The Prostration
IN THE NAME OF GOD, THE MOST GRACIOUS, THE DISPENSER OF GRACE
[32:1]
Alif. Lām. Mīm.

[32:2]
THE BESTOWAL from on high of this divine writ issues, beyond any doubt, from the Sustainer of all the worlds:

[32:3]
and yet, they [who are bent on denying the truth] assert, "[Muhammad] has invented it!"
Nay, but it is the truth from thy Sustainer, enabling thee to warn [this] people to whom no warner has come before thee, so that they might follow the right path.

[32:4]
IT IS GOD who has created the heavens and the earth and all that is between them in six aeons, and is established on the throne of His almightiness. You have none to protect you from God, and none to intercede for you [on Judgment Day]: will you not, then, bethink yourselves?

[32:5]
He governs all that exists, from the celestial space to the earth; and in the end all shall ascend unto Him [for judgment] on a Day the length whereof will be [like] a thousand years of your reckoning.

[32:6]
Such is He who knows all that is beyond the reach of a created being’s perception, as well as all that can be witnessed by a creature’s senses or mind: the Almighty, the Dispenser of Grace,

[32:7]
who makes most excellent everything that He creates.
Thus, He begins the creation of man out of clay;

[32:8]
then He causes him to be begotten out of the essence of a humble fluid;

[32:9]
and then He forms him in accordance with what he is meant to be, and breathes into him of His spirit: and [thus, O men,] He endows you with hearing, and sight, and feelings as well as minds: [yet] how seldom are you grateful!

[32:10]
For [many are] they [who] say, "What! After we have been [dead and] lost in the earth, shall we indeed be [restored to life] in a new act of creation?"
Nay, but [by saying this] they deny the truth that they are destined to meet their Sustainer!

[32:11]
Say: "[One day,] the angel of death who has been given charge of you will gather you, and then unto your Sustainer you will be brought back."

[32:12]
If thou couldst but see [how it will be on Judgment Day,] when those who are lost in sin will hang their heads before their Sustainer, [saying:] "O our Sustainer! [Now] we have seen, and we have heard! Return us, then, [to our earthly life] that we may do good deeds: for [now], behold, we are certain [of the truth]!"

[32:13]
Yet had We so willed, We could indeed have imposed Our guidance upon every human being: but [We have not willed it thus – and so] that word of Mine has come true: "Most certainly will I fill hell with invisible beings as well as with humans, all together!"

[32:14]
[And He will say unto the sinners:] "Taste, then, [the recompense] for your having been oblivious of the coming of this your Day [of Judgment] – for, verily, We are [now] oblivious of you: taste, then, [this] abiding suffering for all [the evil] that you were wont to do!"

[32:15]
ONLY THEY [truly] believe in Our messages who, whenever they are conveyed to them, fall down, prostrating themselves in adoration, and extol their Sustainer’s limitless glory and praise; and who are never filled with false pride;

[32:16]
[and] who are impelled to rise from their beds [at night] to call out to their Sustainer in fear and hope; and who spend on others out of what We provide for them as sustenance.

[32:17]
And [as for all such believers,] no human being can imagine what blissful delights, as yet hidden, await them [in the life to come] as a reward for all that they did.

[32:18]
Is, then, he who [in his earthly life] was a believer to be compared with one who was iniquitous? [Nay,] these two are not equal!

[32:19]
As for those who attain to faith and do righteous deeds – gardens of rest await them, as a welcome [from God], in result of what they did;

[32:20]
but as for those who are lost in iniquity – their goal is the fire: as oft as they will try to come out of it, they will be thrown back into it; and they will be told, "Taste [now] this suffering through fire which you were wont to call a lie!"

[32:21]
However, ere [We condemn them to] that supreme suffering, We shall most certainly let them taste of a suffering closer at hand, so that they might [repent and] mend their ways.

[32:22]
And who could be more wicked than he to whom his Sustainer’s messages are conveyed and who thereupon turns away from them? Verily, We shall inflict Our retribution on those who are [thus] lost in sin!

[32:23]
AND, INDEED, [O Muhammad,] We did vouchsafe revelation unto Moses [as well]: so be not in doubt of [thy] having met with the same [truth in the revelation vouchsafed to thee].
And [just as] We caused that [earlier revelation] to be a guidance for the children of Israel,

[32:24]
and [as] We raised among them leaders who, so long as they bore themselves with patience and had sure faith in Our messages, guided [their people] in accordance with Our behest – [so, too, shall it be with the divine writ revealed unto thee, O Muhammad.]

[32:25]
VERILY, it is your Sustainer alone who will decide between men on Resurrection Day with regard to all on which they were wont to differ.

[32:26]
[But] can, then, they [who deny the truth] learn no lesson by recalling how many a generation We have destroyed before their time, – [people] in whose dwelling-places they [themselves now] walk about?
In this, behold, there are messages indeed: will they not, then, listen?

[32:27]
Are they not aware that it is We who drive the rain onto dry land devoid of herbage, and thereby bring forth herbage of which their cattle and they themselves do eat? Can they not, then, see [the truth of resurrection]?

