the orphans their property, and give them not the vile
|
|
in exchange for the good, and devour not their property to your own
|
|
property; verily, that were a great sin. But if ye fear that ye cannot
|
|
do justice between orphans, then marry what seems good to you of
|
|
women, by twos, or threes, or fours; and if ye fear that ye cannot
|
|
be equitable, then only one, or what your right hands possess. That
|
|
keeps you nearer to not being partial.
|
|
And give women their dowries freely; and if they are good enough
|
|
to remit any of it of themselves, then devour it with good digestion
|
|
and appetite.
|
|
But do not give up to fools their property which God has made you to
|
|
stand by; but maintain them from it, and clothe them, and speak to
|
|
them with a reasonable speech. Prove orphans until they reach a
|
|
marriageable age, and if ye perceive in them right management, then
|
|
hand over to them their property, and do not devour it extravagantly
|
|
in anticipation of their growing up. And he who is rich, let him
|
|
abstain; but he who is poor, let him devour in reason, and when ye
|
|
hand over to them their property, then take witnesses against them;
|
|
but God sufficeth for taking account.
|
|
Men should have a portion of what their parents and kindred leave,
|
|
and women should have a portion of what their parents and kindred
|
|
leave, whether it be little or much, a determined portion. And when
|
|
the next of kin and the orphans and the poor are present at the
|
|
division, then maintain them out of it, and speak to them a reasonable
|
|
speech And let these fear lest they leave behind them a weak seed, for
|
|
whom they would be afraid; and let them fear God, and speak a
|
|
straightforward speech. Verily, those who devour the property of
|
|
orphans unjustly, only devour into their bellies fire, and they
|
|
shall broil in flames.
|
|
God instructs you concerning your children; for a male the like of
|
|
the portion of two females, and if there be women above two, then
|
|
let them have two-thirds of what (the deceased) leaves; and if there
|
|
be but one, then let her have a half; and as to the parents, to each
|
|
of them a sixth of what he leaves, if he has a son; but if he have
|
|
no son, and his parents inherit, then let his mother have a third, and
|
|
if he have brethren, let his mother have a sixth after payment of
|
|
the bequest he bequeaths and of his debt.
|
|
Your parents or your children, ye know not which of them is
|
|
nearest to you in usefulness:- an ordinance this from God; verily, God
|
|
is knowing and wise! And ye shall have half of what your wives
|
|
leave, if they have no son; but if they have a son, then ye shall have
|
|
a fourth of what they leave, after payment of the bequests they
|
|
bequeath or of their debts. And they shall have a fourth of what ye
|
|
leave, if ye have no son; but if ye have a son, then let them have
|
|
an eighth of what ye leave, after payment of the bequest ye bequeath
|
|
and of your debts.
|
|
And if the man's or the woman's (property) be inherited by a kinsman
|
|
who is neither parent nor child, and he have a brother or sister, then
|
|
let each of these two have a sixth; but if they are more than that,
|
|
let them share in a third after payment of the bequest he bequeaths
|
|
and of his debts, without predjudice,- an ordinance this from God, and
|
|
God is knowing and clement!
|
|
These be God's bounds, and whoso obeys God and the Apostle He will
|
|
make him enter into gardens beneath which rivers flow, and they
|
|
shall dwell therein for aye;- that is the mighty happiness.
|
|
But whoso rebels against God and His Apostle, and transgresses His
|
|
bounds, He will make him enter into fire, and dwell therein for aye;
|
|
and for him is shameful woe.
|
|
Against those of your women who commit adultery, call witnesses four
|
|
in number from among yourselves; and if these bear witness, then
|
|
keep the women in houses until death release them, or God shall make
|
|
for them a way.
|
|
And if two of you commit it, then hurt them both; but if they turn
|
|
again and amend, leave them alone, verily, God is easily turned,
|
|
compassionate.
|
|
God is only bound to turn again towards those who do evil through
|
|
ignorance and then turn again. Surely, these will God turn again to,
|
|
for God is knowing, wise. His turning again is not for those who do
|
|
evil, until, when death comes before one of them, he says, 'Now I turn
|
|
again;' nor yet for those who die in misbelief. For such as these have
|
|
we prepared a grievous woe.
|
|
O ye who believe! It is not lawful for you to inherit women's
|
|
estates against their will; nor to hinder them, that ye may go off
|
|
with part of what ye brought them, unless they commit fornication
|
|
manifestly; but associate with them in reason, for if ye are averse
|
|
from them, it may be that ye are averse from something wherein God has
|
|
put much good for you.
|
|
But if ye wish to exchange one wife for another, and have given
|
|
one of them a talent, then take not from it anything. What! would
|
|
you take it for a calumny and a manifest crime?
|
|
How can ye take it when one of you has gone in unto the other, and
|
|
they have taken from you a rigid compact?
|
|
And do not marry women your fathers married,- except bygones,- for
|
|
it is abominable and hateful, and an evil way; unlawful for you are
|
|
your mothers, and your daughters, and your sisters, and your
|
|
paternal aunts and maternal aunts, and your brother's daughters, and
|
|
your sister's daughters, and your foster mothers, and your foster
|
|
sisters, and your wives' mothers, and your step daughters who are your
|
|
wards, born of your wives to whom ye have gone in; but if ye have
|
|
not gone in unto them, then it is no crime in you; and the lawful
|
|
spouses of your sons from your own loins, and that ye form a connexion
|
|
between two sisters,- except bygones,- verily, God is forgiving,
|
|
merciful; and married women, save such as your right hands possess,-
|
|
God's Book against you!- but lawful for you is all besides this, for
|
|
you to seek them with your wealth, marrying them and not
|
|
fornicating; but such of them as ye have enjoyed, give them their hire
|
|
as a lawful due; for there is no crime in you about what ye agree
|
|
between you after such lawful due, verily, God is knowing and wise.
|
|
But whosoever of you cannot go the length of marrying marriageable
|
|
women who believe, then take of what your right hands possess, of your
|
|
maidens who believe;- though God knows best about your faith. Ye
|
|
come one from the other; then marry them with the permission of
|
|
their people, and give them their hire in reason, they being chaste
|
|
and not fornicating, and not receivers of paramours.
|
|
But when they are married, if they commit fornication, then
|
|
inflict upon them half the penalty for married women; that is for
|
|
whomsoever of you fears wrong; but that ye should have patience is
|
|
better for you, and God is forgiving and merciful.
|
|
God wishes to explain to you and to guide you into the ordinances of
|
|
those who were before you, and to turn towards you, for God is
|
|
knowing, wise. God wishes to turn towards you, but those who follow
|
|
their lusts wish that ye should swerve with a mighty swerving! God
|
|
wishes to make it light for you, for man was created weak.
|
|
O ye who believe! devour not your property amongst yourselves
|
|
vainly, unless it be a merchandise by mutual consent. And do not
|
|
kill yourselves; verily, God is compassionate unto you.
|
|
But whoso does that maliciously and unjustly, we will broil him with
|
|
fire; for that is easy with God.
|
|
If ye avoid great sins from which ye are forbidden, we will cover
|
|
your offences and make you enter with a noble entrance.
|
|
And do not covet that by which God has preferred one of you over
|
|
another. The men shall have a portion of what they earn, and the women
|
|
a portion of what they earn; ask God for His grace, verily, God
|
|
knows all.
|
|
To every one have we appointed kinsfolk as heirs of what parents and
|
|
relatives and those with whom ye have joined right hands leave; so
|
|
give them their portion, for, verily, God is over all a witness.
|
|
Men stand superior to women in that God hath preferred some of
|
|
them over others, and in that they expend of their wealth: and the
|
|
virtuous women, devoted, careful (in their husbands) absence, as God
|
|
has cared for them. But those whose perverseness ye fear, admonish
|
|
them and remove them into bedchambers and beat them; but if they
|
|
submit to you, then do not seek a way against them; verily, God is
|
|
high and great.
|
|
And if ye fear a breach between the two, then send a judge from
|
|
his people and a judge from her people. If they wish for
|
|
reconciliation, God will arrange between them; verily, God is
|
|
knowing and aware.
|
|
And serve God, and do not associate aught with Him; and to your
|
|
parents show kindness, and to kindred, and orphans, and the poor, and'
|
|
the neighbour who is akin, and the neighbour who is a stranger, and
|
|
the companion who is strange, and the son of the road, and what your
|
|
right hands possess, verily, God loves not him who is proud and
|
|
boastful; who are miserly and bid men be miserly too, and who hide
|
|
what God has given them of His grace;- but we have prepared for the
|
|
misbelievers shameful woe.
|
|
And those who expend their wealth in alms for appearance sake before
|
|
men, and who believe not in God nor in the last day;- but whosoever
|
|
has Satan for his mate, an evil mate has he.
|
|
What harm would it do them if they believed in God and in the last
|
|
day, and expended in alms of what God has provided them with? but
|
|
God knows about them.
|
|
Verily, God would not wrong by the weight of an atom; and if it's
|
|
a good work, He will double it and bring from Himself a mighty hire.
|
|
How then when we bring from every nation a witness, and bring thee
|
|
as a witness against these on the day when those who misbelieve and
|
|
rebel against the Apostle would fain that the earth were levelled with
|
|
them? but they cannot hide the news from God.
|
|
O ye who believe! approach not prayer while ye are drunk, until ye
|
|
well know what ye say; nor yet while polluted,- unless ye be passing
|
|
by the way,- until ye have washed yourselves. But if ye are sick, or
|
|
on a journey, or one of you come from the privy, or if ye have touched
|
|
a woman, and ye cannot find water, then use good surface sand and wipe
|
|
your faces and your hands therewith; verily, God pardons and forgives.
|
|
Do ye not see those who have been given a portion of the Book?
|
|
they buy error, and they wish that ye may err from the way! But God
|
|
knows best who your enemies are, and God suffices as a patron, and
|
|
sufficient is God as a help.
|
|
And those who are Jews, and those who pervert the words from their
|
|
places, and say, 'We hear but we rebel, and do thou listen without
|
|
hearing,' and (who say) 'ra'hina,' distorting it with their tongues
|
|
and taunting about religion. But had they said, 'We hear and we
|
|
obey, so listen and look upon us,' it would have been better for
|
|
them and more upright;- but may God curse them in their misbelief, for
|
|
they will not believe except a few.
|
|
O ye who have been given the Book! believe in what we have revealed,
|
|
confirming what ye had before; ere we deface your faces and turn
|
|
them into hinder parts, or curse you as we cursed the fellows of the
|
|
Sabbath when God's command was done.
|
|
Verily, God pardons not associating aught with Him, but He pardons
|
|
anything short of that to whomsoever He pleases; but he who associates
|
|
aught with God, he hath devised a mighty sin.
|
|
Do ye not see those who purify themselves? nay, God purifies whom He
|
|
will, and they shall not be wronged a straw.
|
|
Behold, how they devise against God a lie, and that is manifest
|
|
sin enough.
|
|
Do ye not see those to whom a portion of the Book has been given?
|
|
They believe in Gibt and Taghut, and they say of those who misbelieve,
|
|
'These are better guided in the way than those who believe.' These are
|
|
those whom God has cursed, and whom God has cursed no helper shall
|
|
he find.
|
|
Shall they have a portion of the kingdom? Why even then they would
|
|
not give to men a jot.
|
|
Do they envy man for what God has given of His grace? We have
|
|
given to Abraham's people the Book and wisdom, and we have given
|
|
them a mighty kingdom. And of them are some who believe therein, and
|
|
of them are some who turn from it, but Hell is flaming enough for
|
|
them.
|
|
Verily, those who disbelieve in our signs, we will broil them with
|
|
fire; whenever their skins are well done, then we will change them for
|
|
other skins, that they may taste the torment. Verily, God is
|
|
glorious and wise.
|
|
But those who believe and do aright, we will make them enter gardens
|
|
beneath which rivers flow, and they shall dwell therein for ever and
|
|
aye, for them therein are pure wives, and we will make them enter into
|
|
a shady shade. Verily, God bids you pay your trusts to their owners,
|
|
and when ye judge between men to judge with justice. Verily, God,
|
|
excellent is what He admonishes you with; verily, God both hears and
|
|
sees.
|
|
O ye who believe! obey God, and obey the Apostle and those in
|
|
authority amongst you; and if ye quarrel about anything, refer to
|
|
God and the Apostle, if ye believe in God and the last day; that is
|
|
better and fairer as a settlement.
|
|
Do ye not see those who pretend that they believe in what has been
|
|
revealed to them, and what was revealed before thee; they wish to
|
|
refer their judgment to Taghut, but they are bidden to disbelieve
|
|
therein, and Satan wishes to lead them into a remote error. And when
|
|
it is said to them, 'Come round to what God has sent down and unto the
|
|
Apostle,' thou seest the hypocrites turning from thee, turning away.
|
|
How then when there befalls them a mischance through what their
|
|
hands have sent on before? then will they come to you, and swear by
|
|
God, 'We meant naught but good and concord.' These, God knows what
|
|
is in their hearts. Turn thou away from them and admonish them, and
|
|
speak to them into their souls with a searching word.
|
|
We have never sent an apostle save that he should be obeyed by the
|
|
permission of God; and if they, when they have wronged themselves,
|
|
come to thee and ask pardon of God, and the Apostle asks pardon for
|
|
them, then they will find God easy to be turned, compassionate.
|
|
But no! by thy Lord! they will not believe, until they have made
|
|
thee judge of what they differ on; then they will not find in
|
|
themselves aught to hinder what thou hast decreed, and they will
|
|
submit with submission. But had we prescribed for them, 'Kill
|
|
yourselves, or go ye forth out of your houses,' they would not have
|
|
done it, save only a few of them; but had they done what they are
|
|
admonished, then it would have been better for them, and a more firm
|
|
assurance.
|
|
And then we would surely have brought them from ourselves a mighty
|
|
hire, and would have guided them into a right path.
|
|
Whoso obeys God and the Apostle, these are with those God has been
|
|
pleased with, of prophets and confessors and martyrs and the
|
|
righteous;- a fair company are they.
|
|
That is grace from God, and God knows well enough.
|
|
O ye who believe! take your precautions and sally in detachments
|
|
or altogether. Verily, there is of you who tarries behind, and, if a
|
|
mischance befalls you, says, 'God has been gracious to me, since I
|
|
am not with them a martyr.'
|
|
But if there befalls you grace from God, he would say- as though
|
|
there were no friendship between you and him- 'O would that I had been
|
|
with thee to attain this mighty happiness!' Let those then fight in
|
|
God's way who sell this life of the world for the next; and whoso
|
|
fights in God's way, then, be he killed or be he victorious, we will
|
|
give him a mighty hire.
|
|
What ails you that ye do not fight in God's way, and for the weak
|
|
men and women and children, who say, 'Lord, bring us out of this
|
|
town of oppressive folk, and make for us from Thee a patron, and
|
|
make for us from Thee a help?'
|
|
Those who believe fight in the way of God; and those who
|
|
disbelieve fight in the way of Taghut; fight ye then against the
|
|
friends of Satan, verily, Satan's tricks are weak.
|
|
Do ye not see those to whom it is said, 'Restrain your hands, and be
|
|
steadfast in prayer and give alms;' and when it is prescribed for them
|
|
to fight then a band of them fear men, as though it were the fear of
|
|
God or a still stronger fear, and they say, 'O our Lord! why hast thou
|
|
prescribed for us to fight, couldst thou not let us abide till our
|
|
near appointed time?' Say, 'The enjoyment of this world is but slight,
|
|
and the next is better for him who fears;'- but they shall not be
|
|
wronged a straw.
|
|
Wheresoe'er ye be death will overtake you, though ye were in lofty
|
|
towers. And if a good thing befall them, they say, 'This is from God,'
|
|
but if a bad thing, they say, 'This is from thee.' Say, 'It is all
|
|
from God.' What ails these people? they can hardly understand a tale.
|
|
What befalls thee of good it is from God; and what befalls thee of
|
|
bad it is from thyself. We have sent thee to mankind as an apostle,
|
|
and God sufficeth for a witness.
|
|
Whoso obeys the prophet he has obeyed God; and he who turns back- we
|
|
have not sent thee to watch over them.
|
|
They say, 'Obedience!' but when they sally forth from you, a company
|
|
of them brood by night over something else than that which thou hast
|
|
said; but God writes down that over which they brood. Turn then from
|
|
them and rely on God, for God sufficeth for a guardian. Do they not
|
|
meditate on the Koran? if it were from other than God they would
|
|
find in it many a discrepancy.
|
|
And when there comes to them a matter of security or fear they
|
|
publish it; but if they were to report it to the Apostle and to
|
|
those in authority amongst them, then those of them who would elicit
|
|
it from them would know it; but were it not for God's grace upon you
|
|
and His mercy ye had followed Satan, save a few.
|
|
Fight, then, in the way of God; impose not aught on any but thyself,
|
|
and urge on the believers; it may be that God will restrain the
|
|
violence of those who misbelieve, for God is more violent and more
|
|
severe to punish.
|
|
Whoso intercedes with a good intercession shall have a portion
|
|
therefrom; but he who intercedes with a bad intercession shall have
|
|
the like thereof, for God keeps watch over all things.
|
|
And when ye are saluted with a salutation, salute with a better than
|
|
it, or return it;- verily, God of all things takes account.
|
|
God, there is no God but He! He will surely assemble you on the
|
|
resurrection day, there is no doubt therein; who is truer than God
|
|
in his discourse?
|
|
Why are ye two parties about the hypocrites, when God hath
|
|
overturned them for what they earned? Do ye wish to guide those whom
|
|
God hath led astray? Whoso God hath led astray ye shall not surely
|
|
find for him a path. They would fain that ye misbelieve as they
|
|
misbelieve, that ye might be alike; take ye not patrons from among
|
|
them until they too flee in God's way; but if they turn their backs,
|
|
then seize them and kill them wheresoever ye find them, and take
|
|
from them neither patron nor help,- save those who reach a people
|
|
betwixt whom and you is an alliance- or who come to you while their
|
|
bosoms prevent them from fighting you or fighting their own people.
|
|
But had God pleased He would have given you dominion over them, and
|
|
they would surely have fought you. But if they retire from you and
|
|
do not fight you, and offer you peace,- then God hath given you no way
|
|
against them.
|
|
Ye will find others who seek for quarter from you, and quarter
|
|
from their own people; whenever they return to sedition they shall
|
|
be overturned therein: but if they retire not from you, nor offer
|
|
you peace, nor restrain their hands, then seize them and kill them
|
|
wheresoever ye find them;- over these we have made for you manifest
|
|
power.
|
|
It is not for a believer to kill a believer save by mistake; and
|
|
whosoever kills a believer by mistake then let him free a believing
|
|
neck; and the blood-money must be paid to his people save what they
|
|
shall remit as alms. But if he be from a tribe hostile to you and
|
|
yet a believer, then let him free a believing neck. And if it be a
|
|
tribe betwixt whom and you there is an alliance, then let the
|
|
blood-money be paid to his friends, and let him free a believing neck;
|
|
but he who cannot find the means, then let him fast for two
|
|
consecutive months- a penance this from God, for God is knowing, wise.
|
|
And whoso kills a believer purposely, his reward is hell, to dwell
|
|
therein for aye; and God will be wrath with him, and curse him, and
|
|
prepare for him a mighty woe.
|
|
O ye who believe! when ye are knocking about in the way of God be
|
|
discerning, and do not say to him who offers you a salutation, 'Thou
|
|
art no believer,' craving after the chances of this world's life,
|
|
for with God are many spoils! So were ye aforetime, but God was
|
|
gracious to you, be ye then discerning; verily, God of what ye do is
|
|
well aware.
|
|
Not alike are those of the believers who sit at home without harm,
|
|
and those who are strenuous in God's way with their wealth and their
|
|
persons. God hath preferred those who are strenuous with their
|
|
wealth and their persons to those who sit still, by many degrees,
|
|
and to each hath God promised good, but God hath preferred the
|
|
strenuous for a mighty hire over those who sit still,- degrees from
|
|
him, and pardon and mercy, for God is forgiving and merciful.
|
|
Verily, the angels when they took the souls of those who had wronged
|
|
themselves, said, What state were ye in? they say, 'We were but weak
|
|
in the earth;' they said, 'Was not God's earth wide enough for you
|
|
to flee away therein?' These are those whose resort is hell, and a bad
|
|
journey shall it be!
|
|
Save for the weak men, and women, and children, who could not
|
|
compass any stratagem, and were not guided to a way; these it may be
|
|
God will pardon, for God both pardons and forgives.
|
|
Whosoever flees in the way of God shall find in the earth many a
|
|
spacious refuge; and he who goes forth from his house, fleeing unto
|
|
God and His prophet, and then death catches him up,- his hire devolves
|
|
on God, and God is forgiving and merciful.
|
|
And when ye knock about in the earth, it is no crime to you that
|
|
ye come short in prayer, if ye fear that those who disbelieve will set
|
|
upon you verily, the misbelievers are your obvious foes.
|
|
When thou art amongst them, and standest up to pray with them,
|
|
then let a, party of them stand up with thee, and let them take
|
|
their arms; and when they adore, let them go behind you, and let
|
|
another party who have not yet prayed come forward and pray with thee;
|
|
and let them take their precautions and their arms.
|
|
Fain would those who misbelieve that ye were careless of your arms
|
|
and your baggage, that they might turn upon you with a single turning.
|
|
And it is no crime to you if ye be annoyed with rain or be sick,
|
|
that ye lay down your arms; but take your precautions,- verily, God
|
|
has prepared for those who misbelieve a shameful woe.
|
|
But when ye have fulfilled your prayer, remember God standing and
|
|
sitting and lying on your sides; and when ye are in safety then be
|
|
steadfast in prayer; verily, prayer is for the believers prescribed
|
|
and timed!
|
|
And do not give way in pursuit of the people; if ye suffer they
|
|
shall surely suffer too, even. as ye suffer; and ye hope from God, but
|
|
they hope not! and God is knowing, wise.
|
|
Verily, we have revealed to thee the Book in truth that thou
|
|
mayest judge between men of what God has shown thee; so be not with
|
|
the treacherous a disputant; but ask God's pardon: verily, God is
|
|
forgiving, merciful.
|
|
And wrangle not for those who defraud themselves; for God loves
|
|
not him who is a fraudulent sinner. They hide themselves from men; but
|
|
they cannot hide themselves from God, for He is with them while they
|
|
brood at night over speeches that please Him not;- but God doth
|
|
compass what they do!
|
|
Here are ye, wrangling for them about this world's life;- but who
|
|
shall wrangle with God for them on the day of judgment, or who shall
|
|
be a guardian over them?
|
|
Yet whoso does evil and wrongs himself, and then asks pardon of God,
|
|
shall find God forgiving and merciful; and whoso commits a crime, he
|
|
only commits it against himself, for God is knowing, wise.
|
|
And whoso commits a fault or a sin and throws it on the innocent, he
|
|
hath to bear a calumny and a manifest sin.
|
|
Were it not for God's grace upon thee, and His mercy, a party of
|
|
them would have tried to lead thee astray; but they only lead
|
|
themselves astray; they shall not hurt you in aught: for God hath sent
|
|
down upon thee the Book and the wisdom, and taught thee what thou
|
|
didst not know, for God's grace was mighty on thee.
|
|
There is no good in most of what they talk in private; save in his
|
|
who bids almsgiving, or kindness, or reconciliation between men; and
|
|
whoso does this, craving the good pleasure of God, we will give to him
|
|
a mighty hire.
|
|
But he who severs himself from the prophet after that we have made
|
|
manifest to him the guidance, and follows other than the way of the
|
|
believers, we will turn our backs on him as he hath turned his back;
|
|
and we will make him reach hell, and a bad journey shall it be.
|
|
Verily, God forgives not associating aught with Him, but He
|
|
pardons anything short of that, to whomsoever He will; but whoso
|
|
associates aught with God, he hath erred a wide error.
|
|
Verily, they call not beside Him on aught save females; and they
|
|
do not call on aught save a rebellious devil.
|
|
God curse him! for he said, 'I will take from thy servants a portion
|
|
due to me and I will lead them astray; and I will stir up vain desires
|
|
within them; and I will order them and they shall surely crop the ears
|
|
of cattle; and I will order them and they shall surely alter God's
|
|
creation;' but he who takes the devil for his patron instead of God,
|
|
he loses with a manifest loss. He promises them, and stirs up vain
|
|
desires within them; but the devil promises only to deceive.
|
|
These, their resort is hell; they shall not find an escape
|
|
therefrom! But those who believe, and do what is right, we will make
|
|
them enter into gardens beneath which rivers flow, to dwell therein
|
|
for aye,- God's promise in truth; and who is truer than God in speech?
|
|
Not for your vain desires, nor the vain desires of the people of the
|
|
Book. He who doeth evil shall be recompensed therewith, and shall
|
|
not find for him beside God a patron, or a help. But he who doeth good
|
|
works,- be it male or female,- and believes, they shall enter into
|
|
Paradise, and they shall not be wronged a jot.
|
|
Who has a better religion than he who resigns his face to God, and
|
|
does good, and follows the faith of Abraham, as a 'Hanif?- for God
|
|
took Abraham as a friend.
|
|
And God's is what is in the heavens and in the earth, and God
|
|
encompasses all things!
|
|
They will ask thee a decision about women; say, 'God decides for you
|
|
about them, and that which is rehearsed to you in the Book; about
|
|
orphan women to whom ye do not give what is prescribed for them, and
|
|
whom ye are averse from marrying; and about weak children; and that ye
|
|
stand fairly by orphans;- and what ye do of good, verily, that God
|
|
knows.'
|
|
And if a woman fears from her husband perverseness or aversion, it
|
|
is no crime in them both that they should be reconciled to each other,
|
|
for reconciliation is best. For souls are prone to avarice; but if
|
|
ye act kindly and fear God, of what ye do He is aware.
|
|
Ye are not able, it may be, to act equitably to your wives, even
|
|
though ye covet it; do not however be quite partial, and leave one
|
|
as it were in suspense; but if ye be reconciled and fear, then God
|
|
is forgiving and merciful; but if they separate, God can make both
|
|
independent out of His abundance; for God is abundant, wise.
|
|
God's is what is in the heavens and what is in the earth! We have
|
|
ordained to those who have been given the Book before you, and to
|
|
you too that ye fear God;- but if ye misbelieve, verily, God's is what
|
|
is in the heavens and what is in the earth, and God is rich and to
|
|
be praised!
|
|
God's is what is in the heavens and what is in the earth! and God
|
|
sufficeth for a guardian!
|
|
If He will He can make ye pass away, O men! and can bring others;-
|
|
God is able to do all that.
|
|
He who wishes for a reward in this world,- with God is the reward of
|
|
this world and of the next, and God both hears and sees.
|
|
O ye who believe! be ye steadfast in justice, witnessing before
|
|
God though it be against yourselves, or your parents, or your kindred,
|
|
be it rich or poor, for God is nearer akin than either.
|
|
Follow not, then, lusts, so as to act partially; but if ye swerve or
|
|
turn aside, God of what ye do is well aware.
|
|
O ye who believe! believe in God and His apostles, and the Book
|
|
which He hath revealed to His Apostle, and the Book which He sent down
|
|
before; for whoso disbelieves in God, and His angels, and His Apostle,
|
|
and the last day, has erred a wide error.
|
|
Verily, those who believe and then misbelieve, and then believe
|
|
and then misbelieve, and then increase in misbelief, God will never
|
|
pardon them, nor will He guide them in the path.
|
|
Give to the hypocrites the glad tidings that for them is grievous
|
|
woe!
|
|
Those who take the misbelievers for their patron rather than
|
|
believers,- do they crave honour from them? Verily, honour is
|
|
altogether God's!
|
|
He hath revealed this to you in the Book, that when ye hear the
|
|
signs of God disbelieved in and mocked at, then sit ye not down with
|
|
them until they plunge into another discourse, for verily, then ye
|
|
would be like them. Verily, God will gather the hypocrites and
|
|
misbelievers into hell together.
|
|
Those who lie in wait for you, and if the victory be yours from God,
|
|
say, 'Were we not with you?' and if the misbelievers have a chance,
|
|
they say, 'Did we not get the mastery over you, and defend you from
|
|
the believers?' But God shall judge between you on the resurrection
|
|
day; for God will not give the misbelievers a way against believers.
|
|
Verily, the hypocrites seek to deceive God, but He deceives them;
|
|
and when they rise up to pray, they rise up lazily to be seen of
|
|
men, and do not remember God, except a few; wavering between the
|
|
two, neither to these nor yet to those! but whomsoever God doth lead
|
|
astray thou shall not find for him a way.
|
|
O ye who believe! take not misbelievers for patrons rather than
|
|
believers; do ye wish to make for God a power against you?
|
|
Verily, the hypocrites are in the lowest depths of hell-fire, and
|
|
thou shalt not find for them a help.
|
|
Save those who turn again, and do right, and take tight hold on God,
|
|
and are sincere in religion to God; these are with the believers,
|
|
and God will give to the believers mighty hire.
|
|
Why should God punish you, if ye are grateful and believe? for God
|
|
is grateful and knowing.
|
|
God loves not publicity of evil speech, unless one has been wronged;
|
|
for God both hears and knows.
|
|
If ye display good or hide it, or pardon evil, verily, God is
|
|
pardoning and powerful!
|
|
Verily, those who disbelieve in God and His apostles desire to
|
|
make a distinction between God and His apostles, and say, 'We
|
|
believe in part and disbelieve in part, and desire to take a midway
|
|
course between the two:' these are the misbelievers, and we have
|
|
prepared for misbelievers shameful woe! But those who believe in God
|
|
and His apostles, and who do not make a distinction between any one of
|
|
them,- to these we will give their hire, for God is forgiving and
|
|
merciful!
|
|
The people of the Book will ask thee to bring down for them a book
|
|
from heaven; but they asked Moses a greater thing than that, for
|
|
they said, 'Show us God openly;' but the thunderbolt caught them in
|
|
their injustice. Then they took the calf, after what had come to
|
|
them of manifest signs; but we pardoned that, and gave Moses obvious
|
|
authority. And we held over them the mountain at their compact, and
|
|
said to them, 'Enter ye the door adoring;' and we said to them,
|
|
'Transgress not on the Sabbath day, and we took from them a rigid
|
|
compact.
|
|
But for that they broke their compact, and for their misbelief in
|
|
God's signs, and for their killing the prophets undeservedly, and
|
|
for their saying, 'Our hearts are uncircumcised,'- nay, God hath
|
|
stamped on them their misbelief, so that they cannot believe except
|
|
a few,- and for their misbelief, and for their saying about Mary a
|
|
mighty calumny, and for their saying, 'Verily, we have killed the
|
|
Messiah, Jesus the son of Mary, the apostle of God,'...but they did
|
|
not kill him, and they did not crucify him, but a similitude was
|
|
made for them. And verily, those who differ about him are in doubt
|
|
concerning him; they have no knowledge concerning him, but only follow
|
|
an opinion. They did not kill him, for sure! nay, God raised him up
|
|
unto Himself; for God is mighty and wise!
|
|
And there shall not be one of the people of the Book but shall
|
|
believe in him before his death; and on the day of judgment he shall
|
|
be a witness against them.
|
|
And for the injustice of those who are Jews have we forbidden them
|
|
good things which we had made lawful for them, and for their
|
|
obstructing so much the way of God, and for their taking usury when we
|
|
had forbidden it, and for their devouring the wealth of people in
|
|
vain,- but we have prepared for those of them who misbelieve a
|
|
grievous woe.
|
|
But those amongst them who are firm in knowledge, and the
|
|
believers who believe in what is revealed to thee, let what is
|
|
revealed before thee, and the steadfast in prayer, and the givers of
|
|
alms, and the believers in God and the last day,- unto these we will
|
|
give a mighty hire.
|
|
Verily, we have inspired thee as we inspired Noah and the prophets
|
|
after him, and as we inspired Abraham, and Ishmael, and Jacob, and the
|
|
tribes, and Jesus, and Job, and Jonas, and Aaron, and Solomon; and
|
|
to David did we give Psalms.
|
|
Of apostles we have already told thee of some before; and of
|
|
apostles some we have not told thee of;-
|
|
But Moses did God speak to, speaking;- apostles giving glad
|
|
tidings and warning, that men should have no argument against God,
|
|
after the apostles, for God is mighty, wise!
|
|
But God bears witness to what He has revealed to thee: He revealed
|
|
it in His knowledge, and the angels bear witness too; though God is
|
|
witness enough.
|
|
Verily, those who misbelieve and obstruct the way of God, have erred
|
|
a wide error.
|
|
Verily, those who misbelieve and are unjust, God will not pardon
|
|
them, nor will He guide them on the road- save the road to hell, to
|
|
dwell therein for aye;- that is easy enough to God!
|
|
O ye folk! the Apostle has come to you with truth from your Lord:
|
|
believe then, for it is better for you. But if ye misbelieve, then
|
|
God's is what is in the heavens and the earth, and God is knowing,
|
|
wise.
|
|
O ye people of the Book! do not exceed in your religion, nor say
|
|
against God aught save the truth. The Messiah, Jesus the son of
|
|
Mary, is but the apostle of God and His Word, which He cast into
|
|
Mary and a spirit from Him; believe then in God and His apostles,
|
|
and say not 'Three.' Have done! it were better for you. God is only
|
|
one God, celebrated be His praise that He should beget a Son! His is
|
|
what is in the heavens and what is in the earth and God sufficeth
|
|
for a guardian.
|
|
The Messiah doth surely not disdain to be a servant of God, nor do
|
|
the angels who are nigh to Him; and whosoever disdains His service and
|
|
is too proud, He will gather them altogether to Himself.
|
|
But as for those who believe and do what is right, He will pay their
|
|
hire and will give increase to them of His grace. But as for those who
|
|
disdain and are too proud, He will punish them with a grievous woe,
|
|
and they shall not find for them other than God a patron or a help.
|
|
O ye folk! proof has come to you from your Lord, and we have sent
|
|
down to you manifest light. As for those who believe in God, and
|
|
take tight hold of Him, He will make them enter into mercy from Him
|
|
and grace; and He will guide them to Himself by a right way.
|
|
They will ask thee for a decision; say, 'God will give you a
|
|
decision concerning remote kinship.'
|
|
If a man perish and have no child, but have a sister, let her have
|
|
half of what he leaves; and he shall be her heir, if she have no
|
|
son. But if there be two sisters, let them both have two thirds of
|
|
what he leaves; and if there be brethren, both men and women, let
|
|
the male have like the portion of two females. God makes this manifest
|
|
to you lest ye err; for God all things doth know.
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF THE TABLE
|
|
(V. Medinah.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
O ye who believe! fulfil your compacts.- Lawful for you are brute
|
|
beasts, save what is here recited to you, not allowing you the chase
|
|
while ye are on pilgrimage; verily, God ordaineth what He will.
|
|
O ye who believe! do not deem the monuments of God to be lawful, nor
|
|
the sacred month, nor the offering, nor its neck garlands, nor those
|
|
who sojourn at the sacred house, craving grace from their Lord and His
|
|
pleasure.
|
|
But when ye are in lawful state again, then chase; and let not
|
|
ill-will against the people who turned you from the Sacred Mosque make
|
|
you transgress; but help one another in righteousness and piety, and
|
|
do not help one another to sin and enmity; but fear God,- verily,
|
|
God is keen to punish.
|
|
Forbidden to you is that which dies of itself, and blood, and the
|
|
flesh of swine, and that which is devoted to other than God, and the
|
|
strangled and the knocked down, and that which falls down, and the
|
|
gored, and what wild beasts have eaten- except what ye slaughter in
|
|
time- and what is sacrificed to idols, and dividing carcases by
|
|
arrows.
|
|
To-day shall those who disbelieve in your religion despair; do ye
|
|
not then fear them, but fear me- To-day is perfected for you your
|
|
religion, and fulfilled upon you is my favour, and I am pleased for
|
|
you to have Islam for a religion. But he who is forced by hunger,
|
|
not inclined wilfully to sin, verily, God is forgiving, compassionate.
|
|
They will ask thee what is lawful for them? say, 'Lawful for you are
|
|
good things and what ye have taught beasts of prey (to catch),
|
|
training them like dogs;- ye teach them as God taught you;- so eat
|
|
of what they catch for you, and mention the name of God over it, and
|
|
fear God, for verily, God is swift in reckoning up.'
|
|
Lawful for you to-day are good things, and the food of those to whom
|
|
the Book has been given is lawful for you, and your food is lawful for
|
|
them; and chaste women of those who believe, and chaste women of those
|
|
to whom the Book has been given before you,- when you have given
|
|
them their hire, living chastely and not fornicating, and not taking
|
|
paramours. But whoso disbelieves in the faith, of a truth his work
|
|
is vain, and he shall be in the next life of those who lose.
|
|
O ye who believe! when ye rise up to prayer wash your faces, and
|
|
your hands as far as the elbows, and wipe your heads, and your feet
|
|
down to the ankles. And if ye are polluted, then purify yourselves.
|
|
But if ye are sick, or on a journey, or if one of you comes from the
|
|
privy, or if ye have touched women and cannot find water, then take
|
|
fine surface sand and wipe your faces and your hands therewith. God
|
|
does not wish to make any hindrance for you; but He wishes. to
|
|
purify you and to fulfil his favour upon you; haply ye may give
|
|
thanks.
|
|
Remember the favour of God to you and His covenant which He
|
|
covenanted with you, when ye said, 'We hear and we obey;' and fear
|
|
God, verily, God knows the nature of men's breasts.
|
|
O ye who believe! stand steadfast to God as witnesses with
|
|
justice; and let not ill-will towards people make you sin by not
|
|
acting with equity. Act with equity, that is nearer to piety, and fear
|
|
God; for God is aware of what ye do.
|
|
God has promised to those who believe and work righteousness, that
|
|
for them is pardon and a mighty hire. But those who disbelieve and
|
|
call our signs lies, these are the fellows of hell.
|
|
O ye who believe! remember God's favour towards you, when a people
|
|
intended to stretch their hands against you, but He withheld their
|
|
hands from you; and upon God let believers rely.
|
|
God did take a compact from the children of Israel, and raised up of
|
|
them twelve wardens; and God said, 'Verily, I am with you, if ye be
|
|
steadfast in prayer, and give alms, and believe in my apostles, and
|
|
assist them, and lend to God a goodly loan; then will I cover your
|
|
offences and make you enter gardens beneath which rivers flow: and
|
|
whoso disbelieves after that, he hath erred from the level way.
|
|
And for that they broke their compact, we cursed them, and placed in
|
|
their hearts hardness, so that they perverted the words from their
|
|
places, and forgot a portion of what they were reminded of.
|
|
But thou wilt not cease to light upon treachery amongst them, save a
|
|
few of them; but pardon them and shun them; verily, God loves the
|
|
kind.
|
|
And of those who say, 'Verily we are Christians,' we have taken a
|
|
compact; but they have forgotten a portion of what they were
|
|
reminded of; wherefore have we excited amongst them enmity and
|
|
hatred till the resurrection day; but God will tell them of what
|
|
they have done.
|
|
O ye people of the Book! our Apostle has come to you to explain to
|
|
you much of what ye had hidden of the Book, and to pardon much.
|
|
There has come to you from God a light, and a perspicuous Book; God
|
|
guides thereby those who follow His pleasure to the way of peace,
|
|
and brings them into a right way.
|
|
They misbelieve who say, 'Verily, God is the Messiah the son of
|
|
Mary;' say, 'Who has any hold on God, if he wished to destroy the
|
|
Messiah the son of Mary, and his mother, and those who are on earth
|
|
altogether?'
|
|
God's is the kingdom of the heavens and the earth and what is
|
|
between the two; He createth what He will, for God is mighty over all!
|
|
But the Jews and the Christians say, 'We are the sons of God and His
|
|
beloved.' Say, 'Why then does He punish you for your sins? nay, ye are
|
|
mortals of those whom He has created! He pardons whom He pleases,
|
|
and punishes whom He pleases; for God's is the kingdom of the
|
|
heavens and the earth, and what is between the two, and unto Him the
|
|
journey is.
|
|
O people of the Book! our Apostle has come to you, explaining to you
|
|
the interval of apostles; lest ye say, 'There came not to us a
|
|
herald of glad tidings nor a warner.' But there has come to you now
|
|
a herald of glad tidings and a warner, and God is mighty over all!
|
|
When Moses said to his people, 'O my people! remember the favour
|
|
of God towards you when He made amongst you prophets, and made for you
|
|
kings, and brought you what never was brought to anybody in the
|
|
worlds. O my people! enter the Holy Land which God has prescribed
|
|
for you; and be ye not thrust back upon your hinder parts and
|
|
retreat losers. They said, 'O Moses! verily, therein is a people,
|
|
giants; and we will surely not enter therein until they go out from
|
|
thence; but if they go out then we will enter in.' Then said two men
|
|
of those who fear,- God had been gracious to them both,- 'Enter ye
|
|
upon them by the door, and when ye have entered it, verily, ye shall
|
|
be victorious; and upon God do ye rely if ye be believers.' They said,
|
|
'O Moses! we shall never enter it so long as they are therein; so,
|
|
go thou and thy Lord and fight ye twain; verily, we will sit down
|
|
here.' Said he, 'My Lord, verily, I can control only myself and my
|
|
brother; therefore part us from these sinful people.' He said,
|
|
'Then, verily, it is forbidden them; for forty years shall they wander
|
|
about in the earth; so vex not thyself for the sinful people.'
|
|
Recite to them the story of the two sons of Adam; truly when they
|
|
offered an offering and it was accepted from one of them, and was
|
|
not accepted from the other, that one said, 'I will surely kill thee
|
|
he said, 'God only accepts from those who fear. If thou dost stretch
|
|
forth to me thine hand to kill me, I will not stretch forth mine
|
|
hand to kill thee; verily, I fear God the Lord of the worlds;
|
|
verily, I wish that thou mayest draw upon thee my sin and thy sin, and
|
|
be of the fellows of the Fire, for that is the reward of the
|
|
unjust.' But his soul allowed him to slay his brother, and he slew
|
|
him, and in the morning he was of those who lose. And God sent a
|
|
crow to scratch in the earth and show him how he might hide his
|
|
brother's shame, he said, 'Alas, for me! Am I too helpless to become
|
|
like this crow and hide my brother's shame?' and in the morning he was
|
|
of those who did repent.
|
|
For this cause have we prescribed to the children of Israel that
|
|
whoso kills a soul, unless it be for another soul or for violence in
|
|
the land, it is as though he had killed men altogether; but whoso
|
|
saves one, it is as though he saved men altogether.
|
|
Our apostles came to them with manifest signs; then, verily, many of
|
|
them did after that commit excesses in the earth.
|
|
The reward of those who make war against God and His Apostle, and
|
|
strive after violence in the earth, is only that they shall be
|
|
slaughtered or crucified, or their hands cut off and their feet on
|
|
alternate sides, or that they shall be banished from the land;- that
|
|
is a disgrace for them in this world, and for them in the next is
|
|
mighty woe; save for those who repent before ye have them in your
|
|
power, for know ye that God is forgiving, merciful.
|
|
O ye who believe! fear God and crave the means to approach Him,
|
|
and be strenuous in His way, haply ye will prosper then.
|
|
Verily, those who disbelieve, even though they had what is in the
|
|
earth, all of it, and the like thereof with it, to offer as a ransom
|
|
from the punishment of the resurrection day, it would not be
|
|
accepted from them; but for them is grievous woe. They may wish to
|
|
go forth from the Fire, but they shall not go forth therefrom, for
|
|
them is lasting woe.
|
|
The man thief and the woman thief, cut off the hands of both as a
|
|
punishment, for that they have erred;- an example from God, for God is
|
|
mighty, wise.
|
|
But whoso turns again after his injustice and acts aright, verily,
|
|
God will turn to him, for, verily, God is forgiving, merciful.
|
|
Do ye not know that God, His is the kingdom of the heavens and the
|
|
earth; He punishes whom He pleases, and forgives whom He pleases,
|
|
for God is mighty over all?
|
|
O thou Apostle! let not those grieve thee who vie in misbelief; or
|
|
those who say with their mouths 'We believe,' but their hearts do
|
|
not believe; or of those who are Jews, listeners to a lie,-
|
|
listeners to other people, but who come not to thee. They pervert
|
|
the words from their places and say, 'If this is what ye are given,
|
|
take it; but if ye are not given it, then beware!' but he whom God
|
|
wishes to mislead, thou canst do nothing with God for him; these are
|
|
those whose hearts God wishes not to purify, for them in this world is
|
|
disgrace, and for them in the next is mighty woe,- listeners to a lie,
|
|
eaters of unlawful things!
|
|
But if they come to thee, then judge between them or turn aside from
|
|
them; but if thou turnest aside from them they shall not harm thee
|
|
at all, but if thou judgest, then judge between them with justice,
|
|
verily, God loves the just. But how should they make thee their judge,
|
|
when they have the law wherein is God's judgment? Yet they turn back
|
|
after that, for they do not believe.
|
|
Verily, we have revealed the law in which is guidance and light; the
|
|
prophets who were resigned did judge thereby those who were Jews, as
|
|
did the masters and doctors by what they remembered of the Book of God
|
|
and by what they were witnesses of. Fear not men, but fear me, and
|
|
sell not my signs for a little price; for whoso will not judge by what
|
|
God has revealed, these be the misbelievers. We have prescribed for
|
|
thee therein 'a life for a life, and an eye for an eye, and a nose for
|
|
a nose, and an ear for an ear, and a tooth for a tooth, and for wounds
|
|
retaliation;' but whoso remits it, it is an expiation for him, but
|
|
he whoso will not judge by what God has revealed, these be the unjust.
|
|
And we followed up the footsteps of these (prophets) with Jesus
|
|
the son of Mary, confirming that which was before him and the law, and
|
|
we brought him the gospel, wherein is guidance and light, verifying
|
|
what was before it of the law, and a guidance and an admonition unto
|
|
those who fear.
|
|
Then let the people of the gospel judge by that which is revealed
|
|
therein, for whoso will not judge by what God has revealed, these be
|
|
the evildoers.
|
|
We have revealed to thee the Book in truth verifying what was before
|
|
it, and preserving it; judge then between them by what God has
|
|
revealed, and follow not their lusts, turning away from what is
|
|
given to thee of the truth.
|
|
For each one of you have we made a law and a pathway; and had God
|
|
pleased He would have made you one nation, but He will surely try
|
|
you concerning that which He has brought you. Be ye therefore
|
|
emulous in good deeds; to God is your return altogether, and He will
|
|
let you know concerning that wherein ye do dispute.
|
|
Wherefore judge thou between them by what God has revealed, and
|
|
follow not their lusts; but beware lest they mislead thee from part of
|
|
what God has revealed to thee; yet if they turn back, then know that
|
|
God wishes to fall on them for some sins of theirs,- verily, many
|
|
men are evildoers.
|
|
Is it the judgment of the Ignorance they crave? but who is better
|
|
than God to judge for people who are sure?
|
|
O ye who believe! take not the Jews and Christians for your patrons:
|
|
they are patrons of each other; but whoso amongst you takes them for
|
|
patrons, verily, he is of them, and, verily, God guides not an
|
|
unjust people.
|
|
Thou wilt see those in whose hearts is a sickness vieing with
|
|
them; they say, 'We fear lest there befall us a reverse.' It may be
|
|
God will give the victory, or an order from Himself, and they may
|
|
awake repenting of what they thought in secret to themselves.
|
|
Those who believe say, 'Are these they who swore by God with their
|
|
most strenuous oath that they were surely with you?'- their works
|
|
are in vain and they shall wake the losers.
|
|
O ye who believe! whoso is turned away from his religion- God will
|
|
bring (instead) a people whom He loves and who love Him, lowly to
|
|
believers, lofty to unbelievers, strenuous in the way of God,
|
|
fearing not the blame of him who blames. That is God's grace! He gives
|
|
it unto whom He pleases, for God both comprehends and knows.
|
|
God only is your patron, and His Apostle and those who believe,
|
|
who are steadfast in prayer and give alms, bowing down. Whoso taketh
|
|
as patrons God and His apostles and those who believe;- verily,
|
|
God's crew, they are victorious!
|
|
O ye who believe! take not for patrons those who take your
|
|
religion for a jest or a sport, from amongst those who have been given
|
|
the Book before and the misbelievers; but fear God if ye be believers.
|
|
Nor those who, when ye call to prayer, take it for a jest and a sport;
|
|
that is because they are a people who do not understand.
|
|
Say, 'O people of the Book! do ye disavow us, for aught but that
|
|
we believe in God, and what was revealed to us before, and for that
|
|
most of you are evildoers?'
|
|
Say, 'Can I declare unto you something worse than retribution from
|
|
God?' Whomsoever God has cursed and been wroth with- and he has made
|
|
of them apes and swine- and who worship Taghut, they are in a worse
|
|
plight and are more erring from the level path. When they come to
|
|
you they say, 'We believe;' but they entered in with unbelief, and
|
|
they went out therewith, and God knows best what they did hide.
|
|
Thou wilt see many of them vieing in sin and enmity, and in eating
|
|
unlawful things,- evil is it that they have done. The masters and
|
|
their doctors prohibit them from speaking sin and eating unlawful
|
|
things,- evil is what they have performed.
|
|
The Jews say, 'God's hand is fettered;' their hands are fettered and
|
|
they are cursed for what they said; nay! His hands are outspread, He
|
|
expends how He pleases! and that which has been sent down to thee from
|
|
thy Lord will surely increase many of them in their rebellion and
|
|
misbelief, for we have cast amongst them enmity and hatred till the
|
|
resurrection day. Whenever they light a fire for war, God puts it out;
|
|
they strive for corruption in the earth, but God loves not the
|
|
corrupt.
|
|
But did the people of the Book believe and fear, we would cover
|
|
their offences, and we would make them enter into gardens of pleasure;
|
|
and were they steadfast in the law and the gospel, and what has been
|
|
sent down to them from their Lord, they should eat from above them and
|
|
below them. Amongst them are a nation who are moderate, but many of
|
|
them- bad is what they do.
|
|
O thou Apostle! preach what has been revealed to thee from thy Lord;
|
|
if thou do it not thou hast not preached His message, and God will not
|
|
hold thee free from men; for God guides not people who misbelieve.
|
|
Say, 'O people of the Book! ye rest on naught until ye stand fast by
|
|
the law and the gospel, and what is revealed to you from your Lord.'
|
|
But what has been revealed to thee from thy Lord will of a surety
|
|
increase many of them in rebellion and misbelief, vex not thyself then
|
|
for a people who misbelieve.
|
|
Verily, those who believe and those who are Jews, and the
|
|
Sabaeans, and the Christians, whosoever believes in God and the last
|
|
day, and does what is right, there is no fear for them, nor shall they
|
|
grieve.
|
|
We took a compact of the children of Israel, and we sent to them
|
|
apostles; every time there. came to them an apostle with what their
|
|
souls loved not, a part of them they did call liars and a part of them
|
|
they slew.
|
|
And they reckoned that there would be no disturbance; but they
|
|
were blind and deaf! and then God turned again towards them: and
|
|
then many amongst them were blind and deaf! but God saw what they did.
|
|
They misbelieve who say, 'Verily, God is the Messiah the son of
|
|
Mary;' but the Messiah said, 'O children of Israel! worship God, my
|
|
Lord and your Lord;' verily, he who associates aught with God, God
|
|
hath forbidden him Paradise, and his resort is the Fire, and the
|
|
unjust shall have none to help them.
|
|
They misbelieve who say, 'Verily, God is the third of three;' for
|
|
there is no God but one, and if they do not desist from what they say,
|
|
there shall touch those who misbelieve amongst them grievous woe.
|
|
Will they not turn again towards God and ask pardon of Him? for
|
|
God is forgiving and merciful.
|
|
The Messiah the son of Mary is only a prophet: prophets before him
|
|
have passed away; and his mother was a confessor; they used both to
|
|
eat food.- See how we explain to them the signs, yet see how they turn
|
|
aside!
|
|
Say, 'Will ye serve, other than God, what can neither hurt you nor
|
|
profit you?' but God, He both hears and knows.
|
|
Say, 'O people of the Book! exceed not the truth in your religion,
|
|
and follow not the lusts of a people who have erred before, and who
|
|
lead many astray, and who go away from the level path.'
|
|
Those of the children of Israel who disbelieved were cursed by the
|
|
tongue of David and Jesus the son of Mary; that is because they
|
|
rebelled and did transgress; they would not desist from the wrong they
|
|
did; evil is that which they did. Thou wilt see many of them taking
|
|
those who disbelieve for their patrons; evil is that which their souls
|
|
have sent before them, for God's wrath is on them, and in the
|
|
torment shall they dwell for aye. But had they believed in God and the
|
|
prophet, and what was revealed to him, they had not taken these for
|
|
their patrons; but many of them are evildoers.
|
|
Thou wilt surely find that the strongest in enmity against those who
|
|
believe are the Jews and the idolaters; and thou wilt find the nearest
|
|
in love to those who believe to be those who say, 'We are Christians;'
|
|
that is because there are amongst them priests and monks, and
|
|
because they are not proud.
|
|
And when they hear what has been revealed to the prophet, you will
|
|
see their eyes gush with tears at what they recognise as truth
|
|
therein; and they will say, 'O our Lord! we believe, so write us
|
|
down amongst the witnesses. Why should we not believe in God and the
|
|
truth that is given to us, nor desire that our Lord should make us
|
|
enter with the upright people?'
|
|
Therefore has God rewarded them, for what they said, with gardens
|
|
beneath which rivers flow, to dwell therein for aye; that is the
|
|
reward of those who do good; but those who disbelieve and say our
|
|
signs are lies, they are the fellows of hell.
|
|
O ye who believe! forbid not the good things which God has made
|
|
lawful for you, nor transgress; verily, God loves not the
|
|
transgressors.
|
|
But eat of what God has provided you lawfully of good things; and
|
|
fear God, in whom ye believe.
|
|
God will not catch you up for a casual word in your oaths, but He
|
|
will catch you up for having what ye make deliberate oaths about;
|
|
and the expiation thereof is to feed ten poor men with the middling
|
|
food ye feed your families withal, or to clothe them, or to free a
|
|
neck; but he who has not the means, then let him fast three days. That
|
|
is the expiation of your oaths, when ye have sworn to keep your oaths;
|
|
thus does God explain to you His signs,- haply ye may be grateful.
|
|
O ye who believe! verily, wine, and el maisar, and statues, and
|
|
divining (arrows) are only an abomination of Satan's work; avoid
|
|
them then that haply ye may prosper. Satan only desires to place
|
|
enmity and hatred between you by wine and maisar, and to turn you from
|
|
the remembrance of God and from prayer; but will ye not desist, and
|
|
obey God, and obey the apostles, and beware, for if ye turn back
|
|
then know that our Apostle has only his message to preach?
|
|
There is no crime in those who believe and do right, for having
|
|
tasted food, when they fear God, and believe, and do what is right,
|
|
and then fear Him, and believe, and then fear, and do good, for God
|
|
loves those who do good.
|
|
O ye who believe! God will try you with something of the game that
|
|
your hands and your lances take, that God may know who fears Him in
|
|
secret; and whoso transgresses after that, for him is grievous woe.
|
|
O ye who believe! kill not game while ye are on pilgrimage. But he
|
|
amongst you who kills it purposely, his compensation is the like of
|
|
that which he has killed, in sheep- of which two equitable persons
|
|
amongst you shall be judge- an offering brought to the Kaabah; or as
|
|
an expiation, the food of poor persons, or an equivalent thereof in
|
|
fasting, that he may taste the evil result of his deed. God pardons
|
|
bygones; but whoso returns, God will take vengeance on him, for God is
|
|
mighty and the avenger.
|
|
Lawful for you is the game of the sea, and to eat thereof; a
|
|
provision for you and for travellers; but forbidden you is the game of
|
|
the land while ye are on pilgrimage; so fear God to whom ye shall be
|
|
gathered.
|
|
God has made the Kaabah, the sacred House, to be a station for
|
|
men, and the sacred month, and the offering and its neck garland; this
|
|
is that ye may know that God knows what is in the heavens and what
|
|
is in the earth, and that God knows all things. Know that God is
|
|
keen to punish, but that God is forgiving, merciful.
|
|
The Apostle has only to preach his message, but God knows what ye
|
|
show and what ye hide.
|
|
Say, 'The vile shall not be deemed equal with the good, although the
|
|
abundance of the vile please thee.' Fear God then, O ye who have
|
|
minds! haply ye may prosper.
|
|
O ye who believe! ask not about things which if they be shown to you
|
|
will pain you; but if ye ask about them when the (whole) Koran is
|
|
revealed, they shall be shown to you. God pardons that, for God is
|
|
forgiving and clement. People before you have asked about that, yet on
|
|
the morrow did they disbelieve therein.
|
|
And God has not ordained any Bahirah or Saibah, nor Wazilah nor
|
|
'Hami, but those who misbelieve invent a lie against God, for most
|
|
of them do not understand.
|
|
And when it is said to them, 'Come round to what God has revealed
|
|
unto His Apostle,' they say, 'Enough for us is what we found our
|
|
fathers agreed upon.' What! though their fathers knew nothing and were
|
|
not guided.
|
|
O ye who believe! mind yourselves; he who errs can do you no hurt
|
|
when ye are guided: unto God is your return altogether, and He will
|
|
declare to you that which ye do not know.
|
|
O ye who believe! let there be a testimony between you when any
|
|
one of you is on the point of death- at the time he makes his will-
|
|
two equitable persons from amongst you; or two others from some
|
|
other folk, if ye be knocking about in the land, and the calamity of
|
|
death befall you; ye shall shut them both up after prayer, and they
|
|
shall both swear by God, if ye doubt them, (saying), 'We will not sell
|
|
(our testimony) for a price, though it were to a relative, nor will we
|
|
hide God's testimony, verily, then, we should be among sinners.' But
|
|
if it shall be lit upon that they too have deserved the imputation
|
|
of sin, then let two others stand up in their place with those who
|
|
think them deserving of the imputation, the nearest two in kin, and
|
|
they shall both swear by God, 'Indeed, our testimony is truer than the
|
|
testimony of those two, and we have not transgressed, for then we
|
|
should surely be of the unjust: thus is it easier for men to bear
|
|
testimony according to the purport thereof, else must they fear lest
|
|
an oath be given to rebut their own oath; but let them fear God and
|
|
listen, for God guides not the people who do ill.
|
|
On the day when God shall assemble the apostles and shall say,
|
|
'How were ye answered?' they will say, 'We have no knowledge;
|
|
verily, thou art He who knoweth the unseen.'
|
|
When God said, 'O Jesus, son of Mary! remember my favours towards
|
|
thee and towards thy mother, when I aided thee with the Holy Ghost,
|
|
till thou didst speak to men in the cradle and when grown up.
|
|
'And when I taught thee the Book and wisdom and the law and the
|
|
gospel; when thou didst create of clay, as it were, the likeness of
|
|
a bird, by my power, and didst blow thereon, it became a bird; and
|
|
thou didst heal the blind from birth, and the leprous by my
|
|
permission; and when thou didst bring forth the dead by my permission;
|
|
and when I did ward off the children of Israel from thee, when thou
|
|
didst come to them with manifest signs, and those who misbelieved
|
|
amongst them said, "This is naught but obvious magic."
|
|
'And when I inspired the apostles that they should believe in him
|
|
and in my Apostle, they said, "We believe; do thou bear witness that
|
|
we are resigned."'
|
|
When the apostles said, 'O Jesus, son of Mary! is thy Lord able to
|
|
send down to us a table from heaven?' he said, 'Fear God, if ye be
|
|
believers and they said, 'We desire to eat therefrom that our hearts
|
|
may be at rest, and that we may know that what thou hast told us is
|
|
the truth, and that we may be thereby amongst the witnesses.' Said
|
|
Jesus the son of Mary, 'O God, our Lord! send down to us a table
|
|
from heaven to be to us as a festival,- to the first of us and to
|
|
the last, and a sign from Thee,- and grant us provision, for Thou
|
|
art the best of providers.'
|
|
God said, 'Verily, I am about to send it down to you; but whoso
|
|
disbelieves amongst you after that, verily, I will torment him with
|
|
the torment which I have not tormented any one with in all the
|
|
worlds.'
|
|
And when God said, 'O Jesus, son of Mary! is it thou who didst say
|
|
to men, take me and my mother for two gods, beside God?' He said, 'I
|
|
celebrate Thy praise! what ails me that I should say what I have no
|
|
right to? If I had said it, Thou wouldst have known it; Thou knowest
|
|
what is in my soul, but I know not what is in Thy soul; verily, Thou
|
|
art one who knoweth the unseen. I never told them save what Thou didst
|
|
bid me,- "Worship God, my Lord and your Lord," and I was a witness
|
|
against them so long as I was amongst them; but when Thou didst take
|
|
me away to thyself Thou wert the watcher over them, for Thou art
|
|
witness over all. If Thou shouldst punish them, verily, they are Thy
|
|
servants; if Thou shouldst forgive them, verily, Thou art the mighty
|
|
and the wise.' God said, 'This is the day when their confession
|
|
shall profit the confessors, for them are gardens beneath which rivers
|
|
flow, to dwell therein for ever and for aye.'
|
|
God is well pleased with them, and they well pleased with Him;
|
|
that is the mighty happiness.
|
|
God's is the kingdom of the heavens, and the earth, and all that
|
|
is therein, and He is mighty over all.
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF CATTLE
|
|
(VI. Mecca.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate, God!
|
|
Praise belongs to God who created the heavens and the earth, and
|
|
brought into being the darkness and the light. Yet do those who
|
|
misbelieve hold Him to have peers.
|
|
He it is who created you from clay; then He decreed a term,- a
|
|
term ordained with Him. And yet ye doubt thereof.
|
|
He is God in the heavens and the earth. He knows your secret conduct
|
|
and your plain, and He knows what ye earn.
|
|
There came not to them any sign of the signs of their Lord, but they
|
|
turned away; and they have called the truth a lie now that it has come
|
|
to them, but there shall come to them the message of that at which
|
|
they mocked.
|
|
Do not they see how many a generation we have destroyed before them,
|
|
whom we had settled in the earth as we have not settled for you, and
|
|
sent the rain of heaven upon them in copious showers, and made the
|
|
waters flow beneath them? Then we destroyed them in their sins, and
|
|
raised up other generations after them.
|
|
Had we sent down to thee a book on paper, and they had touched it
|
|
with their hands, still those who misbelieve would have said, 'This is
|
|
naught but obvious magic.' They say, 'Why has not an angel been sent
|
|
down to him?' but if we had sent down an angel, the affair would
|
|
have been decided, and then they would have had no respite.
|
|
And had we made him an angel, we should have made him as a man
|
|
too; and we would have made perplexing for them that which they deem
|
|
perplexing now.
|
|
There have been prophets before thee mocked at, but that encompassed
|
|
them which the scoffers among them mocked at.
|
|
Say, 'Go about in the earth, then wilt thou see how has been the end
|
|
of those who called them liars.'
|
|
Say, 'Whose is what is in the heavens and the earth?
|
|
Say, 'God's, who has imposed mercy on himself.' He will surely
|
|
gather you together for the resurrection day. There is no doubt in
|
|
that, but those who waste their souls will not believe.
|
|
His is whatsoever dwells in the night or in the day, He both hears
|
|
and knows.
|
|
Say, 'Other than God shall I take for a patron, the Originator of
|
|
the heavens and the earth? He feedeth men, but is not fed.' Say, 'I am
|
|
bidden to be the first of those resigned;' and it was said to me,
|
|
'Be not thou of the idolaters.' Say, 'I fear, if I rebel against my
|
|
Lord, the torment of the mighty day.'
|
|
Whomsoever it is averted from on that day, God will have had mercy
|
|
on; and that is obvious happiness.
|
|
And if God touch thee with harm, there is none to take it off but
|
|
He; and if He touch thee with good, He is mighty over all. He is
|
|
sovereign over His servants, He is the wise, the aware!
|
|
Say, 'What is the greatest witness?' Say, 'God is witness between
|
|
you and me.' This Koran was inspired to me to warn you and those it
|
|
reaches. Do ye really bear witness that with God are other gods?
|
|
Say, 'I bear not witness thereto:' say, 'He is but one God, and I am
|
|
clear of your associating (gods with him).'
|
|
Those to whom we have brought the Book know him as they know their
|
|
sons;- those who lose their souls do not believe.
|
|
Who is more unjust than he who forges against God a lie, or says His
|
|
signs are lies? verily, the unjust shall not prosper.
|
|
On the day when we shall gather them all together, then shall we say
|
|
to those who have associated others with ourself, 'Where are your
|
|
associates whom ye did pretend?' Then they will have no excuse but
|
|
to say, 'By God our Lord, we did not associate (others with thee)!'
|
|
See how they lie against themselves, and how what they did forge
|
|
deserts them! And they are some who listen unto thee, but we have
|
|
placed a veil upon their hearts lest they should understand it, and in
|
|
their ears is dulness of hearing; and though they saw each sign they
|
|
would not believe therein; until when they come to thee to wrangle
|
|
with thee, the unbelievers say, 'These are but old folks' tales.'
|
|
They forbid it and they avoid it;- but they destroy none but
|
|
themselves; yet they do not perceive.
|
|
But couldst thou see when they are set over the fire and say, 'Would
|
|
that we were sent back! we would not call our Lord's signs lies, but
|
|
we would be of the believers?' Nay! now is shown to them what they did
|
|
hide before; and could they be sent back, they would return to that
|
|
they were forbidden, for they are very liars.
|
|
They say there is naught but this life of ours in the world and we
|
|
shall not be raised. But couldst thou see when they are set before
|
|
their Lord; he says, 'Is not this the truth?' They say, Yea, by our
|
|
Lord!' he says, 'Then taste the torment, for that ye did misbelieve!'
|
|
Losers are they who disbelieved in meeting God, until when the
|
|
hour comes suddenly upon them they say, 'Woe is us for our neglect
|
|
thereof!' for they shall bear their burdens on their backs, evil is
|
|
what they bear.
|
|
The life of this world is nothing but a game and a sport, and surely
|
|
the next abode were better for those who fear. What! do they not
|
|
understand?
|
|
Full well we know that verily that which they say grieves thee;
|
|
but they do not call thee only a liar, for the unjust gainsay the
|
|
signs of God. Called liars too were apostles before thee; but they
|
|
were patient of being called liars and of being hurt until our help
|
|
came to them; for there is none to change the words of God- now has
|
|
there come to thee the story of those He sent.
|
|
And if their turning from thee be hard for thee, and if thou canst
|
|
seek for a shaft down into the earth, or a ladder up into the sky,
|
|
to bring them a sign- but if God pleased He would bring them all to
|
|
guidance, be thou not then of the ignorant.
|
|
He only answers the prayer of those who listen; but the dead will
|
|
God raise up, then unto Him shall they return. They say, 'Unless there
|
|
be sent down some sign from his Lord'- say, 'Verily, God is able to
|
|
send down a sign, but most of them do not know.'
|
|
There is not a beast upon the earth nor a bird that flies with
|
|
both its wings, but is a nation like to you; we have omitted nothing
|
|
from the Book; then to their Lord shall they be gathered. Those who
|
|
say our signs are lies- deafness, dumbness, in the dark! whom He
|
|
pleases does God lead astray, and whom He pleases He places on the
|
|
right way.
|
|
Say, 'Look you now! if there should come God's torment, or there
|
|
should come to you the hour, on other than God would ye call, if ye do
|
|
tell the truth?' Nay, it is on Him that ye would call, and He will
|
|
avert that which ye call upon Him for if He but please; and ye shall
|
|
forget that which ye did associate with Him.
|
|
Ere this we sent unto nations before thee, and we caught them in
|
|
distress and trouble that haply they might humble themselves. And do
|
|
they not, when our violence falls upon them, humble themselves?- but
|
|
their hearts were hard, and Satan made seemly to them that which
|
|
they had done.
|
|
And when they forgot what they were reminded of, we opened for
|
|
them the gates of everything, until when they rejoiced at what they
|
|
had, we caught them up suddenly, and lo! they were in despair.
|
|
And the uttermost part of the people who did wrong were cut off;
|
|
praise be to God, Lord of the worlds!
|
|
Say, 'Look you now! if God should catch your hearing and your sight,
|
|
and should set a seal upon your hearts- who is god but God to bring
|
|
you it again?'
|
|
Say, 'Look you now! if God's torment should come you suddenly or
|
|
openly, would any perish save the people who do wrong?'
|
|
We do not send our messengers save as heralds of glad tidings and of
|
|
warning, and whoso believes and acts aright, there is no fear for
|
|
them, and they shall not be grieved, but those who say our signs are
|
|
lies, torment shall touch them, for that they have done so wrong.
|
|
Say, 'I do not say to you, mine are the treasuries of God, nor
|
|
that I know the unseen; I do not say to you, I am an angel-if I follow
|
|
aught but what I am inspired with-:' say, 'Is the blind equal to him
|
|
who sees-?' what! do ye not reflect?
|
|
Admonish therewith those who fear that they shall be gathered unto
|
|
their Lord; there is no patron for them but Him, and no intercessor;
|
|
haply they may fear.
|
|
Repulse not those who call upon their Lord in the morning and in the
|
|
evening, desiring His face; they have no reckoning against thee at
|
|
all, and thou hast no reckoning against them at all;- repulse them and
|
|
thou wilt be of the unjust.
|
|
So have we tried some of them by others, that they may say, 'Are
|
|
these those unto whom God has been gracious amongst ourselves?' Does
|
|
not God know those who give thanks?
|
|
And when those who believe in our signs come to thee, say, 'Peace be
|
|
on you! God hath prescribed for Himself mercy; verily, he of you who
|
|
does evil in ignorance, and then turns again and does right,-
|
|
verily, He is forgiving and merciful.'
|
|
Thus do we detail our signs, that the way of the sinners may be made
|
|
plain.
|
|
Say, 'I am forbidden to worship those ye call upon beside God;' say,
|
|
'I will not follow your lusts, for then should I err and not be of the
|
|
guided.'
|
|
Say, 'I stand on a manifestation from my Lord, which ye call a
|
|
lie. I have not with me what ye fain would hasten on, that the
|
|
matter might be settled between me and you; but God knows best who are
|
|
the unjust.'
|
|
With Him are the keys of the unseen. None knows them save He; He
|
|
knows what is in the land and in the sea; and there falls not a leaf
|
|
save that He knows it; nor a grain in the darkness of the earth, nor
|
|
aught that is moist, nor aught that is dry, save that is in His
|
|
perspicuous Book.
|
|
He it is who takes you to Himself at night, and knows what ye have
|
|
gained in the day; then He raises you up again, that your appointed
|
|
time may be fulfilled; then unto Him is your return, and then will
|
|
He inform you of what ye have done.
|
|
He triumphs over His servants; He sends to them guardian angels,
|
|
until, when death comes to any one of you, our messengers take him
|
|
away; they pass not over any one, and then are they returned to God,
|
|
their true sovereign.
|
|
Is not His the rule? but He is very quick at reckoning up.
|
|
Say, 'Who rescues you from the darkness of the land and of the sea?'
|
|
ye call upon Him in humility and in secret, 'Indeed, if He would
|
|
rescue us from this, we will surely be of those who give Him
|
|
thanks.' Say, 'God rescues from the darkness thereof, and from every
|
|
trouble, yet ye associate others with Him.'
|
|
Say, 'He is able to send torment on you from above you and from
|
|
beneath your feet, and to confuse you in sects, and to make some of
|
|
you taste the violence of others.'
|
|
See how we turn about the signs, that haply they may discriminate.
|
|
Thy people called it a lie, and yet it is the truth. Say, 'I have
|
|
not charge over you; to every prophecy is a set time, and in the end
|
|
ye shall know.'
|
|
When thou dost see those who plunge deeply into the discussion of
|
|
our signs, turn from them until they plunge deeply into some other
|
|
discourse; for it may be that Satan may make thee forget; but sit not,
|
|
after thou hast remembered, with the unjust people.
|
|
Those who fear are not bound to take account of them at all, but
|
|
mind!- haply they may fear.
|
|
Leave those who have taken their religion for a play and a sport,
|
|
whom this world's life hath deceived, and remind them thereby that a
|
|
soul shall be given up for what it has earned; nor has it, beside God,
|
|
patron or intercessor; and though it should compensate with the
|
|
fullest compensation, it would not be accepted. Those who are given up
|
|
for what they have gained, for them is a drink of boiling water, and
|
|
grievous woe for that they have misbelieved.
|
|
Say, 'Shall we call on what neither profits us nor harms us, and
|
|
be thrown back upon our heels after God has guided us, like him whom
|
|
Satan hath led away bewildered in the earth, who has companions who
|
|
call him to guidance, "Come to us? "' Say, 'Verily, God's guidance
|
|
is the guidance, and we are bidden to resign ourselves unto the Lord
|
|
of the worlds, and be ye steadfast in prayer and fear Him, for He it
|
|
is to whom we shall be gathered.'
|
|
He it is who has created the heavens and the earth in truth; and
|
|
on the day when He says, 'BE,' then it is. His word is truth; to Him
|
|
is the kingdom on the day when the trumpets shall be blown; the knower
|
|
of the unseen and of the evident; He is wise and well aware.
|
|
When Abraham said to his father Azar, 'Dost thou take idols for
|
|
gods? verily, I see thee and thy people in obvious error.' Thus did we
|
|
show Abraham the kingdom of heaven and of the earth, that he should be
|
|
of those who are sure. And when the night overshadowed him he saw a
|
|
star and said, 'This is my Lord;' but when it set he said, 'I love not
|
|
those that set.' And when he saw the moon beginning to rise he said,
|
|
'This is my Lord;' but when it set he said, 'If God my Lord guides
|
|
me not I shall surely be of the people who err.' And when he saw the
|
|
sun beginning to rise he said, 'This is my Lord, this is greatest of
|
|
all;' but when it set he said, 'O my people! verily, I am clear of
|
|
what ye associate with God; verily, I have turned my face to him who
|
|
originated the heaven and the earth, as a 'Hanif, and I am not of
|
|
the idolaters.' And his people disputed with him;- he said, 'Do ye
|
|
dispute with me concerning God, when He has guided me? but I fear
|
|
not what ye associate with Him unless my Lord should wish for
|
|
anything. My Lord doth comprehend all things in His knowledge, will ye
|
|
not then remember? How should I fear what ye associate with Him,
|
|
when ye yourselves fear not to associate with God what He has sent
|
|
down to you no power to do? Which then of the two sects is worthier of
|
|
belief, if indeed ye know?'
|
|
Those who believe and do not obscure their faith with wrong, they
|
|
are those who shall have security, and they are guided.
|
|
These are our arguments which we gave to Abraham against his
|
|
people;- we raise the rank of whom we will; verily, thy Lord is wise
|
|
and knowing. And we gave to him Isaac and Jacob, each did we guide.
|
|
And Noah we guided before and all his seed,- David and Solomon and Job
|
|
and Joseph and Moses and Aaron,- for thus do we reward those who do
|
|
good. And Zachariah and John and Jesus and Elias, all righteous
|
|
ones; and Ishmael and Elisha and Jonas and Lot, each one have we
|
|
preferred above the worlds; and of their fathers and their seed and
|
|
brethren; we have chosen them and guided them into a right way.
|
|
That is God's guidance; He guides those whom He will of His
|
|
servants; and if they associate aught with Him,- vain is that which
|
|
they have worked.
|
|
It is to these we give the Book and judgment and prophecy; and if
|
|
these disbelieve therein we have given them in charge to a people
|
|
who shall not disbelieve.
|
|
It is these that God hath guided, and by their guidance be thou led.
|
|
Say, 'I will not ask you for it a hire: it is naught save a reminder
|
|
to the worlds.'
|
|
They do not prize God at His true worth when they say, 'God has
|
|
never revealed to mortal anything.' Say, 'Who revealed the Book
|
|
wherewith Moses came, a light and a guidance unto men? Ye put it on
|
|
papers which ye show, though ye hide much; and ye are taught what ye
|
|
knew not, neither you nor your fathers.' Say, 'God,' then leave them
|
|
in their discussion to play.
|
|
This is the Book which we have revealed, a blessing and a
|
|
confirmation to those which were before it, and that the mother of
|
|
cities may be warned, with those who are round about her. Those who
|
|
believe in the last day believe therein, and they unto their prayers
|
|
will keep.
|
|
Who is more unjust than he who devises against God a lie, or says,
|
|
'I am inspired,' when he was not inspired at all? and who says, 'I
|
|
will bring down the like of what God has sent down;' but didst thou
|
|
see when the unjust are in the floods of death, and the angels stretch
|
|
forth their hands, 'Give ye forth your souls; to-day shall ye be
|
|
recompensed with the torment of disgrace, for that ye did say
|
|
against God what was not true, and were too proud to hear His signs
|
|
And ye come now single-handed as we created you at first, and ye
|
|
have left behind your backs that which we granted you; and we see
|
|
not with you your intercessors whom ye pretended were partners amongst
|
|
you; betwixt you have the ties been cut asunder; and strayed away from
|
|
you is what ye did pretend.'
|
|
Verily, God it is who cleaves out the grain and the date-stone; He
|
|
brings forth the living from the dead, and it is He who brings the
|
|
dead from the living. There is God! how then can ye be beguiled?
|
|
He it is who cleaves out the morning, and makes night a repose,
|
|
and the sun and the moon two reckonings- that is the decree of the
|
|
mighty, the wise!
|
|
He it is who made for you stars that ye might be guided thereby in
|
|
the darkness of the land and of the sea. Now have we detailed the
|
|
signs unto a people who do know.
|
|
He it is who made you spring from one soul, and gave you a
|
|
settlement and a depository. Now have we detailed the signs unto a
|
|
people who discern.
|
|
He it is who sends down from the heavens water; and we bring forth
|
|
therewith growths of everything; and we bring forth therefrom green
|
|
things, wherefrom we bring forth grain in full ear; and the palm, from
|
|
its spathe come clusters within reach; and gardens of grapes and
|
|
olives and pomegranates, alike and unlike;- behold its fruit when it
|
|
fruits and ripens! verily, in that ye have a sign for the people who
|
|
believe.
|
|
Yet they made the ginn partners with God, though He created them!
|
|
and they ascribed to Him sons and daughters, though they have no
|
|
knowledge; celebrated be His praise! and exalted be He above what they
|
|
attribute to Him! The inventor of the heavens and the earth! how can
|
|
He have a son, when He has no female companion, and when He has
|
|
created everything, and everything He knows?
|
|
There is God for you,- your Lord! There is no god but He, the
|
|
Creator of everything; then worship Him, for He o'er everything
|
|
keeps guard!
|
|
Sight perceives Him not, but He perceives men's sights; for He is
|
|
the subtle, the aware.
|
|
Now has an insight from your Lord come unto you, and he who looks
|
|
therewith it is for himself; but he who is blind thereto, it is
|
|
against his soul and I am not your keeper.
|
|
Thus do we turn about the signs, that they may say, 'Thou hast
|
|
studied,' and that we may explain to those who know.
|
|
Follow what is revealed to thee from thy Lord; there is no god but
|
|
He, and shun the idolaters.
|
|
But had God pleased, they would not have associated aught with
|
|
Him; but we have not made thee a keeper over them, nor art thou for
|
|
them a warder.
|
|
Do not abuse those who call on other than God, for then they may
|
|
abuse God openly in their ignorance. So do we make seemly to every
|
|
nation their work, then unto their Lord is their return, and He will
|
|
inform them of what they have done.
|
|
They swore by God with their most strenuous oath, that if there come
|
|
to them a sign they will indeed believe therein. Say, 'Signs are
|
|
only in God's hands;- but what will make you understand that even when
|
|
one has come, they will not believe?'
|
|
We will overturn their hearts and their eyesights, even as they
|
|
believed not at first; and we will leave them, in their rebellion,
|
|
blindly wandering on.
|
|
And had we sent down unto them the angels, or the dead had spoken to
|
|
them, or we had gathered everything unto them in hosts, they would not
|
|
have believed unless that God pleased- but most of them are ignorant.
|
|
So have we made for every prophet an enemy,- devils of men and
|
|
ginns; some of them inspire others with specious speech to lead
|
|
astray; but had thy Lord pleased they would not have done it; so leave
|
|
them with what they do devise.
|
|
And let the hearts of those who believe not in the hereafter
|
|
listen to it; and let them be well pleased with it; and let them
|
|
gain what they may gain!
|
|
Of other than God shall I crave a decree, when it is He who has sent
|
|
down to you the Book in detail, and those to whom we gave the Book
|
|
know that it is sent down from thy Lord, in truth? be thou not then of
|
|
those who doubt.
|
|
The words of thy Lord are fulfilled in truth and justice; there is
|
|
none to change His words, for He both hears and knows.
|
|
But if thou followest most of those who are in the land, they will
|
|
lead thee astray from the path of God; they only follow suspicion
|
|
and they only (rest on) conjecture.
|
|
Thy Lord, He knows best who errs from His path, and He knows best
|
|
the guided.
|
|
Eat then of what God's name has been pronounced over, if ye
|
|
believe in His signs. What ails you that ye do not eat from what God's
|
|
name is pronounced over, when He has detailed to you what is
|
|
unlawful for you? Save what ye are forced to; but, verily, many will
|
|
lead you astray by their fancies, without knowledge. Verily, thy
|
|
Lord knows best the transgressors.
|
|
Leave alone the outside of sin and the inside thereof; verily, those
|
|
who earn sin shall be recompensed for what they have gained.
|
|
But eat not of what the name of God has not been pronounced over,
|
|
for, verily, it is an abomination. Verily, the devils inspire their
|
|
friends that they may wrangle with you; but if ye obey them, verily,
|
|
ye are idolaters.
|
|
Is he who was dead and we have quickened him, and made for him a
|
|
light, that he might walk therein amongst men, like him whose likeness
|
|
is in the darkness whence he cannot come forth? Thus is made seemly to
|
|
the misbelievers what they have done.
|
|
And thus have we placed in every town the great sinners thereof,
|
|
that they may use craft therein; but they use not craft except against
|
|
themselves, although they do not understand.
|
|
And when there comes to them a sign, they say, 'We will not
|
|
believe until we are brought like what the apostles were brought;' God
|
|
knows best where to put His message. There shall befall those who sin,
|
|
meanness in God's eyes, and grievous torment for the craft they used.
|
|
Whomsoever God wishes to guide, He expands His breast to Islam;
|
|
but whomsoever wishes to lead astray, He makes his breast tight and
|
|
straight, as though he would mount up into heaven; thus does God set
|
|
His horror on those who do not believe.
|
|
This is the way of thy Lord- straight. We have detailed the signs
|
|
unto a mindful people; for them is an abode of peace; and their
|
|
Lord, He is their patron for what they have done.
|
|
And on the day when He shall gather them all together, 'O assembly
|
|
of the ginns! ye have got much out of mankind.' And their clients from
|
|
among mankind shall say, 'O our Lord! much advantage had we one from
|
|
another;' but we reached our appointed time which thou hadst appointed
|
|
for us. Says He, 'The fire is your resort, to dwell therein for aye!
|
|
save what God pleases; verily, thy Lord is wise and knowing.'
|
|
Thus do we make some of the unjust patrons of the others, for that
|
|
which they have earned.
|
|
O assembly of ginns and men! did there not come to you apostles from
|
|
among yourselves, relating to you our signs, and warning you of the
|
|
meeting of this very day of yours? They say, 'We bear witness
|
|
against ourselves.' The life of this world deceived them, and they
|
|
bear witness against themselves that they were unbelievers.
|
|
That is because thy Lord would never destroy towns unjustly while
|
|
their people are careless; but for every one are degrees of what
|
|
they have done; and thy Lord is not careless of that which they do.
|
|
Thy Lord is rich, merciful; if He pleases He will take you off,
|
|
and will cause what He pleases to succeed you; even as He raised you
|
|
up from the seed of other people.
|
|
Verily, what ye are promised will surely come, nor can ye
|
|
frustrate it.
|
|
Say, 'O my people! act according to your power, verily, I am
|
|
acting too; and soon shall ye know whose is the future of the
|
|
abode!' verily, the unjust shall not prosper.
|
|
They set apart for God, from what He raises of tilth and of
|
|
cattle, a portion, and they say, 'This is God's;'- as they pretend-
|
|
'and this is for our associates;' but that which is for their
|
|
associates reaches not to God, and that which was for God does reach
|
|
to their associates;- evil is it what they judge.
|
|
Thus too have their associates made seemly to many of the
|
|
idolaters the killing of their children, to destroy them, and to
|
|
obscure for them their religion; but had God pleased they would not
|
|
have done it, leave them alone and that which they have forged.
|
|
And they say, 'These cattle and tilth are inviolable; none shall
|
|
taste thereof, save such as we please'- as they pretend- and there are
|
|
cattle whose backs are prohibited, and cattle over whom God's name
|
|
is not pronounced,- forging a lie against Him! He shall reward them
|
|
for what they have forged.
|
|
And they say, 'What is in the wombs of these cattle is unlawful
|
|
for our wives, but if it be (born) dead, then are they partners
|
|
therein.' He will reward them for their attribution; verily, He is
|
|
wise and knowing.
|
|
Losers are they who kill their children foolishly, without
|
|
knowledge, and who prohibit what God has bestowed upon them, forging a
|
|
lie against God; they have erred and are not guided.
|
|
He it is who brought forth gardens with trailed and untrailed vines,
|
|
and the palms and corn land, with various food, and olives, and
|
|
pomegranates, alike and unlike. Eat from the fruit thereof whene'er it
|
|
fruits, and bring the dues thereof on the day of harvest, and be not
|
|
extravagant; verily, He loves not the extravagant.
|
|
Of cattle are there some to ride on and to spread. Eat of what God
|
|
has bestowed upon you, and follow not the footsteps of Satan;
|
|
verily, he is to you an open foe.
|
|
Eight pairs,- of sheep two, and of goats two; say, 'Are the two
|
|
males unlawful, or the two females, or what the wombs of the two
|
|
females contain? inform me with knowledge if ye tell the truth.' And
|
|
of camels two, and cows two; say, 'Are the two males unlawful, or
|
|
the two females, or what the wombs of the two females contain? Were ye
|
|
witnesses when God ordained for you these?- Then who is more unjust
|
|
than he who devises a lie against God, to lead men astray without
|
|
knowledge? verily, God guides not the unjust people.'
|
|
Say, 'I cannot find in what I am inspired with anything unlawful for
|
|
the taster to taste; unless it be dead (of itself), or blood that
|
|
has been shed, or the flesh of swine,- for that is a horror- or an
|
|
abomination that is consecrated to other than God. But he who is
|
|
forced, not wilfully nor transgressing,- then, verily, thy Lord is
|
|
forgiving and merciful.'
|
|
To those who were Jews did we prohibit everything that hath a
|
|
solid hoof; and of oxen and sheep did we prohibit to them the fat,
|
|
save what the backs of both do bear, or the inwards, or what is
|
|
mixed with bone; with that did we recompense them for their rebellion,
|
|
for, verily, we are true.
|
|
And if they give thee the lie, say, 'Your Lord is of ample mercy,
|
|
nor shall His violence be turned back from the sinful people.'
|
|
Those who associate others with God will say, 'Had God pleased, we
|
|
had not so associated, nor our fathers; nor should we have forbidden
|
|
aught.' Thus did they give the lie to those who came before them,
|
|
until they tasted of our violence! Say, 'Have ye any knowledge? if so,
|
|
bring it forth to us: ye only follow suspicion, and ye do but
|
|
conjecture.'
|
|
Say, 'God's is the searching argument; and had He pleased He would
|
|
have guided you all.'
|
|
Say, 'Come on then with your witnesses, who bear witness that God
|
|
has prohibited these!' but if they do bear witness, bear thou not
|
|
witness with them; nor follow the lust of those who say our signs
|
|
are lies, and those who do not believe in the last day, or those who
|
|
for their Lord make peers.
|
|
Say, 'Come! I will recite what your Lord has forbidden you, that
|
|
ye may not associate aught with Him, and (may show) kindness to your
|
|
parents, and not kill your children through poverty;- we will
|
|
provide for you and them;- and draw not nigh to flagrant sins,
|
|
either apparent or concealed, and kill not the soul, which God hath
|
|
forbidden save by right; that is what God ordains you, haply ye may
|
|
understand.'
|
|
And draw not nigh unto the wealth of the orphan, save so as to
|
|
better it, until he reaches full age; and give weight and measure with
|
|
justice. We do not compel the soul save what it can compass; and
|
|
when ye pronounce, then be just, though it be in the case of a
|
|
relative.
|
|
And God's compact fulfil ye; that is what He ordained you, haply
|
|
ye may be mindful. Verily, this is my right way; follow it then, and
|
|
follow not various paths, to separate yourselves from His way; that is
|
|
what He has ordained you, haply ye may fear!
|
|
Then we gave Moses the Book, complete for him who acts aright, and a
|
|
decision and a guidance and a mercy; haply in the meeting of their
|
|
Lord they will believe.
|
|
This is the Book which we have sent down; it is a blessing; follow
|
|
it then and fear; haply ye may obtain mercy. Lest ye say, 'The Book
|
|
was only sent down to two sects before us; verily, we, for what they
|
|
read, care naught.' Or, lest ye should say, 'Had we had a book
|
|
revealed to us we should surely have been more guided than they;'
|
|
but there is come to them a manifest sign from their Lord, and a
|
|
guidance and a mercy; who then is more unjust than he who calls
|
|
God's signs lies, and turns from them? we will reward those who turn
|
|
from our signs with an evil punishment for that they turned away.
|
|
What do they expect but that the angels should come for them, or
|
|
that thy Lord should come, or that some signs of thy Lord should come?
|
|
On the day when some signs do come, its faith shall profit no soul
|
|
which did not believe before, unless it has earned some good by its
|
|
faith. Say, 'Wait ye expectant, then we wait expectant too.'
|
|
Verily, those who divided their religion and became sects, thou hast
|
|
not to do with them, their matter is in God's hands, He will yet
|
|
inform them of that which they have done.
|
|
He who brings a good work shall have ten like it; but he who
|
|
brings a bad work shall be recompensed only with the like thereof, for
|
|
they shall not be wronged.
|
|
Say, 'As for me, my Lord has guided me to the right way, a right
|
|
religion,- the faith of Abraham the 'Hanif, for he was not of the
|
|
idolaters.'
|
|
Say, 'Verily, my prayers and my devotion and my life and my death
|
|
belong to God, the Lord of the worlds. He has no partner; that is what
|
|
I am bidden; for I am first of those who are resigned.'
|
|
Say, Other than God shall I crave for a Lord when He is Lord of
|
|
all?' but no soul shall earn aught save against itself; nor shall
|
|
one bearing a burden bear the burden of another; and then unto your
|
|
Lord is your return, and He will inform you concerning that whereon ye
|
|
do dispute.
|
|
He it is who made you vicegerents, and raised some of you above
|
|
others in degree, to try you by that which he has brought you;-
|
|
verily, thy Lord is swift to punish, but, verily, He is forgiving
|
|
and merciful.
