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The Quranic Story and Its Purposes — Why Are Stories Repeated?

terms Level: basic ulum-quran trm-059
لَقَدۡ كَانَ فِي قَصَصِهِمۡ عِبۡرَةٞ لِّأُوْلِي ٱلۡأَلۡبَٰبِ
— يوسف 111
Definition of the Quranic story:
Historical events and figures mentioned by the Quran for a guidance purpose — not mere historical documentation.

Purposes of the Quranic story:
  1. Steadying the heart: "And each account of the messengers We relate to you is that by which We strengthen your heart." (11:120)
  2. Affirming monotheism: Every prophet's story ends with the victory of monotheism over polytheism.
  3. Lesson and admonition: "Indeed in their stories is a lesson for those of understanding." (12:111)
  4. Proving prophethood: Mentioning accounts of past nations the Prophet did not witness.
  5. Revealing Allah's way with nations: Injustice destroys; truthfulness saves.
Why are stories repeated?
  1. Each repetition serves a new purpose in each surah — Moses in Al-Baqarah focuses on legislation; in Ta-Ha on revelation; in Al-Qasas on biography.
  2. Linguistic inimitability — told in varied words without contradiction.
  3. Steadying the Prophet's heart through repetition and variation.
Source: Al-Dhahabi, Al-Tafsir wa al-Mufassirun (1/54); Al-Zarkashi, Al-Burhan (1/288); Ibn Kathir (4/425)
Question: Why are Quranic stories repeated? Name three purposes of the Quranic story.
Answer: Reasons for repetition: new purpose in each surah, linguistic inimitability, steadying the Prophet heart. Purposes: steadying hearts, affirming monotheism, lesson and admonition.
Printed from quran.zayenha.com — 6/15/2026