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Iblis

Iblis (Arabic: إِبْلِيسْ, romanizedIblīs),[2] alternatively known as Eblīs,[3] is the leader of the devils (shayāṭīn) in Islam. According to the Quran, Iblis was thrown out of heaven, after he refused to prostrate himself before Adam. Due to the similarities of a being cast out of heaven, he is often compared to the equivalent of the Christian Satan.

The Angels meet Adam, the prototypical human being. They share, albeit to a lesser degree, the defiant reaction of Iblis, who haughtily turns his head away. Painting from a manuscript of the Manṭiq al-ṭayr (The Conference of the Birds) of Farīd al-Dīn ʿAṭṭār. Iran, Shiraz, 899/1494.[1]

Islamic theology (kalām) regards Iblis as an example of attributes and actions which God punishes with hell (Nār). Regarding the origin and nature of Iblis, there are two different viewpoints.[4][5] According to one, Iblis is an angel, and according to the other, he is the father of the jinn. Quranic exegesis (tafsīr) and the Stories of the Prophets (Qiṣaṣ al-anbiyāʾ) elaborate on Iblis' origin story in greater detail.

In the first version, before Iblis was cast down from heaven, he used to be an angel, created from fire, called ʿAzāzīl. God appointed him to obliterate the jinn who precedingly inhabited of the Earth until they became disobedient and destructive. Consequently God decided to replace them with humans.[4] When God announces to create a successor to the jinn, the angels objected to that decision. When God taught Adam and showed the superiority of Adam compared to the angels in regards of knowledge, angels were ordered to prostrate themselves. All the angels obeyed except Iblis, who claims that the command was unjust and refuses to follow order. Whereupon, he was punished by being relegated from an angel (malāk) to a devil (shayṭān) and is expelled.[4]

In the alternative account, Iblis was not one of the angels but the ancestor of the jinn. Created from the fires beneath the seventh earth, he worshipped God for thousands of years until he was elevated to the company of angels in the seventh heaven.[4] This account draws a distinction between Iblis and the angels by their moral abilities, arguing that angels are incapable of disobedience, but Iblis was free to choose. Thus, only Iblis, being a jinni, was able to refuse to prostrate himself when Adam was created. Doing so, he was expelled from heaven and sent to earth, where he sired the jinn and devils.[4]

In Islamic tradition, Iblis is identified with ash-Shayṭān ("the Devil"), often followed by the epithet ar-Rajim (Arabic: ٱلرَجِيم, lit.'the Accursed').[6] Shayṭān is usually applied to Iblis in order to denote his role as the tempter, while Iblīs is his proper name. Some Muslim scholars uphold a more ambivalent role for Iblis, considering him not simply a devil but also "the truest monotheist" (Tawḥīd-i Iblīs), because he would only bow before the Creator and not his creations, while preserving the term shayṭān exclusively for evil forces.[4]: 46 [7][8] The idea that Iblis is not evil but a necessity for the world is also used in Muslim literature. Others have strongly rejected sympathies with Iblis, considering it a form of deception to lead people astray.

Naming and etymology edit

In Islamic traditions, Iblīs is known by many alternative names or titles, such as Abū Murrah (Arabic: أَبُو مُرَّة, "Father of Bitterness") as the name stems from the word "murr" – meaning "bitter", ‘aduww Allāh or ‘aduwallah (Arabic: عُدُوّ الله, "enemy or foe" of God)[9] and Abū Al-Harith (Arabic: أَبُو الْحَارِث, "the father of the plowmen").[10] He is also known by the nickname "Abū Kardūs" (Arabic: أَبُو كَرْدُوس), which may mean "Father who piles up, crams or crowds together".

The designation Iblīs (Arabic: إِبْلِيس) may be an epithet referencing an attribute, deriving from the Arabic verbal root BLS ب-ل-س (with the broad meaning of "remain in grief").[11] According to Ibn Manzur this is the major opinion among Arab scholars, who maintain the tradition that the personal name of this being was ʿAzāzīl.[12]

Some Muslim teachers, such as al-Jili,[13] relate this name to talbis meaning confusion,[14] because God's command confused him.

Another possibility is that it is derived from Ancient Greek διάβολος (diábolos) (which is also the source of the English word 'devil') via a Syriac intermediary.[15][2] The name itself is not found in Arab literature before the Quran, suggesting it is not of pre-Islamic Arabian origin.[16]

Kalam edit

Quran edit

Iblis is mentioned 11 times in the Quran by name, nine times related to his refusal against God's Command to prostrate himself before Adam. The term šayṭān is more prevalent, although Iblis is sometimes referred to as šayṭān; the terms are not interchangeable. The different fragments of Iblis's story are scattered across the Quran. In the aggregate, the story can be summarised as follows:[17]

When God created Adam, He ordered the angels to bow before the new creation. All of the angels bowed down, but Iblis refused to do so. He argued that since he was created from fire, he is superior to humans, who were made from clay-mud, and that he should not prostrate himself before Adam.[18] As punishment for his haughtiness, God banished Iblis from heaven and condemned him to hell. Later, Iblis requested the ability to try to mislead Adam and his descendants, whereupon God grants the request, thus depicting God as the power behind both the angels and devils.[19]

Surah al-Kahf states in reference to Iblis:

[...] except Iblis, he was one of the jinni [...] (Arabic: إِلَّاۤ إِبۡلِیسَ كَانَ مِنَ ٱلۡجِنِّ "illā iblīsa kāna mina l-jinni") (18:50)

This led to a dispute among the mufassirūn (exegetes), who disagree on whether the term is meant to be a nisbah to designate Iblis's heavenly origin (i.e. an angel) in contrast to the earthly Adam (and the jinn preceding him), or if the term is meant to set Iblis apart from the angels and that he is the progenitor of the jinn dwelling in paradise until his fall (comparable to how Adam fell then he sinned in the Garden).[19][20][21] This dispute goes back to the formative stage of Islam. These two conflicting opinions are based on the interpretations of ibn Abbas and Hasan al-Basri respectively.[19] Muslim scholars then followed one of these two interpretations.[19]

Those scholars who agree on an angelic nature of Iblis, regard further verses of the Quran as allusions to Iblis. Surah 21:29 (al-’anbiyā) states:

Whoever of them were to say, "I am a god besides Him", they would be rewarded with Hell by Us [...]