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF AL AARAF
|
|
(VII. Mecca.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
ALIF LAM MIM SAD. A book revealed to thee,- so let there be no
|
|
straitness in thy breast, that thou mayest warn thereby,- and a
|
|
reminder to the believers.
|
|
Follow what has been revealed to you from your Lord, and follow
|
|
not beside Him patrons; little is it that ye mind.
|
|
Yet how many a town have we destroyed, and our violence came upon it
|
|
by night, or while they slept at noon; and their cry, when our
|
|
violence came upon them, was only to say, 'Verily, we were unjust!'
|
|
But we will of a surety question those to whom the prophets were sent,
|
|
and we will narrate to them with knowledge, for we were not absent.
|
|
The balance on that day is true, and whosesoever scales are heavy,
|
|
they are prosperous; but whosesoever scales are light, they it is
|
|
who lose themselves, for that they did act unjustly by our signs.
|
|
We have established you in the earth, and we have made for you
|
|
therein livelihoods; little is it that ye thank; and we created you,
|
|
then we fashioned you, then we said unto the angels, 'Adore Adam,' and
|
|
they adored, save Iblis, who was not of those who did adore.
|
|
Said He, 'What hinders thee from adoring when I order thee?' he
|
|
said, 'I am better than he; Thou hast created me from fire, and him
|
|
Thou hast created out of clay.'
|
|
Said He, 'Then go down therefrom; what ails thee that thou
|
|
shouldst be big with pride therein? go forth! verily, thou art of
|
|
the little ones.'
|
|
He said, 'Respite me until the day when they shall be raised.' He
|
|
said 'Verily, thou art of the respited;' said he, 'For that Thou
|
|
hast led me into error, I will lie in wait for them in Thy straight
|
|
path; then I will surely come to them, from before them and from
|
|
behind them; and most of them Thou shalt not find thankful.' He
|
|
said, 'Go forth therefrom, despised, expelled; whoso follows thee, I
|
|
will surely fill hell with you altogether. But, O Adam, dwell thou and
|
|
thy wife in Paradise and eat from whence ye will, but draw not nigh
|
|
unto this tree or ye will be of the unjust.'
|
|
But Satan whispered to them to display to them what was kept back
|
|
from them of their shame, and he said, 'Your Lord has only forbidden
|
|
you this tree lest ye should be twain angels, or should become of
|
|
the immortals;' and he swore to them both, 'Verily, I am unto you a
|
|
sincere adviser;' and he beguiled them by deceit, and when they
|
|
twain tasted of the tree, their shame was shown them, and they began
|
|
to stitch upon themselves the leaves of the garden. And their Lord
|
|
called unto them, 'Did I not forbid you from that tree there, and
|
|
say to you, Verily, Satan is to you an open foe?' They said, 'O our
|
|
Lord! we have wronged ourselves- and if Thou dost not forgive us and
|
|
have mercy on us, we shall surely be of those who are lost!' He
|
|
said, 'Go ye down, one of you to the other a foe; but for you in the
|
|
earth there is an abode, and a provision for a season.' He said,
|
|
'Therein shall ye live and therein shall ye die, from it shall ye be
|
|
brought forth.'
|
|
O sons of Adam! we have sent down to you garments wherewith to cover
|
|
your shame, and plumage; but the garment of piety, that is better.
|
|
That is one of the signs of God, haply ye may remember.
|
|
O sons of Adam! let not Satan infatuate you as he drove your parents
|
|
out of Paradise, stripping from them their garments, and showing
|
|
them their shame; verily, he sees you- he and his tribe, from whence
|
|
ye cannot see them. Verily, we have made the devils patrons of those
|
|
who do not believe, and when they commit an abomination they say,
|
|
'We found our fathers at this, and God bade us do it.'
|
|
Say, 'God bids you not to do abomination; do ye say against God that
|
|
which ye do not know?'
|
|
Say, 'My Lord bids only justice:- set steadfastly you faces at every
|
|
mosque and pray to Him, being sincere in your religion. As He
|
|
brought you forth in the beginning, shall ye return. A sect He guides,
|
|
and for a sect of them was error due; verily, they did take the devils
|
|
for their patrons instead of God, and they did count that they were
|
|
guided.'
|
|
O sons of Adam! take your ornaments to every mosque and eat and
|
|
drink, but do not be extravagant, for He loves not the extravagant.
|
|
Say, 'Who has prohibited the ornaments of God which He brought forth
|
|
for His servants, and good things of His providing?' say, 'On the
|
|
day of judgment they shall only be for those who believed when in
|
|
the life of this world.' Thus do we detail the signs unto a people
|
|
that do know.
|
|
Say, 'My Lord has only prohibited abominable deeds, the apparent
|
|
thereof and the concealed thereof, and sin, and greed for that which
|
|
is not right, and associating with God what He has sent down no
|
|
power for, and saying against God that which ye do not know.'
|
|
Every nation has its appointed time, and when their appointed time
|
|
comes they cannot keep it back an hour, nor can they bring it on.
|
|
O sons of Adam! verily, there will come to you apostles from amongst
|
|
you, narrating unto you my signs; then whoso fears God and does what
|
|
is right, there is no fear for them, nor shall they grieve. But
|
|
those who say my signs are lies, and who are too big with pride for
|
|
them, these are the fellows of the Fire, they shall dwell therein
|
|
for aye!
|
|
Who is more unjust than he who devises against God a lie, or says
|
|
His signs are lies? These, their portion of the Book shall reach
|
|
them until when our messengers come to take their souls away, and say,
|
|
'Where is what ye used to call upon instead of God?' they say, 'They
|
|
have strayed away from us;' and they shall bear witness against
|
|
themselves that they have been misbelievers.
|
|
He will say, 'Enter ye- amongst the nations who have passed away
|
|
before you, both of ginns and men- into the fire;' whenever a nation
|
|
enters therein, it curses its mate; until, when they have all
|
|
reached it, the last of them will say unto the first, 'O our Lord!
|
|
these it was who led us astray, give them double torment of the fire!'
|
|
He will say, 'To each of you double! but ye do not know.' And the
|
|
first of them will say unto the last, 'Ye have no preference over
|
|
us, so taste ye the torment for that which ye have earned!'
|
|
Verily, those who say our signs are lies and are too big with
|
|
pride for them; for these the doors of heaven shall not be opened, and
|
|
they shall not enter into Paradise until a camel shall pass into a
|
|
needle's eye.
|
|
It is thus that we reward the sinners; for them is a couch of
|
|
hell-fire, with an awning above them! thus do we reward the unjust!
|
|
But those who believe and do what is right- we will not oblige a
|
|
soul more than its capacity- they are the fellows of Paradise, they
|
|
shall dwell therein for aye.
|
|
We will strip away what ill feeling is in their breasts- there shall
|
|
flow beneath them rivers, and they shall say, 'Praise belongs to God
|
|
who guided us to this! for we should not have been guided had not
|
|
God guided us!- the apostles of our Lord did come to us with truth!'
|
|
And it shall be cried out to them, 'This is Paradise which ye have
|
|
as an inheritance for that which ye have done!' And the fellows of
|
|
Paradise will call out to the fellows of the Fire, 'We have now
|
|
found that what our Lord promised us is true; have ye found that
|
|
what your Lord promised you is true?' They will say, 'Yea!' And a
|
|
crier from amongst them will cry out, 'The curse of God is on the
|
|
unjust who turn from the way of God and crave to make it crooked,
|
|
while in the hereafter they do disbelieve!'
|
|
And betwixt the two there is a veil, and on al Aaraf are men who
|
|
know each by marks; and they shall cry out to the fellows of Paradise,
|
|
'Peace] be upon you!' they cannot enter it although they so desire.
|
|
But when their sight is turned towards the fellows of the Fire, they
|
|
say, 'O our Lord! place us not with the unjust people.' And the
|
|
fellows on al Aaraf will cry out to the men whom they know by their
|
|
marks, and say, 'Of no avail to you were your collections, and what ye
|
|
were so big with pride about; are these those ye swore that God
|
|
would not extend mercy to? Enter ye Paradise; there is no fear for
|
|
you, nor shall ye be grieved.'
|
|
But the fellows of the Fire shall cry out to the fellows of
|
|
Paradise, 'Pour out upon us water, or something of what God has
|
|
provided you with.' They will say, 'God has prohibited them both to
|
|
those who misbelieve; who took their religion for a sport and a
|
|
play; whom the life of the world beguiled.'- To-day do we forget
|
|
them as they forgot the meeting of this day, and for that they did
|
|
deny our signs!
|
|
Now we have brought them a book explaining it in knowledge, a
|
|
guidance and a mercy to a people who believe.
|
|
Do they wait now for aught but its interpretation?- on the day
|
|
when its interpretation shall come, those who forgot it before will
|
|
say, 'There did come to us the apostles of our Lord in truth, have
|
|
we intercessors to intercede for us? or, could we return, we would
|
|
do otherwise than we did.' They have lost themselves, and that which
|
|
they devised has strayed away from them.
|
|
Verily, your Lord is God who created the heavens and the earth in
|
|
six days; then He made for the Throne. He covers night with the day-
|
|
it pursues it incessantly- and the sun and the moon and the stars
|
|
are subject to His bidding. Aye!- His is the creation and the
|
|
bidding,- blessed be God the Lord of the worlds!
|
|
Call on your Lord humbly and secretly, verily, He loves not the
|
|
transgressors. And do not evil in the earth after it has been righted;
|
|
and call upon Him with fear and earnestness; verily, the mercy of
|
|
God is nigh unto those who do well.
|
|
He it is who sends forth the winds as heralds before His mercy;
|
|
until when they lift the heavy cloud which we drive to a dead land,
|
|
and send down thereon water, and bring forth therewith every kind of
|
|
fruit;- thus do we bring forth the dead; haply ye may remember.
|
|
And the good land brings forth its vegetation by the permission of
|
|
its Lord; and that which is vile brings forth naught but scarcity.
|
|
Thus do we turn about our signs for a people who are grateful.
|
|
We did send Noah unto his people, and he said, 'O my people I
|
|
serve God, ye have no god but Him; verily, I fear for you the
|
|
torment of the mighty day.' Said the chiefs of his people, 'Verily, we
|
|
do surely see you in obvious error.' Said he, 'O my people! there is
|
|
no error in me; but I am an apostle from the Lord of the worlds. I
|
|
preach to you the messages of my Lord, and I give you sincere
|
|
advice; and I know from God what ye know not. What! do ye wonder
|
|
that there came to you a reminder from your Lord by a man from amongst
|
|
yourselves, to warn you, and that ye may fear? but haply ye may
|
|
receive mercy.'
|
|
But they called him a liar, and we rescued him and those who were
|
|
with him in the ark; and we drowned those who said our signs were
|
|
lies, verily, they were a blind people.
|
|
And unto 'Ad (we sent) their brother Hud, who said, 'O my people!
|
|
serve God, ye have no god save Him; what! will ye not then fear?' Said
|
|
the chiefs of those who misbelieved amongst his people, 'Verily, we
|
|
see thee in folly, and, verily, we certainly think thou art of the
|
|
liars.' He said, 'O my people! there is no folly in me; but I am an
|
|
apostle from the Lord the worlds; I preach to you the messages of your
|
|
Lord; and, verily, I am to you a faithful adviser. What! do ye then
|
|
wonder that there comes to you a reminder from your Lord by a man from
|
|
amongst yourselves, to warn you? remember when He made you vicegerents
|
|
after Noah's people and increased you in length of stature;
|
|
remember, then, the benefits of God,- haply ye may prosper!' They
|
|
said, 'Hast thou come to us that we may worship God alone, and leave
|
|
what our fathers used to worship? then bring us what thou dost
|
|
threaten us with, if thou art of those who tell the truth!' He said,
|
|
'There shall fall upon you from your Lord horror and wrath; do ye
|
|
wrangle with me about names, which ye and your fathers have named
|
|
yourselves, for which God sent down no power; wait then expectant, and
|
|
I with you will wait expectant too! But we rescued him and those
|
|
with him, by mercy from ourselves, and we cut off the hindermost parts
|
|
of those who said our signs were lies and who were not believers.'
|
|
Unto Thamud (we sent) their brother Zali'h, who said, 'O my
|
|
people! worship God; ye have no god but Him: there has come to you a
|
|
manifest sign from your Lord. This she-camel of God's is a sign for
|
|
you; leave her then to eat in the land of God, and touch her not
|
|
with evil, or there will overtake you grievous woe. And remember how
|
|
he made you vicegerents after 'Ad and stablished you in the earth so
|
|
that ye took for yourselves castles on its plains and hewed out
|
|
mountains into houses; and remember the benefits of God, and waste not
|
|
the land, despoiling it.' Said the chiefs of those who were big with
|
|
pride from amongst his people to those who were weak,- to those
|
|
amongst them who believed, 'Do ye know that Zali'h is sent from his
|
|
Lord? They said, 'We do believe in that with which he is sent.' Said
|
|
those who were big with pride, 'Verily, in what ye do believe we
|
|
disbelieve.' Then they did hamstring the camel, and rebelled against
|
|
the bidding of their Lord and said, 'O Zali'h! bring us what thou
|
|
didst threaten us with, if thou art of those who are sent.' Then the
|
|
earthquake took them, and in the morning they lay prone in their
|
|
dwellings; and he turned away from them and said, 'O my people! I
|
|
did preach to you the message of my Lord, and I gave you good
|
|
advice; but ye love not sincere advisers.'
|
|
And Lot, when he said to his people, 'Do ye approach an
|
|
abomination which no one in all the world ever anticipated you in?
|
|
verily, ye approach men with lust rather than women- nay, ye are a
|
|
people who exceed.' But his people's answer only was to say, 'Turn
|
|
them out of your village, verily, they are a people who pretend to
|
|
purity.' But we saved him and his people, except his wife, who was
|
|
of those who lingered; and we rained down upon them a rain;- see
|
|
then how was the end of the sinners!
|
|
And unto Midian did we send their brother Sho'haib, who said, 'O
|
|
my people! serve God, ye have no god save Him. There has come to you a
|
|
manifest sign from your Lord; then give good weight and measure, and
|
|
be not niggardly of your gifts to men, and do not evil in the earth
|
|
after it has been righted. That is better for you if ye are believers;
|
|
and sit not down in every path, threatening and turning from the
|
|
path of God those who believe in Him, and craving to make it
|
|
crooked. Remember when ye were few and He multiplied you; and see what
|
|
was the end of thee evildoers! And if there be a party of you who
|
|
believe in what I am sent with, and a party who believe not, then wait
|
|
patiently until God judges between us, for He is the best of
|
|
judges.' Said the crowd of those who were big with pride amongst His
|
|
people, 'We will of a surety turn thee out, O Sho'haib! and those
|
|
who believe with thee, from our village; or else thou shalt return
|
|
unto our faith.' Said he, 'What even if we be averse therefrom? We
|
|
shall have devised a lie against God if we return unto your faith,
|
|
after God has saved us from it; and what should ail us that we
|
|
should return thereto, unless that God our Lord should please? our
|
|
Lord embraces everything in His knowledge;- on God do we rely. O our
|
|
Lord! open between us and between our people in truth, for Thou art
|
|
the best of those who open. And the chiefs of those who disbelieved
|
|
amongst his people said, 'If ye follow Sho'haib, verily, ye shall be
|
|
the losers;' then there took them the earthquake, and in the morning
|
|
they lay in their dwellings prone. Those who called Sho'haib a liar,
|
|
(were) as though they had not dwelt therein!- Those who called
|
|
Sho'haib a liar, they were the losers then! And he turned away from
|
|
them and said, 'O my people! I preached to you the messages of my
|
|
Lord, and I gave you 'good advice; how should I be vexed for a
|
|
people who do misbelieve?
|
|
We have not sent unto a city any prophet except we overtook the
|
|
people thereof with trouble and distress, that haply they might humble
|
|
themselves; and then did we give them, in exchange for evil, good,
|
|
until they increased and said, 'Distress and joy both touched our
|
|
fathers;' then we overtook them suddenly ere they could perceive.- Had
|
|
the people of the town but believed and feared, we would have opened
|
|
up for them blessings from the heavens and from the earth; but they
|
|
said it was a lie, so we overtook them for that which they had earned.
|
|
Were the people of these cities then secure that our violence
|
|
would not come on them by night, while they slept? were the people
|
|
of these cities secure that our violence would not come on them in the
|
|
morning whilst they played? were they secure from the craft of God.?
|
|
none feel secure from the craft of God except a people that shall
|
|
lose.
|
|
Is it not shown to those who inherit the earth after its (former)
|
|
people, that, did we please, we would smite them in their sins, and
|
|
would set a stamp upon their hearts, and then they should not hear?
|
|
These cities, we do relate to thee their stories. There came to them
|
|
our apostles with manifest signs; but they did not at all believe in
|
|
what they called a lie before.- Thus doth God set a stamp upon the
|
|
hearts of those who misbelieve.
|
|
Nor did we find in most of them a covenant; but we did find most
|
|
of them workers of abomination.
|
|
Then we raised up after them Moses with our signs to Pharaoh and his
|
|
chiefs; but they dealt unjustly therewith, and see what was the end of
|
|
the evildoers!
|
|
Moses said, 'O Pharaoh! verily, I am an apostle from the Lord of the
|
|
worlds; it is not right for me to speak against God aught but the
|
|
truth. I have come to you with a manifest sign from my Lord; send then
|
|
the children of Israel with me.' Said he, 'If thou hast come with a
|
|
sign, then bring it, if thou art of those who speak the truth.' Then
|
|
he threw his rod down, and lo! it was an obvious snake; and he drew
|
|
out his hand, and lo! it was white to the beholders. Said the chiefs
|
|
of Pharaoh's people, 'Verily, this is surely a knowing magician; he
|
|
desires to turn you out of your land;- What is it then ye bid? They
|
|
said, 'Give him and his brother some hope; and send into the cities to
|
|
collect and bring you every knowing magician.' And the magician came
|
|
to Pharaoh and said, 'Is there indeed a reward for us if we are
|
|
conquerors? He said, 'Yea! and ye shall be of those who draw nigh unto
|
|
me.' They said, 'O Moses! wilt thou cast down (thy rod) or shall we be
|
|
(first) to throw?' Said he, 'Throw down;' and when they threw down,
|
|
they did enchant the people's eyes, and made them dread, and brought a
|
|
mighty magic. But we inspired Moses (saying), 'Throw down thy rod, and
|
|
it will gulp down that which they devise;' and the truth stood fast,
|
|
and vain was that which they had done; and they were conquered
|
|
there, and turned back feeling small! and the magicians threw
|
|
themselves down adoring. Said. they, 'We believe in the Lord of the
|
|
worlds, the Lord of Moses and Aaron! Said Pharaoh, 'Do ye believe in
|
|
him ere I give you leave? This is craft which ye have devised in the
|
|
land, to turn its people out therefrom, but soon shall ye know! I will
|
|
cut off your hands and your feet from opposite sides, then I will
|
|
crucify you altogether!' They said, 'Verily, we unto our Lord
|
|
return! nor dost thou take vengeance on us, save for that we believe
|
|
in the signs of our Lord, when they come to us.
|
|
'O our Lord! pour out upon us patience, and take us to Thyself
|
|
resigned.' And the chiefs of Pharaoh's people said, 'Will ye leave
|
|
Moses and his people to do evil in the land, and to leave thee and thy
|
|
gods?' Said he, 'We will have their sons slain and their women we will
|
|
let live, for, verily, we are triumphant over them.'
|
|
Said Moses unto his people, 'Ask for aid from God and be patient;
|
|
verily, the earth is God's! He gives it for an inheritance to whom
|
|
He pleases of His servants, and the future is for those who fear.'
|
|
They said, 'We have been hurt before thou didst come to us, and
|
|
since thou hast come to us.' Said he, 'It may be that your Lord will
|
|
destroy your foe, and will make you succeed him in the earth; and He
|
|
will see how ye act.'
|
|
We had overtaken Pharaoh's people with the years (of dearth) and
|
|
scarcity of fruits, that haply they might remember; but when there
|
|
came to them a 'good thing they said, 'This is ours;' and if there
|
|
befel them an evil, they took the augury from Moses and those with
|
|
him;- is not their augury only in God's hands?- but most of them
|
|
know not.
|
|
And they said, 'Whatever thou dost bring us as a sign to enchant
|
|
us therewith, yet will we not believe in thee.'
|
|
Then we sent upon them the flood and the locusts and the lice and
|
|
the frogs and the blood,- signs detailed; but they were big with pride
|
|
and were a people who did sin.
|
|
And when there fell upon them the plague, they said, 'O Moses!
|
|
call upon thy Lord for us, as He has covenanted with thee; verily,
|
|
if thou dost remove the plague from us, we will believe in thee; and
|
|
we will assuredly send with thee the children of Israel.' But when
|
|
we removed from them the plague until the appointed time which they
|
|
should reach, lo! then they broke their promise. But we took vengeance
|
|
on them, and we drowned them in the sea, for that they said our
|
|
signs were lies and were careless thereof. And we gave as an
|
|
inheritance unto the people who had been weak, the eastern quarters of
|
|
the earth and the western quarters thereof, which we had blest; and
|
|
the good word of thy Lord was fulfilled on the children of Israel, for
|
|
that they were patient; and we destroyed that which Pharaoh and his
|
|
people had made and that which they had piled. And with the children
|
|
of Israel we passed across the sea; and they came unto a people
|
|
devoted to their idols, and said, 'O Moses! make for us a god as
|
|
they have gods.' Said he, 'Verily, ye are ignorant people.' Verily,
|
|
these- destroyed shall be that which they are given to; and vain is
|
|
that which they have done.
|
|
He said, 'Other than God then do ye crave for a god, when He has
|
|
preferred you above the worlds?'
|
|
And when we saved you from Pharaoh's people who wrought you evil
|
|
woe, killing your sons, and letting your women live; and in that was a
|
|
mighty trial from your Lord.
|
|
And we appointed for Moses thirty nights, and completed them with
|
|
ten (more), so that the time appointed by his Lord was completed to
|
|
forty nights. And Moses said unto his brother Aaron, 'Be thou my
|
|
vicegerent amongst my people, and do what is right, and follow not the
|
|
path of the evildoers.'
|
|
And when Moses came to our appointment, and his Lord spake unto him,
|
|
he said, 'O my Lord! show me,- that I may look on thee!' He said,
|
|
'Thou canst not see me; but look upon the mountain, and if it remain
|
|
steady in its place, thou shalt see me;' but when his Lord appeared
|
|
unto the mountain He made it dust, and Moses fell down in a swoon!
|
|
And when he came to himself, he said, 'Celebrated be thy praise! I
|
|
turn repentant unto Thee, and I am the first of those who are
|
|
resigned.'
|
|
He said, 'O Moses! verily, I have chosen thee over the people with
|
|
my messages and my words, take then what I have brought thee, and be
|
|
of those who thank.' And we wrote for him upon tablets an admonition
|
|
concerning everything, and a detailing of everything: 'Take them
|
|
then with firmness, and bid thy people take them for what is best
|
|
thereof. I will show you the abode of those who work abominations; I
|
|
will turn from my signs those who are big with pride in the earth
|
|
without right; and if they see every sign they shall not believe
|
|
therein, and if they see the path of rectitude they shall not take
|
|
it for a path; but if they see the path of error they shall take it
|
|
for a path;- that is because they have said our signs are lies and
|
|
have been careless of them.'
|
|
But those who say our signs and the meeting of the last day are
|
|
lies,- vain are their works: shall they be rewarded save for that
|
|
which they have done?
|
|
And Moses' people after him took to themselves of their ornaments
|
|
a corporeal calf that lowed; did they not see that it could not
|
|
speak with them, nor could it guide them in the path? They took it and
|
|
they were unjust; but when they bit their hands with fruitless rage
|
|
and saw that they had gone astray, they said, 'Verily, if our Lord
|
|
have not compassion on us and forgive us we shall surely be of those
|
|
who lose!'
|
|
And when Moses returned unto his people angry and grieved, he
|
|
said, Evil is it that ye have done after me! Would ye hasten on the
|
|
bidding of your Lord?' and he threw down the tablets and took his
|
|
brother by the head to drag him towards him, but he said, 'O son of my
|
|
mother! verily, the people weakened me and well-nigh killed me; make
|
|
not then mine enemies glad about me, and put me not with the unjust
|
|
people.' He said, 'O Lord! pardon me and my brother, and let us
|
|
enter into Thy mercy; for Thou art the most merciful of the
|
|
merciful. Verily, these have taken to themselves a calf; there shall
|
|
reach them wrath from their Lord, and abasement in the life of this
|
|
world; for thus do we reward those who forge a lie. But those who have
|
|
done bad works, and then turn again after them and believe,- verily,
|
|
thy Lord, after that, is forgiving and merciful.'
|
|
And when Moses' wrath calmed down he took the tables, in the
|
|
inscription of which was guidance and mercy for those who dread
|
|
their Lord.
|
|
And Moses chose from his people seventy men for our appointment; and
|
|
when the earthquake took them he said, 'O my Lord! hadst Thou
|
|
willed, Thou hadst destroyed them before and me. Wilt Thou destroy
|
|
us for what the fools amongst us have done? This is naught but Thy
|
|
trial, wherewith Thou dost lead astray whom Thou pleasest and
|
|
guidest whom Thou pleasest; Thou art our patron! forgive us and have
|
|
mercy on us, for Thou art the best of those who do forgive!
|
|
And write down for us in this world good, and in the future too;
|
|
verily, we are guided unto Thee.' He said, 'My punishment- with it I
|
|
fall on whom I will; and my mercy embraceth everything; and I will
|
|
write it down for those who fear, and who give alms, and those who
|
|
in our signs believe,- who follow the Apostle- the illiterate prophet,
|
|
whom they find written down with them in the law and the gospel,
|
|
bidding them what is reasonable and forbidding them what is wrong, and
|
|
making lawful for them what is good, and making unlawful evil
|
|
things; and setting down for them their burdens and the yokes which
|
|
were upon them;- to those who believe in him and aid him and help
|
|
him and follow the law which has been sent down with him- they shall
|
|
be the prosperous.'
|
|
Say, 'O ye folk! verily, I am the Apostle of God unto you all,'-
|
|
of Him whose is the kingdom of the heavens and the earth, there is
|
|
no god but He! He quickens and He kills! believe then in God and His
|
|
Apostle, the illiterate prophet,- who believes in God and in His
|
|
words- then follow him that haply ye may be guided.
|
|
Amongst Moses' people is a nation guided in truth, and thereby act
|
|
they justly.
|
|
And we cut them up into twelve tribes, each a nation; and we
|
|
revealed unto Moses, when his people asked him for drink, 'Strike with
|
|
thy staff the rock!' and there gushed forth from it twelve springs,
|
|
each folk knew their drinking place. And we overshadowed them with the
|
|
cloud; and sent down upon them the manna and the quails, 'Eat of the
|
|
good things we have provided you with!'- Yet they did not wrong us,
|
|
but it was themselves they wronged.
|
|
And when it was said unto them, 'Dwell in this city and eat
|
|
therefrom as ye will, and say 'hittatun and enter the gate adoring; so
|
|
will we pardon you your sins;- we will increase those who do well.'
|
|
But those amongst them who did wrong changed it for another word
|
|
than which was said to them; and we sent upon them a plague from
|
|
heaven for that they were unjust.
|
|
Ask them too about the city which stood by the sea, when they
|
|
transgressed upon the Sabbath; when their fish came to them on the
|
|
Sabbath day sailing straight up to them; but on the days when they
|
|
kept not the Sabbath, they came not to them, thus did we try them
|
|
for the abominations that they wrought.
|
|
And when a nation from amongst them said, 'Why do ye warn a people
|
|
whom God would destroy, or punish with severe torment?' they said, 'As
|
|
an excuse to your Lord, that haply they may fear.' But when they
|
|
forgot what they had been reminded of, we saved those who forbade
|
|
evil, but we overtook those who did wrong with punishment;- evil was
|
|
the abomination that they did, but when they rebelled against what
|
|
they were forbidden, we said to them, 'Become ye apes, despised and
|
|
spurned!' and then thy Lord proclaimed that He would surely send
|
|
against them till the resurrection day, those who should wreak them
|
|
evil torment; verily, thy Lord is quick at following up, but,
|
|
verily, He is forgiving, merciful.
|
|
We cut them up in the earth into nations. Of them are the righteous,
|
|
and of them are the reverse of that; we have tried them with good
|
|
things and with bad things; haply they may return.
|
|
But there succeeded them successors who inherited the Book! They
|
|
take the goods of this lower world and say, 'It will be forgiven
|
|
us.' But if the like goods came to them they would take them too!
|
|
Was there not taken from them a covenant by the Book, that they should
|
|
not say against God aught but the truth? Yet they study therein! But
|
|
the abode of the future life is better for those who fear- do ye not
|
|
then understand? But those who hold fast by the Book and are steadfast
|
|
in prayer- verily, we will not waste the hire of those who do right.
|
|
And when we shook the mountain over them, as though it were a
|
|
shadow, and they thought it would fall upon them (saying), 'Take ye
|
|
what we have given you with firmness, and remember what is therein;
|
|
haply ye may fear.'
|
|
And when thy Lord took from the children of Adam out of their
|
|
loins their seed, and made them bear witness against themselves, 'Am I
|
|
not your Lord?' They said, 'Yea! we do bear witness'- lest ye should
|
|
say on the day of resurrection, 'Verily, for this we did not care;' or
|
|
say, Verily, our fathers associated others with God before us, and
|
|
we were but their seed after them: wilt Thou then destroy us for
|
|
what vaindoers did?'- Thus do we detail the signs; haply they may
|
|
return.
|
|
Read to them the declaration of him to whom we brought our signs,
|
|
and who stepped away therefrom, and Satan followed him, and he was
|
|
of those who were beguiled. Had we pleased we would have exalted him
|
|
thereby, but he crouched upon the earth and followed his lust, and his
|
|
likeness was as the likeness of a dog, whom if thou shouldst attack he
|
|
hangs out his tongue, or if thou should leave him, hangs out his
|
|
tongue too. That is the likeness of the people who say our signs are
|
|
lies. Tell them then these tales- haply they may reflect.
|
|
Evil is the likeness of a people who say our signs are lies;
|
|
themselves it is they wrong!
|
|
We have created for hell many of the ginn and of mankind; they
|
|
have hearts and they discern not therewith; they have eyes and they
|
|
see not therewith; they have ears and they hear not therewith; they
|
|
are like cattle, nay, they go more astray! these it is who care not.
|
|
But God's are the good names; call on Him then thereby, and leave
|
|
those who pervert His names; they shall be rewarded for that which
|
|
they have done.
|
|
And of those whom we have created is a nation who are guided in
|
|
truth and thereby act with equity; but they who say our signs are
|
|
lies, we will bring them down by degrees from whence they know not.
|
|
I will let them range;- verily, my stratagem is efficacious!
|
|
Do they not then reflect that their companion is not possessed? he
|
|
is but an obvious warner! Do they not behold the kingdoms of the
|
|
heavens and of the earth, and what things God has created, and (see
|
|
that), it may be, their time is already drawing nigh? in what relation
|
|
then will they believe? He whom God leads astray there is no guide for
|
|
him! He leaves them in their rebellion, blindly wandering on.
|
|
They will ask you about the Hour, for what time it is fixed?- say,
|
|
'The knowledge thereof is only with my Lord; none shall manifest it at
|
|
its time but He; it is heavy in the heavens and the earth, it will not
|
|
come to you save on a sudden.'
|
|
They will ask as though thou wert privy to it, say,' knowledge
|
|
thereof is only with God,'- but most folk do not know.
|
|
Say, 'I cannot control profit or harm for myself, save what God
|
|
will. If I knew the unseen I should surely have much that is good, nor
|
|
would evil touch me; I am but a warner and a herald of good tidings
|
|
unto a people who believe.'
|
|
He it is who created you from one soul, and made therefrom its
|
|
mate to dwell therewith; and when he covered her she bore a light
|
|
burden and went about therewith; but when it grew heavy they called on
|
|
God, Lord of them both, 'Surely if thou givest us a rightly-shaped
|
|
child we shall of a surety be of those who thank.' And when He gave
|
|
them both a rightly-shaped child they joined partners with Him for
|
|
that which He had given them, but exalted be God above that which they
|
|
associate with Him. Will they associate with Him those cannot create
|
|
aught, but are themselves created, which have no power to help them,
|
|
and cannot even help themselves?
|
|
But if ye call them unto guidance they will not follow you. It is
|
|
the same to them if Thou dost call them or if Thou dost hold thy
|
|
tongue.
|
|
Those whom ye call on other than God are servants like yourselves.
|
|
Call on them then, and let them answer you, if so be ye tell the
|
|
truth! Have they feet to walk with? or have they hands to hold with?
|
|
or have they eyes to see with? or have they ears to hear with? Call
|
|
upon your partners; then plot against me, and do not wait.
|
|
Verily, my patron is God, who hath sent down the Book, and He is the
|
|
patron of the righteous. But those whom ye call on beside Him cannot
|
|
help you, nor can they even help themselves. But if ye call them
|
|
unto the guidance they will not hear, thou mayest see them looking
|
|
towards thee, yet they do not see. Take to pardon, and order what is
|
|
kind, and shun the ignorant; and if an incitement from the devil
|
|
incites you, then seek refuge in God: verily, He both hears and knows.
|
|
Verily, those who fear God, if a wraith from the devil touch,
|
|
mention Him, and lo! they see.
|
|
And their brethren he shall increase in error, then they shall not
|
|
desist.
|
|
Shouldst Thou not bring them a sign they say, 'Hast Thou not yet
|
|
made choice of one? Say, 'I only follow what is inspired to me by my
|
|
Lord. These are perceptions from my Lord, and a guidance and a mercy
|
|
to a people who believe.'
|
|
And when the Koran is read, then listen thereto and keep silence;
|
|
haply ye may obtain mercy.
|
|
And remember thy Lord within thyself humbly and with fear, not
|
|
openly in words, in the morning and in the evening; and be not of
|
|
those who do not care. Verily, they who are with my Lord are not too
|
|
big with pride for His service, but they do celebrate His praise,
|
|
and Him they do adore.
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF THE SPOILS
|
|
(VIII. Medinah.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
They will ask thee about the spoils. Say, 'The spoils are God's
|
|
and the Apostle's; fear God and settle it amongst yourselves; obey God
|
|
and the Apostle if ye do believe.'
|
|
Verily, the believers are those who, when God's name is mentioned,
|
|
their hearts sink with fear; and when His signs are rehearsed to
|
|
them they increase them in faith; and on their Lord do they rely;
|
|
who are steadfast in prayer, and of what we have bestowed upon them
|
|
give in alms; these are in truth believers; to them are degrees with
|
|
their Lord, and forgiveness, and a generous provision.
|
|
As thy Lord caused thee to go forth from thy house with the truth,
|
|
although a sect of the believers were averse therefrom. They
|
|
wrangled with thee about the truth after it was made plain, as
|
|
though they were being driven on to death and looked thereon; and when
|
|
God promised you that one of the two troops should be yours, and ye
|
|
would fain have had those who had no arms. God wished to prove the
|
|
truth true by His words, and to cut off the hindermost parts of
|
|
those who misbelieve- to prove the truth true, and to make vain the
|
|
vain, although the sinners are averse.
|
|
When ye asked for succour from your Lord, and He answered you, I
|
|
will assist you with a thousand angels, with others in reserve.'
|
|
God made it only glad tidings to quiet your hearts therewith; for
|
|
victory is only from God! verily, God is mighty and wise.
|
|
When drowsiness covered you as a security from Him, and He sent down
|
|
upon you from the heavens water to purify you withal, and to take away
|
|
from you the plague of Satan, and to tie up your hearts and to make
|
|
firm your footsteps.
|
|
When your Lord inspired the angels- 'Verily, I am with you; make
|
|
ye firm then those who believe; I will cast dread into the hearts of
|
|
those who misbelieve,- strike off their necks then, and strike off
|
|
from them every finger tip.'
|
|
That is, because they went into opposition against God and His
|
|
Apostle; for he who goes into opposition against God and His
|
|
Apostle- verily, God is keen to punish.
|
|
There, taste it! since for the misbelievers is the torment of the
|
|
Fire.
|
|
O ye who believe! when ye meet those who misbelieve in swarms,
|
|
turn not to them your hinder parts; for he who turns to them that
|
|
day his hinder parts, save turning to fight or rallying to a troop,
|
|
brings down upon himself wrath from God, and his resort is hell, and
|
|
an ill journey shall it be!
|
|
Ye did not slay them, but it was God who slew them; nor didst thou
|
|
shoot when thou didst shoot, but God did shoot to try the believers
|
|
from Himself with a goodly trial; verily, God both hears and knows.
|
|
There! verily, God weakens the stratagem of the misbelievers.
|
|
If ye wish the matter to be decided, a decision has now come to you;
|
|
but if ye desist, it is better for you; and if ye turn back we will
|
|
turn too, and your troop shall avail nothing, great in number though
|
|
it be, since God is with the believers!
|
|
O ye who believe! obey God and His Apostle, and turn not from Him
|
|
while ye hear, and be not like those who say, 'We hear,' and yet
|
|
they hear not.
|
|
Verily, the worst of beasts in God's sight are the deaf, the dumb
|
|
who do not understand. Had God known any good in them, He would have
|
|
made them hear; but had He made them hear, they would have turned back
|
|
and have swerved aside.
|
|
O ye who believe! answer God and His Apostle when He calls you to
|
|
that which quickens you; and know that God steps in between man and
|
|
his heart; and that to Him ye shall be gathered. And fear
|
|
temptation, which will not light especially on those of you who have
|
|
done wrong; but know that God is keen to punish.
|
|
Remember when ye were few in number and weak in the land, fearing
|
|
lest people should snatch you away; then He sheltered you and aided
|
|
you with victory, and provided you with good things; haply ye may give
|
|
thanks.
|
|
O ye who believe! be not treacherous to God and His Apostle; nor
|
|
be treacherous to your engagement while ye know!
|
|
Know that your wealth and your children are but a temptation, and
|
|
that God- with Him is mighty hire!
|
|
O ye who believe! if ye fear God He will make for you a
|
|
discrimination, and will cover for you your offences, and will forgive
|
|
you; for God is Lord of mighty grace.
|
|
And when those who misbelieve were crafty with thee to detain thee a
|
|
prisoner, or kill thee, or drive thee forth; they were crafty, but God
|
|
was crafty too, for God is best of crafty ones!
|
|
But when our verses were rehearsed to them they said, 'We have
|
|
already heard.- If we pleased we could speak like this; verily, this
|
|
is nothing but tales of those of yore.'
|
|
When they said, 'O God! if this be truth, and from Thee, then rain
|
|
upon us stones from heaven or bring us grievous woe!'
|
|
But God would not torment them while thou art amongst them; nor
|
|
was God going to torment them while they asked Him to forgive. But
|
|
what ails them that God should not torment them while they turn folk
|
|
away from the Holy Mosque, though they are not the guardians
|
|
thereof- its guardians are only the pious?- but most of them know not.
|
|
Their prayer at the House was naught but whistling and clapping
|
|
hands!- taste then the torment for that ye misbelieved!
|
|
Verily, those who misbelieve expend their wealth to turn folk from
|
|
the path of God; but they shall spend it, and then it shall be for
|
|
them sighing, and then they shall be overcome! Those who misbelieve,
|
|
into hell shall they be gathered!- that God may distinguish the vile
|
|
from the good, and may put the vile, some on the top of the other, and
|
|
heap all up together, and put it into hell!- These are those who lose!
|
|
Say to those who misbelieve, if they desist they will be forgiven
|
|
what is past; but if they return,- the course of those of former
|
|
days has passed away.
|
|
Fight them then that there should be no sedition, and that the
|
|
religion may be wholly God's; but if they desist, then God on what
|
|
they do doth look. But if they turn their backs, then know that God is
|
|
your Lord; a good Lord is He, and a good help; and know that
|
|
whenever ye seize anything as a spoil, to God belongs a fifth thereof,
|
|
and to His Apostle, and to kindred and orphans, and the poor and the
|
|
wayfarer; if ye believe in God and what we have revealed unto our
|
|
servants on the day of the discrimination,- the day when the two
|
|
parties met; and God is mighty over all. When ye were on the near side
|
|
of the valley, and they were on the far side, and the camels were
|
|
below you; had ye made an appointment then ye would have failed to
|
|
keep your appointment- but it was that God might accomplish a thing
|
|
that was as good as done! that he who was to. perish might perish with
|
|
a manifest sign; and that he who was to live might live with a
|
|
manifest sign; for, verily, God hears and knows!
|
|
When God showed thee them in thy dream as though they were but
|
|
few; but had He shown thee them as though they were many, ye would
|
|
have been timid, and ye would have quarrelled about the matter;- but
|
|
God preserved you; verily, He knows the nature of men's breasts!
|
|
And when He showed them to you, as ye encountered them, as few in
|
|
your eyes; and made you seem few in their eyes; that God might
|
|
accomplish a thing that was as good as done; for unto God do things
|
|
return!
|
|
O ye who believe! when ye encounter a troop, then stand firm and
|
|
remember God; and haply ye may prosper! and fear God and His
|
|
Apostle, and do not quarrel or be timid, so that your turn of luck
|
|
go from you; but be ye patient, verily, God is with the patient. And
|
|
be not like those who went forth from their homes with insolence,
|
|
and for appearance sake before men, and to turn folks off God's way;
|
|
for all they do God comprehends.
|
|
And when Satan made their works appear seemly to them, and said,
|
|
'There is none amongst mankind to conquer you to-day, for, verily, I
|
|
am your neighbour!' and when the two troops came in sight of each
|
|
other, he turned upon his heels and said, 'Verily, I am clear of
|
|
you! verily, I see what you see not! verily, I fear God, for God is
|
|
keen to punish!
|
|
And when the hypocrites and those in whose hearts was sickness said,
|
|
'Their religion hath beguiled these men, but he who relies upon God,
|
|
verily, God is mighty and wise.'
|
|
Couldst thou see when the angels take away the souls of those who
|
|
misbelieve; they smite them on their faces and hinder parts.- 'Taste
|
|
ye the torment of burning! that is for what your hands have sent on
|
|
before; and for that God is no unjust one towards his servants.'
|
|
As was the wont of Pharaoh's people and those before them! they
|
|
disbelieved in the signs of God, and God overtook them in their
|
|
sins; verily, God is strong and keen to punish.
|
|
That is because God is not one to change a favour He has favoured
|
|
a people with, until they change what they have in themselves, and for
|
|
that God both hears and knows.
|
|
As was the wont of Pharaoh's people and those before them! they said
|
|
our signs were lies, and we destroyed them in their sins, and
|
|
drowned Pharaoh's people; and all of them were evildoers.
|
|
Verily, the worst of beasts in God's eyes are those who misbelieve
|
|
and will not believe; with whom if thou dost make a league, they break
|
|
their league each time, for they fear not God; but shouldst thou
|
|
ever catch them in war, then make those who come after them run by
|
|
their example, haply they may remember then.
|
|
And shouldst thou ever fear from any people treachery, then throw it
|
|
back to them in like manner; verily, God loves not the treacherous.
|
|
Deem not that those who misbelieve can win; verily, they cannot make
|
|
(God) powerless!
|
|
Prepare ye against them what force and companies of horse ye can, to
|
|
make the enemies of God, and your enemies, and others beside them,
|
|
in dread thereof. Ye do not know them, but God knows them! and
|
|
whatever ye expend in God's way He will repay you; and ye shall not be
|
|
wronged. But if they incline to peace, incline thou to it too, and
|
|
rely upon God; verily, He both hears and knows.
|
|
But if they wish to betray thee, then God is enough for thee! He
|
|
it is who supports thee with His help and with the believers; and
|
|
reconciles their hearts! Didst thou expend all that is in the earth
|
|
thou couldst not reconcile their hearts, but God reconciled them,
|
|
verily, He is mighty and wise!
|
|
O thou prophet! God is sufficient for thee, with those of the
|
|
believers who follow thee! O thou prophet! urge on the believers to
|
|
fight. If there be of you twenty patient men, they shall conquer two
|
|
hundred; if there be of you a hundred, they shall conquer a thousand
|
|
of those who misbelieve, because they are a people who did not
|
|
discern.- Now has God made it light for you; He knows that there is
|
|
a weakness amongst you: but if there be amongst you but a patient
|
|
hundred, they will conquer two hundred; and if there be of you a
|
|
thousand, they will conquer two thousand, by the permission of God,-
|
|
for God is with the patient!
|
|
It has not been for any prophet to take captives until he hath
|
|
slaughtered in the land! Ye wish to have the goods of this world,
|
|
but God wishes for the next, for God is mighty, wise! Were it not
|
|
for a book from God that had gone before, there would have touched
|
|
you, for that which ye took, a mighty punishment.
|
|
Eat of what spoils ye have taken, what is lawful and good; and
|
|
fear God, verily, God is forgiving and merciful.
|
|
O thou prophet! say to such of the captives as are in your hands,
|
|
'If God knows of any good in your hearts, he will give you better than
|
|
that which is taken from you, and will forgive you; for God is
|
|
forgiving and merciful.
|
|
But if they desire to betray thee,- they have betrayed God before!
|
|
but He hath given you power over them; for God is knowing, wise!
|
|
Verily, those who believe and have fled and fought strenuously
|
|
with their wealth and persons in God's way, and those who have given
|
|
refuge and help, these shall be next of kin to each other. But those
|
|
who believe, but have not fled, ye have naught to do with their claims
|
|
of kindred, until they flee as well. But if they ask you for aid for
|
|
religion's sake, then help is due from you, except against a people
|
|
between whom and you there is an alliance; for God on what ye do
|
|
doth look.
|
|
And those who misbelieve, some of them are next of kin to others-
|
|
unless ye act the same there will be sedition in the land, and great
|
|
corruption.
|
|
Those who believe and have fled and fought strenuously in. God's
|
|
cause, and those who have given a refuge and a help, those it is who
|
|
believe; to them is forgiveness and generous provision due. And
|
|
those who have believed afterwards and have fled and fought
|
|
strenuously with you; these too are of you, but blood relations are
|
|
nearer in kin by the Book of God. Verily, God all things doth know.
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF REPENTANCE OR IMMUNITY
|
|
(IX. Medinah.)
|
|
|
|
AN immunity from God and His Apostle to those idolaters with whom ye
|
|
have made a league.
|
|
Roam ye at large in the land for four months, but know that ye
|
|
cannot make God helpless, and that God disgraces the misbelievers.
|
|
A proclamation from God and His Apostle to the people on the day
|
|
of the greater pilgrimage, that God is clear of the idolaters as is
|
|
His Apostle! If then ye repent it is better for you; but if ye turn
|
|
your backs, then know that ye cannot make God helpless. Give to
|
|
those who misbelieve glad tidings of grievous woe!- Except to those of
|
|
the idolaters with whom ye have made a league, and who then have not
|
|
failed you at all, and have not back-ed up any one against you. Fulfil
|
|
for them then your covenant until the time agreed upon with them;
|
|
verily, God loves those who fear.
|
|
But when the sacred months are passed away, kill the idolaters
|
|
wherever ye may find them; and take them, and besiege them, and lie in
|
|
wait for them in every place of observation; but if they repent, and
|
|
are steadfast in prayer, and give alms, then let them go their way;
|
|
verily, God is forgiving and merciful.
|
|
And if any one of the idolaters ask thee for aid, then aid him, in
|
|
order that he may hear the word of God; then let him reach his place
|
|
of safety,- that is, because they are a folk who do not know.
|
|
How can there be for the idolaters a treaty with God and with His
|
|
Apostle, save those with whom ye have made a league at the Sacred
|
|
Mosque! Then while they stand by you, stand ye by them; verily, God
|
|
loves those who fear.
|
|
How!- if they prevail against you, they will not observe either ties
|
|
of blood or ties of clientship; they please you with their mouths, but
|
|
their hearts refuse; and most of them do work abomination. They barter
|
|
God's signs for a little price, and they turn folk from His way;
|
|
verily, they- evil is that which they have done.
|
|
They will not observe in a believer ties of kindred nor ties of
|
|
clientship; but they it is are the transgressors.
|
|
But if they repent and are steadfast in prayer and give alms, then
|
|
they are your brethren in religion- we detail the signs unto a
|
|
people that do know.
|
|
But if they break faith with you after their treaty, and taunt
|
|
your religion, then fight the leaders of misbelief; verily, they
|
|
have no faith, haply they may desist.
|
|
Will ye not fight a people who broke their oaths, and intended to
|
|
expel the Apostle? They began with you at first, are ye afraid of
|
|
them? God is more deserving that ye should fear Him! If ye be
|
|
believers, kill them! God will torment them by your hands, and
|
|
disgrace them, and aid you against them, and heal the breasts of a
|
|
people who believe; and will remove rage from their hearts; for God
|
|
turns unto Him whomsoever He pleases, and God is knowing, wise!
|
|
Did ye reckon that ye would be left, when God knows not as yet those
|
|
of you who fought strenuously, and who did not take other than God and
|
|
His Apostle, and the believers for an intimate friend? for God is well
|
|
aware of what ye do. It is not for idolaters to repair to the
|
|
mosques of God, bearing witness against themselves to unbelief; they
|
|
it is whose works are vain, and in the Fire shall they dwell for aye!
|
|
He only shall repair to the mosques of God who believes in God and
|
|
the last day, and is steadfast in prayer, and gives the alms, and
|
|
fears only God;- it may be that these will be of those who are guided.
|
|
Have ye made out the giving drink to the pilgrims and the
|
|
repairing to the Sacred Mosque to be like being one who believes in
|
|
God and in the last day, and is strenuous in the way of God?- they are
|
|
not equal in God's sight, and God guides not an unjust people.
|
|
Those who believe and who have fled and been strenuous in the way of
|
|
God, with their wealth and with their persons, are highest in rank
|
|
with God, and these it is who are happy. Their Lord gives them glad
|
|
tidings of mercy from Himself, and goodwill; and gardens shall they
|
|
have therein and lasting pleasure, to dwell therein for aye! Verily,
|
|
God, with Him is mighty here.
|
|
O ye who believe! take not your fathers and your brothers for
|
|
patrons if they love misbelief rather than faith; for whosoever
|
|
amongst you takes them for patrons these are the unjust.
|
|
Say, 'If your fathers, and your sons, and your brethren, and your
|
|
wives, and your clansmen, and the wealth which ye have gained, and the
|
|
merchandise which ye fear may be slack, and the dwellings which ye
|
|
love are dearer to you than God and His Apostle, and than fighting
|
|
strenuously in His way,- then wait awhile, until God brings His
|
|
bidding, for God guides not a people who work abomination!'
|
|
God has helped you in many a place, and on the day of 'Honein when
|
|
ye were so pleased with your numbers; but it did not serve you at all,
|
|
and the road grew too strait for you, where it had been broad; and
|
|
then ye turned your backs retreating; then God sent down His
|
|
shechina upon His Apostle and upon the believers; and sent down armies
|
|
which ye could not see, and punished those who misbelieved; for that
|
|
is the reward of the misbelievers, then God turns after that to whom
|
|
He will, for God is forgiving and merciful!
|
|
O ye who believe! it is 'Only the idolaters who are unclean; they
|
|
shall not then approach the Sacred Mosque after this year. But if ye
|
|
fear want then God will enrich you from His grace if He will;
|
|
verily, God is knowing, wise!
|
|
Fight those who believe not in God and in the last day, and who
|
|
forbid not what God and His Apostle have forbidden, and who do not
|
|
practice the religion of truth from amongst those to whom the Book has
|
|
been brought, until they pay the tribute by their hands and be as
|
|
little ones.
|
|
The Jews say Ezra is the son of God; and the Christians say that the
|
|
Messiah is the son of God; that is what they say with their mouths,
|
|
imitating the sayings of those who misbelieved before.- God fight
|
|
them! how they lie!
|
|
They take their doctors and their monks for lords rather than God,
|
|
and the Messiah the son of Mary; but they are bidden to worship but
|
|
one God, there is no god but He; celebrated be His praise, from what
|
|
they join with Him!
|
|
They desire to put out the light of 'God with their mouths, but
|
|
God will not have it but that we should perfect His light, averse
|
|
although the misbelievers be!
|
|
He it is who sent His Apostle with guidance and the religion of
|
|
truth, to make it prevail over every other religion, averse although
|
|
idolaters may be!
|
|
O ye who believe! verily, many of the doctors and the monks devour
|
|
the wealth of men openly, and turn folk from God's way; but those
|
|
who store up gold and silver and expend it not in God's way,- give
|
|
them glad tidings of grievous woe! On the day when it shall be
|
|
heated in the fire of hell, and their brows shall be branded
|
|
therewith, and their sides and their backs!- 'This is what ye stored
|
|
up for yourselves, taste then what ye stored up!'
|
|
Verily, the number of months with God is twelve months in God's
|
|
Book, on the day when He created the heavens and the earth; of these
|
|
are four that are sacred; that is the subsisting religion. Then do not
|
|
wrong yourselves therein, but fight the idolaters one and all, as they
|
|
fight you one and all, and know that God is with those who fear.
|
|
Verily, putting off is but an increase in misbelief to lead astray
|
|
therewith those who misbelieve. They make it lawful one year, but they
|
|
make it unlawful another year, that they may come to an
|
|
understanding as to the number which God has made sacred, and make
|
|
lawful what God has prohibited. Seemly to them are their evil works,
|
|
but God guides not a misbelieving people.
|
|
O ye who believe! what ailed you when ye were told to march forth in
|
|
God's way, that ye sank down heavily upon the earth? were ye content
|
|
with the life of this world instead of the next? but the provision
|
|
of this world's life is but a little to the next. Unless ye march
|
|
forth He will punish you with grievous woe, and will put in. your
|
|
stead a people other than you! ye cannot hurt Him at all, for God is
|
|
mighty over all!
|
|
Unless ye help him- and God did help him, when those who misbelieved
|
|
drove him forth the second of two. When they twain were in the cave;
|
|
when he said to his comrade, 'Grieve not, verily, God is with us;' and
|
|
God sent down His shechina upon him, and aided him with hosts ye could
|
|
not see, and made the word of those who misbelieved inferior, and
|
|
the word of God superior; for God is mighty and wise. March ye then,
|
|
light and heavy, and fight strenuously with your wealth and persons in
|
|
God's way; that is better for you if ye did but know!
|
|
Were there goods nigh at hand, and a moderate journey, they would
|
|
have followed you; but the distance was too far for them; they will
|
|
swear by God, 'If we could, we would have gone forth with you.' They
|
|
destroy themselves, but God knows that they lie!
|
|
God forgive thee; why didst thou give them leave (to stay) until
|
|
it was made manifest to thee who spake the truth- until thou
|
|
mightest know the liars?
|
|
Those who believe in God and in the last day will not beg off from
|
|
fighting strenuously with their wealth and their persons; but God
|
|
knows those who fear.
|
|
It is only those who believe not in God and in the last day who
|
|
beg off from thee, and those whose hearts are in doubt, and in their
|
|
doubt do hesitate.
|
|
Had they wished to go forth, they would have prepared for it a
|
|
preparation; but God was averse from their starting off, and made them
|
|
halt, and they were told to sit with those who sit. Had they gone
|
|
forth with you they would but have made you more trouble, and they
|
|
would have hurried about amongst you craving a sedition; amongst you
|
|
are some who would have listened to them; but God knows those who
|
|
are unjust! They used to crave sedition before and upset thy
|
|
affairs; until the truth came, and God's bidding was made manifest,
|
|
averse although they were.
|
|
Of them are some who say, 'Permit me, and do not try me!' Have
|
|
they not fallen into the trial already, but hell shall encompass the
|
|
misbelievers.
|
|
If good befall thee it seems ill to them; but if a calamity befall
|
|
thee they say, 'We had taken care for our affair before;' and they
|
|
turn their backs and they are glad.
|
|
Say, 'Nought shall befall us save what God has written down for
|
|
us; He is our Lord, and upon God believers do rely!'
|
|
Say, 'Do ye await for us aught but one of the two best things?' we
|
|
too await for you that God will inflict on you torment from Himself,
|
|
or by our hands. Wait then; and we with you are waiting too!
|
|
Say, 'Expend ye in alms, whether ye will or no, it shall not be
|
|
accepted from you; verily, ye are a people who do work abomination.'
|
|
But nought hinders their alms-giving from being accepted save that
|
|
they misbelieve in God and His Apostle, and perform not prayer save
|
|
lazily, and expend not in alms save reluctantly.
|
|
Let not their wealth please you nor their children, God only
|
|
wishes to torment them therewith in the life of this world, and that
|
|
their souls may pass away while still they misbelieve.
|
|
They swear by God that, verily, they are of you; but they are not of
|
|
you, and they are a people who do stand aside in fear. Could they
|
|
but have found a refuge, or some caves, or a place in which to
|
|
creep, they would have turned round in haste thereto.
|
|
Of them are some who defame thee, with respect to alms; though if
|
|
they are given a part thereof, they are content; and if they are not
|
|
given a part thereof, then are they in a rage. Would that they were
|
|
content with what God and His Apostle had brought them, and would say,
|
|
'God is enough for us! God will bring us of His grace, and so will His
|
|
Apostle; verily, unto God is our desire!'
|
|
Alms are only for the poor and needy, and those who work for them,
|
|
and those whose hearts are reconciled, and those in captivity, and
|
|
those in debt, and those who are on God's path, and for the wayfarer;-
|
|
an ordinance this from God, for God is knowing, wise.
|
|
And of them are some who are by the ears with the prophet, and
|
|
say, 'He is all ear.' Say, 'An ear of good for you!' he believes in
|
|
God, and believes in those who do believe, and is a mercy unto such of
|
|
you as believe; but those who are by the ears with the Apostle of God,
|
|
for them is grievous woe!
|
|
They swear by God to please you; but God and His Apostle are more
|
|
worthy for them to please if they be believers. Do they not know
|
|
that whoso setteth himself against God and His Apostle, for him is the
|
|
fire of hell, to dwell therein for aye? and that is mighty shame!
|
|
The hypocrites are cautious lest there be revealed against them a
|
|
surah to inform them of what is in their hearts; say, 'Mock ye!
|
|
verily, God will bring forth that of which ye are so cautious!' But if
|
|
thou shouldst ask them, they will say, 'We did but discuss and
|
|
jest;' say, 'Was it at God and His signs, and His Apostle, that ye
|
|
mocked?'
|
|
Make no excuse! Ye have misbelieved after your faith; if we
|
|
forgive one sect of you, we will torment another sect, for that they
|
|
sinned!
|
|
The hypocrites, men and women, some of them follow others, bidding
|
|
what is wrong and forbidding what is right, and they clench their
|
|
hands. They forget God and He forgets them! Verily, the hypocrites,
|
|
they are the doers of abomination!
|
|
God has promised unto the hypocrites, men and women, and unto the
|
|
misbelievers, hell-fire, to dwell therein for aye; it is enough for
|
|
them! God shall curse them, and theirs shall be enduring woe.
|
|
Ye are like those who were before you. They were stronger than you
|
|
and more abundant in wealth and children; they enjoyed their portion
|
|
then, and ye enjoy your portion, as they enjoyed their portion
|
|
before you; and ye discuss as they discussed. Their works are vain
|
|
in this world and the next, and they it is who lose.
|
|
Did there not come to them the declaration of those who were
|
|
before them? of the people of Noah and 'Ad and Thamud, and of the
|
|
people of Abraham, and the people of Midian? and of the overturned
|
|
(cities)? Their apostles came to them with manifest signs; for God
|
|
would not wrong them, but it was themselves they wronged.
|
|
And the believers, men and women, are some the patrons of others;
|
|
they bid what is reasonable, and forbid what is wrong, and are
|
|
steadfast in prayer, and give alms, and obey God and His Apostle. On
|
|
these will God have mercy; verily, God is mighty, wise!
|
|
God has promised to believers, men and women, gardens beneath
|
|
which rivers flow, to dwell therein for aye; and goodly places in
|
|
the garden of Eden, But good-will from God is the greatest of all!
|
|
that is the mighty happiness!
|
|
O thou prophet! strive strenuously against the misbelievers and
|
|
the hypocrites, and be stern against them; for their resort is hell,
|
|
and an ill journey shall it be.
|
|
They swear by God they did not speak it, but they did speak the word
|
|
of misbelief; and they disbelieved after they had embraced Islam,
|
|
and they designed what they could not attain; and they only
|
|
disapproved it because God and His Apostle had enriched them of His
|
|
grace. If they turn again 'tis better for them; but if they turn their
|
|
backs, God will torment them with mighty woe in this world and in
|
|
the next, nor shall they have upon the earth a patron or protector.
|
|
And of them are some who make a treaty with God, that 'If He bring
|
|
us of His grace, we will give alms and we will surely be among the
|
|
righteous.' But when He gave them of His grace they were niggardly
|
|
thereof, and turned their backs and swerved aside. So He caused
|
|
hypocrisy to pursue them in their hearts unto the day when they
|
|
shall meet Him,- for that they did fail God in what they promised Him,
|
|
and for that they were liars!
|
|
Do they not know that God knows their secrets and their whisperings,
|
|
and that God knows the unseen things?
|
|
Those who defame such of the believers as willingly give their alms,
|
|
and such as can find nothing to give but their exertions, and who mock
|
|
at them,- God will mock at them, and for them is grievous woe!
|
|
Ask forgiveness for them or ask not forgiveness for them! if they
|
|
shouldst ask forgiveness for them seventy times, yet would not God
|
|
forgive them; that is because they disbelieved in God and His Apostle,
|
|
for God guides not a people who work abomination.
|
|
Those who were left behind rejoiced in staying behind the Apostle of
|
|
God, and were averse from fighting strenuously with their wealth and
|
|
their persons in God's way, and said, 'March not forth in the heat.'
|
|
Say, 'The fire of hell is hotter still, if ye could but discern!'
|
|
Let them then laugh little, and let them weep much, as a recompense
|
|
for that which they have earned!
|
|
But if God bring thee back to a sect of them, and they ask thee then
|
|
for leave to sally forth; say, 'Ye shall by no means ever sally
|
|
forth with me, nor shall ye ever fight a foe with me! verily, ye
|
|
were content to sit at home the first time, sit ye then now with those
|
|
who stay behind.'
|
|
Pray not for any one of them who dies, and stand not by his tomb;
|
|
verily, they disbelieved in God and His Apostle and died workers of
|
|
abomination!
|
|
Let not their wealth and their children please you, God only
|
|
wishes to torment them therewith in this world, and that their souls
|
|
may pass away the while they misbelieve.
|
|
Whenever a surah is sent down to them, 'Believe ye in God, and fight
|
|
strenuously together with His Apostle,' those of them who have the
|
|
means will ask thee for leave to stay at home and say, 'Let us be
|
|
amongst those who stay behind.' They are content to be with those
|
|
who are left behind. A stamp is set upon their hearts that they should
|
|
not discern.
|
|
But the Apostle and those who believe with him are strenuous with
|
|
their wealth and with their persons; these shall have good things, and
|
|
these it is shall prosper.
|
|
God has prepared for them gardens beneath which rivers flow, to
|
|
dwell therein for aye; that is the mighty happiness!
|
|
There came certain desert Arabs that they might be excused; and
|
|
those stayed behind who had called God and His Apostle liars. There
|
|
shall befall those of them who misbelieved, a mighty woe. For the
|
|
weak, and the sick, and those who cannot find wherewith to expend in
|
|
alms there is no hindrance, so they be only sincere towards God and
|
|
His Apostle. There is no way against those who do well; for God is
|
|
forgiving and merciful. Nor against those to whom, when they came to
|
|
thee that thou shouldst mount them, thou didst say, 'I cannot find
|
|
wherewith to mount you,' turned their backs while their eyes poured
|
|
forth with tears, for grief that they could not find wherewith to
|
|
expend. Only is there a way against those who ask thee for leave to
|
|
stay at home while they are rich; content to be with those who are
|
|
left behind; on whose hearts God has set a stamp, so that they
|
|
should not know.
|
|
They make excuses to you when ye return to them: say, 'Make no
|
|
excuse, we believe you not; God has informed us concerning you. God
|
|
sees your works and His Apostle too!' Then shall ye be brought back
|
|
unto Him who knows the unseen and the seen; and He shall inform you of
|
|
that which ye have done.
|
|
They will adjure you by God when ye have come back to them, to
|
|
turn aside from them; turn ye aside then from them; verily, they are a
|
|
plague, and their resort is hell! a recompense for that which they
|
|
have earned!
|
|
They will adjure you to be pleased with them; but if ye are
|
|
pleased with them, God will not be pleased with a people who work
|
|
abomination.
|
|
The Arabs of the desert are keener in misbelief and hypocrisy, and
|
|
are more likely not to know the bounds which God has sent down to
|
|
His Apostle; but God is knowing and wise.
|
|
And of the Arabs of the desert are some who take what they expend to
|
|
be a forced loan, and they wait a turn of fortune against you; against
|
|
them shall a turn of evil fortune be; for God both hears and knows.
|
|
And of the Arabs of the desert are some who believe in God and
|
|
the last day, and who take what they expend in alms to be a means of
|
|
approach to God and to the Apostle's prayers,- is it not a means of
|
|
approach for them? God will make them enter into His mercy; verily,
|
|
God is forgiving and merciful.
|
|
As for the foremost in the race, the first of those who fled, and
|
|
the helpers, and those who followed them in their kindness, God is
|
|
well pleased with them, and they are well pleased with Him; He has
|
|
prepared for them gardens beneath which rivers flow, to dwell
|
|
therein for aye; that is the mighty happiness.
|
|
And of those who are round about you of the Arabs of the desert,
|
|
some are hypocrites, and of the people of Medinah, some are stubborn
|
|
in hypocrisy; thou dost not know them- we know them; we will torment
|
|
them twice over; then shall they be sent off into mighty woe.
|
|
And others have confessed their sins,- that they have mixed with a
|
|
righteous action another evil action;- haply it may be God will turn
|
|
again to them; verily, God is forgiving and merciful.
|
|
Take from their wealth alms to cleanse and purify them thereby;
|
|
and pray for them; verily, thy prayer is a repose for them; for God
|
|
both hears and knows.
|
|
Do they not know that God accepts repentance from His servants,
|
|
and takes alms; and that God is He who is easily turned and merciful.
|
|
And say, 'Act ye;' and God and His Apostle and the believers shall
|
|
see your acts, and ye shall be brought back to Him who knows the
|
|
seen and 'the unseen, and He shall inform you of that which ye have
|
|
done.
|
|
And others are in hopes of God's bidding; whether He will torment
|
|
them, or whether He turn again towards them; for God is knowing, wise.
|
|
And there are those who have taken to a mosque for mischief, and for
|
|
misbelief, and to make a breach amongst the believers, and for an
|
|
ambush for him who made war against God and His Apostle before; they
|
|
surely swear, 'We only wished for what was good;' but God bears
|
|
witness that they are liars.
|
|
Never stand up therein!- there is a mosque founded on piety from the
|
|
first day: it is more right that thou shouldst stand therein;- therein
|
|
are men who love to be clean; for God doth love the clean.
|
|
Is he who has laid his foundation upon the fear of God and of His
|
|
good-will better, or he who has laid his foundation upon a crumbling
|
|
wall of sand, which crumbles away with him into the fire of hell?- but
|
|
God guides not a people who do wrong.
|
|
The building which they have built will not cease to be a source
|
|
of doubt in their hearts until their hearts are cut asunder; but God
|
|
is knowing, wise.
|
|
Verily, God hath bought of the believers their persons and their
|
|
wealth, for the paradise they are to have; they shall fight in the way
|
|
of God, and they shall slay and be slain: promised in truth, in the
|
|
law and the gospel and the Koran;- and who is more faithful to His
|
|
covenant than God?
|
|
Be ye glad then in the covenant which ye have made with Him, for
|
|
that is the mighty happiness! Those who repent, those who worship,
|
|
those who praise, those who fast, those who bow down, those who adore,
|
|
those who bid what is right and forbid what is wrong, and those who
|
|
keep the bounds of God,- glad tidings to those who believe!
|
|
It is not for the prophet and those who believe to ask forgiveness
|
|
for the idolaters, even though they be their kindred, after it has
|
|
been made manifest to them that they are the fellows of hell.
|
|
Nor was Abraham's asking pardon for his father aught else but
|
|
through a promise he had promised him; but when it was made manifest
|
|
to him that he wa's an enemy to God, he cleansed himself of him;
|
|
verily, Abraham was pitiful and clement.
|
|
Nor will God lead astray a people after He has guided them until
|
|
that is made manifest to them which they have to fear; verily, God all
|
|
things doth know.
|
|
Verily, God's is the kingdom of the heavens and the earth! He
|
|
quickens and He kills! Nor have ye beside God a patron or protector.
|
|
God has now turned towards the prophet and those who fled with
|
|
him, and towards the helpers who followed him in the hour of
|
|
difficulty, after that the hearts of a part of them had well-nigh gone
|
|
amiss.
|
|
Then He turned unto them; verily, to them He is kind and
|
|
merciful:- unto the three who were left behind, so that the earth with
|
|
all its ample space was too strait for them, and their souls were
|
|
straitened for them, and they thought that there was no refuge for
|
|
them from God save unto Him.
|
|
Then He turned again towards them that they might also turn; verily,
|
|
God, He is easily turned and merciful!
|
|
O ye who believe! fear God and be with those who speak the truth.
|
|
It was not for the people of Medinah, and those around about them of
|
|
the Arabs of the desert, to stay behind the Apostle of God and not
|
|
to prefer their souls to his: that is because neither thirst, nor
|
|
toil, nor heat, nor hunger befel them on God's way. Nor do they stop
|
|
to anger the misbelievers, nor do they get any (harm) from the enemy
|
|
without a good work being written down to them; verily, God wastes not
|
|
the hire of those who do well.
|
|
Nor do they expend in alms a small or great expense, nor do they
|
|
cross a wady without it being written down to them; that God may
|
|
reward them with better than that which they have done.
|
|
The believers should not march forth altogether; and if a troop of
|
|
every division of them march not forth, it is only that they may study
|
|
their religion and warn their people when they return to them, that
|
|
haply they may beware.
|
|
O ye who believe! fight those who are near to you of the
|
|
misbelievers, and let them find in you sternness; and know that God is
|
|
with those who fear.
|
|
And whenever a surah is sent down, there are some of them who say,
|
|
'Which of you has this increased in faith?' But as for those who
|
|
believe, it does increase them in faith, and they shall rejoice: but
|
|
as for those in whose hearts is sickness, it only adds a plague to
|
|
their plague, and they die misbelievers.
|
|
Do they not see that they are tried in every year once or twice? Yet
|
|
they do not turn again, nor do they mind!
|
|
And whenever a surah is: sent down, some of them look at the others-
|
|
'Does any one see you?'- Then they turn away! God has turned their
|
|
hearts, for that they are a people who do not discern.
|
|
There has come to you an apostle from amongst yourselves; hard for
|
|
him to bear is it that ye commit iniquity; he is anxious over you
|
|
after the believers, pitiful, compassionate.
|
|
But if they turn their backs, then say, God is enough for me!
|
|
there is no god but He! upon Him do I rely, for He is Lord of the
|
|
mighty throne!'
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF JONAH, (PEACE BE ON HIM!)
|
|
(X. Mecca.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
ALIF LAM RA. Those are the signs of the wise Book! was it a wonder
|
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to the folk that we inspired a man from amongst themselves, 'Warn thou
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the folk; and give glad tidings to those who believe, that for them
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there is an advance of sincerity gone before them with their Lord?'
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The misbelievers say, 'Verily, this is an obvious sorcerer!'
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Verily, your Lord is God, who created the heavens and the earth in
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six days; then He made for the throne, to govern the affair; there
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is no intercessor, except after His permission. That is God for you-
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your Lord! Then worship Him- do ye not mind?
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To Him is your return all of you- God's promise in truth; verily, He
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produces the creature, then He makes it return again, that He may
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recompense those who believe and do what is right with justice; but
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those who misbelieve, for them is a drink of boiling water, and
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grievous woe, for that they did misbelieve.
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He it is who made the sun for a brightness, and the moon for a
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light, and decreed for it mansions, that ye may know the number of the
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years and the reckoning.- God only created that in truth. He details
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the signs unto a people who do know.
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Verily, in the alternation of night and day, and in what God has
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created of the heavens and the earth, are signs unto a people who do
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fear.
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Verily, those who hope not for our meeting, and are content with the
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life of this world, and are comforted thereby, and those who are
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neglectful of our signs,- these, their resort is fire for that which
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they have earned!
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Verily, those Who believe and do what is right, their Lord guides
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them by their faith; beneath them shall rivers flow in the gardens
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of pleasure.
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Their cry therein shall be, 'Celebrated be Thy praises, O God!'
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and their salutation therein shall be, 'Peace!' and the end of their
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cry shall be, 'Praise (belongs) to God, the Lord of the worlds!'
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And if God should hasten on the bad to men as they would hasten on
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the good, their appointed time would surely be fulfilled. But we
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will let those who hope not for our meeting go on in their
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rebellion, blindly wandering on.
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When distress touches man, he calls us to his side, whether
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sitting or standing; but when we have removed from him his distress,
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he passes on as though he had not called on us in a distress that
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touched him. Thus unto the extravagant is made seemly that which
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they have done.
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We have already destroyed generations before you when they did
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wrong, and there came to them their apostles with manifest signs,
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but they would not believe. Thus do we reward the sinful people.
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Then we made you their successors in the earth after them, that we
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may see how ye will act.
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But when our evident signs are recited to them, those who hope not
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for our meeting say, 'Bring a Koran other than this; or change it.'
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Say, 'It is not for me to, change it of my own accord; I do not follow
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aught but what I am inspired with; verily, I fear, if I rebel
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against my Lord, the torment of a mighty day!'
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Say, 'Had God pleased, should not have recited it to you, nor taught
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you therewith. I have tarried a lifetime amongst you before it;-
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have ye not then any sense?'
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Who is more unjust than he who forges against God a lie, or says His
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signs are lies? verily, the sinners shall not prosper.
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They worship beside God what can neither harm them nor profit
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them, and they say, 'These are our intercessors with God!' Say,
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'Will ye inform God of aught in the heavens or the earth, that He
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knows not of?' Celebrated be His praise! and exalted be He, above what
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they associate with Him!
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People were but one nation once, then they disagreed; and had it not
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been for thy Lord's word already passed, there would have been decided
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between them that concerning which they disagreed.
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They say, 'Why is not a sign sent down upon him from his Lord?' Say,
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'The unseen is only God's; but wait ye for a while, verily, I with you
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am one of those who wait!'
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When we have let men taste of mercy after distress which has touched
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them, lo! they use a stratagem against our signs! Say, 'God is quicker
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at stratagem.' Verily, our messengers write down what stratagem ye
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use.'
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He it is who makes you travel in the land and sea, until when ye are
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in the ships- and these carry them afloat with a favouring wind, and
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they rejoice therein, there comes to them a violent wind, and there
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comes to them the wave from every place, and they think that they
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are encompassed about; then they call on God, sincere in religion
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towards Him, 'If thou dost save from this we will surely be of those
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who thank.' But when He has saved them, lo! they are wilful in the
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earth unjustly;- O ye folk! your wilfulness against yourselves is
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but a provision of this world's life; then unto us is your return, and
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we will inform you of that which ye have done!
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Verily, the likeness of this world's life is like water which we
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send down from the sky, and the plants of the earth, from which men
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and cattle eat, are mingled therewith; until when the earth puts on
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its gilding and is adorned, the people thereof think that they have
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power over it. Our order comes to it by night or day, and we make it
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as it were mown down- as though it had not yesterday been rich!-
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Thus do we detail the signs unto a people who reflect.
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God calls unto the abode of peace, and guides whom He will into
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the right path.
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To those who do what is good, goodness and increase! nor shall
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blackness or abasement cover their faces! these are the fellows of
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Paradise, they shall dwell therein for aye.
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But, as for those who have earned ill, the reward of evil is the
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like thereof; abasement shall cover them! they shall have none to
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defend them against God;- as though their faces were veiled with the
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deep darkness of the night; these are the fellows of the Fire, and
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they shall dwell therein for aye.
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And on the day we gather them all together then we will say to those
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who associated other gods (with us), your places, ye and your
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associates!' and we will part them; and their associates will say, 'It
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was not us ye worshipped.- But God is witness enough between us and
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you, that we were heedless of your worshipping us.' There shall
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every soul prove what it has sent on before; and they shall be
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returned unto God, their God, their true sovereign, and that which
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they devised shall stray away from them.
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Say, 'Who provides you from the heaven and the earth? who has
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dominion over hearing and sight? and who brings forth the living
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from the dead, and brings forth the dead from the living? and who
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governs the affair?' And they will say, 'God.' Say, 'Do ye not then
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fear?'
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That is God, your true Lord! and what is there after the truth but
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error? how then can ye turn away?
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Thus is the word of thy Lord verified against those who commit
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abomination; verily, they will not believe. Say, 'Is there any of your
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associates who can produce a creature and then turn it back again?'
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Say, 'God produces a creature, then turns it back again; how then
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can ye lie?' Say, 'Is there any of your associates who guides unto the
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truth?' Say, 'God guides unto the truth.' Is then He who guides unto
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the truth more worthy to be followed, or he that guides not except
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he be himself guided? What ails you then, how ye judge?
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But most of them follow only suspicion; verily, suspicion does not
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avail against the truth. at all verily, God knows what they do.
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This Koran could not have been devised by any beside God; but it
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verifies that which was before it, and details the Book- there is no
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doubt therein- from the Lord of the worlds.
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Do they say, 'He hath devised it?' say then, 'Bring a surah like
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it,- and call, if ye can, on other than God, if ye do tell the truth!'
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Yet they call that a lie, the knowledge of which they cannot
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compass, while its interpretation has not yet come to them; so did
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those before them charge with lying, and see what was the end of the
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unjust!
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Of them are some who believe therein; and of them are some who do
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not believe therein; but thy Lord knows best who are corrupters.
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But if they call thee liar, say, 'I have my work, and ye have your
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work; ye are clear of what I work, and I am clear of what ye work.'
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There are some of them who listen to thee- canst thou make the
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deaf to hear, although they have no sense? And of them are some who
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look at thee- canst thou guide the blind, although they cannot see?
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Verily, God wrongs not man at all, but men do wrong themselves.
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And on the day when we will gather them together it will be as
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though they had not tarried save an hour of the day, they shall know
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each other. Lost are those who called the meeting with God a lie,
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and were not guided!
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Either we will show thee something of that with which we
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threatened them, or we will take thee to ourself, for unto us is their
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return; then is God a witness to what they do.
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Every nation has its apostle; and when their apostle comes to
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them, it is decided between them with justice, and they are not
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wronged.
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But they say, 'When is this threat (to come), if ye tell the truth?'
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Say, 'I have no power over myself for harm or for profit, save
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what God will. Every nation has its appointed time; when their
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appointed time comes to them they cannot delay it for an hour or bring
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it on.'
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Say, 'Let us see now when the torment comes to you, by night or day,
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what will the sinners fain bring on thereof? And when it has fallen-
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will ye believe in it now!- And yet ye wish to bring it on! Then shall
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it be said to those who have done wrong, Taste ye the torment of
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eternity! shall ye be recompensed except for that which ye have
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earned? They will ask thee to inform them whether it be true. Say,
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'Aye, by my Lord! verily, it is the truth, nor can ye weaken him.'
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And if every soul that hath done wrong had whatever is in the earth,
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it would give it as a ransom. They will utter their repentance when
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they see the torment; and it shall be decided between them with
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justice, nor shall they be wronged.
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Is not indeed what is in the heavens and what is in the earth God's?
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is not indeed the promise of God true? Though most of them know not.
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He quickens and He kills, and unto Him are ye returned!
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O ye folk! there has come to you a warning from your Lord, and a
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balm for what is in your breasts, and a guidance and a mercy to
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believers.
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Say, 'By the grace of God and by His mercy,- and in that let them
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rejoice! It is better than that which they collect!'
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Let us see now what God has sent down to you of provision! and yet
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ye have made of it unlawful and lawful. Say, 'Does God permit you,
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or against God do ye forge lies?
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What will those who forge lies against God think on the resurrection
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day? Verily, God is Lord of grace towards men, but most of them do not
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give thanks!
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Nor shalt thou be in any affair, nor shalt thou recite concerning it
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a Koran- nor shall ye do a work, without our being witness against
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you, when ye are engaged therein: nor does the weight of an atom
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escape thy Lord in earth or in heaven; nor is there less than that
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or greater, but it is in the perspicuous Book.
