The chapter starts with the
Muqattaʿat Hāʼ Mīm, the sixth of seven Quranic chapters to do so. The following verses (2–15) discuss the "signs of God", such as the order in nature as well as its ability to serve humanity. The verses exhort mankind to reflect upon those signs and warn them of the punishment for those who turn away from God despite the signs. Verse 16 talks about the Children of Israel, whom it says were sent with the Book (
Torah) and multiple prophets, and were "favored above the world". The following verse, however, criticized the
Jews of Medina for rejecting the message of Muhammad. Verse 18 is the only verse in the Quran that explicitly mentions the term
sharia. A partial translation of the verse reads: "We have ordained for you a
sharia to live in line with". Linguistically, the Arabic term
sharia means "a straight, smooth path that leads to water", which in the context of Arabian desert culture could also mean "a path to salvation from death". This term later became a technical term for the
Islamic law, but according to scholar of Islam
Bassam Tibi, this term was initially understood as referring to a morality, not law. The remaining verses (20–37) contain Quranic descriptions of the
Judgment Day and the fate of those who deny the signs of God, i.e. the nonbelievers. Verse 28 describes that "every community will be upon its knees" on Judgment Day, a passage which gives the chapter its name. ==Ayat (verses)==