According to multiple scholars (Tabari, Suyuti, al-Nasafi,[19] al-Māturīdī[22]), this verse was meant to be a revelation about Iblis since only he was claiming divine authority for himself, and does so by inviting to follow egoistic desires (nafs).[19] The term sijjin, mentioned in Surah 83:7, is regarded by several scholars (Tabari, Tha'labi, Nasafi) as a prison in hell for Iblis. From this place, he would send his demons to the surface.[19]

Affiliation edit

 
Painting from a Herat manuscript of the Persian rendition by Bal'ami of the Annals/Tarikh (universal chronicle) of al-Tabari, depicting angels honoring Adam, except Iblis, who refuses. Held at the Topkapi Palace Museum Library.

There are different opinions regarding the origin of Iblis. This dispute is closely related to doctrinal differences regarding free will. Like humans, jinn are created on earth to "worship" ('abada) God (51:56), and are capable of righteous and evil acts (11:119).[23] If angels can sin or not is disputed in Islam. Those who say that Iblis was not an angel, but a jinni, argue that only jinn (and humans), but not angels are capable of disobedience.[15] This is the generally opinion among the Qadariyah and most Mu'tazilites.[15] This view is also found to be prominent among many Salafis.[24]

On the other hand, the term for celestial beings is usually malāk (angel) in early Islam.[25] Tabarsi notes that if Iblis were a jinni, he could not have been one of the custodians of paradise.[15] Many among those who say that Iblis was an angel read Surah 18:50 as a nisba for the term jannāt, thus referring to Iblis' heavenly origin (this reading is preferred by – among others – Ash'ari,[26] Suyuti, and Al-Tha'labi[2]). Most mutakallimūn (theologians) do not consider angels to be infallible, al-Razi being an exception.[27]

Nontheless, if faith (ʾīmān) in God is proportional to obedience and knowledge of God,[15] theologians still need to explain the cause for Iblis' fall. The Hanābila and Ash'arites would argue that Iblis was ignorant (jahl) and did not understand God's will (irāda).[15] However, Iblis' unbelief (kufr) would be ultimately caused by God.[15] Al-Maghrībī states that, when the angels questioned the creation of Adam, God opened the angels' eyes for the characteristics of Adam, but closed the eyes of Iblis, so he would remain in resistance (iḥtijāj).[15] Therefore, Iblis would have been created as a disobedient angel and function as God's tempter.[28]

Abu Mansur al-Maturidi, the eponymous founder of Māturīdī theology, considers some sort of middle ground, arguing that angels have been put to a test in the heavens, just as humans and jinn are tested on earth. If they were not tested, the Quran would not compliment angels for obedience.[29]

Function edit

 
Depiction of Iblis in the epic poem Shahnameh

Within Muslim thought, Iblis is generally not considered to be the originator of evil. However, there are a few exceptions among Muslim scholars. The Qadariyya asserted that evil was introduced by disobedience to God, and Iblis was the first who disobeyed. This view is sometimes attributed to Hasan al-Basri.[30] An extreme position among the Qadariyya asserts that Iblis was not even created by God, but this view is generally rejected as beliefs of the Manichaeans (majūs).[15] Al-Māturīdī argued that such dualistic worldviews are irreconcilable with the Islamic doctrine of tawḥīd.[31] Likewise, the jinn would have sinned prior to Iblis.[32]

Iblis' disobedience is seen as an example and warning for the thaqalān (those who are accountable for their deeds).[33] Those who say that Iblis was predestined to fall, say that he was created in such a way that God can demonstrate his entire spectrum of attributes (for example; jalal (majesty)) in his eternal speech (i.e. the Quran), and teaching the consequences of sin.[34]

Three things to avoid are marked by the fall of Iblis: Transgression (ma'siyah), arrogance (istikbār), and comparison (qiyās) to another creature of God.[15] Disobedience alone is not considered to be the cause of Iblis' damnation, but the reason behind his action and the implied underlying unbelief.[32]

Although not the cause of evil, Iblis is known as the progenitor of tempters, known as the "father of the devils" (Abū ash-Shayāṭīn).[35](p129) Ḥādīth literature emphasizes their evil influences over humans rather than treating them as proper personalities.[36] Muslims are advised to "seek refuge" from such influences and are recommanded to recite duʿāʾ (prayers) for protection.[37]

Satan's Monotheism (Tawḥīd-i Iblīs) edit

 
Adam honoured by Angels – Persian miniature. Iblis, black-faced and without hair (top-right of the picture). He refuses to prostrate himself with the other Angels.