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Are not, verily, the friends of God those on whom there is no
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fear, neither shall they be grieved?- They who believed and who did
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fear- for them are good tidings in the life of this world, and in
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the future too; there is no changing the words of God! That is the
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mighty happiness!
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Let not their speech grieve thee; verily, power is wholly God's!
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He both hears and knows.
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Is not, verily, whoever is in the heavens and whoever is in the
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earth God's? What then do they follow who call on associates other
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than God?
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Verily, they follow nothing but suspicion, and verily, they are
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telling naught but lies.
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He it is who made for you the night, that ye might rest therein, and
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the day to see therein verily, in that are signs unto a people who can
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hear.
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They say, 'God has taken to Himself a son.' Celebrated be His
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praises! He is the rich one! His is whatever is in the heavens, and
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whatever is in the earth. Ye have no authority for this! will ye say
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against God, that which ye do not know?
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Say, 'Verily, those who forge against God a lie shall not prosper!'
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A provision in this world- then unto us is their return! then we
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will make them taste keen torment for that they misbelieved.
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Recite to them the story of Noah, when he said to his people, 'O
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my people! if my stay with you be grievous to you, and my reminding
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you of the signs of God, yet upon God do I rely! Collect then your
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affairs and your associates; nor let your affair (be ordered) for
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you in the dark; then decide respecting me, and do not wait; and if ye
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turn your backs, I ask you not for hire; my hire is only due from God,
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and I am bidden to be of those resigned.' But they called him a
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liar; and we saved him, and those with him, in the ark; and we made
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these successors, and drowned those who had said our signs were
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lies; see then how was the end of those who had been warned!
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Then we raised up after him apostles unto their people, and they
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came to them with manifest signs; but they would not believe in what
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they had called a lie before. Thus do we set a stamp upon the hearts
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of the transgressors.
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Then we raised up after them Moses and Aaron, unto Pharaoh and his
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chiefs with our signs; but they were too big with pride, and were a
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sinful people; and when the truth came to them from us they said,
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verily, 'This is obvious sorcery.'
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Moses said, 'Will ye say of the truth when it comes to you, Is
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this sorcery? But sorcerers shall not prosper.'
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They said, 'Hast thou come to turn us away from what we found our
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fathers at, that there may be for you twain grandeur in the earth? but
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we will not believe you.'
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And Pharaoh said, 'Bring me every knowing sorcerer;' and when the
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sorcerers came, Moses said to them, 'Throw down what ye have to
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throw!' and when they threw down, Moses said, 'What ye have brought is
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sorcery! verily, God will make it vain; verily, God rights not the
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work of evildoers!'
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But God verifies the truth by His words, although the sinners are
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averse therefrom.
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But none believed in Moses, save a race of his own people, through
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fear of Pharaoh and his chiefs; lest he should afflict them, for
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verily, Pharaoh was lofty in the earth, and verily, he was
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extravagant.
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And Moses said, 'O my people! if ye did believe in God, then on
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Him rely, if ye be resigned.' They said, 'Upon God do we rely. O our
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Lord! make us not a cause of trial for a people who do wrong, but save
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us by Thy mercy from the people who misbelieve!'
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And we inspired Moses and his brother thus, 'Establish, ye twain,
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houses for your people in Egypt; and make ye your houses a qiblah; and
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be ye steadfast in prayer, and give glad tidings to those who
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believe.'
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Moses said, 'O our Lord! verily, Thou hast brought to Pharaoh and
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his chiefs ornaments and wealth in the life of this world; O our Lord!
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that they may err from Thy way! O our Lord! confound their wealth
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and harden their hearts that they may not believe until they see
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grievous woe!' He said, 'Your prayer is answered; be upright then,
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ye two, and follow not the path of those who do not know!'
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And we brought the children of Israel across the sea; and Pharaoh
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and his hosts followed them eager and hostile, until when drowning
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overtook him, he said, 'I believe that there is no god but He in
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whom the children of Israel believe, and I am of those who are
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resigned!'- 'Now! but thou didst rebel aforetime, and wert of those
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who do evil; but to-day we will save thee in thy body, that thou
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mayest be to those who come after thee a sign, for verily, many men
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are careless of our signs!'
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And we established the people of Israel with a sure establishment,
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and we provided them with good things; nor did they disagree until
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there came to them the knowledge. Verily, thy Lord shall decide
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between them on the resurrection day concerning that whereon they
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did dispute.
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And if thou art in doubt of that which we have sent down unto
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thee, ask those who read the Book before thee; verily, the truth is
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come to thee from thy Lord, be not then of those who are in doubt. And
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be not of those who say the signs of God are lies, or thou wilt be
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of those who lose! Verily, those against whom God's word is pronounced
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will not believe, even though there come to them every sign, until
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they see the grievous woe. Were it not so, a city would have
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believed and its faith would have profited it. But (none did) except
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the people of Jonas; when they believed we removed from them the
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torment of disgrace in this world, and we gave them provision for a
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while. But had thy Lord pleased, all who are in the earth would have
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believed altogether; as for thee, wilt thou force men to become
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|
believers?
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It is not for any person to believe save by the permission of God;
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He puts horror on those who have no sense.
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|
Say, 'Behold what is in the heavens and in the earth! but signs
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|
and warners avail not a people who do not believe. Do they await aught
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|
but the like of the days of those who passed away before them?' Say,
|
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'Wait ye then! verily, I am with you one of those who wait.' Then we
|
|
will save our apostles and those who believe; thus is it due from us
|
|
to save believers.
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|
Say, 'O ye folk! if ye are in doubt concerning my religion, I will
|
|
not worship those ye worship other than Cod; but I worship God, who
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|
takes you to Himself, and I am bidden to be of the believers!' And,
|
|
'Make steadfast thy face to the religion as a 'Hanif; and be not of
|
|
the idolaters; and call not besides God on what can neither profit
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|
thee nor harm thee; for if thou dost, verily, thou art then of the
|
|
unjust!'
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|
And should God touch thee with harm, there is none to remove it save
|
|
He; and if He wish thee well, there is none to repel His grace; He
|
|
makes it fall on whom He will of His servants; for He is pardoning and
|
|
merciful!
|
|
Say, 'O ye people! there has come to you the truth from your Lord,
|
|
and he who is guided, his guidance is only for his soul; and he who
|
|
errs, errs only against it; and I am not a guardian over you.'
|
|
Follow what is revealed to thee, and be patient until God judges,
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|
for He is the best of judges.
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THE CHAPTER OF HUD
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(XI. Mecca.)
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ALIF LAM RA. A book whose signs are confirmed and then detailed,
|
|
from the wise one, the aware: that ye worship not other than God,-
|
|
verily, I am to you from Him a warner and a herald of glad tidings;
|
|
and that ye seek pardon from your Lord, then turn again to Him! He
|
|
will cause you to enjoy a good provision to a named and appointed
|
|
time, and will give His grace to every one deserving grace; but if
|
|
ye turn your backs, I fear for you the torment of a great day.
|
|
Unto God is your return, and He is mighty over all.
|
|
Do they not, verily, fold up their breasts, that the' may hide
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|
from Him? But when they cover themselves with their garments, does
|
|
He not know what they conceal and what they display? verily, He
|
|
knows the nature of men's breasts!
|
|
There is no beast that walks upon the earth but its provision is
|
|
from God. He knows its settlement and its resting-place; all is in the
|
|
perspicuous Book.
|
|
He it is who created the heavens and the earth in six days, and
|
|
His throne was upon the water that He might try you, which of you
|
|
did best.
|
|
But shouldst thou say, 'Ye will be raised up after death,' those who
|
|
misbelieve will surely say, 'This is naught but obvious sorcery;'
|
|
and if we keep back from them the torment to a stated generation, they
|
|
will surely say, 'What hinders it?'- Aye! on the day it comes to
|
|
them there is no turning it away from them, but that shall close in on
|
|
them at which they mocked.
|
|
And if we make man taste of mercy from us and then strip it off from
|
|
him, verily, he is despairing, ungrateful; and if we make him taste of
|
|
comfort after distress has touched him, he will surely say, 'The evils
|
|
have gone away from me;' verily, then he is joyful and boasting.
|
|
Save those who are patient and do right; these- for them is pardon and
|
|
a mighty hire!
|
|
Haply thou art leaving part of what is revealed to thee and thy
|
|
breast is straitened thereby, lest they should say, 'Why is not a
|
|
treasure sent down to him? or why did not an angel come with him?-
|
|
thou art only a warner, and God is guardian over all.'
|
|
Or they will say, 'He hath devised it;' say, 'Bring ten surahs
|
|
like it devised; and call upon whom ye can beside God, if ye do tell
|
|
the truth!' And if they do not answer, then know that it is revealed
|
|
by the knowledge of God, and that there is no god but He- are ye
|
|
then resigned?
|
|
Whosoever shall wish for the life of this world and its ornaments,
|
|
we will pay them their works therein, and they shall not be cheated.
|
|
These are those for whom there is nothing in the hereafter save the
|
|
Fire; and void is what they made therein, and vain what they were
|
|
doing!
|
|
Is he (like them) who stands upon a manifest sign from his Lord,
|
|
which is a witness from Him, and recites it, with the book of Moses
|
|
before him for a model and a mercy? These believe in it; and whosoever
|
|
of the crews disbelieves in him, the Fire is his promise.
|
|
Be not thou in doubt about it; verily, it is truth from thy Lord,
|
|
though most men do not believe.
|
|
Who is more unjust than he who forges against God a lie? they
|
|
shall be set before their Lord, and the witnesses shall say, 'These it
|
|
is who lied against their Lord.' Aye! God's curse is on the unjust who
|
|
turn men away from the path, and crave to make it crooked, and in
|
|
the hereafter disbelieve! They cannot make Him helpless in the
|
|
earth, nor have they other than God for patrons. Doubled for them is
|
|
the torment. They could not hear, nor did they see! Those it is who
|
|
lose themselves; and that which they did devise has strayed away
|
|
from them. No doubt but that in the hereafter these are those who
|
|
lose!
|
|
Verily, those who believe and do what is right, and humble
|
|
themselves to their Lord, they are the fellows of Paradise; they shall
|
|
dwell therein for aye. The two parties' likeness is as the blind and
|
|
the deaf, and the seeing and the hearing; shall they two be equal in
|
|
likeness? will ye not mind?
|
|
We did send Noah unto his people, 'Verily, I am to you an obvious
|
|
warner; that ye should not worship any save God. Verily, I fear for
|
|
you the torment of the grievous day. But the chiefs of those who
|
|
misbelieved amongst his people said, 'We only see in thee a mortal
|
|
like ourselves; nor do we see that any follow thee except the
|
|
reprobates amongst us by a rash judgment; nor do we see that you
|
|
have any preference over us; nay more, we think you liars!' said, 'O
|
|
my people! let us see! if I stand upon a manifest sign from my Lord,
|
|
and there come to me mercy from him, and ye are blinded to it; shall
|
|
we force you to it while ye are averse therefrom?
|
|
'O my people! I do not ask you for wealth in return for it; my
|
|
hire is only from God; nor do I repulse those who believe; verily,
|
|
they shall meet their Lord. But I see you, a people who are
|
|
ignorant. O my people! who will help me against God, were I to repulse
|
|
you? do ye not then mind? I do not say that I have the treasures of
|
|
God; nor do I know the unseen; nor do I say, "Verily, I am an
|
|
angel;" nor do I say of those whom your eyes despise, "God will
|
|
never give them any good!"- God knows best what is in their souls-
|
|
verily, then should I be of the unjust.'
|
|
They said, 'O Noah! thou hast wrangled with us, and hast
|
|
multiplied wranglings with us; bring us then what thou hast threatened
|
|
us with, if thou art of those who tell the truth.' Said he, 'God
|
|
will only bring it on you if He pleases, nor can ye make Him helpless;
|
|
nor will my advice profit you, should I wish to. advise you, if God
|
|
wish to lead you into error. He is your Lord, and unto Him shall ye be
|
|
returned.'
|
|
Do they say, 'He has devised it?' Say, 'If I have devised it, then
|
|
on me be my sin. But I am clear of that wherein ye sin.'
|
|
And Noah was inspired, 'None shall surely believe amongst thy people
|
|
but those who have believed already; take not then ill that which they
|
|
do. And make the ark under our eyes, and at our inspiration; and plead
|
|
not with me for those who have done wrong; verily, they shall be
|
|
drowned.'
|
|
So he made the ark, and every time the chiefs of his people passed
|
|
by him they jested at him. Said he, 'If ye jest at us, verily, we
|
|
shall jest at you even as ye are jesting, and ye shall surely know.
|
|
'He to whom a torment comes, it shall shame him, and there shall
|
|
light upon him lasting torment.'
|
|
Until at length when our order came, and the oven boiled, we said,
|
|
'Load therein of every kind two, and likewise thy family,- save
|
|
those on whom the sentence has already been passed- likewise those who
|
|
believe;' but there believed not with him save a few. And he said,
|
|
'Ride ye therein; in the name of God is its course, and its mooring.
|
|
Verily, my Lord is forgiving and merciful.'
|
|
And it floated on with them mid waves like mountains; and Noah cried
|
|
to his son who had gone aside, 'O my boy! ride with us and be not with
|
|
the misbelievers.' Said he, 'I will betake me to a mountain that shall
|
|
save me from the water.' Said he, 'There is none to save to-day from
|
|
the command of God, except for him on whom He may have mercy.' And the
|
|
wave came between them, and he was amongst the drowned.
|
|
And it was said, 'O earth! swallow down thy water!' and, 'O
|
|
heaven! hold!' and the water abated; and the affair was decided, and
|
|
it settled on Gudi, it was said, 'Away with the people who are
|
|
evildoers!'
|
|
And Noah went unto his Lord and said, 'My Lord, verily, my son is of
|
|
my people, and, verily, Thy promise is true, and Thou art the
|
|
justest of judges.' He said, 'O Noah! he is not of thy people; verily,
|
|
it is a work that is not right. Then, ask me not for that of which
|
|
thou knowest naught. Verily, I. admonish thee that thou shouldst not
|
|
be of the ignorant.' He said, 'My Lord, verily, I seek refuge in
|
|
Thee from asking Thee for aught of which I know nothing; and, unless
|
|
Thou dost forgive me and have mercy on, me, I shall be of those who
|
|
lose.'
|
|
It was said, 'O Noah! descend in safety from us, and blessings
|
|
upon thee and upon (some) nations of those who are with thee; but
|
|
(some) nations we will allow to enjoy prosperity and then there
|
|
shall touch, them, from us grievous woe.' These are, stories of the
|
|
unseen which we reveal to thee; thou didst not know them, thou nor thy
|
|
people before this. Be patient, then; verily, the issue is for those
|
|
who fear.
|
|
And unto 'Ad (we sent) their brother Hud, he said, 'O my people!
|
|
serve God; ye have no god but Him. Ye do but devise a lie. O my
|
|
people! I do not ask you for hire in return; my hire is only from
|
|
Him who created me: have ye then no sense?
|
|
'O my people! ask pardon of your Lord; then turn to Him; He will
|
|
send the skies down on you in torrents; and He will add strength to
|
|
your strength: do not then turn back sinners.'
|
|
They said, 'O Hud! thou hast not come to us with a manifest sign;
|
|
nor will we leave our gods at thy word; nor will we believe in thee.
|
|
We can only say that some of our gods have attacked thee with evil.'
|
|
Said he, 'Verily, I call God to witness, and do ye bear witness too,
|
|
that I am free from that which ye associate beside Him.
|
|
'Plot then against me altogether, and give me no delay. Verily, I
|
|
rely upon God, my Lord and your Lord. There is no beast that walks,
|
|
but He taketh it by its forelock. Verily, my Lord is on the right way!
|
|
'But if ye turn your backs,- then I have conveyed to you what I
|
|
was sent to you with; and my Lord will make another people your
|
|
successors. Ye cannot harm Him at all; verily, my Lord is guardian
|
|
over all!'
|
|
And when our order came we saved Hud, and those who believed with
|
|
him, by mercy from us; and we saved them from harsh torment. That
|
|
(tribe of) 'Ad denied the signs of their Lord, and rebelled against
|
|
His apostles, and followed the bidding of every headstrong tyrant.
|
|
They were followed in this world by curse, and on the resurrection
|
|
day- Did not 'Ad disbelieve their Lord? Aye! away with 'Ad the
|
|
people of Hud!'
|
|
And unto Thamud (we sent) their brother Zali'h; said he, 'O my
|
|
people! worship God; ye have no god but Him. He it is that produced
|
|
you from the earth, and made you live therein! Then ask pardon of Him;
|
|
then turn again to Him: verily, my Lord is nigh and answers!'
|
|
They said, 'O Zali'h! thou wert amongst us one we hoped in before
|
|
this: dost thou forbid us to worship what our fathers worshipped?
|
|
verily, we are in hesitating doubt as to that to which thou callest
|
|
us.'
|
|
He said, 'O my people! let us see; if I stand upon a manifest sign
|
|
from my Lord, and there come from Him mercy, who will help me
|
|
against God if I rebel against Him? Ye will add only to my loss.
|
|
'O my people! this she-camel of God is a sign for you; leave her,
|
|
then, to feed in God's earth, and touch her not with evil, or there
|
|
will catch you torment that is nigh.' But they did hamstring her,
|
|
and he said, 'Enjoy yourselves in your houses for three days;- that is
|
|
the promise that shall not be belied.'
|
|
And when our order came we saved Zali'h, and those who believed with
|
|
him, by our mercy, from disgrace upon that day. Verily, thy Lord He is
|
|
powerful and mighty.
|
|
And the noise caught those who had done wrong; and on the morrow
|
|
they were lying corpses in their houses, as though they had never
|
|
dwelt therein. Did not Thamud indeed disbelieve in their Lord? Aye!
|
|
away with Thamud!
|
|
Our messengers did come to Abraham with glad tidings; they said,
|
|
'Peace!' He said, 'Peace be it!' nor did he delay to bring the roasted
|
|
calf. But when he saw that their hands reached not thereto, he could
|
|
not understand them, and harboured fear of them. They said, 'Fear not.
|
|
Verily, we are sent unto the people of Lot.' And his wife was standing
|
|
by, laughing; and we gave her the glad tidings of Isaac, and of
|
|
Jacob after Isaac. Said she, 'Alas for me! shall I bear a son when I
|
|
am an old woman, and this husband of mine an old man? Verily, this
|
|
is a wonderful thing!' They said,' Dost thou wonder at the bidding
|
|
of God? God's mercy and blessings upon you, ye people of the house!
|
|
Verily, He is to be praised and glorified.'
|
|
And when his terror left Abraham, and the glad tidings came to
|
|
him, he wrangled with us about the people of Lot; verily, Abraham
|
|
was clement, pitiful, relenting.
|
|
'O Abraham! avoid this; verily, the bidding of thy Lord has come;
|
|
verily, there is coming to them torment that cannot be put off.'
|
|
And when our messengers came to Lot, he was grieved for them; but
|
|
his arm was straitened for them, and he said, 'This is a troublesome
|
|
day!' And his people came to him, rushing at him, for before that they
|
|
used to work evil. He 'Said, 'O my people! here are my daughters, they
|
|
are purer for you; then, fear God, and do not disgrace me through my
|
|
guests;- is there not among you one right-thinking man?'
|
|
They said, 'Thou knowest that we have no claim on thy daughters;
|
|
verily, thou knowest what we want!' He said, 'Had I but power over
|
|
you; or could I but resort to some strong column....!' (The angels)
|
|
said, 'O Lot! verily, we are the messengers of thy Lord, they shall
|
|
certainly not reach thee; then travel with thy people in the
|
|
darkness of the night, and let none of you look round except thy wife:
|
|
verily, there shall befall her what befalls them. Verily, their
|
|
appointment is for the morning! and is not the morning nigh?'
|
|
And when our bidding came, we made their high parts their low parts.
|
|
And we rained down upon them stones and baked clay one after
|
|
another, marked, from thy Lord, and these are not so far from the
|
|
unjust!
|
|
And unto Midian (we sent) their brother Sho'haib. He said, 'O my
|
|
people! serve God; ye have no god but Him, and give not short
|
|
measure and weight. Verily, 'I see you well off; but, verily, I fear
|
|
for you the torments of an encompassing day. O my people! give measure
|
|
and weight fairly, and defraud not men of their things; and wreak
|
|
not wrong in the earth, corrupting it. God's residue is better for you
|
|
if ye be believers. But I am not a guardian over you.'
|
|
They said, 'O Sho'haib! Do thy prayers bid thee that we should
|
|
forsake what our fathers served, or that we should not do as we please
|
|
with our wealth? Thou art, forsooth, the clement and
|
|
straight-forward one!'
|
|
He said, 'O my people! Do ye see? If I stand upon a manifest sign
|
|
from my Lord, and He provides me from Himself with a goodly provision,
|
|
and I consent not with you to that which I forbid you, I only wish
|
|
to better you so far as I can,- nor comes my grace through any one but
|
|
God; on Him do I rely, and unto Him I turn. O my people! let not a
|
|
breach with me make you so sin that there befall you the like of
|
|
that which befel the people of Noah, or the people of Hud, or the
|
|
people of Zali'h- nor are the people of Lot so far from you! Ask
|
|
pardon, then, from your Lord, then turn to Him; verily, my Lord is
|
|
merciful, loving!'
|
|
They said, 'O Sho'haib! we do not understand much of what thou
|
|
sayest, and 'we see that thou art weak amongst us; and were it not for
|
|
thy family we would stone thee, nor couldst thou be powerful over us.'
|
|
He said, 'O my people! are my family more esteemed by you than
|
|
God? or have you taken Him as something to cast behind your backs?
|
|
Verily, my Lord, whate'er ye do, doth comprehend. O my people! act
|
|
according to your power; verily, I too will act, and ye at length
|
|
shall know! To whomsoever torment comes it shall disgrace him, and him
|
|
who is a liar. Watch then; verily, I with you am watching too!'
|
|
And when our bidding came we saved Sho'haib, and those who
|
|
believed with him, by our mercy; and the noise caught those who had
|
|
done wrong, and on the morrow they were in their houses prone, as
|
|
though they had not dwelt therein. Aye! 'Away with Midian!' as it was,
|
|
'Away with Thamud!'
|
|
And we sent Moses with our signs and with obvious power unto Pharaoh
|
|
and his chiefs; but they followed Pharaoh's bidding, and Pharaoh's
|
|
bidding was not straightforward.
|
|
He shall approach his people on the resurrection day, and take
|
|
them down to water at the Fire,- an evil watering-place to water at!
|
|
In this (world) were they followed by a curse; and on the
|
|
resurrection day evil shall be the aid they are aided with!
|
|
That is one of the stories of the cities which we recite to thee-
|
|
some of them are standing now and some mown down!
|
|
We did not wrong them, but they wronged themselves. Their gods
|
|
availed them naught, on which they called instead of God, when once
|
|
the bidding of thy Lord had come; nor did they add save to their
|
|
downfall!
|
|
Thus is thy Lord's overtaking when He overtakes the cities that have
|
|
done wrong; verily, His overtaking is grievous, keen.
|
|
Verily, in that is a sign to him who fears the torment of the last
|
|
day;- that is a day unto which men shall be gathered;- that is a
|
|
witnessed day!
|
|
We will not delay it, save unto a numbered and appointed time. The
|
|
day when it shall come no soul shall speak save by His permission, and
|
|
amongst them (shall be) the wretched and the glad.
|
|
And as for those who are wretched-why, in the Fire! there shall they
|
|
groan and sob! to dwell therein for aye, so long as the heavens and
|
|
the earth endure; save what thy Lord will. Verily, thy Lord is one who
|
|
works His will.
|
|
And as for those who are glad- why, in Paradise! to dwell therein
|
|
for aye, so long as the heavens and the earth endure; save what thy
|
|
Lord will,- a ceaseless boon!
|
|
Be not then in doubt concerning what these men do serve;- they
|
|
only serve as their fathers served before; and we will give them their
|
|
portion undiminished.
|
|
We gave Moses the Book before, and then they disagreed concerning
|
|
it, and, had it not been for a word that had been passed by thy
|
|
Lord, it would have been decided between them; but, verily, they are
|
|
(still) in hesitating doubt concerning it.
|
|
But, verily, every one thy Lord will surely repay for their works;
|
|
verily, He of what they do is well aware!
|
|
Do thou then be upright, as thou art bidden, and whosoever turns
|
|
repentantly with thee; and transgress ye not:- verily, He on what ye
|
|
do doth look.
|
|
Lean not unto those who do wrong, lest the Fire touch you, for ye
|
|
have no patrons but God; and, moreover, ye shall not be helped!
|
|
And be thou steadfast in prayer at the two ends of the day, and
|
|
the (former and latter) parts of the night. Verily, good works
|
|
remove evil works;- that is a reminder to the mindful! And be thou
|
|
patient, for God wastes not the hire of those who do good.
|
|
And were there among the generations before you any endowed with a
|
|
remnant (of piety) forbidding evildoing in the earth, save a few of
|
|
those whom we saved; but the evildoers followed what they enjoyed, and
|
|
were sinners.
|
|
Thy Lord would not have destroyed the cities unjustly while the
|
|
people of them were welldoers.
|
|
Had thy Lord pleased, He would have made men one nation; but they
|
|
will not cease to differ, save those they Lord has had mercy on. For
|
|
this has He created them, and the word of thy Lord is fulfilled, 'I
|
|
will surely fill hell with ginns and mankind altogether.'
|
|
And all that we relate to thee of the stories of the apostles is
|
|
what will stablish thy heart: and herein has the truth come to thee,
|
|
and an admonition and a reminder to the believers.
|
|
Say to those who believe not, 'Act according to your power,
|
|
verily, we are acting too! And wait ye, verily, we are waiting too!'
|
|
God's are the unseen things of the heavens and of the earth; and
|
|
unto Him the affair doth all return. Then serve Him and rely on Him;
|
|
for thy Lord is not heedless of that which ye do.
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF JOSEPH, (PEACE BE ON HIM!)
|
|
(XII. Mecca.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
ALIF LAM RA. Those are the signs of the perspicuous Book. Verily, we
|
|
have revealed it, an Arabic Koran; haply ye may understand.
|
|
We tell thee the best of stories, in inspiring thee with this Koran,
|
|
though thou wert before it among the heedless.
|
|
When Joseph said to his father, 'O my sire! verily, I saw eleven
|
|
stars, and the sun, and the moon,- I saw them adoring me!'
|
|
He said, 'O my boy! toll not thy vision to thy brethren, for they
|
|
will plot a plot against thee; verily, the devil is to man an open
|
|
foe.'
|
|
Thus does thy Lord choose thee, and teach thee the interpretation of
|
|
sayings, and fulfil His favour upon thee, and upon Jacob's people,
|
|
as He fulfilled it upon thy two forefathers before thee, Abraham and
|
|
Isaac,- verily, thy Lord is knowing, wise!
|
|
In Joseph and his brethren were signs to those who enquire!
|
|
When they said, 'Surely, Joseph and his brother are dearer to our
|
|
father than we, a band although we be; verily, our father is in
|
|
obvious error.
|
|
'Slay Joseph, or cast him in some land; that your father's face
|
|
may be free for you, and ye may be, after he is gone, a people who
|
|
do right.'
|
|
A speaker from amongst them spake, 'Slay not Joseph, but throw him
|
|
into the bottom of the pit; some of the travellers may pick him up, if
|
|
so ye do.'
|
|
Said they, 'O our father! what ails thee that thou wilt not trust us
|
|
with Joseph while we are unto him sincere? Send him with us
|
|
to-morrow to revel and to play, and, verily, we over him will keep
|
|
good guard.'
|
|
Said he, 'Verily, it grieves me that ye should go off with him,
|
|
for I fear lest the wolf devour him while ye of him do take no heed.'
|
|
Said they, 'Why, if the wolf should devour him while we are (such) a
|
|
band, verily, we then should deserve to lose!'
|
|
And when they had gone off with him and agreed to put him in the
|
|
depths of the pit, and we inspired him, 'Thou shalt surely inform them
|
|
of this affair of theirs and they shall not perceive.'
|
|
And they came to their father at eve and weeping said, 'O our
|
|
father! verily, we went forth to race and left Joseph by our goods,
|
|
and the wolf devoured him,- but thou wilt not believe us, truth
|
|
tellers though we be.'
|
|
And they brought his shirt with lying blood upon it. Said he,
|
|
'Nay, but your souls have induced you to do this; but patience is
|
|
fair! and God is He whom I ask for aid against that which ye
|
|
describe.'
|
|
And travellers came and sent their water-drawer; and he let down his
|
|
bucket. Said he, 'O glad tidings! this is a youth.' And they kept
|
|
him secret, as a chattel; but God knew what they were doing.
|
|
And they sold him for a mean price,- drachmae counted out,- and they
|
|
parted with him cheaply.
|
|
And the man from Egypt who had bought him said to his wife,
|
|
'Honour his abiding here; it may be he will be of use to us, or we may
|
|
adopt him as a son.
|
|
Thus did we stablish Joseph in the land; and we did surely teach him
|
|
the interpretation of sayings; for God can overcome His affairs,
|
|
though most men do not know.
|
|
And when he had reached his strength we brought him judgment and
|
|
knowledge, for thus do we reward those who do good.
|
|
And she in whose house he was desired him for his person; and she
|
|
locked the doors and said, 'Come along with thee!' Said he, 'Refuge in
|
|
God! verily, my Lord has made good my abiding here; verily, the
|
|
wrong-doers shall not prosper.'
|
|
And she was anxious for him, and he would have been anxious for her,
|
|
had it not been that he saw the demonstration of his Lord; thus did we
|
|
turn evil and fornication from him; verily, he was of our sincere
|
|
servants.
|
|
And they raced to the door and she rent his shirt from behind; and
|
|
they met her master at the door. Said she, 'What is the recompense
|
|
of him who wishes evil for thy family, but that imprisonment or a
|
|
grievous torment?'
|
|
Said he, 'She desired me for my person.' And a witness from among
|
|
her family bore witness: 'If his shirt be rent from in front, then she
|
|
speaks the truth and he is of the liars; but if his shirt be rent from
|
|
behind, then she lies and he is of the truth tellers.'
|
|
And when he saw his shirt rent from behind he said, 'This is one
|
|
of your tricks; verily, your tricks are mighty! Joseph! turn aside
|
|
from this. And do thou, woman, ask pardon for thy fault; verily,
|
|
thou wert of the sinners.'
|
|
And women in the city said, 'The wife of the prince desires her
|
|
young man for his person; he has infatuated her with love: verily,
|
|
we see her in obvious error.' And when she heard of their
|
|
craftiness, she sent to them, and prepared for them a banquet, and
|
|
gave each of them a knife; and she said, 'Come forth to them!' And
|
|
when they saw him they said, 'Great God!' and cut their hands and
|
|
said, 'God forbid! This is no mortal, this is nothing but an
|
|
honourable angel.' Said she, 'This is he concerning whom ye blamed me.
|
|
I did desire him for his person, but he was too continent. But if he
|
|
do not what I bid him he shall surely be imprisoned and shall surely
|
|
be among the small!' Said he, 'My Lord! Prison is dearer to me than
|
|
what they call on me to do; and unless Thou turn from me their
|
|
craftiness I shall feel a passion for them and shall be among the
|
|
ignorant!' And his Lord answered him and turned from him their
|
|
craftiness; verily, He both hears and knows!
|
|
Then it appeared good to them, even after they had seen the signs,
|
|
to imprison him until a time.
|
|
And there entered the prison with him two young men. Said one of
|
|
them, 'Verily, I see myself pressing wine.' And the other said,
|
|
'Verily, I see myself bearing on my head loaves from which the birds
|
|
do eat; inform us of the interpretation thereof; verily, we see that
|
|
thou art of those who do good.'
|
|
He said, 'There shall not come to you any food with which ye are
|
|
provided, but I will inform you both of its interpretation before it
|
|
comes to you. That is (some) of what my Lord has taught me; verily,
|
|
I have left the faith of a people who do not believe in God, while
|
|
in the future too they disbelieve. And I have followed the faith of my
|
|
fathers, Abraham and Isaac and Jacob; we could not associate aught
|
|
with God; that is from God's grace upon us and upon men: but most
|
|
men give not thanks. O ye twain fellow-prisoners! Are manifold lords
|
|
better, or God, the one, the dominant? What ye worship beside Him
|
|
are naught but names which ye have named, ye and your fathers, for
|
|
which God has sent down no authority. Judgment is only God's; He
|
|
bids you worship only Him. That is the standard of religion,- but most
|
|
men do not know. O ye twain fellow-prisoners! as for one of you, he
|
|
shall pour out wine for his lord: and as for the other, he shall be
|
|
crucified, and the birds shall eat of his head. The matter is
|
|
decreed whereon ye asked me for a decision!'
|
|
And he said to him whom he thought would escape of those two,
|
|
Remember me with thy lord!' But Satan made him forget the
|
|
remembrance of his lord, so he tarried in prison a few years.
|
|
Then said the king, 'Verily, I see seven fat kine which seven lean
|
|
kine devoured; and seven green ears of corn and others dry. O ye
|
|
chiefs! Explain to me my vision, if a vision ye can expound!'
|
|
Said they, 'Confused dreams, and naught of the exposition of such
|
|
dreams know we!'
|
|
Then he who had escaped of those twain said,- remembering after a
|
|
while,- 'Verily, I will inform you of the interpretation thereof, so
|
|
send me.'
|
|
'Joseph! O thou truth teller! explain to us the seven fat kine which
|
|
seven lean devoured; and the seven green ears of corn and others
|
|
dry. Haply I may go back to the men, haply they then may know!'
|
|
He said, 'Ye shall sow for seven years, as is your wont; but what ye
|
|
reap, let it remain in the ear, except a little whereof ye shall
|
|
eat. Then there shall come after that seven severe (years) which shall
|
|
devour what ye have put by before for them, save a little of what ye
|
|
shall preserve. Then there will come after that a year in which men
|
|
shall have rain and in which they shall press.'
|
|
Then said the king, 'Bring him to me.'
|
|
And when the messenger came to him, he said, Go back to thy lord,
|
|
and ask him, "What meant the women who cut their hands? Verily, my
|
|
lord knows their craftiness!"'
|
|
He said, 'What was your design when ye desired Joseph for his
|
|
person? They said, 'God forbid! we know no bad of him.' Said the
|
|
wife of the prince, Now does the truth appear! I desired him for his
|
|
person and, verily, he is of those who tell the truth.'
|
|
'That' (said Joseph) 'was that he might know that I did not betray
|
|
him in his absence, and that God guides not the craft of those who
|
|
do betray! Yet I do not clear myself, for the soul is very urgent to
|
|
evil, save what my Lord has had mercy on; verily, my Lord is forgiving
|
|
and merciful!'
|
|
And the king said, 'Bring him to me. I will take him specially for
|
|
myself.' And when he had spoken with him he said, 'Verily, to-day thou
|
|
art with us in a permanent place of trust.'
|
|
He said, 'Place me over the treasures of the land; verily, I will be
|
|
a knowing keeper.'
|
|
Thus did we stablish Joseph in the land that he might settle in what
|
|
part thereof he pleased- we overtake with our mercy whom we will,
|
|
nor do we waste the hire of those who do good; and surely the hire
|
|
of the future life is better for those who believe and who have
|
|
feared.
|
|
And his brethren came to Joseph, and they entered in unto him and he
|
|
knew them, but they recognised not him.
|
|
And when he had equipped them with their equipment he said, 'Bring
|
|
me a brother that ye have from your father; do ye not see that I
|
|
give good measure, and that I am the best of entertainers? But if ye
|
|
bring him not to me, no measure shall ye have with me, nor shall ye
|
|
come nigh me.'
|
|
They said, 'We will desire him of our father, and we will surely
|
|
do it.'
|
|
Then he said to his young men, 'Put their chattels in their packs,
|
|
haply they may know it when they are come back to their family;
|
|
haply they may return.'
|
|
And when they returned to their father, they said, 'O our father!
|
|
Measure is withheld from us; so send with us our brother that we may
|
|
get measure, and, verily, him we will keep!'
|
|
He said, 'Shall I entrust you with him, save as entrusted you with
|
|
his brother before? but God is the best of keepers, and He is the most
|
|
merciful of the merciful.'
|
|
And when they opened their goods they found their chattels
|
|
restored to them. Said they, 'O our father! What more can we crave?
|
|
Here are our chattels restored to us, and we shall guard our
|
|
brother, and shall have an additional measure beside that- a small
|
|
measure.'
|
|
He said, 'I will by no means send him with you until you give me a
|
|
compact from God that ye will surely bring him to me, unless ye be
|
|
encompassed.'
|
|
So when they had given him their compact he said, 'God over what
|
|
ye say has charge.'
|
|
And he said, 'O my sons! enter not by one gate, but enter by several
|
|
gates; but I cannot avail you aught against God. Judgment is only
|
|
God's; upon Him do I rely, and on Him do the reliant rely.'
|
|
And when they had entered as their father bade them, it availed them
|
|
nothing against God, save for a want in Jacob's soul which it
|
|
fulfilled; for, verily, he was possessed of knowledge, for that we had
|
|
taught him;- but most men do not know.
|
|
And when they entered in unto Joseph, he took his brother to stay
|
|
with him, and said, 'Verily, I am thy brother- then take not ill
|
|
that which they have been doing.'
|
|
And when he had equipped them with their equipment he placed the
|
|
drinking cup in his brother's pack; then a crier cried out, 'O ye
|
|
caravan! verily, ye are thieves!'
|
|
They said, approaching them, 'What is it that ye miss?'
|
|
Said they, 'We miss the goblet of the king, and whoso brings it
|
|
shall have a camel-load, and I am guarantee thereof.'
|
|
They said, 'By God! Ye knew we came not to do evil in the land,
|
|
and that we were not thieves.'
|
|
They said, 'And what shall be the recompense thereof if ye be
|
|
liars?'
|
|
They said, 'The recompense thereof is he in whose pack it is
|
|
found- he shall be the recompense thereof; thus do we recompense the
|
|
unjust.'
|
|
And he began with their sacks before the sacks of his brother;
|
|
then he drew it forth from his brother's sack. Thus did we devise a
|
|
stratagem for Joseph. He could not take his brother by the king's
|
|
religion except God pleased;- we raise the degrees of whomsoever we
|
|
please, and over every possessor of knowledge is one who knows.
|
|
They said, 'If he has stolen, a brother of his has stolen before
|
|
him.'
|
|
But Joseph kept it secret in his soul and disclosed it not to
|
|
them. Said he, 'Ye are in a bad case, and God knows best about what ye
|
|
describe.'
|
|
They said, 'O prince! Verily, he has a father, a very old man;
|
|
take then one of us instead of him; verily, we can see that thou art
|
|
of those who do good.'
|
|
Said he, '(I seek) refuge in God from taking any save him with
|
|
whom we found our property; verily, we should then be certainly
|
|
unjust.'
|
|
And when they despaired of him they retired to consult privately.
|
|
Said the eldest of them, 'Do ye not know that your father has taken
|
|
a compact from God against you? Aforetime ye exceeded in the matter of
|
|
Joseph- I will surely not quit the land until my father give me leave,
|
|
or God judge for me, for He is the best of judges.
|
|
'Return ye to your father and say, "O our father! verily, thy son
|
|
has committed theft, and we bore testimony to naught but what we knew;
|
|
for of the unforeseen we were not keepers!"
|
|
'Ask then in the city where we were, and of the caravan in which
|
|
we approached it, for, verily, we tell the truth.'
|
|
Said he, 'Nay, your souls have induced you to do this thing. But
|
|
patience is fair. It may be that God will give me them all
|
|
together;- verily, He is knowing, wise.'
|
|
And he turned away from them and said, 'O my lament for Joseph!' and
|
|
his eyes grew white with grief, for he repressed (his woe).
|
|
They said, 'By God! thou wilt not cease to remember Joseph till thou
|
|
art at the point of death, or art of those who perish!'
|
|
Said he, 'I only complain of my emotion and my grief to God, for I
|
|
know that from God which ye know nothing of.
|
|
'O my sons! go and enquire concerning Joseph and his brother, and
|
|
despair not of God's comfort; for, verily, none need despair of
|
|
God's comfort save a misbelieving people!'
|
|
And when they entered in unto him they said, 'O prince! distress has
|
|
touched both us and our families, and we have brought trifling
|
|
chattels. So give us full measure and bestow upon us in charity;
|
|
verily, God rewards the charitable.'
|
|
He said, 'Do ye know what ye did with Joseph and his brother,
|
|
while ye were ignorant?'
|
|
They said, 'Art thou then indeed Joseph?' He said, 'I am Joseph, and
|
|
this is my brother; God has been gracious towards us. Verily, whoso
|
|
fears God and is patient,- verily, God wastes not the hire of those
|
|
who do good!'
|
|
They said, 'By God! God has chosen thee over us; and we indeed
|
|
were sinners.'
|
|
He said, 'No reproach against you to-day! God will pardon you, for
|
|
He is the most merciful of the merciful. Take this my shirt, and throw
|
|
it over the face of my father, he will become able to see; and bring
|
|
me your families all together.'
|
|
And when the caravan departed, their father said, 'Verily, I find
|
|
the smell of Joseph, unless ye think I dote!
|
|
They said, 'By God! thou art in thy old error.' And when the
|
|
herald of glad tidings came he threw it on his face, and he was
|
|
restored to sight.
|
|
Said he, 'Did I not tell you that I know from God that of which ye
|
|
know not?
|
|
They said, 'O our father! ask pardon for us of our sins;- verily, we
|
|
were sinners!'
|
|
He said, 'I will ask pardon for you from my Lord; verily, He is
|
|
the pardoning and merciful.'
|
|
And when they entered in unto Joseph, he took his father to stay
|
|
with him, and said, 'Enter ye into Egypt, if it please God, safe.' And
|
|
he raised his father upon the throne, and they fell down before him
|
|
adoring.
|
|
And he said, 'O my sire! This is the interpretation of my vision
|
|
aforetime; my Lord has made it come true, and He has been good to
|
|
me, in bringing me forth out of prison, and bringing you from the
|
|
desert, after Satan had made a breach between me and my brethren;-
|
|
verily, my Lord is kind to whomsoever He will;- verily, He is the
|
|
knowing, the wise!
|
|
'O my Lord! thou hast given me dominion, and hast taught me the
|
|
interpretation of sayings; O originator of the heavens and the
|
|
earth! Thou art my patron in this world and the next; take me to
|
|
Thyself resigned, and let me reach the righteous!'
|
|
That is one of the stories of the unseen which we inspire thee with,
|
|
though thou wert not with them when they agreed in their affair,
|
|
when they were so crafty.- And yet most men, though thou shouldst be
|
|
urgent, will not believe.
|
|
Thou dost not ask them for it a hire; it is naught but a reminder to
|
|
the world.
|
|
How many a sign in the heavens and the earth do they pass by and
|
|
turn away therefrom!
|
|
Nor do most of them believe in God without associating (other
|
|
gods) with Him.
|
|
Are they safe, then, from overwhelming vengeance coming on them from
|
|
the torment of God? or from the Hour coming upon them suddenly while
|
|
they do not perceive?
|
|
Say, 'This is my way; I call now unto God on clear proof, I and
|
|
those who follow me; and celebrated be God's praises, for I am not
|
|
of the idolaters.'
|
|
Nor did we ever send before thee any save men whom we inspired, of
|
|
the people of the cities. Have they not journeyed on in the earth
|
|
and beheld how was the end of those before them? But the abode of
|
|
the future is surely better for those who believe;- what! have they
|
|
then no sense?
|
|
Until when the apostles despaired and they thought that they were
|
|
proved liars, our help came to them, and whosoever we pleased was
|
|
saved; but our violence is not averted from the sinful people.
|
|
Their stories were a lesson to those endowed with minds. It was
|
|
not a tale forged, but a verification of what was before it, and a
|
|
detailing of everything, and a guide and a mercy to a people who
|
|
believe.
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF THUNDER
|
|
(XIII. Mecca.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
ALIF LAM MIM RA. Those are the signs of the Book, and that which
|
|
is sent down to thee from thy Lord is the truth; but most people
|
|
will not believe. God it is who has raised the heavens without columns
|
|
that ye can see; then He made for the throne, and subjected the sun
|
|
and the moon; each one runs on to a stated and appointed time; He
|
|
governs the affair, details the signs;- haply of the meeting with your
|
|
Lord ye will be sure.
|
|
And He it is who has stretched out the earth and placed therein firm
|
|
mountains and rivers, and of every fruit has He placed therein two
|
|
kinds. He makes the night cover the day;- verily, in that are signs
|
|
unto a people who reflect.
|
|
And on the earth are neighbouring portions, and gardens of grapes
|
|
and corn and palms growing together (from one root) and not growing
|
|
together; they are watered with one water, yet we distinguish one over
|
|
the other as food;- verily, in that are signs unto a people who have
|
|
sense.
|
|
And if thou shouldst wonder, wondrous is their speech: 'What! when
|
|
we have become dust, shall we really then be created anew?
|
|
These are they who disbelieve in their Lord, and these are they with
|
|
fetters round their necks, and these are the fellows of the Fire; they
|
|
shall dwell therein for aye!
|
|
They will wish thee to hasten on the evil rather than the good;
|
|
examples have passed away before them: but thy Lord is possessor of
|
|
forgiveness unto men, notwithstanding their injustice; but, verily,
|
|
thy Lord is keen to punish.
|
|
Those who misbelieve say, 'Unless a sign be sent down upon him
|
|
from his Lord....'- Thou art only a warner, and every people has its
|
|
guide.
|
|
God knows what each female bears, and what the wombs fall short of
|
|
or add; for dimensions of everything are with Him.
|
|
He who knows the unseen and the visible,- the great, the lofty one.
|
|
Alike among you is he who keeps secret his speech and he who
|
|
displays it; and he who hides by night and he who stalks abroad by
|
|
day. Each of them has pursuers before him and behind him, to keep
|
|
guard over him at the command of God; verily, God changes not what a
|
|
people has until they change it for themselves. And when God wishes
|
|
evil to a people there is no averting it, nor have they a protector
|
|
beside Him.
|
|
He it is who shows you the lightning for fear and hope; and He
|
|
brings up the heavy clouds.
|
|
And the thunder celebrates His praise, and the angels too for fear
|
|
of Him; and He sends the thunder-clap and overtakes therewith whom
|
|
He will;- yet they wrangle about God! But He is strong in might.
|
|
On Him is the call of truth, and those who call on others than Him
|
|
shall not be answered at all, save as one who stretches out his hand
|
|
to the water that it may reach his mouth, but it reaches it not! The
|
|
call of the misbelievers is only in error.
|
|
And God do those who are in the heavens and the earth adore, whether
|
|
they will or no! as do their shadows also morn and eve.
|
|
Say, 'Who is Lord of the heavens and the earth say, 'God;' say,
|
|
'Do ye take beside God patrons who cannot control profit or harm for
|
|
themselves?' say, 'Shall the blind and the seeing be held equal? or
|
|
shall the darkness and the light be held equal? or have they made
|
|
associates with God who can create as He creates, so that the creation
|
|
seem familiar to them?' say, 'God is the creator of everything, and He
|
|
is the one, the dominant.'
|
|
He sends down from the sky water, and the water-courses flow
|
|
according to their bulk, and the torrent bears along the floating
|
|
scum: and from what they set fire to, craving ornaments or utensils,
|
|
comes a scum like that;- thus does God hit the truth and the
|
|
falsehood;- and as for the scum it is thrown off, and as for what
|
|
profits man it stays on the earth. Thus does God strike out parables!
|
|
For those who respond to their Lord is good; but those who respond
|
|
not to Him, had they all that is in the earth and the like thereof
|
|
as well, they would give it for a ransom; these shall have an evil
|
|
reckoning up! and their resort is hell,- an evil couch shall it be!
|
|
Is he who knows that naught but the truth is sent down upon thee
|
|
from thy Lord like him who is blind? Only those possessed of minds
|
|
will remember!
|
|
Those who fulfil God's covenant and break not the compact, and those
|
|
who attain what God has bidden to be attained, and dread their Lord
|
|
and fear the evil reckoning up; and those who are patient, craving
|
|
their Lord's face, and are steadfast in prayer, and expend in alms
|
|
of what we have bestowed upon them secretly and openly, and ward off
|
|
evil with good,- these shall have the recompense of the abode, gardens
|
|
of Eden, into which they shall enter with the righteous amongst
|
|
their fathers and their wives and their seed; and the angels shall
|
|
enter in unto them from every gate:- 'Peace be upon you! for that ye
|
|
were patient; and goodly is the recompense of the abode.'
|
|
And those who break God's covenant after compacting for it, and
|
|
who cut asunder what God hath bidden to be joined, and who do evil
|
|
in the earth, these- upon them is the curse of God, and for them is an
|
|
evil abode.
|
|
God extends his bounty freely to whomsoever He will, or He metes
|
|
it out; and they rejoice in the life of this world, but the life of
|
|
this world is naught but a (temporary) provision compared with the
|
|
next.
|
|
Those who misbelieve say, 'Unless a sign is sent down upon him
|
|
from his Lord....' Say, 'God leads whom He will astray, but guides
|
|
unto Him those who turn again.
|
|
'Those who believe and whose hearts are comforted by the mention
|
|
of God,- aye! by the mention of God shall their hearts be comforted,
|
|
who believe and do what is right. Good cheer for them and an excellent
|
|
resort.'
|
|
Thus have we sent thee to a nation before which other nations have
|
|
passed away, to recite to them that which we have inspired thee
|
|
with; yet they misbelieve in the merciful! Say, 'He He my Lord;
|
|
there is no god but He; upon Him do I rely, and unto Him is my
|
|
repentance.'
|
|
And though it were a Koran by which the mountains were moved, or
|
|
by which the earth were cut up, or the dead made to speak- nay,
|
|
God's is the command altogether! Did not those who believed know
|
|
that if God had pleased He would have guided men altogether?
|
|
And a striking calamity shall not cease to overtake those who
|
|
misbelieve for what they have wrought, or to alight close by their
|
|
dwellings; until God's promise comes- verily, God fails not in His
|
|
promise.
|
|
Before thee have apostles been mocked at; and those who
|
|
misbelieved have I allowed to range at large; and then it caught
|
|
them up! How then was my punishment?
|
|
Shall He who is standing over every soul (to note) what it has
|
|
earned-? And they join partners with God! Say, 'Name them; can ye
|
|
inform Him of what He does not know in the earth? or is it for
|
|
name's sake only (that ye call upon them)?
|
|
Nay, then, stratagem is made seemly to those who misbelieve, and
|
|
they turn folks from the path of God! But whomsoever God doth lead
|
|
astray, no guide has he.'
|
|
For them is torment in this world's life; but surely the torment
|
|
of the next is more wretched still- nor have they against God a
|
|
keeper.
|
|
The likeness of the Paradise which those who fear God are
|
|
promised, beneath it rivers flow, its food is enduring, and likewise
|
|
its shade! That is the recompense of those who fear; but the
|
|
recompense of misbelievers is the Fire!
|
|
And those to whom we brought the Book rejoice in that which we
|
|
have sent down to thee; but of the confederates are some who deny a
|
|
part thereof.
|
|
Say, 'I am only bidden to serve God and not to associate any with
|
|
Him; on Him I call and to Him is my recourse.'
|
|
Thus have we sent it down, an Arabic judgment, but hadst thou
|
|
followed their lusts, after the knowledge that has come to thee,
|
|
thou hadst not had against God a patron or a keeper.
|
|
And we sent apostles before thee, and we made for them wives and
|
|
seed; and no apostle could bring a sign save by God's permission;- for
|
|
every period there is a book.
|
|
God blots out what He will, or He confirms; and with Him is the
|
|
Mother of the Book.
|
|
Either we will let thee see a part of what we threaten them with, or
|
|
we will take thee to Ourself; but thy duty is only to deliver thy
|
|
message, and ours to reckon up.
|
|
Did they not see that we come to the land and diminish the borders
|
|
thereof? God judges, and there is none to reverse His judgment, and He
|
|
is swift at reckoning up!
|
|
And those who were before them were crafty too; but God's is the
|
|
craft altogether! He knows what every soul earns; and the misbelievers
|
|
shall know whose is the recompense of the abode.
|
|
And those who misbelieve say, 'Thou art not sent!' Say, 'God is
|
|
witness enough between me and you; and so is he who has the
|
|
knowledge of the Book!'
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF ABRAHAM, (PEACE BE ON HIM!)
|
|
(XIV. Mecca.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
ALIF LAM MIM. A book which we have sent down to thee, to bring men
|
|
forth from darkness into light, by permission of their Lord, unto
|
|
the way of the mighty and praiseworthy one.
|
|
God is He whose is whatsoever is in the heavens and whatsoever is in
|
|
the earth. Alas for the misbelievers, for their torment is keen! Who
|
|
love this world's life better than the next, and turn folks from the
|
|
path of God, and crave to make it crooked; these are in remote error.
|
|
We have not sent any apostle save with the language of his people,
|
|
that he might explain to them. But God leads whom He will astray,
|
|
and guides whom He will; and He is the mighty, the wise.
|
|
We did send Moses with our signs, 'Bring forth thy people from the
|
|
darkness into the light, and remind them of the days of God!'
|
|
verily, in that are signs to every patient, grateful one.
|
|
When Moses said to his people, 'Remember the favours of God
|
|
towards you, when He saved you from Pharaoh's people, who sought to
|
|
wreak you evil woe, slaughtering your sons and letting your women
|
|
live;' in that was a great trial for you from your Lord. When your
|
|
Lord proclaimed, 'If ye give thanks I will surely give you increase;
|
|
but if ye misbelieve, verily, my torment is severe!' And Moses said,
|
|
'If ye misbelieve, ye and those who are on the earth altogether- then,
|
|
verily, God is rich, and to be praised!'
|
|
Has not the story come to you of those who were before you, of the
|
|
people of Noah, and 'Ad, and Thamud,and those who came after them?
|
|
none knows them save God. Apostles came unto them with manifest signs;
|
|
but they thrust their hands into their mouths and said, 'Verily, we
|
|
disbelieve in that which ye are sent with, and we are in hesitating
|
|
doubt concerning that to which ye call us!' Their apostles said, 'Is
|
|
there doubt about God, the originator of the heavens and the earth? He
|
|
calls you to pardon you for your sins, and to respite you until an
|
|
appointed time.'
|
|
They said, 'Ye are but mortals like ourselves; ye wish to turn us
|
|
from what our fathers used to serve. Bring us, then, obvious
|
|
authority!'
|
|
Their apostles said unto them, 'We are only mortals like yourselves;
|
|
but God is gracious unto whomsoever He will of His servants, and it is
|
|
not for us to bring you an authority, save by His permission; but upon
|
|
God do the believers rely!' What ails us that we should not rely on
|
|
God when He has guided us in our paths? we will be surely patient in
|
|
your hurting us; for upon God rely those do rely.
|
|
And those who misbelieved said to their apostles, 'We will drive you
|
|
forth from our land; or else ye shall return to our faith!' And
|
|
their Lord inspired them, 'We will surely destroy the unjust; and we
|
|
will make you to dwell in the land after them. That is for him who
|
|
fears my place and fears my threat!'
|
|
Then they asked for an issue; and disappointed was every rebel
|
|
tyrant! Behind such a one is hell, and he shall be given to drink
|
|
liquid pus! He shall try to swallow it, but cannot gulp it down; and
|
|
death shall come upon him from every place, and yet he shall not
|
|
die; and behind him shall be rigorous woe!
|
|
The likeness of those who disbelieve on their Lord,- their works are
|
|
as ashes whereon the wind blows fiercely on a stormy day. They have no
|
|
power at all over that which they have earned.- That is the remote
|
|
error!
|
|
Dost not thou see that God created the heavens and the earth in
|
|
truth? If He please He can take you off and bring a new creation;
|
|
nor is that hard for God!
|
|
They all come out to God; and the weak say to those who were big
|
|
with pride, 'We were followers of yours, can ye now avail us aught
|
|
against God's torment?'
|
|
They say, 'If God had guided us we would have guided you. It is
|
|
the same to us if we are agonized or if we are penitent, we have no
|
|
escape.'
|
|
And Satan says, when the affair is decided, 'Verily, God promised
|
|
you a promise of truth; but I promised you and failed you; for I had
|
|
no authority over you. I only called you, and ye did answer me; then
|
|
blame me not, but blame yourselves; I cannot help you, nor can you
|
|
help me. I disbelieved in your associating me (with God) before;
|
|
verily, the wrong-doers, for them is grievous woe!'
|
|
But I will cause those who believe and do aright to enter gardens
|
|
beneath which rivers flow, to dwell therein for aye by the
|
|
permission of their Lord; their salutation therein is 'Peace!'
|
|
Dost thou not see how God strikes out a parable? A good word is like
|
|
a good tree whose root is firm, and whose branches are in the sky;
|
|
it gives its fruit at every season by the permission of its Lord-
|
|
but God strikes out parables for men that haply they may be mindful.
|
|
And the likeness of a bad word is as a bad tree, which is felled
|
|
from above the earth, and has no staying place.
|
|
God answers those who believe with the sure word in this world's
|
|
life and in the next; but God leads the wrong-doers astray; for God
|
|
does what He will.
|
|
Dost not thou see those who have changed God's favours for
|
|
misbelief, and have made their people to alight at the abode of
|
|
perdition?- in hell they shall broil, and an ill resting-place shall
|
|
it be!
|
|
And they made peers for God, to lead men astray from His path.
|
|
Say, 'Enjoy yourselves, for, verily, your journey is to the Fire.'
|
|
Say to my servants who believe, that they be steadfast in prayer and
|
|
expend in alms of what we have bestowed upon them in secret and in
|
|
public, before there comes the day when there shall be no buying and
|
|
no friendship.
|
|
God it is who created the heavens and the earth; and sent down
|
|
from the sky water, and brought forth therewith fruits as a
|
|
provision for you; and subjected to you the ships, to float therein
|
|
upon the sea at His bidding; and subjected for you the rivers; and
|
|
subjected for you the sun and the moon, constant both; and subjected
|
|
for you the night and the day; and brought you of everything ye
|
|
asked Him: but if ye try to number God's favours, ye cannot count
|
|
them;- verily, man is very unjust and ungrateful.
|
|
And when Abraham said, 'My Lord, make this land safe, and turn me
|
|
and my sons away from serving idols!
|
|
'My Lord, verily, they have led many men astray; but he who
|
|
follows me, verily, he is of me; but he who rebels against me,-
|
|
verily, thou art pardoning, merciful!
|
|
'O our Lord! verily, I have made some of my seed dwell in a valley
|
|
without corn, by thy Sacred House. O our Lord! let them be steadfast
|
|
in prayer and make the hearts of men yearn towards them, and provide
|
|
them with fruits, haply they may give thanks.
|
|
'O our Lord! verily, Thou knowest what we hide and what we
|
|
publish; for naught is hid from God in the earth or in the sky. Praise
|
|
to God who hath bestowed on me, notwithstanding my old age, Ishmael
|
|
and Isaac!- verily, my Lord surely hears prayer.
|
|
'O my Lord! make me steadfast in prayer, and of my seed likewise!
|
|
O our Lord! and accept my prayer! O our Lord! pardon me and my parents
|
|
and the believers on the reckoning day!'
|
|
So think not God careless of what the unjust do; He only respites
|
|
them until the day on which all eyes shall stare!
|
|
Hurrying on, raising up their heads, with their looks not turned
|
|
back to them, and their hearts void; and warn men of the day when
|
|
the torment shall come!
|
|
And those who have done wrong shall say, 'O our Lord! respite us
|
|
until an appointed time nigh at hand, and we will respond to Thy call,
|
|
and follow the apostles!'- 'What! did ye not swear before, ye should
|
|
have no decline?'
|
|
And ye dwelt in the dwellings of those who had wronged themselves;
|
|
and it was made plain to you how we did with them; and we struck out
|
|
parables for you: but they plotted their stratagems, but with God is a
|
|
stratagem for them, although at their stratagem the mountains should
|
|
give way.
|
|
Think then not indeed that God fails in his promise to his
|
|
apostles;- verily, God is mighty, the Lord of vengeance; on the day
|
|
when the earth shall be changed for another earth, and the heavens
|
|
too; and (all) shall go forth unto God, the one, the dominant.
|
|
Thou shalt see the sinners on that day bound together in fetters;
|
|
with shirts of pitch, and fire covering their faces;- that God may
|
|
reward each soul according to what it has earned verily, God is
|
|
swift at reckoning up!
|
|
This is a message to be delivered to men that they may be warned
|
|
thereby, and know that only He is God,- one,- and that those who
|
|
have minds may remember.
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF EL 'HAGR
|
|
(XV. Mecca.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God!
|
|
ALIF LAM RA. Those are the signs of the Book and of a perspicuous
|
|
Koran.
|
|
Many a time will those who disbelieve fain they had been resigned.
|
|
Leave them to eat and enjoy themselves and let hope beguile them,
|
|
but they at length shall know!
|
|
We never destroyed a city without it had its noted doom.
|
|
No nation can hasten on its appointed time, nor put it off.
|
|
But they say, 'O thou to whom the Reminder has been sent down!
|
|
verily, thou art possessed. Why dost thou not bring us the angels if
|
|
thou dost tell the truth?'
|
|
We sent not down the angels save by right; nor even then would these
|
|
be respited.
|
|
Verily, we have sent down the Reminder, and, verily, we will guard
|
|
it.
|
|
And we sent before thee among the sects of those of yore. But
|
|
there never came an apostle to them but they mocked at him. Such
|
|
conduct also will we put into the hearts of the sinners. They will not
|
|
believe therein, but the course of those of yore is run. But had we
|
|
opened to them a door of the sky and they had mounted up into it all
|
|
the while; then also had they said, 'Our eye-sight is only
|
|
intoxicated; nay, we are an enchanted people!'
|
|
And we have placed in the sky the signs of the zodiac, and have made
|
|
them seemly to the beholders; and we have guarded them from every
|
|
pelted devil; save from such as steal a hearing, and there follows him
|
|
an obvious shooting-star.
|
|
And the earth we have stretched out and have thrown on it firm
|
|
mountains, and have caused to grow upon it of everything a measured
|
|
quantity. And we have made for you means of livelihood therein, and
|
|
for those for whom ye have not to provide.
|
|
Nor is there aught but the treasuries of it are with us, and we do
|
|
not send it down save in a noted quantity.
|
|
And we send forth the impregnating winds, and we send down water
|
|
from the sky, and we give it to you to drink, nor is it ye who store
|
|
it up.
|
|
And we, verily, we quicken and kill; and we are of (all things)
|
|
heirs.
|
|
And we already know the foremost of you, and we know the laggards
|
|
too!
|
|
And, verily, it is your Lord who will gather you; verily, He is wise
|
|
and knowing.
|
|
And we did create man from crackling clay of black mud wrought in
|
|
form.
|
|
And the ginns had we created before of smokeless fire.
|
|
And when thy Lord said to the angels, 'Verily, I am creating a
|
|
mortal from crackling clay of black mud wrought into shape;
|
|
And when I have fashioned it, and breathed into it of my spirit,
|
|
then fall ye down before it adoring.'
|
|
And the angels adored all of them together, save Iblis, who
|
|
refused to be among those who adored.
|
|
He said, 'O Iblis! what ails thee that thou art not among those
|
|
who adore?'
|
|
Said he, 'I would not adore a mortal whom Thou hast created from
|
|
crackling clay of black mud wrought into form.'
|
|
He said, 'Then get thee forth therefrom, and, verily, thou art to be
|
|
pelted! And, verily, the curse is upon thee until the day of
|
|
judgment.'
|
|
Said he, 'O my Lord! respite me until the day when they shall be
|
|
raised.' He said, 'Then, verily, thou art of the respited until the
|
|
day of the noted time.'
|
|
He said, 'O my Lord! for that Thou hast seduced me I will surely
|
|
make it seem seemly for them on earth, and I will surely seduce them
|
|
all together; save such of Thy servants amongst them as are
|
|
sincere.' Said He, 'This is a right way against me. Verily, my
|
|
servants thou hast no authority over, save over those who follow
|
|
thee of such as are seduced: and, verily, hell is promised to them all
|
|
together. It has seven doors; at every door is there a separate
|
|
party of them.'
|
|
Verily, those who fear God shall dwell amidst gardens and springs:
|
|
'Enter ye therein with peace in safety!' And we will strip off
|
|
whatever ill-feeling is in their breasts; as brethren on couches
|
|
face to face.
|
|
No toil shall touch them therein, nor shall they be brought forth
|
|
therefrom.
|
|
Inform my servants that I am the pardoning, the merciful; and that
|
|
my woe is the grievous woe.
|
|
And inform them concerning Abraham's guests when they entered in
|
|
unto him and said, 'Peace!' he said, 'Verily, we are afraid of you.'
|
|
They said, 'Be not afraid! verily, we give thee glad tidings of a
|
|
knowing boy.' He said, 'Do ye give me this glad tidings although old
|
|
age has touched me? give me the glad tidings then!' They said, 'We
|
|
give the glad tidings of the truth, then be not of those who despair!'
|
|
He said, 'Who would despair of the mercy of his Lord save those who
|
|
err?' He said, 'What is your business, O ye messengers?' They said,
|
|
'Verily, we are sent unto a sinful people; save only Lot's family,
|
|
them will we save all together, except his wife; we have decreed,
|
|
verily, she shall be of those who linger.'
|
|
And when the messengers came unto Lot's family, he said, 'Verily, ye
|
|
are a people whom I recognise not.' They said, 'Nay, but we have
|
|
come to thee with that whereof they did doubt. And we have brought
|
|
thee the truth, and, verily, we speak the truth! Travel then with
|
|
thy family in the deep darkness of the night, and follow thou their
|
|
rear; and let not any one of you turn round to look; but go on to
|
|
where ye are bidden.'
|
|
And we decided for him this affair because the uttermost one of
|
|
these people should be cut off on the morrow.
|
|
Then the people of the city came, glad at the tidings. Said he,
|
|
'Verily, these are my guests, therefore disgrace me not; but fear God,
|
|
and put me not to shame.'
|
|
They said, 'Have we not forbidden thee everybody in the world?' He
|
|
said, 'Here are my daughters, if do it ye must.'- By thy life! verily,
|
|
they were surely in their intoxication blindly wandering on!-
|
|
And the noise caught them at the dawn. And we made the higher
|
|
parts (of the cities) their lower parts, and rained down on them
|
|
stones of baked clay. Verily, in that is a sign to those who mark.
|
|
And, verily, the (cities) are on a path that still remains. Verily, in
|
|
that is a sign to the believers.
|
|
And the fellows of the Grove too were unjust; and we took
|
|
vengeance on them, and, verily, they both are for an obvious example.
|
|
And the fellows of El 'Hagr called the messengers liars, and we
|
|
brought them our signs, but they therefrom did turn away. And they did
|
|
hew them in the mountain houses to dwell in in safety.
|
|
But the noise caught them in the morn; and that which they had
|
|
earned availed them naught.
|
|
We did not create the heavens and the earth and all that is
|
|
between them both, save in truth. And, verily, the Hour is surely
|
|
coming; then do thou pardon with a fair pardon,
|
|
Verily, thy Lord He is the creator, the knowing! We have already
|
|
brought thee Seven of the Repetition, and the mighty Koran.
|
|
Let not thine eyes strain after what we have allowed a few pairs
|
|
of them to enjoy, nor grieve for them; but lower thy wing to the
|
|
believers, and say, 'Verily, I am an obvious warner.'
|
|
As we sent down (punishment) on the separatists who dismember the
|
|
Koran.
|
|
But, by thy Lord! we will question them, one and all, about what
|
|
they have done.
|
|
Therefore, publish what thou art bidden, and turn aside from the
|
|
idolaters.
|
|
Verily, we are enough for thee against the scoffers.
|
|
Who place with God other gods; but they at length shall know! And we
|
|
knew that thy breast was straitened at what they say.
|
|
Then celebrate the praises of thy Lord, and be thou of those who
|
|
adore.
|
|
And serve thy Lord until the certainty shall come to thee.
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF THE BEE
|
|
(XVI. Mecca.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
God's bidding will come; seek not then to hasten it on. Celebrated
|
|
be His praises from what they join with Him!
|
|
He sends down the angels with the Spirit at His bidding upon whom He
|
|
will of His servants (to say), 'Give warning that there is no god
|
|
but Me; Me therefore do ye fear.' He created the heavens and the earth
|
|
in truth! Exalted be He above that which they join with Him!
|
|
He created man from a clot; and yet, behold, he is an open opponent!
|
|
The cattle too have we created for you; in them is warmth and
|
|
profit, and from them do ye eat.
|
|
In them is there beauty for you when ye drive them home to rest, and
|
|
when ye drive them forth to graze. And they bear your heavy burdens to
|
|
towns which ye could not otherwise reach, except with great
|
|
wretchedness of soul;- verily, your Lord is kind and merciful.
|
|
And horses too, and mules, and asses, for you to ride upon and for
|
|
an ornament.- He creates also what ye know not of. God's it is to show
|
|
the path; from it some turn aside: but had He pleased He would have
|
|
guided you one and all.
|
|
He it is who sends down water from the sky, whence ye have drink,
|
|
and whence the trees grow whereby ye feed your flocks.
|
|
He makes the corn to grow, and the olives, and the palms, and the
|
|
grapes, and some of every fruit;- verily, in that is a sign unto a
|
|
people who reflect.
|
|
And He subjected to you the night and the day, and the sun, and
|
|
the moon, and the stars are subjected to His bidding. Verily, in
|
|
that are signs to a people who have sense.
|
|
And what He has produced for you in the earth varying in hue,
|
|
verily, in that is a sign for a people who are mindful.
|
|
He it is who has subjected the sea, that ye may eat fresh flesh
|
|
therefrom; and ye bring forth from it ornaments which ye wear,- and
|
|
thou mayest see the ships cleaving through it,- and that ye may search
|
|
after His grace,- and haply ye may give thanks.
|
|
And He has cast firm mountains on the earth lest it move with you;
|
|
and rivers and roads; haply ye may be guided.
|
|
And landmarks; and by the stars too are they guided.
|
|
Is He who creates like him who creates not?- are they then
|
|
unmindful?
|
|
But if ye would number the favours of God, ye cannot count them.
|
|
Verily, God is forgiving, merciful.
|
|
God knows what ye keep secret, and what ye disclose.
|
|
And those on whom ye call beside God cannot create anything, for
|
|
they are themselves created. Dead, not living, nor can they perceive!
|
|
When shall they be raised?
|
|
Your God is one God, and those who believe not in the hereafter
|
|
their hearts are given to denial, and they are big with pride!
|
|
Without a doubt God knows what ye keep secret and what ye disclose!
|
|
Verily, He does not love those big with pride!
|
|
And when it is said to them, 'What is it that your Lord has sent
|
|
down?' they say, 'Old folks' tales!'
|
|
Let them bear the burden of their sins entirely on the
|
|
resurrection day, and some of the burdens of those whom they led
|
|
astray without knowledge.- Aye! an ill burden shall they bear.
|
|
Those who were before them devised a stratagem, but God brought
|
|
their building off its foundations, and the roof fell over them, and
|
|
the torment came to them, from whence they could not perceive.
|
|
Then on the resurrection day He will put them to shame, and say,
|
|
'Where are your associates whom ye divided into parties about?'
|
|
Those to whom knowledge is brought will say, 'Verily, disgrace to-day,
|
|
and evil are upon the misbelievers!'
|
|
Those whom the angels took away were wronging themselves; then
|
|
they offered peace: 'We have done no evil.'- 'Yea! verily, God knows
|
|
what ye did. Wherefore enter ye the doors of hell, to dwell therein
|
|
for aye; for ill is the resort of the proud.'
|
|
And it will be said to those who fear God, 'What is it that your
|
|
Lord has sent down?' They will say, 'The best,' for those who do good,
|
|
good in this world; but certainly the abode of the next is best, and
|
|
surely pleasant is the abode of those who fear.
|
|
Gardens of Eden which they shall enter, beneath them rivers flow;
|
|
therein shall they have what they please;- thus does God reward
|
|
those who fear Him.
|
|
To those whom the angels take off in a goodly state they shall
|
|
say, 'Peace be upon you! enter ye into Paradise for that which ye have
|
|
done.'
|
|
Do they expect other than that the angels should come to take them
|
|
off, or that thy Lord's bidding should come?- thus did those before
|
|
them; God did not wrong them; but it was themselves they wronged.
|
|
And the evil which they had done befel them, and that environed them
|
|
at which they used to mock!
|
|
And those who associated (others with God) said, 'Had God pleased we
|
|
had not served aught beside Him, neither we nor our fathers; nor had
|
|
we prohibited aught without Him;'- thus did those before them: but
|
|
have messengers aught to do but to deliver their message plainly?
|
|
We have sent in every nation an apostle (to say), 'Serve ye God, and
|
|
avoid Taghut!' and amongst them are some whom God has guided, and
|
|
amongst them are some for whom error is due;- go ye about then on
|
|
the earth, and behold how was the end of those who called (the
|
|
apostles) liars!
|
|
If thou art ever so eager for their guidance, verily, God guides not
|
|
those who go astray, nor have they any helpers.
|
|
They swear by their most strenuous oath, 'God will not raise up
|
|
him who dies.'- Yea! a promise binding on him true!- but most men do
|
|
not know. To explain to them that which they disputed about, and
|
|
that those who misbelieved may know that they are liars.
|
|
We only say unto a thing we wish, 'BE,' and it is.
|
|
But those who fled for God's sake, after they were wronged, we
|
|
will surely establish them in this world with good things; but the
|
|
hire of the future life is greater, if ye did but know.
|
|
Those who are patient, and upon their Lord rely!
|
|
And we have not sent before thee any but men whom we inspire,- ask
|
|
ye those who have the Reminder, if ye know not yourselves,- with
|
|
manifest signs and with scriptures; and we have sent down the Reminder
|
|
to thee too, that thou mayest explain to men what has been sent down
|
|
to them, and haply they may reflect.
|
|
Are those who were so crafty in evil sure that God will not cleave
|
|
open the earth with them, or bring them torment from whence they
|
|
cannot perceive, or seize them in their going to and fro? for they
|
|
cannot make Him helpless.
|
|
Or that He should seize them with a gradual destruction? for,
|
|
verily, your Lord is kind, merciful.
|
|
Do they not regard whatever thing God has created; its shadow
|
|
falls on the right or the left, adoring God and shrinking up?
|
|
Whatever is in the heavens and in the earth, beast or angel,
|
|
adores God; nor are they big with pride!
|
|
They fear their Lord above them, and they do what they are bidden.
|
|
And God says, 'Take not to two gods; God is only one; me then do
|
|
ye fear!'
|
|
His is what is in the heavens and in the earth to Him is obedience
|
|
due unceasingly; other than God then will ye fear?
|
|
And whatever favours ye have, they are from God; then, whenever
|
|
distress touches you, unto Him ye turn for succour. Yet, when He
|
|
removes the distress from you, lo! a party of you join partners with
|
|
their Lord.
|
|
That they may disbelieve in what we have brought them and may
|
|
enjoy,- but at length they shall know!
|
|
And they set aside for what they know not a portion of what we
|
|
have bestowed upon them.- By God! ye shall be questioned concerning
|
|
that which ye have devised.
|
|
They make for God daughters;- celebrated be His praise!-and for
|
|
themselves they like them not.
|
|
When any one of them has tidings of a female child, his face is
|
|
overclouded and black, and he has to keep back his wrath.
|
|
He skulks away from the people, for the evil tidings he has
|
|
heard;- is he to keep it with its disgrace, or to bury it in the
|
|
dust?- aye! evil is it that they judge!
|
|
For those who disbelieve in the future life is a similitude of evil:
|
|
but for God is the loftiest similitude; for He is the mighty, the
|
|
wise!
|
|
If God were to punish men for their wrong-doing He would not leave
|
|
upon the earth a single beast; but He respites them until a stated
|
|
time; and when their time comes they cannot put it off an hour, nor
|
|
can they bring it on.
|
|
They set down to God what they abhor themselves; and their tongues
|
|
describe the lie that good is to be theirs.' Without a doubt theirs is
|
|
the Fire, for, verily, they shall be sent on there!
|
|
By God! we sent (messengers) to nations before thee, but Satan
|
|
made their works seemly to them, for he is their patron to-day, and
|
|
for them is grievous woe!
|
|
We have only sent down to thee the Book, that thou mayest explain to
|
|
them that which they did dispute about, and as a guidance and a
|
|
mercy to a people who believe.
|
|
And God sends down water from the sky, and quickens therewith the
|
|
earth after its death; verily, in that is a sign to a people who can
|
|
hear.
|
|
Verily, ye have in cattle a lesson; we give you to drink from that
|
|
which is in their bellies, betwixt chyme and blood,- pure milk,-
|
|
easy to swallow for those who drink.
|
|
And of the fruit of the palms and the grapes ye take therefrom an
|
|
intoxicant and a goodly provision; verily, in that is a sign to a
|
|
people who have sense!
|
|
And thy Lord inspired the bee, 'Take to houses in the mountains, and
|
|
in the trees, and in the hives they build.
|
|
'Then eat from every fruit, and walk in the beaten paths of thy
|
|
Lord;' there cometh forth from her body a draught varying in hue, in
|
|
which is a cure for men; verily, in that are signs unto a people who
|
|
reflect.
|
|
God created you; then He will take you to Himself; but amongst you
|
|
are some whom He will thrust into the most decrepit age; so that he
|
|
may not know aught that once he knew. Verily, God is knowing,
|
|
powerful.
|
|
And God has preferred some of you over others in providing for
|
|
you; but those who have been preferred will not restore their
|
|
provision to those whom their right hands possess that they may
|
|
share equally therein:- is it God's favours they gainsay?
|
|
And God has made for you from amongst yourselves wives, and has made
|
|
for you from your wives sons and grandchildren; and has provided you
|
|
with good things;- is it in vanity that they believe, while for
|
|
God's favour they are ungrateful?
|
|
And they serve beside God what cannot control for them any provision
|
|
from the heavens or the earth, and have no power at all.
|
|
Do not then strike out parables for God! Verily, God knows, but ye
|
|
do not know.
|
|
God has struck out a parable; an owned slave, able to do nothing;
|
|
and one whom we have provided with a good provision, and who expends
|
|
therefrom in alms secretly and openly:- shall they be held equal?-
|
|
Praise be to God, most of them do not know!
|
|
And God has struck out a parable: two men, one of them dumb, able to
|
|
do nothing, a burden to his lord; wherever he directs him he comes not
|
|
with success; is he to be held equal with him who bids what is just
|
|
and who is on the right way?
|
|
God's are the unseen things of the heavens and the earth; nor is the
|
|
matter of the Hour aught but as the twinkling of an eye, or nigher
|
|
still! Verily, God is mighty over all!
|
|
God brings you forth out of the wombs of your mothers knowing
|
|
naught; and He makes for you hearing, and sight, and hearts,- haply ye
|
|
may give thanks!
|
|
Do they not see the birds subjected in the vault of the sky?- none
|
|
holds them in but God: verily, in that is a sign unto a people who
|
|
believe.
|
|
God made for you in your houses a repose; and made for you, of the
|
|
skins of cattle, houses, that ye may find them light, on the day ye
|
|
move your quarters and the day when ye abide; and from their wool, and
|
|
from their fur, and from their hair come furniture and chattels for
|
|
a season.
|
|
And God has made for you, of what He has created, shades; and has
|
|
made for you shelters in the mountains; and He has made for you shirts
|
|
to keep you from the heat, and shirts to keep you from each other's
|
|
violence:- thus does He fulfil His favours towards you,- haply ye
|
|
yet may be resigned.
|
|
But if they turn their backs,- thine is only to preach thy plain
|
|
message.
|
|
They recognise the favours of God, and yet they deny them, for
|
|
most men are ungrateful.
|
|
And on the day when we shall send from every nation a witness;
|
|
then shall those who misbelieve not be allowed (to excuse themselves),
|
|
and they shall not be taken back into favour.
|
|
And when those who join their partners with God say, 'Our Lord!
|
|
these be our partners on whom we used to call beside Thee.' And they
|
|
shall proffer them the speech, 'Verily, ye are liars! And they shall
|
|
proffer on that day peace unto God; and that which they had devised
|
|
shall stray away from them.
|
|
Those who misbelieve and turn folks off God's path, we will add
|
|
torment to their torment, for that they were evildoers.
|
|
And on the day when we will raise up in every nation a witness
|
|
against them from among themselves, and we will bring thee as a
|
|
witness against these; for we have sent down to thee a book explaining
|
|
clearly everything, and a guidance, and a mercy, and glad tidings to
|
|
the believers.
|
|
Verily, God bids you do justice and good, and give to kindred (their
|
|
due), and He forbids you to sin, and do wrong, and oppress; He
|
|
admonishes you, haply ye may be mindful!
|
|
Fulfil God's covenant when ye have covenanted, and break not your
|
|
oaths after asseverating them, for ye thereby make God your surety;
|
|
verily, God knows what ye do.
|
|
And be not like her who unravels her yarn, fraying it out after
|
|
she hath spun it close, by taking your oaths for mutual intrigue,
|
|
because one nation is more numerous than another; God only tries you
|
|
therewith, but He will make manifest to you on the resurrection day
|
|
that whereon ye did dispute.
|
|
But had God pleased He would have made you one nation; but He
|
|
leads astray whom He will, and guides whom He will;- but ye shall be
|
|
questioned as to that which ye have done.
|
|
Take not therefore your oaths for mutual intrigue, lest a foot
|
|
slip after being planted firmly, and ye taste of evil for that ye
|
|
turned folks off the path of God, and for you there be mighty woe!
|
|
And sell not God's covenant for a little price; with God only is
|
|
what is better for you, if ye did but know.
|
|
What ye have is spent, but what God has endures; and we will
|
|
recompense the patient with their hire for the best deeds they have
|
|
done.
|
|
Whoso acts aright, male or female, and is a believer, we will
|
|
quicken with a goodly life; and we will recompense them with their
|
|
hire for the best deeds they have done.
|
|
When thou dost read the Koran ask refuge with God from Satan the
|
|
pelted one.
|
|
Verily, he has no power over those who believe and who upon their
|
|
Lord rely. His power is only over those who take him for a patron, and
|
|
over the idolaters.
|
|
And whenever we change one verse for another,- God knows best what
|
|
He sends down. They say, 'Thou art but a forger!'- Nay, most of them
|
|
do not know. Say, 'The Holy Spirit brought it down from thy Lord in
|
|
truth, to stablish those who believe, and for a guidance and glad
|
|
tidings to those who are resigned.'
|
|
We knew that they said, 'It is only some mortal who teaches him.'-
|
|
The tongue of him they lean towards is barbarous, and this is plain
|
|
Arabic.
|
|
Verily, those who believe not in God's signs, God will not guide
|
|
them, and for them is grievous woe.
|
|
Only they are the forgers of a lie who believe not in God's signs;
|
|
and these, they are the liars.
|
|
Whoso disbelieves in God after having believed, unless it be one who
|
|
is forced and whose heart is quiet in the faith,- but whoso expands
|
|
his breast to misbelieve,- on them is wrath from God, and for them
|
|
is mighty woe!
|
|
That is because they preferred the love of this world's life to
|
|
the next;- but, verily, God guides not the unbelieving people. These
|
|
are they on whose hearts, and hearing, and eyesight, God has set a
|
|
stamp, and these, they are the careless. Without a doubt that in the
|
|
next life they will be the losers.
|
|
Then, verily, thy Lord, to those who fled after they had been tried,
|
|
and then fought strenuously and were patient,-verily, thy Lord after
|
|
that will be forgiving and merciful.
|
|
On the day every soul will come to wrangle for itself, and every
|
|
soul shall be paid what it has earned, and they shall not be wronged.
|
|
God has struck out a parable: a city which was safe and quiet, its
|
|
provision came to it in plenty from every place, and then it denied
|
|
God's favours, and God made it feel clothing of hunger and fear, for
|
|
that which they had wrought.
|
|
And there came to them an apostle from amongst themselves, but
|
|
they called him a liar, and the torment seized them, while yet they
|
|
were unjust.
|
|
Eat, then, from what God has provided you with, things lawful and
|
|
good, and give thanks for the favours of God, if it be Him ye serve.
|
|
He has only forbidden you that which dies of itself, and blood,
|
|
and the flesh of swine, and that which is devoted to other than God;
|
|
but he who is forced, neither revolting nor transgressing, it is no
|
|
sin for him: verily, God is forgiving and merciful.
|
|
And say not of the lie your tongues pronounce, 'This is lawful,
|
|
and this is unlawful,' forging against God a lie; verily, those who
|
|
forge against God a lie shall not prosper. A little enjoyment- then
|
|
for them is grievous woe!
|
|
For those who are Jews we have forbidden what we have narrated to
|
|
thee before; we did not wrong them, but it was themselves they
|
|
wronged.
|
|
Then, verily, thy Lord to those who have done evil in ignorance
|
|
and then repented after that and done aright,- verily, thy Lord
|
|
afterwards is forgiving and merciful.
|
|
Verily, Abraham was. a high priest, a 'Hanif, and was not of the
|
|
idolaters: thankful for His favours; He chose him and He guided him
|
|
unto the right way.
|
|
And we gave him in this world good things; and, verily, in the
|
|
next he will be among the righteous.
|
|
Then we inspired thee, 'Follow the faith of Abraham, a 'Hanif, for
|
|
he was not of the idolaters.'
|
|
The Sabbath was only made for those who dispute thereon; but,
|
|
verily, thy Lord will judge between them on the resurrection day
|
|
concerning that whereon they do dispute.
|
|
Call unto the way of thy Lord with wisdom and goodly warning; and
|
|
wrangle with them in the kindest way; verily, thy Lord He knows best
|
|
who has erred from His way, for He knows best the guided ones.
|
|
But if ye punish, punish (only) as ye were punished; but if ye are
|
|
patient, it is best for those who are patient.
|
|
Be thou patient then; but thy patience is only in God's hands. Do
|
|
not grieve about them; and be not in a strait at their craftiness;-
|
|
verily, God is with those who fear Him, and with those who do well.
