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Islamic eschatology

Islamic eschatology (Arabic: عِلْم آخر الزمان في الإسلام, ‘ilm ākhir az-zamān fī al-islām) is a field of study in Islam concerning future events that would happen in the end times. It is primarily based on sources from the Quran and Sunnah. Aspects from this field of study include the signs of the final age, the destruction of the universe and Judgement Day.[1][2][3]

The general consensus of Muslim scholars agree there would be tremendous and distinctive signs before the world ends. Among which would be an era of trials and tribulations, a time of immorality followed by mighty wars, worldwide unnatural phenomena and the return of justice to the world. Defining figures are also prophesied such as the Mahdi, and the Second Coming of Isa (known as Jesus in Christianity) who bring about a heavenly victory against Dajjal (Antichrist according to Christianity) ending with the release of Yajuj and Majuj (Gog and Magog) to the world.[4] Once all the events are completed, the universe shall be destroyed and every human being would be resurrected to be held accountable for their deeds.[5][6]

Sources for Islamic eschatology edit

Alike with other tenets of Islamic faith, sources of Islamic eschatology are taken from two primary sources, namely the Quran itself and Sunnah literature, which are accounts of the traditions of the Islamic prophet Muhammad during his lifetime.[7] These two foundational sources would pave the way for interpretations by later scholars such as al-Ghazali, Ibn Kathir, and Muhammad al-Bukhari.[8][9]

Signs of the End Times edit

 
Events in Islamic eschatology based on Sunan Abu Dawood, "Battles" (Kitab Al-Malahim).[10]
 
Eschatological timeline of "minor" and "major" signs preceding the Day of Judgement

The arrival of Judgement Day is prophesied to be preceded by apocalyptic signs of its arrival in various hadith collections.[11][12][13]

  • Senseless immorality would prevail. The prevalence of tyrants, alcohol, usury, satanic music, fornication, homosexuality, and disobedience by wives, murders, lying and cheating, disinterest in and ignorance of religion.
  • Unnatural phenomenons would occur. The rise of frequent sudden deaths, excessive lightning, destructive rainfall, terrible drought, a huge cloud of smoke, the opening up of huge cracks in the earth, the sun rising in the west, the breeze that take the souls of the faithful.
  • The appearance of dark, satanic evils such as the Antichrist, Gog and Magog.[14][15]
  • The arrival of messianic saviors such as the Mahdi and Jesus, who along with divine intervention, will restore justice.[16][17]

The signs are divided into two categories.[18][19] Minor signs are uneventful signs that happen in the timeframe of centuries. Major signs are seismic events that happen very rapidly and is the immediate precursor to the end.[20][21][22][23]

Savior and evil-doing figures that appear in the major signs include:

  • Al-Masih ad-Dajjal (Arabic: المسيح الدجّال, romanizedal-Masīḥ ad-Dajjāl, lit.'Deceitful Messiah'),[24] is blind in one eye, and will deceive starving masses – especially the Jews – by performing miracles.[25][26][citation needed] He will raise an army that will kill and conquer,[27] and corner his nemesis, the Mahdi, along with a small army of Muslim fighters in Jerusalem. Jesus will descend from heaven just in time to kill him and defeat his army.[25][citation needed]
 
Iskandar (Alexander) builds a wall to seal Yajuj and Majuj; here aided by dīvs (demons). Persian miniature from a Falnama, 16th century.[28][29]
  • The Mahdi (Arabic: ٱلْمَهْدِيّ, romanizedal-mahdīy), i.e. the "Rightly Guided One", is a messianic figure descended from Muhammad through Ali, who (with the help of Jesus) will defeat the Dajjal, reestablish Islamic law, rid the world of bid'a (religious innovation), and fill it with justice;[30] (Sunni and Shia disagree on details such as whether he is currently alive, will kill the Dajjal himself, what he looks like, his exact ancestry, etc.)
  • Jesus (Arabic: عِيسَى ٱبْنُ مَرْيَمَ, romanizedʿĪsā ibn Maryam, lit.'Isa, son of Maryam') will make a second coming, descending to earth, but unlike in Christianity it will be to assist the Mahdi by killing the dajjal, "break[ing] the cross, kill[ing] the pigs, and abolish[ing] the Jizya tax",[31][32] i.e. put an end to Christians misconceptions about his being the Son of God and there being no need to follow dietary laws.[33] Jesus and the Mahdi will then rule the earth in perfect justice for a time before Judgement Day. (Shia believe it is the Mahdi who will kill the dajjal; others believe "the Mahdi" is not a distinct person but just the title given to Jesus.)
  • Gog and Magog (Arabic: يأجوج ومأجوج) are mentioned in the Quran as doing "great mischief on earth", and being suppressed by a figure called Dhul-Qarnayn ("the two-horned one")[34] who builds a wall to contain their mischief, warning their local victims that when the time comes (believed to mean the end times), Allah will remove the barrier.[35] Non-Quranic Islamic apocalyptic literature describes Gog and Magog as a subhuman pestilence who are released from thousands of years of imprisonment to do much killing, pillaging and devouring of vast resources until being wiped out after "God commands an insect or worm to burrow into their necks and kill them".[36]

