This is a summary of the Quran sourced from Wikipedia. It may be inaccurate. Nevertheless, it can help give an idea of the topics in each chapter.
| 1-20 | Unbelievers and hypocrites reproved
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| 21-38 | Exhortation to the worship of the true God
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| 39-102 | Jews and Christians urged to accept the claim of Muhammad to be a prophet of God
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| 102-112 | The opposition of Jews and Christians to Muhammad’s prophetic pretensions combated
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| 113 | The doctrine of abrogation enunciated
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| 115 | A Qibla declared to be unnecessary
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| 116-141 | The Jews denounced and the religion of Abraham declared to be the true Islam
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| 142-153 | The Jews finally abandoned and the Arabs accepted by the adoption of Makkah as the Qibla of Islam
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| 154-163 | The bereaved friends of those slain at the Battle of Badr comforted
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| 164-172 | Makkans exhorted to faith in God, and directed to observe the law respecting forbidden meats
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| 173-176 | Law concerning lawful and unlawful food (delivered at Madina)
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| 177 | The sum of Muslim duty
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| 178-179 | The law of retaliation
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| 180-182 | The law concerning bequests
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| 183-185 | The law concerning fasting
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| 186-187 | The fast of Ramadan
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| 188-202 | The pilgrimage to Makkah and war for the faith
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| 203-206 | Hypocrites and true believers contrasted
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| 207-208 | Exhortation to a hearty acceptance of Islam
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| 209 | The doom of infidels pronounced
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| 210-212 | The Jews reproached
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| 213 | Suffering to be patiently endured
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| 214-242 | Sundry laws relating to almsgiving, war, wine, lots, orphans, marriage, women, oaths, and divorce
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| 243-253 | The duty of warring in defence of religion enjoined by precept, and illustrated by the history of former prophets
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| 254-257 | The Throne Verse
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| 258-260 | The doctrine of the resurrection illustrated
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| 261-274 | Exhortation and encouragement to almsgiving
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| 275-277 | Usury forbidden
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| 278-284 | The law concerning contracts and debts
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| 285-286 | The prophet’s confession and prayer |
| 1-2 | God one and self-existent
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| 3-4 | The Quran to be believed
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| 5-6 | God omniscient
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| 7 | Plain and obscure verses of the Quran
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| 8-9 | The prayer of those versed in Quranic mystery
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| 10-12 | The punishment of Pharaoh a warning to infidels
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| 13 | The victory at the Battle of Badr alluded to
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| 14-18 | The faithful, their character and reward
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| 19-20 | Islam the true religion
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| 21-25 | The punishment of unbelievers eternal
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| 26-27 | God omnipotent and sovereign
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| 28-34 | Obedience to God enjoined
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| 35-38 | The Virgin Mary – her conception – nurtured by Zacharias |
| 39-41 | John the Baptist, his birth |
| 42-57 | Christ announced to the Virgin – his miracles, apostles etc
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| 58-65 | Muhammad’s dispute with the Christians of Najran
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| 66-77 | The hypocritical Jews reproached
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| 78-83 | Prophets not to be worshipped
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| 84-91 | God’s curse on infidels
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| 92 | Almsgiving enjoined
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| 93-95 | The Jews unlawfully forbid certain meats
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| 96-97 | The Kaabah founded
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| 98-105 | Muslims are warned against the friendship of Jews etc |
| 106-109 | The lot of infidels and believers contrasted |
| 110-112 | Muslims safe from the enmity of Jews and Christians |
| 113-115 | Certain believing Jews commended for their faith |
| 116-120 | Muslims not to make friends of Jews and Christians
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| 121-122 | The battle of Uhud alluded to
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| 123-129 | Disheartened Muslims encouraged