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF THE NIGHT JOURNEY
|
|
(XVII. Mecca.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
Celebrated be the praises of Him who took His servant a journey by
|
|
night from the Sacred Mosque to the Remote Mosque, the precinct of
|
|
which we have blessed, to show him of our signs! verily, He both hears
|
|
and looks.
|
|
And we gave Moses the Book and made it a guidance to the children of
|
|
Israel: 'Take ye to no guardian but me.'
|
|
Seed of those we bore with Noah (in the ark)! verily, he was a
|
|
thankful servant!
|
|
And we decreed to the children of Israel in the Book, 'Ye shall
|
|
verily do evil in the earth twice, and ye shall rise to a great height
|
|
(of pride).'
|
|
And when the threat for the first (sin) of the two came, we sent
|
|
over them servants of ours, endued with violence, and they searched
|
|
inside your houses; and it was an accomplished threat.
|
|
Then we rallied you once more against them, and aided you with
|
|
wealth and sons, and made you a numerous band.
|
|
'If ye do well, ye will do well to your own souls; and if ye do ill,
|
|
it is against them!
|
|
'And when the threat for the last came- to harm your faces and to
|
|
enter the mosque as they entered it the first time, and to destroy
|
|
what they had got the upper-hand over with utter destruction.'
|
|
It may be that thy Lord will have mercy on you;- if ye return we
|
|
will return, and we have made hell a prison for the misbelievers.
|
|
Verily, this Koran guides to the straightest path, and gives the
|
|
glad tidings to the believers who do aright that for them is a great
|
|
hire; and that for those who believe not in the hereafter, we have
|
|
prepared a mighty woe.
|
|
Man prays for evil as he prays for good; and man was ever hasty.
|
|
We made the night and the day two signs; and we blot out the sign of
|
|
the night and make the sign of the day visible, that ye may seek after
|
|
plenty from your Lord, and that ye may number the years and the
|
|
reckoning; and we have detailed everything in detail.
|
|
And every man's augury have we fastened on his neck; and we will
|
|
bring forth for him on the resurrection day a book offered to him wide
|
|
open. 'Read thy book, thou art accountant enough against thyself
|
|
to-day!'
|
|
He who accepts guidance, accepts it only for his own soul: and he
|
|
who errs, errs only against it; nor shall one burdened soul bear the
|
|
burden of another.
|
|
Nor would we punish until we had sent an apostle. And when we
|
|
desired to destroy a city we bade the opulent ones thereof; and they
|
|
wrought abomination therein; and its due sentence was pronounced;
|
|
and we destroyed it with utter destruction.
|
|
How many generations have we destroyed after Noah! but thy Lord of
|
|
the sins of his servant is well aware, and sees enough.
|
|
Whoso is desirous of this life that hastens away, we will hasten
|
|
on for him therein what we please,- for whom we please. Then we will
|
|
make hell for him to broil in- despised and outcast.
|
|
But whoso desires the next life, and strives for it and is a
|
|
believer- these, their striving shall be gratefully received.
|
|
To all- these and those- will we extend the gifts of thy Lord; for
|
|
the gifts of thy Lord are not restricted.
|
|
See how we have preferred some of them over others, but in the
|
|
next life are greater degrees and greater preference.
|
|
Put not with God other gods, or thou wilt sit despised and forsaken.
|
|
Thy Lord has decreed that ye shall not serve other than Him; and
|
|
kindness to one's parents, whether one or both of them reach old age
|
|
with thee; and say not to them, 'Fie!' and do not grumble at them, but
|
|
speak to them a generous speech. And lower to them the wing of
|
|
humility out of compassion, and say, 'O Lord! have compassion on
|
|
them as they brought me up when I was little!' Your Lord knows best
|
|
what is in your souls if ye be righteous, and, verily, He is forgiving
|
|
unto those who come back penitent.
|
|
And give thy kinsman his due and the poor and the son of the road;
|
|
and waste not wastefully, for the wasteful were ever the devil's
|
|
brothers; and the devil is ever ungrateful to his Lord.
|
|
But if thou dost turn away from them to seek after mercy from thy
|
|
Lord, which thou hopest for, then speak to them an easy speech.
|
|
Make not thy hand fettered to thy neck, nor yet spread it out
|
|
quite open, lest thou shouldst have to sit down blamed and
|
|
straitened in means. Verily, thy Lord spreads out provision to
|
|
whomsoever He will or He doles it out. Verily, He is ever well aware
|
|
of and sees his servants.
|
|
And slay not your children for fear of poverty; we will provide
|
|
for them; beware! for to slay them is ever a great sin!
|
|
And draw not near to fornication; verily, it is ever an abomination,
|
|
and evil is the way thereof.
|
|
And slay not the soul that God has forbidden you, except for just
|
|
cause; for he who is slain unjustly we have given his next of kin
|
|
authority; yet let him not exceed in slaying; verily, he is ever
|
|
helped.
|
|
And draw not near to the wealth of the orphan, save to improve it,
|
|
until he reaches the age of puberty, and fulfil your compacts; verily,
|
|
a compact is ever enquired of.
|
|
And give full measure when ye measure out, and weigh with a right
|
|
balance; that is better and a fairer determination.
|
|
And do not pursue that of which thou hast no knowledge; verily,
|
|
the hearing, the sight, and the heart, all of these shall be
|
|
enquired of.
|
|
And walk not on the earth proudly; verily, thou canst not cleave the
|
|
earth, and thou shalt not reach the mountains in height.
|
|
All this is ever, evil in the sight of your Lord and abhorred.
|
|
That is something of what thy, Lord has inspired thee with of
|
|
wisdom; do not then put with God other gods, or thou wilt be thrown
|
|
into hell reproached and outcast. What! has your Lord chosen to give
|
|
you sons, and shall He take for Himself females from among the angels?
|
|
verily, ye are speaking a mighty speech.
|
|
Now have we turned it in various ways in this Koran so let them bear
|
|
in mind; but it will only increase them in aversion.
|
|
Say, 'Were there with Him other gods, as ye say, then would they
|
|
seek a way against the Lord of the throne.'
|
|
Celebrated be His praises, and exalted be He above what they say
|
|
with a great exaltation!
|
|
The seven heavens and the earth celebrate His praises, and all who
|
|
therein are; nor is there aught but what celebrates His praise: but ye
|
|
cannot understand their celebration;- verily, He is clement and
|
|
forgiving.
|
|
And when thou readest the Koran we place between thee and those
|
|
who believe not in the hereafter a covering veil. And we place
|
|
covers upon their hearts, lest they should understand, and dulness
|
|
in their ears.
|
|
And when thou dost mention in the Koran thy Lord by Himself they
|
|
turn their backs in aversion. We know best for what they listen when
|
|
they listen to thee; and when they whisper apart- when the wrong-doers
|
|
say, 'Ye only follow a man enchanted.'
|
|
Behold, how they strike out for you parables, and err, and cannot
|
|
find the way!
|
|
They say, 'What! when we have become bones and rubbish are we to
|
|
be raised up a new creature?' Say, 'Be ye stones, or iron, or a
|
|
creature, the greatest your breasts can conceive-!' Then they shall
|
|
say, 'Who is to restore us?' Say, 'He who originated you at first;'
|
|
and they will wag their heads and say, 'When will that be? Say, 'It
|
|
may, perhaps, be nigh.'
|
|
The day when He shall call on you and ye shall answer with praise to
|
|
Him, and they will think that they have tarried but a little.
|
|
And say to my servants that they speak in a kind way; verily,
|
|
Satan makes ill-will between them; verily, Satan was ever unto man
|
|
an open foe.
|
|
Your Lord knows you best; if He please He will have mercy upon
|
|
you, or if He please He will torment you: but we have not sent thee to
|
|
take charge of them.
|
|
And thy Lord best knows who is in the heavens and the earth; we
|
|
did prefer some of the prophets over the others, and to David did we
|
|
give the Psalms.
|
|
Say, 'Call on those whom ye pretend other than God;' but they
|
|
shall not have the power to remove distress from you, nor to turn it
|
|
off.
|
|
Those on whom they call, seek themselves for a means of
|
|
approaching their Lord, (to see) which of them is nearest: and they
|
|
hope for His mercy and they fear His torment; verily, the torment of
|
|
thy Lord is a thing to beware of.
|
|
There is no city but we will destroy it before the day of
|
|
judgment, or torment it with keen torment;- that is in the Book
|
|
inscribed.
|
|
Naught hindered us from sending thee with signs, save that those
|
|
of yore said they were lies; so we gave Thamud the visible
|
|
she-camel, but they treated her unjustly for we do not send (any
|
|
one) with signs save to make men fear.
|
|
And when we said to thee, 'Verily, thy Lord encompasses men!' and we
|
|
made the vision which we showed thee only a cause of sedition unto
|
|
men, and the cursed tree as well; for we will frighten them, but it
|
|
will only increase them in great rebellion.
|
|
And when we said to the angels, 'Adore Adam;' and they adored,
|
|
save Iblis, who said, 'Am I to adore one whom Thou hast created out of
|
|
clay?
|
|
Said he, 'Dost thou see now? this one whom Thou hast honoured
|
|
above me, verily, if Thou shouldst respite me until the resurrection
|
|
day, I will of a surety utterly destroy his seed except a few.'
|
|
Said He, 'Begone! and whoso of them follows thee- verily, hell is
|
|
your recompense, an ample recompense. Entice away whomsoever of them
|
|
thou canst with thy voice; and bear down upon them with thy horse
|
|
and with thy foot; and share with them in their wealth and their
|
|
children; and promise them,- but Satan promises them naught but
|
|
deceit. Verily, my servants, thou hast no authority over them; thy
|
|
Lord is guardian enough over them!'
|
|
It is your Lord who drives the ships for you in the sea that ye
|
|
may seek after plenty from Him; verily, He is ever merciful to you.
|
|
And when distress touches you in the sea, those whom ye call on,
|
|
except Him, stray away from you; but when He has brought you safe to
|
|
shore, ye turn away; for man is ever ungrateful.
|
|
Are ye sure that He will not cleave with you the side of the
|
|
shore, or send against you a heavy sand-storm? then ye will find no
|
|
guardian for yourselves.
|
|
Or are ye sure that He will not send you back therein another
|
|
time, and send against you a violent wind, and drown you for your
|
|
misbelief? then ye will find for yourselves no protector against us.
|
|
But we have been gracious to the children of Adam, and we have borne
|
|
them by land and sea, and have provided them with good things, and
|
|
have preferred them over many that we have created.
|
|
The day when we will call all men by their high priest; and he whose
|
|
book is given in his right hand- these shall read their book, nor
|
|
shall they be wronged a straw. But he who in this life is blind
|
|
shall be blind in the next too, and err farther from the way.
|
|
They had well-nigh beguiled thee from what we inspired thee with,
|
|
that thou shouldst forge against us something else, and then they
|
|
would have taken thee for a friend; and had it not been that we
|
|
stablished thee, thou wouldst have well-nigh leant towards them a
|
|
little then would we have made thee taste of torment both of life
|
|
and death, then thou wouldst not have found against us any helper.
|
|
And they well-nigh enticed thee away from the land, to turn thee out
|
|
therefrom; but then- they should not have tarried after thee except
|
|
a little.
|
|
[This is] the course of those of our prophets whom we have sent
|
|
before thee; and thou shalt find no change in our course.
|
|
Be thou steadfast in prayer from the declining of the sun until
|
|
the dusk of the night, and the reading of the dawn; verily, the
|
|
reading of the dawn is ever testified to.
|
|
And for the night, watch thou therein as an extra service. It may be
|
|
that thy Lord will raise thee to a laudable station.
|
|
And say, 'O my Lord! make me enter with a just entry; and make me
|
|
come forth with a just coming forth; and grant me from Thee
|
|
authority to aid.'
|
|
And say, 'Truth has come, and falsehood has vanished! verily,
|
|
falsehood is transient.'
|
|
And we will send down of the Koran that which is a healing and a
|
|
mercy to the believers, but it will only increase the wrong-doers in
|
|
loss.
|
|
And when we favour man he turns away and retires aside, but when
|
|
evil touches him he is ever in despair. Say, 'Every one acts after his
|
|
own manner, but your Lord knows best who is most guided in the way.'
|
|
They will ask thee of the spirit. Say, 'The spirit comes at the
|
|
bidding of my Lord, and ye are given but a little knowledge thereof.'
|
|
If we had wished we would have taken away that with which we have
|
|
inspired thee; then thou wouldst have found no guardian against us,
|
|
unless by a mercy from thy Lord; verily, His grace towards thee is
|
|
great!
|
|
Say, 'If mankind and ginns united together to bring the like of this
|
|
Koran, they could not bring the like, though they should back each
|
|
other up!'
|
|
We have turned about for men in this Koran every parable; but most
|
|
men refuse to accept it, save ungratefully.
|
|
And they say, 'We will by no means believe in thee, until there gush
|
|
forth for thee a fountain from the earth; or there be made for thee
|
|
a garden of palms and grapes, and rivers come gushing out amidst them;
|
|
or thou make the sky to fall down upon us in pieces; or thou bring
|
|
us God and the angels before us; or there be made for thee a house
|
|
of gold; or thou climb up into the heaven; and even then we will not
|
|
believe in thy climbing there, until thou send down on us a book
|
|
that we may read!'
|
|
Say, 'Celebrated be the praises of my Lord! was I aught but a mortal
|
|
apostle?'
|
|
Naught prohibited men from believing when the guidance came to them,
|
|
save their saying, 'God has sent a mortal for an apostle.'
|
|
Say, 'Were there angels on the earth walking in quiet, we had surely
|
|
sent them an angel as an apostle.'
|
|
Say, 'God is witness enough between me and you; verily, He is ever
|
|
of His servants well aware, and sees.'
|
|
He whom God guides, he is guided indeed; and he whom God leads
|
|
astray, thou shalt never find patrons for them beside Him; and we will
|
|
gather them upon the resurrection day upon their faces, blind, and
|
|
dumb, and deaf; their resort is hell; whenever it grows dull we will
|
|
give them another blaze!
|
|
That is their reward for that they disbelieved in our signs, and
|
|
said, 'What! when we are bones and rubbish, shall we then be raised up
|
|
a new creation?'
|
|
Could they not see that God who created the heavens heavens and
|
|
the earth is able to create the like of them, and to set for them an
|
|
appointed time; there is no doubt therein, yet the wrong-doers
|
|
refuse to accept it, save ungratefully!
|
|
Say, 'Did ye control the treasuries of the mercy of my Lord, then ye
|
|
would hold them through fear of expending; for man is ever niggardly!'
|
|
And we did bring Moses nine manifest signs; then ask the children of
|
|
Israel (about) when he came to them, and Pharaoh said to him, 'Verily,
|
|
I think thee, O Moses! enchanted.'
|
|
He said, 'Well didst thou know that none sent down these save the
|
|
Lord of the heavens and the earth as visible signs; and, verily, I
|
|
think thee, O Pharaoh! ruined.'
|
|
And he desired to drive them out of the land; but we drowned him and
|
|
those with him, one and all.
|
|
And after him we said to the children of Israel, Dwell ye in the
|
|
land; and when the promise of the hereafter comes to pass, we will
|
|
bring you in a mixed crowd (to judgment).
|
|
'In truth have we sent it down, and in truth has it come down; and
|
|
we have not sent thee as aught but a herald of glad tidings and a
|
|
warner.
|
|
'And a Koran which we have divided, that thou mayst read it to
|
|
mankind leisurely, and we sent it down, sending it down.'
|
|
Say, 'Believe ye therein, or believe not; verily, those who were
|
|
given the knowledge before it, when it is read to them fall down
|
|
upon their beards adoring! and they say, "Celebrated be the praises of
|
|
our Lord! verily, the promise of our Lord is ever fulfilled"- they
|
|
fall down upon their beards weeping, and it increases their humility.'
|
|
Say, 'Call on God, or call on the Merciful One, whichever ye may
|
|
call on Him by; for His are the best of names.'
|
|
And do not say thy prayers openly, nor yet murmur them, but seek a
|
|
way between these.
|
|
And say, 'Praise belongs to God, who has not taken to Himself a son,
|
|
and has not had a partner in His kingdom, nor had a patron against
|
|
(such) abasement.' And magnify Him greatly!
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF THE CAVE
|
|
(XVIII. Mecca.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
Praise belongs to God, who sent down to His servant the Book, and
|
|
put no crookedness therein,-straight, to give warning of keen violence
|
|
from Him; and to give the glad tidings to the believers, who do what
|
|
is right, that for them is a goodly reward wherein they shall abide
|
|
for ever and for aye; and to give warning to those who say, 'God
|
|
hath taken to Himself a son.'
|
|
They have no knowledge thereof, nor their fathers; a serious word it
|
|
is that comes forth from their mouths! verily, they only speak a lie!
|
|
Haply thou wilt grieve thyself to death for sorrow after them, if
|
|
they believe not in this new revelation. Verily, we have made what
|
|
is on the earth an ornament thereof, to try them, which of them is
|
|
best in works; but, verily, we are going to make what is thereon
|
|
bare soil.
|
|
Hast thou reckoned that the Fellows of the Cave and Er-raqim were
|
|
a wonder amongst our signs?'
|
|
When the youths resorted to the cave and said, 'O our Lord! bring us
|
|
mercy from Thee, and dispose for us our affair aright!'
|
|
And we struck their ears (with deafness) in the cave for a number of
|
|
years. Then we raised them up again, that we might know which of the
|
|
two crews could best calculate the time of their tarrying. We will
|
|
narrate to thee their story in truth. Verily, they were youths who
|
|
believed in their Lord, and we added to their guidance, and we
|
|
braced up their hearts, when they stood up and said, 'Our Lord is
|
|
the Lord of the heavens and the earth, we will not call upon any god
|
|
beside Him, for then we should have said an extravagant thing. These
|
|
people of ours have taken to other gods beside Him. Though they do not
|
|
bring any manifest authority for them. And who is more unjust than
|
|
he who forges against God a lie?
|
|
'So when ye have gone apart from them and what they serve other than
|
|
God, then resort ye to the cave. Our Lord will unfold His mercy to
|
|
you, and will dispose for you your affair advantageously.'
|
|
And thou mightst have seen the sun when it rose decline from their
|
|
cave towards the right hand, and when it set leave them on the left
|
|
hand, while they were in the spacious part thereof. That is one of the
|
|
signs of God. Whom God guides he is guided indeed, and whom He leads
|
|
astray thou shalt surely find for him no patron to guide aright.
|
|
Thou mightst have reckoned them waking though they were sleeping, as
|
|
we turned them towards the right and towards the left; and their dog
|
|
spreading out his fore-paws on the threshold. Hadst thou come suddenly
|
|
upon them thou wouldst surely have turned and fled away from them, and
|
|
wouldst surely have been filled by them with dread.
|
|
Thus did we raise them up that they might question each other. Spake
|
|
a speaker amongst them, 'How long have ye tarried?' They said, 'We
|
|
have tarried a day or part of a day.' They said, 'Your Lord knows best
|
|
your tarrying; so send one of you with this coin of yours to the city,
|
|
and let him look which of them has purest food, and let him bring
|
|
you provision thereof; and let him be subtle and not let any one
|
|
perceive you. Verily, they-should they perceive youwould stone you, or
|
|
would force you back again unto their faith, and ye would never
|
|
prosper then.'
|
|
Thus did we make their people acquainted with their story, that they
|
|
might know that God's promise is true; and that the Hour, there is
|
|
no doubt concerning it. When they disputed amongst themselves
|
|
concerning their affair, and said, 'Build a building over them,
|
|
their Lord knows best about them;' and those who prevailed in their
|
|
affair said, 'We will surely make a mosque over them.'
|
|
They will say, 'Three, and the fourth of them was their dog:' and
|
|
they will say, 'Five, and the sixth of them was their dog:' guessing
|
|
at the unseen: and they will say, 'Seven, and the eighth of them was
|
|
their dog.' Say, 'My Lord knows best the number of them; none knows
|
|
them but a few.'
|
|
Dispute not therefore concerning them save with a plain disputation,
|
|
and ask not any one of them concerning them.
|
|
And never say of anything, 'Verily, I am going to do that
|
|
to-morrow,' except 'if God please;' and remember thy Lord when thou
|
|
hast forgotten, and say, 'It may be that my Lord will guide me to what
|
|
is nearer to the right than this.'
|
|
They tarried in their cave three hundred years and nine more. Say,
|
|
'God knows best of their tarrying. His are the unseen things of the
|
|
heavens and the earth-He can see! and hear!'
|
|
They have no patron beside Him, nor does He let any one share in His
|
|
judgment. So, recite what thou art inspired with of the Book of thy
|
|
Lord; there is no changing His words; nor shalt thou ever find a
|
|
refuge beside Him; and keep thyself patient, with those who call
|
|
upon their Lord morning and evening, desiring His face; nor let
|
|
thine eyes be turned from them, desiring the adornment of the life
|
|
of this world; and obey not him whose heart we have made heedless of
|
|
remembrance of us, and who follows his lusts, for his affair is ever
|
|
in advance (of the truth).
|
|
But say, 'The truth is from your Lord, so let him who will, believe;
|
|
and let him who will, disbelieve.' Verily, we have prepared for the
|
|
evildoers a fire, sheets of which shall encompass them; and if they
|
|
cry for help, they shall be helped with water like molten brass, which
|
|
shall roast their faces:-an ill drink and an evil couch!
|
|
Verily, those who believe and act aright,-verily, we will not
|
|
waste the hire of him who does good works.
|
|
These, for them are gardens of Eden; beneath them rivers flow;
|
|
they shall be adorned therein with bracelets of gold, and shall wear
|
|
green robes of silk, and of brocade; reclining therein on
|
|
thrones;-pleasant is the reward, and goodly the couch!
|
|
Strike out for them a parable: Two men, for one of whom we made
|
|
two gardens of grapes, and surrounded them with palms, and put corn
|
|
between the two. Each of the two gardens brought forth its food and
|
|
did not fail in aught. And we caused a river to gush forth, amidst
|
|
them; and he had fruit, and said unto his fellow, who was his
|
|
next-door neighbour, 'I am more wealthy than thee, and mightier of
|
|
household.'
|
|
And he went in unto his garden, having wronged himself: said he,
|
|
'I do not think that this will ever disappear; and I do not think that
|
|
the hour is imminent; and if even I be sent back unto my Lord, I shall
|
|
find a better one than it in exchange.'
|
|
Said unto him his fellow, who was his next-door neighbour, 'Thou
|
|
hast disbelieved in Him who created thee from earth, and then from a
|
|
clot, then fashioned thee a man; but God, He is my Lord; nor will I
|
|
associate any one with my Lord. Why couldst- thou not have said,
|
|
when thou didst go into thy garden, "What God pleases! there is no
|
|
power save in God,"-to look at, I am less than thee in wealth and
|
|
children; but haply my Lord will give me something better than thy
|
|
garden, and will send upon it thunder-claps from the sky, and it shall
|
|
be on the morrow bare slippery soil; or on the morrow its water may be
|
|
deeply sunk, so that thou canst not get thereat.
|
|
And his fruits were encompassed, and on the morrow he turned down
|
|
the palms of his hands for what he had spent thereon, for it was
|
|
fallen down upon its trellises. And he said, 'Would that I had never
|
|
associated any one with my Lord!' And he had-not any party to help him
|
|
beside God, nor was helped. In such a case the patronage is God's, the
|
|
true; He is best at rewarding and best at bringing to an issue.
|
|
Strike out for them, too, a parable of the life of this world;
|
|
like water which we send down from the sky, and the vegetation of
|
|
the earth is mingled therewith;-and on the morrow it is dried up,
|
|
and the winds scatter it; for God is powerful over all.
|
|
Wealth and children are an adornment of the life of this world;
|
|
but enduring good works are better with thy Lord, as a recompense, and
|
|
better as a hope.
|
|
And the day when we will move the mountains, and thou shalt see
|
|
the (whole) earth stalking forth; and we will gather them, and will
|
|
not leave one of them behind. Then shall they be presented to thy Lord
|
|
in ranks.-Now have ye come to us as we created you at first! nay,
|
|
but ye thought that we would never make our promise good!
|
|
And the Book shall be placed, and thou shalt see the sinners in fear
|
|
of what is in it; and they will say, 'Alas, for us! what ails this
|
|
Book, it leaves neither small nor great things alone, without
|
|
numbering them?' and they shall find present what they have done;
|
|
and thy Lord will not wrong any one.
|
|
And when we said to the angels, Adore Adam,' they adored him, save
|
|
only Iblis, who was of the ginn, who revolted from the bidding of
|
|
his Lord. 'What! will ye then take him and his seed as patrons, rather
|
|
than me, when they are foes of yours? bad for the wrong-doers is the
|
|
exchange,'
|
|
I did not make them witnesses of the creation of the heavens and the
|
|
earth, nor of the creation of themselves, nor did I take those who
|
|
lead astray for my supporters.
|
|
On the day when He shall say, 'Call ye my partners whom ye pretend:'
|
|
and they shall call on them, but they shall not answer them; and we
|
|
will set the vale of perdition between them; and the sinners shall see
|
|
the fire, and shall think that they are going to fall therein, and
|
|
shall find no escape therefrom. We have turned about in this Koran for
|
|
men every parable; but man is ever at most things a caviller.
|
|
Naught prevented men from believing when the guidance came to
|
|
them, or from asking pardon of their Lord, except the coming on them
|
|
of the course of those of yore, or the coming of the torment before
|
|
their eyes.
|
|
We sent not prophets save as heralds of glad tidings and as warners;
|
|
but those who misbelieve wrangle with vain speech to make void the
|
|
truth therewith; and they take my signs and the warnings given them as
|
|
a jest.
|
|
Who is more unjust than he who, being reminded of the signs of his
|
|
Lord, turns away therefrom, and forgets what his hands have done
|
|
before? verily, we will place veils upon their hearts lest they should
|
|
understand, and dulness in their ears!
|
|
And if thou shouldst call them to the guidance, they will not be
|
|
guided then for ever.
|
|
But thy Lord is forgiving, endowed with mercy; were He to punish
|
|
them for what they have earned He would have hastened for them the
|
|
torment. Nay rather, they have their appointed time, and shall never
|
|
find a refuge beside Him.
|
|
These cities, we destroyed them when they were unjust; and for their
|
|
destruction we set an appointed time.
|
|
And when Moses said to his servant, 'I will not cease until I
|
|
reach the confluence of the two seas, or else I will go on for years.'
|
|
But when they reached the confluence of the two they forgot their
|
|
fish, and it took its way in the sea with a free course.
|
|
And when they had passed by, he said to his servant, 'Bring us our
|
|
dinners, for we have met with toil from this journey of ours.' Said
|
|
he, 'What thinkest thou? when we resorted to the rock, then, verily, I
|
|
forgot the fish, but it was only Satan who made me forget it, lest I
|
|
should remember it; and it took its way in the sea wondrously!'
|
|
Said he, 'This is what we were searching for.' So they turned back
|
|
upon their footsteps, following them up.
|
|
Then they found a servant of our servants, to whom we had given
|
|
mercy from ourselves, and had taught him knowledge from before us.
|
|
Said Moses to him, 'Shall I follow thee, so that thou mayest teach me,
|
|
from what thou hast been taught, the right way?' said he, 'Verily,
|
|
thou canst never have patience with me. How canst thou be patient in
|
|
what thou comprehendest no knowledge of?' He said, 'Thou wilt find me,
|
|
if God will, patient; nor will I rebel against thy bidding.' He
|
|
said, 'Then, if thou followest me, ask me not about anything until I
|
|
begin for them the mention of it.'
|
|
So they set out until when they rode in the bark, he scuttled it.
|
|
Said he, 'Hast thou scuttled it to drown its crew? Thou hast
|
|
produced a strange thing.'
|
|
Said he, 'Did I not tell thee, verily, thou canst never have
|
|
patience with me?'
|
|
Said he, 'Rebuke me not for forgetting, and impose not on me a
|
|
difficult command.' So they set out until they met a boy, and he
|
|
killed him. And he (Moses) said, 'Hast thou killed a pure person
|
|
without (his killing) a person? thou hast produced an unheard-of
|
|
thing.'
|
|
Said he, 'Did I not tell thee, verily, thou canst not have
|
|
patience with me?'
|
|
Said he, 'If I ask thee about anything after it, then do not
|
|
accompany me. Now hast thou arrived at my excuse.' So they set out
|
|
until when they came to the people of a city; and they asked the
|
|
people thereof for food; but they refused to entertain them. And
|
|
they found therein a wall which wanted to fall to pieces, and he set
|
|
it upright. Said (Moses), 'Hadst thou pleased thou mightst certainly
|
|
have had a hire for this.'
|
|
Said he, 'This is the parting between me and thee. I will give
|
|
thee the interpretation of that with which thou couldst not have
|
|
patience. As for the bark it belonged to poor people, who toiled on
|
|
the sea, and I wished to damage it, for behind it was a king who
|
|
seized on every bark by force. And as for the youth, his parents
|
|
were believers, and we feared lest he should impose upon them
|
|
rebellion and misbelief So we desired that their Lord would give
|
|
them in exchange a better one than him in purity, and nearer in filial
|
|
affection. And as for the wall, it belonged to two orphan youths in
|
|
the city, and beneath it was a treasure belonging to them both, and
|
|
their father was a righteous man, and their Lord desired that they
|
|
should reach puberty, and then take out their treasure as a mercy from
|
|
thy Lord; and I did it not on my own bidding. That is the
|
|
interpretation of what thou couldst not have patience with.'
|
|
And they will ask thee about DHU 'I Qarnain, say, 'I will recite
|
|
to you a mention of him; verily, we stablished for him in the earth,
|
|
and we gave him a way to everything; and he followed a way until
|
|
when he reached the setting of the sun, he found it setting in a black
|
|
muddy spring and he found thereat a people.'
|
|
We said, 'O DHU 'l Qarnain! thou mayest either torment these people,
|
|
or treat them well.' Said he, 'As for him who does wrong, I will
|
|
torment him, then shall he be sent back to his Lord, and He will
|
|
torment him with an unheard-of torment; but as for him who believes
|
|
and acts aright, for him is an excellent reward, and we will tell
|
|
him our easy bidding.'
|
|
Then he followed a way until when he reached the rising of the
|
|
sun, he found it rise upon a people to whom we had given no shelter
|
|
therefrom.
|
|
So! And we comprehended the knowledge of what (forces) he had with
|
|
him.
|
|
Then he followed a way until when he reached the point between the
|
|
two mountains, he found below them both a people who could scarcely
|
|
under-stand speech. They said, 'O DHU 'l Qarnain! verily, Yagug and
|
|
Magug are doing evil in the land. Shall we then pay thee tribute, on
|
|
condition that thou set between us and them a rampart?' He said, 'What
|
|
my Lord hath established me in is better; so help me with strength,
|
|
and I will set between you and them a barrier.
|
|
'Bring me pigs of iron until they fill up the space between the
|
|
two mountain sides.' Said he, 'Blow until it makes it a fire.' Said
|
|
he, 'Bring me, that I may pour over it, molten brass.' they could
|
|
not scale it, and they could not tunnel it.
|
|
Said he, 'This is a mercy from my Lord; but when the promise of my
|
|
Lord comes to pass, He will make it as dust, for the promise of my
|
|
Lord is true.'
|
|
And we left some of them to surge on that day over others, and the
|
|
trumpet will be blown, and we will gather them together.
|
|
And we will set forth hell on that day before the misbelievers,
|
|
whose eyes were veiled from my Reminder, and who were unable to
|
|
hear. What! did those who misbelieve reckon that they could take my
|
|
servants for patrons beside me? Verily, we have prepared hell for
|
|
the misbelievers to alight in!
|
|
Say, 'Shall we inform you of those who lose most by their works?
|
|
those who erred in their endeavours after the life of this world,
|
|
and who think they are doing good deeds.'
|
|
Those who misbelieve in the signs of their Lord and in meeting
|
|
Him, vain are their works; and we will not give them right weight on
|
|
the resurrection day. That is their reward,-hell! for that they
|
|
misbelieved and took my signs and my apostles as a mockery.
|
|
Verily, those who believe and act aright, for them are gardens of
|
|
Paradise to alight in, to dwell therein for aye, and they shall
|
|
crave no change therefrom.
|
|
Say, 'Were the sea ink for the words of my Lord, the sea would
|
|
surely fail before the words of my Lord fail; aye, though we brought
|
|
as much ink again!
|
|
Say, 'I am only a mortal like yourselves; I am inspired that your
|
|
God is only one God. Then let him who hopes to meet his Lord act
|
|
righteous acts, and join none in the service of his Lord.'
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF MARY
|
|
(XIX. Mecca.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
KAF HA YA AIN SAD. The mention of thy Lord's mercy to His servant
|
|
Zachariah, when he called on his Lord with a secret calling. Said
|
|
he, 'My Lord! verily, my bones are weak, and my head flares with
|
|
hoariness;-and I never was unfortunate in my prayers to Thee, my Lord!
|
|
But I fear my heirs after me, and my wife is barren; then grant me
|
|
from Thee a successor, to be my heir and the heir of the family of
|
|
Jacob, and make him, my Lord! acceptable.'
|
|
'O Zachariah! verily, we give thee glad tidings of a son, whose name
|
|
shall be John. We never made a namesake of his before.'
|
|
Said he, 'My Lord! how can I have a son, when my wife is barren, and
|
|
I have reached through old age to decrepitude?'
|
|
He said, 'Thus says thy Lord, It is easy for Me, for I created
|
|
thee at first when yet thou wast nothing.'
|
|
Said he, 'O my Lord! make for me a sign. He said, 'Thy sign is
|
|
that thou shalt not speak to men for three nights (though) sound.'
|
|
Then he went forth unto his people from the chamber, and he made
|
|
signs to them: 'Celebrate (God's) praises morning and evening!'
|
|
O John! take the Book with strength; and we gave him judgment when a
|
|
boy, and grace from us, and purity; and he was pious and righteous
|
|
to his parents, and was not a rebellious tyrant.
|
|
So peace upon him the day he was born, and the day he died, and
|
|
the day he shall be raised up alive.
|
|
And mention, in the Book, Mary; when she retired from her family
|
|
into an eastern place; and she took a veil (to screen herself) from
|
|
them; and we sent unto her our spirit; and he took for her the
|
|
semblance of a well-made man. Said she, 'Verily, I take refuge in
|
|
the Merciful One from thee, if thou art pious.' Said he, 'I am only
|
|
a messenger of thy Lord to bestow on thee a pure boy.'
|
|
Said she, 'How can I have a boy when no man has touched me, and when
|
|
I am no harlot?' He said, 'Thus says thy Lord, It is easy for Me!
|
|
and we will make him a sign unto man, and a mercy from us; for it is a
|
|
decided matter.'
|
|
So she conceived him, and she retired with him into a remote
|
|
place. And the labour pains came upon her at the trunk of a palm tree,
|
|
and she said, 'O that I had died before this, and been forgotten out
|
|
of mind!' and he called to her from beneath her 'Grieve not, for thy
|
|
Lord has placed a stream beneath thy feet, and shake towards thee
|
|
the trunk of the palm tree, it will drop upon thee fresh dates fit
|
|
to gather; so eat, and drink, and cheer thine eye; and if thou
|
|
shouldst see any mortal say, "Verily, I have vowed to the Merciful One
|
|
a fast, and I will not speak to-day with a human being."'
|
|
Then she brought it to her people, carrying it; said they, 'O
|
|
Mary! thou hast done an extraordinary thing! O sister of Aaron! thy
|
|
father was not a bad man, nor was thy mother a harlot!'
|
|
And she pointed to him, and they said, 'How are we to speak with one
|
|
who is in the cradle a child?' He said, 'Verily, I am a servant of
|
|
God; He has brought me the Book, and He has made me a prophet, and
|
|
He has made me blessed wherever I be; and He has required of me prayer
|
|
and almsgiving so long as I live, and piety towards my mother, and has
|
|
not made me a miserable tyrant; and peace upon me the day I was
|
|
born, and the day I die, and the day I shall be raised up alive.'
|
|
That is, Jesus the son of Mary,-by the word of truth whereon ye do
|
|
dispute!
|
|
God could not take to himself any son! celebrated be His praise!
|
|
when He decrees a matter He only says to it, 'BE,' and it is; and,
|
|
verily, God is my Lord and your Lord, so worship Him; this is the
|
|
right way.
|
|
And the parties have disagreed amongst themselves, but woe to
|
|
those who disbelieve, from the witnessing of the mighty day! they
|
|
can hear and they can see, on the day when they shall come to us;
|
|
but the evildoers are to-day in obvious error!
|
|
And warn them of the day of sighing, when the matter is decreed
|
|
while they are heedless, and while they do not believe.
|
|
Verily, we will inherit the earth and all who are upon it, and
|
|
unto us shall they return!
|
|
And mention, in the Book, Abraham; verily, he was a confessor,-a
|
|
prophet. When he said to his father, 'O my sire! why dost thou worship
|
|
what can neither hear nor see nor avail thee aught? O my sire! verily,
|
|
to me has come knowledge which has not come to thee; then follow me,
|
|
and I will guide thee to a level way.
|
|
O my sire! serve not Satan; verily, Satan is ever a rebel against
|
|
the Merciful. O my sire! verily, I fear that there may touch thee
|
|
torment from the Merciful, and that thou mayest be a client of Satan.'
|
|
Said he, 'What! art thou averse from my gods, O Abraham? verily,
|
|
if thou dost not desist I will certainly stone thee; but get thee gone
|
|
from me for a time!'
|
|
Said he, 'Peace be upon thee! I will ask forgiveness for thee from
|
|
my Lord; verily, He is very gracious to me: but I will part from you
|
|
and what ye call on beside God, and will pray my Lord that I be not
|
|
unfortunate in my prayer to my Lord.'
|
|
And when he had parted from them and what they served beside God, we
|
|
granted him Isaac and Jacob, and each of them we made a prophet; and
|
|
we granted them of our mercy, and we made the tongue of truth lofty
|
|
for them.
|
|
And mention, in the Book, Moses; verily, he was sincere, and was
|
|
an apostle,-a prophet. We called him from the right side of the
|
|
mountain; and we made him draw nigh unto us to commune with him, and
|
|
we granted him, of our mercy, his brother Aaron as a prophet.
|
|
And mention, in the Book, Ishmael; verily, he was true to his
|
|
promise, and was an apostle, a prophet; and he used to bid his
|
|
people prayers and almsgiving, and was acceptable in the sight of
|
|
his Lord.
|
|
And mention, in the Book, Idris; verily, he was a confessor,-a
|
|
prophet; and we raised him to a lofty place.
|
|
These are those to whom God has been gracious, of the prophets of
|
|
the seed of Adam, and of those whom we bore with Noah, and of the seed
|
|
of Abraham and Israel, and of those we guided and elected; when the
|
|
signs of the Merciful are read to them, they fall down adoring and
|
|
weeping.
|
|
And successors succeeded them, who lost sight of prayer and followed
|
|
lusts, but they shall at length find themselves going wrong, except
|
|
such as repent and believe and act aright; for these shall enter
|
|
Paradise and shall not be wronged at all,-gardens of Eden, which the
|
|
Merciful has promised to His servants in the unseen; verily, His
|
|
promise ever comes to pass!
|
|
They shall hear no empty talk therein, but only peace;' and they
|
|
shall have their provision therein, morning and evening; that is
|
|
Paradise which we will give for an inheritance to those of our
|
|
servants who are pious!
|
|
We do not descend save at the bidding of thy Lord; His is what is
|
|
before us, and what is behind us, and what is between those; for thy
|
|
Lord is never forgetful,-the Lord of the heavens and the earth, and of
|
|
what is between the two; then serve Him and persevere in His
|
|
service. Dost thou know a namesake of His?
|
|
Man will say, 'What! when I have died shall I then come forth alive?
|
|
Does not man then remember that we created him before when he was
|
|
naught?'
|
|
And by thy Lord! we will surely gather them together, and the devils
|
|
too; then we will surely bring them forward around hell, on their
|
|
knees!
|
|
Then we will drag off from every sect whichever of them has been
|
|
most bold against the Merciful.
|
|
Then we know best which of them deserves most to be broiled therein.
|
|
There is not one of you who will not go down to it,-that is
|
|
settled and decided by thy Lord.
|
|
Then we will save those who fear us; but we will leave the evildoers
|
|
therein on their knees.
|
|
And when our signs are recited to them manifest, those who
|
|
misbelieve say to those who believe, 'Which of the two parties is best
|
|
placed and in the best company?'
|
|
And how many generations before them have we destroyed who were
|
|
better off in property and appearance?
|
|
Say, 'Whosoever is in error, let the Merciful extend to him length
|
|
of days!-until they see what they are threatened with, whether it be
|
|
the torment or whether it be the Hour, then they shall know who is
|
|
worse placed and weakest in forces!'
|
|
And those who are guided God will increase in guidance.
|
|
And enduring good works are best with thy Lord for a reward, and
|
|
best for restoration.
|
|
Hast thou seen him who disbelieves in our signs, and says, 'I
|
|
shall surely be given wealth and children?'
|
|
Has he become acquainted with the unseen, or has he taken a
|
|
compact with the Merciful? Not so! We will write down what he says,
|
|
and we will extend to him a length of torment, and we will make him
|
|
inherit what he says, and he shall come to us alone. They take other
|
|
gods besides God to be their glory. Not so! They shall deny their
|
|
worship and shall be opponents of theirs!
|
|
Dost thou not see that we have sent the devils against the
|
|
misbelievers, to drive them on to sin? but, be not thou hasty with
|
|
them. Verily, we will number them a number (of days),-the day when
|
|
we will gather the pious to the Merciful as ambassadors, and we will
|
|
drive the sinners to hell like (herds) to water! They shall not
|
|
possess intercession, save he who has taken a compact with the
|
|
Merciful.
|
|
They say, 'The Merciful has taken to Himself a son:'-ye have brought
|
|
a monstrous thing! The heavens well-nigh burst asunder thereat, and
|
|
the earth is riven, and the mountains fall down broken, that they
|
|
attribute to the Merciful a son! but it becomes not the Merciful to
|
|
take to Himself a son! there is none in the heavens or the earth but
|
|
comes to the Merciful as a servant; He counts them and numbers them by
|
|
number, and they are all coming to Him on the resurrection day singly.
|
|
Verily, those who believe and act aright, to them the Merciful
|
|
will give love.
|
|
We have only made it easy for thy tongue that thou mayest thereby
|
|
give glad tidings to the pious, and warn thereby a contentious people.
|
|
How many a generation before them have we destroyed? Canst thou find
|
|
any one of them, or hear a whisper of them?
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF TA HA
|
|
(XX. Mecca.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
TA HA. We have not sent down this Koran to thee that thou shouldst
|
|
be wretched; only as a reminder to him who fears-descending from Him
|
|
who created the earth and the high heavens, the Merciful settled on
|
|
the throne! His are what is in the heavens, and what is in the
|
|
earth, and what is between the two, and what is beneath the ground!
|
|
And if thou art public in thy speech-yet, verily, he knows the secret,
|
|
and more hidden still.
|
|
God, there is no god but He! His are the excellent names.
|
|
Has the story of Moses come to thee? When he saw the fire and said
|
|
to his family, 'Tarry ye; verily, I perceive a fire! Haply I may bring
|
|
you therefrom a brand, or may find guidance by the fire.' And when
|
|
he came to it he was called to, 'O Moses! verily, I am thy Lord, so
|
|
take off thy sandals; verily, thou art in the holy valley Tuva, and
|
|
I have chosen thee. So listen to what is inspired thee; verily, I am
|
|
God, there is no god but Me! then serve Me, and be steadfast in prayer
|
|
to remember Me.
|
|
'Verily, the hour is coming, I almost make it appear, that every
|
|
soul may be recompensed for its efforts.
|
|
'Let not then him who believes not therein and follows his lusts
|
|
ever turn thee away therefrom, and thou be ruined.
|
|
'What is that in thy right hand, O Moses?'
|
|
Said he, 'It is my staff on which I lean, and wherewith I beat
|
|
down leaves for my flocks, and for which I have other uses.'
|
|
Said He, 'Throw it down, O Moses!' and he threw it down, and behold!
|
|
it was a snake that moved about.
|
|
Said He, 'Take hold of it and fear not; we will restore it to its
|
|
first state.
|
|
'But press thy hand to thy side, it shall come forth white without
|
|
harm,-another sign! to show thee of our great signs!
|
|
'Go unto Pharaoh, verily, he is outrageous!'
|
|
Said he, 'My Lord! expand for me my breast; and make what I am
|
|
bidden easy to me; and loose the knot from my tongue, that they may
|
|
understand my speech; and make for me a minister from my people,-Aaron
|
|
my brother; gird up my loins through him, and join him with me in
|
|
the affair; that we may celebrate Thy praises much and remember Thee
|
|
much.
|
|
Verily, Thou dost ever behold us!'
|
|
He said, 'Thou art granted thy request, O Moses! and we have already
|
|
shown favours unto thee at another time. When we inspired thy mother
|
|
with what we inspired her, "Hurl him into the ark, and hurl him into
|
|
the sea; and the sea shall cast him on the shore, and an enemy of mine
|
|
and of his shall take him;"-for on thee have I cast my love, that thou
|
|
mayest be formed under my eye. When thy sister walked on and said,
|
|
"Shall I guide you to one who will take charge of him?" And we
|
|
restored thee to thy mother, that her eye might be cheered and that
|
|
she should not grieve. And thou didst slay a person and we saved
|
|
thee from the trouble, and we tried thee with various trials. And thou
|
|
didst tarry for years amongst the people of Midian; then thou didst
|
|
come (hither) at (our) decree, O Moses! And I have chosen thee for
|
|
myself. Go, thou and thy brother, with my signs, and be not remiss
|
|
in remembering me. Go ye both to Pharaoh; verily, he is outrageous!
|
|
and speak to him a gentle speech, haply he may be mindful or may
|
|
fear.'
|
|
They two said, 'Our Lord! verily, we fear that he may trespass
|
|
against us, or that he may be outrageous.'
|
|
He said, 'Fear not; verily, I am with you twain. I hear and see!
|
|
'So come ye to him and say, "Verily, we are the apostles of thy
|
|
Lord; send then the children of Israel with us; and do not torment
|
|
them. We have brought thee a sign from thy Lord, and peace be upon him
|
|
who follows the guidance!
|
|
'"Verily, we are inspired that the torment will surely come upon him
|
|
who calls us liars and turns his back."'
|
|
Said he, 'And who is your Lord, O Moses?'
|
|
He said, 'Our Lord is He who gave everything its creation, then
|
|
guided it.'
|
|
Said he, 'And what of the former generations?'
|
|
He said, 'The knowledge of them is with my Lord in a book; my Lord
|
|
misleads not, nor forgets!
|
|
Who made for you the earth a bed; and has traced for you paths
|
|
therein; and has sent down from the sky water,-and we have brought
|
|
forth thereby divers sorts of different vegetables. Eat and pasture
|
|
your cattle therefrom; verily, in that are signs to those endued
|
|
with intelligence. From it have we created you and into it will we
|
|
send you back, and from it will we bring you forth another time.'
|
|
We did show him our signs, all of them, but he called them lies
|
|
and did refuse.
|
|
Said he, 'Hast thou come to us, to turn us out of our land with
|
|
thy magic, O Moses? Then we will bring you magic like it; and we
|
|
will make between us and thee an appointment; we will not break it,
|
|
nor do thou either;-a fair place.'
|
|
Said he, 'Let your appointment be for the day of adornment and let
|
|
the people assemble in the forenoon.'
|
|
But Pharaoh turned his back, and collected his tricks, and then he
|
|
came.
|
|
Said Moses to them, 'Woe to you! do not forge against God a lie;
|
|
lest He destroy you by torment; for disappointed has ever been he
|
|
who has forged.'
|
|
And they argued their matter among themselves; and secretly talked
|
|
it over.
|
|
Said they, 'These twain 'are certainly two magicians, who wish to
|
|
turn you out of your land by their magic, and to remove your most
|
|
exemplary doctrine. Collect therefore your tricks, and then form a
|
|
row; for he is prosperous to-day who has the upper hand.'
|
|
Said they, 'O Moses! either thou must throw, or we must be the first
|
|
to throw.'
|
|
He said, 'Nay, throw ye!' and lo! their ropes and their staves
|
|
appeared to move along. And Moses felt a secret fear within his soul.
|
|
Said we, 'Fear not! thou shalt have the upper hand. Throw down
|
|
what is in thy right hand; and it shall devour what they have made.
|
|
Verily, what they have made is but a magician's trick; and no magician
|
|
shall prosper wherever he comes.'
|
|
And the magicians were cast down in adoration; said they, 'We
|
|
believe in the Lord of Aaron and of Moses!'
|
|
Said he, 'Do ye believe in Him before I give you leave? Verily, he
|
|
is your master who taught you magic! Therefore will I surely cut off
|
|
your hands and feet on alternate sides, and I will surely crucify
|
|
you on the trunks of palm trees; and ye shall surely know which of
|
|
us is keenest at torment and more lasting.'
|
|
Said they, 'We will never prefer thee to what has come to us of
|
|
manifest signs, and to Him who originated us. Decide then what thou
|
|
canst decide; thou canst only decide in the life of this world!
|
|
Verily, we believe in our Lord, that He may pardon us our sins, and
|
|
the magic thou hast forced us to use; and God is better and more
|
|
lasting!'
|
|
Verily, he who comes to his Lord a sinner,-verily, for him is
|
|
hell; he shall not die therein, and shall not live.
|
|
But he who comes to Him a believer who has done aright-these, for
|
|
them are the highest ranks,-gardens of Eden beneath which rivers flow,
|
|
to dwell therein for aye; for that is the reward of him who keeps
|
|
pure.
|
|
And we inspired Moses, 'Journey by night with my servants, and
|
|
strike out for them a dry road in the sea. Fear not pursuit, nor be
|
|
afraid!' Then Pharaoh followed them with his armies, and there
|
|
overwhelmed them of the sea that which overwhelmed them. And Pharaoh
|
|
and his people went astray and were not guided.
|
|
O children of Israel! We have saved you from your enemy; and we made
|
|
an appointment with you on the right side of the mount; and we sent
|
|
down upon you the manna and the quails. 'Eat of the good things we
|
|
have provided you with, and do not exceed therein, lest my wrath light
|
|
upon you; for whomsoever my wrath lights upon he falls!
|
|
'Yet am I forgiving unto him who repents and believes and does
|
|
right, and then is guided.
|
|
'But what has hastened thee on away from thy people, O Moses?'
|
|
He said, 'They were here upon my track and I hastened on to Thee, my
|
|
Lord! that thou mightest be pleased.'
|
|
Said He, 'Verily, we have tried thy people, since thou didst
|
|
leave, and es Samariy has led them astray.'
|
|
And Moses returned to his people, wrathful, grieving!
|
|
Said he, 'O my people! did not your Lord promise you a good promise?
|
|
Has the time seemed too long for you, or do you desire that wrath
|
|
should light on you from your Lord, that ye have broken your promise
|
|
to me?'
|
|
They said, 'We have not broken our promise to thee of our own
|
|
accord. But we were made to carry loads of the ornaments of the
|
|
people, and we hurled them down, and so did es Samariy cast; and he
|
|
brought forth for the people a corporeal calf which lowed.' And they
|
|
said, 'This is your god and the god of Moses, but he has forgotten!'
|
|
What! do they not see that it does not return them any speech, and
|
|
cannot control for them harm or profit? Aaron too told them before, 'O
|
|
my people! ye are only being tried thereby; and, verily, your Lord
|
|
is the Merciful, so follow me and obey my bidding.'
|
|
They said, 'We will not cease to pay devotion to it until Moses come
|
|
back to us.'
|
|
Said he, 'O Aaron! what prevented thee, when thou didst see them
|
|
go astray, from following me? Hast thou then rebelled against my
|
|
bidding?
|
|
Said he, 'O son of my mother! seize me not by my beard, or my
|
|
head! Verily, I feared lest thou shouldst say, "Thou hast made a
|
|
division amongst the children of Israel, and hast not observed my
|
|
word."'
|
|
Said he, 'What was thy design, O Samariy?' Said he, 'I beheld what
|
|
they beheld not, and I grasped a handful from the footprint of the
|
|
messenger and cast it; for thus my soul induced me.'
|
|
Said he, 'Then get thee gone; verily, it shall be thine in life to
|
|
say, "Touch me not!" and, verily, for thee there is a threat which
|
|
thou shalt surely never alter. But look at thy god to which thou
|
|
wert just now devout; we will surely burn it, and then we will scatter
|
|
it in scattered pieces in the sea.
|
|
'Your God is only God who,-there is no god but He,-He embraceth
|
|
everything in His knowledge.'
|
|
Thus do we narrate to thee the history of what has gone before,
|
|
and we have brought thee a reminder from us.
|
|
Whoso turns therefrom, verily, he shall bear on the resurrection day
|
|
a burden:-for them to bear for aye, and evil for them on the
|
|
resurrection day will it be to bear.
|
|
On the day when the trumpet shall be blown, and we will gather the
|
|
sinners in that day blue-eyed.
|
|
They shall whisper to each other, 'Ye have only tarried ten days.'
|
|
We know best what they say, when the most exemplary of them in his way
|
|
shall say, 'Ye have only tarried a day.'
|
|
They will ask thee about the mountains; say, 'My Lord will scatter
|
|
them in scattered pieces, and He will leave them a level plain, thou
|
|
wilt see therein no crookedness or inequality.'
|
|
On that day they shall follow the caller in whom is no
|
|
crookedness; and the voices shall be hushed before the Merciful, and
|
|
thou shalt hear naught but a shuffling.
|
|
On that day shall no intercession be of any avail, save from such as
|
|
the Merciful permits, and who is acceptable to Him in speech.
|
|
He knows what is before them and what is behind them, but they do
|
|
not comprehend knowledge of Him.
|
|
Faces shall be humbled before the Living, the Self-subsistent; and
|
|
he who bears injustice is ever lost.
|
|
But he who does righteous acts and is a believer, he shall fear
|
|
neither wrong nor diminution.
|
|
Thus have we sent it down an Arabic Koran; and we have turned
|
|
about in it the threat,-haply they may fear, or it may cause them to
|
|
remember.
|
|
Exalted then be God, the king, the truth! Hasten not the Koran
|
|
before its inspiration is decided for thee; but say, 'O Lord! increase
|
|
me in knowledge.'
|
|
We did make a covenant with Adam of yore, but he forgot it, and we
|
|
found no firm purpose in him.
|
|
And when we said to the angels, 'Adore Adam,' they adored, save
|
|
Iblis, who refused. And we said, 'O Adam! verily, this is a foe to
|
|
thee and to thy wife; never then let him drive you twain forth from
|
|
the garden or thou wilt be wretched. Verily, thou hast not to be
|
|
hungry there, nor naked! and, verily, thou shalt not thirst therein,
|
|
nor feel the noonday heat!'
|
|
But the devil whispered to him. Said he, 'O Adam! shall I guide thee
|
|
to the tree of immortality, and a kingdom that shall not wane?'
|
|
And they eat therefrom, and their shame became apparent to them; and
|
|
they began to stitch upon themselves some leaves of the garden; and
|
|
Adam rebelled against his Lord, and went astray.
|
|
Then his Lord chose him, and relented towards him, and guided him.
|
|
Said he, 'Go down, ye twain, therefrom altogether, some of you foes to
|
|
the other. And if there should come to you from me a guidance; then
|
|
whoso follows my guidance shall neither err nor be wretched. But he
|
|
who turns away from my reminder, verily, for him shall be a straitened
|
|
livelihood; and we will gather him on the resurrection day blind!'
|
|
He shall say, 'My Lord! wherefore hast Thou gathered me blind when I
|
|
used to see?' He shall say, 'Our signs came to thee, and thou didst
|
|
forget them; thus to-day art thou forgotten!'
|
|
Thus do we recompense him who is extravagant and believes not in the
|
|
signs of his Lord; and the torment of the hereafter is keener and more
|
|
lasting!
|
|
Does it not occur to them how many generations we have destroyed
|
|
before them?- they walk in their very dwelling-places; verily, in that
|
|
are signs to those endued with intelligence.
|
|
And had it not been for thy Lord's word already passed (the
|
|
punishment) would have been inevitable and (at) an appointed time.
|
|
Bear patiently then what they say, and celebrate the praises of
|
|
thy Lord before the rising of the sun, and before its setting, and
|
|
at times in the night celebrate them; and at the ends of the day;
|
|
haply thou mayest please (Him).
|
|
And do not strain after what we have provided a few of them with-the
|
|
flourish of the life of this world, to try them by; but the
|
|
provision of thy Lord is better and more lasting.
|
|
Bid thy people prayer, and persevere in it; we do not ask thee to
|
|
provide. We will provide, and the issue shall be to piety.
|
|
They say, 'Unless he bring us a sign from his Lord-What! has there
|
|
not come to them the manifest sign of what was in the pages of yore?'
|
|
But had we destroyed them with torment before it, they would have
|
|
said, 'Unless Thou hadst sent to us an apostle, that we might follow
|
|
Thy signs before we were abased and put to shame.'
|
|
Say, Each one has to wait, so wait ye! but in the end ye shall
|
|
know who are the fellows of the level way, and who are guided!'
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF THE PROPHETS
|
|
(XXI. Mecca.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
Their reckoning draws nigh to men, yet in heedlessness they turn
|
|
aside.
|
|
No reminder comes to them from their Lord of late, but they listen
|
|
while they mock, and their hearts make sport thereof! And those who do
|
|
wrong discourse secretly (saying), 'Is this man aught but a mortal
|
|
like yourselves? will ye accede to magic, while ye can see?'
|
|
Say, 'My Lord knows what is said in the heavens and the earth, He
|
|
hears and knows!'
|
|
'Nay!' they say, '-a jumble of dreams; nay! he has forged it; nay!
|
|
he is a poet; but let him bring us a sign as those of yore were sent.'
|
|
No city before them which we destroyed believed-how will they
|
|
believe? Nor did we send before them any but men whom we inspired? Ask
|
|
ye the people of the Scriptures if ye do not know. Nor did we make
|
|
them bodies not to eat food, nor were they immortal. Yet we made our
|
|
promise to them good, and we saved them and whom we pleased; but we
|
|
destroyed those who committed excesses.
|
|
We have sent down to you a book in which is a reminder for you; have
|
|
ye then no sense?
|
|
How many a city which had done wrong have we broken up, and raised
|
|
up after it another people! And when they perceived our violence
|
|
they ran away from it. 'Run not away, but return to what ye
|
|
delighted in, and to your dwellings! haply ye will be questioned.'
|
|
Said they, 'O woe is us! verily, we were wrong-doers.'
|
|
And that ceased not to be their cry until we made them mown
|
|
down,-smouldering out!
|
|
We did not create the heaven and the earth and what is between the
|
|
two in play. Had we wished to take to a sport, we would have taken
|
|
to one from before ourselves; had we been bent on doing so. Nay, we
|
|
hurl the truth against falsehood and it crashes into it, and lo! it
|
|
vanishes, but woe to you for what ye attribute (to God)!
|
|
His are whosoever are in the heavens and the earth, and those who
|
|
are with Him are not too big with pride for His service, nor do they
|
|
weary. They celebrate His praises by night and day without
|
|
intermission. Or have they taken gods from the earth who can raise
|
|
up (the dead)?
|
|
Were there in both (heaven and earth) gods beside God, both would
|
|
surely have been corrupted. Celebrated then be the praise of God,
|
|
the Lord of the throne, above what they ascribe!
|
|
He shall not be questioned concerning what He does, but they shall
|
|
be questioned.
|
|
Have they taken gods beside Him? Say, 'Bring your proofs. This is
|
|
the reminder of those who are with me, and of those who were before
|
|
me.' Nay, most of them know not the truth, and they do turn aside.
|
|
We have not sent any prophet before thee, but we inspired him
|
|
that, 'There is no god but Me, so serve ye Me.'
|
|
And they say, 'The Merciful has taken a son; celebrated be His
|
|
praise!'-Nay, honoured servants; they do not speak until He speaks;
|
|
but at His bidding do they act. He knows what is before them, and what
|
|
is behind them, and they shall not intercede except for him whom He is
|
|
pleased with; and they shrink through fear.
|
|
And whoso of them should say, 'Verily, I am god instead of Him,'
|
|
such a one we recompense with hell; thus do we recompense the
|
|
wrong-doers.
|
|
Do not those who misbelieve see that the heavens and the earth
|
|
were both solid, and we burst them asunder; and we made from water
|
|
every living thing-will they then not believe?
|
|
And we placed on the earth firm mountains lest it should move with
|
|
them, and He made therein open roads for paths, haply they may be
|
|
guided! and we made the heaven a guarded roof; yet from our signs they
|
|
turn aside!
|
|
He it is who created the night and the day, and the sun and the
|
|
moon, each floating in a sky.
|
|
We never made for any mortal before thee immortality; what, if
|
|
thou shouldst die, will they live on for aye?
|
|
Every soul shall taste of death! we will test them with evil and
|
|
with good, as a trial; and unto us shall they return!
|
|
And when those who misbelieve see thee, they only take thee for a
|
|
jest, 'Is this he who mentions your gods?' Yet they at the mention
|
|
of the Merciful do disbelieve.
|
|
Man is created out of haste. I will show you my signs; but do not
|
|
hurry Me.
|
|
And they say, 'When will this threat (come to pass), if ye tell
|
|
the truth?'
|
|
Did those who misbelieve but know when the fire shall not be
|
|
warded off from their faces nor from their backs, and they shall not
|
|
be helped! Nay, it shall come on them suddenly, and shall
|
|
dumbfounder them, and they shall not be able to repel it, nor shall
|
|
they be respited.
|
|
Prophets before thee have been mocked at, but that whereat they
|
|
jested encompassed those who mocked.
|
|
Say, 'Who shall guard you by night and by day from the Merciful?'
|
|
Nay, but they from the mention of their Lord do turn aside.
|
|
Have they gods to defend them against us? These cannot help
|
|
themselves, nor shall they be abetted against us.
|
|
Nay, but we have granted enjoyment to these men and to their fathers
|
|
whilst life was prolonged. Do they not see that we come to the land
|
|
and shorten its borders? Shall they then prevail?
|
|
Say, 'I only warn you by inspiration;' but the deaf hear not the
|
|
call when they are warned. But if a blast of the torment of thy Lord
|
|
touches them, they will surely say, 'O, woe is us! verily, we were
|
|
wrong-doers!'
|
|
We will place just balances upon the resurrection day, and no soul
|
|
shall be wronged at all, even though it be the weight of a grain of
|
|
mustard seed, we will bring it; for we are good enough at reckoning
|
|
up.
|
|
We did give to Moses and Aaron the Discrimination, and a light and a
|
|
reminder to those who fear; who are afraid of their Lord in secret;
|
|
and who at the Hour do shrink.
|
|
This is a blessed reminder which we have sent down, will ye then
|
|
deny it?
|
|
And we gave Abraham a right direction before; for about him we knew.
|
|
When he said to his father and to his people, 'What are these images
|
|
to which ye pay devotion?' Said they, 'We found our fathers serving
|
|
them.' Said he, 'Both you and your fathers have been in obvious
|
|
error.' They said, 'Dost thou come to us with the truth, or art thou
|
|
but of those who play?'
|
|
He said, 'Nay, but your Lord is Lord of the heavens and the earth,
|
|
which He originated; and I am of those who testify to this; and, by
|
|
God! I will plot against your idols after ye have turned and shown
|
|
me your backs!'
|
|
So he brake them all in pieces, except a large one they had; that
|
|
haply they might refer it to that.
|
|
Said they, 'Who has done this with our gods? verily, he is of the
|
|
wrong-doers!' They said, 'We heard a youth mention them who is
|
|
called Abraham.'
|
|
Said they, 'Then bring him before the eyes of men; haply they will
|
|
bear witness.'
|
|
Said they, 'Was it thou who did this to our gods, O Abraham?' Said
|
|
he, 'Nay, it was this largest of them; but ask them, if they can
|
|
speak.'
|
|
Then they came to themselves and said, 'Verily, ye are the
|
|
wrong-doers.' Then they turned upside down again: 'Thou knewest that
|
|
these cannot speak.'
|
|
Said he, 'Will ye then serve, beside God, what cannot profit you
|
|
at all, nor harm you? fie upon you, and what ye serve beside God! have
|
|
ye then no sense?'
|
|
Said they, 'Burn him, and help your gods, if ye are going to do so!'
|
|
We said, 'O fire! be thou cool and a safety for Abraham!'
|
|
They desired to plot against him, but we made them the losers.
|
|
And we brought him and Lot safely to the land which we have
|
|
blessed for the world, and we bestowed upon him Isaac and Jacob as a
|
|
fresh gift, and each of them we made righteous persons; and we made
|
|
them high priests to guide (men) by our bidding, and we inspired
|
|
them to do good works, and to be steadfast in prayer, and to give
|
|
alms; and they did serve us.
|
|
And Lot, to him we gave judgment and knowledge, and we brought him
|
|
safely out of the city which had done vile acts; verily, they were a
|
|
people who wrought abominations! And we made him enter into our mercy;
|
|
verily, he was of the righteous!
|
|
And Noah, when he cried aforetime, and we answered him and saved him
|
|
and his people from the mighty trouble, and we helped him against
|
|
the people who said our signs were lies; verily, they were a bad
|
|
people, so we drowned them all together.
|
|
And David and Solomon, when they gave judgment concerning the field,
|
|
when some people's sheep had strayed therein at night; and we
|
|
testified to their judgment; and this we gave Solomon to understand.
|
|
To each of them we gave judgment and knowledge; and to David we
|
|
subjected the mountains to celebrate our praises, and the birds
|
|
too,-it was we who did it.
|
|
And we taught him the art of making coats of mail for you, to shield
|
|
you from each other's violence; are ye then grateful?
|
|
And to Solomon (we subjected) the wind blowing stormily, to run on
|
|
at his bidding to the land which we have blessed,-for all things did
|
|
we know,-and some devils to dive for him, and to do other works beside
|
|
that; and we kept guard over them.
|
|
And Job, when he cried to his Lord, 'As for me, harm has touched me,
|
|
but Thou art the most merciful of the merciful ones.' And we
|
|
answered him, and removed from him the distress that was upon him; and
|
|
we gave his family, and the like of them with them, as a mercy from
|
|
us, and a remembrance to those who serve us.
|
|
And Ishmael, and Idris, and DHU 'l Kifl, all of these were of the
|
|
patient: and we made them enter into our mercy; verily, they were
|
|
among the righteous.
|
|
And DHU 'nnun, when he went away in wrath and thought that we had no
|
|
power over him; and he cried out in the darkness, 'There is no god but
|
|
Thou, celebrated be Thy praise! Verily, I was of the evildoers!' And
|
|
we answered him, and saved him from the trouble. Thus do we save
|
|
believers!
|
|
And Zachariah, when he cried unto his Lord, 'O Lord! leave me not
|
|
alone; for thou art the best of heirs.' And we answered him, and
|
|
bestowed upon him John; and we made his wife right for him; verily,
|
|
these vied in good works, and called on us with longing and dread, and
|
|
were humble before us.
|
|
And she who guarded her private parts, and we breathed into her of
|
|
our Spirit, and we made her and her son a sign unto the worlds.
|
|
Verily, this your nation is one nation; and I am your Lord, so serve
|
|
me.
|
|
But they cut up their affair amongst themselves; they all shall
|
|
return to us; and he who acts and he who is a believer, there is no
|
|
denial of his efforts, for, verily, we will write them down for him.
|
|
There is a ban upon a city which we have destroyed that they shall
|
|
not return, until Yagug and Magug are let out, and they from every
|
|
hummock shall glide forth.
|
|
And the true promise draws nigh, and lo! they are staring-the eyes
|
|
of those who misbelieve! O, woe is us! we were heedless of this,
|
|
nay, we were wrong-doers!
|
|
Verily, ye, and what ye serve beside God, shall be the pebbles of
|
|
hell, to it shall ye go down!
|
|
Had these been God' they would not have gone down thereto: but all
|
|
shall dwell therein for aye; for them therein is groaning, but they
|
|
therein shall not be heard.
|
|
Verily, those for whom the good (reward) from us was
|
|
fore-ordained, they from it shall be kept far away; they shall not
|
|
hear the slightest sound thereof, and they in what their souls
|
|
desire shall dwell for aye. The greatest terror shall not grieve them;
|
|
and the angels shall meet them, (saying), 'This is your day which ye
|
|
were promised!'
|
|
The day when we will roll up the heavens as es-Sigill rolls up the
|
|
books; as we produced it at its first creation will we bring it back
|
|
again-a promise binding upon us; verily, we are going to do it. And
|
|
already have we written in the Psalms after the reminder that 'the
|
|
earth shall my righteous servants inherit.'
|
|
Verily, in this is preaching for a people who serve me!
|
|
We have only sent thee as a mercy to the worlds.
|
|
Say, 'I am only inspired that your God is one God; are ye then
|
|
resigned?' But if they turn their backs say, 'I have proclaimed
|
|
(war) against all alike, but I know not if what ye are threatened with
|
|
be near or far!'
|
|
Verily, He knows what is spoken openly, and He knows what ye hide.
|
|
I know not, haply it is a trial for you and a provision for a
|
|
season.
|
|
Say, 'My Lord! judge thou with truth! and our Lord is the Merciful
|
|
whom we ask for aid against what they ascribe!'
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF THE PILGRIMAGE
|
|
(XXII. Mecca.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
O ye folk! fear your Lord. Verily, the earthquake of the Hour is a
|
|
mighty thing.
|
|
On the day ye shall see it, every suckling woman shall be scared
|
|
away from that to which she gave suck; and every pregnant woman
|
|
shall lay down her load; and thou shalt see men drunken, though they
|
|
be not drunken: but the torment of God is severe.
|
|
And amongst men is one who wrangles about God without knowledge, and
|
|
follows every rebellious devil; against whom it is written down that
|
|
whoso takes him for a patron, verily, he will lead him astray, and
|
|
will guide him towards the torment of the blaze!
|
|
O ye folk! if ye are in doubt about the raising (of the
|
|
dead),-verily, we created you from earth, then from a clot, then
|
|
from congealed blood, then from a morsel, shaped or shapeless, that we
|
|
may explain to you. And we make what we please rest in the womb
|
|
until an appointed time; then we bring you forth babes; then let you
|
|
reach your full age; and of you are some who die; and of you are
|
|
some who are kept back till the most decrepit age, till he knows no
|
|
longer aught of knowledge. And ye see the earth parched, and when we
|
|
send down water on it, it stirs and swells, and brings forth herbs
|
|
of every beauteous kind.
|
|
That is because God, He is the truth, and because He quickens the
|
|
dead, and because He is mighty over all; and because the Hour is
|
|
coming, there is no doubt therein, and because God raises up those who
|
|
are in the tombs.
|
|
And amongst men is one who wrangles about God without knowledge or
|
|
guidance or an illuminating book; twisting his neck from the way of
|
|
God; for him is disgrace in this world, and we will make him taste,
|
|
upon the resurrection day, the torment of burning.
|
|
That is for what thy hands have done before, and for that God is not
|
|
unjust unto His servants.
|
|
'And amongst men is one who serves God (wavering) on a brink; and if
|
|
there befall him good, he is comforted; but if there befall him a
|
|
trial, he turns round again, and loses this world and the next-that is
|
|
an obvious loss. He calls, besides God, on what can neither harm him
|
|
nor profit him;-that is a wide error.
|
|
He calls on him whose harm is nigher than his profit,-a bad lord and
|
|
a bad comrade.
|
|
Verily, God makes those who believe and do aright enter into gardens
|
|
beneath which rivers flow; verily, God does what He will.
|
|
He who thinks that God will never help him in this world or the
|
|
next-let him stretch a cord to the roof and put an end to himself; and
|
|
let him cut it and see if his stratagem will remove what he is enraged
|
|
at.
|
|
Thus have we sent down manifest signs; for, verily, God guides
|
|
whom He will.
|
|
Verily, those who believe, and those who are Jews, and the Sabaeans,
|
|
and the Christians, and the Magians, and those who join other gods
|
|
with God, verily, God will decide between them on the resurrection
|
|
day; verily, God is witness over all.
|
|
Do they not see that God, whosoever is in the heavens adores Him,
|
|
and whosoever is in the earth, and the sun, and the moon, and the
|
|
stars, and the mountains, and the beasts, and many among men, though
|
|
many a one deserves the torments?
|
|
Whomsoever God abases there is none to honour him; verily, God
|
|
does what He pleases.
|
|
These are two disputants who dispute about their Lord, but those who
|
|
misbelieve, for them are cut out garments of fire, there shall be
|
|
poured over their heads boiling water, wherewith what is in their
|
|
bellies shall be dissolved and their skins too, and for them are maces
|
|
of iron. Whenever they desire to come forth therefrom through pain,
|
|
they are sent back into it: 'And taste ye the torment of the burning!'
|
|
Verily, God will make those who believe and do right enter into
|
|
gardens beneath which rivers flow; they shall be bedecked therein with
|
|
bracelets of gold and with pearls, and their garments therein shall be
|
|
of silk, and they shall be guided to the goodly speech, and they shall
|
|
be guided to the laudable way.
|
|
Verily, those who misbelieve and who turn men away from God's path
|
|
and the Sacred Mosque, which we have made for all men alike, the
|
|
dweller therein, and the stranger, and he who desires therein
|
|
profanation with injustice, we will make him taste grievous woe.
|
|
And when we established for Abraham the place of the House,
|
|
(saying), 'Associate naught with me, but cleanse my House for those
|
|
who make the circuits, for those who stand to pray, for those who bow,
|
|
and for those too who adore.
|
|
'And proclaim amongst men the Pilgrimage; let them come to you on
|
|
foot and on every slim camel, from every deep pass, that they may
|
|
witness advantages for them, and may mention the name of God for the
|
|
stated days over what God has provided them with of brute beasts, then
|
|
eat thereof and feed the badly off, the poor.
|
|
'Then let them finish the neglect of their persons, and let them pay
|
|
their vows and make the circuit round the old House.
|
|
'That do. And whoso magnifies the sacred things of God it is
|
|
better for him with his Lord.
|
|
'Cattle are lawful for you, except what is recited to you; and avoid
|
|
the abomination of idols, and avoid speaking falsely, being 'Hanifs to
|
|
God, not associating aught with Him; for he who associates aught
|
|
with God, it is as though he had fallen from heaven, and the birds
|
|
snatch him up, or the wind blows him away into a far distant place.
|
|
'That-and he who makes grand the symbols' of God, they come from
|
|
piety of heart.
|
|
'Therein have ye advantages for an appointed time, then the place
|
|
for sacrificing them is at the old House.'
|
|
To every nation have we appointed rites, to mention the name of
|
|
God over what He has provided them with of brute beasts; and your
|
|
God is one God, to Him then be resigned, and give glad tidings to
|
|
the lowly, whose hearts when God is mentioned are afraid, and to those
|
|
who are patient of what befalls them, and to those who are steadfast
|
|
in prayer and of what we have given them expend in alms.
|
|
The bulky (camels) we have made for you one of the symbols of God,
|
|
therein have ye good; so mention the name of God over them as they
|
|
stand in a row, and when they fall down (dead) eat of them, and feed
|
|
the easily contented and him who begs.
|
|
Thus have we subjected them to you; haply, ye may give thanks!
|
|
Their meat will never reach to God, nor yet their blood, but the
|
|
piety from you will reach to Him.
|
|
Thus hath He subjected them to you that ye may magnify God for
|
|
guiding you: and give thou glad tidings to those who do good.
|
|
Verily, God will defend those who believe; verily, God loves not any
|
|
misbelieving traitor.
|
|
Permission is given to those who fight because they have been
|
|
wronged,-and, verily, God to help them has the might,-who have been
|
|
driven forth from their homes undeservedly, only for that they said,
|
|
'Our Lord is God;' and were it not for God's repelling some men with
|
|
others, cloisters and churches and synagogues and mosques, wherein
|
|
God's name is mentioned much, would be destroyed. But God will
|
|
surely help him who helps Him; verily, God is powerful, mighty.
|
|
Who, if we stablish them in the earth, are steadfast in prayer,
|
|
and give alms, and bid what is right, and forbid what is wrong; and
|
|
God's is the future of affairs.
|
|
But if they call thee liar, the people of Noah called him liar
|
|
before them, as did 'Ad and Thamud, and the people of Abraham, and the
|
|
people of Lot, and the fellows of Midian; and Moses was called a
|
|
liar too: but I let the misbelievers range at large, and then I seized
|
|
on them, and how great was the change!
|
|
And how many a city have we destroyed while it yet did wrong, and it
|
|
was turned over on its roofs, and (how many) a deserted well and lofty
|
|
palace!
|
|
Have they not travelled on through the land? and have they not
|
|
hearts to understand with, or ears to hear with? for it is not their
|
|
eyes which are blind, but blind are the hearts which are within
|
|
their breasts.
|
|
They will bid thee hasten on the torment, but God will never fail in
|
|
his promise; for, verily, a day with thy Lord is as a thousand years
|
|
of what ye number.
|
|
And to how many a city have I given full range while it yet did
|
|
wrong! then I seized on it, and unto me was the return.
|
|
Say, 'O ye folk! I am naught but a plain warner to you, but those
|
|
who believe and do right, for them is forgiveness and a generous
|
|
provision; but those who strive to discredit our signs, they are the
|
|
fellows of hell!'
|
|
We have not sent before thee any apostle or prophet, but that when
|
|
he wished, Satan threw not something into his wish; but God annuls
|
|
what Satan throws; then does God confirm his signs, and God is
|
|
knowing, wise-to make what Satan throws a trial unto those in whose
|
|
hearts is sickness, and those whose hearts are hard; and, verily,
|
|
the wrongdoers are in a wide schism-and that those who have been given
|
|
'the knowledge' may know that it is the truth from thy Lord, and may
|
|
believe therein, and that their hearts may be lowly; for, verily,
|
|
God surely will guide those who believe into a right way.
|
|
But those who misbelieve will not cease to be in doubt thereof until
|
|
the Hour comes on them suddenly, or there comes on them the torment of
|
|
the barren day.
|
|
The kingdom on that day shall be God's, He shall judge between them;
|
|
and those who believe and do aright shall be in gardens of pleasure,
|
|
but those who misbelieve and say our signs are lies, these-for them is
|
|
shameful woe.
|
|
And those who flee in God's way, and then are slain or die, God will
|
|
provide them with a goodly provision; for, verily, God is the best
|
|
of providers.
|
|
He shall surely make them enter by an entrance that they like;
|
|
for, verily, God is knowing, clement.
|
|
That (is so). Whoever punishes with the like of what he has been
|
|
injured with, and shall then be outraged again, God shall surely
|
|
help him; verily, God pardons, forgives.
|
|
That for that God joins on the night to the day, and joins on the
|
|
day to the night, and that God is hearing, seeing; that is for that
|
|
God is the truth, and for that what ye call on beside Him is
|
|
falsehood, and that God is the high, the great.
|
|
Hast thou not seen that God sends down from the sky water, and on
|
|
the morrow the earth is green? verily, God is kind and well aware.
|
|
His is what is in the heavens and what is in the earth; and, verily,
|
|
God is rich and to be praised.
|
|
Hast thou not seen that God has subjected for you what is in the
|
|
earth, and the ship that runs on in the sea at His bidding, and He
|
|
holds back the sky from falling on the earth save at His bidding?
|
|
verily, God to men is gracious, merciful.
|
|
He it is who quickens you, then makes you die, then will He
|
|
quicken you again-verily, man is indeed ungrateful.
|
|
For every nation have we made rites which they observe; let them not
|
|
then dispute about the matter, but call upon thy Lord; verily, thou
|
|
art surely in a right guidance!
|
|
But if they wrangle with thee, say, 'God best knows what ye do.'
|
|
God shall judge between them on the resurrection day concerning that
|
|
whereon they disagreed.
|
|
Didst thou not know that God knows what is in the heavens and the
|
|
earth? verily, that is in a book; verily, that for God is easy.
|
|
And they serve beside God what He has sent down no power for, and
|
|
what they have no knowledge of; but the wrong-doers shall have none to
|
|
help them.
|
|
When our signs are read to them manifest, thou mayest recognise in
|
|
the faces of those who misbelieve disdain; they well-nigh rush at
|
|
those who recite to them our signs. Say, 'Shall I inform you of
|
|
something worse than that for you, the Fire which God has promised
|
|
to those who misbelieve? an evil journey shall it be!'
|
|
O ye folk! a parable is struck out for you, so listen to it. Verily,
|
|
those on whom ye call beside God could never create a fly if they
|
|
all united together to do it, and if the fly should despoil them of
|
|
aught they could not snatch it away from it-weak is both the seeker
|
|
and the sought.
|
|
They do not value God at His true value; verily, God is powerful,
|
|
mighty.
|
|
God chooses apostles of the angels and of men; verily, God hears and
|
|
sees. He knows what is before them and what is behind them; and unto
|
|
God affairs return.
|
|
O ye who believe! bow down and adore, and serve your Lord, and do
|
|
well, haply ye may prosper; and fight strenuously for God, as is His
|
|
due. He has elected you, and has not put upon you any hindrance by
|
|
your religion,-the faith of your father Abraham. He has named you
|
|
Muslims before and in this (book), that the Apostle may be a witness
|
|
against you, and that ye may be witnesses against men.
|
|
Be ye then steadfast in prayer, and give alms, and hold fast by God;
|
|
He is your sovereign, and an excellent sovereign, and an excellent
|
|
help!