[37]

Small Resurrection edit

Small Resurrection (al-qiyamah al-sughra) happens, when the soul is separated from the body. The soul then turns to the afterlife (akhira or malakut), where it is interrogated by two angels, Munkar and Nakir.[38]

Resurrection and final judgement edit

 
Diagram of Ard al-Hashr (the "Plain of Assembly") on the Day of Judgement, from an autograph manuscript of Futuhat al-Makkiyya written by the Sufi mystic and Muslim philosopher Ibn Arabi, ca. 1238. Shown are the ʿArsh (Throne of God), al-Aminun (pulpits for the righteous), seven rows of angels, al-Ruh (Gabriel), A'raf (the Barrier), Ḥawḍ al-Kawthar (the Pond of Abundance), al-Maqam al-Mahmud (the Praiseworthy Station, where the Prophet Muhammad will stand to intercede for the faithful), Mizan (the Scale), As-Sirāt (the Bridge), Jahannam (Hell), and Marj al-Jannat (Meadow of Paradise).[39]

In Islam, "the promise and threat" (waʿd wa-waʿīd)[40] of Judgement Day (Arabic: یوم القيامة, romanizedYawm al-qiyāmah, lit.'Day of Resurrection' or Arabic: یوم الدین, romanizedYawm ad-din, lit.'Day of Judgement'), has been called "the dominant message" of the Quran,[nb 1][41] and is considered a fundamental tenet of faith by all Muslims, and one of the six articles of Islamic faith.

The two themes "central to the understanding of Islamic eschatology" are:

  1. the resurrection of bodies joined with spirits in a "reunion of whole, cognizant, and responsible persons", and
  2. a final judgement of the quality of each persons life "lived on earth and a subsequent recompense carried out with absolute justice through the prerogative of God's merciful will".[42]

The trials, tribulations and details associated with it are detailed in the Quran and the hadith (sayings of Muhammad); these have been elaborated on in creeds, Quranic commentaries (tafsịrs), theological writing,[43] eschatological manuals to provide more details and a sequence of events on the Day.[41] Islamic expositors and scholarly authorities who have explained the subject in detail include al-Ghazali, Ibn Kathir, Ibn Majah, Muhammad al-Bukhari, and Ibn Khuzaymah.

Resurrection of the dead edit

After the final signs of The Hour – the defeat of the Sufyani; the end of the just reign of the Mahdi and/or Jesus; the rising of the sun from the west;[44] the peaceful death all believers from inhalation of a lethal breeze[45][46][47] – a trumpet will blast, signaling the destruction of earth (Q.69:13–16). A second blast will signal the death of any being still living.[48]

The dead will then be resurrected and Afterlife commence with yet another trumpet blast, (different sources give different numbers of trumpet blasts)[nb 2] The first to arise will be Muhammad,[50] followed by the other members of the Muslim community,[51] with all gathering at the place of assembly [al-maḥshar].[52] In between resurrection and the actual judgement will be an agonizing time of waiting (Q.21:103, Q.37:20) for unbelievers.[52]

Separation of the righteous and the damned edit

At divine judgement, the resurrected will stand in a grand assembly, each person's Book of Deeds – where "every small and great thing is recorded" – will be read,[53] and ultimate judgement made.[9][54] The resurrected will then walk over the bridge of As-Sirāt, those judged worthy for the Garden continuing to their heavenly abode, those damned to The Fire, falling off the bridge into the pit of Jahannam.[55] There will also be a punishment of the grave (for those who disbelieved) between death and the resurrection.[56]

Not everyone consigned to hell will remain there, as it is believed by both scholars and lay Muslims that "all but the mushrikun, those who have committed the worst sin of impugning the tawḥīd of God, have the possibility of being saved;"[57] and God's intercession to save sinners from hellfire is a "major theme" in popular Islamic stories about Judgement Day.[58]

Eschatological theological questions edit

Scholars did not always agree on questions of who might go to hell; whether the creation of heaven and hell would wait until Judgement Day; whether there was a state between heaven and hell; whether those consigned to hell would be there for eternity.

