Surah An-Nasr (النصر) is a Medinan surah of the Quran with 3 verses. Read, listen and memorize this surah with our interactive tools.
Updated on 07 March 2026 at 4:16 PM
📖 1 min read
Surah An-Nasr in numbers
Chronological revelation order
Revelation no. 112 / 114
(Medinan)
20
words
-97.2% vs avg.
84
letters
-97.3% vs avg.
min read
3
verses
-94.5% vs avg.
Keyword frequency في سورة An-Nasr
الله2
رب1
Most frequent letters في سورة An-Nasr
ا
8
#1
ل
7
#2
ن
6
#3
و
6
#4
ٱ
5
#5
Main themes of the surah في سورة An-Nasr
بالاحتجاب بإرادته الكبرياء والعز والتجبر والقهر مع أن المألو...
By veiling Himself with His great dignity, might, and omnipotence, yet He is {was} ever-accepting of repentance and remorseful ones. This is because the One who is characterized by these attributes would not typically accept excuses or remorse. However, God is the One who continually accepts repentance, guiding those whom Satan has misled back to the path of righteousness, particularly those from among His merciful servants. It was He who guided your supporters, gradually bringing them into the fold of Islam, until they eventually entered Makkah in a multitude of ten thousand after the revelation of Surah Al-Fath. Moreover, He will return you to the state in which your exaltation becomes more apparent in the highest assembly, and He will restore your community to the good state it once was, after they may have strayed from His path due to disobedience or sin. God indeed guides them on the best path, for the end of the surah returns to its beginning, as it is only due to God's acceptance of repentance that the Helper, who facilitated the conquest and the union of its beginning and end, is found. It is also known that every part of it is a consequence of what precedes it. Thus, God's acceptance of His servant's repentance is a result of the servant's own repentance through seeking forgiveness, which is a request for pardon with its conditions. This, in turn, is a fruit of the servant's perfect faith in their Lord, which is indicated by their efforts to exalt His religion and their facilitation of entry into it, despite the fact that they were once the most obstinate and arrogant of people.