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF BELIEVERS
|
|
(XXIII. Mecca.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
Prosperous are the believers who in their prayers are humble, and
|
|
who from vain talk turn aside, and who in almsgiving are active. And
|
|
who guard their private parts-except for their wives or what their
|
|
right hands possess for then, verily, they are not to be blamed;-but
|
|
whoso craves aught beyond that, they are the transgressors-and who
|
|
observe their trusts and covenants, and who guard well their
|
|
prayers: these are the heirs who shall inherit Paradise; they shall
|
|
dwell therein for aye!
|
|
We have created man from an extract of clay; then we made him a clot
|
|
in a sure depository; then we created the clot congealed blood, and we
|
|
created the congealed blood a morsel; then we created the morsel bone,
|
|
and we clothed the bone with flesh; then we produced it another
|
|
creation; and blessed be God, the best of creators!
|
|
Then shall ye after that surely die; then shall ye on the day of
|
|
resurrection be raised.
|
|
And we have created above you seven roads; nor are we heedless of
|
|
the creation.
|
|
And we send down from the heaven water by measure, and we make it
|
|
rest in the earth; but, verily, we are able to take it away; and we
|
|
produce for you thereby gardens of palms and grapes wherein ye have
|
|
many fruits, and whence ye eat.
|
|
And a tree growing out of Mount Sinai which produces oil, and a
|
|
condiment for those who eat.
|
|
And, verily, ye have a lesson in the cattle; we give you to drink of
|
|
what is in their bellies; and ye have therein many advantages, and
|
|
of them ye eat, and on them and on ships ye are borne!
|
|
We sent Noah unto his people, and he said, 'O my people! worship
|
|
God, ye have no god-but Him; do ye then not fear?'
|
|
Said the chiefs of those who misbelieved among his people, 'This
|
|
is nothing but a mortal like yourselves who wishes to have
|
|
preference over you, and had God pleased He would have sent angels; we
|
|
have not heard of this amongst our fathers of yore: he is nothing
|
|
but a man possessed; let him bide then for a season.'
|
|
Said he, 'Help me, for they call me liar!'
|
|
And we inspired him, 'Make the ark under our eyes and inspiration;
|
|
and when the oven boils over, conduct into it of every kind two,
|
|
with thy family, except him of them against whom the word "has passed;
|
|
and do not address me for those who do wrong, verily, they are to be
|
|
drowned!
|
|
'But when thou art settled, thou and those with thee in the ark,
|
|
say, "Praise belongs to God, who saved us from the unjust people!"
|
|
'And say, "My Lord! make me to alight in a blessed
|
|
alighting-place, for Thou art the best of those who cause men to
|
|
alight!"' Verily, in that this is a sign, and, verily, we were
|
|
trying them.
|
|
Then we raised up after them another generation; and we sent amongst
|
|
them a prophet of themselves (saying), 'Serve God, ye have no god
|
|
but He; will ye then not fear?'
|
|
Said the chiefs of his people who misbelieved, and called the
|
|
meeting of the last day a lie, and to whom we gave enjoyment in the
|
|
life of this world, 'This is only a mortal like yourselves, who eats
|
|
of what ye eat, and drinks of what ye drink; and if ye obey a mortal
|
|
like yourselves, verily, ye will then be surely losers! Does he
|
|
promise you that when ye are dead, and have become dust and bones,
|
|
that then ye will be brought forth?
|
|
'Away, away with what ye are threatened,-there is only our life in
|
|
the world! We die and we live, and we shall not be raised! He is
|
|
only a man who forges against God a lie. And we believe not in him!'
|
|
Said he, 'My Lord! help me, for they call me liar!' He said, 'Within
|
|
a little they will surely awake repenting!'
|
|
And the noise seized them deservedly; and we made them as rubbish
|
|
borne by a torrent; so, away with the unjust people!
|
|
Then we raised up after them other generations. No nation can
|
|
anticipate its appointed time, nor keep it back.
|
|
Then we sent our apostles one after another. Whenever its apostle
|
|
came to any nation they called him a liar; and we made some to
|
|
follow others; and we made them legends; away then with a people who
|
|
do not believe!
|
|
Then we sent Moses and his brother Aaron with our signs, and with
|
|
plain authority to Pharaoh and his chiefs, but they were too big
|
|
with pride, and were a haughty people.
|
|
And they said, 'Shall we believe two mortals like ourselves, when
|
|
their people are servants of ours?'
|
|
So they called them liars, and were of those who perished.
|
|
And we gave Moses the Book, that haply they might be guided.
|
|
And we made the son of Mary and his mother a sign; and we lodged
|
|
them both on a high place, furnished with security and a spring.
|
|
O ye apostles! eat of the good things and do right; verily, what
|
|
ye do I know!
|
|
And, verily, this nation of yours is one nation, and I am your Lord;
|
|
so fear me.
|
|
And they have become divided as to their affair amongst themselves
|
|
into sects, each party rejoicing in what they have themselves. So
|
|
leave them in their flood (of error) for a time.
|
|
Do they reckon that that which we grant them such an extent, of
|
|
wealth and children, we hasten to them as good things-nay, but they do
|
|
not perceive!
|
|
Verily, those who shrink with terror at their Lord, and those who in
|
|
the signs of their Lord believe, and those who with their Lord join
|
|
none, and those who give what they do give while their hearts are
|
|
afraid that they unto their Lord will return,-these hasten to good
|
|
things and are first to gain the same. But we will not oblige a soul
|
|
beyond its capacity; for with us is a book that utters the truth,
|
|
and they shall not be wronged.
|
|
Nay, their hearts are in a flood (of error) at this, and they have
|
|
works beside this which they do. Until we catch the affluent ones
|
|
amongst them with the torment; then lo! they cry for aid.
|
|
Cry not for aid to-day! verily, against us ye will not be helped. My
|
|
signs were recited to you, but upon your heels did ye turn back, big
|
|
with pride at it, in vain discourse by night.
|
|
Is it that they did not ponder over the words, whether that has come
|
|
to them which came not to their fathers of yore? Or did they not
|
|
know their apostle, that they thus deny him? Or do they say, 'He is
|
|
possessed by a ginn?' Nay, he came to them with the truth, and most of
|
|
them are averse from the truth.
|
|
But if the truth were to follow their lusts, the heavens and the
|
|
earth would be corrupted with all who in them are!-Nay, we brought
|
|
them their reminder, but they from their reminder turn aside.
|
|
Or dost thou ask them for a tribute? but the tribute of thy Lord
|
|
is better, for He is the best of those who provide.
|
|
And, verily, thou dost call them to a right way; but, verily,
|
|
those who believe not in the hereafter from the way do veer.
|
|
But if we had mercy on them, and removed the distress they have,
|
|
they would persist in their rebellion, blindly wandering on!
|
|
And we caught them with the torment, but they did not abase
|
|
themselves before their Lord, nor did they humble themselves; until we
|
|
opened for them a door with grievous torment, then lo! they are in
|
|
despair.
|
|
He it is who produced for you hearing, and sight, and
|
|
minds,-little is it that ye thank. And He it is who created you in the
|
|
earth, and unto Him shall ye be gathered. And He it is who gives you
|
|
life and death; and His is the alternation of the night and the day;
|
|
have ye then no sense?
|
|
Nay, but they said like that which those of yore did say.
|
|
They said, 'What! when we have become earth and bones, are we then
|
|
going to be raised? We have been promised this, and our fathers too,
|
|
before;-this is naught but old folks' tales!'
|
|
Say, 'Whose is the earth and those who are therein, if ye but know?'
|
|
They will say, 'God's.' Say, 'Do ye not then mind?'
|
|
Say, 'Who is Lord of the seven heavens, and Lord of the mighty
|
|
throne?'
|
|
They will say, 'God.' Say, 'Do ye not then fear?'
|
|
Say, 'In whose hand is the dominion of everything; He succours but
|
|
is not succoured,-if ye did but know?'
|
|
They will say, 'God's.' Say, 'Then how can ye be so infatuated?'
|
|
Nay, we have brought them the truth, but, verily, they are liars!
|
|
God never took a son, nor was there ever any god with Him;-then each
|
|
god would have gone off with what he had created, and some would
|
|
have exalted themselves over others,- celebrated be His praises
|
|
above what they attribute (to Him)!
|
|
He who knows the unseen and the visible, exalted be He above what
|
|
they join with Him!
|
|
Say, 'My Lord! if Thou shouldst show me what they are threatened,-my
|
|
Lord! then place me not amongst the unjust people.'
|
|
Repel evil by what is better. We know best what they attribute (to
|
|
thee). And say, 'My Lord! I seek refuge in Thee from the incitings
|
|
of the devils; and I seek refuge in Thee from their presence!'
|
|
Until when death comes to any one of them he says, 'My Lord! send ye
|
|
me back, haply I may do right in that which I have left!'
|
|
Not so!-a mere word he speaks!-but behind them is a bar until the
|
|
day they shall be raised.
|
|
And when the trumpet shall be blown, and there shall be no
|
|
relation between them on that day, nor shall they beg of each other
|
|
then!
|
|
And he whose scales are heavy,-they are the prosperous. But he whose
|
|
scales are light,-these are they who lose themselves, in hell to dwell
|
|
for aye! The fire shall scorch their faces, and they shall curl
|
|
their lips therein! 'Were not my signs recited to you? and ye said
|
|
that they were lies!' They say, 'Our Lord our misery overcame us,
|
|
and we were a people who did err! Our Lord! take us out therefrom, and
|
|
if we return, then shall we be unjust.'
|
|
He will say, 'Go ye away into it and speak not to me!'
|
|
Verily, there was a sect of my servants who said, 'Our Lord! we
|
|
believe, so pardon us, "and have mercy upon us, for Thou art the
|
|
best of the merciful ones.'
|
|
And ye took them for a jest until ye forgat my reminder and did
|
|
laugh thereat. Verily, I have recompensed them this day for their
|
|
patience; verily, they are happy now.
|
|
He will say, 'How long a number of years did ye tarry on earth?'
|
|
They will say, 'We tarried a day or part of a day, but ask the
|
|
Numberers.'
|
|
He will say, 'Ye have only tarried a little, were ye but to know it.
|
|
Did ye then reckon that we created you for sport, and that to us ye
|
|
would not return?' But exalted be God, the true; there is no god but
|
|
He, the Lord of the noble throne! and whoso calls upon another god
|
|
with God has no proof of it, but, verily, his account is with his
|
|
Lord; verily, the misbelievers shall not prosper. And say, 'Lord,
|
|
pardon and be merciful, for Thou art the best of the merciful ones!'
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF LIGHT
|
|
(XXIV. Medinah.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
A chapter which we have sent down and determined, and have sent down
|
|
therein manifest signs; haply ye may be mindful.
|
|
The whore and the whoremonger. Scourge each of them with a hundred
|
|
stripes, and do not let pity for them take hold of you in God's
|
|
religion, if ye believe in God and the last day; and let a party of
|
|
the believers witness their torment. And the whoremonger shall marry
|
|
none but a whore or an idolatress; and the whore shall none marry
|
|
but an adulterer or an idolater; God has prohibited this to the
|
|
believers; but those who cast (imputations) on chaste women and then
|
|
do not bring four witnesses, scourge them with eighty stripes, and
|
|
do not receive any testimony of theirs ever, for these are the workers
|
|
of abomination. Except such as repent after that and act aright,
|
|
for, verily, God is forgiving and compassionate.
|
|
And those who cast (imputation) on their wives and have no witnesses
|
|
except themselves, then the testimony of one of them shall be to
|
|
testify four times that, by God, he is of those who speak the truth;
|
|
and the fifth testimony shall be that the curse of God shall be on him
|
|
if he be of those who lie. And it shall avert the punishment from
|
|
her if she bears testimony four times that, by God, he is of those who
|
|
lie; and the fifth that the wrath of God shall be on her if he be of
|
|
those who speak the truth.
|
|
And were it not for God's grace upon you and His mercy, and that God
|
|
is relenting, wise...
|
|
Verily, those who bring forward the lie, a band of you,-reckon it
|
|
not as an evil for you, nay, it is good for- you; every man of them
|
|
shall have what he has earned of sin; and he of them who managed to
|
|
aggravate it, for him is mighty woe.
|
|
Why did not, when ye heard it, the believing men and believing women
|
|
think good in themselves, and say, 'This is an obvious lie?' Why did
|
|
they not bring four witnesses to it? but since they did not bring
|
|
the witnesses, then they in God's eyes are the liars. And but for
|
|
God's grace upon you, and His mercy in this world and the next,
|
|
there would have touched you, for that which ye spread abroad,
|
|
mighty woe. When ye reported it with your tongues, and spake with your
|
|
mouths what ye had no knowledge of, and reckoned it a light thing,
|
|
while in God's eyes it was grave.
|
|
And why did ye not say when ye heard it, 'It is not for us to
|
|
speak of this? Celebrated be His praises, this is a mighty calumny!'
|
|
God admonishes you that ye return not to the like of it ever, if
|
|
ye be believers; and God manifests to you the signs, for God is
|
|
knowing, wise.
|
|
Verily, those who love that scandal should go abroad amongst those
|
|
who believe, for them is grievous woe in this world and the next;
|
|
for God knows, but ye do not know.
|
|
And but for God's grace upon you, and His mercy, and that God is
|
|
kind and compassionate...!
|
|
O ye who believe! follow not the footsteps of Satan, for he who
|
|
follows the footsteps of Satan, verily, he bids you sin and do
|
|
wrong; and but for God's grace upon you and His mercy, not one of
|
|
you would be ever pure; but God purifies whom He will, for God both
|
|
hears and knows. And let not those amongst you who have plenty and
|
|
ample means swear that they will not give aught to their kinsman and
|
|
the poor and those who have fled their homes in God's way, but let
|
|
them pardon and pass it over. Do ye not like God to forgive you? and
|
|
God is forgiving, compassionate.
|
|
Verily, those who cast imputations on chaste women who are negligent
|
|
but believing shall be cursed in this world and the next; and for them
|
|
is mighty woe. The day when their tongues and hands and feet shall
|
|
bear witness against them of what they did, on that day God will pay
|
|
them their just due; and they shall know that God, He is the plain
|
|
truth.
|
|
The vile women to the vile men, and the vile men to the vile
|
|
women; and the good women to the good men, and the good men to the
|
|
good women: these are clear of what they say to them forgiveness and a
|
|
noble provision!
|
|
O ye who believe! enter not into houses which are not your own
|
|
houses, until ye have asked leave and saluted the people thereof, that
|
|
is better for you; haply ye may be mindful. And if ye find no one
|
|
therein, then do not enter them until permission is given you, and
|
|
if it be said to you, 'Go back!' then go back, it is purer for you;
|
|
for God of what ye do doth know. It is no crime against you that ye
|
|
enter uninhabited houses,-a convenience for you;-and God knows what ye
|
|
show and what ye hide.
|
|
Say to the believers that they cast down their looks and guard their
|
|
private parts; that is purer for them; verily, God is well aware of
|
|
what they do.
|
|
And say to the believing women that they cast down their looks and
|
|
guard their private parts, and display not their ornaments, except
|
|
those which are outside; and let them pull their kerchiefs over
|
|
their bosoms and not display their ornaments save to their husbands
|
|
and fathers, or the fathers of their husbands, or their sons, or the
|
|
sons of their husbands, or their brothers, or their brothers' sons, or
|
|
their sisters' sons, or their women, or what their right hands
|
|
possess, or their male attendants who are incapable, or to children
|
|
who do not note women's nakedness; and that they beat not with their
|
|
feet that their hidden ornaments may be known;-but turn ye all
|
|
repentant to God, O ye believers! haply ye may prosper.
|
|
And marry the single amongst you, and the righteous among your
|
|
servants and your handmaidens. If they be poor, God will enrich them
|
|
of His grace, for God both comprehends and knows. And let those who
|
|
cannot find a match, until God enriches them of His grace, keep
|
|
chaste.
|
|
And such of those whom your right hands possess as crave a
|
|
writing, write it for them, if ye know any good in them, and give them
|
|
of the wealth of God which He has given you. And do not compel your
|
|
slave girls to prostitution, if they desire to keep continent, in
|
|
order to crave the goods of the life of this world; but he who does
|
|
compel them, then, verily, God after they are compelled is
|
|
forgiving, compassionate.
|
|
Now have we sent down to you manifest signs, and the like of those
|
|
who have passed away before you, and as an admonition to those who
|
|
fear.
|
|
God is the light of the heavens and the earth; His light is as a
|
|
niche in which is a lamp, and the lamp is in a glass, the glass is
|
|
as though it were a glittering star; it is lit from a blessed tree, an
|
|
olive neither of the east nor of the west, the oil of which would
|
|
well-nigh give light though no fire touched it,-light upon
|
|
light!-God guides to His light whom He pleases; and God strikes out
|
|
parables for men, and God all things doth know.
|
|
In the houses God has permitted to be reared and His name to be
|
|
mentioned therein-His praises are celebrated therein mornings and
|
|
evenings.
|
|
Men whom neither merchandize nor selling divert from the remembrance
|
|
of God and steadfastness in prayer and giving alms, who fear a day
|
|
when hearts and eyes shall be upset;-that God may recompense them
|
|
for the best that they have done, and give them increase of His grace;
|
|
for God provides whom He pleases without count.
|
|
But those who misbelieve, their works are like the mirage in a
|
|
plain, the thirsty counts it water till when he comes to it he finds
|
|
nothing, but he finds that God is with him; and He will pay him his
|
|
account, for God is quick to take account.
|
|
Or like darkness on a deep sea, there covers it a wave above which
|
|
is a wave, above which is a cloud,-darknesses one above the
|
|
other,-when one puts out his hand he can scarcely see it; for he to
|
|
whom God has given no light, he has no light.
|
|
Hast thou not seen that God,-all who are in the heavens and the
|
|
earth celebrate His praises, and the birds too spreading out their
|
|
wings; each one knows its prayer and its praise, and God knows what
|
|
they do?
|
|
Hast thou not seen that God drives the clouds, and then re-unites
|
|
them, and then accumulates them, and thou mayest see the rain coming
|
|
forth from their midst; and He sends down from the sky mountains
|
|
with hail therein, and He makes it fall on whom He pleases, and He
|
|
turns it from whom He pleases; the flashing of His ligtning
|
|
well-nigh goes off with their sight?
|
|
God interchanges the night and the day; verily, in that is a
|
|
lesson to those endowed with sight.
|
|
And God created every beast from water, and of them is one that
|
|
walks upon its belly, and of them one that walks upon two feet, and of
|
|
them one that walks upon four. God creates what He pleases; verily,
|
|
God is mighty over all!
|
|
Now have we sent down manifest signs, and God guides whom He pleases
|
|
unto the right way.
|
|
They will say, 'We believe in God and in the Apostle, and we
|
|
obey.' Then a sect of them turned their backs after that, and they are
|
|
not believers.
|
|
And when they are called to God and His Apostle to judge between
|
|
them, lo! a sect of them do turn aside. But had the right been on
|
|
their side they would have come to him submissively enough.
|
|
Is there a sickness in their hearts, or do they doubt, or do they
|
|
fear lest God and His Apostle should deal unfairly by them?- Nay, it
|
|
is they who are unjust.
|
|
The speech of the believers, when they are called to God and His
|
|
Apostle to judge between them, is only to say, 'We hear and we
|
|
obey;' and these it is who are the prosperous, for whoso obeys God and
|
|
His Apostle and dreads God and fears Him, these it is who are the
|
|
happy.
|
|
They swear by God with their most strenuous oath that hadst Thou
|
|
ordered them they would surely go forth. Say, 'Do not swear-reasonable
|
|
obedience; verily, God knows what ye do.'
|
|
Say, 'Obey God and obey the Apostle; but if ye turn your backs he
|
|
has only his burden to bear, and ye have only your burden to bear. But
|
|
if ye obey him, ye are guided; but the Apostle has only his plain
|
|
message to deliver.'
|
|
God promises those of you who believe and do right that He will give
|
|
them the succession in the earth as He gave the succession to those
|
|
before them, and He will establish for them their religion which He
|
|
has chosen for them, and to give them, after their fear, safety in
|
|
exchange;- they shall worship me, they shall not associate aught
|
|
with me: but whoso disbelieves after that, those it is who are the
|
|
sinners.
|
|
And be steadfast in prayer and give alms and obey the Apostle, haply
|
|
ye may obtain mercy.
|
|
Do not reckon that those who misbelieve can frustrate (God) in the
|
|
earth, for their resort is the Fire, and an ill journey shall it be.
|
|
O ye who believe! let those whom your right hands possess, and those
|
|
amongst you who have not reached puberty, ask leave of you three
|
|
times: before the prayer of dawn, and when ye put off your clothes
|
|
at noon, and after the evening prayer;-three times of privacy for you:
|
|
there is no crime on either you or them after these while ye are
|
|
continually going one about the other. Thus does God explain to you
|
|
His signs, for God is knowing, wise.
|
|
And when your children reach puberty let them ask leave as those
|
|
before them asked leave. Thus does God explain to you His signs, for
|
|
God is knowing, wise.
|
|
And those women who have stopped (child-bearing), who do not hope
|
|
for a match, it is no crime on them that they put off their clothes so
|
|
as not to display their ornaments; but that they abstain is better for
|
|
them, for God both hears and knows.
|
|
There is no hindrance to the blind, and no hindrance to the lame,
|
|
and no hindrance to the sick, and none upon yourselves that you eat
|
|
from your houses, or the houses of your fathers, or the houses of your
|
|
mothers, or the houses of your brothers, or the houses of your
|
|
sisters, or the houses of your paternal uncles, or the houses of
|
|
your paternal aunts, or the houses of your maternal uncles, or the
|
|
houses of your maternal aunts, or what ye possess the keys of, or of
|
|
your friend, there is no crime on you that ye eat all together or
|
|
separately.
|
|
And when ye enter houses then greet each other with a salutation
|
|
from God, blessed and good. Thus does God explain to you His signs,
|
|
haply ye may understand.
|
|
Only those are believers who believe in God and His Apostle, and
|
|
when they are with Him upon public business go not away until they
|
|
have asked his leave; verily, those who ask thy leave they it is who
|
|
believe in God and His Apostle.
|
|
But when they ask thy leave for any of their own concerns, then give
|
|
leave to whomsoever thou wilt of them, and ask pardon for them of God;
|
|
verily, God is forgiving and merciful.
|
|
Make not the calling of the Apostle amongst yourselves like your
|
|
calling one to the other God knows those of you who withdraw
|
|
themselves covertly. And let those who disobey his order beware lest
|
|
there befall them some trial or there befall them grievous woe. Ay,
|
|
God's is what is in the heavens and the earth, He knows what ye are
|
|
at; and the day ye shall be sent back to Him then He will inform you
|
|
of what ye have done, for God all things doth know.
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF THE DISCRIMINATION
|
|
(XXV. Mecca.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
Blessed be He who sent down the Discrimination to His servant that
|
|
he might be unto the world a warner; whose is the kingdom of the
|
|
heavens and the earth, and who has not taken to Himself a son, and who
|
|
has no partner in His kingdom, and created everything, and then
|
|
decreed it determinately! And they take beside Him gods who create not
|
|
aught, but are themselves created, and cannot control for themselves
|
|
harm or profit, and cannot control death, or life, or resurrection.
|
|
And those who misbelieve say, 'This is nothing but a lie which he
|
|
has forged, and another people hath helped him at it;' but they have
|
|
wrought an injustice and a falsehood.
|
|
And they say, 'Old folks' tales, which he has got written down while
|
|
they are dictated to him morning and evening.'
|
|
Say, 'He sent it down who knows the secret in the heavens and the
|
|
earth; verily, He is ever forgiving, merciful!'
|
|
And they say, 'What ails this prophet that he eats food and walks in
|
|
the markets?- unless there be sent down to him an angel and be a
|
|
warner with him.... Or there be thrown to him a treasury, or he have a
|
|
garden to eat therefrom....!' and the unjust say, 'Ye only follow an
|
|
infatuated man.'
|
|
See how they strike out for thee parables, and err, and cannot
|
|
find a way.
|
|
Blessed be He who, if He please, can make for thee better than that,
|
|
gardens beneath which rivers flow, and can make for thee castles!
|
|
Nay, but they call the Hour a lie; but we have prepared for those
|
|
who call the Hour a lie a blaze: when it seizes them from a far-off
|
|
place they shall hear its raging and roaring; and when they are thrown
|
|
into a narrow place thereof, fastened together, they shall call
|
|
there for destruction.
|
|
Call not to-day for one destruction, but call for many destructions!
|
|
Say, 'Is that better or the garden of eternity which was promised to
|
|
those who fear-which is ever for them a recompense and a retreat? They
|
|
shall have therein what they please, to dwell therein for aye: that is
|
|
of thy Lord a promise to be demanded.
|
|
And the day He shall gather them and what they served beside God,
|
|
and He shall say, 'Was it ye who led my servants here astray, or did
|
|
they err from the way?'
|
|
They shall say, 'Celebrated be Thy praise, it was not befitting
|
|
for us to take any patrons but Thee; but Thou didst give them and
|
|
their fathers enjoyment until they forgot the Reminder and were a lost
|
|
people!'
|
|
And now have they proved you liars for what ye say, and they
|
|
cannot ward off or help. And he of you who does wrong we will make him
|
|
taste great torment.
|
|
We have not sent before thee any messengers but that they ate food
|
|
and walked in the markets; but we have made some of you a trial to
|
|
others: will ye be patient? thy Lord doth ever look.
|
|
And those who do not hope to meet us say, 'Unless the angels be sent
|
|
down to us, or we see our Lord....!' They are too big with pride in
|
|
their souls and they have exceeded with a great excess!
|
|
The day they shall see the angels,-no glad tidings on that day for
|
|
the sinners, and they shall say, 'It is rigorously forbidden!'
|
|
And we will go on to the works which they have done, and make them
|
|
like motes in a sunbeam scattered! The fellows of Paradise on that day
|
|
shall be in a better abiding-place and a better noonday rest.
|
|
The day the heavens shall be cleft asunder with the clouds, and
|
|
the angels shall be sent down descending.
|
|
The true kingdom on that day shall belong to the Merciful, and it
|
|
shall be a hard day for the misbelievers.
|
|
And the day when the unjust shall bite his hands and say, 'O,
|
|
would that I had taken a way with the Apostle! O, woe is me! would
|
|
that I had not taken such a one for a friend now, for he did lead me
|
|
astray from the Reminder after it had come to me, for Satan leaves man
|
|
in the lurch!'
|
|
The Apostle said, my Lord! verily, my people have taken this Koran
|
|
to be obsolete!'
|
|
Thus have we made for every prophet an enemy from among the sinners;
|
|
but thy Lord is good guide and helper enough.
|
|
Those who misbelieve said, 'Unless the Koran be sent down to him all
|
|
at once....!'- thus-that we may stablish thy heart therewith, did we
|
|
reveal it piecemeal. Nor shall they come to thee with a parable
|
|
without our bringing thee the truth and the best interpretation.
|
|
They who shall be gathered upon their faces to hell,-these are in
|
|
the worst place, and err most from the path.
|
|
And we did give to Moses the Book, and place with him his brother
|
|
Aaron as a minister; and we said, 'Go ye to the people who say our
|
|
signs are lies, for we will destroy them with utter destruction.'
|
|
And the people of Noah, when they said the apostles were liars, we
|
|
drowned them, and we made them a sign for men; and we prepared for the
|
|
unjust a grievous woe.
|
|
And 'Ad and Thamud and the people of ar Rass, and many generations
|
|
between them.
|
|
For each one have we struck out parables, and each one have we
|
|
ruined with utter ruin.
|
|
Why, they have come past the cities which were rained on with an
|
|
evil rain; have they not seen them?-nay, they do not hope to be raised
|
|
up again.
|
|
And when they saw thee they only took thee for a jest, 'Is this he
|
|
whom God has sent as an apostle? he well-nigh leads us astray from our
|
|
gods, had we not been patient about them.' But they shall know, when
|
|
they see the torment, who errs most from the path. Dost thou
|
|
consider him who takes his lusts for his god? wilt thou then be in
|
|
charge over him? or dost thou reckon that most of them- will hear or
|
|
understand? they are only like the cattle, nay, they err more from the
|
|
way.
|
|
Hast thou not looked to thy Lord how He prolongs the shadow? but had
|
|
He willed He would have made it stationary; then we make the sun a
|
|
thereto, then we contract it towards us with a gul an easy
|
|
contraction.
|
|
And He it is who made the night for a garment; and sleep for repose,
|
|
and made the day for men to rise up again. And He it is who sent the
|
|
winds with glad tidings before His mercy; and we send down from the
|
|
heavens pure water, to quicken therewith the dead country, and to give
|
|
it for drink to what we have created,-the cattle and many folk.
|
|
We have turned it in various ways amongst them that they may
|
|
remember; though most men refuse aught but to misbelieve. But, had
|
|
we pleased, we would have sent in every city a warner. So obey not the
|
|
unbelievers and fight strenuously with them in many a strenuous fight.
|
|
He it is who has let loose the two seas, this one sweet and fresh,
|
|
that one bitter and pungent, and has made between them a rigorous
|
|
prohibition.
|
|
And He it is who has created man from water, and has made for him
|
|
blood relationship and marriage relationship; for thy Lord is mighty.
|
|
Yet they worship beside God what can neither profit them nor harm
|
|
them; but he who misbelieves in his Lord backs up (the devil).
|
|
We have only sent thee to give glad tidings and to warn. Say, 'I ask
|
|
you not for it a hire unless one please to take unto his Lord a
|
|
way.' And rely thou upon the Living One who dies not; and celebrate
|
|
His praise, for He knows well enough about the thoughts of His
|
|
servants, He who created the heavens and the earth, and what is
|
|
between them, in six days, and then made for the throne; the
|
|
Merciful One, ask concerning Him of One who is aware.
|
|
And when it is said, 'Adore ye the Merciful!' they say, 'What is the
|
|
Merciful? shall we adore what thou dost order us?' and it only
|
|
increases their aversion.
|
|
Blessed be He who placed in the heavens zodiacal signs, and placed
|
|
therein the lamp and an illuminating moon!
|
|
And He it is who made the night and the day alternating for him
|
|
who desires to remember or who wishes to be thankful.
|
|
And the servants of the Merciful are those who walk upon the earth
|
|
lowly, and when the ignorant address them, say, 'Peace!' And those who
|
|
pass the night adoring their Lord and standing; and those who say,
|
|
'O our Lord! turn from us the torment of hell; verily, its torments
|
|
are persistent; verily, they are evil as an abode and a station.'
|
|
And those who when they spend are neither extravagant nor miserly,
|
|
but who ever take their stand between the two; and who call not upon
|
|
another god with God; and kill not the soul which God has prohibited
|
|
save deservedly; and do not commit fornication: for he who does that
|
|
shall meet with a penalty; doubled for him shall be the torment on the
|
|
resurrection day, and he shall be therein for aye despised. Save he
|
|
who turns again and believes and does a righteous work; for, as to
|
|
those, God will change their evil deeds to good, for God is ever
|
|
forgiving, merciful.
|
|
And he who turns again and does right, verily, he turns again to God
|
|
repentant.
|
|
And those who do not testify falsely; and when they pass by
|
|
frivolous discourse, pass by it honourably; and those who when they
|
|
are reminded of the signs of their Lord do not fall down thereat
|
|
deaf and blind; and those who say, 'Our Lord! grant us from our
|
|
wives and seed that which may cheer our eyes, and make us models to
|
|
the pious!'
|
|
These shall be rewarded with a high place for that they were
|
|
patient: and they shall meet therein with salutation and peace,-to
|
|
dwell therein for aye; a good abode and station shall it be!
|
|
Say, 'My Lord cares not for you though you should not call (on Him);
|
|
and ye have called (the Apostle) a liar, but it shall be (a
|
|
punishment) which ye cannot shake off.'
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF THE POETS
|
|
(XXVI. Mecca.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
TA SIN MIM. Those are the signs of the perspicuous Book; haply
|
|
thou art vexing thyself to death that they will not be believers!
|
|
If we please we will send down upon them from the heaven a sign, and
|
|
their necks shall be humbled thereto. But there comes not to them
|
|
any recent Reminder from the Merciful One that they do not turn away
|
|
from. They have called (thee) liar! but there shall come to them a
|
|
message of that at which they mocked.
|
|
Have they not looked to the earth, how we caused to grow therein
|
|
of every noble kind? verily, in that is a sign; but most of them
|
|
will never be believers! but, verily, thy Lord He is mighty and
|
|
merciful.
|
|
And when thy Lord called Moses (saying), 'Come to the unjust people,
|
|
to the people of Pharaoh, will they not fear?' Said he, 'My Lord!
|
|
verily, I fear that they will call me liar; and my breast is
|
|
straitened, and my tongue is not fluent; send then unto Aaron, for
|
|
they have a crime against me, and I fear that they may kill me.'
|
|
Said He, 'Not so; but go with our signs, verily, we are with you
|
|
listening.
|
|
'And go to Pharaoh and say, "Verily, we are the apostles of the Lord
|
|
of the worlds (to tell thee to) send with us the children of Israel."'
|
|
And he said, 'Did we not bring thee up amongst us as a child? and
|
|
thou didst dwell amongst us for years of thy life; and thou didst do
|
|
thy deed which thou hast done, and thou art of the ungrateful!'
|
|
Said he, 'I did commit this, and I was of those who erred.
|
|
'And I fled from you when I feared you, and my Lord granted me
|
|
judgment, and made me one of His messengers; and this is the favour
|
|
thou hast obliged me with, that thou hast enslaved the children of
|
|
Israel!'
|
|
Said Pharaoh, 'Who is the Lord of the worlds? Said he, 'The Lord
|
|
of the heavens and the earth and what is between the two, if ye are
|
|
but sure.'
|
|
Said he to those about him, 'Do ye not listen?' Said he, 'Your
|
|
Lord and the Lord of your fathers of yore!'
|
|
Said he, 'Verily, your apostle who is sent to you is surely mad!'
|
|
Said he, 'The Lord of the east and of the west, and of what is
|
|
between the two, if ye had but sense!'
|
|
Said he, 'If thou dost take a god besides Me I will surely make thee
|
|
one of the imprisoned!'
|
|
Said he, 'What, if I come to thee with something obvious?'
|
|
Said he, 'Bring it, if thou art of those who tell the truth!'
|
|
And he threw down his rod, and, behold, it was an obvious serpent!
|
|
and he plucked out his hand, and, behold, it was white to the
|
|
spectators!
|
|
He said to the chiefs around him, 'Verily, this is a knowing
|
|
sorcerer, he desires to turn you out of your land! what is it then
|
|
ye bid?'
|
|
They said, 'Give him and his brother some hope, and send into the
|
|
cities to collect and bring to thee every knowing sorcerer.'
|
|
And the sorcerers assembled at the appointed time on a stated day,
|
|
and it was said to the people, 'Are ye assembled? haply we may
|
|
follow the sorcerers if we gain the upper hand.'
|
|
And when the sorcerers came they said to Pharaoh, 'Shall we, verily,
|
|
have a hire if we gain the upper hand?' Said he, 'Yes; and, verily, ye
|
|
shall then of those who are nigh (my throne).' And Moses said to them,
|
|
'Throw down what ye have to throw down.' So they threw down their
|
|
ropes and their rods and said, 'By Pharaoh's might, verily, we it is
|
|
who shall gain the upper hand!'
|
|
And Moses threw down his rod, and, lo, it swallowed up what they
|
|
falsely devised!
|
|
And the sorcerers threw themselves down, adoring. Said they, 'We
|
|
believe in the Lord of the worlds, the Lord of Moses and Aaron!'
|
|
Said he, 'Do ye believe in Him ere I give you leave? Verily, he is
|
|
your chief who has taught you sorcery, but soon ye shall know. I
|
|
will surely cut off your hands and your feet from opposite sides,
|
|
and I will crucify you all together!'
|
|
They said, 'No harm; verily, unto our Lord do we return! verily,
|
|
we hope that our Lord will forgive us our sins, for we are the first
|
|
of believers!'
|
|
And we inspired Moses, 'Journey by night with my servants; verily,
|
|
ye are pursued.'
|
|
And Pharaoh sent into the cities to collect; 'Verily, these are a
|
|
small company. And, verily, they are enraged with us; but we are a
|
|
multitude, wary!
|
|
'Turn them- out of gardens and springs, and treasuries, and a
|
|
noble station!'- thus,- and we made the children of Israel to
|
|
inherit them.
|
|
And they followed them at dawn; and when the two hosts saw each
|
|
other, Moses' companions said, 'Verily, we are overtaken!' Said he,
|
|
'Not so; verily, with me is my Lord, He will guide me.'
|
|
And we inspired Moses, 'Strike with thy rod the sea;' and it was
|
|
cleft asunder, and each part was like a mighty mountain. And then we
|
|
brought the others. And we saved Moses and those with him all
|
|
together; then we drowned the others; and that is a sign: but most
|
|
of them will never be believers! And, verily, thy Lord He is mighty,
|
|
merciful.
|
|
And recite to them the story of Abraham; when he said to his
|
|
father and his people, 'What do ye serve?' They said, 'We serve idols,
|
|
and we are still devoted to them.' He said, 'Can they hear you when ye
|
|
call, or profit you, or harm?'
|
|
They said, 'No; but we found our, fathers doing thus.' He said,
|
|
'Have ye considered what ye have been serving, ye and your fathers
|
|
before you? Verily, they are foes to me, save only the Lord of the
|
|
worlds, who created me and guides me, and who gives me food and drink.
|
|
And when I am sick He heals me; He who will kill me, and then bring me
|
|
to life; and who I hope will forgive me my sins on the day of
|
|
judgment! Lord, grant me judgment, and let me reach the righteous; and
|
|
give me a tongue of good report amongst posterity; and make me of
|
|
the heirs of the paradise of pleasure; and pardon my father, verily,
|
|
he is of those who err; and disgrace me not on the day when they are
|
|
raised up again; the day when wealth shall profit not, nor sons, but
|
|
only he who comes to God with a sound heart. And paradise shall be
|
|
brought near to the pious; and hell shall be brought forth to those
|
|
who go astray, and it shall be said to them, "Where is what ye used to
|
|
worship beside God? can they help you, or get help themselves?" And
|
|
they shall fall headlong into it, they and those who have gone astray,
|
|
and the hosts of Iblis all together!
|
|
'They shall say, while they quarrel therein, By God! we were
|
|
surely in an obvious error, when we made you equal to the Lord of
|
|
the worlds! but it was only sinners who led us astray. But we have
|
|
no intercessors and no warm friend; but had we a turn we would be of
|
|
the believers."'-Verily, in that is a sign, but most of them will
|
|
never be believers; and, verily, thy Lord He is mighty and merciful.
|
|
The people of Noah said the apostles were liars, when their
|
|
brother Noah said to them, 'Will ye not fear? verily, I am a
|
|
faithful apostle to you; then fear God and obey me. I do not ask you
|
|
for it any hire; my hire is only with the Lord of the worlds. So
|
|
fear God and obey me.' They said, 'Shall we believe in thee, when
|
|
the reprobates follow thee? 'He said, I did not know what they were
|
|
doing; their account is only with my Lord, if ye but perceive. And I
|
|
am not one to drive away the believers, I am only a plain warner.'
|
|
They said, 'Verily, if thou desist not, O Noah! thou shalt surely be
|
|
of those who are stoned!' Said he, 'My Lord! verily, my people call me
|
|
liar; open between me and between them an opening, and save me and
|
|
those of the believers who are with me!'
|
|
So we saved him and those with him in the laden ark, then we drowned
|
|
the rest; verily, in that is a sign, but most of them will never be
|
|
believers; and, verily, thy Lord He is mighty and merciful.
|
|
And 'Ad called the apostles liars; when their brother Hud said to
|
|
them, 'Will ye not fear? Verily, I am to you a faithful apostle;
|
|
then fear God and obey me. I do not ask you for it any hire; my hire
|
|
is only with the Lord of the worlds. Do ye build on every height a
|
|
landmark in sport, and take to works that haply ye may be immortal?
|
|
'And when ye assault ye assault like tyrants; but fear God and
|
|
obey me; and fear Him who hath given you an extent of cattle and sons,
|
|
and gardens and springs. Verily, I fear for you the torment of a
|
|
mighty day!'
|
|
They said, 'It is the same to us if thou admonish or art not of
|
|
those who do admonish; this is nothing but old folks' fictions, for we
|
|
shall not be tormented!'
|
|
And they called him liar! but we destroyed them. Verily, in that
|
|
is a sign, but most of them will never be believers. And, verily,
|
|
thy Lord is mighty, merciful.
|
|
Thamud called the apostles liars; when their brother Zali'h said
|
|
to them, 'Do ye not fear? verily, I am to you a faithful apostle; so
|
|
fear God and obey me. I do not ask you for it any hire; my hire is
|
|
only with the Lord of the worlds. Shall ye be left here in safety with
|
|
gardens and springs, and corn-fields and palms, the spathes whereof
|
|
are fine? and ye hew out of the mountains houses skilfully. But fear
|
|
God and obey me; and obey not the bidding of the extravagant, who do
|
|
evil in the earth and do not act aright!'
|
|
They said, 'Thou art only of the infatuated; thou art but mortal
|
|
like ourselves; so bring us a sign, if thou be of those who speak
|
|
the truth!'
|
|
He said, 'This she-camel shall have her drink and you your drink
|
|
on a certain day; but touch her not with evil, or there will seize you
|
|
the torment of a mighty day!'
|
|
But they hamstrung her, and on the morrow they repented; and the
|
|
torment seized them; verily, in that is a sign; but most of them
|
|
will never be believers: but verily, thy Lord He is mighty, merciful.
|
|
The people of Lot called the apostles liars; when their brother
|
|
Lot said to them, 'Do ye not fear? verily, I am to you a faithful
|
|
apostle; then fear God and obey me. I do not ask you for it any
|
|
hire; my hire is only with the Lord of the worlds. Do ye approach
|
|
males of all the world and leave what God your Lord has created for
|
|
you of your wives? nay, but ye are people who transgress!'
|
|
They said, 'Surely, if thou dost not desist, O Lot! thou shalt be of
|
|
those who are expelled!'
|
|
Said he, 'Verily, I am of those who hate your deed; my Lord! save me
|
|
and my people from what they do.'
|
|
And we saved him and his people all together, except an old woman
|
|
amongst those who lingered. Then we destroyed the others; and we
|
|
rained down upon them a rain; and evil was the rain of those who
|
|
were warned. Verily, in that is a sign; but most of them will never be
|
|
believers. And, verily, thy Lord He is mighty, merciful,
|
|
compassionate.
|
|
The fellows of the Grove called the apostles liars; Sho'haib said to
|
|
them, 'Will ye not fear? verily, I am to you a faithful apostle,
|
|
then fear God and obey me. I do not ask you for it any hire; my hire
|
|
is only with the Lord of the worlds. Give good measure, and be not
|
|
of those who diminish; and weigh with a fair balance, and do not cheat
|
|
men of their goods; and waste not the land, despoiling it; and fear
|
|
Him who created you and the races of yore!' Said they, 'Thou art
|
|
only of the infatuated; and thou art only a mortal like ourselves;
|
|
and, verily, we think that thou art surely of the liars; so make a
|
|
portion of the heaven to fall down upon us, if thou art of those who
|
|
tell the truth!'
|
|
Said he, 'My Lord knows best what ye do! but they called him liar,
|
|
and the torment of the day of the shadow seized them; for it was the
|
|
torment of a mighty day: verily, in that is a sign; but most of them
|
|
will never be believers; but, verily, thy Lord He is mighty, merciful!
|
|
And, verily, it is a revelation from the Lord of the worlds; the
|
|
Faithful Spirit came down with it upon thy heart, that thou shouldst
|
|
be of those who warn;-in plain Arabic language, and, verily, it is
|
|
(foretold) in the scriptures of yore! Have they not a sign, that the
|
|
learned men of the children of Israel recognise it? Had we sent it
|
|
down to any barbarian, and he had read it to them, they would not have
|
|
believed therein. Thus have we made for it a way into the hearts of
|
|
the sinners; they will not believe therein until they see the grievous
|
|
woe! and it shall come to them suddenly while they do not perceive!
|
|
They will say, 'Shall we be respited?- What! do they wish to hasten on
|
|
our torment?'
|
|
What thinkest thou? if we let them enjoy themselves for years, and
|
|
then there come to them what they are threatened, that will not
|
|
avail them which they had to enjoy! But we do not destroy any city
|
|
without its having warners as a reminder, for we are never unjust.
|
|
The devils did not descend therewith; it is not fit work for them;
|
|
nor are they able to do it. Verily, they are deposed from listening;
|
|
call not then with God upon other gods, or thou wilt be of the
|
|
tormented; but warn thy clansmen who are near of kin. And lower thy
|
|
wing to those of the believers who follow thee; but if they rebel
|
|
against thee, say, 'Verily, I am clear of what ye do,' and rely thou
|
|
upon the mighty, merciful One, who sees thee when thou dost stand
|
|
up, and thy posturing amongst those who adore. Verily, He both hears
|
|
and knows!
|
|
Shall I inform you upon whom the devils descend? they descend upon
|
|
every sinful liar, and impart what they have heard; but most of them
|
|
are liars.
|
|
And the poets do those follow who go astray! Dost thou not see
|
|
that they wander distraught in every vale? and that they say that
|
|
which they do not do? save those who believe, and do right, and
|
|
remember God much, and defend themselves after they are wronged; but
|
|
those who do wrong shall know with what a turn they shall be turned.
|
|
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF THE ANT
|
|
(XXVII. Mecca.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
TA SIN. Those are the signs of the Koran and the perspicuous Book; a
|
|
guidance and glad tidings to the believers, who are steadfast at
|
|
prayer, and give alms, and of the hereafter are sure; verily, those
|
|
who believe not in the hereafter we have made seemly for them their
|
|
works, and they shall wander blindly on! These are they who shall have
|
|
an evil torment, and they in the hereafter shall be those who most
|
|
lose! Verily, thou dost meet with this Koran from the wise, the
|
|
knowing One!
|
|
When Moses said to his people, 'Verily, I perceive a fire, I will
|
|
bring you therefrom news; or I will bring you a burning brand; haply
|
|
ye may be warmed.' But when he came to it he was called to, 'Blessed
|
|
be He who is in the fire, and he who is about it! and celebrated be
|
|
the praises of God, the Lord of the worlds! O Moses! verily, I am God,
|
|
the mighty, wise; throw down thy staff!' and when he saw it quivering,
|
|
as though it were a snake, he turned back fleeing, and did not return.
|
|
'O Moses! fear not; verily, as for me-apostles fear not with me;
|
|
save only those who have done wrong and then substitute good for evil;
|
|
for, verily, I am forgiving, merciful! but put thy hand in thy
|
|
bosom, it shall come forth white without hurt;-one of nine signs to
|
|
Pharaoh and his people; verily, they are a people who act abominably.'
|
|
And when our signs came to them visibly, they said, 'This is obvious
|
|
sorcery!' and they gainsaid them-though their souls made sure of
|
|
them unjustly, haughtily; but, behold what was the end of the
|
|
evildoers!
|
|
And we gave David and Solomon knowledge; and they both said, 'Praise
|
|
belongs to God, who hath preferred us over many of His servants who
|
|
believe!'
|
|
And Solomon was David's heir; and said, 'O ye folk! we have been
|
|
taught the speech of birds, and we have been given everything; verily,
|
|
this is an obvious grace!'
|
|
And assembled for Solomon were his hosts of the ginns, and men,
|
|
and birds, and they were marshalled; until they came upon the valley
|
|
of the ants. Said an ant, 'O ye ants! go into your dwellings, that
|
|
Solomon and his hosts crush you not while they do not perceive.'
|
|
And he smiled, laughing at her speech, and said, 'O Lord! excite
|
|
me to be thankful for Thy favour, wherewith Thou hast favoured me
|
|
and my parents, and to do righteousness which may please Thee; and
|
|
make me enter into Thy mercy amongst Thy righteous servants!'
|
|
And he reviewed the birds, and said, 'How is it I see not the
|
|
hoopoe? is he then amongst the absent? I will surely torment him
|
|
with a severe torment; or I will surely slaughter him; or he shall
|
|
bring me obvious authority.'
|
|
And he tarried not long, and said, 'I have compassed what ye
|
|
compassed not; for I bring you from Seba a sure information: verily, I
|
|
found a woman ruling over them, and she was given all things, and
|
|
she had a mighty throne; and I found her and her people adoring the
|
|
sun instead of God, for Satan had made seemly to them their works, and
|
|
turned them from the path, so that they are not guided. Will they
|
|
not adore God who brings forth the secrets in the heavens, and knows
|
|
what they hide and what they manifest?- God, there is no god but He,
|
|
the Lord of the mighty throne!'
|
|
Said he, 'We will see whether thou hast told the truth, or whether
|
|
thou art of those who lie. Go with this my letter and throw it
|
|
before them, then turn back away from them, and see what they return.'
|
|
Said she, 'O ye chiefs! verily, a noble letter has been thrown
|
|
before me. It is from Solomon, and, verily, it is, "In the name of the
|
|
merciful and compassionate God. Do not rise up against me, but come to
|
|
me resigned!"' She said, ye chiefs! pronounce sentence for me in my
|
|
affair. I never decide an affair until ye testify for me.'
|
|
They said, 'We are endowed with strength, and endowed with keen
|
|
violence; but the bidding is thine, see then what it is that thou wilt
|
|
bid.'
|
|
She said, 'Verily, kings when they enter a city despoil it, and make
|
|
the mighty ones of its people the meanest; thus it is they do! So,
|
|
verily, I am going to send to them a gift, and will wait to see with
|
|
what the messengers return.'
|
|
And when he came to Solomon, he said, 'Do ye proffer me wealth, when
|
|
what God has given me is better than what He has given you? nay, ye in
|
|
your gifts rejoice! return to them, for we will surely come to them
|
|
with hosts which they cannot confront; and we will surely drive them
|
|
out therefrom mean and made small!'
|
|
Said he, 'O ye chiefs! which of you will bring me her throne
|
|
before they come to me resigned?'
|
|
Said a demon of the ginns, 'I will bring thee it before thou canst
|
|
rise up from thy place, for I therein am strong and faithful.'
|
|
He who had the knowledge of the Book said, 'I will bring it to
|
|
thee before thy glance can turn.' And when he saw it settled down
|
|
beside him, he said, 'This is of my Lord's grace, that He may try me
|
|
whether I am grateful or ungrateful, and he who is grateful is only
|
|
grateful for his own soul, and he who is ungrateful,- verily, my
|
|
Lord is rich and generous.'
|
|
Said he, 'Disguise for her her throne; let us see whether she is
|
|
guided, or whether she is of those who are not guided.' And when she
|
|
came it was said, 'Was thy throne like this?' She said, 'It might be
|
|
it;' and we were given knowledge before her, but we were resigned.
|
|
But that which she served beside God turned her away; verily, she
|
|
was of the unbelieving people. And it was said to her, 'Enter the
|
|
court;' and when she saw it, she reckoned it to be an abyss of
|
|
water, and she uncovered her legs. Said he, 'Verily, it is a court
|
|
paved with glass!' Said she, 'My Lord! verily, I have wronged
|
|
myself, but I am resigned with Solomon to God the Lord of the worlds!'
|
|
And we sent unto Thamud their brother Zali'h, 'Serve God;' but
|
|
behold, they were two parties who contended!
|
|
Said he, 'O my people! why do ye hasten on evil acts before good
|
|
deeds? why do ye not ask forgiveness of God? haply ye may obtain
|
|
mercy.' They said, 'We have taken an augury concerning thee and
|
|
those who are with thee. Said he, 'Your augury is in God's hands; nay,
|
|
but ye are a people who are tried!'
|
|
And there were in the city nine persons who despoiled the land and
|
|
did not right. Said they, 'Swear to each other by God, we will
|
|
surely fall on him by night and on his people; then we will surely say
|
|
unto his next of kin, "We witnessed not the destruction of his people,
|
|
and we do surely tell the truth!"' And they plotted a plot, and we
|
|
plotted a plot, but they did not perceive. Behold, how was the end
|
|
of their plot, that we destroyed them and their people all together!
|
|
Thus are their houses overturned, for that they were unjust; verily,
|
|
in that is a sign to people who do know!
|
|
But we saved those who believed and who did fear.
|
|
And Lot when he said to his people, 'Do ye approach an abominable
|
|
sin while ye can see? do ye indeed approach men lustfully rather
|
|
than women? nay! ye are a people who are ignorant.' But the answer
|
|
of his people was only to say, 'Drive out Lot's family from your city!
|
|
verily, they are a folk who would keep pure.'
|
|
But we saved him and his family except his wife, her we destined
|
|
to be of those who lingered; and we rained down upon them rain, and
|
|
evil was the rain of those who were warned.
|
|
Say, 'Praise belongs to God; and peace be upon His servants whom
|
|
He has chosen! Is God best, or what they associate with Him?' He who
|
|
created the heavens and the earth; and sends down upon you from the
|
|
heaven water; and we cause to grow therewith gardens fraught with
|
|
beauty; ye could not cause the trees thereof to grow! Is there a god
|
|
with God? nay, but they are a people who make peers with Him! He who
|
|
made the earth, settled, and placed amongst it rivers; and placed upon
|
|
it firm mountains; and placed between the two seas a barrier; is there
|
|
a god with God? nay, but most of them know not! He who answers the
|
|
distressed when he calls upon Him and removes the evil; and makes
|
|
you successors in the earth; is there a god with God? little is it
|
|
that ye are mindful. He who guides you in the darkness, of the land
|
|
and of the sea; and who sends winds as glad tidings before His
|
|
mercy; is there a god with God? exalted be God above what they
|
|
associate with Him! He who began the creation and then will make it
|
|
return again; and who provides you from the heaven and the earth; is
|
|
there a god with God? so bring your proofs if ye do speak the truth!
|
|
Say, 'None in the heavens or the earth know the unseen save only
|
|
God; but they perceive not when they shall be raised!'-nay, but
|
|
their knowledge attains to somewhat of the hereafter; nay, but they
|
|
are in doubt concerning it! nay, but they are blind!
|
|
And those who disbelieved said, 'What! when we have become dust
|
|
and our fathers too, shall we indeed be brought forth? We were
|
|
promised this, we and our fathers before us, this is nothing but old
|
|
folks' tales!'
|
|
Say, 'Journey on through the land and see how was the end of the
|
|
sinners! and grieve not for them, and be not straitened at what they
|
|
plot.'
|
|
They say, 'When shall this threat be if ye do tell the truth?'
|
|
Say; 'It may be that there is pressing close behind you a part of what
|
|
ye would hasten on! But, verily, thy Lord is full of grace to men, but
|
|
most of them will not be thankful; and, verily, thy Lord knows what
|
|
their breasts conceal and what they manifest; and there is no secret
|
|
thing in the heaven or the earth, save that it is in the perspicuous
|
|
Book!
|
|
Verily, this Koran relates to the people of Israel most of that
|
|
whereon they do dispute; and, verily, it is a guidance and a mercy
|
|
to the believers. Verily, thy Lord decides between them by His
|
|
judgment, for He is mighty, knowing. Rely thou then upon God,
|
|
verily, thou art standing on obvious truth. Verily, thou canst not
|
|
make the dead to hear, and thou canst not make the deaf to hear the
|
|
call when they turn their backs on thee; nor art thou a guide to the
|
|
blind, out of their error: thou canst only make to hear such as
|
|
believe in our signs, and such as are resigned.
|
|
And when the sentence falls upon them we will bring forth a beast
|
|
out of the earth that shall speak to them, (and say) that, 'Men of our
|
|
signs would not be sure.'
|
|
And the day when we will gather from every nation a troop of those
|
|
who said our signs were lies; and they shall be marshalled; until they
|
|
come, and He will say, 'Did ye say my signs were lies, when ye had
|
|
compassed no knowledge thereof? or what is it that ye were doing?' and
|
|
the sentence shall fall upon them for that they did wrong, and they
|
|
shall not have speech.
|
|
Did they not see that we have made the night for them to rest in,
|
|
and the day to see by? verily, in that are signs to people who
|
|
believe.
|
|
And the day when the trumpet shall be blown and all who are in the
|
|
heavens and the earth shall be startled, save whom God pleases! and
|
|
all shall come abjectly to Him. And thou shalt see the mountains,
|
|
which thou dost deem solid, pass away like the passing of the
|
|
clouds;-the work of God who orders all things; verily, He is well
|
|
aware of what ye do!
|
|
He who brings a good deed shall have better than it; and from the
|
|
alarm of that day they shall be safe: but those who bring an evil deed
|
|
shall be thrown down upon their faces in the fire. Shall ye be
|
|
rewarded save for what ye have done?
|
|
I am bidden to serve the Lord of this country who has made it
|
|
sacred, and whose are all things; and I am bidden to be of those who
|
|
are resigned, and to recite the Koran; A an; and he who is guided he
|
|
is only guided for himself; and he who errs, say, 'I am only of
|
|
those who warn!'
|
|
And say, 'Praise be to God, He will show you His signs, and ye shall
|
|
recognise them; for thy Lord is not heedless of what ye do!'
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF THE STORY
|
|
(XXVIII. Mecca.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
TA SIN MIM. Those are the signs of the perspicuous Book; we recite
|
|
to thee from the history of Moses and Pharaoh in truth unto a people
|
|
who believe.
|
|
Verily, Pharaoh was lofty in the land and made the people thereof
|
|
sects; one party of them he weakened, slaughtering their sons and
|
|
letting their women live. Verily, he was of the despoilers.
|
|
And we wished to be gracious to those who were weakened in the
|
|
earth, and to make them models, and to make them the heirs; and to
|
|
establish for them in the earth; and to show Pharaoh and Haman and
|
|
their hosts what they had to beware of from them.
|
|
And we inspired the mother of Moses, 'Suckle him; and when thou
|
|
art afraid for him then throw him into the river, and fear not and
|
|
grieve not; verily, we are going to restore him to thee, and to make
|
|
him of the apostles!'
|
|
And Pharaoh's family picked him up that he might be for them a foe
|
|
and a grief; verily, Pharaoh and Haman and their hosts were sinners.
|
|
And Pharaoh's wife said, 'He is a cheering of the eye to me, and
|
|
to thee. Kill him not; it may be that he will profit us, or that we
|
|
may take him for a son;' for they did not perceive.
|
|
And the heart of Moses' mother was void on the morrow; she well-nigh
|
|
disclosed him, had it not been that we bound up her heart that she
|
|
might be of the believers.
|
|
And she said to his sister, 'Follow him up.' And she looked after
|
|
him from afar, and they did not perceive. And we made unlawful for him
|
|
the wet-nurses. And she said, 'Shall I guide you to the people of a
|
|
house who will take care of him for you, and who will be sincere
|
|
respecting him?
|
|
So we restored him to his mother that her eye might be cheered,
|
|
and that she might not grieve, and that she might know that the
|
|
promise of God is true, though most of them know not.
|
|
And when he reached puberty, and was settled, we gave him judgment
|
|
and knowledge; for thus do we reward those who do well. And he entered
|
|
into the city at the time the people thereof were heedless, and he
|
|
found therein two men fighting; the one of his sect and the other of
|
|
his foes. And he who was of his sect asked his aid against him who was
|
|
of his foes; and Moses smote him with his fist and finished him.
|
|
Said he, 'This is of the work of Satan, verily, he is a misleading
|
|
obvious foe.'
|
|
Said he, 'My Lord! verily, I have wronged my soul, but forgive
|
|
me.' So He forgave him; for He is forgiving and merciful.
|
|
Said he, 'My Lord! for that Thou hast been gracious to me, I will
|
|
surely not back up the sinners.'
|
|
And on the morrow he was afraid in the city, expectant. And
|
|
behold, he whom he had helped the day before cried (again) to him
|
|
for aid. Said Moses to him, 'Verily, thou art obviously quarrelsome.
|
|
And when he wished to assault him who was the enemy to them both, he
|
|
said, 'O Moses! dost thou desire to kill me as thou didst kill a
|
|
person yesterday? thou dost only desire to be a tyrant in the earth;
|
|
and thou dost not desire to be of those who do right!' And a man
|
|
came from the remote parts of the city running, said he, 'O Moses!
|
|
verily, the chiefs are deliberating concerning thee to kill thee; go
|
|
then forth; verily, I am to you a sincere adviser!'
|
|
So he went forth therefrom, afraid and expectant. Said he, 'Lord,
|
|
save me from the unjust people!'
|
|
And when he turned his face in the direction of Midian, he said, 'It
|
|
may be that my Lord will guide me to a level path!' And when he went
|
|
down to the water of Midian he found thereat a nation of people
|
|
watering their flocks.
|
|
And he found beside them two women keeping back their flocks. Said
|
|
he, 'What is your design?' They said, 'We cannot water our flocks
|
|
until the herdsmen have finished; for our father is a very old man.'
|
|
So he watered for them; then he turned back towards the shade and
|
|
said, 'My Lord! verily, I stand in need of what Thou sendest down to
|
|
me of good.'
|
|
And one of the two came to him walking modestly; said she,
|
|
'Verily, my father calls thee, to reward thee with hire for having
|
|
watered our flocks for us.' And when he came to him and related to him
|
|
the story, said he, 'Fear not, thou art safe from the unjust
|
|
people.' Said one of them, 'O my sire! hire him; verily, the best of
|
|
those whom thou canst hire is the strong and faithful.'
|
|
Said he, 'Verily, I desire to marry thee to one of these daughters
|
|
of mine, on condition that thou dost serve me for hire eight years;
|
|
and if thou shalt fulfil ten it is of thyself; for I do not wish to
|
|
make it wretched for thee; thou wilt find me, if it please God, of the
|
|
righteous!'
|
|
Said he, 'That is between you and me; whichever of the two terms I
|
|
fulfil, let there be no enmity against me, for God over what we say
|
|
keeps guard.'
|
|
And when Moses had fulfilled the appointed time, and was
|
|
journeying with his people, he perceived from the side of the mountain
|
|
a fire; said he to his people, 'Tarry ye here; verily, I have
|
|
perceived a fire, haply I may bring you good news therefrom, or a
|
|
brand of fire that haply ye may be warmed.'
|
|
And when he came to it he was called to, from the right side of
|
|
the wady, in the blessed valley, out of the tree, 'O Moses! verily,
|
|
I am God the Lord of the worlds; so throw down thy rod;' and when he
|
|
saw it quivering as though it were a snake, he turned away and fled
|
|
and did not return. 'O Moses! approach and fear not, verily, thou
|
|
art amongst the safe. Thrust thy hand into thy bosom, it shall come
|
|
out white, without hurt; and then fold again thy wing, that thou
|
|
dost now stretch out through dread; for those are two signs from thy
|
|
Lord to Pharaoh and his chiefs; verily, they are a people who work
|
|
abomination!'
|
|
Said he, 'My Lord! verily, I have killed a person amongst them,
|
|
and I fear that they will kill me: and my brother Aaron, he is more
|
|
eloquent of tongue than I; send him then with me as a support, to
|
|
verify me; verily, I fear that they will call me liar!'
|
|
Said He, 'We will strengthen thine arm with thy brother; and we will
|
|
make for you both authority, and they shall not reach you in our
|
|
signs; ye two and those who follow you shall gain the upper hand.'
|
|
And when Moses came to them with our manifest signs, they said,
|
|
'This is only sorcery devised; and we have not heard of this amongst
|
|
our fathers of yore.'
|
|
Moses said, 'My Lord knows best who comes with guidance from Him,
|
|
and whose shall be the issue of the abode. Verily, the unjust shall
|
|
not prosper!'
|
|
And Pharaoh said, 'O ye chiefs! I do not know any god for you except
|
|
me; then set fire, O Haman! to some clay and make for me a tower,
|
|
haply I may mount up to the God of Moses; for, verily, I think he is
|
|
of those who lie!'
|
|
And he grew big with pride, he and his armies in the land, without
|
|
right; and they thought that they to us should not return. And we
|
|
overtook him and his army, and we flung them into the sea; behold,
|
|
then, how was the end of the unjust!
|
|
But we made them models calling to the fire; and on the resurrection
|
|
day they shall not be helped; and we followed them up in this world
|
|
with a curse; and on the resurrection day they shall be abhorred!
|
|
And we gave Moses the Book, after that we had destroyed the former
|
|
generations, as an insight to men and a guidance and a mercy; haply
|
|
they may be mindful!
|
|
Thou wast not upon the western side when we decided for Moses, but
|
|
afar off; nor wast thou of the witnesses. But we raised up (other)
|
|
generations, and life was prolonged for them; and thou wast not
|
|
staying amidst the people of Midian, reciting to them our signs; but
|
|
we were sending our apostles.
|
|
Nor wast thou by the side of the mountain when we called; but it
|
|
is a mercy from thy Lord, that thou mayest warn a people to whom no
|
|
warner has come before thee; haply they may be mindful! And lest there
|
|
should befall them a mishap for what their hands have sent before, and
|
|
they should say, 'Our Lord! why didst thou not send to us an
|
|
apostle? for we would have followed thy signs and been of the
|
|
believers.'
|
|
And when the truth comes to them from us they say, 'We are given the
|
|
like of what Moses was given.' Did they not disbelieve in what Moses
|
|
was given before?-they say, 'Two works of sorcery back up each other;'
|
|
and they say, 'Verily, we do disbelieve in all.'
|
|
Say, 'Bring, then, a book from God which shall be a better guide
|
|
than both, and I will follow it, if ye do tell the truth!'
|
|
And if they cannot answer thee, then know that they follow their own
|
|
lusts; and who is more in error than he who follows his own lust
|
|
without guidance from God? verily, God guides not an unjust people!
|
|
And we caused the word to reach them, haply they may be mindful!
|
|
Those to whom we gave the Book before it, they believe therein;
|
|
and when it is recited to them they say, 'We believe in it as truth
|
|
from our Lord; verily, we were resigned before it came!' These shall
|
|
be given their hire twice over, for that they were patient, and
|
|
repelled evil with good, and of what we have bestowed upon them give
|
|
alms.
|
|
And when they hear vain talk, they turn away from it and say, 'We
|
|
have our works, and ye have your works. Peace be upon you! we do not
|
|
seek the ignorant!'
|
|
Verily, thou canst not guide whom thou dost like, but God guides
|
|
whom He pleases; for He knows best who are to be guided.
|
|
And they say, 'If we follow the guidance we shall be snatched away
|
|
from the land.' Have we not established for them a safe sanctuary,
|
|
to which are imported the fruits of everything as a provision from us?
|
|
but most of them do not know.
|
|
How many a city have we destroyed that exulted in its means of
|
|
subsistence? These are their dwellings, never dwelt in after them,
|
|
except a little; for we were the heirs.
|
|
But thy Lord would never destroy cities until He sent to the
|
|
metropolis thereof an apostle, to recite to them our signs; nor
|
|
would we destroy cities unless their people were unjust. Whatever
|
|
thing ye may be given, it is a provision for this world's life and the
|
|
adornment thereof; but what is with God is better and more enduring;
|
|
have ye then no sense?
|
|
Is He to whom we have promised a goodly promise, which he shall meet
|
|
with, like him to whom we have given the enjoyment of the life of this
|
|
world, and who upon the resurrection day shall be of the arraigned?
|
|
And on the day when He will call them and will say, 'Where are those
|
|
associates which ye did pretend?' And those against whom the
|
|
sentence is due shall say, 'Our Lord! these are those whom we have
|
|
seduced; we seduced them as we were seduced ourselves: but we clear
|
|
ourselves to thee;-they did not worship us!'
|
|
And it will be said, 'Call upon your partners; and they will call
|
|
upon them, but they will not answer them, and they shall see the
|
|
torment; would that they had been guided.
|
|
And the day when He shall call them and shall say, 'What was it ye
|
|
answered the apostles?' and the history shall be blindly confusing
|
|
to them on that day, and they shall not ask each other.
|
|
But, as for him who turns again and believes and does right, it
|
|
may be that he will be among the prosperous. For thy Lord creates what
|
|
He pleases and chooses; they have not the choice! Celebrated be the
|
|
praise of God! and exalted be He above what they associate with Him!
|
|
Thy Lord knows what they conceal in their breasts and what they
|
|
manifest.
|
|
He is God, there is no god but He; to Him belongs praise, in the
|
|
first and the last; and His is the judgment; and unto Him shall ye
|
|
return!
|
|
Have ye considered, if God were to make for you the night endless
|
|
until the resurrection day, who is the god, but God, to bring you
|
|
light? can ye not then hear?
|
|
Say, 'Have ye considered, if God were to make for you the day
|
|
endless until the day of judgment, who is the god, except God, to
|
|
bring you the night to rest therein? can ye not then see?' But of
|
|
His mercy He has made for you the night and the day, that ye may
|
|
rest therein, and crave of His grace, haply ye may give thanks.
|
|
And the day when He shall call them and shall say, 'Where are my
|
|
partners whom ye did pretend?' And we will pluck from every nation a
|
|
witness; and we will say, 'Bring your proof and know that the truth is
|
|
God's;' and that which they had devised shall stray away from them.
|
|
Verily, Korah was of the people of Moses, and he was outrageous
|
|
against them; and we gave him treasuries of which the keys would
|
|
bear down a band of men endowed with strength. When his people said to
|
|
him, 'Exult not; verily, God loves not those who exult! but crave,
|
|
through what God has given thee, the future abode; and forget not
|
|
thy portion in this world, and do good, as God has done good to
|
|
thee; and seek not evil doing in the earth; verily, God loves not
|
|
the evildoers!'
|
|
Said he, 'I have only been given it for knowledge which I have!' did
|
|
he not know that God had destroyed before him many generations of
|
|
those who were stronger than he, and had amassed more? But the sinners
|
|
need not to be asked concerning their crimes.
|
|
And he went out amongst the people in his ornaments; those who
|
|
desired the life of this world said, 'O would that we had the like
|
|
of what Korah has been given! verily, he is endowed with mighty
|
|
fortune!'
|
|
But those who had been given knowledge said, 'Woe to you! the reward
|
|
of God is better for him who believes and does right; but none shall
|
|
meet with it except the patient. And we clave the earth with him and
|
|
with his house; and he had no troop to help him against God, nor was
|
|
he of those who were helped!'
|
|
And on the morrow those who had yearned for his place the day before
|
|
said, 'Ah, ah! God extends provision to whom He pleases of His
|
|
servants, or He doles it out; had not God been gracious to us, the
|
|
earth would have cleft open with us! Ah, ah! the unbelievers shall not
|
|
prosper!
|
|
That is the future abode; we make it for those who do not wish to be
|
|
haughty in the earth, nor to do evil, and the end is for the pious.
|
|
He who brings a good deed shall have better than it; and he who
|
|
brings an evil deed-those who do evil deeds shall only be rewarded for
|
|
that which they have done. Verily, He who hath ordained the Koran
|
|
for thee will restore thee to thy returning place. Say, 'My Lord knows
|
|
best who brings guidance, and who is in obvious error; nor couldst
|
|
thou hope that the Book would be thrown to thee, save as a mercy
|
|
from thy Lord! be not then a backer up of those who misbelieve; and
|
|
let them not turn thee from the signs of God, after they have been
|
|
sent down to thee; but call unto thy Lord and be not of the idolaters;
|
|
and call not with God upon any other god; there is no god but He!
|
|
everything is perishable, except His face; His is the judgment, and
|
|
unto Him shall ye return!
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF THE SPIDER
|
|
(XXIX. Mecca.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
ALIF LAM MIM. Do men then reckon that they will be left alone to
|
|
say, 'We believe,' and not be tried? we did try those who were
|
|
before them, and God will surely know those who are truthful, and He
|
|
will surely know the liars. Do those who do evil reckon that they
|
|
can outstrip us? evil is it that they judge.
|
|
He who hopes for the meeting of God,-verily, God's appointed time
|
|
will come; and He both hears and knows! And he who fights strenuously,
|
|
fights strenuously only for his own soul; verily, God is independent
|
|
of the worlds.
|
|
Those who believe and do right, we will surely cover for them
|
|
their offences; and we will surely reward them with better than that
|
|
which they have done.
|
|
And we have enjoined on man kindness to his parents; and if they
|
|
strive with thee that thou mayest join with me, what thou hast no
|
|
knowledge of, then obey them not; to me is your return, and I will
|
|
inform you of that which ye have done.
|
|
But those who believe and do right, we will make them enter
|
|
amongst the righteous.
|
|
And there are those among men who say, 'We believe in God!' but when
|
|
they are hurt in God's cause, they deem the trials of men like the
|
|
torment of God; but if help come from thy Lord they will say, 'Verily,
|
|
we were with you!' does not God know best what is in the breasts of
|
|
the worlds? God will surely know those who believe, and will surely
|
|
know the hypocrites.
|
|
And those who misbelieved said to those who believed, 'Follow our
|
|
path, we will bear your sins; but they could not bear their sins at
|
|
all; verily, they are liars! But they shall surely bear their own
|
|
burdens, and burdens with their burdens; and they shall surely be
|
|
asked upon the resurrection day concerning what they did devise.
|
|
And we sent Noah to his people, and he dwelt among them for a
|
|
thousand years save fifty years; and the deluge overtook them while
|
|
they were unjust: but we saved him and the fellows of the ark, and
|
|
we made it a sign unto the worlds.
|
|
And Abraham when he said to his people, 'Serve God and fear Him,
|
|
that is better for you if ye did but know. Ye only serve beside God
|
|
idols and do create a lie; verily, those whom ye serve beside God
|
|
cannot control for themselves provision; then crave provision with
|
|
God, and serve Him, and give thanks to Him; unto Him shall ye
|
|
return! And if ye say it is a lie, nations before you called (the
|
|
apostles) liars too; but an apostle has only his plain message to
|
|
preach!'
|
|
Have they not seen how God produces the creation, and then turns
|
|
it back? verily, that to God is easy.
|
|
Say, 'Journey ye on in the land, and behold how the creation
|
|
appeared; then God produces another production: verily, God is
|
|
mighty over all!'
|
|
He torments whom He will, and has mercy on whom He will; and unto
|
|
Him shall ye be returned.
|
|
Nor can ye make Him helpless in the earth, nor in the heavens; nor
|
|
have ye beside God a patron or a helper.
|
|
And those who disbelieve in God's signs and in meeting with Him,
|
|
these shall despair of my mercy; and these, for them is grievous woe.
|
|
But the answer of his people was only to say, 'Kill him or burn
|
|
him!' But God saved him from the fire; verily, in that are signs
|
|
unto a people who believe.
|
|
He said, 'Verily, ye take be-side God idols, through mutual
|
|
friendship in the life of this world; then on the day of judgment ye
|
|
shall deny each other, and shall curse each other, and your resort
|
|
shall be the fire, and ye shall have none to help.'
|
|
And Lot believed him. And (Abraham) said, 'Verily, I flee unto my
|
|
Lord! Verily, He is mighty, wise! and we granted him Isaac and
|
|
Jacob; and we placed in his seed prophecy and the Book; and we gave
|
|
him his hire in this world; and, verily, he in the next shall be among
|
|
the righteous.'
|
|
And Lot when he said to his people, 'Verily, ye approach an
|
|
abomination which no one in all the world ever anticipated you in!
|
|
What! do ye approach men? and stop folks on the highway? and
|
|
approach in your assembly sin?' but the answer of his people was
|
|
only to say, 'Bring us God's torment, if thou art of those who speak
|
|
the truth!'
|
|
Said he, 'My Lord! help me against a people who do evil!'
|
|
And when our messengers came to Abraham with the glad tidings,
|
|
they said, 'We are about to destroy the people of this city. Verily,
|
|
the people thereof are wrong-doers.'
|
|
Said he, 'Verily, in it is Lot; they said, 'We know best who is
|
|
therein; we shall of a surety save him and his people, except his
|
|
wife, who is of those who linger.' And when our messengers came to
|
|
Lot, he was vexed for them, and his arm was straitened for them; and
|
|
they said, 'Fear not, neither grieve; we are about to save thee and
|
|
thy people, except thy wife, who is of those who linger. Verily, we
|
|
are about to send down upon the people of this city a horror from
|
|
heaven, for that they have sinned; and we have left therefrom a
|
|
manifest sign unto a people who have sense.'
|
|
And unto Midian we sent their brother Sho'haib, and he said, 'My
|
|
people, serve God, and hope for the last day; and waste not the
|
|
land, despoiling it.'
|
|
But they called him liar; and the convulsion seized them, and on the
|
|
morrow they lay in their dwellings prone.
|
|
And Ad and Thamud- but it is plain to you from their habitations;
|
|
for Satan made seemly to them their works, and turned them from the
|
|
way, sagacious though they were!
|
|
And Korah and Pharaoh and Haman- Moses did come to them with
|
|
manifest signs, but they were too big with pride in the earth,
|
|
although they could not outstrip us!
|
|
And each of them we seized in his sin; and of them were some against
|
|
whom we sent a sandstorm; and of them were some whom the noise seized;
|
|
and of them were some with whom we cleaved the earth open; and of them
|
|
were some we drowned: God would not have wronged them, but it was
|
|
themselves they wronged.
|
|
The likeness of those who take, beside God, patrons is as the
|
|
likeness of a spider, that takes to himself a house; and, verily,
|
|
the weakest of houses is a spider's house, if they did but know!
|
|
Verily, God knows whatever thing they call upon beside Him; for He
|
|
is the mighty, wise.
|
|
These are parables which we have struck out for men; but none will
|
|
understand them, save those who know.
|
|
God created the heavens and the earth in truth verily, in this is
|
|
a sign unto believers.
|
|
Recite what has been- revealed to thee of the Book; and be steadfast
|
|
in prayer; verily, prayer forbids sin and wrong; and surely the
|
|
mention of God is greater; for God knows what ye do. And do not
|
|
wrangle with the people of the Book, except for what is better; save
|
|
with those who have been unjust amongst them and who say, 'We
|
|
believe in what is sent down to us, and what has been sent down to
|
|
you; our God and your God is one, and we are unto Him resigned.'
|
|
Thus did we send down to thee the Book; and every one to whom we
|
|
have given the Book believes therein. But these will not believe
|
|
therein; though none gainsay our signs except the misbelievers.
|
|
Thou couldst not recite before this any book, nor write it with
|
|
thy right hand, for in that case those who deem it vain would have
|
|
doubted. Nay, but it is evident signs in the breasts of those who
|
|
are endued with knowledge, and none but the unjust would gainsay our
|
|
signs!
|
|
They say, 'Unless there be sent down upon him signs from his Lord-;'
|
|
say, 'Verily, signs are with God, and, verily, I am an obvious
|
|
warner!'
|
|
Is it not enough for them that we have sent down to thee the Book
|
|
which thou dost recite to them? verily, in that is a mercy and a
|
|
reminder to a people who believe.
|
|
Say, 'God is witness enough between me and you; He knows what is
|
|
in the heavens and what is in the earth; and those who believe in
|
|
falsehood and misbelieve in God, they shall be the losers.' They
|
|
will wish thee to hasten on the torment; but were it not for a
|
|
stated and appointed time, the torment would have come upon them
|
|
suddenly, while yet they did not perceive.
|
|
They will wish thee to hurry on the torment, but, verily, hell
|
|
encompasses the misbelievers!
|
|
On the day when the torment shall cover them from above them and
|
|
from beneath their feet, and He shall say, 'Taste that which ye have
|
|
done!'
|
|
O my servants who believe! verily, my land is spacious enough; me
|
|
therefore do ye worship.
|
|
Every soul must taste of death, then unto us shall ye return; and
|
|
those who believe and act aright, we will surely inform them of
|
|
upper chambers in Paradise, beneath which rivers flow; to dwell
|
|
therein for aye-pleasant is the hire of those who work! those who
|
|
are patient and rely upon their Lord!
|
|
How many a beast cannot carry its own provision! God provides for it
|
|
and for you; He both hears and knows!
|
|
And if thou shouldst ask them, 'Who created the heavens and the
|
|
earth, and subjected the sun and the moon?' they will surely say,
|
|
'God!' how then can they lie?
|
|
God extends provision to whomsoever He will of His servants, or
|
|
doles it out to him; verily, God all things doth know.
|
|
And if thou shouldst ask them, 'Who sends down from the heavens
|
|
water and quickens therewith the earth in its death?' they will surely
|
|
say, 'God!' say, 'And praise be to God!' nay, most of them have no
|
|
sense.
|
|
This life of the world is nothing but a sport and a play; but,
|
|
verily, the abode of the next world, that is life,-if they did but
|
|
know!
|
|
And when they ride in the ship they call upon God, making their
|
|
religion seem sincere to Him; but when He saves them to the shore,
|
|
behold, they associate others with Him; that they may disbelieve in
|
|
our signs; and that they may have some enjoyment: but soon they
|
|
shall know.
|
|
Have they not seen that we have made a safe sanctuary whilst
|
|
people are being snatched away around them? is it then in falsehood
|
|
that they will believe, and for the favours of God be ungrateful?
|
|
But who is more unjust than he who devises against God a lie, or
|
|
calls the truth a lie when it comes to him? Is there not in hell a
|
|
resort for the misbelievers? but those who fight strenuously for us we
|
|
will surely guide them into our way, for, verily, God is with those
|
|
who do well.
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF THE GREEKS
|
|
(XXX. Mecca.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
The Greeks are overcome in the nighest parts of the land; but
|
|
after being overcome they shall overcome in a few years; to God
|
|
belongs the order before and after; and on that day the believers
|
|
shall rejoice in the help of God;-God helps whom He will, and He is
|
|
mighty, merciful.- God's promise!-God breaks not His promise, but most
|
|
men do not know!
|
|
They know the outside of this world's life, but of the hereafter
|
|
they are heedless. Have they not reflected in themselves, that God
|
|
created not the heavens and the earth, and what is between the two
|
|
except in truth, and for a stated and appointed time? but, verily,
|
|
many men in the meeting of their Lord do disbelieve.
|
|
Have they not journeyed on in the land and seen how was the end of
|
|
those before them who were stronger than they, and who turned up the
|
|
ground and cultivated it more than they do cultivate it? and there
|
|
came to them their apostles with manifest signs; for God would never
|
|
wrong them: it was themselves they wronged!
|
|
Then evil was the end of those who did evil, in that they said the
|
|
signs of God were lies and mocked thereat.
|
|
God produces a creation, then He makes it go back again, then unto
|
|
Him shall ye return.
|
|
And on the day when the Hour shall rise, the sinners shall be
|
|
confused; and they shall not have amongst their partners intercessors;
|
|
and their partners shall they deny.
|
|
And on the day when the Hour shall rise, on that day shall they be
|
|
scattered apart; and as for those who believe and do right, they in
|
|
the garden shall be joyful; and as for those who misbelieved and
|
|
said our signs and the meeting of the hereafter were lies, they
|
|
shall be in the torment arraigned.
|
|
Celebrated be the praises of God, when ye are in the evening and
|
|
when ye are in the morning! for to Him belongs praise in the heavens
|
|
and the earth! and at the evening, and when ye are at noon.
|
|
He brings forth the living from the dead, and brings forth the
|
|
dead from the living; and He quickens the earth after its death, and
|
|
thus shall ye too be brought forth.
|
|
And of His signs is this, that He hath created you from dust;
|
|
then, behold, ye are mortals who are spread abroad.
|
|
And of His signs is this, that He hath created for you of yourselves
|
|
wives with whom ye may cohabit; He has made between you affection
|
|
and pity. Verily, in that are signs unto a people who reflect.
|
|
And of His signs is the creation of the heavens and the earth, and
|
|
the diversity of your tongues and colours; verily, in that are signs
|
|
unto the worlds.
|
|
And of His signs is your sleep by night and by day; and your craving
|
|
after His grace. Verily, in that are signs unto a people who do hear.
|
|
And of His signs is this, that He shows you lightning for fear and
|
|
hope; and sends down from the sky water, and quickens therewith the
|
|
earth after its death; verily, in that are signs unto a people who
|
|
have sense.
|
|
And of His signs is this, that the heavens and the earth stand by
|
|
His order; then when He calls you from the earth, lo! ye shall come
|
|
forth. His are those who are in the heavens and the earth, and all
|
|
to Him are devoted. And He it is who produces a creation and then
|
|
makes it to go back again; for it is very easy to Him; and His are the
|
|
loftiest similitudes in the heavens and the earth; and He is the
|
|
mighty, wise!
|
|
He has struck out for you a parable from yourselves; have ye of what
|
|
your right hand possess partners in what we have bestowed upon you, so
|
|
that ye share alike therein? do ye fear them as ye fear each other?-
|
|
Thus do we detail the signs unto a people who have sense.
|
|
Nay, when those who are unjust follow their lusts without
|
|
knowledge,-and who shall guide him whom God has led astray? and they
|
|
shall have none to help.
|
|
Set thy face steadfast towards the religion as an 'Hanif,
|
|
according to the constitution whereon God has constituted men; there
|
|
is no altering the creation of God, that is the standard religion,
|
|
though most men do not know.
|
|
Turn repentant towards Him; and fear Him, and be steadfast in
|
|
prayer; and be not of the idolaters.
|
|
Of those who have divided their religion and become sects, every
|
|
party in what they have, rejoice.
|
|
And when distress touches men they call upon their Lord, repentant
|
|
towards Him; then when He has made them taste mercy from Himself,
|
|
behold! a party of them associate others with their Lord, that they
|
|
may disbelieve in what we have brought them;-but enjoy yourselves; for
|
|
hereafter ye shall know!
|
|
Or have we sent down to them authority which speaks of what they
|
|
do associate with Him?
|
|
And when we have made men taste of mercy, they rejoice therein;
|
|
and if there befall them evil for what their hands have sent before,
|
|
behold! they are in despair.
|
|
Have they not seen that God extends provision to whom He pleases, or
|
|
doles it out? verily, in that are signs unto a people who believe.
|
|
Then give to the kinsman his due, and to the poor and to the
|
|
wayfarer; that is better for those who desire the face of God, and
|
|
these it is who are prosperous.
|
|
And what-ye put out to usury that it may increase with the wealth of
|
|
men, it shall not increase with God; but what ye put- out in alms,
|
|
desiring the face of God-these it is who shall gain double.
|
|
It is God who created you and then provided for you; and then will
|
|
make you die, and then will quicken you again; is there any of your
|
|
partners who can do aught of that? Celebrated be His praises, and
|
|
exalted be He above what they associate with Him!
|
|
Trouble hath appeared in the land and the sea, for what men's
|
|
hands have gained! to make them taste a part of that which they have
|
|
done,-haply they may return!
|
|
Say, 'Journey on in the land, and behold what was the end of those
|
|
before you,-most of them were idolaters!'
|
|
Set thy face steadfast to the standard religion, before there come a
|
|
day from God which there is no averting; on that day shall they be
|
|
parted into two bands.
|
|
He who misbelieves, upon him is his misbelief; but whoso does right,
|
|
for themselves they are spreading couches:
|
|
That He may reward those who believe and do right of His grace;
|
|
verily, He loves not the misbelievers!
|
|
And of His signs is this, that He sends forth the winds with glad
|
|
tidings, to make you taste of His mercy, and to make the ships go on
|
|
at His bidding, and that ye may crave of His grace, and haply ye may
|
|
give thanks.
|
|
We have sent before thee apostles unto their people, and they came
|
|
to them with manifest signs: and we took vengeance upon those who
|
|
sinned, but due from us it was to help the believers.
|
|
God it is who sends forth the winds to stir up clouds; then He
|
|
spreads them forth over the sky as he pleases; and He breaks them up
|
|
and ye see the rain come forth from amongst them; and when He causes
|
|
it to fall upon whom He pleases of His servants, behold they hail it
|
|
with joy, although before it was sent down upon them they were
|
|
before then confused!
|
|
Look then to the vestiges of God's mercy, how He quickens the
|
|
earth after its death; verily, that is the quickener of the dead,
|
|
and He is mighty over all!
|
|
But if we should send a wind and they should see it yellow, they
|
|
would after that become misbelievers.
|
|
But, verily, thou canst not make the dead to hear, nor canst thou
|
|
make the deaf to hear the call, when they turn their backs and flee;
|
|
nor hast thou to guide the blind out of their error; thou canst only
|
|
make those to hear who believe in our signs and who are resigned.
|
|
God it is who created you of weakness, then made for you after
|
|
weakness strength; then made for you after strength, weakness and grey
|
|
hairs: He creates what He pleases, for He is the knowing, the
|
|
powerful!
|
|
And on the day when the Hour shall rise, the sinners shall swear
|
|
that they have not tarried save an hour; thus were they wont to lie!
|
|
But those who are given knowledge and faith will say, 'We have
|
|
tarried according to the Book of God, until the day of
|
|
resurrection;' and this is the day of resurrection, but ye-ye do not
|
|
know.
|
|
And on that day their excuse shall profit not those who did wrong;
|
|
nor shall they be asked to please God again.
|
|
We have struck out to men in this Koran every kind of parable; but
|
|
if thou shouldst bring them a sign then those who misbelieve will
|
|
surely say, 'Ye are but followers of vanity; thus does God set a stamp
|
|
upon the hearts of those who do not know.'
|
|
Be thou patient then; verily, God's promise is true! and let them
|
|
not flurry thee who are not sure.
