Skip to main content
NewQuran Gallery Chatbot is live!
Start Chat with AI
Logo

Ar-Ra"d - The Thunder

Arabic Name: الرَّعْد

Urdu Name: گرج

Type: Madani

Serial Number: 13

Revelation Order: 96

Total Verses: 43

Parah: 13

Rukus: 6

Sajda: 15

الَّذِيۡنَ يُوۡفُوۡنَ بِعَهۡدِ اللّٰهِ وَلَا يَنۡقُضُوۡنَ الۡمِيۡثَاقَۙ‏
al-la-dhee-na yoo-foo-na bi-ah-dil-laa-hi wa-laa yan-qu-doo-nal-mee-thaa-q
Surah Ar-Ra"d (13:20)

Related Hadith

"لا إيمان لمن لا أمانة له, ولا دين لمن لا عهد له (No faith for one who has no trust, and no religion for one who has no covenant)."
Mentioned by Al-Tabari in his tafsir, commonly found in hadith collections like Musnad Ahmad.Hasan (Good) by many scholars.

Directly establishes the link between keeping one's word and the validity of one's faith.

Quick Facts about this Verse

Surah

Ar-Ra"d

Revealed

Madani

Position

Juz 13

Explore this Verse

Verse Meaning

According to As-Sa'di's comprehensive analysis, Quran 13:20 describes the foremost quality of 'Ulu al-Albab' (people of profound understanding): their absolute integrity in fulfilling 'the covenant of Allah' and never breaking their solemn pledges ('al-mithaq'). This is not limited to a single promise but encompasses all of Allah's rights upon His servants—His commands and prohibitions—and every covenant, oath, and vow that people make. A cross-tafsir synthesis reveals the depth of this concept: Al-Qurtubi and others explain that this 'covenant' operates on multiple levels, from the primordial pledge taken from all souls in pre-eternity (the Covenant of Alast) to the practical, everyday promises and contracts made between people. The hidden gem emerging from this comprehensive view is that covenant-fulfillment is the master key to all other righteous characteristics. It is the defining trait that separates the people of understanding from the hypocrites, who, as Ibn Kathir notes, are known for breaking their word. This verse establishes that a believer's entire relationship with God and creation is built upon a foundation of sacred trust and unwavering reliability. The emphasis on not just fulfilling the covenant (`yufun`) but also not breaking the fortified pledge (`la yanqudun al-mithaq`) highlights a proactive commitment to integrity in all spheres of life, making it the bedrock of true faith and intellect.

Questions for Reflection

Personal Integrity

As-Sa'di explains the covenant is comprehensive. Reflect on the small promises you make to yourself and others daily. Where is the alignment between your word and your actions strongest, and where does it need reinforcing? How does this reflect your larger covenant with Allah?

The Primordial Pledge

Al-Qurtubi connects this verse to the primordial covenant where our souls testified to Allah's Lordship. Close your eyes and try to feel the echo of that ancient promise. How does remembering this pledge change your perspective on the challenges and obligations you face today?

Faith and Covenants

Reflect on the Prophet's (ﷺ) statement cited by Al-Tabari: 'No faith for one who has no trust, and no religion for one who has no covenant.' In what specific ways is your fulfillment of promises—to your family, at work, in your community—a direct expression and proof of your faith?

Practical Applications

Conduct a Personal 'Covenant Audit' to align your actions with your promises to Allah and people.

Review your five daily prayers (covenant with Allah), your business contracts, your promises to your family, and even your New Year's resolutions.

Adopt the principle of 'Radical Reliability' by refusing to make promises you are not certain you can keep.

Before committing to a project deadline, a social engagement, or a financial promise, pause and assess your capacity to fulfill it with excellence.

Internalize the 'Primordial Promise' to reframe daily obligations as acts of fulfilling a sacred, ancient pledge.

When feeling burdened by a religious duty or an ethical choice, remind yourself: 'My soul already agreed to this. I am simply being true to myself.'

Hidden Gem

The synthesis of tafsirs reveals a profound truth: 'Mithaq' (pledge) is often a covenant fortified with an oath. This implies that many of the commitments we make, even implicitly, are witnessed by Allah. Contemplating this transforms mundane promises into sacred trusts, elevating our entire standard of personal conduct and accountability.

Previous

Ayah 20 of 43

Next

Scroll to see more verses or use the dropdown in the breadcrumb to jump to any verse

Common Questions

2 more questions available in the full page

Ask AI