Adapted from Tafsir Ibn Ashur
Themes and purpose:
This Makkan surah defines the anatomy of true faith, opening with the declaration, "Successful indeed are the believers." Its primary purpose is to prove monotheism and the Resurrection by citing the wonders of human creation and the stories of past prophets. It establishes the spiritual and ethical foundations of the community before confronting the arrogance of the polytheists, warning them that their path mirrors the path of earlier nations that were destroyed.
Context of Revelation:
Era: Makkan by unanimous agreement.
Chronology: It has been counted as the 76th surah in the order of revelation, revealed after SĆ«rat al-áčŹĆ«r and before al-Mulk.
Name and Ayah Count:
Name: The surah's established name is "SĆ«rat al-MuâminĆ«n" (The Believers). It is also known as "SĆ«rat Qad aflaáž„a" (Successful Indeed) and "SĆ«rat al-FalÄáž„" (The Success). It opens by reporting Allah's proclamation of the success of the believers and then details the virtues by which they achieved that success.
Ayah Count: 117 ayah (Majority) or 118 (Kƫfan).
Surah Overview:
- Central axis: Establishing monotheism, dismantling polytheism, and highlighting faith and its disciplines/laws as the path of rectitude.
- Proclaiming the success of the believers and listing the spiritual and ethical virtues by which they achieve it. [1-11]
- Proving Monotheism and the Resurrection by detailing the stages of human creation and development. [12-16]
- Citing the marvels of creation (heavens, rain, vegetation, livestock, and ships) as proof of Allah's Oneness. [17-22]
- Recounting the struggles of past prophets (especially Nuh, Musa, and Isa) as admonitory examples for those rejecting Muhammad (ï·ș): the prophetic call is to monotheism and righteous deeds, yet deniers respond with aversion and slanderâso Allahâs punishment ultimately follows. [23-50]
- Followed by renewed praise of the Godâfearing believers (those who believed and had piety). [51â61]
- Direct address to the polytheists: they mirror earlier nations; despite omens of punishment and satanic delusion, despite admitting Allahâs Lordship, they persist in shirk, follow whims, and reject a Messenger they know to be truthful, with interspersed concise maxims. [62â95]
- Consoling the Prophet (ï·ș) and commanding him to overlook the ill-treatment of his people. [96-98]
- Describing the regret of the disbelievers and their pleas when death arrives and on the Day of Judgment, while the true believers will be vindicated. [99-111]
- Establishing that Allah did not create humanity for frivolous reasons but for a purpose (reward and punishment). [115-116]
- Concluding by commanding the Prophet (ï·ș) to seek forgiveness for the believers, thereby completing the cycle of success with which the surah began. [118]