This axis brings together 2 instances of the use of this verse in Muhammad Shahrur’s books, linking it to the concepts and arguments that appear around it.
The verse as cited
As for those who are wretched, they will be in the Fire; for them therein is sighing and sobbing * abiding therein as long as the heavens and the earth endure, except what your Lord wills. Surely your Lord is Doer of whatever He intends
Brief reading
The two verses are used to establish the meaning of abiding in the hereafter and to connect it to the permanence of the fate of the disbelievers.
Axes
- Faith-based
- Legislative
Related concepts
- Abiding: 3
- Fire: 1
- Permanence: 1
- Hereafter: 1
Its place in the conceptual network
It enters into building the image of hereafter permanence within the meanings of reward and punishment.
The verse’s role in the argument
- Establishing: 1
- Support: 1
Pages in the atlas that point to this verse
These links collect the pages that rely on the verse or make it part of the argument within the atlas.
Related structural theses
Instances of use
- The Book and the Qur’an, p. 208: He uses them to prove the permanence of the Fire for the disbelievers and to link abiding to the remaining of the heavens and the new earth.
- Concept: Abiding
- Function of the verse here: Establishing
- Textual citation: «- {As for those who are wretched, they will be in the Fire…} (Hud 106). - {abiding therein as long as the heavens and the earth endure…} (107).»
- Toward New Foundations for Islamic Jurisprudence, p. 21: He makes the verse an example of permanence and continuity in the world of the hereafter within the two axes of being and becoming.
- Concept: Abiding
- Function of the verse here: Support
- Textual citation: «{ As for those who are wretched, they will be in the Fire… abiding therein as long as the heavens and the earth endure… } (Hud 106, 107).»
Related books
This page is presented within the general method of building the atlas.