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| 130-136 | Usury forbidden
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| 137-138 | The doom of defamers of the apostles
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| 139-144 | Islam not dependent on Muhammad for success
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| 145-148 | The former prophets are examples of perseverance
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| 149-151 | Unbelievers to be avoided
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| 152-154 | Certain Muslims disobedient at Uhud |
| 155-157 | The hypocrites rebuked |
| 158-159 | Muslims slain at Uhud to enter paradise
|
| 160-161 | Mild treatment of vacillating Muslims
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| 162-165 | The spoils of war to be honestly divided |
| 166-169 | The faithful sifted by defeat at Uhud |
| 170-172 | The joy of the Uhud martyrs in paradise
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| 173-176 | Certain Muslims commended for faithfulness
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| 177-180 | The fate of unbelievers
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| 181 | The miser’s doom
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| 182-190 | Scoffing Jews denounced—they charge Muhammad with imposture
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| 191-195 | Meditations and prayers of the pious
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| 196-198 | God’s answer to the prayers of the pious
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| 199 | Certain believing Jews and Christians commended
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| 200 | Exhortation to patience and perseverance
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| 1 | Man and his Creator
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| 2-5 | Orphans, the duty of guardians to such |
| 6-13 | The law of inheritance
|
| 14-15 | The punishment of adulteresses
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| 16-17 | Repentance enjoined
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| 18-19 | Women’s rights |
| 20-27 | Forbidden and lawful degrees in marriage
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| 28-30 | Gaming, rapine, and suicide forbidden
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| 31-33 | Man’s superiority over woman recognised |
| 34 | Reconcilement of man and wife
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| 35-36 | Parents, orphans, the poor etc to be kindly treated
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| 37-41 | Hypocrisy in almsgiving condemned
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| 42 | Prayer forbidden to the drunken and polluted
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| 43-45 | Jewish mockers denounced |
| 46-53 | Idolatry the unpardonable sin
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| 54-55 | The rewards of faith and unbelief |
| 56 | Trusts to be faithfully paid back
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| 57-68 | Disputes to be settled by God and his Apostle
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| 69-74 | Precautions, &c., in warring for the faith
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| 75-84 | The disobedient and cowardly reproved
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| 85 | Salutations to be returned
|
| 86-90 | Treatment of hypocrites and apostates
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| 91-93 | Believers not to be slain or plundered |
| 94-99 | Believers in heathen countries to fly to Muslim lands
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| 100-102 | Special order for prayer in time of war
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| 103 | Exhortation to zeal for Islam
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| 104-114 | , |
| 133 | Fraud denounced
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| 115-125 | Idolatry and Islam compared
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| 126 | Equity in dealing with women and orphans enjoined |
| 127-129 | Wives to be subject to the will of husbands
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| 130-132 | God to be feared
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| 134-138 | Muslims exhorted to steadfastness
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| 139-143 | Hypocrites to be shunned |
| 144-151 | The reward of hypocrisy and belief compared
|
| 152-154 | Presumptuous and disobedient Jews destroyed |
| 155-158 | The Jews defame Mary and Jesus |
| 159-160 | Certain kinds of food forbidden to Jews as punishment
|
| 161-168 | Muhammad’s inspiration like that of other prophets
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| 169-174 | Christians reproved for their faith in Jesus as the Son of God and in the doctrine of the Trinity
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| 175 | The law of inheritance for distant relatives
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| 1 | Covenants are to be fulfilled
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| 2 | Lawful meats
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| 3 | Heathen pilgrims not to be molested
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| 4 | Islam completed—last revelation of the Quran
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| 4-5 | Certain kinds of food, gaming, and lots forbidden
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| 6 | Muslims permitted to eat the food of Jews and Christians, and to marry their women
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| 7 | The law of purifications
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| 8 | Believers reminded of the covenant of Aqabah
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| 9-11 | Muslims should forget old quarrels with brethren
