Al-Ghafūr [1] is one of the Names of God in Islam. It means The Ever-Forgiving or The All-Forgiving. It is part of the 99 Names of God, by which Muslims regard God, and it is described in Qur'ān and Sunnah.
Linguistic translation of Al-Ghafūr
editThe root verb of Al-Ghaffoor and Al-Ghaffaar is gha-fa-ra (غَفَرَ) which points to three main meanings:
- The first meaning is to cover, veil, conceal, and hide.
- The second meaning is to pardon, to forgive, and to set aright.
- And the third meaning is to cover a thing to protect it (from dirt).
Occurrence in the Qur'an
editGod’s name Al-Ghafūr occurs 91 times in the Quran, making it one of the most common names mentioned there, and is often mentioned alongside other Attributes of God:
- Ar-Raheem: is mentioned 72 times with Al-Ghafūr, one of the most common sets of pairs of Allah’s names.
- Al-Haleem ('The Forbearing one': 6 times.
- Al-’Afuww: 4 times.
- Ash-Shakuwr: 3 times
- Al-Aziz ('The Almighty' or 'The Honorable': twice.
- Al-Waduwd ('The Most Loving'): once.
References
edit- ^ ALA-LC romanization of Arabic: الغفور