The predestinarians approach was attractive for many Muslim thinkers to avoid dualistic tendencies. Some extreme positions went as far as to consider the belief that evil derives from an individual's own responsibility without God's interference, as a form of attributing a second power to God, thus falling into širk (polytheism).[38] From this idea of absolute predeterminism, some scholars and ṣūfis[who?] developed sympathy for Iblis. They began to consider Iblis to be a "true monotheist" only bested by Muhammed, who would accept punishment and suffering over bowing before something else but God, an idea later known as "Satan's monotheism" (tawḥīd-i Iblīs).[7]

This idea is reflected in a transmission by Wahb ibn Munabbih, an eminent teller of Israʼiliyyat, stating that Iblis met Moses on the slopes of Sinai. When Moses asks Iblis why he refused God's order, he replies that the command was actually a test.[39] This story inspired people, such as Mansur al-Hallaj and Ahmad Ghazali. The latter depicted Iblis as a paragon of self-sacrifice and stated at some point: "Whoever doesn't learn monotheism from Satan is a heretic (zindīq )."[40] His student, Sheikh Adi ibn Musafir, asserted that Iblis' disobedience was wanted by God, or God would be powerless and a powerless being cannot be attributed to God.[41]

Such positive depictions are, however, by no means universal among the predestinarians. Ibn Ghanim refers to the report of the meeting between Iblis and Moses, and argues that Iblis is just using predeterminism as an excuse to cover his unbelief and use a subtle deception by evoking sympathies.[42] Ruzbihan Baqli calls Iblis' apology a form of deception.[43]

Jalāl al-Dīn Muḥammad Rūmī (1207–1273) argues that it is pointless to use predeterminism as an excuse for one's own demise.[15] He invokes the analogy between Adam and Iblis: While both were destined to fall, Iblis and his offspring blamed God, while Adam pleaded for forgiveness nontheless. He advises humans to do the same.[44][15] In this context, Rumi declares that love is more important than intelligence and states: "(Cunning) intelligence is from Iblis, and love from Adam."[45]

In his Masnavi (Book 2), he refers to several attempts to excuse Iblis, when he wakens Mu'awiya for the morning prayer (ṣalāt al-fajr). Mu'awiya is sceptical towards Iblis' alleged good intentions, so he begins to question him. Iblis argues that an original angel, who was predestined to fall, could never be truly evil.[46][47] Mu'awiya realizes he cannot outsmart Iblis and seeks refuge in God instead. When Iblis sees that he cannot win Mu'awiya over, he confesses that he never had good intentions in the first place and used these arguements just to trick people. Instead, he woke him up because missing a prayer and consequent repentance (tawbah), would bring him closer to God than performing the prayer. Rumi makes clear that there is no reason to have sympathies for the fallen angel, as he is still the enemy of humans.[7]

But on the other hand, some of the Sufis had a contradictory opinion about this: the Salemiya sect believed that although Iblis was rebellious at first and disobeyed the command of God, but contrary to the opinion of most Muslims, they believed that he repented later and prostrated to Adam. did Something that most sects of this religion do not believe in.[48]

Narrative exegesis (Qiṣaṣ) edit

 
Painting of the expulsion from "The Garden" by Al-Hakim Nishapuri. The main actors of the narration about Adam's fall are drawn: Adam, Hawwa (Eve), Iblis, the serpent, the peacock and an Angel, probably Ridwan, who guards paradise.
 
This painting is from a copy of the Fālnāmeh (Book of Omens) ascribed to Ja´far al-Sādiq. It shows Adam, Eve, the serpent, the peacock, and Iblis, after their expulsion from Garden Eden. Iblis characteristically depicted black-faced is bottom-left in picture above the angels.

Qiṣaṣ is a form of exegesis by Muslims focusing on establishing a coherent story from material of Islamic scripture (Quran, ḥadīṯ).[49][50]

In reference to the interpretation of the events in Surah 2:30-34, when the angels complain over mankinds' potential to shed blood and cause injustice, Islamic narrative traditions elaborate a legendary battle between the angels and jinn.[51] Tabari and al-Thaʿlabi explain that the angels feared that humanity will become as corrupt as the jinn. Before Adam was created, the jinn, offspring of al-Jānn (الجان), lived on earth. When they became infidels, God sent an army of angels called "al-Jinn" (named after paradise, not the genus) to defeat them.[51] They explain that most angels were created from light, but Iblis and his angels from nār as-samūm, and the genus of jinn from mārijin min nār (smokeless fire).[51]

Some later traditions place Iblis among the genus of the jinn instead. In one narration of the Tarikh Khamis, among the masses of infidel jinn only Iblis dedicated his life to worship of God, withdrawing to a high mountain. The angels soon notice him and elavate him to the heavens, where he becomes one like them in worship.[52]

With reference to Surah 76:1, Islamic narrative tradition considers Adam to be created step by step, beginning as an inanimate body.[53] The story is mentioned by various scholars of the Sunni tradition, including Muqatil, Tabari, Mas'udi, Kisa'i, and Tha'labi.[53] The angels passing by him were scared. Most afraid was Iblis. To overcome his anxiety, he enters Adam and moves through the body.[53] He concludes that "this is hollow clay", whereas Iblis is "fire". Since fire overcomes clay, he vows to destroy Adam like fire destroys clay:

You are nothing – because of his ringing – and you were made for nothing! If I am to rule over you, I will kill you, and if you are to rule over me, I will rebel against you.[53]

Some scholars (among them Thala'bi, Tabarsi,[54] Diyarbakri[55]) explain, with slightly variations, Iblis' entry to the Garden of Eden by the aid of a serpent and a peacock. Some traditions have the Garden of Eden being warded by an angelic guardian. Thus, Iblis persuades a peacock to get help, by promising him that, if he enters the Garden, the beauty of the peacock will never decay thanks to the fruit of immortality. The peacock, unable to carry Iblis, persuades the serpent, who decides to slip Iblis by carrying him in his mouth. From the mouth of the serpent, Iblis speaks to Adam and Ḥawwāʾ.[56]

In culture edit

In arts edit

 
Another painting of angels prostrating before Adam with Iblis refusing, here depicted with a headcover
 
