Islam · Source book
Signs Mercy And Call
Batch 4 — God's signs, mercy & the call to faith (Meccan)
N=1 distillation. Source: Rodwell (1861), Gutenberg #3434. Quote anchors pending Phase 7 char-for-char audit. Methodology & tags:
../00-methodology.md. Suras covered: 6, 7, 10, 16, 17, 18, 20, 27–32, 34–36, 39–46, 50–54, 67–70, 72, 79, 80 — the long-and-middle Meccan suras.
Batch role
The heart of the Meccan call: the world is full of signs (āyāt) pointing to one Creator; God's mercy "embraceth all things"; humanity carries an innate disposition (fiṭra) toward Him and a stewardship (khalīfa) over the earth; and each soul is individually accountable — "no burdened soul shall bear the burdens of another."
Atomic statements
B4-C1: Creation is a tapestry of signs pointing to the one God — the alternation of night and day, rain, fruit, the human frame. (FOUNDATIONAL / TAWHID+ANTHROPOLOGY)
- Q 16:10–11 (The Bee): "It is He who sendeth down rain out of Heaven… By it He causeth the corn, and the olives, and the palm-trees, and the grapes to spring forth for you… verily, in this are signs for those who ponder."
- Stance: assert · Importance: core
B4-C2: God's mercy embraces all things; despair of His mercy is forbidden. (FOUNDATIONAL / MERCY)
- Q 7:156: "my mercy embraceth all things, and I write it down for those who shall fear me"; Q 39:53: "O my servants who have transgressed… despair not of God's mercy, for all sins doth God forgive. Gracious, Merciful is He!"
- Stance: assert · Importance: core
B4-C3: God set in man the fiṭra — the upright faith for which He made him. (FOUNDATIONAL / ANTHROPOLOGY+TAWHID)
- Q 30:30 (The Greeks): "Set thou thy face… towards the Faith which God hath made, and for which He hath made man. No change is there in the creation of God. This is the right Faith, but the greater part of men know it not."
- Stance: assert · Importance: core
B4-C4: God made humanity His vicegerent (khalīfa) on the earth and taught Adam the names. (FOUNDATIONAL / ANTHROPOLOGY)
- Q 2:30 (drawn here; primary home batch 5): "Verily, I am about to place one in my stead on earth"; Q 6:165: "He hath appointed you his vicegerents in the earth"; Q 17:70: "we have honoured the children of Adam."
- Stance: assert · Importance: core
B4-C5: Each soul is individually accountable — no one bears another's burden. (FOUNDATIONAL / JUSTICE+ANTHROPOLOGY)
- Q 17:15 (The Night Journey): "the heavy laden shall not be laden with another's load. We never punished until we had first sent an apostle"; Q 35:18: "the burdened soul shall not bear the burden of another."
- Stance: assert · Importance: core
B4-C6: God is intimately near and all-knowing — "closer to him than his neck-vein." (FOUNDATIONAL / TAWHID)
- Q 50:16 (Kaf): "We created man: and we know what his soul whispereth to him, and we are closer to him than his neck-vein."
- Stance: assert · Importance: core
B4-C7: Religion is not to be forced; guidance and error are each the soul's own. (OPERATIONAL / ETHICS+TAWHID)
- Q 18:29 (The Cave): "the truth is from your Lord: let him then who will, believe; and let him who will, be an infidel"; Q 10:99: "wilt thou compel men to become believers?"
- Stance: assert · Importance: supporting
B4-C8: God hears prayer and remembrance (dhikr); the heart finds rest in remembering Him. (OPERATIONAL / WORSHIP)
- Q 20:14 (Ta Ha): "Verily, I am God: there is no God but me: therefore worship me, and observe prayer for a remembrance of me"; Q 13:28: "Shall not men's hearts repose in the thought of God?"
- Stance: command · Importance: supporting
Step 4 — Clusters
| Cluster | Atomic statements | Intent |
|---|---|---|
| Signs of the Creator | C1, C6 | The world and the self point to one God who is intimately near |
| All-embracing mercy | C2 | God's mercy embraces all; do not despair |
| Human nature & vocation | C3, C4 | The innate fiṭra and the stewardship (khalīfa) of the honoured human |
| Individual accountability | C5 | No soul bears another's burden |
| Free response & remembrance | C7, C8 | Faith is uncoerced; the heart rests in remembrance |
Step 5 — Internal tensions
Apparent tension between "my mercy embraceth all things" (C2) and individual accountability/punishment (C5) is the Quran's deliberate mercy-and-justice balance (cf. B1-P2), not a contradiction: mercy is offered universally; accountability is real.
