Surah 2

Surah 2:63

"(Remember) when We took a covenant with you, and raised the mountain above you: ‘Hold fast what We have given you, and remember what is in it, so that you may guard (yourselves).’"
Taking the Covenant from the Jews Verses 2:63-64
Show Full Scripture Context (2:63-64) — 2 Verses
Verse 63

وَإِذۡ أَخَذۡنَا مِيثَٰقَكُمۡ وَرَفَعۡنَا فَوۡقَكُمُ ٱلطُّورَ خُذُواْ مَآ ءَاتَيۡنَٰكُم بِقُوَّةٖ وَٱذۡكُرُواْ مَا فِيهِ لَعَلَّكُمۡ تَتَّقُونَ

(Remember) when We took a covenant with you, and raised the mountain above you: ‘Hold fast what We have given you, and remember what is in it, so that you may guard (yourselves).’

Verse 64

ثُمَّ تَوَلَّيۡتُم مِّنۢ بَعۡدِ ذَٰلِكَۖ فَلَوۡلَا فَضۡلُ ٱللَّهِ عَلَيۡكُمۡ وَرَحۡمَتُهُۥ لَكُنتُم مِّنَ ٱلۡخَٰسِرِينَ

Then you turned away after that, and if (it were) not (for the) favor of God on you, and His mercy, you would indeed have been among the losers.

Quoted Scripture
"63. And (O Children of Israel, remember) when We took your covenant and We raised above you the Mount (saying): "Hold fast to that which We have given you, and remember that which is therein so that you may acquire Taqwa.""

"64. Then after that you turned away. Had it not been for the grace and mercy of Allah upon you, indeed you would have been among the losers."

Taking the Covenant from the Jews
Allah reminded the Children of Israel of the pledges, covenants and promises that He took from them to believe in Him alone, without a partner, and follow His Messengers. Allah stated that when He took their pledge from them, He raised the mountain above their heads, so that they affirm the pledge that they gave Allah and abide by it with sincerity and seriousness. Hence, Allah's statement, {And (remember) when We raised the mountain over them as if it had been a canopy, and they thought that it was going to fall on them. (We said): "Hold firmly to what We have given you (Tawrah), and remember that which is therein (act on its commandments), so that you may fear Allah and obey Him."} (7:171).

The mount mentioned here is At-Tur, just as it was explained in Surat Al-A'raf according to the Tafsir of Ibn 'Abbas, Mujahid, 'Ata', 'Ikrimah, Al-Hasan, Ad-Dahhak, Ar-Rabi' bin Anas and others. This is more obvious. There is another report from Ibn 'Abbas saying; 'The Tur is a type of mountain that vegetation grows on, if no vegetation grows on it, it is not called Tur.' And in the Hadith about the trials, Ibn 'Abbas said; “When they (the Jews) refused to obey, Allah raised the mountain above their heads so that they would listen.” Al-Hasan said that Allah's statement, {Hold fast to that which We have given you} means, the Tawrah. Mujahid said that the Ayah commanded, “Strictly adhere to it.” Abu Al-'Aliyah and Ar-Rabi' said that, {and remember that which is therein} means, “Read the Tawrah and implement it.” Allah's statement, {Then after that you turned away. Had it not been for the grace of Allah} means, “Yet, after the firm pledge that you gave, you still deviated and broke your pledge”; {Had it not been for the grace and mercy of Allah upon you}, meaning, by forgiving you and by sending the Prophets and Messengers to you, {indeed you would have been among the losers} meaning, in this life and the Hereafter due to their breach of the covenant.

— from Tafsir Ibn Kathir (Vol. 1, Pages 251-252)

About this Source & Scholarly Authority (Tafsir Ibn Kathir)

Universal Sunni Consensus: Tafsir al-Qur'an al-Azim by Hafiz Ibn Kathir (701–774 AH / 1301–1373 AD) is universally regarded across all major schools of Sunni Islam (traditional, Salafi, Ash'ari) as the most authoritative classical exegesis. It is prized because it relies on Tafsir bil-Ma'thur—interpreting the Quran using the Quran itself, authentic Hadiths of Prophet Muhammad, and recorded statements of the early Companions (Sahabah).

Standard English Edition: This text is from the standard 10-volume English abridgment published by Dar-us-Salam Publications (supervised by Shaykh Safiur-Rahman Al-Mubarakpuri), which is the official, most widely distributed English Quranic commentary in mosques and Islamic libraries worldwide today.