Portrayal of Islamic devils in the form of wild monsters. Siyah Qalem - Hazine 2153, s.31b

Iblis is perhaps one of the most well-known individual supernatural entities in Islamic tradition and was depicted in multiple visual representations like the Quran and Manuscripts of Bal‘ami’s ‘Tarjamah-i Tarikh-i Tabari.[57] Iblis was a unique individual, described as both a pious jinni and an angel before he fell from God's grace when he refused to bow before the prophet Adam. After this incident, Iblis turned into a shaytan.[58] In visual appearance, Iblis' depiction was described in On the Monstrous in the Islamic Visual Tradition by Francesca Leoni as a being with a human-like body with flaming eyes, a tail, claws, and large horns on a grossly disproportionate large head.[59]

Illustrations of Iblis in Islamic paintings often depict him black-faced, a feature which would later symbolize any satanic figure or heretic, and with a black body, to symbolize his corrupted nature. Another common depiction of Iblis shows him in human form wearing a special head covering, clearly different from the traditional Islamic turban and long sleeves, signifying long lasting devotion to God.[1] Only in one, he wears traditional Islamic head covering.[60]

Most pictures show and describe Iblis at the moment, when the angels prostrate themselves before Adam. In the manuscripts of Bal‘ami’s ‘Tarjamah-i Tarikh-i Tabari he is usually seen beyond the outcrop, his face transformed with his wings burned, to the envious countenance of a devil.[61] In his demonic form, Iblis is portrayed similar to his cohorts (shayatin) in Turko-Persian art as Asian demons (div).[62] They are bangled creatures with flaming eyes, only covered by a short skirt. Similar to European arts depicting devils by traits of pagan deities, Islamic arts portray the devils with features often similar to that of Hindu deities.[63]

In literature edit

The complexity of Iblis' character from the Quranic story had lasting influence on Islamic literature. It elaborates on the necessity of evil and Iblis' disobedience in creative retelling of the exegetical tradition.[44]

Iblis and the angels feature in Hafez's poetry (1325–1390), collected in The Divān of Hafez. Hafez iterates that angels are incapable of love. They can merely praise the creator but without the passion of a human-being} When Iblis protests, either because he considers Adam's offspring unworthy or himself devoted to God alone, he is described as an imposter (mudda'ī). He claims to act for the sake of God's love, but is actually envious of mankinds' exalted position. Hafez advises his audience not to reveal the secrets of love towards God to the imposter.[64]

Vathek, first composed in French (1782) by the English novelist William Beckford, in which the protagonists travel through, what he conceives as the supernatural world of the Orient. In their travels, they meet jinn, angels, peri, and prophets. The underworld is the domain of Iblis, however, they meet him only in person at the end of the journey. Although there are similarities to Dante's Satan in the Halls of Eblis, Beckford's Satan, clearly inspired by the figure of Iblis, is that of a young man with mixed traits of pride and despair, and not that of a monstrous being.[65][66]

In Muhammad Iqbal's poetry, Iblis is critical about overstressed obedience, which caused his downfall. But Iblis is not happy about humanity's obedience towards himself either; rather he longs for humans who resist him. Before a human who resisted him, he would be willing to prostrate himself, and he could finally achieve salvation.[67]

Egyptian novelist Tawfiq al-Hakim's ash-Shahid (1953) describes the necessity of Iblis' evil for the world. As a reference to Iblis' predetermined fall, his protagonist Iblis consulsts religious authorities to embrace salvation, but is rejected each time, because the world would require him to be sinful. He consults the Pope, the Rabbi, and the Al-Azhar Mosque, each of them explain the necessity of Iblis' unbelief. Without Iblis' evil deeds, a large portion of revelation would become obsolete. Afterwards, Iblis visits the angel Gabriel, but is rejected again. Realizing that Iblis is both doomed as well as appointed by God, he descends from heaven shouting out: "I am a martyr!".[68]

See also edit

References edit

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Works cited edit

  • Awn, Peter J. (1983). Satan's Tragedy and Redemption: Iblīs in Sufi Psychology (PDF). Leiden, the Netherlands: Brill. ISBN 978-9-0040-6906-0.
  • Kuehn, Sara (2019). "The Primordial Cycle Revisited: Adam, Eve, and the Celestial Beings". The Intermediate Worlds of Angels: Islamic Representations of Celestial Beings in Transcultural Contexts. Germany: Ergon Verlag. pp. 173–199. ISBN 978-3-95650-623-9 – via Academia.edu.
  • Leoni, Francesca (2012). "On the Monstrous in the Islamic Visual Tradition". The Ashgate Research Companion to Monsters and the Monstrous. Farnham: Ashgate Publishing. ISBN 978-1-4724-1801-2.
  • Sharpe, Elizabeth Marie (1992). Into the realm of smokeless fire: (Qur'an 55:14): A critical translation of al-Damiri's article on the jinn from "Hayat al-Hayawan al-Kubra" (Thesis). The University of Arizona. Retrieved 2024-03-03.