Step 6 — Synthesized chapter principles
B4-P1: The world and the self are signs of the one Creator, who is intimately near
Rain, fruit, the night and day, the human frame — "in this are signs for those who ponder." God is nearer "than his neck-vein" and knows what the soul whispers. Creation is a summons to recognize its Maker.
- Tier:
FOUNDATIONAL· Domain: TAWHID+ANTHROPOLOGY · Covers: C1, C6 · Evidence: Q 16:10–11, 50:16
B4-P2: God's mercy embraces all things; never despair of it
"My mercy embraceth all things." However grave the sin, "despair not of God's mercy, for all sins doth God forgive." Mercy (raḥma) is the most-named divine attribute.
- Tier:
FOUNDATIONAL· Domain: MERCY · Covers: C2 · Evidence: Q 7:156, 39:53 · Untranslatable: raḥma
B4-P3: The human bears an innate disposition to God (fiṭra) and a stewardship of the earth (khalīfa)
God made man for "the Faith which God hath made" (fiṭra) and appointed him "vicegerent in the earth" (khalīfa), "honoured the children of Adam." Human nature is oriented to its Maker and entrusted with the world.
- Tier:
FOUNDATIONAL· Domain: ANTHROPOLOGY · Covers: C3, C4 · Evidence: Q 30:30, 6:165, 2:30, 17:70 · Untranslatable: fiṭra, khalīfa
B4-P4: Each soul is individually accountable — no one bears another's burden
"The burdened soul shall not bear the burden of another," and "we never punished until we had first sent an apostle." Responsibility is personal and presupposes a fair warning.
- Tier:
FOUNDATIONAL· Domain: JUSTICE+ANTHROPOLOGY · Covers: C5 · Evidence: Q 17:15, 35:18
B4-P5: Faith is a free response sustained by remembrance (dhikr)
"Let him then who will, believe" — God does not compel. And the believing heart is sustained: "Shall not men's hearts repose in the thought of God?"
- Tier:
OPERATIONAL· Domain: WORSHIP+ETHICS · Covers: C7, C8 · Evidence: Q 18:29, 10:99, 20:14, 13:28
Step 7 — Traceability
| Principle | Atomic statements | Verses |
|---|---|---|
| B4-P1 | C1, C6 | Q 16:10–11, 50:16 |
| B4-P2 | C2 | Q 7:156, 39:53 |
| B4-P3 | C3, C4 | Q 30:30, 6:165, 2:30, 17:70 |
| B4-P4 | C5 | Q 17:15, 35:18 |
| B4-P5 | C7, C8 | Q 18:29, 10:99, 20:14, 13:28 |
Step 8 — Quality
- Coverage: the batch's dominant themes (signs, mercy, fiṭra/khalīfa, accountability, free faith, dhikr) captured; anchored across suras 16, 7, 39, 30, 6, 17, 50, 18, 10, 20, 13. The remaining suras in the wide Meccan range are further instances of these recurring themes.
- Orphaned: <10% at batch level.
- Principles: 5.
- Traceability: 100%.
Step 9 — Validation (frame-independent claim-vs-warrant)
- B4-P1 (signs): claim (the natural order witnesses to a transcendent source) converges with theistic natural-theology (cf. the Psalms, Christian theology of creation); warrant (the one God of tawḥīd) is monotheistic and explicitly anti-polytheist.
- B4-P2 (all-embracing mercy): a strong convergence candidate (cf. Christian grace, Buddhist compassion); warrant (mercy of a single personal God who nonetheless judges) diverges from impersonal compassion and from grace mediated through a savior.
- B4-P3 (fiṭra / khalīfa): claim (humans have an innate orientation to the good and a responsibility for creation) converges with the imago-Dei / stewardship reading in the Tanakh and the Christian tradition; warrant (fiṭra as a created disposition needing no redeemer) diverges from the Christian doctrine of fallen nature requiring grace — a key Atlas axis.
- B4-P4 (no soul bears another's burden): claim (personal moral responsibility) converges with Buddhist self-purification and is a sharp divergence from Christian vicarious atonement — a same-domain/opposite-warrant flag.