Also known as Surah 64, Sura 64, Surah of Loss, Surah of Deprivation, The Manifestation of Losses a, Surah of the Manifestation of Losses a, The Cheating, Surah of the Cheating
At-Taghābun (, "Loss, Deprivation") is the 64th surah of the Quran with 18 verses. This Medinan surah opens with the words of glorification of God (Allah in Arabic) and is part of Al-Musabbihat group. The theme of this surah is an invitation to the Faith, obedience (to God) and the teaching of good morals, contrasting with the previous surah, Al-Munafiqun, which is concerned with hypocrisy and the lack of Iman.
At-Taghabun is the 64th chapter of the Quran, containing 18 verses, that focuses on inviting people to faith in God while emphasizing obedience and moral behavior. It matters as part of Islamic scripture because it directly counters the themes of hypocrisy discussed in the previous chapter, offering instead a positive message about spiritual commitment and ethical living.
AI-generated from the Wikipedia summary — may contain errors.
via Wikipedia infobox
At-Taghābun (, "Loss, Deprivation") is the 64th surah of the Quran with 18 verses. This Medinan surah opens with the words of glorification of God (Allah in Arabic) and is part of Al-Musabbihat group. The theme of this surah is an invitation to the Faith, obedience (to God) and the teaching of good morals, contrasting with the previous surah, Al-Munafiqun, which is concerned with hypocrisy and the lack of Iman.
==Summary== The sequence followed is that the first four verses are addressed to all human-kind, verses 5–10 to those men who do not believe in the invitation of the Qur'an, and verses 11–18 to those who accept and believe in this invitation.
via Wikidata sitelinks · CC0
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).