iblis, 2018, film, film, arabic, يس, romanized, iblīs, alternatively, known, eblīs, leader, devils, shayāṭīn, islam, according, quran, thrown, heaven, after, refused, prostrate, himself, before, adam, similarities, being, cast, heaven, often, compared, equival. For the 2018 film see Iblis film Iblis Arabic إ ب ل يس romanized Iblis 2 alternatively known as Eblis 3 is the leader of the devils shayaṭin in Islam According to the Quran Iblis was thrown out of heaven after he refused to prostrate himself before Adam Due to the similarities of a being cast out of heaven he is often compared to the equivalent of the Christian Satan The Angels meet Adam the prototypical human being They share albeit to a lesser degree the defiant reaction of Iblis who haughtily turns his head away Painting from a manuscript of the Manṭiq al ṭayr The Conference of the Birds of Farid al Din ʿAṭṭar Iran Shiraz 899 1494 1 Islamic theology kalam regards Iblis as an example of attributes and actions which God punishes with hell Nar Regarding the origin and nature of Iblis there are two different viewpoints 4 5 According to one Iblis is an angel and according to the other he is the father of the jinn Quranic exegesis tafsir and the Stories of the Prophets Qiṣaṣ al anbiyaʾ elaborate on Iblis origin story in greater detail In the first version before Iblis was cast down from heaven he used to be an angel created from fire called ʿAzazil God appointed him to obliterate the jinn who precedingly inhabited of the Earth until they became disobedient and destructive Consequently God decided to replace them with humans 4 When God announces to create a successor to the jinn the angels objected to that decision When God taught Adam and showed the superiority of Adam compared to the angels in regards of knowledge angels were ordered to prostrate themselves All the angels obeyed except Iblis who claims that the command was unjust and refuses to follow order Whereupon he was punished by being relegated from an angel malak to a devil shayṭan and is expelled 4 In the alternative account Iblis was not one of the angels but the ancestor of the jinn Created from the fires beneath the seventh earth he worshipped God for thousands of years until he was elevated to the company of angels in the seventh heaven 4 This account draws a distinction between Iblis and the angels by their moral abilities arguing that angels are incapable of disobedience but Iblis was free to choose Thus only Iblis being a jinni was able to refuse to prostrate himself when Adam was created Doing so he was expelled from heaven and sent to earth where he sired the jinn and devils 4 In Islamic tradition Iblis is identified with ash Shayṭan the Devil often followed by the epithet ar Rajim Arabic ٱلر ج يم lit the Accursed 6 Shayṭan is usually applied to Iblis in order to denote his role as the tempter while Iblis is his proper name Some Muslim scholars uphold a more ambivalent role for Iblis considering him not simply a devil but also the truest monotheist Tawḥid i Iblis because he would only bow before the Creator and not his creations while preserving the term shayṭan exclusively for evil forces 4 46 7 8 The idea that Iblis is not evil but a necessity for the world is also used in Muslim literature Others have strongly rejected sympathies with Iblis considering it a form of deception to lead people astray Contents 1 Naming and etymology 2 Kalam 2 1 Quran 2 2 Affiliation 2 3 Function 3 Satan s Monotheism Tawḥid i Iblis 4 Narrative exegesis Qiṣaṣ 5 In culture 5 1 In arts 5 2 In literature 6 See also 7 References 7 1 Works citedNaming and etymology editIn Islamic traditions Iblis is known by many alternative names or titles such as Abu Murrah Arabic أ ب و م ر ة Father of Bitterness as the name stems from the word murr meaning bitter aduww Allah or aduwallah Arabic ع د و الله enemy or foe of God 9 and Abu Al Harith Arabic أ ب و ال ح ار ث the father of the plowmen 10 He is also known by the nickname Abu Kardus Arabic أ ب و ك ر د وس which may mean Father who piles up crams or crowds together The designation Iblis Arabic إ ب ل يس may be an epithet referencing an attribute deriving from the Arabic verbal root BLS ب ل س with the broad meaning of remain in grief 11 According to Ibn Manzur this is the major opinion among Arab scholars who maintain the tradition that the personal name of this being was ʿAzazil 12 Some Muslim teachers such as al Jili 13 relate this name to talbis meaning confusion 14 because God s command confused him Another possibility is that it is derived from Ancient Greek diabolos diabolos which is also the source of the English word devil via a Syriac intermediary 15 2 The name itself is not found in Arab literature before the Quran suggesting it is not of pre Islamic Arabian origin 16 Kalam editQuran edit Iblis is mentioned 11 times in the Quran by name nine times related to his refusal against God s Command to prostrate himself before Adam The term sayṭan is more prevalent although Iblis is sometimes referred to as sayṭan the terms are not interchangeable The different fragments of Iblis s story are scattered across the Quran In the aggregate the story can be summarised as follows 17 When God created Adam He ordered the angels to bow before the new creation All of the angels bowed down but Iblis refused to do so He argued that since he was created from fire he is superior to humans who were made from clay mud and that he should not prostrate himself before Adam 18 As punishment for his haughtiness God banished Iblis from heaven and condemned him to hell Later Iblis requested the ability to try to mislead Adam and his descendants whereupon God grants the request thus depicting God as the power behind both the angels and devils 19 Surah al Kahf states in reference to Iblis except Iblis he was one of the jinni Arabic إ ل ا إ ب ل یس ك ان م ن ٱل ج ن illa iblisa kana mina l jinni 18 50 This led to a dispute among the mufassirun exegetes who disagree on whether the term is meant to be a nisbah to designate Iblis s heavenly origin i e an angel in contrast to the earthly Adam and the jinn preceding him or if the term is meant to set Iblis apart from the angels and that he is the progenitor of the jinn dwelling in paradise until his fall comparable to how Adam fell then he sinned in the