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| 12 | God’s favour to Muslims
|
| 13-15 | Disobedience of Jews and Christians exposed
|
| 16-18 | Jews and Christians are exhorted to accept Islam
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| 19-20 | The divinity of Christ denied
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| 21 | Jews and Christians not the children of God
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| 22 | Muhammad sent as a warner
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| 23-29 | Israel’s rebellion at Kadesh Barnea
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| 30-34 | The story of Cain and Abel
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| 35-36 | The sin of homicide
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| 37-38 | The punishment of theft accompanied by apostasy
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| 39 | The faithful exhorted to fight for religion
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| 40-41 | The punishment of infidels
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| 42-44 | The penalty of theft
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| 45-55 | Muhammad to judge the Jews and Christians by the law, gospel, and the Quran
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| 56 | Muslims forbidden to fraternise with Jews and Christians
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| 57-58 | Hypocrites threatened
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| 59-61 | Believers warned and instructed
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| 62-63 | Muslims not to associate with infidels
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| 64-65 | The Jews exhorted and warned
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| 66-69 | The hypocrisy and unbelief of the Jews rebuked
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| 70 | Promises to believing Jews and Christians
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| 71 | Muhammad required to preach |
| 72 | He attests Jewish and Christian Scriptures |
| 73 | Believing Jews, Sabeans, and Christians to be saved
|
| 74-75 | The Jews rejected and killed the prophets of God |
| 76-81 | The doctrines of the Trinity and Christ’s Sonship rejected |
| 82-84 | Disobedient Jews cursed by their prophets |
| 85-88 | Jewish hatred and Christian friendship compared
|
| 89-90 | Muslims to use lawful food etc
|
| 91 | Expiation for perjury
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| 92-94 | Wine and lots forbidden
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| 95-97 | Law concerning hunting and gaming during pilgrimage
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| 98-100 | Pilgrimage and its rites enjoined
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| 101-102 | The Prophet not to be pestered with questions
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| 102-104 | Heathen Arab customs denounced
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| 105-107 | Wills to be attested by witnesses
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| 108 | The prophets ignorant of the characters of their followers
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| 109-110 | Jesus—his miracles—God’s favour to him
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| 111 | The apostles of Jesus were Muslims
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| 112-114 | A table provided by Jesus for the apostles
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| 115-118 | Jesus did not teach his followers to worship him and his mother
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| 119 | The reward of the true believer
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| 120 | God is sovereign
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| 1-3 | Praise to the Almighty and Omniscient Creator
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| 4-5 | The wilful unbelief of the Makkah infidels
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| 6 | They are threatened with the divine judgment
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| 7 | The people of Makkah hopelessly unbelieving
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| 8-9 | Why angels were not sent to the infidels
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| 10-11 | Those who rejected the former prophets were punished
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| 12-18 | Why the true God should be served
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| 19 | God the witness between Muhammad and the infidels
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| 20 | The Jews recognise Muhammad as a prophet
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| 21-23 | Idolaters on the judgment-day—their condition |
| 24-29 | Scoffing idolaters rebuked and threatened
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| 30-31 | The condition of believers and unbelievers after death
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| 32-33 | Unbelievers make God a liar |
| 33 | God’s word and purposes unchangeable
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| 34 | Miracles of no avail to convince infidels
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| 35 | God will raise the dead to life
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| 36 | Why God did not grant the signs asked by unbelievers
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| 37 | Animals and birds to be brought into judgment
|
| 38 | Infidels are deaf and dumb |
| 39-40 | Idolaters will call upon God in their distress |
| 41-44 | Adversity and prosperity alike unmeaning to infidels
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| 45 | God is the only helper in trouble |
| 46-48 | Unbelievers, if impenitent, sure to perish
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| 49 | Muhammad unacquainted with the secrets of God
