7: The Heights
This long chapter of 206 Meccan
verses is arranged in twenty-four sections. VV.
163-170 in section XXI date however
from Madina. The chapter was revealed after
[The Letter] Sad 38 and before Sprites 72, and concerns our eventual reward
for our conduct during this life. It contains a series of parallel yet
not identical
passages on the case histories or messages that have been conveyed through
various
prophets.
In section II the Devil tempts Adam before the tree of Good and Evil.
The Heights which give the chapter its title are mentioned in sections
V-VI, and they
present a vivid picture of Heaven and Hell which furnishes some of the
imagery
for the Divine Comedy by the Italian poet Dante Alighieri. Some consider
them
to be a lofty bridge or the site of Purgatory that lies between Heaven
and Hell.
Sections IX-X reflect on the future and on God's Oneness. Then there follows
in
detail Moses' wonderful story, especially on Mt. Sinai with the Golden
Calf (XIII
XVIII), and then his troubles with the Children of Israel. The last section
(XXIV,
long with VII), offers the vast picture of man's creation along with the
resultant
process of animal and human reproduction.