Garden 19 20 21 This dispute goes back to the formative stage of Islam These two conflicting opinions are based on the interpretations of ibn Abbas and Hasan al Basri respectively 19 Muslim scholars then followed one of these two interpretations 19 Those scholars who agree on an angelic nature of Iblis regard further verses of the Quran as allusions to Iblis Surah 21 29 al anbiya states Whoever of them were to say I am a god besides Him they would be rewarded with Hell by Us According to multiple scholars Tabari Suyuti al Nasafi 19 al Maturidi 22 this verse was meant to be a revelation about Iblis since only he was claiming divine authority for himself and does so by inviting to follow egoistic desires nafs 19 The term sijjin mentioned in Surah 83 7 is regarded by several scholars Tabari Tha labi Nasafi as a prison in hell for Iblis From this place he would send his demons to the surface 19 Affiliation edit nbsp Painting from a Herat manuscript of the Persian rendition by Bal ami of the Annals Tarikh universal chronicle of al Tabari depicting angels honoring Adam except Iblis who refuses Held at the Topkapi Palace Museum Library There are different opinions regarding the origin of Iblis This dispute is closely related to doctrinal differences regarding free will Like humans jinn are created on earth to worship abada God 51 56 and are capable of righteous and evil acts 11 119 23 If angels can sin or not is disputed in Islam Those who say that Iblis was not an angel but a jinni argue that only jinn and humans but not angels are capable of disobedience 15 This is the generally opinion among the Qadariyah and most Mu tazilites 15 This view is also found to be prominent among many Salafis 24 On the other hand the term for celestial beings is usually malak angel in early Islam 25 Tabarsi notes that if Iblis were a jinni he could not have been one of the custodians of paradise 15 Many among those who say that Iblis was an angel read Surah 18 50 as a nisba for the term jannat thus referring to Iblis heavenly origin this reading is preferred by among others Ash ari 26 Suyuti and Al Tha labi 2 Most mutakallimun theologians do not consider angels to be infallible al Razi being an exception 27 Nontheless if faith ʾiman in God is proportional to obedience and knowledge of God 15 theologians still need to explain the cause for Iblis fall The Hanabila and Ash arites would argue that Iblis was ignorant jahl and did not understand God s will irada 15 However Iblis unbelief kufr would be ultimately caused by God 15 Al Maghribi states that when the angels questioned the creation of Adam God opened the angels eyes for the characteristics of Adam but closed the eyes of Iblis so he would remain in resistance iḥtijaj 15 Therefore Iblis would have been created as a disobedient angel and function as God s tempter 28 Abu Mansur al Maturidi the eponymous founder of Maturidi theology considers some sort of middle ground arguing that angels have been put to a test in the heavens just as humans and jinn are tested on earth If they were not tested the Quran would not compliment angels for obedience 29 Function edit nbsp Depiction of Iblis in the epic poem Shahnameh Within Muslim thought Iblis is generally not considered to be the originator of evil However there are a few exceptions among Muslim scholars The Qadariyya asserted that evil was introduced by disobedience to God and Iblis was the first who disobeyed This view is sometimes attributed to Hasan al Basri 30 An extreme position among the Qadariyya asserts that Iblis was not even created by God but this view is generally rejected as beliefs of the Manichaeans majus 15 Al Maturidi argued that such dualistic worldviews are irreconcilable with the Islamic doctrine of tawḥid 31 Likewise the jinn would have sinned prior to Iblis 32 Iblis disobedience is seen as an example and warning for the thaqalan those who are accountable for their deeds 33 Those who say that Iblis was predestined to fall say that he was created in such a way that God can demonstrate his entire spectrum of attributes for example jalal majesty in his eternal speech i e the Quran and teaching the consequences of sin 34 Three things to avoid are marked by the fall of Iblis Transgression ma siyah arrogance istikbar and comparison qiyas to another creature of God 15 Disobedience alone is not considered to be the cause of Iblis damnation but the reason behind his action and the implied underlying unbelief 32 Although not the cause of evil Iblis is known as the progenitor of tempters known as the father of the devils Abu ash Shayaṭin 35 p129 Ḥadith literature emphasizes their evil influences over humans rather than treating them as proper personalities 36 Muslims are advised to seek refuge from such influences and are recommanded to recite duʿaʾ prayers for protection 37 Satan s Monotheism Tawḥid i Iblis edit nbsp Adam honoured by Angels Persian miniature Iblis black faced and without hair top right of the picture He refuses to prostrate himself with the other Angels The predestinarians approach was attractive for many Muslim thinkers to avoid dualistic tendencies Some extreme positions went as far as to consider the belief that evil derives from an individual s own responsibility without God s interference as a form of attributing a second power to God thus falling into sirk polytheism 38 From this idea of absolute predeterminism some scholars and ṣufis who developed sympathy for Iblis They began to consider Iblis to be a true monotheist only bested by Muhammed who would accept punishment and suffering over bowing before something else but God an idea later known as Satan s monotheism tawḥid i Iblis 7 This idea is reflected in a transmission by Wahb ibn Munabbih an eminent teller of Israʼiliyyat stating that Iblis met Moses on the slopes of Sinai When Moses asks Iblis why he refused God s order he replies that the command was actually a test 39 This story inspired people such as Mansur al Hallaj and Ahmad Ghazali The latter depicted Iblis as a paragon of self sacrifice and stated at some point Whoever doesn t learn monotheism from Satan is a heretic zindiq 40 His student Sheikh Adi ibn Musafir asserted that Iblis disobedience was wanted by God or God would be powerless and a powerless being cannot be attributed to God 41 Such