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| 50 | There shall be no intercessor on the judgment-day
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| 51-54 | The motives of professing Muslims not to be judged
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| 55-57 | Muhammad declines the proposals of idolaters
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| 58-61 | God the Omniscient and Sovereign Ruler |
| 62-64 | God the Almighty Deliverer
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| 65 | Muhammad charged with imposture
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| 66 | Unbelievers will certainly be punished
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| 67-69 | Mockers to be avoided by Muslims
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| 70-71 | The punishment of idolaters certain and dreadful
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| 71-74 | Muslims commanded to obey God only
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| 75-84 | Abraham’s testimony against idolatry
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| 85-91 | The prophets who succeeded Abraham
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| 92 | The unbelieving Jews (of Madína) rebuked
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| 93 | The Quran confirms the former Scriptures |
| 94 | The fate of those who forge Scriptures
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| 95 | Idolaters deserted by their gods on the judgment-day
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| 96-100 | The God of nature the true God |
| 101-103 | God has no offspring |
| 104-105 | God’s favour in sending the Quran
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| 106-108 | The command to retire from Makkah
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| 109 | Muhammad not permitted to work miracles
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| 110-113 | The people of Makkah given over to unbelief
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| 114 | Muhammad the prophet of God
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| 114-117 | The direction of Muslims and idolaters contrasted
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| 118-121 | Law of permitted and forbidden meats
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| 122 | The righteous and unbelievers compared
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| 122-125 | Wicked leaders of the people—conduct and punishment
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| 126-127 | The blessedness of the faithful
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| 128-130 | God’s threatenings against unbelieving men and genii |
| 131 | God always warns men before punishing idolatry
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| 132-133 | Rewards and punishments shall be according to works
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| 134 | The punishment of unbelievers certain |
| 135-136 | The idolaters of Makkah rebuked |
| 137-139 | Evil customs of the Quraish exposed |
| 140 | The idolaters of Makkah threatened
|
| 141 | The fruit of trees to be eaten
|
| 142-144 | Controversy between the Quraish and Muhammad concerning forbidden meats referred to |
| 145 | The law concerning forbidden meats rehearsed |
| 146 | The Jewish law of forbidden meats
|
| 147 | God will punish those who accuse the prophets of imposture
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| 148-149 | The idolaters of Makkah are reprobate |
| 150 | Their testimony unworthy of credit
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| 151-153 | Forbidden things rehearsed
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| 154-157 | The Quran attests the teaching of Moses and Jesus
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| 158 | The fate of the wicked on the judgment-day
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| 159 | Sectaries reproved
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| 160 | The reward of the righteous and wicked compared
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| 161-162 | Islam the true religion
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| 163 | Muhammad’s self-consecration to God
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| 164-165 | The idolaters exhorted to believe in God
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| 1-2 | Muhammad not to doubt the Quran
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| 3 | The people exhorted to believe in it
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| 4-5 | Many cities destroyed for their unbelief
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| 6-9 | Prophets and their hearers on the judgment-day
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| 10 | The ingratitude of infidels
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| 11 | The creation of Adam
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| 11-12 | Satan refuses to worship Adam |
| 13 | He is driven from Paradise |
| 14-15 | He is respited until the resurrection |
| 16-17 | He avows his purpose to beguile man
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| 18-19 | God threatens Satan and his victims
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| 20-24 | The fall of Adam and Eve |
| 25-26 | They are expelled from Paradise
|
| 27-29 | Indecent customs condemned |
| 30-31 | God to be sought in prayer |
| 32-34 | True worshippers to be decently clad
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| 35 | Every nation has a fixed term of life
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| 36-42 | The doom of those who reject the apostles of God
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| 43-45 | The blessed reward of true believers
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| 45-46 | God’s curse on the infidels