[32:28]
But they answer: "When will that final decision take place, if what you [believers] say is true?"

[32:29]
Say: "On the Day of the Final Decision, their [newly-found] faith will be of no use to those who [in their lifetime] were bent on denying the truth, nor will they be granted respite!" –

[32:30]
and then leave them alone, and wait [for the truth to unfold as] they, behold, are waiting....


* v.1 : See Appendix II.

* v.3 : Cf. note 61 on 10:38.

* v.4 : See note 43 on 7:54.

* v.5 : I.e., the Day of Judgment will seem to be endless to those who are judged. In the ancient Arabic idiom, a day that is trying or painful is described as “long,” just as a happy day is spoken of as “short” (Marāghī XXI, 105).

* v.6 : See sūrah 6, note 65.

* v.7 : I.e., He fashions every detail of His creation in accordance with the functions intended for it, irrespective of whether those functions can be understood by us or are beyond the reach of our perception. In the text, the passage comprising verses 7-9 is in the past tense; but since it relates to a continuous act of creation, it signifies the present and the future as well as the past, and may, therefore, be suitably rendered in the present tense.
* Cf. note 4 on 23:12. In view of the next verse, this “beginning” of man’s creation seems to allude to the basic composition of the human body as such, as well as to each individual’s pre-natal existence in the separate bodies of his parents.

* v.8 : Lit., “He caused [i.e., as pointed out in note 6 above, “He causes”] his procreation [or “his begetting”] his procreation [or “his begetting”] to be out of...,” etc.

* v.9 : As in 15:29 and 38:72, God’s “breathing of His spirit into man” is a metaphor for the divine gift of life and consciousness, or of a “soul” (which, as pointed out in sūrah 4, note 181, is one of the meanings of the term rūh). Consequently, “the soul of every human being is of the spirit of God” (Rāzī). Regarding the verb sawwāhu – rendered by me as “He forms him in accordance with what he is meant to be” – see note 1 on 87:2 and note 5 on 91:7.
* Lit., “hearts” (af’idah), which in classical Arabic is a metonym for both “feelings” and “minds”; hence my composite rendering of this term.

* v.10 : Sc., “and thus, by implication, they deny His existence.” (Cf. notes 11 and 12 on 13:5.)

* v.13 : Lit., “We could indeed have given unto every human being (nafs) his guidance,” i.e., forcibly: but since this would have deprived man of his ability to choose between right and wrong – and, thus, of all moral responsibility – God does not “impose” His guidance upon anyone (cf. 26:4 and the corresponding note).
* See 7:18 as well as the last paragraph of 11:119. As regards the “invisible beings” (jinn), see Appendix III.

* v.15 : Lit., “whose sides [i.e., bodies] restlessly rise.”

* v.16 : Lit., “what is kept hidden for them [by way] of a joy of the eyes,” i.e., of blissful delights, irrespective of whether seen, heard, or felt. The expression “what is kept hidden for them” clearly alludes to the unknowable – and, therefore, only allegorically describable – quality of life in the hereafter. The impossibility of man’s really “imagining” paradise has been summed up by the Prophet in the well-authenticated hadīth: “God says: ‘I have readied for My righteous servants what no eye has ever seen, and no ear has ever heard, and no heart of man has ever conceived’” (Bukhārī and Muslim, on the authority of Abū Hurayrah; also Tirmidhī). This hadīth has always been regarded by the Companions as the Prophet’s own comment on the above verse (cf. Fath al-Bārī VIII, 418 f.).

* v.21 : Lit., “nearer,” i.e., in this world: for an explanation, see note 27 on 52:47.
* Lit., “so that they might return [to righteousness].”

* v.23 : With this passage the discourse returns to the theme enunciated at the beginning of this sūrah – namely, the divine origin of the revelation granted to Muhammad, which, as the present passage points out, proceeds from the same source as that granted to Moses (the last of the great apostles of God accepted as such by all the three monotheistic religions, Judaism, Christianity, and Islam). Furthermore, the identity of the fundamental truths in all divine revelations, stressed in the above verse, implies an identity of the moral demands made of the followers of those revelations irrespective of period, race, or social environment.

* v.24 : I.e., in accordance with the divine ordinances enunciated in and for their time in the Torah: an allusion to the decline of faith, frequently mentioned in the Qur’ān, among the children of Israel of later times, and to the tendency among many of their leaders and learned men to corrupt the text of the Torah and, thus, to “overlay the truth with falsehood” (see, e.g., 2:42, 75, 79, and the corresponding notes).
* This interpolation reflects Zamakhsharī’s commentary on the above passage, to the effect that the Qur’ān is destined to provide guidance and light so long as the community’s religious leaders are patient in adversity and steadfast in their faith: an interpretation which implies that the Qur’ān will cease to be of benefit to people who have lost their moral virtues and their faith.

* v.25 : Lit., “between them.”
* See sūrah 2, note 94; also 22:67-69. In the present instance, this difference of opinion relates to belief in resurrection, on the one hand, and its denial, on the other.

* v.26 : For the wider meaning of the term qarn (lit., “generation”), see note 111 on 20:128.

* v.28 : A reference to the statement in verse 25.