Basis of belief edit

"Fear, hope, and finally ... faith", have been given (by Jane I. Smith, Yvonne Y. Haddad) as motivations offered by the Quran for the belief of Muslims in an Afterlife,[59] although some (Abū Aʿla al-Mawdūdī) have asserted it is simply a matter of reason:

The fact is that whatever Muhammad (peace be upon him) has told us about life after death is clearly borne out by reason. Although our belief in that Day is based upon our implicit trust in the Messenger of God, rational reflection not only confirms this belief but it also reveals that Muhammad's (peace be upon him) teachings in this respect are much more reasonable and understandable than all other view-points about life after death.[60]

Early Muslim thought on damnation edit

One of the primary beliefs pertaining to Islamic eschatology during the Early Muslim Period was that all humans could receive God's mercy and were worthy of salvation.[61] These early depictions even show how small, insignificant deeds were enough to warrant mercy.[62] Most early depictions of the end of days depict only those who reject Tawhid, (the concept of monotheism), are subject to eternal punishment. However, everybody is held responsible for their actions. Concepts of reward and punishment were seen as beyond this world, a view that is also held today.[62]

Resurrection theories edit

Although Islamic philosophers and scholars were in general agreement on a bodily resurrection after death, interpretations differ in regard to the specifications of bodily resurrection. Some of the theories are the following:

  • The return to the same material body, someone had during lifetime, that will be restored.[63]
  • Conjunction of the soul with a Mithali body, which is congenial to the worlds of Barzakh and the Akhirah.[64]
  • Resurrection with a Hurqaliyati body, accordingly a second invisible body, that survives death.[65]

Literal or allegorical edit

According to scholars Jane I. Smith, Yvonne Y. Haddad, "the vast majority of believers", understand verses of the Quran on Jannah (and hellfire) "to be real and specific, anticipating them" with joy or terror.[66] Besides the material notion of the paradise, descriptions of it are also interpreted as allegories, whose meaning is the state of joy believers will experience in the afterlife. For some theologians, seeing God is not a question of sight, but of awareness of God's presence.[67] Although early Sufis, such as Hallaj, took the descriptions of Paradise literal, later Sufi traditions usually stressed out the allegorical meaning.[68]

On the issue of Judgement Day, early Muslims debated whether scripture should be interpreted literally or figuratively, and the school of thought that prevailed (Ashʿarī) "affirmed that such things as" connected with Judgement day as "the individual records of deeds (including the paper, pen, and ink with which they are inscribed), the bridge, the balance, and the pond" are "realities", and "to be understood in a concrete and literal sense."[69]

Modernist, postmodernist thought edit

According to Smith and Haddad, "The great majority of contemporary Muslim writers, ... choose not to discuss the afterlife at all".[70] Islamic Modernists, according to Smith and Haddad, express a "kind of embarrassment with the elaborate traditional detail concerning life in the grave and in the abodes of recompense, called into question by modern rationalists".[71][72][73] Consequently, most of "modern Muslim Theologians" either "silence the issue" or reaffirm "the traditional position that the reality of the afterlife must not be denied but that its exact nature remains unfathomable".[74][71]

The beliefs of Pakistani modernist Muhammad Iqbal (died 1938), were similar to the Sufi "spiritual and internalized interpretations of hell" of ibn ʿArabī, and Rumi, seeing paradise and hell "primarily as metaphors for inner psychic" developments. Thus hellfire is actually a state of realization of one's failures as a human being", and not a supernatural subterranean realm.[75] Egyptian modernist Muhammad ʿAbduh, thought it was sufficient to believe in the existence of an afterlife with rewards and punishment to be a true believer, even if you ignored "clear" (ẓāhir) hadith about hell.[76]

Gender equity edit

Some postmodernists have found at least one sahih (authentic) hadith on hell unacceptable—the tradition of Muhammad stating, "most people in hell are women"[77] has been explained as an attempt to "legitimate social control over women" (Smith and Haddad),[78] or perpetuate "the moral, social, political, sectarian hierarchies" of medieval Islam (Lange).[73] Amina Wadud notes that the Qur'an does not mention any specific gender when talking about Hell, Q.43:74–76, for example, states that "the guilty are immortal in hell's torment"; and when discussing paradise, includes women, Q.3:14–15, for example, states that "Beautiful of mankind is love of the joys (that come) from women and offspring..."[79]

