ﲛ ﲜ ﲝ ﲞ ﲟ ﲠ ﲡ ﲢ ﲣ ﲤ ﲥ ﲦ
Our Lord, indeed whoever You admit to the Fire - You have disgraced him, and for the wrongdoers there are no helpers.
ﲛ ﲜ ﲝ ﲞ ﲟ ﲠ ﲡ ﲢ ﲣ ﲤ ﲥ ﲦ
Our Lord, indeed whoever You admit to the Fire - You have disgraced him, and for the wrongdoers there are no helpers.
Tafsir
Verse range: 3:192-194
If you ask: "What is the benefit of combining the 'caller' (munadi) and 'calling' (yunadi)?" I say: The mention of the calling is absolute, then restricted by "to faith" to magnify the status of the caller, for there is no caller greater than one who calls to faith.
It is similar to saying, "I passed by a guide guiding to Islam." This is because when "caller" is used absolutely, the imagination might wander to one calling for war, or to extinguish a conflict, or to aid the distressed, or to address some calamity, or for other benefits. Likewise, "guide" might be applied to one who guides to a path, or guides to sound judgment, and so on. When you say "calling to faith" and "guiding to Islam," you have elevated the status of the caller and the guide and magnified them.
It is said: "He called him li-kadha (for such) and ila-kadha (to such)," and "he summoned him lahu (for it) and ilayhi (to it)," and "he called out to him lahu and ilayhi." Similarly, "he guided him lil-tariq (for the path) and ilayhi (to it)." This is because the meaning of reaching the end-goal and the meaning of specification are both present. The caller is the Messenger.
According to Muhammad ibn Ka'b, the Quran is the caller.
It is also possible that it is connected to an omitted element, meaning: "What You promised us, sent down upon Your messengers," or "carried upon Your messengers," because the messengers are burdened with that.
If you ask: "How do they pray to Allah to fulfill what He has promised, when Allah does not break His promise?" I say: The meaning is a request for success in maintaining the causes that lead to the fulfillment of the promise. Or, it is a form of seeking refuge in Allah and submitting to Him, just as the Prophets (peace be upon them) would seek forgiveness despite knowing they were forgiven. They intended by that to humble themselves before their Lord, to supplicate to Him, and to seek the refuge that is the hallmark of servitude.