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| 47-50 | The veil of Aráf and its inhabitants
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| 51-52 | The rejecters of God’s apostles to be forgotten
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| 53-54 | A warning against rejecting Muhammad
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| 55-59 | The Creator and Lord of the worlds to be served
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| 60-65 | Noah rejected by his people—their fate |
| 66-73 | Húd rejected by the Ádites—their fate |
| 74-80 | Sálih rejected by the Thamúdites—their destruction |
| 81-85 | Lot rejected and the Sodomites destroyed |
| 86-94 | Shuaib rejected by the Madianites, and their doom
|
| 95-96 | Unbelievers at Makkah unaffected either by adversity or prosperity
|
| 97-101 | The dreadful fate of those cities who rejected the apostles of God and charged them with imposture
|
| 102-103 | They are reprobated
|
| 104-105 | Moses is sent to Pharaoh and his princes
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| 106-108 | The miracles of the serpent and leprous hand
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| 109-115 | The magicians of Egypt called
|
| 116-120 | Contest by miracles between Moses and the magicians
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| 121-123 | Several magicians converted to Moses
|
| 124-127 | Pharaoh’s anger kindled against them
|
| 128 | Pharaoh and his princes persecute Moses and his people
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| 129-130 | Moses exhorts his people to patient trust in God
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| 131-132 | Adversity and prosperity alike unavailing to bring Pharaoh to repentance
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| 133-134 | The Egyptian unbelievers plagued
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| 135 | The hypocrisy of the Egyptians
|
| 136 | They are destroyed in the Red Sea
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| 137 | The people of Moses triumph, and possess the eastern and western land
|
| 138-141 | The children of Israel become idolatrous
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| 142 | Moses makes Aaron his deputy, and fasts forty days
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| 143 | He desires to see the glory of God, but repents his rashness
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| 144-145 | God gives Moses the law on two tables
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| 146-147 | Infidels threatened for calling their prophets impostors
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| 148 | The people of Moses worship the golden calf
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| 149 | They repent their sin
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| 150 | Moses in indignation assaults Aaron
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| 151 | He prays for forgiveness for himself and Aaron
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| 152 | He calls for vengeance on the idolaters
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| 153 | God merciful to believers
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| 154 | Moses’s anger is appeased
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| 155 | He chooses seventy elders
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| 155-156 | Moses prays for deliverance from destruction by lightning
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| 156-159 | The Illiterate Prophet foretold by Moses
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| 160 | Some Jews rightly directed
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| 161 | The Israelites divided into twelve tribes
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| 161 | The rock smitten, and manna and quails given
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| 162-163 | The command to enter the city saying Hittatun, and the fate of the disobedient
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| 164-167 | The Sabbath-breakers changed into apes
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| 168-169 | Dispersion of the Jews among the nations
|
| 170-171 | Some of their successors faithful to the law of Moses
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| 172 | God shakes Mount Sinai over the Israelites
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| 173-175 | God’s covenant with the children of Adam
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| 176-179 | The curse of Balaam a warning to infidels
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| 180 | Many genii and men created for hell
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| 181-182 | The names of God not to be travestied
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| 183-184 | God’s method of leading infidels to destruction
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| 185 | Muhammad not possessed of a devil
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| 186 | No hope for the reprobate
|
| 187 | The coming of the “last hour” sudden
|
| 188 | Muhammad no seer, only a preacher
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| 189-190 | Adam and Eve were guilty of idolatry
|
| 191-198 | The folly of idolatry
|
| 199 | Muhammad commanded to use moderation
|
| 200-201 | He is to repel Satan by using the name of God
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| 202 | The people of Makkah incorrigible
|
| 203 | They charge Muhammad with imposture
|
| 204-206 | The Qurán to be listened to in silence and holy meditation
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| 1 | Spoils belong to God and his Apostle
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| 2-4 | True believers and their future reward
|
| 5-6 | Muslims reproved for distrusting their Prophet
|
| 7 | God gives the Muslims either the Quraish or their caravan
|
| 8 | The victory of Badr a seal to Islam |