"Limbo" or al-aʿrāf in Islam edit

In terms of classical Islam, "the only options" afforded by the Qur'an for the resurrected are an eternity of horrible punishments of The Fire or the delightful rewards of The Garden. Islamic tradition has raised the question of whether or not consignment to the Fire is eternal, or eternal for all, but "has found no reason to amend" the limit of two options in the afterlife.[80] But one verse in the Quran has "led to a great deal of speculation concerning the possibility of a third place".[80]

  • There will be a barrier [ḥijāb] between Paradise and Hell. And on the heights [al-aʿrāf] of that barrier˺ will be people who will recognize ˹the residents of˺ both by their appearance. They will call out to the residents of Paradise, "Peace be upon you!" They will have not yet entered Paradise, but eagerly hope to (Q.7:46).[80]

"What some have called" the "Limbo" Theory of Islam, as described by Jane Smith and Yvonne Haddad, implies that some individuals are not immediately sent to The Fire or The Garden, but are held in a state of limbo.[80] Smith and Haddad believe it is "very doubtful" that the Qur'anic meant for al-aʿrāf to be understood as "an abode for those ... in an intermediate category, but this has come to be the most commonly held interpretation".[81][82]

As for who the inhabitants of the inhabits al-aʿrāf are, the "majority of exegetes" support the theory that they are persons whose actions balance in terms of merit and demerit – whose good deeds keep them from the Fire and whose evil deeds keep them from the Garden. They will be the last to enter the Garden, at the mercy of their Lord.[83]

The Current existence of the Afterlife edit

 
Pomegranate flower and fruit, considered a fruit from paradise in Muslim tradition. Therefore, it is used as an ingredient in a dessert (Ashure) used to commemorate prophetic events.

There was considerable debate regarding whether heaven and hell exists at the current moment.[84][85] The Mu'tazila argued that since the Quran states that once the trumpet sounds, all except God will be destroyed, this would include the destruction of heaven and hell.[84][85] However, the Ash'ariya argued that although the trumpet's sounding will precede all being destroyed, creation was a "constant process".[84][85] Māturīdism also defends the idea that paradise and hell are coexisting with the temporal world. The attributes of paradise and hell would already take effect on this world (dunya). Abu al-Layth al-Samarqandi (944–983) states that the purpose of simultaneous existence of both worlds is that they inspire hope and fear among humans.[86]: 168 

Evidence that Jannah and the Fire already exists is supported by a number of verses in the Quran. It is implied someone has gone to the Garden or the hell (3:169, 36:13-26, 66:10, 3:10-11, 6:93).[87] In the Story of Adam and Eve, they once resided in Garden of Eden, which is often considered to be Jannah. This identification, however, is not universal. Al-Balluti (887 – 966) reasoned that the Garden of Eden lacked the perfection and eternal character of a final paradise:[86]: 167  Adam and Eve lost the primordial paradise, while the paradisiacal afterlife lasts forever; if Adam and Eve were in the otherworldly paradise, the devil (Shaiṭān) could not have entered and deceive them, since there is no evil or idle talk in paradise; Adam slept in his garden, but there is no sleep in paradise.[86]: 167 

Besides the Quranic allusions, hadiths are taken into consideration to evaluate the afterlife's coexistence with the temporary world. Reports pertaining to the Night Journey (Mi'raj) state that Muhammad saw visions of both destinations and creatures inhabiting it.[84][85] Thus, heaven and hell are usually regarded as coexisting with the current world.[88] According to another common tradition, Muhammad is supposed to have taken a pomegranate from jannah, and shared it with Ali, as recorded by Nasir al-Din al-Tusi. However, some scholars, like Ghazali, reject that Muhammad grabbed the fruit, argued he had only a vision instead.[86]: 215 

The Concept of Eternity edit

In Classical Islam, there was a consensus among the theological community regarding the finality of Jannah (also called Heaven, paradise, the Gardens); after Judgement Day, faithful servants of God would find themselves here for eternity.[89][90] However, some practitioners in the early Muslim community held that the other abode of the hereafter (hell/Jahannam), or at least part of that abode, might not be eternal.[89][90] This belief was based upon an interpretations of scripture that since the upper, less tortuous levels of Hell were reserved for Muslims who were only in hell for as long as God deemed necessary. Once Muslims had their sins purged and were allowed into heaven, these levels would be empty and the need for their existence gone.[89][90] These interpretations are centered on verses 11:106–107 in the Quran, stating,

