This axis brings together 1 instance of the use of this verse in Muhammad Shahrur’s books, linking it to the concepts and arguments that appear around it.
The verse text as cited
Then, when the Trumpet is blown with one blast * and the earth and the mountains are lifted and crushed with a single crushing blow
Brief reading
Shahrur interprets it as the first blast associated with the destruction of the cosmos, not the final blast of resurrection.
Axes
- Belief-related
- Narrative and historical
Associated concepts
- The first blast: 2
Its place in the network of concepts
It links a cosmic scene with distinguishing the stages of the eschatological event.
The role of the verse in the argument
- Distinguishing: 1
Instances of use
- The Book and the Qur’an, p. 203: He interprets it as the first blast associated with the destruction of the cosmos, not the final blast of resurrection.
- Concept: the first blast
- Function of the verse here: Distinguishing
- Textual evidence: «{فَإِذَا نُفِخَ فِي الصُّورِ نَفْخَةً وَاحِدَةً} (al-Haqqah 13) because he followed it with his words {وَحُمِلَتِ الْأَرْضُ وَالْجِبَالُ فَدُكَّتَا دَكَّةً وَاحِدَةً} (al-Haqqah 14).»
Related books
This page is presented within the general method of building the atlas.