| 9 | Angelic aid vouchsafed to Muhammad |
| 10-11 | The Muslims refreshed and comforted before the battle |
| 12 | The angels enjoined to comfort the faithful by destroying the infidel Quraish |
| 13-14 | Infidels are doomed to punishment here and hereafter |
| 15-16 | Muslims are never to turn their backs on the infidels on pain of hell-fire |
| 17-18 | The victory of Badr a miracle |
| 19 | The Quraish are warned against further warfare with the Muslims
|
| 20-21 | Muslims exhorted to steadfastness in faith
|
| 22-23 | Infidels compared to deaf and dumb brutes
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| 24 | Believers are to submit themselves to God and his Apostle
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| 25-28 | They are warned against civil strife, deception, and treachery
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| 29 | God’s favour to true believers
|
| 30 | Plots against Muhammad frustrated by God
|
| 31 | The infidels liken the Quran to fables
|
| 32-33 | The Quraish were protected from deserved punishment by Muhammad’s presence among them
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| 34-38 | The idolaters of Mecca rebuked and threatened
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| 39 | An amnesty offered to the Quraish
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| 40-41 | Impenitent idolaters to be extirpated from the earth
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| 42 | How the spoils of war are to be divided
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| 43-44 | The Muslims were led by God to fight at Badr to attest the truth of Islam
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| 45-46 | The Muslims encouraged, and the infidels lured to destruction, by each seeing the other to be few in number
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| 47-48 | Believers exhorted to obedience
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| 49 | Believers warned against impious vainglory
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| 50 | The devil deserts the Quraish at Badr
|
| 51-53 | The fate of hypocrites
|
| 54-56 | Their doom like that of Pharaoh and his people
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| 57 | The worst of beasts are the infidels
|
| 58-60 | Treachery to be met with its like
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| 61 | God is against the infidels
|
| 62 | The Muslims excited to war against unbelievers
|
| 63 | Condition of peace with unbelievers
|
| 64 | The miracle of Arab union
|
| 65-66 | God with the Prophet and the Muslims in warring for the faith
|
| 68-70 | Muslims reproved for accepting ransom for the captives taken at Badr
|
| 71 | Captive Quraish exhorted to accept Islam, and warned against deception
|
| 73-75 | The brotherhood of the Ansárs and Muháj Jirín
|
| 76 | The hereditary rights of blood-relations re-established
|
| 1-2 | Four months’ immunity proclaimed to idolaters
|
| 3-5 | After four months, all idolaters to be slain, with exception of those with whom treaties have been made
|
| 5-6 | Ignorant idolaters to be taught the religion of Islam, after which, if they repent, they are to be spared alive
|
| 7 | No new league to be made with idolaters
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| 8-10 | Idolaters are not to be trusted
|
| 11 | Penitent idolaters to be regarded as brethren
|
| 13-16 | Muslims exhorted to fight against the truce-breakers of Makkah
|
| 17-18 | All but Muslims to be excluded from the sacred temples
|
| 19 | Abbás rebuked for his vainglory
|
| 20-22 | The Muhájjirín assigned the first rank among Muslims—their reward
|
| 23-24 | True believers to refuse friendship with nearest kin if they be infidels
|
| 25-27 | The victory of Hunain due to God’s help
|
| 28 | Idolaters excluded from the Kaabah
|
| 29 | The Jews and Christians as well as idolaters to be attacked
|
| 30 | Jews and Christians reproved for applying the epithet “Son of God” to Ezra and Jesus
|
| 31-32 | They also worship their priests and monks
|
| 33 | Islam superior to all other religions
|
| 34-35 | Stingy Muslims likened to covetous monks—their punishment
|
| 36 | Infidels may be attacked in sacred months
|
| 37 | The sacred months not to be transferred
|
| 38-41 | Muslims exhorted to go on expedition to Tabúq by reference to God’s help to Muhammad and Abu Baqr in the cave
|
| 42 | The lukewarm Muslims rebuked for wishing to stay at home
|
| 43 | Muhammad rebuked for excusing some of these from going
|
| 44-46 | Willingness to fight for Muhammad, a test of faith
|
| 47-50 | Seditious Muslims rebuked
|
| 51-52 | The sure reward of the faithful
|
| 53-55 | God refuses the offerings of infidels and hypocrites
|
| 55 | The wealth and prosperity of infidels a sign of their reprobation
|
| 56-57 | Half-hearted Muslims reproved
|
| 58-59 | Those who had spread libellous reports regarding Muhammad’s use of alms rebuked
|
| 60 | How alms should be expended
|
| 61-69 | Grumblers and hypocrites threatened
|
| 70 | They are warned by the example of the wicked in former ages
|
| 71-73 | The faithful described—their rewards
|
| 74-75 | Hypocrites denounced and threatened
|
| 76-79 | Prosperity of infidels a prelude to their destruction
|
| 80 | God shall scoff at the scoffers
|
| 81 | The defamers of the faithful shall never be forgiven
|
| 82-84 | Punishment of the “stayers at home”
|
| 85 | Muhammad forbidden to pray at the grave of unbelievers and hypocrites
|
| 86-88 | The Prophet not to wonder at the prosperity of the wicked
|
| 89-90 | Reward of those who assist the Apostle in his wars
|
| 91 | Hypocritical Arabs of the desert reproved
|
| 92-93 | Who may lawfully remain at home in time of war
|
| 94-97 | Other hypocrites reproved
|
| 98-99 | The Baduín, the worst of hypocrites
|
| 100 | Some of them true believers
|
| 101 | The reward of the Ansars and Muhájjirín
|
| 102 | The desert Arabs and some of the people of Madína reproved
