عَمَّ يَتَسَاءَلُونَ
ABOUT WHAT do they [most often] ask one another? (1)
عَنِ النَّبَإِ الْعَظِيمِ
About the awesome tiding [of resurrection], (2)
الَّذِي هُمْ فِيهِ مُخْتَلِفُونَ
on which they [so utterly] disagree. (3)
كَلَّا سَيَعْلَمُونَ
Nay, but in time they will come to understand [it]! (4)
ثُمَّ كَلَّا سَيَعْلَمُونَ
And once again: Nay, but in time they will come to understand! (5)
أَلَمْ نَجْعَلِ الْأَرْضَ مِهَادًا
HAVE WE NOT made the earth a resting-place [for you], (6)
وَالْجِبَالَ أَوْتَادًا
and the mountains [its] pegs? (7)
وَخَلَقْنَاكُمْ أَزْوَاجًا
And We have created you in pairs; (8)
وَجَعَلْنَا نَوْمَكُمْ سُبَاتًا
and We have made your sleep [a symbol of] death (9)
وَجَعَلْنَا اللَّيْلَ لِبَاسًا
and made the night [its] cloak (10)
وَجَعَلْنَا النَّهَارَ مَعَاشًا
and made the day [a symbol of] life. (11)
وَبَنَيْنَا فَوْقَكُمْ سَبْعًا شِدَادًا
And We have built above you seven firmaments, (12)
وَجَعَلْنَا سِرَاجًا وَهَّاجًا
and have placed [therein the sun,] a lamp full of blazing splendour. (13)
وَأَنْزَلْنَا مِنَ الْمُعْصِرَاتِ مَاءً ثَجَّاجًا
And from the wind-driven clouds We send down waters pouring in abundance, (14)
لِنُخْرِجَ بِهِ حَبًّا وَنَبَاتًا
so that We might bring forth thereby grain, and herbs, (15)
وَجَنَّاتٍ أَلْفَافًا
and gardens dense with foliage. (16)
إِنَّ يَوْمَ الْفَصْلِ كَانَ مِيقَاتًا
VERILY, the Day of Distinction [between the true and the false] has indeed its appointed time: (17)
يَوْمَ يُنْفَخُ فِي الصُّورِ فَتَأْتُونَ أَفْوَاجًا
the Day when the trumpet [of resurrection] is sounded and you all come forward in multitudes; (18)
وَفُتِحَتِ السَّمَاءُ فَكَانَتْ أَبْوَابًا
and when the skies are opened and become [as wide-flung] gates; (19)
وَسُيِّرَتِ الْجِبَالُ فَكَانَتْ سَرَابًا
and when the mountains are made to vanish as if they had been a mirage. (20)
إِنَّ جَهَنَّمَ كَانَتْ مِرْصَادًا
[On that Day,] verily, hell will lie in wait [for those who deny the truth] – (21)
لِلطَّاغِينَ مَآبًا
a goal for all who are wont to transgress the bounds of what is right! (22)
لَابِثِينَ فِيهَا أَحْقَابًا
In it shall they remain for a long time. (23)
لَا يَذُوقُونَ فِيهَا بَرْدًا وَلَا شَرَابًا
Neither coolness shall they taste therein nor any [thirst-quenching] drink – (24)
إِلَّا حَمِيمًا وَغَسَّاقًا
only burning despair and ice-cold darkness: (25)
جَزَاءً وِفَاقًا
a meet requital [for their sins]! (26)
إِنَّهُمْ كَانُوا لَا يَرْجُونَ حِسَابًا
Behold, they were not expecting to be called to account, (27)
وَكَذَّبُوا بِآيَاتِنَا كِذَّابًا
having given the lie to Our messages one and all: (28)
وَكُلَّ شَيْءٍ أَحْصَيْنَاهُ كِتَابًا
but We have placed on record every single thing [of what they did]. (29)
فَذُوقُوا فَلَنْ نَزِيدَكُمْ إِلَّا عَذَابًا
[And so We shall say:] "Taste, then, [the fruit of your evil doings,] for now We shall bestow on you nothing but more and more suffering!" (30)
- on which they [so utterly] disagree.1
- 1 The question which preoccupies man above all others - the question as to whether there is life after death - has been variously answered throughout the ages. It is, of course, impossible to describe the innumerable variations of those answers; nevertheless, a few main lines of thought are clearly discernible, and their mention may be useful for a better understanding of the Qur'anic treatment of this problem. Some people - probably a minority - seem to be convinced that bodily death amounts to total and irreversible extinction, and that, therefore, all talk about a hereafter but an outcome of wishful thinking. Others are of the opinion that after individual death the human "life-essence" returns to the supposed source of its origin - conceived as the "universal soul" - and merges with it entirely. Some believe in a successive transmigration of the individual soul, at the moment of death, into another body, human or animal, but without a continuation of individual consciousness. Others, again, think that only the soul, and not the entire human "personality", continues to live after death - that is, in a purely spiritual, disembodied form. And, lastly, some believe in an undiminished survival of the individual personality and consciousness, and regard death and resurrection as the twin stages of a positive act of re-creation of the entire human personality, in whatever form this may necessarily involve: and this is the Qur'anic view of the life to come.
-
About which they cannot agree.
— Abdullah Yusuf Ali -
Concerning which they are in disagreement.
— Marmaduke Pickthall -
About which they differ?
— M. Habib Shakir -
About which they are in disagreement.
— Taqiuddin Hilali and M. Mohsin Khan -
Concerning which they differ.
— Abdul-Majid Daryabadi -
whereupon they are at variance?
— Hasan Qaribullah and Ahmed Darwish -
on which they differ?
— Ayub Khan -
Concerning which they differ.
— Sher Ali -
on which they [so utterly] disagree.
— Muhammad Asad -
whereon they are at variance.
— Arthur Arberry -
that they are in utter disagreement?{{1}}
— Abu'l Ala Maududi