The verse of (Arabic: إِکْمَال الدِّيْن) or the verse of refers to verse 5:3 of the Qur'an, the central religious text in Islam. Included in this verse is the passage,
The interpretation of the verse of is disputed. Sunni sources offer different views, chief among them is that this verse was revealed to the Islamic prophet Muhammad during his Farewell Pilgrimage to Mecca to signal the completion of Islamic legislation, although some injunctions about were likely revealed later. By contrast, Shia authorities are nearly unanimous that the verse of was revealed following the announcement of Muhammad about Ali at the Ghadir Khumm, after his Farewell Pilgrimage and shortly before his death in 632 CE. In Shia sources, Muhammad received this revelation following his designation of 'Ali ibn Abi Talib at Ghadir Khumm to lead the nascent Muslim community after him. Some Sunni sources also associate the verse of with the Ghadir Khumm but reject its Shia significance.
See main article: Farewell Pilgrimage and Ghadir Khumm.
Shortly before he died in 632, the Islamic prophet Muhammad performed the Hajj in Mecca, which has become known as his Farewell Pilgrimage. In his sermon in Mecca at Mount Arafat, and also later at Ghadir Khumm by some accounts, he alerted Muslims about his impending death. On his return trip to Medina after performing the Hajj, Muhammad called the caravan to a halt at Ghadir Khumm .
There Muhammad gave a sermon in which he announced, "Anyone who has me as his, has this Ali as his ," as reported by some canonical Sunni and Shia sources, including and . In particular, the former source adds that Muhammad repeated this statement three or four times and that his companion Umar congratulated Ali after the sermon, "You have now become of every faithful man and woman."
While the authenticity of the Ghadir Khumm is rarely contested, the interpretation of the Arabic word is a source of controversy between Sunni and Shia. In this context, Shia sources interpret this word as meaning 'leader', 'master', or 'patron', and thus see the Ghadir Khumm as the appointment of Ali to succeed Muhammad on both the spiritual and temporal levels, while Sunni accounts of this sermon tend to offer little explanation or substitute the word (of God,) in place of . Sunni authors argue that Muhammad did not explicitly refer to Ali as his successor in his sermon, while the Shia writer Abdul Hosein Amini enumerates the Sunni and Shia sources that corroborate the Shia interpretation in his multivolume .
Sunni scholars proffer various views about when or why the verse of was revealed to Muhammad. The majority view is that Muhammad received this verse after his sermon at Arafat during his Farewell Pilgrimage in 632. This verdict is also accepted by the Islamicist Theodor Nöldeke . Some other Sunni reports imply that the verse was revealed first during the Farewell Pilgrimage and then again at the Ghadir Khumm. Such reports are given by the Sunni scholars al-Tabari, al-Baghdadi, and Ibn al-Jawzi . Alternatively, the verse of is linked to the 629630 Conquest of Mecca by the Sunni jurist al-Qurtubi in his exegesis. At any rate, disbelievers on that day lost hope of turning Muslims away from their faith, according to al-Tabari and al-Qurtubi.
The perfection of Islam and the completion of blessing in the verse are interpreted as the banishment of idolatry from the pilgrimage in some reports by al-Tabari and al-Zamakhshari, another Sunni exegete. Here, al-Tabari rejects the Shia view by presenting opposite traditions, which he attributes to Ibn Abbas, a key Shia figure, but also takes the unusual step of including his own verdict. Some other Sunni commentators view the perfection of Islam and the completion of blessing as a reference to the rites of Hajj which were established by Muhammad in his Farewell Pilgrimage. Alternatively, one of the interpretations offered by the Sunni theologian al-Baydawi is that God perfected his religion by the victory of Islam on that day over all other religions. In his view, this victory may readily complete the blessings of God. Yet for others, the verse of signifies the completion of revelation, although there also exist other candidates for the last verse of the Quran, namely, verses 2:281, 4:176, 9:128-9, 110:1-3. This is refined by al-Tabari and al-Zamakhshari, who explain that no ritual or legal ruling was revealed after the verse of, while al-Qurtubi asserts that Muhammad did receive some legal but no ritual injunctions after this verse. This last view that the perfection of religion in the verse corresponds to the completion of the Islamic legislation is common among Sunnis, although some legal injunctions about were probably revealed after the verse of .
Nearly unanimous, Shia sources explain that the verse of was revealed to Muhammad after his announcement about Ali at the Ghadir Khumm on the return trip after the Farewell Pilgrimage in 632. In particular, a tradition to this effect is attributed to the Shia imam Muhammad al-Baqir by various Shia authorities, including al-Qummi, al-Qadi al-Nu'man, al-Kulayni, al-Tusi, and al-Tabarsi . Alternatively, a few Shia accounts suggest that the verse and Muhammad's announcement both took place during the Farewell Pilgrimage. In Shia sources, the perfection of religion and the completion of blessing in the verse of followed the establishment of Ali's spiritual authority over Muslims.
Muhammad H. Tabatabai, author of the seminal Shia exegesis, argues in his work that 'today' in the verse of is the day of the Ghadir Khumm. In particular, the unbelievers' despair in the verse of followed Muhammad's designation of Ali to guide the nascent Muslim community, he writes. The enemies of Islam despaired from destroying it, suggests Tabatabai, because Ali's leadership would have rightly guided the Muslim community.
Tabatabai contends that the perfection of religion in the verse of is the guardianship of Ali, as opposed to the closure of Islamic legislation, advanced by some Sunni scholars. According to Tabatabai, this Sunni view ignores the injunctions about which were revealed after the verse of . The Islamicist Hamid Mavani adds that the traditions cited by Tabatabai are, that is, they have numerous, uninterrupted chains of transmission. Tabatabai elsewhere challenges the prevalent Sunni view by arguing that the perfection of Islam in this verse cannot refer to a minor occasion such as the promulgation of a religious injunction. He also maitains that the perfection of religion in the verse of was the fulfillment of an earlier divine promise in verse 24:55, which reads,
For Tabatabai, the authority of the divine guides completes the spiritual authority of God and His prophet. Nevertheless, he adds, all this was conditional on the submission of Muslims to their divine instructions at the Ghadir Khumm per verse 8:53 of the Quran, which includes the passage, "God would never change a favor He had conferred on a people unless they changed what was within themselves."