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF LOQMAN
|
|
(XXXI. Mecca.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
ALIF LAM MIM. These are the signs of the wise Book, a guidance and a
|
|
mercy to those who do well, who are steadfast in prayer and give
|
|
alms and who of the hereafter are sure; these are in guidance from
|
|
their Lord, and these are the prosperous.
|
|
And amongst men is one who buys sportive legends, to lead astray
|
|
from God's path, without knowledge, and to make a jest of it; these,
|
|
for them is shameful woe! And when our signs are recited to him, he
|
|
turns his back, too big with pride, as though he heard them not,-as if
|
|
in his two ears were dulness. But give to him glad tidings of grievous
|
|
woe!
|
|
Verily, those who believe and do right, for them are gardens of
|
|
pleasure, to dwell therein for aye;-God's promise in truth, and He
|
|
is wise.
|
|
He created the heavens without pillars that ye can see, and He threw
|
|
upon the earth firm mountains lest it should move with you; and He
|
|
dispersed thereon every sort of beast; and we send down from the
|
|
heavens water, and we caused to grow therein of every noble kind.
|
|
This is God's creation; show me what others beside Him have
|
|
created;-nay, the unjust are in obvious error!
|
|
We did give unto Loqman wisdom, saying, 'Thank God; for he who
|
|
thanks God is only thankful for his own soul; and he who is
|
|
ungrateful- verily, God is independent, worthy of praise!'
|
|
And when Loqman said to his son while admonishing him, 'O my boy!
|
|
associate none with God, for, verily, such association is a mighty
|
|
wrong.'-
|
|
For we have commended his parents to man; his mother bore him with
|
|
weakness upon weakness; and his weaning is in two years;-'Be
|
|
thankful to me and to thy parents; for unto me shall your journey
|
|
be. But if they strive with thee that thou shouldst associate with
|
|
me that which thou hast no knowledge of, then obey them not. But
|
|
associate with them in the world with kindness, and follow the way
|
|
of him who turns repentant unto me; then unto me is your return, and I
|
|
will inform you of that which ye have done!
|
|
O my son! verily, if there were the weight of a grain of mustard
|
|
seed and it were (hidden) in the rock, or in the heaven, or in the
|
|
earth, God would bring it (to light). Verily, God is subtle, well
|
|
aware!
|
|
'O my son! be steadfast in prayer, and bid what is reasonable and
|
|
forbid what is wrong; be patient of what befalls thee, verily, that is
|
|
one of the determined affairs.
|
|
'And twist not thy cheek proudly, nor walk in the land haughtily;
|
|
verily, God loves not every arrogant boaster: but be moderate in thy
|
|
walk, and lower thy voice; verily, the most disagreeable of voices
|
|
is the voice of asses!'
|
|
Have ye not seen that God has subjected to you what is in the
|
|
heavens and what is in the earth, and has poured down upon you His
|
|
favours, outwardly and inwardly? but amongst men are those who wrangle
|
|
about God, without knowledge, and without guidance, and without an
|
|
illuminating book!
|
|
And when it is said to them, 'Follow what God has sent down;' they
|
|
say, 'Nay! we will follow what we found our fathers agreed
|
|
upon;'-what! though Satan calls them to the torment of the blaze?
|
|
But he who resigns his face unto God, and does good, he has
|
|
grasped the firm handle; unto God is the issue of affairs. But he
|
|
who misbelieves, let not his misbelief grieve thee; to us is their
|
|
return, and we will inform them of what they do;-for, verily, God
|
|
knows the nature of men's breasts!
|
|
We will let them enjoy themselves a little; then we will force
|
|
them to rigorous woe!
|
|
And if thou shouldst ask them who created the heavens and the earth,
|
|
they will surely say, 'God.' Say, 'Praise be to God!' but most of them
|
|
do not know.
|
|
God's is what is in the heavens and what is in the earth; verily,
|
|
God, He is the independent, worthy of praise.
|
|
And were the trees that are in the earth pens, and the sea (ink)
|
|
with seven more seas to swell its tide, the words of God would not
|
|
be spent; verily, God is mighty, wise!
|
|
Your creation and your rising again are but as that of one soul;
|
|
verily, God both hears and sees!
|
|
Dost thou not see that God joins on the night to the day, and
|
|
joins on the day to the night, and has subjected the sun and the
|
|
moon,-each of them runs on unto an appointed time? and that God of
|
|
what ye do is well aware?
|
|
That is because God, He is true, and because what ye call on
|
|
beside Him is falsehood, and because God, He is the high, the great!
|
|
Dost thou not see that the ship rides on in the sea by the favour of
|
|
God, that He may show you of His signs? verily, in that are signs to
|
|
every grateful person.
|
|
And when a wave like shadows covers them, they call on God, being
|
|
sincere in their religion; and when He saves them to the shore, then
|
|
amongst them are some who halt between two opinions. But none gainsays
|
|
our signs save every perfidious misbeliever.
|
|
O ye folk! fear your Lord and dread the day when the father shall
|
|
not atone for his son, nor shall the child atone aught for its parent.
|
|
Verily, the promise of God is true! Say, 'Let not the life of this
|
|
world beguile you; and let not the beguiler beguile you concerning
|
|
God.'
|
|
Verily, God, with Him is the knowledge of the Hour; and He sends
|
|
down the rain; and He knows what is in the wombs; and no soul knows
|
|
what it is that it shall earn to-morrow; and no soul knows in what
|
|
land it shall die; verily, God is knowing, well aware!
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF ADORATION
|
|
(XXXII. Mecca.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
ALIF LAM MIM. The revelation of the Book, there is no doubt therein,
|
|
from the Lord of the worlds.
|
|
Do they say, 'He has forged it?' Nay! it is the truth from thy Lord,
|
|
that thou mayest warn a people, to whom no warner has come before
|
|
thee, haply they may be guided.
|
|
God it is who created the heavens and the earth and what is
|
|
between the two in six days; then He made for the throne! ye have no
|
|
patron beside Him and no intercessor; are ye not then mindful?
|
|
He governs the affair from the heaven unto the earth; then shall
|
|
it ascend to him in a day, the measure of which is as a thousand years
|
|
of what ye number.
|
|
That is He who knows the unseen and the visible; the mighty, the
|
|
merciful, who has made the best of the creation of everything, and
|
|
produced the creation of man from clay; then He made his stock from an
|
|
extract of despicable water; then He fashioned him and breathed into
|
|
him of his spirit, and made for you hearing and eyesight and
|
|
hearts;-little is it that ye give thanks!
|
|
And they say, 'When we are lost in the earth, shall we then become a
|
|
new creation?' Nay! in the meeting of their Lord they disbelieve.
|
|
Say, 'The angel of death shall take you away, he who is given charge
|
|
of you; then unto your Lord shall ye be returned.'
|
|
And couldst thou see when the sinners hang down their heads before
|
|
their Lord, 'O Lord! we have seen and we have heard; send us back then
|
|
and we will do right. Verily, we are sure!'
|
|
Had we pleased we would have given to everything its guidance; but
|
|
the sentence was due from me;-I will surely fill hell with the ginns
|
|
and with men all together: 'So taste ye, for that ye forgat the
|
|
meeting of this day of yours,-verily, we have forgotten you! and taste
|
|
ye the torment of eternity for that which ye have done!'
|
|
They only believe in our signs who when they are reminded of them
|
|
fall down adoring and celebrate the praises of their Lord, and are not
|
|
too big with pride. As their sides forsake their beds, they call
|
|
upon their Lord with fear and hope; and of what we have bestowed
|
|
upon them do they give alms. No soul knows what is reserved for them
|
|
of cheerfulness for eye, as a reward for that which they have done! Is
|
|
he who is a believer like him who is a sinner? they shall not be
|
|
held equal.
|
|
As for those who believe and do right, for them are the gardens of
|
|
resort, an entertainment for that which they have done!
|
|
But as for those who commit abomination there resort is the Fire.
|
|
Every time that they desire to go forth therefrom, we will send them
|
|
back therein, and it will be said to them, 'Taste ye the torment of
|
|
the fire which ye did call a lie!' and we will surely make them
|
|
taste of the torment of the nearer torment beside the greater
|
|
torment,-haply they may yet return.
|
|
Who is more unjust than he who is reminded of the signs of his Lord,
|
|
and then turns away from them? Verily, we will take vengeance on the
|
|
sinners!
|
|
And we did give Moses the Book; be not then in doubt concerning
|
|
the meeting with him; and we made it a guidance to the children of
|
|
Israel.
|
|
And we made amongst them high priests who guided by our bidding,
|
|
since they were patient and were sure of our signs.
|
|
Verily, thy Lord, he shall decide between them on the resurrection
|
|
day concerning that whereon they do dispute.
|
|
Is it not conspicuous to them how many generations we have destroyed
|
|
before them? they walk over their dwellings! verily, in that are
|
|
signs: do they not then hear?
|
|
Have they not seen that we drive the water to the sterile land,
|
|
and bring forth thereby corn from which their cattle and themselves do
|
|
eat? do they not then see?
|
|
And they say, 'When shall this decision come if ye do tell the
|
|
truth?' Say, 'On the day of the decision their faith shall not
|
|
profit those who misbelieved, nor shall they be respited; turn then
|
|
from them and wait; verily, they are waiting too!
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF THE CONFEDERATES
|
|
(XXXIII. Medinah.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
O thou prophet! fear God and obey not the misbelievers and
|
|
hypocrites; verily, God is ever knowing, wise!
|
|
But follow what thou art inspired with from thy Lord; verily, God of
|
|
what you do is ever well aware. And rely upon God, for God is guardian
|
|
enough.
|
|
God has not made for any man two hearts in his inside; nor has He
|
|
made your wives,- whom you back away from,- your real mothers; nor has
|
|
He made your adopted sons your real sons. That is what ye speak with
|
|
your mouths; but God speaks the truth and He guides to the path!
|
|
Call them by their fathers' names; that is more just in God's sight;
|
|
but if ye know not their fathers, then they are your brothers in
|
|
religion and your clients. There is no crime against you for what
|
|
mistakes ye make therein; but what your hearts do purposely-but God is
|
|
ever forgiving and merciful.
|
|
The prophet is nearer of kin to the believers than themselves, and
|
|
his wives are their mothers. And blood relations are nearer in kin
|
|
to each other by the Book of God than the believers and those who
|
|
fled; only your doing kindness to your kindred, that is traced in
|
|
the Book.
|
|
And when we took of the prophets their compact, from thee and from
|
|
Noah, and Abraham, and Moses, and Jesus the son of Mary, and took them
|
|
a rigid compact, that He might ask the truth-tellers of their truth.
|
|
But He has prepared for those who misbelieve a grievous woe.
|
|
O ye who believe! remember God's favours towards you when hosts came
|
|
to you and we sent against them a wind and hosts that ye could not
|
|
see;-and God knew what ye were doing.
|
|
When they came upon you from above you and from below you, and
|
|
when your eyesights were distracted and your hearts came up into
|
|
your throats, and ye suspected God with certain suspicions.
|
|
There were the believers tried and were made to quake with a
|
|
severe quaking.
|
|
And when the hypocrites and those in whose hearts was sickness said,
|
|
'God and His Apostle have only promised us deceitfully.' And when a
|
|
party of them said, 'O people of Yathreb; there is no place for you
|
|
(here), return then (to the city).' And a part of them asked leave
|
|
of the prophet (to return), saying, 'Verily, our houses are
|
|
defenceless but they were not defenceless, they only wished for
|
|
flight.
|
|
But had they been entered upon from its environs and then been asked
|
|
to show treason they would have done so; but they would only have
|
|
tarried there a little while.
|
|
They had covenanted with God before, that they would not turn
|
|
their backs; and God's covenant shall be enquired of.
|
|
Say, 'Flight shall avail you naught; if ye fly from death or
|
|
slaughter, even then ye shall be granted enjoyment only for a little!'
|
|
Say, 'Who is it that can save you from God, if He wish you evil,
|
|
or wish you mercy?' but they will not find beside God a patron or a
|
|
helper.
|
|
Say, 'God knows the hinderers amongst you, and those who say to
|
|
their brethren, "Come along unto us," and show but little
|
|
valour;-covetous towards you.' When fear comes thou wilt see them
|
|
looking towards thee, their eyes rolling like one fainting with death;
|
|
but when the fear has passed away they will assail you with sharp
|
|
tongues, covetous of the best. These have never believed, and God will
|
|
make vain their works, for that is easy with God.
|
|
They reckoned that the confederates would never go away; and if
|
|
the confederates should come they would fain be in the desert with the
|
|
Arabs, asking for news of you! and if they were amongst you they would
|
|
fight but little.
|
|
Ye had in the Apostle of God a good example' for him who hopes for
|
|
God and the last day, and who remembers God much.
|
|
And when the believers saw the confederates they said, 'This is what
|
|
God and His Apostle promised us; God and His Apostle are true!' and it
|
|
only increased them in faith and resignation.
|
|
Amongst the believers are men who have been true to their covenant
|
|
with God, and there are some who have fulfilled their vow, and some
|
|
who wait and have not changed with fickleness.
|
|
That God might reward the truthful for their truth, and punish the
|
|
hypocrites if He please, or turn again towards them;-verily, God is
|
|
forgiving, merciful!
|
|
And God drove back the misbelievers in their rage; they gat no
|
|
advantage;-God was enough for the believers in the fight, for God is
|
|
strong, mighty!
|
|
And He drove down those of the people of the Book who had helped
|
|
them from their fortresses and hurled dread into their hearts; a
|
|
part ye slew and ye took captive a part: and He gave you their land,
|
|
and their dwellings, and their property for an inheritance, and a land
|
|
ye had not trodden, for God is ever mighty over all.
|
|
O thou prophet! say to thy wives, 'If ye be desirous of the life
|
|
of this world and its adornments, come, I will give you them to
|
|
enjoy and I will let you range handsomely at large! But if ye be
|
|
desirous of God and His Apostle and of the abode of the hereafter,
|
|
verily, God has prepared for those of you who do good a mighty hire!'
|
|
O ye women of the prophet! whosoever of you commits manifest
|
|
fornication, doubled shall be her torment twice; and that is easy unto
|
|
God!
|
|
But that one of you who is devoted to God and His Apostle and does
|
|
right we will give her her her hire twice over, and we have prepared
|
|
for her a noble provision.
|
|
O ye women of the prophet! ye are not like any other women; if ye
|
|
fear God then be not too complaisant in speech, or he in whose heart
|
|
is sickness will lust after you; but speak a reasonable speech.
|
|
And stay still in your houses and show not yourselves with the
|
|
ostentation of the ignorance of yore; and be steadfast in prayer,
|
|
and give alms, and obey God and his Apostle;-God only wishes to take
|
|
away from you the horror as people of His House and to purify you
|
|
thoroughly.
|
|
And remember what is recited in your houses of the signs of God
|
|
and of wisdom; verily, God is subtle and aware!
|
|
Verily, men resigned and women resigned, and believing men and
|
|
believing women, and devout men and devout women, and truthful men and
|
|
truthful women, and patient men and patient women, and humble men
|
|
and humble women, and almsgiving men and almsgiving women, and fasting
|
|
men and fasting women, and men who guard their private parts, and
|
|
women who guard their private parts, and men who remember God much,
|
|
and women who remember Him,- God has prepared for them forgiveness and
|
|
a mighty hire.
|
|
It is not for a believing man or for a believing woman, when God and
|
|
His Apostle have decided an affair, to have the choice in that affair;
|
|
and whoso rebels against God and His Apostle has erred with an obvious
|
|
error.
|
|
And when thou didst say to him God had shown favour to and thou
|
|
hadst shown favour to, 'Keep thy wife to thyself and fear God;' and
|
|
thou didst conceal in thy soul what God was about to display; and
|
|
didst fear men, though God is more deserving that thou shouldst fear
|
|
Him; and when Zaid had fulfilled his desire of her we did wed thee
|
|
to her that there should be no hindrance to the believers in the
|
|
matter of the wives of their adopted sons when they have fulfilled
|
|
their desire of them: and so God's bidding to be done.
|
|
There is no hindrance to the prophet about what God has ordained for
|
|
him;-(such was) the course of God with those who have passed away
|
|
before,-and God's bidding is a decreed decree! Those who preach
|
|
God's messages and fear Him and fear not any one except God,-but God
|
|
is good enough at reckoning up.
|
|
Mohammed is not the father of any of your men, but the Apostle of
|
|
God, and the Seal of the Prophets; for God all things doth know!
|
|
O ye who believe! remember God with frequent remembrance, and
|
|
celebrate His praises morning and evening.
|
|
He it is who prays for you and His angels too, to bring you forth
|
|
out of the darkness into the light, for He is merciful to the
|
|
believers.
|
|
Their salutation on the day they meet Him shall be 'Peace!' and He
|
|
has prepared for them a noble hire.
|
|
O thou prophet! verily, we have sent thee as a witness and a
|
|
herald of glad tidings and a warner, and to call (men) unto God by His
|
|
permission, and as an illuminating lamp.
|
|
Give glad tidings then to the believers, that for them is great
|
|
grace from God. And follow not the unbelievers and the hypocrites; but
|
|
let alone their ill-treatment, and rely upon God, for God is
|
|
guardian enough.
|
|
O ye who believe! when ye wed believing women, and then divorce them
|
|
before ye have touched them, ye have no term that ye need observe;
|
|
so make them some provision, and let them go handsomely at large.
|
|
O thou prophet! verily, we make lawful for thee thy wives to whom
|
|
thou hast given their hire, and what thy right hand possesses of the
|
|
booty that God has granted thee and the daughters of thy paternal
|
|
uncle and the daughters of thy paternal aunts, and the daughters of
|
|
thy maternal uncle and the daughters of thy maternal aunts, provided
|
|
they have fled with thee, and any believing woman if she give
|
|
herself to the prophet, if the prophet desire to marry her;-a
|
|
special privilege this for thee, above the other believers.
|
|
We knew what we ordained for them concerning their wives and what
|
|
their right hands possess, that there should be no hindrance to
|
|
thee; and God is forgiving, merciful.
|
|
Put off whomsoever thou wilt of them and take to thyself
|
|
whomsoever thou wilt, or whomsoever thou cravest of those whom thou
|
|
hast deposed, and it shall be no crime against thee. That is nigher to
|
|
cheering their eyes and that they should not grieve, and should be
|
|
satisfied with what thou dost bring them all; but God knows best
|
|
what is in their hearts; and God is knowing, clement.
|
|
It is not lawful to thee to take women after (this), nor to change
|
|
them for (other) wives, even though their beauty please thee; except
|
|
what thy right hand possesses, for God is ever watchful over all.
|
|
O ye who believe! do not enter the houses of the prophet, unless
|
|
leave be given you, for a meal,-not watching till it is cooked! But
|
|
when ye are invited, then enter; and when ye have fed, disperse, not
|
|
engaging in familiar discourse. Verily, that would annoy the prophet
|
|
and he would be ashamed for your sake, but God is not ashamed of the
|
|
truth.
|
|
And when ye ask them for an article, ask them from behind a curtain;
|
|
that is purer for your hearts and for theirs. It is not right for
|
|
you to annoy the prophet of God, nor to wed his wives after him
|
|
ever; verily, that is with God a serious thing.
|
|
If ye display a thing or conceal it, verily, God all things doth
|
|
know.
|
|
There is no crime against them (if they speak unveiled) to their
|
|
fathers, or their sons, or their brothers, or their brothers' sons, or
|
|
their sisters' sons, or their women, or what their right hands
|
|
possess; but let them fear God,-verily, God is witness over all.
|
|
Verily, God and His angels pray for the prophet. O ye who believe!
|
|
pray for him and salute him with a salutation!
|
|
Verily, those who annoy God and His Apostle, God will curse them
|
|
in this world and the next, and prepare for them shameful woe!
|
|
And those who annoy the believers for what they have not earned,
|
|
such have to bear (the guilt of) calumny and obvious sin.
|
|
O thou prophet! tell thy wives and thy daughters, and the women of
|
|
the believers, to let down over them their outer wrappers; that is
|
|
nearer for them to be known and that they should not be annoyed; but
|
|
God is forgiving, merciful.
|
|
Surely if the hypocrites and those in whose hearts is a sickness and
|
|
the insurrectionists in Medinah do not desist, we will surely incite
|
|
thee against them. Then they shall not dwell near thee therein save
|
|
for a little while. Cursed wherever they are found,-taken and slain
|
|
with slaughter!
|
|
God's course with those who have passed away before: and thou
|
|
shalt never find in God's course any alteration.
|
|
The folk will ask thee about the Hour; say, 'The knowledge thereof
|
|
is only with God, and what is to make thee perceive that the Hour is
|
|
haply nigh?'
|
|
Verily, God has cursed the misbelievers and has prepared for them
|
|
a blaze!
|
|
To dwell therein for ever and for aye; they shall not find a
|
|
patron or a helper!
|
|
On the day when their faces shall writhe in the fire they shall say,
|
|
'O, would that we had obeyed God and obeyed the Apostle!'
|
|
And they shall say, 'Our Lord! verily, we obeyed our chiefs and
|
|
our great men and they led us astray from the path! Our Lord! give
|
|
them double torment and curse them with a great curse!'
|
|
O ye who believe! be not like those who annoyed Moses; but God
|
|
cleared him of what they said, and he was regarded in the sight of
|
|
God.
|
|
O ye who believe! fear God and speak a straightforward speech. He
|
|
will correct for you your works, and pardon you your sins; for he
|
|
who obeys God and His Apostle has attained a mighty happiness.
|
|
Verily, we offered the trust to the heavens and the earth and the
|
|
mountains, but they refused to bear it, and shrank from it; but man
|
|
bore it: verily, he is ever unjust and ignorant. That God may
|
|
torment the hypocritical men and hypocritical women, and the idolaters
|
|
and idolatresses; and that God may turn relenting towards the
|
|
believing men and believing women; verily, God is ever forgiving,
|
|
merciful.
|
|
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF SEBA
|
|
(XXXIV. Mecca.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
Praise belongs to God, whose is whatsoever is in the heavens and
|
|
whatsoever is in the earth; His is the praise in the next world, and
|
|
He is the wise and well aware!
|
|
He knows what goes into the earth, and what comes forth therefrom,
|
|
and what comes down from the sky, and what ascends thereto; for He
|
|
is the merciful, forgiving.
|
|
Those who misbelieve say, 'The Hour shall not come to us;' say,
|
|
'Yea, by my Lord it shall surely come to you! by Him who knows the
|
|
unseen! nor shall there escape from it the weight of an atom, in the
|
|
heavens or in the earth, or even less than that, or greater, save in
|
|
the perspicuous Book;' and that He may reward those who believe and do
|
|
right; these,- for them is forgiveness and a noble provision.
|
|
But those who strive concerning our signs to frustrate them;
|
|
these,-for them is the torment of a grievous plague.
|
|
And those to whom knowledge has been given see that what is sent
|
|
down to thee from thy Lord is the truth, and guides unto the way of
|
|
the mighty, the praiseworthy.
|
|
And those who misbelieve say, 'Shall we guide you to a man who
|
|
will inform you that when ye are torn all to pieces, then ye shall
|
|
be a new creation? he has forged against God a lie, or there is a ginn
|
|
in him;'-nay, those who believe not in the hereafter are in the
|
|
torment and in the remote error!
|
|
Have they not looked at what is before them and what is behind
|
|
them of the heaven and the earth? if we pleased we would cleave the
|
|
earth open with them, or we would make to fall upon them a portion
|
|
of the heaven; verily, in that is a sign to every repentant servant.
|
|
And we did give David grace from us, 'O ye mountains! echo (God's
|
|
praises) with him, and ye birds!' and we softened for him iron:
|
|
'Make thou coats of mail and adapt the rings thereof, and do right;
|
|
verily, I at what ye do do look.' And to Solomon the wind; its morning
|
|
journey was a month, and its evening journey was a month; and we
|
|
made to flow for him a fountain of molten brass; and of the ginns some
|
|
to work before him by the permission of his Lord; and whoso swerves
|
|
amongst them from our bidding we will give him to taste the torment
|
|
and the blaze; and they made for him what he pleased of chambers,
|
|
and images, and dishes like troughs, and firm pots;- work, O ye family
|
|
of David! thankfully;- few is it of my servants who are thankful.
|
|
And when we decreed for him death, naught guided them to his death
|
|
save a reptile of the earth that ate his staff; and when he fell
|
|
down it was made manifest to the ginns that, had they but known the
|
|
unseen, they need not have tarried in the shameful torment.
|
|
Seba had in their dwellings a sign; two gardens, on the right hand
|
|
and on the left, 'Eat from the provision of your Lord; and give thanks
|
|
to Him! a good country and a forgiving Lord!' but they turned away,
|
|
and we sent against them the flood of the dyke; and we changed for
|
|
them their two gardens into two gardens that grew bitter fruit and
|
|
tamarisk, and some few lote trees.
|
|
This did we reward them with, for that they misbelieved; and do we
|
|
so reward any but misbelievers?
|
|
And we made between them and the cities which we had blessed (other)
|
|
cities which were evident; and we measured out the journey: 'Journey
|
|
ye thereto nights and days in safety!' And they said, 'Our Lord!
|
|
make a greater distance between our journeys;' and they wronged
|
|
themselves, and we made them legends; and we tore them all to
|
|
pieces; verily, in that are signs to every patient, grateful person.
|
|
And Iblis verified his suspicion concerning them, and they followed
|
|
him, save a party of the believers.
|
|
Yet had he no authority over them, save that we might know who it
|
|
was that believed in the hereafter from him who amongst them was in
|
|
doubt; for thy Lord guards everything.
|
|
Say, 'Call on those whom ye pretend beside God;' they cannot control
|
|
the weight of an atom in the heavens or in the earth; nor have they
|
|
any partnership in either; nor has He amongst them any supporter;
|
|
nor is intercession of any avail with Him, except for him whom He
|
|
permits; so that when fright is removed from their hearts they say,
|
|
'What is it that your Lord says? they say, 'The truth; for He is the
|
|
high, the great.'
|
|
Say, 'Who provides from the heavens and the earth?' Say, 'God.' And,
|
|
verily, we or ye are surely in guidance. or in an obvious error.
|
|
Say, 'Ye shall not be asked about what we have sent, nor shall we be
|
|
asked about what ye do.
|
|
'Our Lord shall assemble us together; then He shall open between
|
|
us in truth, for He is the opener who knows.'
|
|
Say, 'Show me those whom ye have added to Him as partners; not so!
|
|
nay, but He is God, the mighty, the wise!'
|
|
We have only sent thee to men generally as a herald of glad
|
|
tidings and a warner; but most men do not know.
|
|
And they say, 'When shall this promise be, if ye do speak the
|
|
truth?' say, 'For you is the appointment of a day of which ye shall
|
|
not keep back an hour, nor shall ye bring it on!'
|
|
And those who misbelieve say, 'We will never believe in this Koran
|
|
or in what is before it;' but couldst thou see when the unjust are set
|
|
before their Lord, they shall rebut each other in speech.
|
|
Those who were thought weak shall say to those who were big with
|
|
pride, 'Had it not been for you we should have been believers.'
|
|
Those who were big with pride shall say to those who were thought
|
|
weak, 'Was it we who turned you away from the guidance after it came
|
|
to you? nay, ye were sinners.'
|
|
And those who were thought weak shall say to those who were big with
|
|
pride, 'Nay, but it was the plotting by night and day, when ye did bid
|
|
us to disbelieve in God, and to make peers for Him!' and they shall
|
|
display repentance when they see the torment; and we will put
|
|
fetters on the necks of those who misbelieved. Shall they be
|
|
rewarded except for that which they have done?
|
|
We have not sent to any city a warner but the opulent thereof
|
|
said, 'We, in what ye are sent with, disbelieve.'
|
|
And they say, 'We have more wealth and children, and we shall not be
|
|
tormented.'
|
|
Say, 'Verily, my Lord extends provision to whom He pleases or
|
|
doles it out, but most men do not know; but neither your wealth nor
|
|
your children is that which will bring you to a near approach to us,
|
|
save him who believes and does right; these, for them is a double
|
|
reward for what they have done, and they in upper rooms shall be
|
|
secure.'
|
|
And those who strive concerning our signs to frustrate them, these
|
|
in the torment shall be arraigned. Verily, my Lord extends provision
|
|
to whomsoever He will of His servants, or doles it out to him. And
|
|
what ye expend in alms at all, He will repay it; for He is the best of
|
|
providers.
|
|
And on the day He will gather them all together, then He will say to
|
|
the angels, 'Are these those who used to worship you?
|
|
They shall say, 'Celebrated be thy praises! thou art our patron
|
|
instead of them. Nay, they used to worship the ginns, most of them
|
|
believe in them. But to-day they cannot control for each other, either
|
|
profit or harm;' and we will say to those who have done wrong,
|
|
'Taste ye the torment of the fire wherein ye did disbelieve!'
|
|
And when our signs are recited to them they say, 'This is only a man
|
|
who wishes to turn you from what your fathers served;' and they say,
|
|
'This is only a lie forged,' and those who misbelieve will say of
|
|
the truth when it comes to them, 'It is only obvious sorcery!'
|
|
But we have not brought them any book which they may study, and we
|
|
have not sent to them before thee a warner.
|
|
Those before them said it was a lie, and these have not reached a
|
|
tithe of what we had given them. And they said my apostles were liars,
|
|
and how great a change was then!
|
|
Say, 'I only admonish you of one thing, that ye should stand up
|
|
before God in twos or singly, and then that ye reflect that there is
|
|
no ginn in your companion. He is only a warner to you before the
|
|
keen torment.'
|
|
Say, 'I do not ask you for it a hire; that is for yourselves; my
|
|
hire is only from God, and He is witness over all.'
|
|
Say, 'Verily, my Lord hurls forth the truth; and He well knows the
|
|
unseen.'
|
|
Say, 'The truth has come, and falsehood shall vanish and shall not
|
|
come back.'
|
|
Say, 'If I err I only err against myself; and if I am guided it is
|
|
all what my Lord inspires me; verily, He is the hearing, the nigh!'
|
|
And couldst thou see when they are scared, and there shall be no
|
|
escape, and they shall be taken from a place that is nigh. And they
|
|
say, 'We believe in it.' But how can they partake of it from a distant
|
|
place? They misbelieved before, and conjectured about the unseen
|
|
from a distant place. And there shall be a barrier between them and
|
|
that which they lust after; as we did with their fellow sectaries
|
|
before; verily, they were in hesitating doubt.
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF THE ANGELS
|
|
(XXXV. Mecca.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
Praise belongs to' God, the originator of the heavens and the earth;
|
|
who makes the angels His messengers, endued with wings in pairs, or
|
|
threes or fours; He adds to creation what He pleases; verily, God is
|
|
mighty over all!
|
|
What God opens to men of His mercy there is none to withhold; and
|
|
what He withholds, there is none can send it forth after Him; for He
|
|
is the mighty, the wise.
|
|
O ye folk! remember the favours of God towards you; is there a
|
|
creator beside God, who provides you from the heavens and from the
|
|
earth? There is no god but He; how then can ye lie?
|
|
And if they call thee liar, apostles were called liars before
|
|
thee, and unto God affairs return.
|
|
O ye folk! verily, God's promise is true; then let not the life of
|
|
this world beguile you, and let not the beguiler beguile you
|
|
concerning God. Verily, the devil is to you a foe, so take him as a
|
|
foe; he only calls his crew to be the fellows of the blaze.
|
|
Those who misbelieve, for them is keen torment.
|
|
But those who believe and do right, for them is forgiveness and a
|
|
great hire.
|
|
What! is he whose evil act is made seemly for him, so that he
|
|
looks upon it as good,--? Verily, God leads astray whom He pleases and
|
|
guides whom He pleases; let not thy soul then be wasted in sighing for
|
|
them; verily, God knows what they do!
|
|
It is God who sends the winds, and they stir up a cloud, and we
|
|
irrigate therewith a dead country, and we quicken therewith the
|
|
earth after its death; so shall the resurrection be!
|
|
Whosoever desires honour-honour belongs wholely to God; to Him
|
|
good words ascend, and a righteous deed He takes up; and those who
|
|
plot evil deeds, for them is keen torment, and their plotting is in
|
|
vain.
|
|
God created you from earth, then from a clot; then He made y'ou
|
|
pairs; and no female bears or is delivered, except by His knowledge;
|
|
nor does he who is aged reach old age, or is aught diminished from his
|
|
life, without it is in the Book; verily, that is easy unto God.
|
|
The two seas are not equal: one is sweet and fresh and pleasant to
|
|
drink, and the other is salt and pungent; but from each do ye eat
|
|
fresh flesh, and bring forth ornaments which ye wear; and thou
|
|
mayest see the ships cleave through it, that ye may search after His
|
|
grace, and haply ye may give thanks.
|
|
He turns the night into day, and He turns the day into night; and He
|
|
subjects the sun and the moon, each of them runs on to an appointed
|
|
goal; that is God, your Lord! His is the kingdom; but those ye call on
|
|
beside Him possess not a straw.
|
|
If you call upon them they cannot hear your call, and if they hear
|
|
they cannot answer you; and on the resurrection day they will deny
|
|
your associating them with God; but none can inform thee like the
|
|
One who is aware.
|
|
O ye folk! ye are in need of God; but God, He is independent,
|
|
praiseworthy.
|
|
If He please He will take you off, and will bring a fresh
|
|
creation; for that is no hard matter unto God.
|
|
And no burdened soul shall bear the burden of another; and if a
|
|
heavily laden one shall call for its load (to be carried) it shall not
|
|
be carried for it at all, even though it be a kinsman!-thou canst only
|
|
warn those who fear their Lord in the unseen and who are steadfast
|
|
in prayer; and he who is pure is only pure for himself; and unto God
|
|
the journey is.
|
|
The blind is not equal with him who sees, nor the darkness with
|
|
the night, nor the shade with the hot blast; nor are the living
|
|
equal with the dead; verily, God causes whom He pleases to hear, and
|
|
thou canst not make those who are in their graves hear; thou art but a
|
|
warner!
|
|
Verily, we have sent thee in truth a herald of glad tidings and a
|
|
warner; and there is no nation but its warner has passed away with it.
|
|
And if they called thee liar, those before thee called their
|
|
apostles liars too, who came to them with manifest signs, and the
|
|
Scriptures, and the illuminating Book.
|
|
Then I seized those who misbelieved, and what a change it was!
|
|
Dost thou not see that God has sent down from the heaven water,
|
|
and has brought forth therewith fruits varied in hue, and on the
|
|
mountains dykes, white and red, various in hue, and some intensely
|
|
black, and men and beasts and cattle, various in hue? thus! none
|
|
fear God but the wise among His servants; but, verily, God is
|
|
mighty, forgiving.
|
|
Verily, those who recite the Book of God, and are steadfast in
|
|
prayer, and give alms of what we have bestowed in secret and in
|
|
public, hope for the merchandise that shall not come to naught; that
|
|
He may pay them their hire, and give them increase of His grace;
|
|
verily, He is forgiving, grateful.
|
|
What we have inspired thee with of the Book is true, verifying
|
|
what was before it; verily, God of His servants is well aware and
|
|
sees.
|
|
Then we gave the Book for an inheritance to those whom we chose of
|
|
our servants, and of them are some who wrong themselves, and of them
|
|
are some who take a middle course, and of them are some who vie in
|
|
good works by the permission of their Lord; that is great grace.
|
|
Gardens of Eden shall they enter, adorned therein with bracelets
|
|
of gold and pearls; and their garments therein shall be silk; and they
|
|
shall say, 'Praise belongs to God, who has removed from us our
|
|
grief; verily, our Lord is forgiving, grateful! who has made us alight
|
|
in an enduring abode of His grace, wherein no toil shall touch us, and
|
|
there shall touch us no fatigue.'
|
|
But those who misbelieve, for them is the fire of hell; it shall not
|
|
be decreed for them to die, nor shall aught of the torment be
|
|
lightened from them; thus do we reward every misbeliever; and they
|
|
shall shriek therein, 'O our Lord! bring us forth, and we will do
|
|
right, not what we used to do!'-'Did we not let you grow old enough
|
|
for every one who would be mindful to be mindful? and there came to
|
|
you a warner!-So taste it, for the unjust shall have none to help!'
|
|
verily, God knows the unseen things of the heavens and of the earth;
|
|
verily, He knows the nature of men's breasts, He it is who made you
|
|
vicegerents in the earth, and he who misbelieves, his misbelief is
|
|
against himself; but their misbelief shall only increase the
|
|
misbelievers in hatred with their Lord; and their misbelief shall only
|
|
increase the misbelievers in loss.
|
|
Say, 'Have ye considered your associates whom ye call on beside
|
|
God?' show me what they created of the earth; have they a share in the
|
|
heavens, or have we given them a book that they rest on a manifest
|
|
sign? nay, the unjust promise each other naught but guile.
|
|
Verily, God holds back the heavens and the earth lest they should
|
|
decline; and if they should decline there is none to hold them back
|
|
after Him; verily, He is clement, forgiving.
|
|
They swore by God with their most strenuous oath, verily, if there
|
|
come to them a warner they would be more guided than any one of the
|
|
nations; but when a warner comes to them, it only increases them in
|
|
aversion, and in being big with pride in the earth, and in plotting
|
|
evil; but the plotting of evil only entangles those who practise it;
|
|
can they then expect aught but the course of those of yore? but thou
|
|
shalt not find any alteration in the course of God; and they shall not
|
|
find any change in the course of God.
|
|
Have they not journeyed on in the land and seen what was the end
|
|
of those before them who were stronger than they? but God, nothing can
|
|
ever make Him helpless in the heavens or in the earth; verily, He is
|
|
knowing, powerful.
|
|
Were God to catch men up for what they earn, He would not leave upon
|
|
the back of it a beast; but He respites them until an appointed
|
|
time. When their appointed time comes, verily, God looks upon His
|
|
servants.
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF YA SIN
|
|
(XXXVI. Mecca.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
YA SIN. By the wise Koran verily, thou art of the apostles upon a
|
|
right way. The revelation of the mighty, the merciful! That thou
|
|
mayest warn a people whose fathers were not warned, and who themselves
|
|
are heedless.
|
|
Now is the sentence due against most of them, for they will not
|
|
believe. Verily, we will place upon their necks fetters, and they
|
|
shall reach up to their chins, and they shall have their heads
|
|
forced back; and we will place before them a barrier, and behind
|
|
them a barrier; and we will cover them and they shall not see; and
|
|
it is all the same to them if thou dost warn them or dost warn them
|
|
not, they will not believe. Thou canst only warn him who follows the
|
|
reminder, and fears the Merciful in the unseen; but give him glad
|
|
tidings of forgiveness and a noble hire.
|
|
Verily, we quicken the dead, and write down what they have done
|
|
before, and what vestiges they leave behind; and everything have we
|
|
counted in a plain model.
|
|
Strike out for them a parable: the fellows of the city when there
|
|
came to it the apostles; when we sent those two and they called them
|
|
both liars, and we strengthened them with a third; and they said,
|
|
'Verily, we are sent to you.'
|
|
They said, 'Ye are only mortals like ourselves, nor has the Merciful
|
|
sent down aught; ye are naught but liars.'
|
|
They said, 'Our Lord knows that we are sent to you, and we have only
|
|
our plain message to preach.'
|
|
They said, 'Verily, we have augured concerning you, and if ye do not
|
|
desist we will surely stone you, and there shall touch you from us a
|
|
grievous woe.'
|
|
Said they, 'Your augury is with you; what! if ye are reminded-? Nay,
|
|
ye are an extravagant people!'
|
|
And there came from the remote part of the city a man hastening
|
|
up. Said he, 'O my people! follow the apostles; follow those who do
|
|
not ask you a hire, and who are guided. What ails me that I should not
|
|
worship Him who originated me, and unto whom I must return? Shall I
|
|
take gods beside Him? If the Merciful One desires harm for me, their
|
|
intercession cannot avail me at all, nor can they rescue me. Verily, I
|
|
should then be in obvious error; verily, I believe in your Lord,
|
|
then listen ye to me!'
|
|
It was said, 'Enter thou into Paradise!' said he, 'O, would that
|
|
my people did but know! for that my Lord has forgiven me, and has made
|
|
me of the honoured.'
|
|
And we did send down upon his people no hosts from heaven, nor yet
|
|
what we were wont to send down; it was but a single noise, and lo!
|
|
they were extinct.
|
|
Alas for the servants! there comes to them no apostle but they
|
|
mock at him!
|
|
Have they not seen how many generations we have destroyed before
|
|
them? verily, they shall not return to them; but all of them shall
|
|
surely altogether be arraigned.
|
|
And a sign for them is the dead earth which we have quickened and
|
|
brought forth therefrom seed, and from it do they eat; and we made
|
|
therein gardens and palms and grapes, and we have caused fountains
|
|
to gush forth therein, that they may eat from the fruit thereof, and
|
|
of what their hands have made; will they not then give thanks?
|
|
Celebrated be the praises of Him who created all kinds, of what
|
|
the earth brings forth, and of themselves, and what they know not of!
|
|
And a sign to them is the night, from which we strip off the day,
|
|
and lo! they are in the dark; and the sun runs on to a place of rest
|
|
for it; that is the ordinance of the mighty, the wise.
|
|
And the moon, we have ordered for it stations, until it comes
|
|
again to be like an old dry palm branch.
|
|
Neither is it proper for it to catch up the moon, nor for the
|
|
night to outstrip the day, but each one floats on in its sky.
|
|
And a sign for them is that we bear their seed in a laden ship,
|
|
and we have created for them the like thereof whereon to ride; and
|
|
if we please, we drown them, and there is none for them to appeal
|
|
to; nor are they rescued, save by mercy from us, as a provision for
|
|
a season.
|
|
And when it is said to them, 'Fear what is before you and what is
|
|
behind you, haply ye may obtain mercy and thou bringest them not any
|
|
one of the signs of their Lord, but they turn away therefrom; and when
|
|
it is said to them, 'Expend in alms of what God has bestowed upon
|
|
you,' those who misbelieve say to those who believe, 'Shall we feed
|
|
him whom, if God pleased, He would feed? ye are only in an obvious
|
|
error.'
|
|
They say, 'When shall this promise come to pass, if ye do tell the
|
|
truth?' They await but a single noise, that shall seize them as they
|
|
are contending. And they shall not be able to make a bequest; nor to
|
|
their people shall they return; but the trumpet shall be blown, and,
|
|
behold, from their graves unto their Lord shall they slip out!
|
|
They shall say, 'O, woe is us! who has raised us up from our
|
|
sleeping-place? this is what the Merciful promised, and the apostles
|
|
told the truth!' It shall be but a single noise, and lo! they are
|
|
all arraigned before us.
|
|
And on that day no soul shall be wronged at all, nor shall ye be
|
|
rewarded for aught but that which ye have done.
|
|
Verily, the fellows of Paradise upon that day shall be employed in
|
|
enjoyment; they and their wives, in shade upon thrones, reclining;
|
|
therein shall they have fruits, and they shall have what they may call
|
|
for. 'Peace!'-a speech from the merciful Lord!
|
|
'Separate yourselves to-day, O ye sinners! Did I not covenant with
|
|
you, O children of Adam! that ye should not serve Satan? verily, he is
|
|
to you an open foe; but serve ye me, this is the right way. But he led
|
|
astray a numerous race of you; what! had ye then no sense? this is
|
|
hell, which ye were threatened; broil therein to-day, for that ye
|
|
misbelieved!'
|
|
On that day we will seal their mouths, and their hands shall speak
|
|
to us, and their feet shall bear witness of what they earned. And if
|
|
we please we could put out their eyes, and they would race along the
|
|
road; and then how could they see? And if we pleased we would
|
|
transform them in their places, and they should not be able to go
|
|
on, nor yet to return. And him to whom we grant old age, we bow him
|
|
down in his form; have they then no sense?
|
|
We have not taught him poetry, nor was it proper for him; it is
|
|
but a reminder and a plain Koran to warn him who is living; but the
|
|
sentence is due against the misbelievers.
|
|
Have they not seen that we have created for them of what our hands
|
|
have made for them, cattle, and they are owners thereof? and we have
|
|
tamed them for them, and of them are some to ride, and of them are
|
|
what they eat, and therein have they advantages and beverages; will
|
|
they not then give thanks?
|
|
But they take, beside God, gods that haply they may be helped.
|
|
They cannot help them; yet are they a host ready for them.
|
|
But let not their speech grieve thee: verily, we know what they
|
|
conceal and what they display.
|
|
Has not man seen that we have created him from a clot? and lo! he is
|
|
an open opponent; and he strikes out for us a likeness; and forgets
|
|
his creation; and says, 'Who shall quicken bones when they are
|
|
rotten?' Say, 'He shall quicken them who produced them at first; for
|
|
every creation does He know; who has made for you fire out of a
|
|
green tree, and lo! ye kindle therewith.'
|
|
Is not He who created the heavens and the earth able to create the
|
|
like thereof? yea! He is the knowing Creator; His bidding is only,
|
|
when He desires anything to say to it, 'BE,' and it is. Then
|
|
celebrated be the praises of Him in whose hands is the kingdom of
|
|
everything! and unto Him shall ye return.
|
|
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF THE 'RANGED'
|
|
(XXXVII. Mecca.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
By the (angels) ranged in ranks, and the drivers driving, and the
|
|
reciters of the reminder, 'Verily, your God is one, the Lord of the
|
|
heavens and the earth and what is between the two, and the Lord of the
|
|
sunrises!'
|
|
Verily, we have adorned the lower heaven with the adornment of the
|
|
stars, and to preserve it from every rebellious devil, that they may
|
|
not listen to the exalted chiefs; for they are hurled at from every
|
|
side, driven off, and for them is lasting woe; save such as snatches
|
|
off a word, and there follows him a darting flame!
|
|
Ask them whether they are stronger by nature or (the angels) whom we
|
|
have created? We have created them of sticky clay.
|
|
Nay, thou dost wonder and they jest! and when they are reminded they
|
|
will not remember; and when they see a sign they make a jest
|
|
thereof, and say, 'This is naught but obvious sorcery. What! when we
|
|
are dead, and have become earth and bones, shall we then be raised?
|
|
what! and our fathers of yore?'
|
|
Say, 'Yes, and ye shall shrink up, and it shall only be one scare,
|
|
and, behold, they shall look on, and they shall say, 'O, woe is us!
|
|
this is the day of judgment, this is the day of decision, which ye did
|
|
call a lie!' Gather ye together, ye who were unjust, with their
|
|
mates and what they used to serve beside God, and guide them to the
|
|
way of hell, and stop them; verily, they shall be questioned. 'Why
|
|
do ye not help each other?' nay, on that day they shall resign
|
|
themselves, and some shall draw near to others, to question each
|
|
other, and they shall say, 'Verily, ye came to us from the right.'
|
|
They shall say, 'Nay, ye were not believers, nor had we any
|
|
authority over you; nay, ye were an outrageous people. And the
|
|
sentence of our Lord shall be due for us; verily, we shall surely
|
|
taste thereof; we did seduce you-verily, we were erring too!'
|
|
therefore, verily, on that day they shall share the torment: thus it
|
|
is that we will do with the sinners.
|
|
Verily, when it is said to them, 'There is no god but God,' they get
|
|
too big with pride, and say, What! shall we leave our gods for an
|
|
infatuated poet?' Nay, he came with the truth, and verified the
|
|
apostles; verily, ye are going to taste of grievous woe, nor shall
|
|
ye be rewarded save for that which ye have done!
|
|
Except God's sincere servants, these shall have a stated provision
|
|
of fruits, and they shall be honoured in the gardens of pleasure, upon
|
|
couches facing each other; they shall be served all round with a cup
|
|
from a spring, white and delicious to those who drink, wherein is no
|
|
insidious spirit, nor shall they be drunk therewith; and with them
|
|
damsels, restraining their looks, large eyed; as though they were a
|
|
sheltered egg; and some shall come forward to ask others; and a
|
|
speaker amongst them shall say, 'Verily, I had a mate, who used to
|
|
say, "Art thou verily of those who credit? What! when we are dead, and
|
|
have become earth and bones, shall we be surely judged?"' He will say,
|
|
'Are ye looking down?' and he shall look down and see him in the midst
|
|
of hell. He shall say, 'By God, thou didst nearly ruin me! And had
|
|
it not been for the favour of my Lord, I should have been among the
|
|
arraigned.'-'What! shall we not die save our first death? and shall we
|
|
not be tormented?-Verily, this is mighty bliss! for the like of this
|
|
then let the workers work.'
|
|
Is that better as an entertainment, or the tree of Ez Zaqqum?
|
|
Verily, we have made it a trial to the unjust. Verily, it is a tree
|
|
that comes forth from the bottom of hell; its spathe is as it were the
|
|
heads of devils; verily, they shall eat therefrom, and fill their
|
|
bellies therefrom. Then shall they have upon it a mixture of boiling
|
|
water; then, verily, their return shall be to hell.
|
|
Verily, they found their fathers erring, and they hurried on in
|
|
their tracks; but there had erred before them most of those of yore,
|
|
and we had sent warners amongst them. Behold, then, what was the end
|
|
of those who were warned, save God's sincere servants!
|
|
Noah did call upon us, and a gracious answer did we give; and we
|
|
saved him and his people from a mighty trouble; and we made his seed
|
|
to be the survivors; and we left for him amongst posterity peace
|
|
upon Noah in the worlds; verily, thus do we reward those who do
|
|
well; verily, he was of our believing servants.' Then we drowned the
|
|
others.
|
|
And, verily, of his sect was Abraham; when he came to his Lord
|
|
with a sound heart; when he said to his father and his people, 'What
|
|
is it that ye serve? with a lie do ye desire gods beside God? What
|
|
then is your thought respecting the Lord of the worlds?'
|
|
And he looked a look at the stars and said, 'Verily, I am sick!' and
|
|
they turned their backs upon him fleeing. And he went aside unto their
|
|
gods and said, 'Will ye not eat? What ails you that ye will not
|
|
speak?' And he went aside to them smiting with the right hand.
|
|
And they rushed towards him. Said he, 'Do ye serve what ye hew
|
|
out, when God has created you, and what ye make?'
|
|
Said they, 'Build for him a pyre, and throw him into the flaming
|
|
hell!' They desired to plot against him, but we made them inferior.
|
|
Said he, 'Verily, I am going to my Lord, He will guide me. My Lord!
|
|
grant me (a son), one of the righteous;' and we gave him glad
|
|
tidings of a clement boy.
|
|
And when he reached the age to work with him, he said, 'O my boy!
|
|
verily, I have seen in a dream that I should sacrifice thee, look then
|
|
what thou seest right.'
|
|
Said he, 'O my sire! do what thou art bidden; thou wilt find me,
|
|
if it please God, one of the patient!'
|
|
And when they were resigned, and Abraham had thrown him down upon
|
|
his forehead, we called to him, 'O Abraham! thou hast verified the
|
|
vision; verily, thus do we reward those who do well. This is surely an
|
|
obvious trial.' And we ransomed him with a mighty victim; and we
|
|
left for him amongst posterity, 'Peace upon Abraham; thus do we reward
|
|
those who do well; verily, he was of our servants who believe!' And we
|
|
gave him glad tidings of Isaac, a prophet among the righteous; and
|
|
we blessed him and Isaac;-of their seed is one who does well, and
|
|
one who obviously wrongs himself.
|
|
And we were gracious unto Moses and Aaron. We saved them and their
|
|
people from mighty trouble, and we helped them and they had the
|
|
upper hand; and we gave them both the perspicuous Book; and we
|
|
guided them to the right way; and we left for them amongst
|
|
posterity, 'Peace upon Moses and Aaron; verily, thus do we reward
|
|
those who do well; verily, they were both of our servants who
|
|
believe!'
|
|
And verily Elyas was of the apostles; when he said to his people,
|
|
'Will ye not fear? do ye call upon Baal and leave the best of
|
|
Creators, God your Lord and the Lord of your fathers of yore?'
|
|
But they called him liar; verily, they shall surely be arraigned,
|
|
save God's sincere servants. And we left for him amongst posterity,
|
|
'Peace upon Elyasin; verily, thus do we reward those who do well;
|
|
verily, he was of our servants who believe!'
|
|
And, verily, Lot was surely among the apostles; when we saved him
|
|
and his people altogether, except an old woman amongst those who
|
|
lingered; then we destroyed the others; verily, ye pass by them in the
|
|
morning and at night; have ye then no sense?
|
|
And, verily, Jonah was amongst the apostles; when he ran away into
|
|
the laden ship; and he cast lots and was of those who lost; and a fish
|
|
swallowed him, for he was to be blamed; and had it not been that he
|
|
was of those who celebrated God's praises he would surely have tarried
|
|
in the belly thereof to the day when men shall be raised.
|
|
But we cast him on to the barren shore; and he was sick; and we made
|
|
to grow over him a gourd tree; and we sent him to a hundred thousand
|
|
or more, and they believed; and we gave them enjoyment for a season.
|
|
Ask them, 'Has thy Lord daughters while they have sons? or have we
|
|
created the angels females while they were witnesses?' is it not of
|
|
their lie that they say, 'God has begotten?' verily, they are liars.
|
|
Has he preferred daughters to sons? what ails you? how ye judge!
|
|
will ye not be mindful, or have ye obvious authority? then bring
|
|
your Book if ye do speak the truth.
|
|
And they made him to be related to the ginns, while the ginns know
|
|
that they shall be arraigned; celebrated be God's praises from what
|
|
they attribute!-save God's sincere servants.
|
|
'Verily, ye and what ye worship shall not try any one concerning
|
|
him, save him who shall broil in hell; there is none amongst us but
|
|
has his appointed place, and, verily, we are ranged, and, verily, we
|
|
celebrate His praises.'
|
|
And yet they say, they say, 'Had we a reminder from those of yore we
|
|
should surely have been of God's sincere servants.'
|
|
But they misbelieved in it but soon shall they know.
|
|
But our word has been passed to our servants who were sent that they
|
|
should be helped; that, verily, our hosts should gain mastery for
|
|
them.
|
|
Then turn thou thy back upon them for a time, and look upon them,
|
|
for soon they too shall look.
|
|
Would they hasten on our torment? but when it descends in their
|
|
court, ill will the morning be of those who have been warned!
|
|
But turn thy back upon them for a time; and look, for soon they
|
|
too shall look.
|
|
Celebrated be the praises of thy Lord, the Lord of glory, above what
|
|
they attribute! and peace be upon the apostles and praise be to God,
|
|
the Lord of the worlds!
|
|
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF SAD
|
|
(XXXVIII. Mecca.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
SAD. By the Koran with its reminder! nay, but those who misbelieve
|
|
are in pride, schism!
|
|
How many a generation have we destroyed before them, and they
|
|
cried out, but it was no time to escape!
|
|
And they wonder that a warner has come from amongst themselves,
|
|
and the misbelievers say, 'This is a magician, a liar!' What! does
|
|
he make the gods to be one God? verily, this is a wondrous thing.
|
|
And the chiefs of them went away: 'Go on and persevere in your gods;
|
|
this is a thing designed; we never heard this in any other sect;
|
|
this is nothing but a fiction! Has a reminder come down upon him
|
|
from amongst us?' nay, they are in doubt concerning my reminder;
|
|
nay, they have not yet tasted of my torment!
|
|
Have they the treasures of the mercy of thy mighty Lord, the
|
|
giver? or have they the kingdom of the heavens and of the earth, and
|
|
what is between the two?- then let them climb up the ropes thereof.
|
|
Any host whatever of the confederates shall there be routed.
|
|
Before them did Noah's people, and 'Ad, and Pharaoh of the stakes
|
|
call the apostles liars; and Thamud and the people of Lot, and the
|
|
fellows of the Grove, they were the confederates too.
|
|
They all did naught but call the apostles liars, and just was the
|
|
punishment! Do these await aught else but one noise for which there
|
|
shall be no pause?
|
|
But they say, 'O our Lord, hasten for us our share before the day of
|
|
reckoning!'
|
|
Be patient of what they say, and remember our servant David
|
|
endowed with might; verily, he turned frequently to us. Verily, we
|
|
subjected the mountains to celebrate with him our praises at the
|
|
evening and the dawn; and the birds too gathered together, each one
|
|
would oft return to him; and we strengthened his kingdom, and we
|
|
gave him wisdom and decisive address.
|
|
Has there come to thee the story of the antagonists when they scaled
|
|
the chamber wall? when they entered in unto David, and he was startled
|
|
at them, they said, 'Fear not, we are two antagonists; one of us has
|
|
injured the other; judge then between us with the truth and be not
|
|
partial, but guide us to a level way. Verily, this is my brother: he
|
|
had ninety-nine ewes and I had one ewe; and he said, "Give her over to
|
|
my charge;" and he overcame me in the discourse.' Said he, 'He wronged
|
|
thee in asking for thy ewe in addition to his own ewes. Verily, many
|
|
associates do injure one another, except those who believe and do what
|
|
is right, and very few are they!'
|
|
And he thought that we were trying him; and he asked pardon of his
|
|
Lord and fell down bowing, and did turn; and we pardoned him; for,
|
|
verily, he has a near approach to us and an excellent resort.
|
|
O David! verily, we have made thee a vicegerent, judge then
|
|
between men with truth and follow not lust, for it will lead thee
|
|
astray from the path of God. Verily, those who go astray from the path
|
|
of God, for them is keen torment, for that they did forget the day
|
|
of reckoning!
|
|
And we have not created the heavens and the earth, and what is
|
|
between the two, in vain. That is what those who misbelieved did
|
|
think, but woe from the fire to those who misbelieve!
|
|
Shall we make those who believe and do right like those who do
|
|
evil in the earth? or shall we make the pious like the sinners?
|
|
A blessed Book which we have sent down to thee that they may
|
|
consider its verses, and that those endowed with minds may be mindful.
|
|
And we gave to David, Solomon, an excellent servant; verily, he
|
|
turned frequently to us. When there were set before him in the evening
|
|
the steeds that paw the ground, and he said, 'Verily, I have loved the
|
|
love of good things better than the remembrance of my Lord, until (the
|
|
sun) was hidden behind the veil; bring them back to me;' and he
|
|
began to sever their legs and necks.
|
|
And we did try Solomon, and we threw upon his throne a form; then he
|
|
turned repentant. Said he, 'My Lord, pardon me and grant me a
|
|
kingdom that is not seemly for any one after me; verily, thou art He
|
|
who grants!'
|
|
And we subjected to him the wind to run on at his bidding gently
|
|
wherever he directed it; and the devils-every builder and diver, and
|
|
others bound in fetters-'this is our gift, so be thou lavish or
|
|
withhold without account!'
|
|
And, verily, he had with us a near approach, and a good resort.
|
|
And remember our servant Job when he called upon his Lord that
|
|
'the devil has touched me with toil and torment!'
|
|
'Stamp with thy foot, this is a cool washing-place and a drink.' And
|
|
we granted him his family, and the like of them with them, as a
|
|
mercy from us and a reminder to those endowed with minds,-'and take in
|
|
thy hand a bundle, and strike therewith, and break not thy oath!'
|
|
Verily, we found him patient an excellent servant; verily, he turned
|
|
frequently to us.
|
|
And remember our servants Abraham and Isaac and Jacob, endowed
|
|
with might and sight; verily, we made them sincere by a sincere
|
|
quality-the remembrance of the abode; and, verily, they were with us
|
|
of the elect, the best.
|
|
And remember Ishmael and Elisha and DHU-l-kifl, for each was of
|
|
the righteous. This is a reminder! verily, for the pious is there an
|
|
excellent resort,-gardens of Eden with the doors open to
|
|
them;-reclining therein; calling therein for much fruit and drink; and
|
|
beside them maids of modest glance, of their own age,-'This is what ye
|
|
were promised for the day of reckoning!'-'This is surely our
|
|
provision, it is never spent!'
|
|
This!-and, verily, for the rebellious is there an evil resort,-hell;
|
|
they shall broil therein, and an ill couch shall it be! This,-so let
|
|
them taste it!- hot water, and pus, and other kinds of the same
|
|
sort! 'This is an army plunged in with you! there is no welcome for
|
|
them! verily, they are going to broil in the fire!'
|
|
They shall say, 'Nay, for you too is there no welcome! it was ye who
|
|
prepared it beforehand for us, and an ill resting-place it is!'
|
|
They shall say, 'Our Lord! whoso prepared this beforehand for us,
|
|
give him double torment in the fire!' And they shall say, 'What ails
|
|
us that we do not see men whom we used to think amongst the wicked?
|
|
whom we used to take for mockery? have our eyes escaped them?'
|
|
Verily, that is the truth; the contention of the people of the fire.
|
|
Say, 'I am only a warner; and there is no god but God, the one,
|
|
the victorious, the Lord of the heavens and the earth, and what is
|
|
between the two, the mighty, the forgiving!'
|
|
Say, 'It is a grand story, and yet ye turn from it!' I had no
|
|
knowledge of the exalted chiefs when they contended.
|
|
I am only inspired that I am a plain warner. When thy Lord said to
|
|
the angels, 'Verily, I am about to create a mortal out of clay; and
|
|
when I have fashioned him, and breathed into him of my spirit, then
|
|
fall ye down before him adoring.' And the angels adored all of them,
|
|
save Iblis, who was too big with pride, and was of the misbelievers.
|
|
Said He, 'O Iblis! what prevents thee from adoring what I have
|
|
created with my two hands? art thou too big with pride? or art thou
|
|
amongst the exalted?' Said he, 'I am better than he, Thou hast created
|
|
me from fire, and him Thou hast created from clay.' Said He, 'Then
|
|
go forth therefrom, for, verily, thou art pelted, and, verily, upon
|
|
thee is my curse unto the day of judgment.'
|
|
Said he, 'My Lord! then respite me until the day when they are
|
|
raised.' Said He, 'Then thou art amongst the respited until the day of
|
|
the stated time.' Said he, 'Then, by Thy might! I will surely seduce
|
|
them all together, except Thy servants amongst them who are
|
|
sincere!' Said He, 'It is the truth, and the truth I speak; I will
|
|
surely fill hell with thee and with those who follow thee amongst them
|
|
all together.'
|
|
Say, 'I do not ask thee for it any hire, nor am I of those who
|
|
take too much upon myself. It is but a reminder to the servants, and
|
|
ye shall surely know its story after a time.'
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF THE TROOPS
|
|
(XXXIX. Mecca.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
The sending down of the Book from God, the mighty, the wise.
|
|
Verily, we have sent down to thee the Book in truth, then serve God,
|
|
being sincere in religion unto Him. Aye! God's is the sincere
|
|
religion: and those who take beside Him patrons-'We do not serve
|
|
them save that they may bring us near to God-' Verily, God will
|
|
judge between them concerning that whereon they do dispute.
|
|
Verily, God guides not him who is a misbelieving liar.
|
|
Had God wished to take to Himself a child, He would have chosen what
|
|
He pleased from what He creates;- celebrated be His praises! He is
|
|
God, the one, the victorious. He created the heavens and the earth
|
|
in truth! It is He who clothes the day with night; and clothes the
|
|
night with day; and subjects the sun and the moon, each one runs on to
|
|
an appointed time; aye! He is the mighty, the forgiving! He created
|
|
you from one soul; then He made from it its mate; and He sent down
|
|
upon you of the cattle four pairs! He creates you in the bellies of
|
|
your mothers,-creation after creation, in three darknesses. That is
|
|
God for you! His is the kingdom, there is no god but He; how then
|
|
can ye be turned away?
|
|
If ye be thankless, yet is God independent of you. He is not pleased
|
|
with ingratitude in His servants; but if ye give thanks, He is pleased
|
|
with that in you. But no burdened soul shall bear the burden of
|
|
another; then unto your Lord is your return, and He will inform you of
|
|
that which ye have done. Verily, He knows the natures of men's
|
|
breasts!
|
|
And when distress touches a man he calls his Lord, turning repentant
|
|
to Him; then when He confers on him a favour from Himself he forgets
|
|
what he had called upon Him for before, and makes peers for God to
|
|
lead astray from His way! Say, 'Enjoy thyself in thy misbelief a
|
|
little, verily, thou art of the fellows of the Fire.'
|
|
Shall he who is devout throughout the night, adoring and standing,
|
|
cautious concerning the hereafter, and hoping for the mercy of his
|
|
Lord...? Say, 'Shall those who know be deemed equal with those who
|
|
know not? only those will remember, who are endowed with minds!'
|
|
Say, 'O my servants who believe fear your Lord! for those who do
|
|
well in this world is good, and God's earth is spacious; verily, the
|
|
patient shall be paid their hire without count!'
|
|
Say, 'Verily, I am bidden to serve God, being sincere in religion to
|
|
Him; and I am bidden that I be the first of those resigned.'
|
|
Say, 'Verily, I fear, if I rebel against my Lord, the torment of a
|
|
mighty day.' Say, 'God do I serve, being sincere in my religion to
|
|
Him; serve then what ye will beside Him!' Say, 'Verily, the losers are
|
|
those who lose themselves and their families on the resurrection
|
|
day. Aye, that is the obvious loss.'
|
|
They shall have over them shades of fire, and under them shades;
|
|
with that does God frighten His servants: O my servants! then fear me.
|
|
But those who avoid Taghut and serve them not, but turn repentant
|
|
unto God, for them shall be glad tidings. Then give glad tidings to my
|
|
servants who listen to the word and follow the best thereof; they it
|
|
is whom God guides, and they it is who are endowed with minds. Him
|
|
against whom the word of torment is due,-canst thou rescue him from
|
|
the fire?
|
|
But for those who fear their Lord for them are upper chambers, and
|
|
upper chambers above them built, beneath which rivers flow; God's
|
|
promise! God does not fail in His promise.
|
|
Hast thou not seen that God sends down from the heaven water, and
|
|
conducts it into springs in the earth? then He brings forth
|
|
therewith corn varied in kind, then it dries up, and ye see it grow
|
|
yellow; then He makes it grit;-verily, in that is a reminder for those
|
|
endowed with minds.
|
|
Is he whose breast God has expanded for Islam, and who is in light
|
|
from his Lord....? And woe to those whose hearts are hardened
|
|
against a remembrance of God! those are in obvious error.
|
|
God has sent down the best of legends, a book uniform and repeating;
|
|
whereat the skins of those who fear their Lord do creep! then their
|
|
skins and their hearts soften at the remembrance of God. That is the
|
|
guidance of God! He guides therewith whom He will. But he whom God
|
|
leads astray there is no guide for him.
|
|
Shall he who must screen himself with his own face from the evil
|
|
torment on the resurrection day....? And it shall be said of those who
|
|
do wrong, taste what ye have earned.
|
|
Those before them called the (prophets) liars, and the torment
|
|
came to them from whence they perceived it not; and God made them
|
|
taste disgrace in the life of this world. But surely the torment of
|
|
the hereafter is greater, if they did but know. We have struck out for
|
|
men in this Koran every sort of parable, haply they may be mindful. An
|
|
Arabic Koran with no crookedness therein; haply they may fear!
|
|
God has struck out a parable, a man who has partners who oppose each
|
|
other; and a man who is wholly given up to another; shall they be
|
|
deemed equal in similitude? praise be to God! nay, but most of them
|
|
know not!
|
|
Verily, thou shalt die, and, verily, they shall die; then, verily,
|
|
on the resurrection day before your Lord shall ye dispute.
|
|
And who is more unjust than he who lies against God, and calls the
|
|
truth a lie when it comes to him? Is there not in hell a resort for
|
|
those who misbelieve? but whoso brings the truth and believes in it,
|
|
these are they who fear.
|
|
For them is what they please with their Lord, that is the reward
|
|
of those who do well; that God may cover for them their offences which
|
|
they have done, and may reward them with their hire for the best of
|
|
that which they have done.
|
|
Is not God sufficient for His servants? and yet they would
|
|
frighten thee with those beside Him. But he whom God leads astray
|
|
there is no guide for him; and he whom God guides there is none to
|
|
lead him astray: is not God mighty, the Lord of vengeance?
|
|
And if thou shouldst ask them who created the heavens and the earth,
|
|
they will surely say, 'God!' Say, 'Have ye considered what ye call
|
|
on beside God? If God wished me harm, could they remove His harm? or
|
|
did He wish me mercy, could they withhold His mercy?' Say, 'God is
|
|
enough for me, and on Him rely those who rely.'
|
|
Say, 'O my people! act according to your power; I too am going to
|
|
act; and ye shall know.'
|
|
He to whom the torment comes it shall disgrace him, and there
|
|
shall alight upon him lasting torment.
|
|
Verily, we have sent down to thee the Book for men in truth; and
|
|
whosoever is guided it is for his own soul: but whoso goes astray it
|
|
is against them, and thou art not a guardian for them.
|
|
God takes to Himself souls at the time of their death; and those
|
|
which do not die (He takes) in their sleep; and He holds back those on
|
|
whom He has decreed death, and sends others back till their
|
|
appointed time;-verily, in that are signs unto a people who reflect.
|
|
Do they take besides God intercessors? Say, 'What! though they
|
|
have no control over anything and have no sense.'
|
|
Say, 'God's is the intercession, all of it; His is the kingdom of
|
|
the heavens and the earth; then unto Him shall ye be sent back.'
|
|
And when God alone is mentioned the hearts of those who believe
|
|
not in the hereafter quake, and when those beside Him are mentioned,
|
|
lo, they are joyful!
|
|
Say, 'O God! originator of the heavens and the earth, who knowest
|
|
the unseen and the visible, thou wilt judge between thy servants
|
|
concerning that whereon they do dispute!'
|
|
And had those who do wrong all that is in the earth, and the like
|
|
thereof with it, they would ransom themselves therewith from the
|
|
evil of the torment on the resurrection day! but there shall appear to
|
|
them from God that which they had not reckoned on; and the evils of
|
|
what they have earned shall appear to them; but that shall close in on
|
|
them at which they mocked!
|
|
And when harm touches man he calls on us; then, when we grant him
|
|
favour from us, he says, 'Verily, I am given it through knowledge!'
|
|
nay, it is a trial,-but most of them do not know!
|
|
Those before them said it too, but that availed them not which
|
|
they had earned, and there befel them the evil deeds of what they
|
|
had earned: and those who do wrong of these (Meccans), there shall
|
|
befall them too the evil deeds of what they had earned, nor shall they
|
|
frustrate Him.
|
|
Have they not known that God extends His provision to whom He
|
|
pleases, or doles it out? verily, in that are signs unto a people
|
|
who believe.
|
|
Say, 'O my servants! who have been extravagant against their own
|
|
souls!' be not in despair of the mercy of God; verily, God forgives
|
|
sins, all of them; verily, He is forgiving, merciful.
|
|
But turn repentant unto your Lord, and resign yourselves to Him,
|
|
before there comes on you torment! then ye shall not be helped: and
|
|
follow the best of what has been sent down to you from your Lord,
|
|
before, there come on you the torment suddenly, ere ye can perceive!
|
|
Lest a soul should say, 'O my sighing! for what I have neglected
|
|
towards God! for, verily, I was amongst those who did jest!' or lest
|
|
it should say, 'If God had but guided me, I should surely have been of
|
|
those who fear!' or lest it should say, when it sees the torment, 'Had
|
|
I another turn I should be of those who do well!'
|
|
'Yea! there came to thee my signs and thou didst call them lies, and
|
|
wert too big with pride, and wert of those who misbelieved!'
|
|
And on the resurrection day thou shalt see those who lied against
|
|
God, with their faces blackened. Is there not in hell a resort for
|
|
those who are too big with pride?
|
|
And God shall rescue those who fear Him, into their safe place; no
|
|
evil shall touch them, nor shall they be grieved.
|
|
God is the creator of everything, and He is guardian over
|
|
everything; His are the keys of the heavens and the earth; and those
|
|
who misbelieve in the signs of God, they it is who lose!
|
|
Say, 'What! other than God would you bid me serve, O ye ignorant
|
|
ones? When He has inspired thee and those before thee that, "If thou
|
|
dost associate aught with Him, thy work will surely be in vain, and
|
|
thou shalt surely be of those who lose!" Nay, but God do thou serve,
|
|
and be of those who do give thanks!'
|
|
And they do not value God at His true value; while the earth all
|
|
of it is but a handful for Him on the resurrection day, and the
|
|
heavens shall be rolled up in His right hand! Celebrated be His
|
|
praise! and exalted be He above what they associate with Him! And
|
|
the trumpet shall be blown, and those who are in the heavens and in
|
|
the earth shall swoon, save whom God pleases. Then it shall be blown
|
|
again, and, lo! they shall stand up and look on. And the earth shall
|
|
beam with the light of its Lord, and the Book shall be set forth,
|
|
and the prophets and martyrs shall be brought; and it shall be decreed
|
|
between them in truth, and they shall not be wronged! And every soul
|
|
shall be paid for what it has done, and He knows best that which
|
|
they do; and those who misbelieve shall be driven to hell in troops;
|
|
and when they come there, its doors shall be opened, and its keepers
|
|
shall say to them, 'Did not apostles from amongst yourselves come to
|
|
you to recite to you the signs of your Lord, and to warn you of the
|
|
meeting of this day of yours?' They shall say, 'Yea, but the
|
|
sentence of torment was due against the misbelievers!' It shall be
|
|
said, 'Enter ye the gates of hell, to dwell therein for aye! Hell is
|
|
the resort of those who are too big with pride!'
|
|
But those who fear their Lord shall be driven to Paradise in troops;
|
|
until they come there, its doors shall be opened, and its keepers
|
|
shall say to them, 'Peace be upon you, ye have done well! so enter
|
|
in to dwell for aye!' and they shall say, 'Praise be to God, who
|
|
hath made good His promise to us, and hath given us the earth to
|
|
inherit! We establish ourselves in Paradise wherever we please and
|
|
goodly is the reward of those who work!'
|
|
And thou shalt see the angels circling round about the throne,
|
|
celebrating the praise of their Lord; and it shall be decided
|
|
between them in truth; and it shall be said, 'Praise be to God, the
|
|
Lord of the worlds!'
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF THE BELIEVER
|
|
(XL. Mecca.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
HA MIM. The sending down of the Book from God, the mighty, the
|
|
knowing, the forgiver of sin and accepter of repentance, keen at
|
|
punishment, long-suffering! there is no god but He! to whom the
|
|
journey is!
|
|
None wrangle concerning the signs of God but those who misbelieve;
|
|
then let not their going to and fro in the cities deceive thee.
|
|
The people of Noah before them called the prophets liars; and the
|
|
confederates after them; and every nation schemed against their
|
|
Apostle to catch him. And they wrangled with falsehood that they might
|
|
refute the truth thereby, but I seized them, and how was my
|
|
punishment!
|
|
Thus was the sentence of thy Lord due against those who misbelieved,
|
|
that they are the fellows of the Fire!
|
|
Those who bear the throne and those around it celebrate the praise
|
|
of their Lord, and believe in Him, and ask pardon for those who
|
|
believe: 'Our Lord! thou dost embrace all things in mercy and
|
|
knowledge, then pardon those who turn repentant and follow thy way,
|
|
and guard them from the torment of hell! Our Lord! make them enter
|
|
into gardens of Eden which thou hast promised to them, and to those
|
|
who do well of their fathers, and their wives, and their seed; verily,
|
|
thou art the mighty, the wise! and guard them from evil deeds, for
|
|
he whom thou shalt guard from evil deeds on that day, thou wilt have
|
|
had mercy on, and that is mighty bliss!'
|
|
Verily, those who misbelieve shall be cried out to, 'Surely, God's
|
|
hatred is greater than your hatred of each other when ye were called
|
|
unto the faith and misbelieved!' They shall say, 'Our Lord! Thou
|
|
hast killed us twice, and Thou hast quickened us twice; and we do
|
|
confess our sins: is there then a way for getting out?'
|
|
That is because when God alone was proclaimed ye did disbelieve; but
|
|
when partners were joined to Him ye did believe; but judgment
|
|
belongs to God, the high, the great! He it is who shows you His signs,
|
|
and sends down to you from heaven provision; but none is mindful
|
|
except him who turns repentant; then call on God, being sincere in
|
|
your religion to Him, averse although the misbelievers be! Exalted
|
|
of degrees! The Lord of the throne! He throws the spirit by His
|
|
bidding upon whom He will of His servants, to give warning of the
|
|
day of meeting. The day when they shall be issuing forth, naught
|
|
concerning them shall be hidden from God. Whose is the kingdom on that
|
|
day?-God's, the one, the dominant! to-day shall every soul be
|
|
recompensed for that which it has earned. There is no wrong to-day;
|
|
verily, God is quick at reckoning up!
|
|
And warn them of the day that approaches, when hearts are choking in
|
|
the gullets; those who do wrong shall have no warm friend, and no
|
|
intercessor who shall be obeyed. He knows the deceitful of eye and
|
|
what men's breasts conceal, and God decides with but those they call
|
|
on beside Him do not decide at all: verily, God, He both hears and
|
|
looks.
|
|
Have they not journeyed on in the earth and seen how was the end
|
|
of those who journeyed on before They were stronger than them in
|
|
might, and their vestiges are in the land; but God caught them up in
|
|
their sins, and they had none to guard them against God.
|
|
That is for that their apostles did come to them with manifest
|
|
signs, and they misbelieved, and God caught them up; verily, He is
|
|
mighty, keen to punish!
|
|
And we did send Moses with our signs, and with obvious authority,
|
|
unto Pharaoh and Haman and Qarun. They said, 'A lying sorcerer!' and
|
|
when they came to them with truth from us, they said, 'Kill the sons
|
|
of those who believe with him, and let their women live!' but the
|
|
stratagem of the misbelievers is only in error!
|
|
And Pharaoh said, 'Let me kill Moses; and then let him call upon his
|
|
Lord! verily, I fear that he will change your religion, or that he
|
|
will cause evil doing to appear in the land.'
|
|
And Moses said, 'Verily, I take refuge in my Lord and your Lord from
|
|
every one who is big with pride and believes not on the day of
|
|
reckoning.'
|
|
And a believing- man of Pharaoh's people, who concealed his faith,
|
|
said, 'Will ye kill a man for saying, My Lord is God, when he has come
|
|
to you with manifest signs from your Lord? and if he be a liar,
|
|
against him is his lie; and if he be truthful, there will befall you
|
|
somewhat of that which he threatens you; verily, God guides not him
|
|
who is an extravagant liar. my people! yours is the kingdom to-day, ye
|
|
are eminent in the land, but who will help us against the violence
|
|
of God, if it comes upon us?'
|
|
Said Pharaoh, 'I will only show you what I see, and I will only
|
|
guide you into the way of right direction.'
|
|
And he who believed said, 'O my people! verily, I fear for you the
|
|
ike of the day of the confederates, the like of the- wont of the
|
|
people of Noah and 'Ad and Haman, of those after them; for God desires
|
|
not injustice for His servants. O my people! verily, I fear for you
|
|
the day of crying 'Out,-the day when ye shall turn your backs,
|
|
fleeing, with no defender for you against God; for he whom God leads
|
|
astray, for him there is no guide!
|
|
'And Joseph came to you before with manifest signs, but ye ceased
|
|
not to doubt concerning what he brought you, until, when he
|
|
perished, ye said, God will not send after him an apostle;" thus
|
|
does God lead astray him who is extravagant, a doubter.
|
|
'Those who wrangle concerning the signs of God without authority
|
|
having come to them are greatly hated by God and by those who believe;
|
|
thus does God set a stamp upon the heart of every tyrant too big
|
|
with pride!'
|
|
And Pharaoh said, 'O Haman! build for me a tower, haply I may
|
|
reach the tracts,-the tracts of heaven, and may mount up to the God of
|
|
Moses, for, verily, I think him a liar.'
|
|
And thus was his evil deed made seemly to Pharaoh, and he was turned
|
|
from the way; but Pharaoh's stratagem ended only in ruin, and he who
|
|
believed said, 'O my people! follow me, I will guide you to the way of
|
|
the right direction. O my people! verily, the life of this world is
|
|
but a provision, but, verily, the hereafter, that is the abode of
|
|
stability! Whoso does evil, he shall only be recompensed with the like
|
|
thereof; and whoso does right, be it male or female and a believer,
|
|
these shall enter into Paradise; they shall be provided therein
|
|
without count. O my people! why should I call you to salvation, and
|
|
you call me to the fire? Ye call on me to disbelieve in God, and to
|
|
join with Him what I have no knowledge of; but I call you to the
|
|
mighty forgiving One! no doubt that what ye call me to, ought not to
|
|
be called on in this world or in the hereafter, and that we shall be
|
|
sent back to God, and that the extravagant, they are the fellows of
|
|
the Fire!
|
|
'But ye shall remember what I say to you; and I entrust my affair to
|
|
God, verily, God looks upon His servants!'
|
|
And God guarded him from the evils of what they plotted, and there
|
|
closed in upon Pharaoh evil woe.
|
|
The fire-they shall be exposed to it morning and evening; and 'on
|
|
the day the Hour shall arise, enter, O people of Pharaoh! into the
|
|
keenest torment.
|
|
And when they argue together in the fire, and the weak say to
|
|
those who were big with pride, 'Verily, we were followers of yours,
|
|
can ye then avail us against a portion of the fire?'
|
|
Those who were big with pride shall say, 'Verily, we are all in
|
|
it; verily, God has judged between His servants.'
|
|
And those who are in the fire shall say unto the keepers of hell,
|
|
'Call upon your Lord to lighten from us one day of the torment.'
|
|
They shall say, 'Did not your apostles come to you with manifest
|
|
signs?' They shall say, 'Yea!' They shall say, 'Then, call!'-but the
|
|
call of the misbelievers is only in error.
|
|
Verily, we will help our apostles, and those who believe, in the
|
|
life of this world and on the day when the witnesses shall stand up:
|
|
the day when their excuse shall not avail the unjust; but for them
|
|
is the curse, and for them is an evil abode.
|
|
And we did give Moses the guidance; and we made the children of
|
|
Israel to inherit the Book, as a guidance and a reminder to those
|
|
endowed with minds.
|
|
Be thou patient, then; verily, God's promise is true: and ask thou
|
|
forgiveness for thy sins, and celebrate the praise of thy Lord in
|
|
the evening and in the morn.
|
|
Verily, those who wrangle concerning the signs of God without
|
|
authority having come to them, there is naught in their breasts but
|
|
pride; but they shall not attain it: do thou then seek refuge in
|
|
God; verily, He both hears and looks!
|
|
Surely the creation of the heavens and the earth is greater than the
|
|
creation of man: but most men know it not.
|
|
The blind and the seeing shall not be deemed alike, nor those who
|
|
believe and do right and the evildoer; little is it that they
|
|
remember.
|
|
Verily, the Hour will surely come; there is no doubt therein; but
|
|
most men do not believe!
|
|
And your Lord said, 'Call upon me, I will answer you; verily,
|
|
those who are too big with pride to worship shall enter into hell,
|
|
shrinking up.'
|
|
God it is who has made for you the night to repose therein, and
|
|
the day to see by; verily, God is Lord of grace to men, but most men
|
|
give no thanks!
|
|
There is God for you! your Lord! the creator of everything! there is
|
|
no god but He, how then can ye lie? Thus did those lie who gainsaid
|
|
the signs of God.
|
|
God it is who has made for you the earth as a resting-place, and a
|
|
heaven as building, and has formed you and made excellent your
|
|
forms; and has provided you with good things! there is God for
|
|
you!-your Lord! then blessed be God, the Lord of the worlds!
|
|
He is the living One, there is no god but He! then call on Him,
|
|
being sincere in your religion to Him; praise be to God, the Lord of
|
|
the worlds!
|
|
Say, 'Verily, I am forbidden to serve those whom ye call on beside
|
|
God, since there have come to me manifest signs from my Lord, and I am
|
|
bidden to be resigned unto the Lord of the worlds.'
|
|
He it is who created you from the earth, then from a clot, then from
|
|
congealed blood, then He brings you forth a child; then ye reach to
|
|
puberty; then do ye become old men,-though of you there are some who
|
|
are taken away before,-that ye may reach an appointed time, and
|
|
haply ye may have some sense.
|
|
He it is who quickens and kills, and when He decrees a matter,
|
|
then He only says to it, 'BE,' and it is.
|
|
Hast thou not seen those who wrangle concerning the signs of God how
|
|
they are turned away? Those who call the Book, and what we have sent
|
|
our apostles with, a lie, soon shall they know-when the fetters are on
|
|
their necks and the chains, as they are dragged into hell!-then in the
|
|
fire shall they be baked.
|
|
Then it shall be said to them, 'Where is what ye did associate
|
|
beside God?' They shall say, 'They have strayed away from us; nay,
|
|
we did not call before upon anything!'-thus does God lead the
|
|
misbelievers astray.
|
|
There! for that ye did rejoice in the land without right; and for
|
|
that ye did exult; enter ye the gates of hell, to dwell therein for
|
|
aye; for evil is the resort of those who are too big with pride!
|
|
But be thou patient; verily, the promise of God is true; and whether
|
|
we show thee a part of what we promised them, or whether we surely
|
|
take thee to ourself, unto us shall they be returned.
|
|
And we did send apostles before thee: of them are some whose stories
|
|
we have related to thee, and of them are some whose stories we have
|
|
not related to thee; and no apostle might ever bring a sign except
|
|
by the permission of God; but when God's bidding came it was decided
|
|
with truth, and there were those lost who deemed it vain!
|
|
God it is who has made for you cattle, that ye may ride on some of
|
|
them;-and of them ye eat, and ye have in them advantages;-and that
|
|
ye may attain thereon a want which is in your breasts; upon them and
|
|
upon ships are ye borne.
|
|
He shows you His signs; which sign then of your Lord do ye deny?
|
|
Have they not journeyed on in the land and seen how was the end of
|
|
those before them, who were more numerous than they and stronger in
|
|
might, and in their vestiges which are still in the land? but of no
|
|
avail to them was that which they had earned.
|
|
And when there came to them their apostles with manifest signs
|
|
they rejoiced in what knowledge they had; but there closed in upon
|
|
them that whereat they had mocked.
|
|
And when they saw our violence they said, 'We believe in God
|
|
alone, and we disbelieve in what we once associated with Him.'
|
|
But their faith was of no avail to them when they saw our
|
|
violence-the course of God with His servants in time past, and there
|
|
the misbelievers lose!
|
|
THE CHAPTER 'DETAILED'
|
|
(XLI. Mecca.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
HA MIM. A revelation from the merciful, the compassionate; a book
|
|
whose signs are detailed; an Arabic Koran for a people who do know;
|
|
a herald of glad tidings and a warning. But most of them turn aside
|
|
and do not hear, and say, 'Our hearts are veiled from what thou dost
|
|
call us to, and in our ears is dulness, and between us and thee
|
|
there is a veil. Act thou; verily, we are acting too!' Say, 'I am
|
|
but a mortal like yourselves, I am inspired that your God is one
|
|
God; then go straight to Him, and ask forgiveness of Him; and woe to
|
|
the idolaters, who give not alms, and in the hereafter disbelieve!'
|
|
Verily, those who believe and do right, for them is a hire that is
|
|
not grudged.
|
|
Say, 'What! do ye really misbelieve in Him who created the earth
|
|
in two days, and do ye make peers for Him?-that is the Lord of the
|
|
worlds!'
|
|
And He placed thereon firm mountains above it and blessed it, and
|
|
apportioned therein its foods in four days alike for those who ask.
|
|
Then He made for the heaven and it was but smoke, and He said to it
|
|
and to the earth, 'Come, ye two, whether ye will or no!' They said,
|
|
'We come willingly!'
|
|
And He decreed them seven heavens in two days, and inspired every
|
|
heaven with its bidding: and we adorned the lower heaven with lamps
|
|
and guardian angels; that is the decree of the mighty, the knowing
|
|
One.
|
|
But if they turn aside, then say, 'I have warned you-of a
|
|
thunder-clap like the thunder-clap of 'Ad and Thamud; when their
|
|
apostles came to them from before them and from behind them
|
|
(saying), "Serve ye none but God."' They said, 'If our Lord pleased He
|
|
would send down angels; so we in what ye are sent with disbelieve.'
|
|
And as for 'Ad, they were big with. pride in the land, without
|
|
right, and said, 'Who is stronger than us in might?' Did they not
|
|
see that God who created them He was stronger than they in might?
|
|
But they did gainsay our signs. And we sent upon them a cold blast
|
|
in unfortunate days, that we might make them taste the torment of
|
|
disgrace in the life of this world;-but the torment of the hereafter
|
|
is more disgraceful, and they shall not be helped.
|
|
And as for Thamud we guided them; but they preferred blindness to
|
|
guidance, and the thunderclap of the torment of abasement caught
|
|
them for what they had earned; but we saved those who believed and who
|
|
did fear.
|
|
And the day when the enemies of God shall be gathered. together into
|
|
the fire, marshalled along; until when they come to it, their
|
|
hearing and their eyesight and their skins shall bear witness
|
|
against them of that which they have done. And they shall say to their
|
|
skins, 'Why have ye borne witness against us?' they shall say, 'God
|
|
gave us speech who has given. speech to. everything; He created you at
|
|
first, and unto Him shall ye be returned; and ye could not conceal
|
|
yourselves that your hearing and your eyesight should not be witness
|
|
against you, nor your skins; but ye thought that God did not know much
|
|
of what ye do. And that thought of yours which ye thought concerning
|
|
your Lord has destroyed you, and ye have now become of those who
|
|
lose!'
|
|
And if they are patient, still the fire is a resort for them; and if
|
|
they ask for favour again, they shall not be taken into favour.
|
|
We will allot to them mates, for they have made seemly to them
|
|
what was before them and what was behind them; and due against them
|
|
was the sentence on the nations who passed away before them; both of
|
|
ginns and of mankind; verily, they were the losers!
|
|
Those who misbelieve say, 'Listen not to this Koran, but talk
|
|
foolishly about it, haply ye may gain the upper hand.' But we will
|
|
make those who misbelieve taste keen torment; and we will recompense
|
|
them with the worst of that which they have done. That is, the
|
|
recompence of the enemies of God,-the fire! for them is an eternal
|
|
abode therein: a recompence for that they did gainsay our signs.
|
|
And those who misbelieved say, 'Our Lord, show us those who have led
|
|
us astray amongst the ginns and mankind; we will place them beneath
|
|
'our feet, and they shall both be amongst those who are put down!'
|
|
Verily, those who say, 'Our Lord is God,' and then go straight, the
|
|
angels descend upon them-'fear not and be not grieved, but receive the
|
|
glad tidings of Paradise which ye were promised; we are your patrons
|
|
in the life of this world and in the next, and ye shall have therein
|
|
what your souls desire, and ye shall have therein what ye call for,-an
|
|
entertainment from the forgiving, the merciful!'
|
|
And who speaks better than he who calls to God and does right, and
|
|
says, 'Verily, I am of those resigned?'
|
|
Good and evil shall not be deemed alike; repel (evil) with what is
|
|
best, and lo! He between whom and thyself was enmity is as though he
|
|
were a warm patron. But none shall meet with it save those who are
|
|
patient; and none shall meet with it save those who are endowed with
|
|
mighty good fortune.
|
|
And if an incitement from the devil incites you, then seek refuge in
|
|
God; verily, He both hears and knows.
|
|
And of His signs are the night and the day, and the sun and the
|
|
moon. Adore ye not the sun, neither the moon; but adore God who
|
|
created you, if it be Him ye serve.
|
|
But if they be too big with pride-yet those who are with thy Lord
|
|
celebrate His praises by night and day, and they are never weary.
|
|
And of His signs (is this), that thou mayest see the earth drooping,
|
|
and when we send down water upon it it stirs and swells; verily, He
|
|
who quickens it will surely quicken the dead; verily, He is mighty
|
|
over all.
|
|
Verily, those who are inclined to oppose our signs are not hidden
|
|
from us. Is he who is cast into the fire better, or he who comes
|
|
safe on the resurrection day? Do what ye will: verily, He on what ye
|
|
do doth look.
|
|
Verily, those who misbelieve in the reminder when it comes to
|
|
them-and, verily, it is a glorious Book! falsehood shall not come to
|
|
it, from before it, nor from behind it-a revelation from the wise, the
|
|
praiseworthy One. Naught is said to thee but what was said to the
|
|
apostles before thee, 'Verily, thy Lord is Lord of forgiveness and
|
|
Lord of grievous torment!'
|
|
And had we made it a foreign Koran, they would have said, 'Unless
|
|
its signs be detailed.... What! foreign and Arabic?' Say, 'It is,
|
|
for those who believe, a guidance and a healing. But those who believe
|
|
not, in their ears is dulness, and it is blindness to them; these
|
|
are called to from a far-off place.'
|
|
And we gave Moses the Book, and it was disputed about; but had it
|
|
not been for thy Lord's word already passed it would have been decided
|
|
between them, for, verily, they were in hesitating doubt thereon.
|
|
Whoso does right it is for his soul, and whoso does evil it is
|
|
against it, for thy Lord is not unjust towards His servants.
|
|
To Him is referred the knowledge of the Hour: and no fruits come
|
|
forth from their husks, and no female conceives, or is delivered, save
|
|
with His knowledge.
|
|
And the day when He shall call to them, 'Where are the partners ye
|
|
did join with me?' they shall say, 'We do own to thee there is no
|
|
witness amongst us!' and that on which they used to call before
|
|
shall stray away from them, and they shall think there is no escape
|
|
for them. Man is never tired of praying for good, but if evil touch
|
|
him, then he is despairing and hopeless.
|
|
But if we make him taste mercy from us after distress has touched
|
|
him he will surely say, 'This is for me, and I do not think the Hour
|
|
is imminent; and if I be brought back to my Lord, verily, I shall
|
|
surely have good with Him;' but we will inform those who misbelieve of
|
|
what they have done, and we will surely make them taste wretched
|
|
torment.
|
|
And when we have been gracious to man, he turns away and goes aside;
|
|
but when evil touches him he is one of copious prayer.
|
|
Say, 'Let us see now! if it be from God and ye disbelieve in it, who
|
|
is more in error than he who is in a remote schism?'
|
|
We will show them our signs in the regions and in themselves,
|
|
until it is plain to them that it is the truth. Is it not enough for
|
|
thy Lord that He is witness over all? Ay, verily, they are in doubt
|
|
about the meeting of their Lord! Ay, verily, He encompasses all!