positive depictions are however by no means universal among the predestinarians Ibn Ghanim refers to the report of the meeting between Iblis and Moses and argues that Iblis is just using predeterminism as an excuse to cover his unbelief and use a subtle deception by evoking sympathies 42 Ruzbihan Baqli calls Iblis apology a form of deception 43 Jalal al Din Muḥammad Rumi 1207 1273 argues that it is pointless to use predeterminism as an excuse for one s own demise 15 He invokes the analogy between Adam and Iblis While both were destined to fall Iblis and his offspring blamed God while Adam pleaded for forgiveness nontheless He advises humans to do the same 44 15 In this context Rumi declares that love is more important than intelligence and states Cunning intelligence is from Iblis and love from Adam 45 In his Masnavi Book 2 he refers to several attempts to excuse Iblis when he wakens Mu awiya for the morning prayer ṣalat al fajr Mu awiya is sceptical towards Iblis alleged good intentions so he begins to question him Iblis argues that an original angel who was predestined to fall could never be truly evil 46 47 Mu awiya realizes he cannot outsmart Iblis and seeks refuge in God instead When Iblis sees that he cannot win Mu awiya over he confesses that he never had good intentions in the first place and used these arguements just to trick people Instead he woke him up because missing a prayer and consequent repentance tawbah would bring him closer to God than performing the prayer Rumi makes clear that there is no reason to have sympathies for the fallen angel as he is still the enemy of humans 7 But on the other hand some of the Sufis had a contradictory opinion about this the Salemiya sect believed that although Iblis was rebellious at first and disobeyed the command of God but contrary to the opinion of most Muslims they believed that he repented later and prostrated to Adam did Something that most sects of this religion do not believe in 48 Narrative exegesis Qiṣaṣ edit nbsp Painting of the expulsion from The Garden by Al Hakim Nishapuri The main actors of the narration about Adam s fall are drawn Adam Hawwa Eve Iblis the serpent the peacock and an Angel probably Ridwan who guards paradise nbsp This painting is from a copy of the Falnameh Book of Omens ascribed to Ja far al Sadiq It shows Adam Eve the serpent the peacock and Iblis after their expulsion from Garden Eden Iblis characteristically depicted black faced is bottom left in picture above the angels Qiṣaṣ is a form of exegesis by Muslims focusing on establishing a coherent story from material of Islamic scripture Quran ḥadiṯ 49 50 In reference to the interpretation of the events in Surah 2 30 34 when the angels complain over mankinds potential to shed blood and cause injustice Islamic narrative traditions elaborate a legendary battle between the angels and jinn 51 Tabari and al Thaʿlabi explain that the angels feared that humanity will become as corrupt as the jinn Before Adam was created the jinn offspring of al Jann الجان lived on earth When they became infidels God sent an army of angels called al Jinn named after paradise not the genus to defeat them 51 They explain that most angels were created from light but Iblis and his angels from nar as samum and the genus of jinn from marijin min nar smokeless fire 51 Some later traditions place Iblis among the genus of the jinn instead In one narration of the Tarikh Khamis among the masses of infidel jinn only Iblis dedicated his life to worship of God withdrawing to a high mountain The angels soon notice him and elavate him to the heavens where he becomes one like them in worship 52 With reference to Surah 76 1 Islamic narrative tradition considers Adam to be created step by step beginning as an inanimate body 53 The story is mentioned by various scholars of the Sunni tradition including Muqatil Tabari Mas udi Kisa i and Tha labi 53 The angels passing by him were scared Most afraid was Iblis To overcome his anxiety he enters Adam and moves through the body 53 He concludes that this is hollow clay whereas Iblis is fire Since fire overcomes clay he vows to destroy Adam like fire destroys clay You are nothing because of his ringing and you were made for nothing If I am to rule over you I will kill you and if you are to rule over me I will rebel against you 53 Some scholars among them Thala bi Tabarsi 54 Diyarbakri 55 explain with slightly variations Iblis entry to the Garden of Eden by the aid of a serpent and a peacock Some traditions have the Garden of Eden being warded by an angelic guardian Thus Iblis persuades a peacock to get help by promising him that if he enters the Garden the beauty of the peacock will never decay thanks to the fruit of immortality The peacock unable to carry Iblis persuades the serpent who decides to slip Iblis by carrying him in his mouth From the mouth of the serpent Iblis speaks to Adam and Ḥawwaʾ 56 In culture editIn arts edit Further information Angels in art Islamic art nbsp Another painting of angels prostrating before Adam with Iblis refusing here depicted with a headcover nbsp Portrayal of Islamic devils in the form of wild monsters Siyah Qalem Hazine 2153 s 31b Iblis is perhaps one of the most well known individual supernatural entities in Islamic tradition and was depicted in multiple visual representations like the Quran and Manuscripts of Bal ami s Tarjamah i Tarikh i Tabari 57 Iblis was a unique individual described as both a pious jinni and an angel before he fell from God s grace when he refused to bow before the prophet Adam After this incident Iblis turned into a shaytan 58 In visual appearance Iblis depiction was described in On the Monstrous in the Islamic Visual Tradition by Francesca Leoni as a being with a human like body with flaming eyes a tail claws and large horns on a grossly disproportionate large head 59 Illustrations of Iblis in Islamic paintings often depict him black faced a feature which would later symbolize any satanic figure or heretic and with a black body to symbolize his corrupted nature Another common depiction of Iblis shows him in human form wearing a special head covering clearly different from the traditional Islamic turban and long sleeves signifying long lasting devotion to God 1 Only in one he wears traditional Islamic head covering 