This surah is a direct, unyielding rejection of a compromise proposed by the pagan leaders of Mecca.
The chapter abandons linguistic precision to engage in a back-and-forth rhetorical loop that yields no new theological information.
Surah 109:2-5:
I do not worship what you worship. Nor are you worshippers of what I worship. Nor am I a worshipper of what you worship. Nor are you worshippers of what I worship.
The Logical Critique: The text repeats the exact same semantic claim twice in a row across four consecutive verses. It states "I don't worship your gods, you don't worship mine," and then immediately states "And I don't worship your gods, and you don't worship mine."
Rather than reading like the elegant, efficient output of an omniscient mind, this mirrors the exact patterns of an intense human shouting match. The author uses immediate, circular rhetorical repetition to double down on an position during a heated political standoff in Mecca.