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF COUNSEL
|
|
(XLII. Mecca.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
HA MIM, AIN SIN QAF. Thus does God, the mighty, the wise, inspire
|
|
thee and those before thee.
|
|
His is what is in the heavens and what is in the earth, and He is
|
|
the high, the mighty!
|
|
The heavens well-nigh cleave asunder from above them; and the angels
|
|
celebrate the praises of their Lord, and ask forgiveness for those who
|
|
are on the earth. Ay, verily, God, He is the forgiving and merciful!
|
|
but those who take beside Him patrons, God watches over them, and thou
|
|
hast not charge over them.
|
|
Thus have we revealed an Arabic Koran, that thou mayest warn the
|
|
Mother of cities and all around it; and warn them of a day of
|
|
gathering, there is no doubt therein;-a part in Paradise and a part in
|
|
the blaze.
|
|
But had God pleased He would have made them one nation; but He makes
|
|
whom He will enter into His mercy; and the unjust have neither
|
|
patron nor help. Do they take other patrons besides Him, when God He
|
|
is the patron, and He quickens the dead and He is mighty over all?
|
|
But whatsoever ye dispute about, the judgment of it is God's.
|
|
There is God for you!-my Lord! upon Him do I rely, and unto Him I turn
|
|
repentant. The originator of the heavens and the earth, He has made
|
|
for you from yourselves wives; and of the cattle mates; producing
|
|
you thereby. There is naught like Him, for He both hears and sees.
|
|
His are the keys of the heavens and the earth, He extends
|
|
provision to whom He will, or doles it out; verily, He knows
|
|
everything.
|
|
He has enjoined upon you for religion what He prescribed to Noah and
|
|
what we inspired thee with, and what we inspired Abraham and Moses and
|
|
Jesus,-to be steadfast in religion, and not to part into sects
|
|
therein-a great thing to the idolaters is that which ye call them
|
|
to! God elects for Himself whom He pleases and guides unto Himself him
|
|
who turns repentant.
|
|
But they did not part into sects until after the knowledge had
|
|
come to them, through mutual envy; and had it not been for thy
|
|
Lord's word already passed for an appointed time, it would surely have
|
|
been decided between them; but, verily, those who have been given
|
|
the Book as an inheritance after them, are in hesitating doubt
|
|
concerning it.
|
|
Wherefore call thou, and go straight on as thou art bidden, and
|
|
follow not their lusts; and say, 'I believe in the Book which God
|
|
has sent down; and I am bidden to judge justly between you. God is our
|
|
Lord and your Lord'; we have our works and ye have your works; there
|
|
is no argument between us and you. God will assemble us together and
|
|
unto Him the journey is.'
|
|
But those who argue about God after it has been assented to, their
|
|
arguments shall be rebutted before their Lord; and upon them shall
|
|
be wrath, and for them shall be keen torment.
|
|
God it is who has sent down the Book with truth, and the balance;
|
|
and what shall make thee know whether haply the Hour be nigh? Those
|
|
who believe not would hurry it on; and those who believe shrink with
|
|
terror at it and know that it is true. Ay, verily, those who dispute
|
|
concerning the Hour are in remote error!
|
|
God is kind to His servants; He provides whom He will, and He is the
|
|
mighty, the glorious.
|
|
He who wishes for the tilth of the next world, we will increase
|
|
for him the tilth; and he who desires the tilth of this world, we will
|
|
give him thereof: but in the next he shall have no portion.
|
|
Have they associates who have enjoined any religion on them which
|
|
God permits not?- but were it not for the word of decision it would
|
|
have been decreed to them. Verily, the unjust,-for them is grievous
|
|
woe. Thou shalt see the unjust shrink with terror from what they
|
|
have gained as it falls upon them; and those who believe and do right,
|
|
in meads of Paradise, they shall have what they please with their
|
|
Lord;-that is great grace!
|
|
That is what God gives glad tidings of to His servants who believe
|
|
and do righteous acts.
|
|
Say, 'I do not ask for it a hire-only the love of my kinsfolk.'
|
|
And he who gains a good action we will increase good for him
|
|
thereby; verily, God is forgiving and grateful!
|
|
Or will they say he has forged against God a lie? But if God pleased
|
|
He could set a seal upon thy heart; but God will blot out falsehood
|
|
and verify truth by His word; verily, He knows the nature of men's
|
|
breasts!
|
|
He it is who Accepts repentance from His servants and pardons
|
|
their offences and knows that which ye do. And He answers the prayer
|
|
of those who believe and do right, and gives them increase of His
|
|
grace; but the misbelievers,- for them is keen torment.
|
|
And if God were to extend provision to His servants they would be
|
|
wanton in the earth. But He sends-down by measure what He pleases;
|
|
verily, of His servants He is well aware and sees.
|
|
He it is who sends down the rain after they have despaired; and
|
|
disperses His mercy, for He is the praiseworthy patron.
|
|
And of His signs is the creation the heavens and the earth, and what
|
|
He hath spread abroad therein of beasts; and He is able to collect
|
|
them when He will.
|
|
And what misfortunes befall you it is for what your hands have
|
|
earned; but He pardons much; Yet ye cannot make Him helpless in the
|
|
earth, nor have ye, besides God, either a patron or a helper.
|
|
And of His signs are the ships that sail like mountains in the
|
|
sea. If He will, He calms the wind, and they become motionless on
|
|
the back thereof: verily, in that are signs to every patient, grateful
|
|
person:-or He makes them founder for what they have earned; but He
|
|
pardons much. But let those who wrangle about our signs know that they
|
|
shall have no escape!
|
|
And whatever ye are given it is but a provision of the life of
|
|
this world; but what is with God is better and more lasting for
|
|
those who believe and who upon their Lord rely, and those who avoid
|
|
great sins and abominations, and who when they are wroth forgive,
|
|
and who assent to their Lord, and are steadfast in prayer, and whose
|
|
affairs go by counsel amongst themselves, and who of what we have
|
|
bestowed on them give alms, and who, when wrong. befalls them, help
|
|
themselves.
|
|
For the recompence of evil is evil like unto it; but he who
|
|
pardons and does well, then his reward is with God; verily, He loves
|
|
not the unjust. And he who helps himself after he has been wronged,
|
|
for these-there is no way against them. The way is only against
|
|
those who wrong men and are wanton in the earth without right;
|
|
these- for them is grievous woe.
|
|
But surely he who is patient and forgives,-verily that is a
|
|
determined affair.
|
|
But whomsoever God leads astray he has no patron after Him; and thou
|
|
mayest see the unjust when they see the torment say, 'Is there no
|
|
way to avert this?' and thou mayest see them exposed to it, humbled
|
|
with abasement, looking with a stealthy glance. And those who
|
|
believe shall say, 'Verily, the losers are they who have lost
|
|
themselves and their families too upon the resurrection day!' Ay,
|
|
verily, the unjust are in lasting torment!
|
|
And they shall have no patrons to help them beside God, and
|
|
whomsoever God leads astray, there is no way for him.
|
|
Assent to your Lord before the day comes of which there is no
|
|
averting from God; there is no refuge for you on that day; and for you
|
|
there is no denial.
|
|
But if they turn aside, we have not sent thee to them as a guardian,
|
|
thou hast only thy message to preach.
|
|
And, verily, when we have made man taste of mercy from us he
|
|
rejoices therein; but if there befall them an evil for what their
|
|
hands have done before then, verily, man is ungrateful!
|
|
God's is the kingdom of the heavens and the earth, He creates what
|
|
He pleases, He grants to whom He pleases females, and He grants to
|
|
whom He pleases males, or He gives them in pairs, males and females;
|
|
and He makes whom He pleases barren; verily, He is knowing, powerful!
|
|
It is not for any mortal that God should speak to him, except by
|
|
inspiration, or from behind a veil, or by sending an apostle and
|
|
inspiring, by His permission, what He pleases; verily, He is high
|
|
and wise!
|
|
And thus have we inspired thee by a spirit at our bidding; thou
|
|
didst not know what the Book was, nor the faith: but we made it a
|
|
light whereby we guide whom we will of our servants. And, verily, thou
|
|
shalt surely be guided into the right way,-the way of God, whose is
|
|
what is in the heavens and what is in the earth. Ay, to God affairs do
|
|
tend!
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF GILDING
|
|
(XLIII. Mecca.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
HA MIM. By the perspicuous Book, verily, we have made it an Arabic
|
|
Koran; haply ye will have some sense. And it is in the Mother of the
|
|
Book with us,-high and wise. Shall we then push aside from you the
|
|
Reminder, because ye are a people who are extravagant?
|
|
How many prophets have we sent amongst those of yore? and there
|
|
never came to them a prophet but they did mock at him; then we
|
|
destroyed them-more valiant than these; and the example of those of
|
|
yore passed away.
|
|
And if thou shouldst ask them who created the heavens and the earth,
|
|
they will surely say, 'The mighty, the knowing One created them,
|
|
'who made for you the earth a couch and placed for you therein
|
|
roads, haply ye may be guided: and who sent down from the heaven water
|
|
in due measure; and we raised up thereby a dead country; thus shall ye
|
|
too be brought forth; and who has created all species; and has made
|
|
for you the ships and the cattle whereon to ride that ye may settle
|
|
yourselves on their backs; then remember the favour of your Lord
|
|
when ye settled thereon, and say, 'Celebrated be the praises of Him
|
|
who hath subjected this to us! We could not have got this ourselves;
|
|
and, verily, unto our Lord shall we return!'
|
|
Yet they make for Him of His servants offspring; verily, man is
|
|
surely obviously ungrateful.
|
|
Has He taken of what He creates daughters, and chosen sons for you?
|
|
Yet when the tidings are given any one of that which he strikes
|
|
out as a similitude for the Merciful One, his face grows black and
|
|
he is choked. What! one brought up amongst ornaments, and who is
|
|
always in contention without obvious cause?
|
|
And have they made the angels, who are the servants of the
|
|
Merciful One, females? Were they witnesses of their creation? their
|
|
witness shall be written down, and they shall be questioned; and
|
|
they say, 'Had the Merciful pleased we should never have worshipped
|
|
them.' They have no knowledge of that, they only conjecture.
|
|
Have we given them a book before it to which they might hold?
|
|
Nay; they say, 'We found our fathers (agreed) upon a religion,
|
|
and, verily, we are guided by their traces.'
|
|
Thus, too, did we never send before thee to a city any warner, but
|
|
the affluent ones thereof said, 'Verily, we found our fathers (agreed)
|
|
upon a religion, and, verily, we are led by their traces.'
|
|
Say, 'What! if I come to you with what is a better guide than what
|
|
ye found your fathers agreed upon?' and they will say, 'Verily, we
|
|
in what ye are sent with disbelieve!'
|
|
Then we took vengeance on them, and see how was the end of those who
|
|
called the (apostles) liars.
|
|
When Abraham said to his father and his people, 'Verily, I am
|
|
clear of all that ye serve, except Him who created me; for, verily, He
|
|
will guide me:' and he made it a word remaining among his posterity,
|
|
that haply they might return.
|
|
Nay; but I let these (Meccans) and their fathers have enjoyment
|
|
until the truth came to them, and an apostle. And when the truth
|
|
came to them they said, 'This is magic, and we therein do disbelieve!'
|
|
And they say, 'Unless this Koran were sent down to a man great in
|
|
the two cities....'
|
|
Is it they who distribute the mercy of thy Lord? We distribute
|
|
amongst them their livelihood in the life of this world, and we
|
|
exalt some of them above others in degrees, that some may take
|
|
others into subjection; but the mercy of thy Lord is better than
|
|
that which they amass.
|
|
And but that men would then have been one nation, we would have made
|
|
for those who misbelieve in the Merciful One roofs of silver for their
|
|
houses, and steps up thereto which they might mount; and to their
|
|
houses doors, and bedsteads on which they might recline; and
|
|
gilding,-for, verily, all that is a provision of the life of this
|
|
world, but the hereafter is better with thy Lord for those who fear!
|
|
And whosoever turns from the reminder of the Merciful One, we will
|
|
chain to him a devil, who shall be his mate; and, verily, these
|
|
shall turn them from the path while they reckon that they are guided
|
|
until when he comes to us he shall say, 'O, would that between me
|
|
and thee there were the distance of the two orients, for an evil
|
|
mate (art thou)!' But it shall not avail you on that day, since ye
|
|
were unjust; verily, in the torment shall ye share!
|
|
What! canst thou make the deaf to hear, or guide the blind, or him
|
|
who is in obvious error?
|
|
Whether then we take thee off we will surely take vengeance on them;
|
|
or whether we show thee that which we have promised them; for, verily,
|
|
we have power over them.
|
|
Say, 'Dost thou hold to what is inspired thee verily, thou art in
|
|
the right way, and, verily, it is a reminder to thee and to thy
|
|
people, but in the end they shall be asked.
|
|
And ask those whom we have sent before thee amongst the prophets,
|
|
'Did we make gods beside the Merciful One for them to serve?'
|
|
We did send Moses with our signs to Pharaoh and his chiefs, and he
|
|
said, 'Verily, I am the apostle of the Lord of the worlds; but when he
|
|
came to them with our signs, lo, they laughed at them!'
|
|
And we did not show them a sign, but it was greater than its fellow;
|
|
and we seized them with the torment, haply they might turn.
|
|
And they said, 'O thou magician! pray for us to thy Lord, as He
|
|
has engaged with thee: verily, we are guided.'
|
|
And when we removed from them the torment, behold they broke their
|
|
word.
|
|
And Pharaoh proclaimed amongst his people; said he, 'O my people! is
|
|
not the kingdom of Egypt mine? and these rivers that flow beneath
|
|
me? What! can ye then not see? Am I better than this fellow, who is
|
|
contemptible, who can hardly explain himself? Unless then bracelets of
|
|
gold be cast upon him, or there come with him angels as his mates...!'
|
|
And he taught his people levity; and they obeyed him: verily, they
|
|
were an abominable people.
|
|
And when they had annoyed us we took vengeance on them, and we
|
|
drowned them all together, and we made them a precedent and an example
|
|
to those after them.
|
|
And when the son of Mary was set forth as a parable, behold thy
|
|
people turned away from him and said, 'Are our gods better, or is he?'
|
|
They did not set it forth to thee save for wrangling. Nay, but they
|
|
are a contentious people.
|
|
He is but a servant whom we have been gracious to, and we have
|
|
made him an example for the children of Israel. And if we please we
|
|
can make of you angels in the earth to succeed you. And, verily, he is
|
|
a sign of the Hour. Doubt not then concerning it, but follow this
|
|
right way; and let not the devil turn you away; verily, he is to you
|
|
an open foe!
|
|
And when Jesus came with manifest signs he said, 'I am come to you
|
|
with wisdom, and I will explain to you something of that whereon ye
|
|
did dispute, then fear God, obey me; verily, God, He is Lord and
|
|
your Lord, serve Him then, this is the right way.'
|
|
But the confederates disputed amongst themselves; and woe to those
|
|
who are unjust from the torment of a grievous day!
|
|
Do they expect aught but that the Hour will come upon them
|
|
suddenly while they do not perceive? Friends on that day shall be foes
|
|
to each other, save those who fear.
|
|
O my servants! there is no fear for you on that day; nor shall ye be
|
|
grieved who believe in our signs and who are resigned. Enter ye into
|
|
Paradise, ye and your wives, happy!
|
|
Dishes of gold and pitchers shall be sent round to them; therein
|
|
is what souls desire, and eyes shall be delighted, and ye therein
|
|
shall dwell for aye; for that is Paradise which ye are given as an
|
|
inheritance for that which ye have done. Therein shall ye have much
|
|
fruit whereof to eat.
|
|
Verily, the sinners are in the torment of hell to dwell for aye.
|
|
It shall not be intermitted for them, and they therein shall be
|
|
confused. We have not wronged them, but it was themselves they
|
|
wronged.
|
|
And they shall cry out, 'O Malik! let thy lord make an end of us;'
|
|
he shall say, 'Verily, ye are to tarry here.'
|
|
We have brought you the truth, but most of you are averse from the
|
|
truth. Have they arranged the affair? then will we arrange it too!
|
|
Or do they reckon that we did not hear their secrets and their
|
|
whispering? Nay, but our messengers are with them writing down.
|
|
Say, 'If the Merciful One has a son then am I the first to worship
|
|
him. Celebrated be the praise of the Lord of the heavens and the
|
|
earth! the Lord of the throne, above all they attribute to Him!
|
|
But leave them to ponder and to play until they meet that day of
|
|
theirs which they are promised.
|
|
He it is who is in the heaven a God and in the earth a God! and He
|
|
is the wise, the knowing. And blessed be he whose is the kingdom of
|
|
the heavens and the earth, and what is between both, and His is the
|
|
knowledge of the Hour, and unto Him shall ye be brought back!
|
|
And those they call on beside Him shall not possess intercession
|
|
except those only who bear witness for the truth and who do know.
|
|
And if thou shouldst ask them who created them they will surely say,
|
|
'God!' How then can they lie?
|
|
And what he says, 'O Lord, verily, these are a people who do not
|
|
believe; shun them then and say, "Peace!" for they at length shall
|
|
know!'
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF SMOKE
|
|
(XLIV. Mecca.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
HA MIM. By the perspicuous Book! verily, we have sent it down on a
|
|
blessed night;-verily, we had given warning-wherein is decided every
|
|
wise affair, as an order from us. Verily, we were sending (apostles)-a
|
|
mercy from thy Lord; verily, He both hears and knows: from the Lord of
|
|
the heavens and the earth and what is between the two, if ye were
|
|
but sure. There is no god but He, He quickens and He kills-your Lord
|
|
and the Lord of your fathers of yore! Nay, they in doubt do play!
|
|
But expect thou the day when the heaven shall bring obvious smoke to
|
|
cover men-this is grievous torment!
|
|
Our Lord! remove from us the torment; verily, we are believers.
|
|
How can they have the reminder (now), when they have had a plain
|
|
apostle, and when they turned their backs away from him and said,
|
|
'Taught! mad!' Verily, we will remove the torment a little, (but) ye
|
|
will surely return!
|
|
On the day when we will assault with the great assault, verily, we
|
|
will take vengeance.
|
|
And we already tried the people of Pharaoh when there came to them a
|
|
noble apostle: 'Send back to me God's servants; verily, I am to you
|
|
a faithful apostle;' and, 'Exalt not yourselves above God; verily, I
|
|
come to you with obvious authority. And, verily, I seek refuge in my
|
|
Lord and your Lord, that ye stone me not. And if ye believe not in
|
|
me then let me alone!'
|
|
Then he called upon his Lord, 'Verily, these are a sinful people.'
|
|
So journey with my servants by night-verily, ye will be pursued. But
|
|
leave the sea in quiet-verily, they are a host to be drowned! How many
|
|
gardens and springs have they left, and corn lands and a noble
|
|
place, and comfort wherein they did enjoy themselves!
|
|
Thus-and we gave them for an inheritance to another people. And
|
|
the heaven wept not for them, nor the earth, nor were they respited.
|
|
But we saved the children of Israel from shameful woe!- from
|
|
Pharaoh; verily, he was haughty, one of the extravagant! And we did
|
|
choose them, wittingly, above the worlds; and we gave them signs
|
|
wherein was an obvious trial!
|
|
Verily, these I say, I It is but our first death, so bring our
|
|
fathers, if ye do speak the truth!'
|
|
Are they better than the people of Tubba'h, and those before them?
|
|
We destroyed them verily, they were sinners!
|
|
Nor did we create the heavens and the earth, and what is between the
|
|
two in sport: we did but create them in truth, though most of them
|
|
know it not!
|
|
Verily, the day of separation is their appointed term; the day
|
|
when master shall not avail client at all, nor shall they be helped;
|
|
save whomsoever God shall have mercy on; verily, He is the mighty, the
|
|
merciful!
|
|
Verily, the Zaqqum tree (shall be) the food of the sinful: as it
|
|
were melting, shall it boil in their bellies like the boiling of hot
|
|
water!-'Take him and hale him into the midst of hell! then pour over
|
|
his head the torment of hot water!-Taste! verily, thou art the mighty,
|
|
the honourable! Verily, this is that whereon ye did dispute!'
|
|
Verily, the pious shall be in a safe place! in gardens and
|
|
springs, they shall be clad in satin and stout silk face to face.
|
|
Thus!-and we will wed them to bright and large-eyed maids! They
|
|
shall call therein for every fruit in safety. They shall not taste
|
|
therein of death save their first death, and we will keep them from
|
|
the torment of hell! Grace from thy Lord, that is the grand bliss!
|
|
And we have only made it easy for thy tongue, that haply they may be
|
|
mindful. Then watch thou; verily, they are watching too!
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF THE KNEELING
|
|
(XLV. Mecca.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
HA MIM. A revelation of the Book from God, the mighty, the wise.
|
|
Verily, in the heavens and the earth are signs to those who believe;
|
|
and in your creation and the beasts that are spread abroad are signs
|
|
to a people who are sure; and in the alternation of night and day, and
|
|
the provision that God has sent down from heaven and quickened thereby
|
|
the earth after its death, and in the veering of the winds are signs
|
|
unto a people who have sense.
|
|
These are the signs of God which we recite to thee in truth; and
|
|
in what new story after God and His signs will they believe?
|
|
Woe to every sinful liar who hears God's signs sent to him, then
|
|
persists in being big with pride as though he heard them not-so give
|
|
him the glad tidings of grievous woe-and when he knows something of
|
|
our signs takes them for a jest! These,-for them is shameful woe,
|
|
behind them is hell, and what they have earned shall not avail them
|
|
aught, nor what they have taken besides God for patrons; and for
|
|
them is mighty woe.
|
|
This is a guidance, and those who misbelieve in the signs of their
|
|
Lord, for them is torment of a grievous plague.
|
|
God it is who subjects to you the sea that the ships may sail
|
|
thereon at his bidding, and that ye may crave of His grace, and that
|
|
haply ye may give thanks; and He has subjected to you what is in the
|
|
heavens and what is in the earth,-all from Him; verily, in that are
|
|
signs unto a people who reflect.
|
|
Say to those who believe that they pardon those who hope not for
|
|
God's days, that He may reward a people for that which they have
|
|
earned.
|
|
Whosoever acts aright it is for his own soul, and whosoever does
|
|
evil it is against it; then unto your Lord shall ye be returned.
|
|
And we did bring the children of Israel the Book and judgment and
|
|
prophecy, and we provided them with good things, and preferred them
|
|
above the worlds. And we brought them manifest proofs of the affair,
|
|
and they disputed not until after knowledge had come to them,
|
|
through mutual envy. Verily, thy Lord will decide between them on
|
|
the resurrection day concerning that whereon they did dispute.
|
|
Then we did set thee over a law concerning the affair: follow it
|
|
then, and follow not the lusts of those who do not know. Verily,
|
|
they shall not avail thee against God at all; and, verily, the
|
|
wrongdoers are patrons of each other, but God is the patron of those
|
|
who fear.
|
|
This is an insight for men and a guidance and a mercy to a people
|
|
who are sure.
|
|
Do those who commit evil deeds count that we will make them like
|
|
those who believe and work righteous deeds, equal in their life and
|
|
their death?- ill it is they judge.
|
|
And God created the heavens and the earth in truth; and every soul
|
|
shall be recompensed for, that which it has earned, and they shall not
|
|
be wronged.
|
|
Hast thou considered him who takes his lusts for his god, and God
|
|
leads him astray wittingly, and has set a seal upon his hearing and
|
|
his heart, and has placed upon his eyesight dimness? who then shall
|
|
guide him after God? Will they not then mind?
|
|
They say, 'It is only our life in this world, we die and we live,
|
|
and naught destroys us but time!' But they have no knowledge of
|
|
this; they do but suspect.
|
|
And when our signs are rehearsed to them with evidences their only
|
|
argument is to say, 'Bring our fathers, if ye speak the truth.'
|
|
Say, 'God quickens you, then He kills you, then He will gather you
|
|
unto the resurrection day, there is no doubt therein; but most men
|
|
do not know.'
|
|
God's is the kingdom of the heavens and the earth, and on the day
|
|
when, the Hour shall arise on that day shall those who call it vain be
|
|
losers! And thou shalt see each nation kneeling, each nation
|
|
summoned to its book, 'To-day are ye rewarded for that which ye have
|
|
done.'
|
|
This is our Book that speaketh to you with truth; verily, we have
|
|
written down what ye have done.
|
|
But as to those who believe and do righteous deeds their Lord will
|
|
make them enter into His mercy: that is the obvious bliss.
|
|
And as for those who misbelieve,- were not my signs recited to you
|
|
and ye were too big with pride and ye were a sinful people? And when
|
|
it was said, 'Verily, the promise of God is true, and the Hour there
|
|
is no doubt therein;' ye said, 'We know not what the Hour is, we
|
|
only suspect, and we are not sure.'
|
|
But there shall appear to them the evils of what they have done, and
|
|
that shall encompass them at which they have been mocking. And it
|
|
shall be said, 'To-day will we forget you as ye forgat the meeting
|
|
of this day of yours, and your resort shall be the fire, and ye
|
|
shall have no helpers. That is because ye took the signs of God for
|
|
a jest and the life of this world deceived you; wherefore to-day ye
|
|
shall not be brought forth therefrom, neither shall ye be taken back
|
|
into favour.'
|
|
God's then is the praise, the Lord of the heavens and the Lord-of
|
|
the earth, the Lord of the worlds! His is the grandeur in the
|
|
heavens and the earth, and He is the mighty and the wise!
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF EL A'HQAF
|
|
(XLVI. Mecca.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
HA MIM. The revelation of the Book from God the mighty, the wise.
|
|
We have only created the heavens and the earth and what is between
|
|
the two in truth and for an appointed time; but those who misbelieve
|
|
from being warned do turn aside.
|
|
Say, 'Have ye considered what ye call on beside God?' Show me what
|
|
they have created of the earth? or have they share in the heavens?
|
|
Bring me a book before this or a vestige of knowledge, if ye do tell
|
|
the truth!
|
|
But who is more in error than he who calls beside God on what will
|
|
never answer him until the resurrection day and who are heedless of
|
|
their calling, and when men are gathered together are enemies of
|
|
theirs and do deny their service?
|
|
And when our evident signs are recited to them, those who misbelieve
|
|
say of the truth when it comes to them, 'This is obvious magic.'
|
|
Or do they say, 'He has forged it?' Say, 'If I have forged ye cannot
|
|
obtain for me aught from God; He knows best what ye utter concerning
|
|
it; He is witness enough between me and you, and He is the
|
|
forgiving, the merciful.'
|
|
Say, 'I am not an innovator among the apostles; nor do I know what
|
|
will be done with me or with you if I follow aught but what I am
|
|
inspired with; nor am I aught but a plain warner.'
|
|
Say, 'Have ye considered, if it is from God and ye have
|
|
disbelieved therein, and a witness from the children of Israel
|
|
testifies to the conformity of it, and he believes while ye are too
|
|
big with pride? Verily, God guides not the unjust people.'
|
|
And those who misbelieve say of those. who believe, 'If it had
|
|
been good, they would not have been beforehand with us therein;' and
|
|
when they are not guided thereby, then will they say, 'This is an
|
|
old-fashioned lie.'
|
|
But before it was the Book of Moses, a model and a mercy; and this
|
|
is a book confirming it in Arabic language, to warn those who do wrong
|
|
and as glad tidings to those who do well.
|
|
Verily, those who say, 'Our Lord is God,' and then keep straight,
|
|
there is no fear for them, and they shall not be grieved. These are
|
|
the fellows of Paradise to dwell therein for aye, a recompence for
|
|
that which they have done.
|
|
We have prescribed for man kindness towards his parents. His
|
|
mother bore him with trouble and brought him forth with trouble; and
|
|
the bearing of him and the weaning of him is thirty months; until,
|
|
when he reaches puberty, and reaches forty years, he says, 'Lord! stir
|
|
me up that I may be thankful for thy favours wherewith thou hast
|
|
favoured me and my parents; and that I may do right to please Thee;
|
|
and make it right for me in my offspring; verily, I turn repentant
|
|
unto Thee, and, verily, I am of those resigned.'
|
|
There are those from whom we accept the best of what they have done,
|
|
and we pass over their offences-amongst the fellows of Paradise; the
|
|
promise of truth which they have been promised.
|
|
But he who says to his parents, 'Fie upon you! Do ye promise me that
|
|
I shall be brought forth when generations have passed away before
|
|
me?'-then shall they both cry to God for help. Woe to thee! Believe!
|
|
Verily, the promise of God is true. Then says he, 'This is but old
|
|
folks tales.'
|
|
There are those against whom the sentence was due amongst the
|
|
nations who have passed away before them of ginns and men; verily,
|
|
they have been the losers; and for all are degrees of what they have
|
|
done, so that He may repay them their works, and they shall not be
|
|
wronged.
|
|
And the day when those who misbelieve shall be exposed to the
|
|
fire: 'Ye made away with your good things in your worldly life, and ye
|
|
enjoyed them; wherefore to-day shall ye be rewarded with the torment
|
|
of disgrace, for that ye were big with pride in the earth without
|
|
the right, and for that ye did abomination.'
|
|
Remember too the brother of 'Ad when he warned his people at El
|
|
A'hqaf,- though warners have passed away before him and after
|
|
him,-'Serve not other than God; verily, I fear for you the torment
|
|
of a mighty day!'
|
|
They said, 'Hast thou come to us to turn us from our gods? then
|
|
bring us what thou dost threaten us with, if thou art of those who
|
|
speak the truth!' Said he, 'Knowledge is only with God: but I will
|
|
preach to you that which I am sent with, though I see you are a people
|
|
who are ignorant. And when they saw a traversing cloud approaching
|
|
their valleys they said, 'This is a cloud to give us rain.' 'Nay,
|
|
but it is what ye sought to hasten on-a wind in which is grievous
|
|
torment; it will destroy everything at the order of its Lord!' And
|
|
in the morning naught was seen save their dwellings. Thus do we reward
|
|
the sinful people!
|
|
We had established them in what we have established you, and we made
|
|
for them hearing and eyesight and hearts; but neither their hearing
|
|
nor their eyesight nor their hearts availed them aught, since they did
|
|
gainsay the signs of God, and that encompassed them whereat they had
|
|
mocked.
|
|
And we destroyed the cities that are around you:-and we turned about
|
|
the signs that haply they might return.
|
|
Why did not those help them, whom beside God they took for gods that
|
|
could draw nigh to Him? Nay! they strayed away from them; for that was
|
|
their lie and what they had forged.
|
|
And when we turned towards thee some of the ginn listening to the
|
|
Koran, and when they were present at (the reading of) it, they said,
|
|
'Be silent!' and when it was over. they turned back to their people,
|
|
warning them.
|
|
Said they, 'O our people! verily, we have heard a book sent down
|
|
after Moses, verifying what came before it, guiding to the truth,
|
|
and unto the right way. our people! respond to God's crier and believe
|
|
in Him, and He will pardon you your sins and will deliver you from
|
|
grievous woe.'
|
|
And whoso responds not to God's crier shall not frustrate Him in the
|
|
earth, and shall not have any patrons beside Him:-these are in obvious
|
|
error!
|
|
Did they not see that God who created the heavens and the earth, and
|
|
was not wearied with creating them, is able to quicken the dead?- nay,
|
|
verily, He is mighty over all!
|
|
And the day when those who misbelieve shall be exposed to the
|
|
fire,-'Is not this the truth?' they shall say, 'Yea, by our Lord!'
|
|
He shall say, 'Then taste the torment for that ye did misbelieve!'
|
|
Then do thou be patient, as the apostles endowed with a purpose were
|
|
patient, and hasten not on (their punishment). It shall be to them, on
|
|
the day they see what they are threatened with, as though they had
|
|
tarried but an hour of the day. A preaching this! Shall any perish but
|
|
the people who work abomination?
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF MOHAMMED, ALSO CALLED FIGHT
|
|
(XLVII. Medinah.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
Those who misbelieve and turn folk from God's way, He will make
|
|
their works go wrong. But those who believe and do right and believe
|
|
in what is revealed to Mohammed,-and it is the truth from their
|
|
Lord,-He will cover for them their offences and set right their mind.
|
|
That is because those who misbelieve follow falsehood, and those who
|
|
believe follow the truth from their Lord. Thus does God set forth
|
|
for men their parables.
|
|
And when ye meet those who misbelieve-then striking off heads
|
|
until ye have massacred them, and bind fast the bonds!
|
|
Then either a free grant (of liberty) or a ransom until the war
|
|
shall have laid down its burdens. That!-but if God please He would
|
|
conquer them-but (it is) that He may try some of you by the others.
|
|
And those who are slain in God's cause, their works shall not go
|
|
wrong; He will guide them and set right their mind; and will make them
|
|
enter into Paradise which He has told them of.
|
|
O ye who believe! if ye help God, He will help you, and will make
|
|
firm your footsteps.
|
|
But as for those who misbelieve-confound them! and He will make
|
|
their works go wrong.
|
|
That is because they were averse from what God has revealed; but
|
|
their works shall be void!
|
|
Have they not journeyed through the land and seen how was the end of
|
|
those before them? God destroyed them; and for the misbelievers is the
|
|
like thereof.
|
|
That is because God is the patron of those who believe, and
|
|
because the misbelievers have no patron.
|
|
Verily, God causes those who believe and do right to enter into
|
|
gardens beneath which rivers flow; but those who misbelieve enjoy
|
|
themselves and eat as the cattle eat; but the fire is the resort for
|
|
them!
|
|
How many a city, stronger than thy city which has driven thee out,
|
|
have we destroyed, and there was none to help them!
|
|
Is he who rests upon a manifest sign from his Lord like him, the
|
|
evil of whose works is made seemly to him, and who follow their lusts?
|
|
The similitude of Paradise which is promised to the pious,-in it are
|
|
rivers of water without corruption, and rivers of milk, the taste
|
|
whereof changes not, and rivers of wine delicious to those who
|
|
drink; and rivers of honey clarified; and there shall they have all
|
|
kinds of fruit and forgiveness from their Lord! (Is that) like him who
|
|
dwells in the fire for aye? and who are given to drink boiling water
|
|
that shall rend their bowels asunder?
|
|
Some of them there are who listen to thee, until when they go
|
|
forth from thee they say to those who have been given the knowledge,
|
|
'What is this which he says now?' These are those on whose hearts
|
|
God has set a stamp and who follow their lusts.
|
|
But those who are guided, He guides them the more, and gives them
|
|
the due of their piety.
|
|
Do they wait for aught but the Hour, that it should come to them
|
|
suddenly? The conditions thereof have come already; how, when it has
|
|
come on them, can they have their reminder?
|
|
Know thou that there is no god but God; and ask pardon for thy sin
|
|
and for the believers, men and women; for God knows your return and
|
|
your resort!
|
|
Those who misbelieve say, 'Why has not a surah been revealed?' but
|
|
when a decisive surah is revealed and fighting is mentioned therein,
|
|
thou mayest see those in whose heart is sickness looking towards
|
|
thee with the look of one fainting in death. Preferable for them
|
|
were obedience and a reasonable speech! But when the matter is
|
|
determined on, then if they believed God it were better for them.
|
|
Would ye perhaps, if ye had turned back, have done evil in the
|
|
land and severed the bonds of kinship?
|
|
It is these whom God has cursed, and has made them deaf, and has
|
|
blinded their eyesight! Do they not peruse the Koran? or are there
|
|
locks upon their hearts?
|
|
Verily, those who turn their backs after the guidance that has
|
|
been manifested to them-Satan induces them,- but (God) lets them go
|
|
'On for a time!
|
|
That is for that they say to those who are averse from what God
|
|
has revealed, 'We will obey you in part of the affair!' but God
|
|
knows their secrets! How will it be when the angels take their
|
|
souls, smiting their faces and their backs?
|
|
This is because they follow what angers God and are averse from
|
|
His goodwill; and their works are void.
|
|
Do those in whose hearts is sickness reckon that God will not
|
|
bring their malice forth?
|
|
But did we please we would show thee them, and thou shouldst know
|
|
them by their cognisances. But thou shalt known them by their
|
|
distorting their speech, and God knows their works!
|
|
But we will try you until we know those among you who fight
|
|
strenuously and the patient; and we will try the reports concerning
|
|
you.
|
|
Verily, those who misbelieve and turn folks off God's path, and
|
|
break with the Apostle after the guidance that has been manifested
|
|
to them, cannot harm God at all, and their works shall be void!
|
|
O ye who believe! obey God, and obey the Apostle; and make not
|
|
your works vain.
|
|
Verily, those who misbelieve and turn folks off God's path, and then
|
|
die misbelievers, God will not pardon them.
|
|
Then faint not, nor cry for peace while ye have the upper hand;
|
|
for God is with you and will not cheat you of your works!
|
|
The life of this world is but a play and a sport; but if ye
|
|
believe and fear God, He will give you your hire.
|
|
He does not ask you for (all) your property; if He were to ask you
|
|
for it and to press you, ye would be niggardly, and he would bring
|
|
your malice out.
|
|
Here are ye called upon to expend in God's cause, and among you
|
|
are some who are niggardly; and he who is niggardly is but niggardly
|
|
against his own soul: but God is rich and ye are poor, and if ye
|
|
turn your backs He will substitute another people in your stead,
|
|
then they will not be like you.
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF VICTORY
|
|
(XLVIII. Medinah.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
Verily, we have given thee an obvious victory! that God may pardon
|
|
thee thy former and later sin, and may fulfil His favour upon thee,
|
|
and guide thee in a right way, and that God may help thee with a
|
|
mighty help.
|
|
It is He who sent down his shechina into the hearts of the believers
|
|
that they might have faith added to their faith;-and God's are the
|
|
hosts of the heavens and the earth, and God is knowing, wise- to
|
|
make the believers, men and women, enter into gardens beneath which
|
|
rivers flow, to dwell therein for aye; and to cover for them their
|
|
offences; for that with God is a grand bliss: and to torment the
|
|
hypocrites, men and women, and the idolaters, men and women, who think
|
|
evil thoughts of God;-over them is a turn of evil fortune, and God
|
|
will be wrath with them and curse them, and has prepared for them
|
|
hell, and an evil journey shall it be!
|
|
God's are the hosts of the heavens and the earth, and God is mighty,
|
|
wise!
|
|
Verily, we have sent thee as a witness, and a herald of glad
|
|
tidings, and a warner;-that ye may believe in God and His Apostle, and
|
|
may aid Him and revere Him and celebrate His praises morning and
|
|
evening!
|
|
Verily, those who swear allegiance to thee do but swear allegiance
|
|
to God;-God's hand is above their hands! and whoso perjures himself
|
|
does but perjure himself against himself; but he who fulfils what he
|
|
has covenanted with God, God shall bring him mighty hire.
|
|
The desert Arabs who were left behind shall say, Our wealth and
|
|
our people occnpied us; ask pardon then for us!'-they speak with their
|
|
tongues what is not in their hearts!
|
|
Say, 'Who can control for you aught from God, if He wish you harm or
|
|
wish you advantage Nay, God of what ye do is well aware!
|
|
Nay, ye thought that the Apostle and the believers would not ever
|
|
return again to their families; that was made seemly in your hearts!
|
|
and ye thought evil thoughts, and ye were a corrupt people.
|
|
Whoso believes not in God and His Apostle- we have prepared for
|
|
the unbelievers a blaze!
|
|
God's is the kingdom of the heavens and of the earth. He pardons
|
|
whom He pleases, and torments whom He pleases; and God is forgiving,
|
|
merciful.
|
|
Those who were left behind shall say when ye have gone forth to
|
|
spoils that ye may take, 'Let us follow you;' they wish to change
|
|
God's words. Say, 'Ye shall by no means follow us; thus did God say
|
|
before!'
|
|
They will say, 'Nay! but ye envy us Nay! they did not understand
|
|
save a little.
|
|
Say to those desert Arabs who were left behind, 'Ye shall be
|
|
called out against a people endowed with vehement valour, and shall
|
|
fight them or they shall become Muslims. And if ye obey, God will give
|
|
you a good hire; but if ye turn your backs, as ye turned your backs
|
|
before, He will torment you with grievous woe!'
|
|
There is no compulsion on the blind, and no compulsion on the
|
|
lame, and no compulsion on the sick, but whoso obeys God and His
|
|
Apostle, He will make him enter gardens beneath which rivers flow; but
|
|
whoso turns his back He will torment with grievous woe.
|
|
God was well pleased with the believers when they did swear
|
|
allegiance to thee beneath the tree; and He knew what was in their
|
|
hearts, and He sent down His shechina upon them and rewarded them with
|
|
a victory nigh at hand, and many spoils for them to take; for God is
|
|
mighty, wise!
|
|
God promised you many spoils and hastened this on for you, and
|
|
restrained men's hands from you; and it may be a sign for the
|
|
believers and guide you in a right way;-and other (spoils) which ye
|
|
could not gain; but God has encompassed them; for God is mighty over
|
|
all.
|
|
And had those who misbelieved fought you, they would have turned
|
|
their backs; then they would have found neither patron nor
|
|
helper!-God's course which has been followed before, and thou shalt
|
|
find no change in the course of God!
|
|
He it was who restrained their hands from you, and your hands from
|
|
them in the mid-valley of Mecca after He had given you the victory
|
|
over them; for God on what ye do doth look!
|
|
Those who misbelieved and turned (you) away from the Sacred
|
|
Mosque, and (turned away) the offering, kept from arriving at its
|
|
destined place; and had it not been for believing men and believing
|
|
women whom ye knew not, whom ye might have trampled on, and so a crime
|
|
might have occurred to you on their account without your
|
|
knowledge-that God may make whomsoever He pleases enter into His
|
|
mercy. Had they been distinct from one another, we would have
|
|
tormented those of them who misbelieved with grievous woe.
|
|
When those who misbelieved put in their hearts pique-the pique of
|
|
ignorance-and God sent down His shechina upon His Apostle and upon the
|
|
believers, and obliged them to keep to the word of piety, and they
|
|
were most worthy of it and most suited for it; for God all things doth
|
|
know.
|
|
God truly verified for His Apostle the vision that ye shall verily
|
|
enter the Sacred Mosque, if God please, in safety with shaven heads or
|
|
cut hair, ye shall not fear; for He knows what ye know not, and He has
|
|
set for you, beside that, a victory nigh at hand.
|
|
He it is who sent His Apostle with guidance and the religion of
|
|
truth to set it above all religion for God is witness enough!
|
|
Mohammed is the Apostle of God, and those who are with Him are
|
|
vehement against the misbelievers,- compassionate amongst
|
|
themselves; thou mayest see them bowing down, adoring, craving grace
|
|
from God and His goodwill,- their marks are in their faces from the
|
|
effects of adoration;-that is their similitude in the law and their
|
|
similitude in the gospel; as a seedling puts forth its sprouts and
|
|
strengthens it, and grows stout, and straightens itself upon its stem,
|
|
delighting the sower!-that the misbelievers may be angry at
|
|
them;-God has promised those of them who believe and do
|
|
right-forgiveness and a mighty hire.
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF THE INNER CHAMBERS
|
|
(XLIX. Medinah.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
O ye who believe! do not anticipate God and His Apostle, but fear
|
|
God; verily, God both hears and knows.
|
|
O ye who believe! raise not your voices above the voice of the
|
|
prophet, and do not speak loud to him as ye speak loud to one another,
|
|
lest your works become vain, while ye do not perceive.
|
|
Verily, those who lower their voice before the Apostle of God,
|
|
they are those whose hearts God has proved for piety, for them is
|
|
forgiveness and a mighty hire.
|
|
Verily, those who cry out to thee from behind the inner chambers,
|
|
most of them have no sense; but did they wait until thou come out to
|
|
them, it were better for them;-but God is forgiving, merciful.
|
|
O ye who believe! if there come to you a sinner with an information,
|
|
then discriminate, lest ye fall upon a people in ignorance and on
|
|
the morrow repent of what ye have done.
|
|
And know that among you is the Apostle of God; if he should obey you
|
|
in many a matter ye would commit a sin; God has made faith beloved
|
|
by you, and has made it seemly in your hearts, and has made
|
|
misbelief and iniquity and rebellion hateful to you.-These are the
|
|
rightly directed-grace from God and favour! and God is knowing, wise.
|
|
And if the two parties of the believers quarrel, then make peace
|
|
between them; and if one of the twain outrages the other, then fight
|
|
the party that has committed the outrage until it return to God's
|
|
bidding; and if it do return then make peace between them with equity,
|
|
and be just; verily, God loves the just.
|
|
The believers are but brothers, so make peace between your two
|
|
brethren and fear God, haply ye may obtain mercy!
|
|
O ye who believe! let not one class ridicule another who are
|
|
perchance better than they; nor let women ridicule other women who are
|
|
perchance better than they; and do not defame each other, nor call
|
|
each other bad names-an ill name is iniquity after faith!
|
|
O ye who believe! carefully avoid suspicion; verily, some
|
|
suspicion is a sin. And do not play the spy, nor backbite each
|
|
other; would one of you like to eat his dead brother's flesh?- why! ye
|
|
would abhor it! then fear God; verily, God is relentant,
|
|
compassionate.
|
|
O ye folk! verily, we have created you of male and female, and
|
|
made you races and tribes that ye may know each other.
|
|
Verily, the most honourable of you in the sight of God is the most
|
|
pious of you; verily, God is knowing, aware!
|
|
The desert Arabs say, 'We believe.' Say, 'Ye do not believe; but
|
|
say, "We have become Muslims;" for the faith has not entered into your
|
|
hearts: but if ye obey God and His Apostle He will not defraud you
|
|
of your works at all: verily, God is forgiving, compassionate!'
|
|
The believers are only those who believe in God and His Apostle, and
|
|
then doubt not, but fight strenuously with their wealth and persons in
|
|
God's cause-these are the truth-tellers!
|
|
Say, 'Will ye teach God your religion? when God knows what is in the
|
|
heavens and what is in the earth, and God all things doth know!
|
|
They deem that they oblige thee by becoming Muslims. Say, 'Nay! deem
|
|
not that ye oblige me by your becoming Muslims! God obliges you, by
|
|
directing you to the faith, if ye do speak the truth!'
|
|
Verily, God knows the unseen things of the heavens and the earth,
|
|
and God on what ye do doth look.
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF Q
|
|
(L. Mecca.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
QAF. By the glorious Koran! nay, they wonder that there has come
|
|
to them a warner from amongst themselves; and the misbelievers say,
|
|
'This is a wondrous thing! What, when we are dead and have become
|
|
dust?-that is a remote return!'
|
|
We well know what the earth consumes of them, for with us is a
|
|
book that keeps (account).
|
|
Nay, they call the truth a lie when it comes to them, and they are
|
|
in a confused affair.
|
|
Do not they behold the heaven above them, how we have built it and
|
|
adorned it, and how it has no flaws?
|
|
And the earth, we have stretched it out and thrown thereon firm
|
|
mountains, and caused to grow thereon every beautiful kind.
|
|
An insight and a reminder to every servant who repents!
|
|
And we sent down from the heaven water as a blessing, and caused
|
|
to grow therewith gardens and the harvest grain!
|
|
And the tall palm trees having piled up spathes, for a provision
|
|
to (our) servants; and we quickened thereby a dead land; thus shall
|
|
the resurrection be!
|
|
Before them the people of Noah and the fellows of ar Rass and Thamud
|
|
and 'Ad and Pharaoh called the apostles liars; and the brethren of Lot
|
|
and the fellows of the Grove and the people of Tubba'h all called
|
|
the prophets liars, and the threat was duly executed.
|
|
Were we then fatigued with the first creation? nay! but they are
|
|
in obscurity concerning the new creation.
|
|
But we created man, and we know what his soul whispers; for we are
|
|
nigher to him than his jugular vein!
|
|
When the two meeters meet, sitting the one on the right and the
|
|
other on the left, not a word does he utter, but a watcher is by him
|
|
ready!
|
|
And the agony of death shall come in truth!-'that is what thou didst
|
|
shun!'
|
|
And the trumpet shall be blown!-that is the threatened day!
|
|
And every soul shall come-with it a driver and a witness!
|
|
'Thou wert heedless of this, and we withdrew thy veil from thee, and
|
|
to-day is thine eyesight keen!'
|
|
And his mate shall say, 'This is what is ready for me (to attest).
|
|
'Throw into hell every stubborn misbeliever!-who forbids good, a
|
|
transgressor, a doubter! who sets other gods with God-and throw him,
|
|
ye twain, into fierce torment!'
|
|
His mate shall say, 'Our Lord! I seduced him not, but he was in a
|
|
remote error.'
|
|
He shall say, 'Wrangle not before me; for I sent the threat to you
|
|
before. The sentence is not changed with me, nor am I unjust to my
|
|
servants.'
|
|
On the day we will say to hell, 'Art thou full? and it will say,
|
|
'Are there any more?'
|
|
And Paradise shall be brought near to the pious,-not far off.
|
|
This is what ye are promised, to every one who turns frequently
|
|
(to God) and keeps His commandments: who fears the Merciful in
|
|
secret and brings a repentant heart.
|
|
'Enter into it in peace: this is the day of eternity!'
|
|
They shall have what they wish therein, and increase from us!
|
|
How many a generation have we destroyed before them, mightier than
|
|
they in prowess!
|
|
Pass through the land, is there any refuge? Verily, in that is a
|
|
reminder to whomsoever has a heart, or gives ear, and is a witness
|
|
thereto.
|
|
We did create the heavens and the earth and what is between the
|
|
two in six days, and no weariness touched us.
|
|
Be thou patient then of what they say, and celebrate the praises
|
|
of thy Lord before the rising of the sun and before the setting. And
|
|
through (some) of the night celebrate His praise and the additional
|
|
adorations.
|
|
And listen for the day when the crier shall cry from a near
|
|
place;-the day when they shall hear the shout in truth-that is the day
|
|
of coming forth!
|
|
Verily, we quicken and we kill, and unto us the journey is!
|
|
On the day when the earth shall be cleft asunder from them
|
|
swiftly;-that is a gathering together which is easy to us!
|
|
We know what they say; nor art thou over them one to compel.
|
|
Wherefore remind, by the Koran, him who fears the threat.
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF THE SCATTERERS
|
|
(LI. Mecca.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
By the scatterers who scatter! and by those pregnant with their
|
|
burden! and by those running on easily! and by the distributors of
|
|
affairs!-verily, what ye are threatened with is surely true!
|
|
And, verily, the judgment will surely take place!
|
|
By the heaven possessed of paths! verily, ye are at variance in what
|
|
ye say!
|
|
He is turned from it who is turned.
|
|
Slain be the liars, who are heedless in a flood (of ignorance).
|
|
They will ask, 'When is the day of judgment The day when at the fire
|
|
they shall be tried.-'Taste your trial! this is what ye wished to
|
|
hasten on!'
|
|
Verily, the pious are in gardens and springs, taking what their Lord
|
|
brings them. Verily, they before that did well. But little of the
|
|
night they slept; and at the dawn they asked forgiveness. And in their
|
|
wealth was what was due to him who asked, and him who was kept back
|
|
from asking.
|
|
And in the earth are signs to those who are sure, and in
|
|
yourselves,-what! do ye not then see?
|
|
And in the heaven is your provision and that which ye are promised.
|
|
But by the Lord of the heaven and the earth! verily, it is the
|
|
truth,-like that which ye do utter!
|
|
Has the tale of Abraham's honoured guests reached thee? When they
|
|
entered in unto him and said, 'Peace!' he said, 'Peace!-a people
|
|
unrecognised.'
|
|
And he went aside unto his people and fetched a fat calf, and
|
|
brought it nigh unto them; said he, Will ye then not eat?'
|
|
And he felt a secret fear of them: said they, Fear not.' And they
|
|
gave him glad tidings of a knowing boy.
|
|
And his wife approached with a noise, and smote her face, and
|
|
said, 'An old woman, barren!'
|
|
Said they, 'Thus says thy Lord, He is knowing, wise.' Said he,
|
|
'And about what is your errand, O ye messengers?'
|
|
They said, 'Verily, we are sent unto a sinful people, to send upon
|
|
them stones of clay, marked from thy Lord for the extravagant.'
|
|
And we sent out therefrom such as were in it of the believers; but
|
|
we only found therein one house of Muslims.
|
|
And we left therein a sign to those who fear the grievous woe.
|
|
And in Moses; when we sent him to Pharaoh with obvious authority.
|
|
But he turned his back towards his column and said, 'A sorcerer or
|
|
mad!'
|
|
And we seized him and his hosts and hurled them into the sea; for he
|
|
was to be blamed.
|
|
And in 'Ad, when we sent against them a desolating wind, that left
|
|
naught on which it came without making it ashes!
|
|
And in Thamud, when it was said to them, 'Enjoy yourselves for a
|
|
season.' But they revolted against the bidding of their Lord; and
|
|
the noise caught them as they looked on. And they could not stand
|
|
upright, and they were not helped!
|
|
And the people of Noah of yore; verily, they were an abominable
|
|
people.
|
|
And the heaven-we have built it with might, and, verily, we do
|
|
surely give it ample space!
|
|
And the earth-we have spread it out; and how well we lay it out!
|
|
And of everything have we created pairs, haply ye may be mindful.
|
|
Flee then to God; verily, I am a plain warner from Him to you!
|
|
And do not set with God another god; verily, I am a plain warner
|
|
from Him to you!
|
|
Thus there came no apostle to those before them, but they said, 'A
|
|
sorcerer, mad!'
|
|
Do they bequeath it to each other?
|
|
Yea, they are an outrageous people!
|
|
So turn thy back upon them, so thou wilt not be to blame.
|
|
And remind; for, verily, the reminder shall profit the believers.
|
|
And I have not created the ginn and mankind save that they may
|
|
worship me.
|
|
I do not desire any provision from them, and I do not wish them to
|
|
feed me.
|
|
Verily, God, He is the provider, endowed with steady might.
|
|
Verily, for those who injure (the Apostle) shall be a portion like
|
|
the portion of their fellows, but let them not hurry me!
|
|
Then woe to those who misbelieve from their day which they are
|
|
threatened.
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF THE MOUNT
|
|
(LII. Mecca.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
By the mount! by the Book inscribed upon an outstretched vellum!
|
|
by the frequented house! by the elevated roof! by the swelling sea!
|
|
verily, the torment of thy Lord will come to pass;-there is none to
|
|
avert it!
|
|
The day when the heavens shall reel about, and the mountains shall
|
|
move about,-then woe upon that day to those who call (the apostles)
|
|
liars, who plunge into discussion for a sport!
|
|
On the day when they shall be thrust away into the fire of
|
|
hell,-'This is the fire, the which ye used to call a lie!-Is it magic,
|
|
this? or can ye not see?-broil ye therein, and be patient thereof or
|
|
be not patient, it is the same to you: ye are but rewarded for that
|
|
which ye did do!'
|
|
Verily, the pious (shall be) in gardens and pleasure, enjoying
|
|
what their Lord has given them; for their Lord will save them from the
|
|
torment of hell.
|
|
'Eat and drink with good digestion, for that which ye have done!'
|
|
Reclining on couches in rows; and we will wed them to large-eyed
|
|
maids.
|
|
And those who believe and whose seed follows them in the faith, we
|
|
will unite their seed with them; and we will not cheat them of their
|
|
work at all;- every man is pledged for what he earns.
|
|
And we will extend to them fruit and flesh such as they like. They
|
|
shall pass to and fro therein a cup in which is neither folly nor sin.
|
|
And round them shall go boys of theirs, as though they were hidden
|
|
pearls.
|
|
And they shall accost each other and ask questions, and shall say,
|
|
'Verily, we were before amidst our families shrinking with terror, but
|
|
God has been gracious to us and saved us from the torment of the hot
|
|
blast.
|
|
'Verily, we used to call on Him before; verily, He is the righteous,
|
|
the compassionate!'
|
|
Wherefore do thou remind them: for thou art, by the favour of thy
|
|
Lord, neither a soothsayer nor mad!
|
|
Will they say, 'A poet; we wait for him the sad accidents of fate?'
|
|
Say, 'Wait ye then; for I too am of those who wait!'
|
|
Do their dreams bid them this? or are they an outrageous people?
|
|
Or will they say, 'He has invented it?'-nay, but they do not
|
|
believe!
|
|
But let them bring a discourse like it, if they tell the truth!
|
|
Or were they created of nothing, or were they the creators? Or did
|
|
they create the heavens and the earth?- nay, but they are not sure!
|
|
Or have they the treasures of thy Lord? or are they the governors
|
|
supreme?
|
|
Or have they a ladder whereon they can listen?-then let their
|
|
listener bring obvious authority.
|
|
Has He daughters, while ye have sons?
|
|
Or dost thou ask them a hire, while they are borne down by debt?
|
|
Or have they the unseen, so that they write it down?
|
|
Or do they desire a plot?- but those who misbelieve it is who are
|
|
plotted against!
|
|
Or have they a god beside God? celebrated be God's praises above
|
|
what they join with Him!
|
|
But if they should see a fragment of the sky falling down, they
|
|
would say, 'Clouds in masses!'
|
|
But leave them till they meet that day of theirs whereon they
|
|
shall swoon; the day when their plotting shall avail them naught,
|
|
and they shall not be helped!
|
|
And, verily, there is a torment beside that for those who do
|
|
wrong; but most of them do not know!
|
|
But wait thou patiently for the judgment of thy Lord, for thou art
|
|
in our eyes. And celebrate the praises of thy Lord what time thou
|
|
risest, and in the night, and at the fading of the stars!
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF THE STAR
|
|
(LIII. Mecca.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
By the star when it falls, your comrade errs not, nor is he deluded!
|
|
nor speaks he out of lust! It is but an inspiration inspired! One
|
|
mighty in power taught him, endowed with sound understanding, and
|
|
appeared, he being in the loftiest tract.
|
|
Then drew he near and hovered o'er! until he was two bows' length
|
|
off or nigher still! Then he inspired his servant what he inspired
|
|
him; the heart belies not what he saw! What, will ye dispute with
|
|
him on what he saw?
|
|
And he saw him another time, by the lote tree none may pass; near
|
|
which is the garden of the Abode! When there covered the lote tree
|
|
what did cover it! The sight swerved not nor wandered. He saw then the
|
|
greatest of the signs of his Lord.
|
|
Have ye considered Allat and Al 'Huzza, and Manat the other third?
|
|
Shall there be male offspring for Him and female for you? That were an
|
|
unfair division! They are but names which ye have named, ye and your
|
|
fathers! God has sent down no authority for them! They do but follow
|
|
suspicion and what their souls lust after!-And yet there has come to
|
|
them guidance from their Lord.
|
|
Shall man have what he desires? But God's is the hereafter and the
|
|
present!
|
|
How many an angel in the heaven!-their intercession avails not at
|
|
all, save after God has given permission to whomsoever He will and
|
|
is pleased with!
|
|
Verily, those who believe not in the hereafter do surely name the
|
|
angels with female names!-but they have no knowledge thereof; they
|
|
do but follow suspicion, and, verily, suspicion shall not avail
|
|
against the truth at all!
|
|
But turn aside from him who turns his back upon our remembrance
|
|
and desires naught but this world's life! This is their sum of
|
|
knowledge; verily, thy Lord knows best who has erred from His way, and
|
|
He knows best who is guided!
|
|
God's is what is in the heavens and what is in the earth, that He
|
|
may reward those who do evil for what they have done; and may reward
|
|
those who do good with good! those who shun great sins and
|
|
iniquities,-all but venial faults,-verily, thy Lord is of ample
|
|
forgiveness; He knows best about you, when He produced you from the
|
|
earth, and when ye were embryos in the wombs of your mothers.
|
|
Make not yourselves out, then to be pure; He knows best who it is
|
|
that fears.
|
|
Hast thou considered him who turns his back? who gives but little
|
|
and then stops? Has he then the knowledge of the unseen, so that he
|
|
can see?
|
|
Has he not been informed of what is in the pages of Moses and
|
|
Abraham who fulfilled his word? that no burdened soul shall bear the
|
|
burden of another? and that man shall have only that for which he
|
|
strives; and that his striving shall at length be seen? Then shall
|
|
he be rewarded for it with the most full reward; and that unto thy
|
|
Lord is the limit; and that it is He who makes men laugh and weep; and
|
|
that it is He who kills and makes alive; and that He created pairs,
|
|
male and female, from a clot when it is emitted; and that for Him is
|
|
the next production; and that he enriches and gives possession; and
|
|
that He is the Lord of the Dog-star, and that He it was who
|
|
destroyed 'Ad of yore, and Thamud, and left none of them; and the
|
|
people of Noah before them,-verily, they were most unjust and
|
|
outrageous!
|
|
And the overthrown (cities) He threw down; and there covered them
|
|
what did cover them!
|
|
Which then of your Lord's benefits do ye dispute?
|
|
This is a warner, one of the warners of yore!
|
|
The approaching day approaches; there is none to discover it but
|
|
God.
|
|
At this new discourse then do ye wonder? and do ye laugh and not
|
|
weep? and ye divert yourselves the while!
|
|
But adore God and serve (Him).
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF THE MOON
|
|
(LIV. Mecca.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
The Hour draws nigh, and the moon is split asunder. But if they
|
|
see a sign they turn aside and say, 'Magic, continuous!'
|
|
And they call it a lie and follow their lusts; but every matter is
|
|
settled!
|
|
There has come to them some information with restraint in
|
|
it-wisdom far-reaching-but warners avail not!
|
|
But turn thy back on them!
|
|
The day when the caller shall call to an awkward thing.
|
|
Humbly casting down their looks shall they come forth from their
|
|
graves, as though they were locusts scattered abroad!
|
|
Hurrying forwards to the caller! the misbelievers shall say, 'This
|
|
is a difficult day!'
|
|
Noah's people before them called (the apostles) liars; they called
|
|
our servant a liar; and they said, 'Mad!' and he was rejected.
|
|
And he called upon his Lord, 'Verily, I am overcome, come then to my
|
|
help!'
|
|
And we opened the gates of heaven with water pouring down!
|
|
And we made the earth burst forth in springs, and the waters met
|
|
at a bidding already decreed.
|
|
But we bore him on the thing of planks and nails; sailing on beneath
|
|
our eyes, a reward for him who had been disbelieved!
|
|
And we left it a sign;- but is there any one who will mind?
|
|
'Ad called the apostles liars, and how was my punishment and my
|
|
warning?
|
|
Verily, we sent on them a cold storm wind on a day of continuous
|
|
ill-luck!
|
|
It reft men away as though they had been palm stumps torn up!
|
|
We have made the Koran easy as a reminder- but is there any one
|
|
who will mind?
|
|
Thamud called the warnings lies, and said, 'A mortal, one of us,
|
|
alone, shall we follow him? then indeed were we in error and
|
|
excitement!
|
|
'Is the warning cast on him alone among us? nay, he is an insolent
|
|
liar!
|
|
'They shall know to-morrow about the insolent liar!
|
|
'Verily, we are about to send the she-camel as a trial for them,
|
|
then watch them and have patience! and inform them that the water is
|
|
shared between them (and her); each draught shall be sought by turns.'
|
|
Then they called their companion, and he plied (a knife) and
|
|
hamstrung her.
|
|
Then how was my punishment and my warning? Verily, we sent against
|
|
them one noise, and they were like the dry sticks of him who builds
|
|
a fold.
|
|
We have made the Koran easy as a reminder but is there any one who
|
|
will mind?
|
|
Lot's people called the apostles liars; verily, we sent against them
|
|
a heavy sand storm; all, save Lot's family, we saved them at the dawn.
|
|
As a favour from us; so do we reward him who gives thanks!
|
|
He indeed had warned them of our assault, but they doubted of the
|
|
warning.
|
|
And they desired his guest, and we put out their eyes.-
|
|
So taste ye my torment and warning!'
|
|
And there overtook them on the morning a settled punishment!-
|
|
So taste ye my torment and warning!'
|
|
We have made the Koran easy as a reminder-but is there any one who
|
|
will mind?
|
|
The warning came to Pharaoh's people; they called our signs all
|
|
lies, and we seized on them with the seizing of a mighty powerful one.
|
|
Are your misbelievers better than they? or have ye an exemption in
|
|
the Scriptures? Or do they say we are a victorious company?
|
|
The whole shall be routed and shall turn their backs in flight.
|
|
Nay, the Hour is their promised time! and the Hour is most severe
|
|
and bitter!
|
|
Verily, the sinners are in error and excitement. On the day when
|
|
they shall be dragged to the fire upon their faces!-'Taste ye the
|
|
touch of hell.'
|
|
Verily, everything have we created by decree, and our bidding is but
|
|
one (word), like the twinkling of an eye!
|
|
We have destroyed the like of you-but is there any who will mind?
|
|
And everything they do is in the books, and everything small and
|
|
great is written down.
|
|
Verily, the pious shall be amid gardens and rivers, in the seat of
|
|
truth, with the powerful king.
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF THE MERCIFUL
|
|
(LV. Mecca.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
The Merciful taught the Koran;
|
|
He created man, taught him plain speech.
|
|
The sun and the moon have their appointed time;
|
|
The herbs and the trees adore;
|
|
And the heavens, He raised them and set the balance,
|
|
that ye should not be outrageous in the balance;
|
|
But weigh ye aright, and stint not the balance.
|
|
And the earth He has set it for living creatures
|
|
therein are fruits and palms, with sheaths;
|
|
and grain with chaff and frequent shoots;
|
|
Then which of your Lord's bounties will ye twain deny?
|
|
He created men of crackling clay like the potters.
|
|
And He created the ginn from smokeless fire.
|
|
Then which of your Lord's bounties will ye twain deny?
|
|
The Lord of the two easts and the Lord of the two wests!
|
|
Then which of your Lord's bounties will ye twain deny?
|
|
He has let loose the two seas that meet together;
|
|
between them is a barrier they cannot pass!
|
|
Then which of your Lord's bounties will ye twain deny?
|
|
He brings forth from each pearls both large and small!
|
|
Then which of your Lord's bounties will ye twain deny?
|
|
His are the ships which rear aloft in the sea like
|
|
mountains.
|
|
Then which of your Lord's bounties will ye twain deny?
|
|
Every one upon it is transient, but the face of thy
|
|
Lord endowed with majesty and honour shall endure.
|
|
Then which of your Lord's bounties will ye twain deny?
|
|
Of Him whosoever is in the heaven and the earth
|
|
does beg; every day He is in (some fresh) business!
|
|
Then which of your Lord's bounties will ye twain deny?
|
|
We shall be at leisure for you, O ye two weighty ones!
|
|
Then which of your Lord's bounties will ye twain deny?
|
|
O assembly of ginns and mankind! if ye are able to pass
|
|
through the confines of heaven and earth
|
|
then pass through them!-ye cannot pass through
|
|
save by authority!
|
|
Then which of your Lord's bounties will ye twain deny?
|
|
There shall be sent against you a flash of fire,
|
|
and molten copper, and ye shall not be helped!
|
|
Then which of your Lord's bounties will ye twain deny?
|
|
And when the heaven is rent asunder and become rosy red
|
|
- (melting) like grease!
|
|
Then which of your Lord's bounties will ye twain deny?
|
|
On that day neither man nor ginn shall be asked
|
|
about his crime!
|
|
Then which of your Lord's bounties will ye twain deny?
|
|
The sinners shall be known by their marks, and shall
|
|
be seized by the forelock and the feet!
|
|
Then which of your Lord's bounties will ye twain deny?
|
|
'This is hell, which the sinners did call it lie! they
|
|
shall circulate between it and water boiling quite!'
|
|
Then which of your Lord's bounties will ye twain deny?
|
|
But for him who fears the station of his Lord are
|
|
gardens twain!
|
|
Then which of your Lord's bounties will ye twain deny?
|
|
Both furnished with branching trees.
|
|
Then which of your Lord's bounties will ye twain deny?
|
|
In each are flowing springs.
|
|
Then which of your Lord's bounties will ye twain deny?
|
|
In each are, of every fruit, two kinds.
|
|
Then which of your Lord's bounties will ye twain deny?
|
|
Reclining on beds the linings of which are
|
|
of brocade, and the fruit of the two gardens within
|
|
reach to cull.
|
|
Then which of your Lord's bounties will ye twain deny?
|
|
Therein are maids of modest glances whom no man nor ginn
|
|
has deflowered before.
|
|
Then which of your Lord's bounties will ye twain deny?
|
|
As though they were rubies and pearls.
|
|
Then which of your Lord's bounties will ye twain deny?
|
|
Is the reward of goodness aught but goodness?
|
|
Then which of your Lord's bounties will ye twain deny?
|
|
And besides these, are gardens twain,
|
|
Then which of your Lord's bounties will be twain deny?
|
|
With dark green foliage.
|
|
Then which of your Lord's bounties will ye twain deny?
|
|
In each two gushing springs.
|
|
Then which of your Lord's bounties will ye twain deny?
|
|
In each fruit and palms and pomegranates.
|
|
Then which of your Lord's bounties will ye twain deny?
|
|
In them maidens best and fairest!
|
|
Then which of your Lord's bounties will ye twain deny?
|
|
Bright and large-eyed maids kept in their tents.
|
|
Then which of your Lord's bounties will ye twain deny?
|
|
Whom no man nor ginn has deflowered before them.
|
|
Then which of your Lord's bounties will ye twain deny?
|
|
Reclining on green cushions and beautiful carpets.
|
|
Then which of your Lord's bounties will ye twain deny?
|
|
Blessed be the name of thy Lord possessed of majesty and
|
|
honour!
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF THE INEVITABLE
|
|
(LVI. Mecca.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
When the inevitable happens; none shall call its
|
|
happening a lie!- abasing- exalting!
|
|
When the earth shall quake, quaking! and the mountains
|
|
shall crumble, crumbling, and become like motes
|
|
dispersed!
|
|
And ye shall be three sorts;
|
|
And the fellows of the right hand-what right lucky
|
|
fellows!
|
|
And the fellows of the left hand-what unlucky fellows!
|
|
And the foremost foremost!
|
|
These are they who are brought nigh,
|
|
In gardens of pleasure!
|
|
A crowd of those of yore,
|
|
And a few of those of the latter day!
|
|
And gold-weft couches, reclining on them face to face.
|
|
Around them shall go eternal youths, with goblets and
|
|
ewers and a cup of flowing wine; no headache shall
|
|
they feel therefrom, nor shall their wits be dimmed!
|
|
And fruits such as they deem the best;
|
|
And flesh of fowl as they desire;
|
|
And bright and large-eyed maids like hidden pearls;
|
|
A reward for that which they have done!
|
|
They shall hear no folly there and no sin;
|
|
Only the speech, 'Peace, Peace!'
|
|
And the fellows of the right-what right lucky fellows!
|
|
Amid thornless lote trees.
|
|
And tal'h trees with piles of fruit;
|
|
And outspread shade,
|
|
And water out-poured;
|
|
And fruit in abundance, neither failing nor forbidden;
|
|
And beds upraised!
|
|
Verily, we have produced them a production.
|
|
And made them virgins, darlings of equal age
|
|
(with their spouses) for the fellows of the right!
|
|
A crowd of those of yore, and a crowd of those of the
|
|
latter day!
|
|
And the fellows of the left-what unlucky fellows!
|
|
In hot blasts and boiling water;
|
|
And a shade of pitchy smoke,
|
|
Neither cool nor generous!
|
|
Verily, they were affluent ere this, and did persist in
|
|
mighty crime; and used to say, 'What, when we die
|
|
and have become dust and bones, shall we then indeed
|
|
be raised? or our fathers of yore?'
|
|
Say, 'Verily, those of yore and those of the latter day
|
|
shall surely be gathered together unto the tryst of
|
|
the well-known day.'
|
|
Then ye, O ye who err! who say it is a lie! shall eat of
|
|
the Zaqqum tree! and fill your bellies with it! and
|
|
drink thereon of boiling water! and drink as drinks
|
|
the thirsty camel.
|
|
This is their entertainment on the judgment day!
|
|
We created you, then why do ye not credit?
|
|
Have ye considered what ye emit?
|
|
Do we create it, or are we the creators?
|
|
We have decreed amongst you death; but we are not
|
|
forestalled from making the likes of you in exchange,
|
|
or producing you as ye know not of.
|
|
Ye do know the first production-why then do ye not mind?
|
|
Have ye considered what ye till?
|
|
Do ye make it bear seed, or do we make it bear seed?
|
|
If we pleased we could make it mere grit, so that ye
|
|
would pause to marvel:
|
|
'Verily,we have got into debt and we are excluded.'
|
|
Have ye considered the water which ye drink?
|
|
Do ye make it come down from the clouds, or do we make
|
|
it come down?
|
|
If we pleased we could make it pungent-why then do ye
|
|
not give thanks?
|
|
Have ye considered the fire which ye strike?
|
|
Do ye produce the tree that gives it, or do we
|
|
produce it?
|
|
We have made it a memorial and a chattel for the
|
|
traveller of the waste?
|
|
Then celebrate the grand name of thy Lord!
|
|
So I will not swear by the positions of the stars; and,
|
|
verily, it is a grand oath if ye did but know--that,
|
|
verily, this is the honourable Koran- in the
|
|
laid-up Book!
|
|
Let none touch it but the purified!
|
|
A revelation from the Lord of the worlds.
|
|
What! this new discourse will ye despise?
|
|
And make for your provision, that you call it a lie?
|
|
Why then-when it comes up to the throat, and ye at that
|
|
time look on, though we are nearer to him than you
|
|
are, but ye cannot see,- why, if ye are not to be
|
|
judged, do ye not send it back, if ye do tell the
|
|
truth?
|
|
But either, if he be of those brought nigh to God,- then
|
|
rest and fragrance and the garden of pleasure!
|
|
Or, if he be of the fellows of the right! then 'Peace to
|
|
thee!' from the fellows of the right!
|
|
Or, if he be of those who say it is a lie,-who err! then
|
|
an entertainment of boiling water! and broiling
|
|
in hell!
|
|
Verily, this is surely certain truth!
|
|
So celebrate the grand name of thy Lord!
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF IRON
|
|
(LVII. Mecca.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
Whatever is in the heavens and the earth celebrates the praises of
|
|
God, for He is the mighty, the wise!
|
|
His is the kingdom of the heavens and the earth: He quickens and
|
|
He kills, and He is mighty over all!
|
|
He is the first and the last; and the outer and the inner; and He
|
|
all things doth know!
|
|
He it is who created the heavens and the earth in six days, then
|
|
He made for the throne; and He knows what goes into the earth and what
|
|
goes forth therefrom, and what comes down from the sky and what goes
|
|
up therein, and He is with you wheresoe'er ye be: for God on what ye
|
|
do doth look!
|
|
His is the kingdom of the heavens and the earth, and unto God
|
|
affairs return. He makes the night succeed the day, and makes the
|
|
day succeed the night; and He knows the nature of men's breasts.
|
|
Believe in God and His Apostle, and give alms of what He has made
|
|
you successors of. For those amongst you who believe and give alms-for
|
|
them is mighty hire.
|
|
What ails you that ye do not believe in God and His Apostle? He
|
|
calls on you to believe in your Lord; and He has taken a compact
|
|
from you, if ye be believers.
|
|
He it is who sends down upon His servants manifest signs, to bring
|
|
you forth from the darkness into the light; for, verily, God to you is
|
|
kind, compassionate!
|
|
What ails you that ye give not alms in God's cause? for God's is the
|
|
inheritance of the heavens and the earth. Not alike amongst you is
|
|
he who gives alms before the victory and fights,- they are grander
|
|
in rank than those who give alms afterwards and fight. But to all does
|
|
God promise good; and God of what ye do is well aware!
|
|
Who is there who will lend a good loan to God? for He will double it
|
|
for him, and for him is a generous reward.
|
|
On the day when thou shall see believers, men and women, with
|
|
their light running on before them and on their right hand,-'Glad
|
|
tidings for you today.- Gardens beneath which rivers flow, to dwell
|
|
therein for aye; that is the grand bliss!'
|
|
On the day when the hypocrites, men and women, shall say to those
|
|
who believe, 'Wait for us that we may kindle at your light.' It will
|
|
be said, 'Get ye back, and beg a light.' And there shall be struck out
|
|
between them a wall with a door; within it shall be mercy, and outside
|
|
before it torment. They shall cry out to them, 'We were not with you
|
|
they shall say, 'Yea, but ye did tempt yourselves, and did wait, and
|
|
did doubt; and your vain hopes beguiled you; and the beguiler beguiled
|
|
you about God.
|
|
'Wherefore to-day there shall not be taken from you a ransom, nor
|
|
from those who misbelieved. Your resort is the fire; it is your
|
|
sovereign, and an ill journey will it be!'
|
|
Is the time come to those who believe, for their hearts to be
|
|
humbled at the remembrance of God, and of what He has sent down in
|
|
truth? and for them not to be like those who were given the Scriptures
|
|
before, and over whom time was prolonged, but their hearts grew
|
|
hard, and many of them were workers of abomination?
|
|
Know that God quickens the earth after its death!-we have manifested
|
|
to you the signs; haply ye may have some sense!
|
|
Verily, those who give in charity, men and women, who have lent to
|
|
God a goodly loan,-it shall be doubled for them, and for them is a
|
|
generous hire.
|
|
And those who believe in God and His Apostle, they are the
|
|
confessors and the martyrs with their Lord; for them is their hire and
|
|
their light! But those who misbelieve and call our signs lies, they
|
|
are the fellows of hell!
|
|
Know that the life of this world is but a sport, and a play, and
|
|
an adornment, and something to boast of amongst yourselves; and the
|
|
multiplying of children is like a rain-growth, its vegetation
|
|
pleases the misbelievers; then they wither away, and thou mayest see
|
|
them become yellow; then they become but grit.
|
|
But in the hereafter is a severe woe, and forgiveness from God and
|
|
His goodwill; but the life of this world is but a chattel of guile.
|
|
Race towards forgiveness from your Lord and Paradise, whose
|
|
breadth is as the breadth of the heavens and the earth, prepared for
|
|
those who believe in God and His apostles! and God's grace, He gives
|
|
it to whom He pleases, for God is Lord of mighty grace!
|
|
No accident befalls in the earth, or in yourselves, but it was in
|
|
the Book, before we created them; verily, that is easy unto God.
|
|
That ye may not vex yourselves for what ye miss, nor be overjoyed at
|
|
what He gives you; for God loves no arrogant boaster, who are
|
|
niggardly and bid men be niggardly: but whoso turns his back,
|
|
verily, God is rich, praiseworthy.
|
|
We did send our apostles with manifest signs; and we did send down
|
|
among you the Book and the balance, that men might stand by justice;
|
|
and we sent down iron in which is both keen violence and advantages to
|
|
men; and that God might know who helps Him and His apostles in secret;
|
|
verily, God is strong and mighty!
|
|
And we sent Noah and Abraham; and placed in their seed prophecy
|
|
and the Book; and some of them are guided, though many of them are
|
|
workers of abomination!
|
|
Then we followed up their footsteps with our apostles; and we
|
|
followed them up with Jesus the son of Mary; and we gave him the
|
|
gospel; and we placed in the hearts of those who followed him kindness
|
|
and compassion.- But monkery, they invented it; we only prescribed
|
|
to them the craving after the goodwill of God, and they observed it
|
|
not with due observance. But we gave to those who believe amongst them
|
|
their hire; though many amongst them were workers of abomination!
|
|
O ye who believe! fear God, and believe in His Apostle: He will give
|
|
you two portions of His mercy, and will make for you a light for you
|
|
to walk in, and will forgive you; for God is forgiving, compassionate.
|
|
That the people of the Book may know that they cannot control
|
|
aught of God's grace; and that grace is in God's hands, He gives it to
|
|
whom He will; for God is Lord of mighty grace!