|
| 103-106 | The penitent confessors in Madína are pardoned
|
| 107 | Others await God’s decision in their case
|
| 108-111 | Denunciation against those who built a Masjid in opposition to Muhammad and his faithful ones
|
| 112-113 | True believers are sold to God
|
| 114 | Muslims not to pray for idolatrous relatives
|
| 115 | Why Abraham prayed for his idolatrous parents
|
| 116-118 | God merciful to the faithful
|
| 119 | The three recreant Ansars pardoned
|
| 120-122 | The people of Madína rebuked for want of loyalty to Muhammad
|
| 123 | Some believers excused from going to war
|
| 124 | True believers to war against neighbouring infidels and hypocrisy
|
| 125-128 | Reproof of those who doubt the revelations of God and Muhammad
|
| 129-130 | The Apostle trusts in the help of God
|
| 1-2 | The Makkans charge their Prophet with sorcery because he is a man from among them
|
| 3 | The Creator and Ruler of the universe the only true God
|
| 4 | Believers rewarded at death for good deeds
|
| 4 | Unbelievers punished after death
|
| 5-6 | God’s works are signs to all men
|
| 7-11 | Rewards and punishments of the faithful and the unbelieving
|
| 12 | God’s purpose in prospering the wicked
|
| 13 | Men pray to God in affliction, but forget Him with the return of prosperity
|
| 14-15 | The people of Makkah warned by the example of former generations
|
| 16-18 | The Quraish desire a different Quran — Muhammad protests his inability to alter it
|
| 19 | Idolaters trust intercessors who can neither profit nor harm them
|
| 20 | All men originally professed one religion
|
| 21 | The people demand of Muhammad a sign
|
| 22 | When men despise the judgments of God he threatens greater suffering
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| 23-24 | Unbelievers remember God in distress by land and sea, but forget Him when delivered
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| 25 | Life likened to water which sustains vegetable life
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| 26-28 | Paradise for Muslims and hell for the infidels
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| 29-31 | Idolaters will be deserted by their gods in the judgment-day
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| 32-37 | Idolaters exhorted to worship him whom they recognise as their Creator, Preserver, and Governor
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| 38 | The Quran no forgery; it confirms the former Scriptures
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| 39-40 | Those who charge Muhammad with imposture challenged to produce a chapter like it
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| 41 | Some believe in the Quran, others reject it
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| 42-47 | The unbelieving Quraish declared to be reprobate
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| 48 | An apostle is sent to every nation
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| 49 | Unbelievers mock at the threatenings of their prophet
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| 50 | Every nation has its fixed period of existence
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| 51-55 | Infidels will believe when their punishment comes upon them
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| 56-57 | God is the Author of life and death
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| 58-59 | The Quran an admonition and direction to the unbelievers
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| 60-61 | Lawful food not to be prohibited
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| 62 | Muhammad ever under Divine guidance
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| 63-65 | The blessedness of those who believe and fear God
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| 66-68 | Unbelievers cannot harm the Prophet
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| 69-71 | Those rebuked who say that God hath begotten children
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| 72-75 | Muhammad likened to Noah and other prophets
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| 76 | Moses and Aaron sent to Pharaoh and his princes
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| 77-82 | They are rejected as sorcerers and perverters of the national religion
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| 83 | A few of the people only believe on them
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| 84-86 | Moses and Aaron with the believers put their trust in God
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| 87 | The Israelites commanded to be constant in prayer to God
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| 88-89 | Moses’s prayer, that God would destroy the Egyptians, is heard
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| 90 | Pharaoh and his people drowned in the sea
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| 90-92 | He repents and is raised out of the sea for a sign to the people
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| 93 | The Israelites are provided with a habitation and blessing
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| 94-95 | Jews and Christians appealed to in confirmation of the statements of the Quran
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| 96-98 | No kind of miracle will suffice to make the reprobate believe
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| 99-103 | Infidels do not believe on Muhammad because God does not permit them to do so
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| 104-107 | The people of Makkah exhorted to accept the true orthodox faith
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| 108 | Muhammad not responsible for the faith or unbelief of the people
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| 109 | The Prophet exhorted to be patient
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