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Yunus - Jonas

Arabic Name: يُوْنـُس

Urdu Name: یونس

Type: Makki

Serial Number: 10

Revelation Order: 51

Total Verses: 109

Parah: 11

Rukus: 11

Sajda: None

وَمَا كَانَ لِنَفۡسٍ اَنۡ تُؤۡمِنَ اِلَّا بِاِذۡنِ اللّٰهِ‌ؕ وَيَجۡعَلُ الرِّجۡسَ عَلَى الَّذِيۡنَ لَا يَعۡقِلُوۡنَ‏
wa-maa kaa-na li-naf-sin a(n)~-tu'-mi-na il-laa bi-idh-nil-laa-hi wa-yaje-a-lur-rije-sa a-lal-la-dhee-na laa ya'-qi-luun
Surah Yunus (10:100)

Quick Facts about this Verse

Surah

Yunus

Revealed

Makki

Position

Juz 11

Explore this Verse

Verse Meaning

According to the classical scholar Imam Al-Tabari, verse 10:100 establishes a foundational principle of Islamic theology: no soul can attain faith (iman) except through the specific permission and decree (idhn) of Allah. This is not a matter of coercion but of divine will and wisdom. A comprehensive review of tafsirs reveals a profound connection between this divine will and human accountability. While faith is a gift granted by Allah's permission, the verse simultaneously explains the condition that warrants divine wrath. Scholars like Ibn Kathir and Al-Saddi interpret 'ar-rijs'—variously translated as abomination, filth, or punishment—as the spiritual consequence of misguidance and confusion. The hidden gem revealed through synthesizing these classical commentaries is the direct link between this 'rijs' and the failure to use reason ('alladheena la ya'qiloon'). Al-Qurtubi and Al-Tabari concur that this refers to those who do not contemplate Allah's signs and proofs. Therefore, the verse masterfully balances the concept of divine predestination with human responsibility. Faith is ultimately by Allah's permission, but the state of spiritual impurity and divine anger is a just consequence for those who neglect the very faculty of intellect that Allah bestowed upon them to recognize truth.

Questions for Reflection

Textual Contemplation

Imam Al-Tabari notes that 'idhn' means Allah's permission and decree. Contemplate the difference between faith being a 'right' versus a 'permission'. How does viewing your own faith as a precious, permitted gift from Allah, rather than something you achieved on your own, change your sense of gratitude and humility?

Personal Transformation

Ibn Kathir and other scholars link 'ar-rijs' (filth/confusion) to the failure to use reason ('la ya'qiloon'). Honestly reflect on an area of your life where you feel spiritual confusion or impurity. Does this verse prompt you to consider if there has been a corresponding lack of deep thinking and reflection ('tafakkur') in that area?

Relational Wisdom

As Al-Qurtubi's analysis implies, Allah is perfectly just. How does this verse help you reconcile the concept of Allah's absolute will over who believes with His perfect justice? Contemplate how placing the consequence ('ar-rijs') on the *action* of 'not using reason' demonstrates this divine justice.

Practical Applications

Cultivate intellectual humility by acknowledging that true faith is a divine gift, not merely a product of one's own intellect.

In an age of intellectual pride, this serves as a grounding principle, reminding us to pray for guidance alongside our pursuit of knowledge.

Engage in active, daily reflection ('tafakkur') on Allah's signs in creation and revelation as a primary act of worship.

Dedicate time away from digital distractions to consciously ponder nature, the cosmos, or the Quran's verses, journaling the insights received.

Diagnose spiritual stagnation by examining your use of reason. If you feel spiritual 'filth' ('rijs') or confusion, this verse directs you to investigate if you are neglecting deep contemplation.

When feeling distant from faith, instead of just feeling guilty, ask: 'Am I truly engaging my mind to understand Allah's message and world?'

Hidden Gem

The synthesis reveals a profound spiritual dynamic: the verse does not say Allah withholds His 'idhn' (permission) from those who do not use reason. Rather, it says He 'places rijs' (filth/abomination) upon them. This suggests that the failure to use reason doesn't just leave one in a neutral state of ignorance; it actively invites a state of spiritual pollution that clouds the heart and mind, making the reception of divine permission for faith impossible. It is an active process, not a passive one.

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