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF THE WRANGLER
|
|
(LVIII. Medinah.)
|
|
|
|
GOD has heard the speech of her who wrangled with you about her
|
|
husband, and complained to God; and God hears your gossip; verily, God
|
|
both hears and sees.
|
|
Those among you who back out of their wives they are not their
|
|
mothers their mothers are only those who gave them birth and,
|
|
verily, they speak a wrong speech and a false.
|
|
Verily, God both pardons and forgives. But those who back out of
|
|
their wives and then would recall their speech,- then the
|
|
manumission of a captive before they touch each other; that is what ye
|
|
are admonished, and God of what ye do is well aware!
|
|
But he who finds not (the means) then a fast for two months
|
|
consecutively, before they touch each other; and he who cannot
|
|
endure that:- then the feeding of sixty poor folk. That is that ye may
|
|
believe in God and His Apostle; and these are the bounds of God; and
|
|
for the misbelievers is grievous woe!
|
|
Verily, those who oppose God and His Apostle shall be upset, as
|
|
those before them were upset.
|
|
We have sent down manifest signs: for the misbelievers is shameful
|
|
woe on the day when God shall raise them all together, and shall
|
|
inform them of what they have done. God has taken account of it, but
|
|
they forget it; for God is witness over all!
|
|
Dost thou not see that God knows what is in the heavens and what
|
|
is in the earth? and that there cannot be a privy discourse of three
|
|
but He makes the fourth? nor of five but He makes the sixth? nor
|
|
less than that nor more, but that He is with them wheresoe'er they be?
|
|
then He will inform them of what they have done upon the
|
|
resurrection day; verily, God all things doth know!
|
|
Dost thou not look at those who were prohibited from privy talk, and
|
|
then returned to that they were forbidden? and they too discourse
|
|
together with sin and enmity and rebellion against the Apostle; and
|
|
when they come to thee they greet thee with what God greets thee
|
|
not; and they say in themselves, Why does not God torment us for
|
|
what we say? Hell is enough for them! they shall broil therein, and an
|
|
ill journey shall it be!
|
|
O ye who believe! when ye discourse together, then discourse not
|
|
in sin and enmity and rebellion against the Apostle; but discourse
|
|
together in righteousness and piety; and fear God, for unto Him ye
|
|
shall be gathered!
|
|
Privy talk is only from the devil, that those who do believe may
|
|
grieve: it cannot hurt them at all, except by the permission of God:
|
|
and upon God let the believers rely.
|
|
O ye who believe! when it is said to you, 'Make room in your
|
|
assemblies,' then make room; God will make room for you; and when it
|
|
is said to you, 'Rise up, 'then rise up; God will raise all you who
|
|
believe, as well as those who are given knowledge, in rank; for God of
|
|
what ye do is well aware!
|
|
O ye who believe! when ye address the Apostle, then give in
|
|
charity before addressing him; that is better for you, and more
|
|
pure. But if ye find not the means,- then God is forgiving,
|
|
compassionate. What! do ye shrink from giving in charity before
|
|
addressing him? then if ye do it not, and God relents towards you,
|
|
then be steadfast in prayer, and give alms, and fear God and His
|
|
Apostle; for God is well aware of what ye do!
|
|
Dost thou not look at those who take for patrons a people God is
|
|
wrath with? they are neither of you nor of them, and they swear to you
|
|
a lie the while they know; for them God has prepared severe torment;
|
|
verily, evil is it they have done!
|
|
They take their faith for a cloak; and they turn men aside from
|
|
the path of God; and for them is shameful woe!
|
|
Their wealth shall not avail them, nor their children at all,
|
|
against God; they are the fellows of the Fire, and they shall dwell
|
|
therein for aye!
|
|
On the day when God raises them all together, then will they swear
|
|
to Him as they swore to you; and they will think that they rest on
|
|
somewhat.- Ay, verily, they are liars!
|
|
Satan hath overridden them, and made them forget the remembrance
|
|
of God: they are the crew of Satan; ay, the crew of Satan, they are
|
|
the losers!
|
|
Verily, those who oppose God and His Apostle are amongst the most
|
|
vile.
|
|
God has written, I will surely prevail, I and my apostles;'
|
|
verily, God is strong and mighty!
|
|
Thou shalt not find a people who believe in God and the last day
|
|
loving him who opposes God and His Apostle, even though it be their
|
|
fathers, or their sons, or their brethren, or their clansmen.
|
|
He has written faith in their hearts, and He aids them with a spirit
|
|
from Him; and will make them enter into gardens beneath which rivers
|
|
flow, to dwell therein for aye! God is well pleased with them, and
|
|
they well pleased with Him: they are God's crew; ay, God's crew,
|
|
they shall prosper!
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF THE EMIGRATION
|
|
(LIX. Medinah.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
What is in the heavens and in the earth celebrates God's praises; He
|
|
is the mighty, the wise!
|
|
He it was who drove those of the people of the Book who
|
|
misbelieved forth from their houses, at the first emigration; ye did
|
|
not think that they would go forth, and they thought that their
|
|
fortresses would defend them against God; but God came upon them
|
|
from whence they did not reckon, and cast dread into their hearts!
|
|
They ruined their houses with their own hands and the hands of the
|
|
believers; wherefore take example, O ye who are endowed with sight!
|
|
Had it not been that God had prescribed for them banishment, He
|
|
would have tormented them in this world; but for them in the next
|
|
shall be the torment of the Fire! that is because they opposed God and
|
|
His Apostle: and whoso opposes God, verily, God is keen to punish!
|
|
What palm trees ye did cut down or what ye left standing upon
|
|
their roots was by God's permission, and to disgrace the workers of
|
|
abomination; and as for the spoils that God gave to His Apostle from
|
|
these (people) ye did not press forward after them with horse or
|
|
riding camel; but God gives His Apostle authority over whom He
|
|
pleases, for God is mighty over all!
|
|
What God gave as spoils to His Apostle of the people of the cities
|
|
is God's, and the Apostle's, and for kinsfolk, orphans, and the
|
|
poor, and the wayfarer, so that it should not be circulated amongst
|
|
the rich men of you.
|
|
And what the Apostle gives you, take; and what he forbids you,
|
|
desist from; and fear God, verily, God is keen to punish!
|
|
And (it is) for the poor who fled, who were driven forth from
|
|
their houses and their wealth, who crave grace from God and His
|
|
goodwill, and help God and the Apostle; they are the truthful.
|
|
And those who were settled in the abode and the faith before them,
|
|
love those who fled to them; and they do not find in their breasts a
|
|
need of what has been given to them; preferring them to themselves,
|
|
even though there be poverty amongst them; and whoso is preserved from
|
|
his own coveteousness, these are the prosperous!
|
|
And those who came after them say, 'Our Lord, forgive us and our
|
|
brethren who were beforehand with us in the faith, and place not in
|
|
our hearts ill-will towards those who believe-our Lord! verily, thou
|
|
art kind, compassionate!'
|
|
Dost thou not look on those who were hypocritical, saying to their
|
|
brethren who misbelieved amongst the people of the Book, 'If ye be
|
|
driven forth we will go forth with you; and we will never obey any one
|
|
concerning you; and if ye be fought against we will help you.' But God
|
|
bears witness that they are surely liars!
|
|
If they be driven forth, these will not go forth with them; and if
|
|
they be fought against, these will not help them; or if they do help
|
|
them, they will turn their backs in flight;- then shall they not be
|
|
helped!
|
|
Ye indeed are a keener source of fear in their hearts than God; that
|
|
is because they are a people who do not understand! They will not
|
|
fight. against you in a body save in fortified cities, or from
|
|
behind walls; their valour is great amongst themselves;-thou dost
|
|
reckon them as one body, but their hearts are separated. That is
|
|
because they are a people who have no sense!
|
|
Like unto those before them, recently; they tasted the evil result
|
|
of their affair, and for them is grievous woe.
|
|
Like unto the devil when he said to man, 'Disbelieve.' But when he
|
|
disbelieved, he said, 'Verily, I am clear of thee! Verily, I fear
|
|
God the Lord of the worlds!' And the end of them both shall be that
|
|
they shall both be in the Fire, to dwell therein for aye! for that
|
|
is the reward of the unjust!
|
|
O ye who believe! fear God; and let each soul look to what it
|
|
sends on for the morrow; and fear God; verily, God is well aware of
|
|
what ye do!
|
|
And be ye not like those who forget God, and He makes them forget
|
|
themselves; they are the workers of abomination!
|
|
Not deemed alike shall be the fellows of the Fire and the fellows of
|
|
Paradise: the fellows of Paradise they are the blissful!
|
|
Had we sent down this Koran upon a mountain, thou wouldst have
|
|
seen it humbling itself, splitting asunder from the fear of God! These
|
|
parables do we strike out for men; haply they may reflect!
|
|
He is God than whom there is no god; who knows the unseen and the
|
|
visible; He is the merciful, the compassionate! He is God than whom
|
|
there is no god; the King, the Holy, the Peace-Giver, the Faithful,
|
|
the Protector, the Mighty, the Repairer, the Great!- celebrated be the
|
|
praises of God above what they join with Him.
|
|
He is God, the Creator, the Maker, the Fashioner; His are the
|
|
excellent names! His praises, whatever are in the heavens and the
|
|
earth do celebrate; for God is the mighty, the wise!
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF THE TRIED
|
|
(LX. Medinah.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
O ye who believe! take not my enemy and your enemy for patrons,
|
|
encountering them with love; for they misbelieve in the truth that
|
|
is to come to you; they drive out the Apostle and you for that ye
|
|
believe in God your Lord!
|
|
If ye go forth fighting strenuously in my cause and craving my
|
|
good pleasure, and secretly show love for them, yet do I know best
|
|
what ye conceal and what ye display! and he of you who does so has
|
|
erred from the level path.
|
|
If they find you they will be enemies to you, and they will
|
|
stretch forth against you their hands and their tongues for evil,
|
|
and would fain that ye should disbelieve; neither your kindred nor
|
|
your children shall profit you upon the resurrection day; it will
|
|
separate you! but God on what ye do doth look!
|
|
Ye had a good example in Abraham and those with him, when they
|
|
said to their people, 'Verily, we are clear of you and of what ye
|
|
serve beside God. We disbelieve in you: and between us and you is
|
|
enmity and hatred begun for ever, until ye believe in God alone!'
|
|
But not the speech of Abraham to his father, 'Verily, I will ask
|
|
forgiveness for thee, though I cannot control aught from God!' O our
|
|
Lord! on thee do we rely! and unto thee we turn! and unto thee the
|
|
journey is!
|
|
Our Lord! make us not a trial for those who misbelieve; but
|
|
forgive us! Our Lord! verily, thou art mighty, wise!
|
|
Ye had in them a good example for him who would hope in God and
|
|
the last day. But whoso turns his back, verily, God, He is rich and to
|
|
be praised.
|
|
Mayhap that God will place love between you and between those of
|
|
them ye are hostile towards: for God is powerful, and God is
|
|
forgiving, compassionate.
|
|
God forbids you not respecting those who have not fought against you
|
|
for religion's sake, and who have not driven you forth from your
|
|
homes, that ye should act righteously and justly towards them; verily,
|
|
God loves the just!
|
|
He only forbids you to make patrons of those who have fought against
|
|
you for religion's sake, and driven you forth from your homes, or have
|
|
aided in your expulsion; and whoever makes patrons of them, they are
|
|
the unjust!
|
|
O ye who believe! when there come believing women who have fled,
|
|
then try them: God knows their faith. If ye know them to be
|
|
believers do not send them back to the misbelievers;- they are not
|
|
lawful for them, nor are the men lawful for these;- but give them what
|
|
they have expended, and it shall be no crime against you that ye marry
|
|
them, when ye have given them their hire. And do not ye retain a right
|
|
over misbelieving women; but ask for what ye have spent, and let
|
|
them ask for what they have spent. That is God's judgment: He judges
|
|
between you, for God is knowing, wise!
|
|
And if any of your wives escape from you to the misbelievers, and
|
|
your turn comes, then give to those whose wives have gone away the
|
|
like of what they have spent; and fear God, in whom it is that ye
|
|
believe.
|
|
O thou prophet! when believing women come to thee and engage with
|
|
thee that they will not associate aught with God, and will not
|
|
steal, and will not fornicate, and will not kill their children, and
|
|
will not bring a calumny which they have forged between their hands
|
|
and feet, and that they will not rebel against thee in what is
|
|
reasonable, then engage with them and ask forgiveness for them of
|
|
God;-verily, God is forgiving, compassionate.
|
|
O ye who believe! take not for patrons a people whom God is wrath
|
|
against; they despair of the hereafter, as the misbelievers despair of
|
|
the fellows of the tombs!
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF THE RANKS
|
|
(LXI. Mecca.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
What is in the heavens and what is in the earth celebrates the
|
|
praises of God, for He is the mighty, the wise!
|
|
O ye who believe! say not what ye do not. It is most hateful to
|
|
God that ye say what ye do not.
|
|
Verily, God loves those who fight in His cause in ranks as though
|
|
they were a compact building.
|
|
When Moses said to his people, my people! why do ye hurt me, when ye
|
|
know that I am the apostle of God to you?' and when they swerved,
|
|
God made their hearts to swerve; for God guides not the people who
|
|
work abomination!
|
|
And when Jesus the son of Mary said, 'O children of Israel!
|
|
verily, I am the apostle of God to you, verifying the law that was
|
|
before me and giving you glad tidings of an apostle who shall come
|
|
after me, whose name shall be A'hmed!'-but when he did come to them
|
|
with manifest signs, they said, 'This is manifest sorcery!'
|
|
And who is more unjust than he who forges against God a lie when
|
|
called unto Islam? but God guides not the unjust people.
|
|
They desire to put out the light of God with their mouths; but God
|
|
will perfect His light, averse although the misbeliever be!
|
|
He it is who sent His Apostle with guidance and the religion of
|
|
truth to set it above all religion; averse although the idolaters
|
|
may be.
|
|
O ye who believe! shall I lead you to a merchandise which will
|
|
save you from grievous woe?
|
|
To believe in God and His Apostle, and to fight strenuously in God's
|
|
cause with your property and your persons; that is better for you if
|
|
ye did but know!
|
|
He will pardon you your sins, and bring you into gardens beneath
|
|
which rivers flow, and goodly dwellings in gardens of Eden;- that is
|
|
the mighty bliss!
|
|
And other things which ye love,- help from God and victory
|
|
nigh!-so do thou give the glad tidings unto the believers!
|
|
O ye who believe! be ye the helpers of God as Jesus son of Mary said
|
|
to the apostles, 'Who are my helpers for God?' Said the apostles,
|
|
'We are God's helpers!'
|
|
And a party of the children of Israel believed, and a party
|
|
misbelieved. And we aided those who believed against their enemies,
|
|
and they were on the morrow superior!
|
|
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF THE CONGREGATION
|
|
(LXII. Medinah.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
What is in the heavens and what is in the earth celebrates the
|
|
praises of God the King, the holy, the mighty, the wise!
|
|
He it is who sent unto the Gentiles a prophet amongst themselves
|
|
to recite to them His signs and to purify them, and to teach them
|
|
the Book and the wisdom, although they were before in obvious error.
|
|
And others of them have not yet overtaken them; but He is the
|
|
mighty, the wise!
|
|
That is God's grace, He gives it to whomsoever He will; for God is
|
|
Lord of mighty grace.
|
|
The likeness of those who were charged with the law and then bore it
|
|
not is as the likeness of an ass bearing books: sorry is the
|
|
likeness of the people who say God's signs are lies! but God guides
|
|
not an unjust people.
|
|
Say, 'O ye who are Jews! if ye pretend that ye are the clients of
|
|
God, beyond other people; then wish for death if ye do speak the
|
|
truth!'
|
|
But they never wish for it, through what their hands have sent
|
|
before! but God knows the unjust.
|
|
Say, 'Verily, the death from which ye flee will surely meet you;
|
|
then shall ye be sent back to Him who knows the unseen and the
|
|
visible, and He will inform you of that which ye have done!'
|
|
O ye who believe! when the call to prayer is made upon the
|
|
Congregation Day, then hasten to the remembrance of God, and leave off
|
|
traffic; that is better for you, if ye did but know!
|
|
And when prayer is performed, then disperse abroad in the land,
|
|
and crave of God's grace; and remember God much; haply ye may prosper!
|
|
But when they see merchandise or sport they flock to it and leave
|
|
thee standing! Say, 'What is with God is better than sport and than
|
|
merchandise, for God is the best of providers!'
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF THE HYPOCRITES
|
|
(LXIII. Medinah.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
When the hypocrites come to thee, they say, 'We bear witness that
|
|
thou art surely the Apostle of God;' but God knows that thou art His
|
|
Apostle: and God bears witness that the hypocrites are liars!
|
|
They take their faith for a cloak, and then they turn folks from
|
|
God's way:- evil is that which they have done! That is because they
|
|
believed and then disbelieved, wherefore is a stamp set on their
|
|
hearts so that they do not understand!
|
|
And when thou seest them, their persons please thee; but if they
|
|
speak, thou listenest to their speech: they are like timber propped
|
|
up: they reckon every noise against them! They are the foe, so
|
|
beware of them!-God fight against them, how they lie!
|
|
And when it is said to them, 'Come, and the Apostle of God will
|
|
ask forgiveness for you! they turn away their heads, and thou mayest
|
|
see them turning away since they are so big with pride!
|
|
It is the same to them whether thou dost ask forgiveness for them,
|
|
or whether thou dost not ask forgiveness for them,- God will not
|
|
forgive them; verily, God guides not a people who work abomination!
|
|
They it is who say, 'Expend not in alms upon those who are with
|
|
the Apostle of God, in order that they may desert him!'-but God's
|
|
are the treasures of the heavens and the earth; but the hypocrites
|
|
have no sense!
|
|
They say, 'If we return to el Medinah, the mightier will surely
|
|
drive out the meaner therefrom;' but to God belongs the might, and
|
|
to His Apostle and to the believers; but the hypocrites do not know!
|
|
O ye who believe! let not your property nor your children divert you
|
|
from the remembrance of God,- for whosoever does that, they are
|
|
those who lose!
|
|
But expend in alms of what we have bestowed upon you before death
|
|
come on any one of you, and he says, 'My Lord! wouldst thou but have
|
|
respited me till an appointed time nigh at hand, then would I surely
|
|
give in charity and be among the righteous!' But God will never
|
|
respite a soul when its appointed time has come: and God of what ye do
|
|
is well aware!
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF CHEATING
|
|
(LXIV. Place of origin doubtful.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
What is in the heavens and what is in the earth celebrates God's
|
|
praises; His is the kingdom, and His is the praise, and He is mighty
|
|
over all!
|
|
He it is who created you, and of you is (one) a misbeliever and
|
|
(one) a believer; and God on what ye do does look.
|
|
He created the heavens and the earth in truth; and has formed you
|
|
and made excellent your forms; and unto Him the journey is!
|
|
He knows what is in the heavens and the earth, and knows what ye
|
|
conceal and what ye display; for God knows the nature of men's
|
|
breasts!
|
|
Has there not come to you the story of those who misbelieved before,
|
|
and tasted the evil result of their affair, and for them was
|
|
grievous woe?
|
|
That is because their apostles came to them with manifest signs, and
|
|
they said, 'Shall mortals guide us?' and they misbelieved and turned
|
|
their backs. But God was independent of them; for God is rich and to
|
|
be praised!
|
|
Those who misbelieve pretend that they shall surely not be raised:
|
|
say, 'Yea! by my Lord! ye shall surely be raised: then ye shall be
|
|
informed of that which ye have done;' for that is easy unto God.
|
|
So believe in God and His Apostle and the light which we have sent
|
|
down; for God of what ye do is well aware!
|
|
On the day when he shall gather you to the day of gathering, that is
|
|
the day of cheating! but whoso believes in God and acts aright, He
|
|
will cover for him his offences, and will bring him into gardens
|
|
beneath which rivers flow, to dwell therein for aye! that is the
|
|
mighty bliss!
|
|
But those who misbelieve and say our signs are lies, they are the
|
|
fellows of the Fire, to dwell therein for aye! and evil shall the
|
|
journey be!
|
|
No calamity befalls but by the permission of God: and whoso believes
|
|
in God, He will guide his heart; for God all things doth know!
|
|
So obey God and obey the Apostle: but if ye turn your backs-our
|
|
Apostle has only his plain message to preach!
|
|
God, there is no god but He; and upon Him let the believers rely!
|
|
O ye who believe! verily, among your wives and children are foes
|
|
of yours: so beware of them! But if ye pardon, and overlook it, and
|
|
forgive,- verily, God is forgiving, compassionate!
|
|
Your property and your children are but a trial; and God, with Him
|
|
is mighty hire!
|
|
Then fear God as much as ye can! and hear, and obey, and expend in
|
|
alms: it is better for yourselves. But whosoever is saved from his own
|
|
covetousness-these are the prosperous!
|
|
If ye lend to God a goodly loan, He will double it for you, and will
|
|
forgive you; for God is grateful, clement!
|
|
He knows the unseen and the visible; the mighty, the wise!
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF DIVORCE
|
|
(LXV. Medinah.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
O thou prophet! when ye divorce women, then divorce them at their
|
|
term, and calculate the term and fear God your Lord. Do not drive them
|
|
out of their houses unless they have committed manifest adultery.
|
|
These are God's bounds, and whoso transgresses God's bounds has
|
|
wronged himself. Thou knowest not whether haply God may cause
|
|
something fresh to happen after that.
|
|
And when they have reached their appointed time, then retain them
|
|
with kindness, or separate from them with kindness; and bring as
|
|
witnesses men of equity from among you; and give upright testimony
|
|
to God. That is what He admonishes him who believes in God and the
|
|
last day; and whosoever fears God, He will make for him a (happy)
|
|
issue, and will provide for him from whence he reckoned not.
|
|
And whosoever relies on God, He is sufficient for him: verily, God
|
|
will attain His purpose:- God has set for everything a period.
|
|
And such of your women as despair of menstruation,-if ye doubt, then
|
|
their term is three months; and such as have not menstruated too.
|
|
And those who are heavy with child their appointed time is when they
|
|
have laid down their burden; and whosoever fears God, He will make for
|
|
him an easy affair.
|
|
That is God's command, He has sent it down to you; and whosoever
|
|
fears God He will cover for him his offences and will make grand for
|
|
him his hire.
|
|
Let them dwell where ye dwell, according to your means, and do not
|
|
harm them, to reduce them to straits; and if they be heavy with child,
|
|
then pay for them until they lay down their burdens; and if they
|
|
suckle (the child) for you, then give them their hire, and consult
|
|
among yourselves in reason; but if ye be in difficulties, and
|
|
another woman shall suckle the child for him, let him who has plenty
|
|
expend of his plenty; but he whose provision is doled out, let him
|
|
expend of what God has given him; God will not compel any soul
|
|
beyond what He has given it;-God will make after difficulty ease!
|
|
How many a city has turned away from the bidding of its Lord and His
|
|
apostles; and we called them to a severe account, and we tormented
|
|
them with an unheard-of torment!
|
|
And they tasted the evil results of their conduct; and the end of
|
|
their conduct was loss!
|
|
God prepared for them severe torment;-then fear God, ye who are
|
|
endowed with minds!
|
|
Ye who believe! God has sent down to you a reminder;-an apostle to
|
|
recite to you God's manifest signs;-to bring forth those who believe
|
|
and act aright from darkness into light! and whoso believes in God and
|
|
acts right He will bring him into gardens beneath which rivers flow,
|
|
to dwell therein for ever and for aye! God has made goodly for him his
|
|
provision!
|
|
God it is who created seven heavens, and of the earth the like
|
|
thereof. The bidding descends between them, that ye may know that
|
|
God is mighty over all, and that God has encompassed all things with
|
|
His knowledge!
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF PROHIBITION
|
|
(LXVI. Medinah.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
O thou prophet! wherefore dost thou prohibit what God has made
|
|
lawful to thee, craving to please thy wives? but God is forgiving,
|
|
compassionate!
|
|
God has allowed you to expiate your oaths; for God is your
|
|
sovereign, and He is the knowing, the wise!
|
|
And when the prophet told as a secret to one of his wives a recent
|
|
event, and when she gave information thereof and exposed it, he
|
|
acquainted her with some of it and avoided part of it. But when he
|
|
informed her of it, she said, 'Who told thee this?' he said, 'The wise
|
|
one, the well-aware informed me.
|
|
'If ye both turn repentant unto God,-for your hearts have
|
|
swerved!-but if ye back each other up against him,-verily, God, He
|
|
is the sovereign; and Gabriel and the righteous of the believers,
|
|
and the angels after that, will back him up.
|
|
'It may be that his Lord if he divorce you will give him in exchange
|
|
wives better than you, Muslims, believers, devout, repentant,
|
|
worshipping, giving to fasting-such as have known men and virgins
|
|
too.'
|
|
O ye who believe! save yourselves and your families from the fire,
|
|
whose fuel is men and stones;-over it are angels stout and stern; they
|
|
disobey not God in what He bids them, but they do what they are
|
|
bidden!
|
|
O ye who disbelieve! excuse not yourselves today;-ye shall only be
|
|
rewarded for that which ye have done.
|
|
O ye who believe! turn repentant to God with sincere repentance;
|
|
it may be that thy Lord will cover for you your offences and will
|
|
bring you into gardens beneath which rivers flow!-the day God will not
|
|
disgrace the Prophet nor those who believe with him; their light shall
|
|
run on before them, and at their right hands! they shall say, 'Our
|
|
Lord! perfect for us our light and forgive us; verily, Thou art mighty
|
|
over all!'
|
|
O thou prophet! fight strenuously against the misbelievers and
|
|
hypocrites and be stern towards them; for their resort is hell, and an
|
|
evil journey shall it be!
|
|
God strikes out a parable to those who misbelieve: the wife of
|
|
Noah and the wife of Lot; they were under two of our righteous
|
|
servants, but they betrayed them: and they availed them nothing
|
|
against God; and it was said, 'Enter the fire with those who enter.'
|
|
And God strikes out a parable for those who believe: the wife of
|
|
Pharaoh, when she said, 'My Lord, build for me a house with Thee in
|
|
Paradise, and save me from Pharaoh and his works, and save me from the
|
|
unjust people!'
|
|
And Mary, daughter of Imran, who guarded her private parts, and we
|
|
breathed therein of our spirit and she verified the words of her
|
|
Lord and His books, and was of the devout.
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF THE KINGDOM
|
|
(LXVII. Mecca.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
Blessed be He in whose hand is the kingdom, for He is mighty over
|
|
all!
|
|
Who created death and life, to try you, which of you does best;
|
|
for He is the mighty, the forgiving!
|
|
Who created seven heavens in stories; thou canst not see any
|
|
discordance in the creation of the Merciful!
|
|
Why, look again! canst thou see a flaw? Then look again
|
|
twice!-they look shall return to thee driven back and dulled!
|
|
And we have adorned the lower heaven with lamps; and set them to
|
|
pelt the devils with; and we have prepared for them the torment of the
|
|
blaze!
|
|
And for those who disbelieve in their Lord is the torment of hell,
|
|
and an evil journey shall it be!
|
|
When they shall be cast therein they shall hear its braying as it
|
|
boils--it will well-nigh burst for rage!
|
|
Whenever a troop of them is thrown in, its treasurers shall ask
|
|
them, 'Did not a warner come to you?'
|
|
They shall say, 'Yea! a warner came to us, and we called him liar,
|
|
and said, "God has not sent down aught; ye are but in great error!"'
|
|
And they shall say, 'Had we but listened or had sense we had not
|
|
been amongst the fellows of the blaze!'
|
|
And they will confess their sins; but 'Avaunt to the fellows of
|
|
the blaze!'
|
|
Verily, those who fear their Lord in secret, for them is forgiveness
|
|
and a great hire!
|
|
Speak ye secretly or openly, verily, He knows the nature of men's
|
|
breasts!
|
|
Ay! He knows who created! for he is the subtle, the well-aware!
|
|
He it is who made the earth flat for you; so walk in the spacious
|
|
sides thereof and eat of His provision; for unto Him the
|
|
resurrection is!
|
|
Are ye sure that He who is in the heaven will not cleave the earth
|
|
with you, and that it then shall quake?
|
|
Or are ye sure that He who is in the heaven will not send against
|
|
you a heavy sand storm, and that ye then shall know how the warning
|
|
was?
|
|
But those before them did call the apostles liars, and what a change
|
|
it was!
|
|
Or have they not looked at the birds above them expanding their
|
|
wings or closing them?- none holds them in except the Merciful One;
|
|
for He on everything doth look.
|
|
Or who is this who will be a host for you, to help you against the
|
|
Merciful?- the misbelievers are only in delusion!
|
|
Or who is this who will provide you if He hold back His
|
|
provision?-Nay, but they persist in perverseness and aversion!
|
|
Is he who walks prone upon his face more guided than he who walks
|
|
upright upon a straight path?
|
|
Say, 'It is He who produced you and made for you hearing and sight
|
|
and hearts'-little is it that ye give thanks.
|
|
Say, 'It is He who sowed you in the earth, and unto Him shall ye
|
|
be gathered!'
|
|
They say, 'When shall this threat be, if ye do speak the truth?'
|
|
Say, 'The knowledge is only with God; and I am but a plain warner!'
|
|
And when they see it nigh, sorry shall be the faces of those who
|
|
misbelieve; and it shall be said, 'This is that for which ye used to
|
|
call!'
|
|
Say, 'Have ye considered, whether God destroy me and those with
|
|
me, or whether we obtain mercy, yet who will protect the
|
|
misbelievers from grievous torment?'
|
|
Say, 'He is the Merciful; we believe in Him, and upon Him do we
|
|
rely; and ye shall shortly know who it is that is in obvious error!'
|
|
Say, 'Have ye considered if your waters on the morrow should have
|
|
sunk, who is to bring you flowing water?'
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF THE PEN
|
|
(LXVIII. Mecca.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
NUN. By the pen, and what they write, thou art not, by God's
|
|
grace, mad! and, verily, thine is a hire that is not grudged! and,
|
|
verily, thou art of a grand nature!
|
|
But thou shalt see and they shall see which of you is the
|
|
infatuated.
|
|
Verily, thy Lord He knows best who errs from His way; and He knows
|
|
best those who are guided.
|
|
Then obey not those who call thee liar; they would fain that thou
|
|
shouldst be smooth with them, then would they be smooth with thee!
|
|
And obey not any mean swearer, a back-biter, a walker about with
|
|
slander; a forbidder of good, a transgressor, a sinner; rude, and
|
|
base-born too; though he have wealth and sons!
|
|
When our signs are recited to him he says, 'Old folks' tales!'
|
|
We will brand him on the snout!
|
|
Verily, we have tried them as we tried the fellows of the garden
|
|
when they swore, 'We will cut its fruit at morn!'
|
|
But they made not the exception; and there came round about it an
|
|
encompassing calamity from thy Lord the while they slept; and on the
|
|
morrow it was as one the fruit of which is cut.
|
|
And they cried to each other in the morning, 'Go early to your tilth
|
|
if ye would cut it!'
|
|
So they set off, saying privily to each other, 'There shall surely
|
|
enter it to-day unto you no poor person!'
|
|
And they went early deciding to be stingy.
|
|
And when they saw it they said, 'Verily, we have erred! Nay, we
|
|
are forbidden (its fruit)!'
|
|
Said the most moderate of them, 'Said I not to you, "unless ye
|
|
celebrate God's praises!"'
|
|
Said they, 'Celebrated be the praises of our Lord! verily, we were
|
|
unjust!'
|
|
And they approached each other with mutual blame.
|
|
Said they, 'O woe to us! verily, we have been outrageous! Haply
|
|
our Lord may give us instead a better than it; verily, we unto our
|
|
Lord do yearn.'
|
|
Thus is the torment, but, verily, the torment of the hereafter is
|
|
greater, if ye did but know!
|
|
Verily, for the pious with their Lord are gardens of pleasure!
|
|
Shall we then make the Muslims like the sinners? What ails you?
|
|
how ye judge!
|
|
Or have ye a book in which ye can study, that ye are surely to
|
|
have what ye may choose?
|
|
Or have ye oaths binding on us until the judgment day that ye are
|
|
surely to have what ye may judge?
|
|
Ask them, which of them will vouch for this?
|
|
Or have they partners, then let them bring their partners if they do
|
|
speak the truth?
|
|
On the day when the leg shall be bared; and they shall be called
|
|
to adore and shall not be able!
|
|
Lowering their looks, abasement shall attack them, for they were
|
|
called to adore while yet they were safe!
|
|
But let me alone with him who calls this new discourse a lie. We
|
|
will surely bring them down by degrees from whence they do not know.
|
|
And I will let them have their way! for my device is sure.
|
|
Or dost thou ask them a hire for it while they are burdened with
|
|
debts?
|
|
Or have they the knowledge of the unseen, so that they write?
|
|
But wait patiently for the judgment of thy Lord, and be not like the
|
|
fellow of the fish, when he cried out as he was choking with rage.
|
|
Had it not been that grace from his Lord reached him, he would
|
|
have been cast out on the naked (shore) and blamed the while!
|
|
But his Lord elected him, and made him of the pious.
|
|
The misbelievers well-nigh upset thee with their looks when they
|
|
hear the reminder, and they say, 'Surely he is mad!'
|
|
And yet it is but a reminder to the worlds!
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF THE INFALLIBLE
|
|
(LXIX. Mecca.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
The Infallible, what is the Infallible? and what should make thee
|
|
know what the Infallible is?
|
|
Thamud and 'Ad called the Striking Day a lie; but as for Thamud they
|
|
perished by the shock; and as for 'Ad they perished with the violent
|
|
cold blast of wind, which He subjected against them for seven nights
|
|
and eight days consecutively. Thou mightest see the people therein
|
|
prostrate as though they were palm stumps thrown down, and canst
|
|
thou see any of them left?
|
|
And Pharaoh and those before him of the overturned cities
|
|
committed sins, and they rebelled against the apostle of their Lord,
|
|
and He seized them with an excessive punishment.
|
|
Verily, we, when the water surged, bore you on it in a sailing ship,
|
|
to make it a memorial for you, and that the retentive ear might hold
|
|
it.
|
|
And when the trumpet shall be blown with one blast, and the earth
|
|
shall be borne away, and the mountains too, and both be crushed with
|
|
one crushing; on that day shall the inevitable happen; and the
|
|
heaven on that day shall be cleft asunder, for on that day shall it
|
|
wane! and the angels upon the sides thereof; and above them on that
|
|
day shall eight bear the throne of thy Lord!
|
|
On the day when ye shall be set forth no hidden thing of yours shall
|
|
be concealed.
|
|
And as for him who is given his book in his right hand, he shall
|
|
say, 'Here! take and read my book. Verily, I thought that I should
|
|
meet my reckoning;' and he shall be in a pleasing life, in a lofty
|
|
garden, whose fruits are nigh to cull- 'Eat ye and drink with good
|
|
digestion, for what ye did aforetime in the days that have gone by!'
|
|
But as for him who is given his book in his left hand he shall
|
|
say, 'O, would that I had not received my book! I did not know what my
|
|
account would be. O, would that it had been an end of me! my wealth
|
|
availed me not! my authority has perished from me!' him and fetter
|
|
him, then in hell broil him! then into a chain whose length is seventy
|
|
cubits force him! verily, he believed not in the mighty God, nor was
|
|
he particular to feed the poor: therefore he has not here to-day any
|
|
warm friend, nor any food except foul ichor, which none save sinners
|
|
shall eat!'
|
|
I need not swear by what ye see or what ye do not see, verily, it is
|
|
the speech of a noble apostle; and it is not the speech of a
|
|
poet:-little is it ye believe!
|
|
And it is not the speech of a soothsayer,-little is it that ye
|
|
mind!-a revelation from the Lord of the worlds.
|
|
Why if he had invented against us any sayings, we would have
|
|
seized him by the right hand, then we would have cut his jugular vein;
|
|
nor could any one of you have kept us off from him.
|
|
Verily, it is a memorial to the pious; and, verily, we know that
|
|
there are amongst you those who say it is-a lie; and, verily, it is
|
|
a source of sighing to the misbelievers; and, verily, it is certain
|
|
truth!
|
|
Therefore celebrate the name of thy mighty Lord!
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF THE ASCENTS
|
|
(LXX. Mecca.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
An asker asked for torment that must befall, for the unbelievers;
|
|
there is no repelling it; from God the Lord of the ascents, whereby
|
|
ascend the angels and the Spirit unto Him in a day whose length is
|
|
fifty thousand years.
|
|
Wherefore be patient with fair patience; verily, they see it as afar
|
|
off, but we see it nigh!
|
|
The day when the heaven shall be as molten brass, and the
|
|
mountains shall be like flocks of wool; when no warm friend shall
|
|
question friend; they shall gaze on each other, and the sinner would
|
|
fain give as a ransom from the torment of that day his sons and his
|
|
mate, and his brother and his kin who stand by him, and all who are in
|
|
the earth, that yet it might rescue him!
|
|
Nay, verily, it is a flame,-dragging by the scalp! it shall call
|
|
those who retreated and turned their backs and who amassed and
|
|
hoarded!
|
|
Verily, man is by nature rash! when evil touches him, very
|
|
impatient; when good touches him, niggardly; all save those who
|
|
pray, who remain at their prayers, and in whose wealth is a reasonable
|
|
due (set aside) for him who asks and him who is kept from asking,
|
|
and those who believe in a day of judgment, and those who shrink in
|
|
terror from the torment of their Lord;-verily, the torment of their
|
|
Lord is not safe;-and those who guard their private parts, except
|
|
for their wives or the (slave girls) whom their right hands possess,
|
|
for they are not to be blamed; but whoso craves beyond this, they
|
|
are the transgressors; and those who observe their trusts and their
|
|
compacts, and those who are upright in their testimonies, and those
|
|
who keep their prayers, these shall dwell in gardens honoured.
|
|
What ails the misbelievers that they hurry on before thee,
|
|
crowding together on the right and on the left? Does every man of them
|
|
wish to enter the garden of pleasure?
|
|
Nay, we created them of what they know!
|
|
And I need not swear by the Lord of the easts and the wests; verily,
|
|
we are able to change them for others better, nor are we prevented!
|
|
So leave them to plunge in discussion, and to play until they meet
|
|
that day of theirs which they are threatened with, the day when they
|
|
shall come forth in haste from the graves, as though they flock to a
|
|
standard! with their looks abashed; meanness shall cover them! That is
|
|
the day which they were promised!
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF NOAH
|
|
(LXXI. Mecca.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
Verily, we sent Noah to his people, 'Warn thy people before there
|
|
come to them a grievous torment!'
|
|
Said he, 'O my people! verily, I am to you an obvious warner, that
|
|
ye serve God and fear Him and obey me. He will pardon you your sins,
|
|
and will defer you unto an appointed time; verily, God's appointed
|
|
time when it comes will not be deferred, did ye but know!'
|
|
Said he, 'My Lord! verily, I have called my people by night and day,
|
|
and my call did but increase them in flight; and, verily, every time I
|
|
called them, that Thou mightest pardon them, they placed their fingers
|
|
in their ears and tried to cover themselves with their garments and
|
|
persisted, and were very big with pride. Then I called them openly;
|
|
then I published to them and I spoke to them in secret, and I said,
|
|
"Ask forgiveness of your Lord, verily, He is very forgiving. He will
|
|
send the rain upon you in torrents, and will extend to you wealth
|
|
and children, and will make for you gardens, and will make for you
|
|
rivers. What ails you that ye hope not for something serious from God,
|
|
when He has created you by steps? Do ye not see how God has created
|
|
the seven heavens in stories, and has set the moon therein for a
|
|
light, and set the sun for a lamp? and God has made you grow out of
|
|
the earth, and then He will make you return thereto, and will make you
|
|
come forth therefrom; and God has made for you the earth a carpet that
|
|
ye may walk therein in broad paths."'
|
|
Said Noah, 'My Lord! verily, they have rebelled against me, and
|
|
followed him whose wealth and children have but added to his loss, and
|
|
they have plotted a great plot, and said, "Ye shall surely not leave
|
|
your gods: ye shall surely neither leave Wadd, nor Suwa'h, nor
|
|
Yaghuth, nor Ya'uq, nor Nasr, and they led astray many."' And thou
|
|
(Mohammed) wilt only increase the unjust in their error-because of
|
|
their sins they were drowned and made to enter into the fire, and they
|
|
found no helpers against God!
|
|
And Noah said, 'My Lord! leave not upon the earth one dweller of the
|
|
misbelievers. Verily, Thou, if Thou shouldst leave them, they will
|
|
lead astray Thy servants, and they will only bear for children sinners
|
|
and misbelievers. My Lord! pardon me and my two parents, and
|
|
whomsoever enters my house believing, and (pardon) the believers men
|
|
and women-but Thou shalt only increase the unjust in loss.'
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF THE GINN
|
|
(LXXII. Mecca.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
Say, 'I have been inspired that there listened a company of the
|
|
ginn, and they said, "We have heard a marvellous Koran that guides
|
|
to the right direction; and we believe therein, and we join no one
|
|
with our Lord, for, verily, He-may the majesty of our Lord be
|
|
exalted!-has taken to Himself neither consort nor son.
|
|
And, verily, a fool among us spake against God wide of the mark!
|
|
'"And we thought that men and ginn would never speak a lie against
|
|
God.
|
|
'"And there are persons amongst men who seek for refuge with persons
|
|
amongst the ginn; but increase them in their perverseness. And they
|
|
thought, as ye thought, that God would not raise up any one from the
|
|
dead.
|
|
'"But we touched the heavens and found them filled with a mighty
|
|
guard and shooting-stars; and we did sit in certain seats thereof to
|
|
listen; but whoso of us listens now finds a shooting-star for him on
|
|
guard.
|
|
'"And, verily, we know not whether evil be meant for those who are
|
|
in the earth, or if their Lord means right by them.
|
|
'"And of us are some who are pious, and of us are some who are
|
|
otherwise: we are in separate bands.
|
|
'"And we thought that we could not frustrate God in the earth, and
|
|
could not frustrate Him by flight.
|
|
'"But, verily, when we heard the guidance we believed therein, and
|
|
he who believes in his Lord shall fear neither diminution nor loss.
|
|
'"And, verily, of us are some who are Muslims, and of us some are
|
|
trespassers; but those of us who are Muslims they strive after right
|
|
direction; and as for the trespassers they are fuel for hell."'
|
|
And if they will go right upon the way, we will irrigate them with
|
|
copious water to try them thereby; and whoso turns from the
|
|
remembrance of his Lord He will drive him to severe torment.
|
|
And (say) that the mosques are God's, and that ye should not call on
|
|
any one with God, and that when God's servant stood up to pray they
|
|
called out to him and well-nigh crowded upon him. Say, 'I only call
|
|
upon my Lord, and I join no one with Him.'
|
|
Say, 'Verily, I cannot control for you either harm, or right
|
|
direction.'
|
|
Say, 'Verily, as for me none can protect me against God, nor do I
|
|
find any refuge beside Him,-except delivering the message from God and
|
|
His errands: and whoso rebels against God and His Apostle, verily, for
|
|
him is the fire of hell for them to dwell therein for ever and for
|
|
aye!'
|
|
Until when they see what they are threatened with, then shall they
|
|
surely know who is most weak at helping and fewest in numbers!
|
|
Say, 'I know not if what ye are threatened with be nigh, or if my
|
|
Lord will set for it a term. He knows the unseen, and He lets no one
|
|
know His unseen, save such apostle as He is well pleased with: for,
|
|
verily, he sends marching before him and behind him a guard!'
|
|
That He may know that they have delivered the errands of their Lord,
|
|
for He compasses what they have, and reckons everything by number.
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF THE ENWRAPPED
|
|
(LXXIII. Mecca.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
O thou who art enwrapped! rise by night except a little- the half,
|
|
or deduct therefrom a little, or add thereto, and chant the Koran
|
|
chanting. Verily, we will cast on thee a heavy speech.
|
|
Verily, the early part of the night is stronger in impressions and
|
|
more upright in speech!
|
|
Verily, thou hast by day a long employment; but mention the name
|
|
of thy Lord and devote thyself thoroughly to Him, the Lord of the east
|
|
and the west; there is no god but He; then take Him for a guardian!
|
|
And endure patiently what they say, and flee from them with a
|
|
decorous flight.
|
|
And leave me and those who say it is a lie, who are possessed of
|
|
comfort; and let them bide for a while.
|
|
Verily with us are heavy fetters and hell-fire, and food that
|
|
chokes, and mighty woe!
|
|
On the day when the earth and the mountains shall tremble and the
|
|
earth shall be as a crumbling sand-hill!
|
|
Verily, we have sent unto yoti an apostle bearing witness against
|
|
you, as we sent an apostle unto Pharaoh.
|
|
But Pharaoh rebelled against the apostle, and we seized him with
|
|
an overpowering punishment.
|
|
Then how will ye shield yourselves if ye misbelieve from the day
|
|
which shall make children grey-headed, whereon the heaven
|
|
cleaves-its promise shall be fulfilled!
|
|
Verily, this is a memorial, and whoso will, let him take unto his
|
|
Lord a way.
|
|
Verily, thy Lord knows that thou dost stand up to pray nearly
|
|
two-thirds of the night, or the half of it or the third of it, as do
|
|
part of those who are with thee; for God measures the night and the
|
|
day; He knows that ye cannot calculate it, and He turns relentant
|
|
towards you.
|
|
So read what is easy of the Koran. He knows that there will be of
|
|
you some who are sick and others who beat about in the earth craving
|
|
the grace of God, and others who are fighting in the cause of God.
|
|
Then read what is easy of it and be steadfast in prayer, and give
|
|
alms, and lend to God a goodly loan, for what ye send forward for
|
|
yourselves of good ye will find it with God. It is better and a
|
|
greater hire; and ask ye pardon of God: verily, God is forgiving,
|
|
merciful!
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF THE 'COVERED'
|
|
(LXXIV. Mecca.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
O thou who art covered! rise up and warn!
|
|
And thy Lord magnify!
|
|
And thy garments purify!
|
|
And abomination shun!
|
|
And grant not favours to gain increase!
|
|
And for thy Lord await!
|
|
And when the trump is blown,-for that day is a difficult day! for
|
|
the misbelievers aught but easy!
|
|
Leave me alone with him I have created, and for whom I have made
|
|
extensive wealth, and sons that he may look upon, and for whom I
|
|
have smoothed things down. Then he desires that I should increase!
|
|
nay, verily, he is hostile to our signs! I will drive him up a hill!
|
|
Then he reflected and planned! May he be killed,-how he planned!
|
|
Again, may he be killed,-how he planned! Then he looked; then he
|
|
frowned and scowled; then he retreated and was big with pride and
|
|
said, 'This is only magic exhibited! this is only mortal speech!'- I
|
|
will broil him in hell-fire! and what shall make thee know what
|
|
hell-fire is? It will not leave and will not let alone. It scorches
|
|
the flesh; over it are nineteen (angels).
|
|
We have made only angels guardians of the fire, and we have only
|
|
made their number a trial to those who misbelieve; that those who have
|
|
been given the Book may be certain, and that those who believe may
|
|
be increased in faith; and that those who have been given the Book and
|
|
the believers may not doubt; and that those in whose hearts is
|
|
sickness, and the misbelievers may say, 'What does God mean by this as
|
|
a parable?'
|
|
Thus God leads astray whom He pleases, and guides him He pleases:
|
|
and none knows the hosts of thy Lord save Himself; and it is only a
|
|
reminder to mortals!
|
|
Nay, by the moon!
|
|
And the night when it retires!
|
|
And the morning when it brightly dawns!
|
|
Verily, it is one of the greatest misfortunes; a warning to mortals;
|
|
for him amongst you who wishes to press forward or to tarry!
|
|
Every soul is pledged for what it earns; except the fellows of the
|
|
right: in gardens shall they ask each other about the sinners!-'What
|
|
drove you into hell-fire?'
|
|
They shall say, 'We weren't of those who prayed; we didn't feed
|
|
the poor; but we did plunge into discussion with those who plunged,
|
|
and we called the judgment day a lie until the certainty did come to
|
|
us!'
|
|
But there shall not profit them the intercession of the
|
|
intercessors.
|
|
What ailed them that they turned away from the memorial as though
|
|
they were timid asses fleeing from a lion?
|
|
Nay, every man of them wished that he might have given him books
|
|
spread open!
|
|
Nay, but they did not fear the hereafter!
|
|
Nay, it is a memorial! and let him who will remember it; but none
|
|
will remember it except God please. He is most worthy of fear; and
|
|
he is most worthy to forgive!
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF THE RESURRECTION
|
|
(LXXV. Mecca.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
I need not swear by the resurrection day!
|
|
Nor need I swear by the self-accusing soul!
|
|
Does man think that we shall not collect his bones? Able are we to
|
|
arrange his finger tips!
|
|
Nay, but man wishes to be wicked henceforward! he asks, When is
|
|
the resurrection day?
|
|
But when the sight shall be dazed, and the moon be eclipsed, and the
|
|
sun and the moon be together, and man shall say upon that day,
|
|
'Where is a place to flee to?'-nay, no refuge! and to thy Lord that
|
|
day is the sure settlement: He will inform man on that day of what
|
|
He has sent forward or delayed!
|
|
Nay, man is an evidence against himself, and even if he thrusts
|
|
forward his excuses-.
|
|
Do not move thy tongue thereby to hasten it. It is for us to collect
|
|
it and to read it; and when we read it then follow its reading. And
|
|
again it is for us to explain it.
|
|
Nay, indeed, but ye love the transient life, and ye neglect the
|
|
hereafter!
|
|
Faces on that day shall be bright, gazing on their Lord!
|
|
And faces on that day shall be dismal!
|
|
Thou wilt think that a back-breaking calamity has happened to them!
|
|
Nay, but when the [soul] comes up into the throat, and it is said,
|
|
'Who will charm it back?' and he will think that it is his parting
|
|
[hour]. And leg shall be pressed on leg; unto thy Lord on that day
|
|
shall the driving be.
|
|
For he did not believe and did not pray; but he said it was a lie,
|
|
and turned his back! Then he went to his people haughtily- woe to
|
|
thee, and woe to thee! again woe to thee, and woe to thee!
|
|
Does man think that he shall be left to himself?
|
|
Wasn't he a clot of emitted seed? Then he was congealed blood, and
|
|
(God) created him, and fashioned him, and made of him pairs, male
|
|
and female.
|
|
Is not He able to quicken the dead?
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF MAN
|
|
(LXXVI. Mecca.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
Does there not come on man a portion of time when he is nothing
|
|
worth mentioning?
|
|
Verily, we created man from a mingled clot, to try him; and we
|
|
gave him hearing and sight. Verily, we guided him in the way,
|
|
whether he be grateful or ungrateful.
|
|
Verily, we have prepared for those who misbelieve chains and fetters
|
|
and a blaze!
|
|
Verily, the righteous shall drink of a cup tempered with Kafur, a
|
|
spring from which God's servants shall drink and make it gush out as
|
|
they please!
|
|
They who fulfil their vows, and fear a day, the evil which shall fly
|
|
abroad, and who give food for His love to the poor and the orphan
|
|
and the captive. 'We only feed you for God's sake; we desire not
|
|
from you either reward or thanks; we fear from our Lord a frowning,
|
|
calamitous day!'
|
|
And God will guard them from the evil of that day and will cast on
|
|
them brightness and joy; and their reward for their patience shall
|
|
be Paradise and silk! reclining therein upon couches they shall
|
|
neither see therein sun nor piercing cold; and close down upon them
|
|
shall be its shadows; and lowered over them its fruits to cull; and
|
|
they shall be served round with vessels of silver and goblets that are
|
|
as flagons-flagons of silver which they shall mete out! and they shall
|
|
drink therein a cup tempered with Zingabil, a spring therein named
|
|
Silsabil! and there shall go round about them eternal boys; when
|
|
thou seest them thou wilt think them scattered pearls; and when thou
|
|
seest them thou shalt see pleasure and a great estate! On them shall
|
|
be garments of green embroidered satin and brocade; and they shall
|
|
be adorned with bracelets of silver; and their Lord shall give them to
|
|
drink pure drink! Verily, this is a reward for you, and your efforts
|
|
are thanked.
|
|
Verily, we have sent down upon thee the Koran. Wherefore wait
|
|
patiently for the judgment of thy Lord, and obey not any sinner or
|
|
misbeliever amongst them. But remember the name of thy Lord morning,
|
|
and evening, and through the night, and adore Him, and celebrate His
|
|
praises the whole night long.
|
|
Verily, these love the transitory life, and leave behind them a
|
|
heavy day!
|
|
We created them and strengthened their joints and if we please we
|
|
can exchange for the likes of them in their stead. Verily, this is a
|
|
memorial, and whoso will, let him take unto his Lord a way.
|
|
But ye will not please except God please! Verily, God is knowing,
|
|
wise.
|
|
He makes whomsoever He pleases to enter into His mercy; but the
|
|
unjust He has prepared for them a grievous woe!
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF THOSE SENT
|
|
(LXXVII. Mecca.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
By those sent in a series!
|
|
And by those who speed swiftly!
|
|
And by the dispensers abroad!
|
|
And by the separators apart!
|
|
And by those who instil the reminder, as an excuse
|
|
or warning!
|
|
Verily, what ye are threatened with shall surely happen!
|
|
And when the stars shall be erased!
|
|
And when the heaven shall be cleft!
|
|
And when the mountains shall be winnowed!
|
|
And when the apostles shall have a time appointed
|
|
for them!
|
|
For what day is the appointment made?
|
|
For the day of decision! and what shall make thee
|
|
know what the decision is?
|
|
Woe on that day for those who say it is a lie!
|
|
Have we not destroyed those of yore, and then followed
|
|
them up with those of the latter day? Thus do we with
|
|
the sinners.
|
|
Woe on that day for those who say it is a lie!
|
|
Did we not create you from contemptible water, and place
|
|
it in a sure depository unto a certain. decreed term?
|
|
for we are able and well able too!
|
|
Woe on that day for those who say it is a lie!
|
|
Have we not made for them the earth to hold the living
|
|
and the dead? and set thereon firm mountains reared
|
|
aloft? and given you to drink water in streams?
|
|
Woe on that day for those who say it is a lie!
|
|
Go off to that which ye did call a lie! Go off to the
|
|
shadow of three columns, that shall not shade nor
|
|
avail against the flame! Verily, it throws off sparks
|
|
like towers,-as though they were yellow camels!
|
|
Woe on that day for those who say it is a lie!
|
|
This is the day when they may not speak,- when they are
|
|
not permitted to excuse themselves!
|
|
Woe on that day for those who say it is a lie!
|
|
This is the day of decision! We have assembled you with
|
|
those of yore; if ye have any stratagem employ it now!
|
|
Woe on that day for those who say it is a lie!
|
|
Verily, the pious are amid shades and springs and
|
|
fruit such as they love.-'Eat and drink with good
|
|
digestion, for that which ye have done!'
|
|
Verily, thus do we reward those who do well.
|
|
Woe on that day for those who say it is a lie!
|
|
'Eat and enjoy yourselves for a little; verily, ye are
|
|
sinners!'
|
|
Woe on that day for those who say it is a lie!
|
|
And when it is said to them bow down, they bow not down.
|
|
Woe on that day for those who say it is a lie!
|
|
And in what new discourse after it will they believe?
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF THE INFORMATION
|
|
(LXXVIII. Mecca.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
Of what do they ask each other?-Of the mighty information whereon
|
|
they do dispute? nay, they shall know too well! Again, nay, they shall
|
|
know too well!
|
|
Have we not set the earth as a couch, and the mountains as stakes,
|
|
and created you in pairs, and made your sleep for rest, and made the
|
|
night a garment, and made the day for livelihood, and built above
|
|
you seven solid (heavens) and set a burning lamp, and sent down from
|
|
the rain expressing clouds water pouring forth, to bring out thereby
|
|
the grain and herb and gardens thickly planted?
|
|
Verily, the day of decision is an appointed time; and the day when
|
|
the trumpet shall be blown, and ye shall come in troops, and the
|
|
heavens shall be opened, and shall be all doors, and the mountains
|
|
shall be moved, and shall be like a mirage!
|
|
Verily, hell is an ambuscade; a reward for the outrageous, to
|
|
tarry therein for ages. They shall not taste therein cool nor drink,
|
|
but only boiling water and pus;-a fit reward!
|
|
Verily, they did not hope for the account; but they ever said our
|
|
signs were lies.
|
|
Everything have we remembered in a book.
|
|
Then taste, for we will only increase your torment!'
|
|
Verily, for the pious is a blissful place,-gardens and vineyards,
|
|
and girls with swelling breasts of the same age as themselves, and a
|
|
brimming cup; they shall hear therein no folly and no lie;-a reward
|
|
from thy Lord, a sufficient gift! The Lord of the heavens and the
|
|
earth, and what is between them both,-the Merciful,-they cannot obtain
|
|
audience of Him!
|
|
The day when the Spirit and the angels shall stand in ranks, they
|
|
shall not speak save to whom the Merciful permits, and who speaks
|
|
aright.
|
|
That is the true day; and whoso pleases let him take to a resort
|
|
unto his Lord!
|
|
Verily, we have warned you of a torment that is nigh: on a day
|
|
when man shall see what his two hands have sent forward; and the
|
|
misbeliever shall say, 'Would that I were dust!'
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF THOSE WHO TEAR OUT
|
|
(LXXIX. Mecca.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
By those who tear out violently!
|
|
And by those who gaily release!
|
|
And by those who float through the air!
|
|
And the preceders who precede!
|
|
And those who manage the affair!
|
|
On the day when the quaking quakes which the following one shall
|
|
succeed! Hearts on that day shall tremble; eyes thereon be humbled!
|
|
They say, 'Shall we be sent back to our old course?- What! when we
|
|
are rotten bones?' they say, 'That then were a losing return!'
|
|
But it will only be one scare, and lo! they will be on the surface!
|
|
Has the story of Moses come to you? when his Lord addressed him in
|
|
the holy valley of Tuva, 'Go unto Pharaoh, verily, he is outrageous;
|
|
and say, "Hast thou a wish to purify thyself, and that I may guide
|
|
thee to thy Lord, and thou mayest fear?"'
|
|
So he showed him the greatest sign; but he called him a liar and
|
|
rebelled. Then he retreated hastily, and gathered, and proclaimed, and
|
|
said, 'I am your Lord most High!' but God seized him with the
|
|
punishment of the future life and of the former.
|
|
Verily, in that is a lesson to him who fears!
|
|
Are ye harder to create or the heaven that He has built? He raised
|
|
its height and fashioned it; and made its night to cover it, and
|
|
brought forth its noonday light; and the earth after that He did
|
|
stretch out. He brings forth from it its water and its pasture.
|
|
And the mountains He did firmly set, a provision for you and for
|
|
your cattle.
|
|
And when the great predominant calamity shall come, on the day
|
|
when man shall remember what he strove after, and hell shall be
|
|
brought out for him who sees!
|
|
And as for him who was outrageous and preferred the life of this
|
|
world, verily, hell is the resort!
|
|
But as for him who feared the station of his Lord, and prohibited
|
|
his soul from lust, verily, Paradise is the resort!
|
|
They shall ask thee about the Hour, for when it is set. Whereby
|
|
canst thou mention it? Unto thy Lord its period belongs.
|
|
Thou art only a warner to him who fears it.
|
|
On the day they see it, it will be as though they had only tarried
|
|
an evening or the noon thereof.
|
|
THE CHAPTER 'HE FROWNED'
|
|
(LXXX. Mecca.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
He frowned and turned his back, for that there came to him a blind
|
|
man!
|
|
But what should make thee know whether haply he may be purified?
|
|
or may be mindful and the reminder profit him?
|
|
But as for him who is wealthy, thou dost attend to him; and thou
|
|
dost not care that he is not purified; but as for him who comes to
|
|
thee earnestly fearing the while, from him thou art diverted!
|
|
Nay! verily, it is a memorial; and whoso pleases will remember it.
|
|
In honoured pages exalted, purified, in the hands of noble,
|
|
righteous scribes!
|
|
May man be killed! how ungrateful he is!
|
|
Of what did He create him? Of a clot. He created him and fated
|
|
him; then the path He did make easy for him; then He killed him, and
|
|
laid him in the tomb; then when He pleases will He raise him up again.
|
|
Nay, he has not fulfilled his bidding!
|
|
But let man look unto his foods. Verily, we have poured the water
|
|
out in torrents: then we have cleft the earth asunder, and made to
|
|
grow therefrom the grain, and the grape, and the hay, and the olive,
|
|
and the palm, and gardens closely planted, and fruits, and grass,-a
|
|
provision for you and for your cattle!
|
|
But when the stunning noise shall come, on the day when man shall
|
|
flee from his brother and his mother and his father and his spouse and
|
|
his sons! Every man among them on that day shall have a business to
|
|
employ him.
|
|
Faces on that day shall be bright,-laughing, joyous! and faces shall
|
|
have dust upon them,-darkness shall cover them! those are the wicked
|
|
misbelievers!
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF THE FOLDING UP
|
|
(LXXXI. Mecca.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
When the sun is folded up,
|
|
And when the stars do fall,
|
|
And when the mountains are moved,
|
|
And when the she-camels ten months' gone with young
|
|
shall be neglected,
|
|
And when the beasts shall be crowded together,
|
|
And when the seas shall surge up,
|
|
And when souls shall be paired with bodies,
|
|
And when the child who was buried alive shall be asked
|
|
for what sin she was slain,
|
|
And when the pages shall be spread out,
|
|
And when the heaven shall be flayed,
|
|
And when hell shall be set ablaze,
|
|
And when Paradise shall be brought nigh,
|
|
The soul shall know what it has produced!
|
|
I need not swear by the stars that slink back, moving
|
|
swiftly, slinking into their dens!
|
|
Nor by the night when darkness draws on!
|
|
Nor by the morn when it first breathes up!
|
|
Verily, it is the speech of a noble apostle, mighty,
|
|
standing sure with the Lord of the throne, obeyed and
|
|
trusty too!
|
|
Your comrade is not mad; he saw him on the plain
|
|
horizon, nor does he grudge to communicate the
|
|
unseen.
|
|
Nor is it the speech of a pelted devil.
|
|
Then whither do ye go?
|
|
It is but a reminder to the worlds, to whomsoever of you
|
|
pleases to go straight:- but ye will not please,
|
|
except God, the Lord of the world, should please.
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF THE CLEAVING ASUNDER
|
|
(LXXXII. Mecca.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
When the heaven is cleft asunder,
|
|
And when the stars are scattered,
|
|
And when the seas gush together,
|
|
And when the tombs are turned upside down,
|
|
The soul shall know what it has sent on or kept back!
|
|
O man! what has seduced thee concerning thy generous Lord, who
|
|
created thee, and fashioned thee, and gave thee symmetry, and in
|
|
what form He pleased composed thee?
|
|
Nay, but ye call the judgment a lie! but over you are guardians
|
|
set,-noble, writing down! they know what ye do!
|
|
Verily, the righteous are in pleasure, and, verily, the wicked are
|
|
in hell; they shall broil therein upon the judgment day; nor shall
|
|
they be absent therefrom!
|
|
And what shall make thee know what is the judgment day? Again,
|
|
what shall make thee know what is the judgment day? a day when no soul
|
|
shall control aught for another; and the bidding on that day belongs
|
|
to God!
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF THOSE WHO GIVE SHORT WEIGHT
|
|
(LXXXIII. Mecca.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
Woe to those who give short weight! who when they measure against
|
|
others take full measure; but when they measure to them or weigh to
|
|
them, diminish!
|
|
Do not these think that they shall be raised again at the mighty
|
|
day? the day when men shall stand before the Lord of the worlds!
|
|
Nay, verily, the book of the wicked is in Siggin; and what shall
|
|
make thee know what Siggin is a book inscribed!
|
|
Woe on that day for those who say it is a lie!
|
|
Who call the judgment day a lie! but none shall call it a lie except
|
|
every sinful transgressor, who, when our signs are read to him,
|
|
says, 'Old folks' tales!'
|
|
Nay, but that which they have gained has settled upon their hearts.
|
|
Nay, verily, from their Lord on that day are they veiled; and
|
|
then, verily, they shall broil in hell; then it shall be said, 'This
|
|
is what ye once did call a lie!'
|
|
Nay, verily, the book of the righteous is in 'Illiyun; and what
|
|
shall make thee know what 'Illiyun is? book inscribed! those nigh to
|
|
God shall witness it.
|
|
Verily, the righteous shall be in pleasure; upon couches shall
|
|
they gaze; thou mayest recognise in their faces the brightness of
|
|
pleasure; they shall be given to drink wine that is sealed, whose seal
|
|
is musk; for that then let the aspirants aspire!-and it shall be
|
|
tempered with Tasnim,-a spring from which those nigh to God shall
|
|
drink.
|
|
Verily, those who sin do laugh at those who believe; and when they
|
|
pass by they wink at one another, and when they return to their family
|
|
they return ridiculing them; and when they see them they say, 'Verily,
|
|
these do go astray!'-but they are not sent as guardians over them!
|
|
But to-day those who believe shall at the misbelievers laugh! Upon
|
|
couches shall they gaze; are the misbelievers rewarded for what they
|
|
have done?
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF THE RENDING ASUNDER
|
|
(LXXXIV. Mecca.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
When the heaven is rent asunder and gives ear unto its Lord, and
|
|
is dutiful!
|
|
And when the earth is stretched out and casts forth what is in it,
|
|
and is empty, and gives ear unto its Lord, and is dutiful!
|
|
O man! verily, thou are toiling after thy Lord, toiling; wherefore
|
|
shalt thou meet Him!
|
|
And as for him who is given his book in his right hand, he shall
|
|
be reckoned with by an easy reckoning; and he shall go back to his
|
|
family joyfully.
|
|
But as for him who is given his book behind his back, he shall
|
|
call out for destruction, but he shall broil in a blaze! Verily, he
|
|
was amongst his family joyful. Verily, he thought that he should never
|
|
return to God.
|
|
Yea, verily, his Lord on him did look!
|
|
I need not swear by the evening glow,
|
|
Or by the night, and what it drives together,
|
|
Or by the moon when it is at its full,
|
|
Ye shall be surely transferred from state to state!
|
|
What ails them that they do not believe? and, when the Koran is read
|
|
to them, do not adore? Nay, those who misbelieve do say it is a lie,
|
|
but God knows best the (malice) that they hide.
|
|
So give them the glad tidings of grievous woe! save those who
|
|
believe and act aright, for them is hire that is not grudged!
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF THE ZODIACAL SIGNS
|
|
(LXXXV. Mecca.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
By the heaven with its zodiacal signs!
|
|
And the promised day!
|
|
And the witness and the witnessed!
|
|
The fellows of the pit were slain;
|
|
And the fire with its kindling,
|
|
When they sat over it
|
|
And witnessed the while what they were doing with those
|
|
who believed.
|
|
And they took not vengeance on them save for their
|
|
belief in God,
|
|
The mighty, the praiseworthy,
|
|
Whose is the kingdoms of the heavens and the earth;
|
|
For God is witness over all!
|
|
Verily, those who make trial of the believers, men and women, and
|
|
then do not repent, for them is the torment of hell, and for them is
|
|
the torment of the burning!
|
|
Verily, those who believe and act aright, for them are gardens
|
|
beneath which rivers flow,- that is the great bliss!
|
|
Verily, the violence of thy Lord is keen!
|
|
Verily, He produces and returns, and He is the forgiving, the
|
|
loving, the Lord of the glorious throne; the doer of what He will!
|
|
Has there come to thee the story of the hosts of Pharaoh and Thamud?
|
|
Nay, those who misbelieve do say it is a lie; but God is behind
|
|
them- encompassing!
|
|
Nay, it is a glorious Koran in a preserved tablet.
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF THE NIGHT STAR
|
|
(LXXXVI. Mecca.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
By the heaven and by the night star! And what shall make thee know
|
|
what the night star is?- The star of piercing brightness.
|
|
Verily, every soul has a guardian over it.
|
|
Then let man look from what he is created: he is created from
|
|
water poured forth, that comes out from between the loins and the
|
|
breast bones.
|
|
Verily, He is able to send him back again, on the day when the
|
|
secrets shall be tried, and he shall have no strength nor helper.
|
|
By the heaven that sends back the rain!
|
|
And the earth with its sprouting!
|
|
Verily, it is indeed a distinguishing speech, and it is no
|
|
frivolity!
|
|
Verily, they do plot a plot!
|
|
But I plot my plot too! let the misbelievers bide; do thou then
|
|
let them bide awhile!
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF THE MOST HIGH
|
|
(LXXXVII. Mecca.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
Celebrated the name of thy Lord most High, who created and
|
|
fashioned, and who decreed and guided, and who brings forth the
|
|
pasture, and then makes it dusky stubble!
|
|
We will make thee recite, and thou shalt not forget, save what God
|
|
pleases. Verily, He knows the open and what is concealed; and we
|
|
will send thee easily to ease; wherefore remind, for, verily, the
|
|
reminder is useful.
|
|
But he who fears will be mindful; but the wretch will avoid it; he
|
|
who will broil on the great fire, and then therein shall neither die
|
|
nor live!
|
|
Prosperous is he who purifies himself, and remembers the name of his
|
|
Lord and prays!
|
|
Nay! but ye prefer the life of this world, while the hereafter is
|
|
better and more lasting.
|
|
Verily, this was in the books of yore,-the books of Abraham and
|
|
Moses.
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF THE OVERWHELMING
|
|
(LXXXVIII. Mecca.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
Has there come to thee the story of the overwhelming?
|
|
Faces on that day shall be humble, labouring, toiling,- shall
|
|
broil upon a burning fire; shall be given to drink from a boiling
|
|
spring! no food shall they have save from the foul thorn, which
|
|
shall not fatten nor avail against hunger!
|
|
Faces on that day shall be comfortable, content with their past
|
|
endeavours,-in a lofty garden wherein they shall hear no foolish word;
|
|
wherein is a flowing fountain; wherein are couches raised on high, and
|
|
goblets set down, and cushions arranged, and carpets spread!
|
|
Do they not look then at the camel how she is created?
|
|
And at the heaven how it is reared?
|
|
And at the mountains how they are set up?
|
|
And at the earth how it is spread out?
|
|
But remind: thou art only one to remind; thou art not in authority
|
|
over them; except such as turns his back and misbelieves, for him will
|
|
God torment with the greatest torment.
|
|
Verily, unto us is their return, and, verily, for us is their
|
|
account!
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF THE DAWN
|
|
(LXXXIX. Mecca.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
By the dawn and ten nights!
|
|
And the single and the double!
|
|
And the night when it travels on!
|
|
Is there in that an oath for a man of sense?
|
|
Hast thou not seen how thy Lord did with 'Ad?-with Iram of the
|
|
columns? the like of which has not been created in the land?
|
|
And Thamud when they hewed the stones in the valley?
|
|
And Pharaoh of the stakes?
|
|
Who were outrageous in the land, and did multiply wickedness
|
|
therein, and thy Lord poured out upon them the scourge of torment.
|
|
Verily, thy Lord is on a watch tower! and as for man, whenever his
|
|
Lord tries him and honours him and grants him favour, then he says,
|
|
'My Lord has honoured me;' but whenever he tries him and doles out
|
|
to him his subsistence, then he says, 'My Lord despises me!'
|
|
Nay, but ye do not honour the orphan, nor do ye urge each other to
|
|
feed the poor, and ye devour the inheritance (of the weak) with a
|
|
general devouring, and ye love wealth with a complete love!
|
|
Nay, when the earth is crushed to pieces, and thy Lord comes with
|
|
the angels, rank on rank, and hell is brought on that day,-on that day
|
|
shall man be reminded! but how shall he have a reminder?
|
|
He will say, 'Would that I had sent something forward for my life!
|
|
But on that day no one shall be tormented with a torment like his,
|
|
and none shall be bound with bonds like his!
|
|
O thou comforted soul! return unto thy Lord, well pleased and well
|
|
pleased with!
|
|
And enter amongst my servants, and enter my Paradise!
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF THE LAND
|
|
(XC. Mecca.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
I need not swear by the Lord of this land, and though a dweller in
|
|
this land!
|
|
Nor by the begetter and what he begets!
|
|
We have surely created man in trouble.
|
|
Does he think that none can do aught against him?
|
|
He says, I have wasted wealth in plenty;' does he think that no
|
|
one sees him?
|
|
Have we not made for him two eyes and a tongue, and two lips? and
|
|
guided him in the two highways? but he will not attempt the steep!
|
|
And what shall make thee know what the steep is? It is freeing
|
|
captives, or feeding on the day of famine, an orphan who is akin, or a
|
|
poor man who lies in the dust; and again (it is) to be of these who
|
|
believe and encourage each other to patience, and encourage each other
|
|
to mercy,-these are the fellows of the right!
|
|
But those who disbelieve in our signs, they are the fellows of the
|
|
left, for them is fire that closes in!
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF THE SUN
|
|
(XCI. Mecca.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
By the sun and its noonday brightness!
|
|
And the moon when it follows him!
|
|
And the day when it displays him!
|
|
And the night when it covers him!
|
|
And the heaven and what built it!
|
|
And the earth and what spread it!
|
|
And the soul and what fashioned it, and taught it
|
|
its sin and its piety!
|
|
Prosperous is he who purifies it!
|
|
And disappointed is he who corrupts it!
|
|
Thamud called the apostle a liar in their outrage, when their wretch
|
|
rose up and the apostle of God said to them, 'God's she-camel! so give
|
|
her to drink.'
|
|
But they called him a liar, and they ham-strung her; but their
|
|
Lord destroyed them in their sins, and served them all alike; and He
|
|
fears not the result thereof!
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF THE NIGHT
|
|
(XCII. Mecca.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
By the night when it veils!
|
|
And the day when it is displayed!
|
|
And by what created male and female!
|
|
Verily, your efforts are diverse!
|
|
But as for him who gives alms and fears God,
|
|
And believes in the best,
|
|
We will send him easily to ease!
|
|
But as for him who is niggardly,
|
|
And longs for wealth,
|
|
And calls the good a lie,
|
|
We will send him easily to difficulty!
|
|
And his wealth shall not avail him
|
|
When he falls down (into hell)!
|
|
Verily, it is for us to guide;
|
|
And, verily, ours are the hereafter and the former life!
|
|
And I have warned you of a fire that flames!
|
|
None shall broil thereon, but the most wretched, who says it is a
|
|
lie and turns his back.
|
|
But the pious shall be kept away from it, he who gives his wealth in
|
|
alms, and who gives no favour to any one for the sake of reward, but
|
|
only craving the face of his Lord most High; in the end he shall be
|
|
well pleased!
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF THE FORENOON
|
|
(XCIII. Mecca.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
By the forenoon!
|
|
And the night when it darkens!
|
|
Thy Lord has not forsaken thee, nor hated thee! and surely the
|
|
hereafter is better for thee than the former; and in the end thy
|
|
Lord will give thee, and thou shalt be well pleased!
|
|
Did He not find thee an orphan, and give the shelter? and find
|
|
thee erring, and guide thee? and find thee poor with a family, and
|
|
nourish thee?
|
|
But as for the orphan oppress him not; and as for the beggar drive
|
|
him not away; and as for the favour of thy Lord discourse thereof.
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF 'HAVE WE NOT EXPANDED?'
|
|
(XCIV. Mecca.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
Have we not expanded for thee thy breast? and set down from thee thy
|
|
load which galled thy back? and exalted for thee thy renown?
|
|
Verily, with difficulty is ease! verily, with difficulty is ease!
|
|
And when thou art at leisure then toil, and for thy Lord do thou
|
|
yearn!
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF THE FIG
|
|
(XCV. Place of origin doubtful.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
By the fig!
|
|
And by the olive!
|
|
And by Mount Sinai!
|
|
And by this safe land!
|
|
We have indeed created man in the best of symmetry. Then we will
|
|
send him back the lowest of the low; save those who believe and act
|
|
aright; for theirs is a hire that is not grudged.
|
|
But what shall make thee call the judgment after this a lie?
|
|
Is not God a most just of judges?
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF CONGEALED BLOOD
|
|
(XCVI. Mecca.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
READ, in the name of thy Lord!
|
|
Who created man from congealed blood!
|
|
Read, for thy Lord is most generous!
|
|
Who taught the pen!
|
|
Taught man what he did not know!
|
|
Nay, verily, man is indeed outrageous at seeing himself get rich!
|
|
Verily, unto thy Lord is the return!
|
|
Hast thou considered him who forbids a servant when he prays?
|
|
Hast thou considered if he were in guidance or bade piety?
|
|
Hast thou considered if he said it was a lie, and turned his back?
|
|
Did he not know that God can see?
|
|
Nay, surely, if he do not desist we will drag him by the
|
|
forelock!-the lying sinful forelock!
|
|
So let him call his counsel: we will call the guards of hell!
|
|
Nay, obey him not, but adore and draw nigh!
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF POWER
|
|
(XCVII. Place of origin doubtful.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
Verily, we sent it down on the Night of Power!
|
|
And what shall make thee know what the Night of Power is?- the Night
|
|
of Power is better than a thousand months!
|
|
The angels and the Spirit descend therein, by the permission of
|
|
their Lord with every bidding.
|
|
Peace it is until rising of the dawn!
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF THE MANIFEST SIGN
|
|
(XCVIII. Place of origin doubtful.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
Those of the people of the Book and the idolaters who misbelieve did
|
|
not fall off until there came to them the manifest sign,-
|
|
An apostle from God reading pure pages wherein are right scriptures:
|
|
Nor did those who were given the Book divide into sects until
|
|
after there came to them the manifest sign.
|
|
But they were not bidden aught but to worship God, being sincere
|
|
in religion unto Him as 'Hanifs, and to be steadfast in prayer, and to
|
|
give alms: for that is the standard religion.
|
|
Verily, those who disbelieve amongst the people of the Book and
|
|
the idolaters shall be in the fire of hell, to dwell therein for
|
|
aye; they are wretched creatures!
|
|
Verily, those who believe and act aright, they are the best of
|
|
creatures; their reward with their Lord is gardens of Eden, beneath
|
|
which rivers flow, to dwell therein for aye; God shall be well pleased
|
|
with them, and they with Him! that is for him who fears his Lord!
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF THE EARTHQUAKE
|
|
(XCIX. Place of origin doubtful.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
When the earth shall quake with its quaking!
|
|
And the earth shall bring forth her burdens, and man shall say,
|
|
'What ails her!'
|
|
On that day she shall tell her tidings, because thy Lord inspires
|
|
her.
|
|
On the day when men shall come up in separate bands to show their
|
|
works: and he who does the weight of an atom of good shall see it! and
|
|
he who does the weight of an atom of evil shall see it!
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF THE CHARGERS
|
|
(C. Mecca.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
By the snorting chargers!
|
|
And those who strike fire with their hoofs!
|
|
And those who make incursions in the morning,
|
|
And raise up dust therein,
|
|
And cleave through a host therein!
|
|
Verily, man is to his Lord ungrateful; and, verily, he is a
|
|
witness of that.
|
|
Verily, he is keen in his love of good.
|
|
Does he not know when the tombs are exposed, and what is in the
|
|
breasts is brought to light?
|
|
Verily, thy Lord upon that day indeed is well aware.
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF THE SMITING
|
|
(CI. Mecca.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
The smiting!
|
|
What is the smiting?
|
|
And what shall make thee know what the smiting is?
|
|
The day when men shall be like scattered moths; and the mountains
|
|
shall be like flocks of carded wool!
|
|
And as for him whose balance is heavy, he shall be in a
|
|
well-pleasing life.
|
|
But as for him whose balance is light, his dwelling shall be the pit
|
|
of hell.
|
|
And who shall make thee know what it is?- a burning fire!
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF THE CONTENTION ABOUT NUMBERS
|
|
(CII. Place of origin doubtful.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
The contention about numbers deludes you till ye visit the tombs!
|
|
Not so! In the end ye shall know! And again not so! In the end ye
|
|
shall know!
|
|
Not so! Did ye but know with certain knowledge!
|
|
Ye shall surely see hell! And again ye shall surely see it with an
|
|
eye of certainty.
|
|
Then ye shall surely be asked about pleasure!
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF THE AFTERNOON
|
|
(CIII. Mecca.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
By the afternoon! verily, man is in loss! save those who believe and
|
|
do right, and bid each other be true, and bid each other be patient.
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF THE BACKBITER
|
|
(CIV. Mecca.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
Woe to every slanderous backbiter, who collects wealth and counts
|
|
it.
|
|
He thinks that his wealth can immortalize him.
|
|
Not so! he shall be hurled into El'Hutamah!
|
|
And what shall make thee understand what El'Hutamah is?- the fire of
|
|
God kindled; which rises above the hearts. Verily, it is an archway
|
|
over them on long-drawn columns.
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF THE ELEPHANT
|
|
(CV. Mecca.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
Hast thou not seen what thy Lord did with the fellows of the
|
|
elephant?
|
|
Did He not make their stratagem lead them astray, and send down on
|
|
them birds in flocks, to throw down on them stones of baked clay,
|
|
and make them like blades of herbage eaten down?
|
|
THE CHAPTER OF THE QURAIS
|
|
(CVI. Mecca.)
|
|
|
|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
For the uniting of the Qurais; uniting them for the caravan of
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winter and summer.
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So let them serve the Lord of this house who feeds them against
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hunger and makes them safe against fear.
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THE CHAPTER OF THE 'NECESSARIES'
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(CVII. Place of origin doubtful.)
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IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
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Hast thou considered him who calls the judgment a lie? He it is
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who pushes the orphan away; and urges not (others) to feed the poor.
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But woe to those who pray and who are careless in their prayers,
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Who pretend and withhold necessaries.
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THE CHAPTER OF EL KAUTHAR
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(CVIII. Mecca.)
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IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
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Verily, we have given thee El Kauthar;
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So pray to thy Lord and slaughter (victims).
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Verily, he who hates thee shall be childless.
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THE CHAPTER OF MISBELIEVERS
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(CIX. Mecca.)
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|
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IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
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Say, 'O ye misbelievers! I do not serve what ye serve; nor will ye
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|
serve what I serve; nor will I serve what ye serve; nor will ye
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|
serve what I serve;-ye have your religion, and I have my religion!'
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THE CHAPTER OF HELP
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(CX. Mecca.)
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|
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|
IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
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|
When there comes God's help and victory,
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|
And thou shalt see men enter into God's religion by troops,
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|
Then celebrate the praises of thy Lord, and ask forgiveness of
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Him, verily, He is relentant!
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THE CHAPTER OF ABU LAHEB
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(CXI. Mecca.)
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|
|
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IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
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|
Abu Laheb's two hands shall perish, and he shall perish!
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|
His wealth shall not avail him, nor what he has earned!
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|
He shall broil in a fire that flames, and his wife carrying
|
|
faggots!- on her neck a cord of palm fibres.
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THE CHAPTER OF UNITY
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|
(CXII. Place of origin doubtful.)
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|
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IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
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|
Say, 'He is God alone!
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|
God the Eternal!
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|
He begets not and is not begotten!
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|
Nor is there like unto Him any one!'
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|
THE CHAPTER OF THE DAYBREAK
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|
(CXIII. Place of origin doubtful.)
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|
|
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IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
|
|
Say, 'I seek refuge in the Lord of the daybreak, from the evil of
|
|
what He has created; and from the evil of the night when it cometh on;
|
|
and from the evil of the blowers upon knots; and from the evil of
|
|
the envious when he envies.'
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THE CHAPTER OF MEN
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(CXIV. Place of origin doubtful.)
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|
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IN the name of the merciful and compassionate God.
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Say, 'I seek refuge in the Lord of men, the King of men, the God
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|
of men, from the evil of the whisperer, who slinks off, who whispers
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into the hearts of men!-from ginns and men!'
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THE END
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