60 Most pictures show and describe Iblis at the moment when the angels prostrate themselves before Adam In the manuscripts of Bal ami s Tarjamah i Tarikh i Tabari he is usually seen beyond the outcrop his face transformed with his wings burned to the envious countenance of a devil 61 In his demonic form Iblis is portrayed similar to his cohorts shayatin in Turko Persian art as Asian demons div 62 They are bangled creatures with flaming eyes only covered by a short skirt Similar to European arts depicting devils by traits of pagan deities Islamic arts portray the devils with features often similar to that of Hindu deities 63 In literature edit The complexity of Iblis character from the Quranic story had lasting influence on Islamic literature It elaborates on the necessity of evil and Iblis disobedience in creative retelling of the exegetical tradition 44 Iblis and the angels feature in Hafez s poetry 1325 1390 collected in The Divan of Hafez Hafez iterates that angels are incapable of love They can merely praise the creator but without the passion of a human being When Iblis protests either because he considers Adam s offspring unworthy or himself devoted to God alone he is described as an imposter mudda i He claims to act for the sake of God s love but is actually envious of mankinds exalted position Hafez advises his audience not to reveal the secrets of love towards God to the imposter 64 Vathek first composed in French 1782 by the English novelist William Beckford in which the protagonists travel through what he conceives as the supernatural world of the Orient In their travels they meet jinn angels peri and prophets The underworld is the domain of Iblis however they meet him only in person at the end of the journey Although there are similarities to Dante s Satan in the Halls of Eblis Beckford s Satan clearly inspired by the figure of Iblis is that of a young man with mixed traits of pride and despair and not that of a monstrous being 65 66 In Muhammad Iqbal s poetry Iblis is critical about overstressed obedience which caused his downfall But Iblis is not happy about humanity s obedience towards himself either rather he longs for humans who resist him Before a human who resisted him he would be willing to prostrate himself and he could finally achieve salvation 67 Egyptian novelist Tawfiq al Hakim s ash Shahid 1953 describes the necessity of Iblis evil for the world As a reference to Iblis predetermined fall his protagonist Iblis consulsts religious authorities to embrace salvation but is rejected each time because the world would require him to be sinful He consults the Pope the Rabbi and the Al Azhar Mosque each of them explain the necessity of Iblis unbelief Without Iblis evil deeds a large portion of revelation would become obsolete Afterwards Iblis visits the angel Gabriel but is rejected again Realizing that Iblis is both doomed as well as appointed by God he descends from heaven shouting out I am a martyr 68 See also edit nbsp Islam portal Elbis Harut and Marut Prince of Darkness Manichaeism Questions of Bartholomew SamaelReferences edit a b Kuehn 2019 a b c Gardet Louis Wensinck A J 1971 Iblis In Bosworth C E van Donzel E J Heinrichs W P Lewis B Pellat Ch Schacht J eds Encyclopaedia of Islam Second Edition Vol 3 Leiden Brill Publishers doi 10 1163 1573 3912 islam SIM 3021 ISBN 978 90 04 16121 4 Briggs Constance Victoria 2003 The Encyclopedia of God An A Z Guide to Thoughts Ideas and Beliefs about God Newburyport Massachusetts Hampton Roads ISBN 978 1 612 83225 8 a b c d e f Awn Peter J 1983 Satan s Tragedy and Redemption Iblis in Sufi Psychology Numen Book Series Vol 44 Leiden and Boston Brill Publishers doi 10 1163 9789004378636 003 ISBN 978 90 04 37863 6 Mahmoud Muhammad 1995 The Creation Story in Surat al Baqara with Special Reference to al Ṭabari s Material An Analysis Journal of Arabic Literature 26 1 2 201 214 doi 10 1163 157006495X00175 JSTOR 4183374 Silverstein Adam J January March 2013 On the Original Meaning of the Qurʾanic Term ash Shayṭan ar Rajim Journal of the American Oriental Society 133 1 American Oriental Society 21 33 doi 10 7817 jameroriesoci 133 1 0021 LCCN 12032032 OCLC 47785421 a b c Rustom Mohammed September 2020 Touati Houari ed Devil s Advocate ʿAyn al Quḍat s Defence of Iblis in Context Studia Islamica 115 1 Leiden and Boston Brill Publishers 65 100 doi 10 1163 19585705 12341408 S2CID 226540873 Campanini Massimo 2013 The Qur an The Basics Abingdon England Routledge ISBN 978 1 1386 6630 6 Iblis Meaning Name amp Significance 26 February 2024 Zadeh Travis 2014 Commanding Demons and Jinn The Sorcerer in Early Islamic Thought In Korangy Alireza Sheffield Dan eds No Tapping around Philology A Festschrift in Honor of Wheeler McIntosh Thackston Jr s 70th Birthday Wiesbaden Germany Harrassowitz Verlag p 149 ISBN 978 3447102155 Kazim Ebrahim 2010 Scientific Commentary of Suratul Faateḥah New Delhi India Pharos Media amp Publishing p 274 ISBN 978 8 172 21037 3 ZenEldeen Zakaria Sobhi Dangers and Treatment of Hypocrites Rumors Thematic Analytical Study مجلة الجامعة الإسلامية للدراسات الإسلامية عقيدة تفسير حديث 29 1 2021 Abu Zaid Nasr The Perfect Man in Islam A Textual Analysis 大阪外国語大学学報 77 1989 111 133 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Bloomsbury Publishing 30 11 2010 ISBN 9780857719140 p 219 221 Works cited edit Awn Peter J 1983 Satan s Tragedy and Redemption Iblis in Sufi Psychology PDF Leiden the Netherlands Brill ISBN 978 9 0040 6906 0 Kuehn Sara 2019 The Primordial Cycle Revisited Adam Eve and the Celestial Beings The Intermediate Worlds of Angels Islamic Representations of Celestial Beings in Transcultural Contexts Germany Ergon Verlag pp 173 199 ISBN 978 3 95650 623 9 via Academia edu Leoni Francesca 2012 On the Monstrous in the Islamic Visual Tradition The Ashgate Research Companion to Monsters and the Monstrous Farnham Ashgate Publishing ISBN 978 1 4724 1801 2 Sharpe Elizabeth Marie 1992 Into the realm of smokeless fire Qur an 55 14 A critical translation of al Damiri s article on the jinn from Hayat al Hayawan al Kubra Thesis The University of Arizona Retrieved 2024 03 03 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Iblis amp oldid 1223713043, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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