"As for those who are wretched, they shall be in the Fire, wherein there shall be for them groaning and wailing, abiding therein for so long as the heavens and the earth endure, save as thy Lord wills. Surely thy Lord does whatsoever He wills".[91]

This possibility that God may yet commute a sentence to Hell, interprets (parts of) hell as being similar in function to Purgatory in Christianity, with the exception to this comparison being that Hell in this context is for the punishment of the sinner's complete body, as opposed to the only the soul being punished in Purgatory.[89][90] Arguments questioning the permanence of Hell take the view that Hell is not necessarily solely there to punish the evil, but to purify their souls, whereas the purpose of the Garden is simply to reward the righteous.[92][93] Evidence against the concept of hell being in part temporary, is the Quran verse stating that Hell will endure as long as Heaven will, which has been established as eternal.[94]

Predestination edit

Orthodox Islam teaches the doctrine of Qadar (Arabic: قدر, aka Predestination, or divine destiny in Islam),[95] whereby everything that has happened and will happen in the universe—including sinful human behavior—is commanded by God.[96] At the same time, we human beings are responsible for our actions and rewarded or punished for them in the Afterlife.[97][98]

Qadar/predestination/divine destiny, is one of Sunni Islam's six articles of faith and is mentioned in the Quran.

  • "Nothing will ever befall us except what Allah has destined for us" (Q.9:51).[99]
  • "Allah leaves whoever He wills to stray and guides whoever He wills." (Q.14:4).[99]

Of course, the fate of human beings in the Afterlife is especially crucial. It is reflected in Quranic verses such as

  • Had We willed, We could have easily imposed guidance on every soul. But My Word will come to pass: I will surely fill up Hell with jinn and humans all together. (Q.32:13).[99]

Muhammad also talked about the doctrine of predestination multiple times during his mission.[62] Thus the consensus of the Sunni Muslim community has been that scripture indicates predestination.[62] Nonetheless, some Muslim theologians have argued against predestination, (including at least some Shia Muslims, whose article of faith includes Adalah (justice), but not Qadar. At least some Shia – such as Naser Makarem Shirazi – denounce predestination).[100]

Opponents of predestination in early Islam, (al-Qadariyah, Muʿtazila) argued that if God has already determined everything that will happen, God's human creation cannot really have free will over decisions to do good or evil, or control of whether they suffer eternal torment in Jahannam—which is something that (the opponents believe) a just God would never allow to happen.[99] While Qadar is the consensus of Muslims, it is also an issue scholars discourage debate and discussion about. Hadith narrate Muhammad warning his followers to “refrain from speaking about qadar”;[101] and according to the creed of Al-Tahawi, "the principle of providence" is such a secret that God did not let even angels, prophets and messengers in on the mystery.[97][102]

Who will enter Heaven or hell edit

Scholars do not all agree on who will end up in Jannah and who in Jahannam, and the criteria for deciding. Issues include whether all Muslims, even those who've committed major sins, will end up in Jannah; whether any non-Muslims will be saved or all will go to Jahannam.

According to the Quran, the basic criterion for salvation in the afterlife is the belief in the oneness of God (tawḥīd), angels, revealed books, messengers, as well as repentance to God, and doing good deeds (amal salih).[103]: 51  This is qualified by the doctrine that ultimately salvation can only be attained through God's judgement.[104]

Muslim scholars mostly agree that ultimately all Muslims will be saved (though many may need to be purified by a spell in hellfire[87] but disagree about the possibility for salvation of non-Muslims.

The idea that jinn as well as humans could find salvation was widely accepted,[105] Like humans, their destiny in the hereafter depends on whether they accept God's guidance. The surah Al-Jinn says:

And among us are those who have submitted ˹to Allah˺ and those who are deviant. So ˹as for˺ those who submitted, it is they who have attained Right Guidance. And as for the deviant, they will be fuel for Hell.’” (Q.72:14-15)

Angels, who are not subject to desire and do not commit sin, are found in both paradise and the Fire – punishing sinners in hell, and praising and serving humans (and jinn) in paradise.[106]

Scholars edit

Muslim scholars arguing in favor of non-Muslims' being able to enter paradise cite the verse:

  • "Indeed, those who believed and those who were Jews or Christians or Sabians—those who believed in Allah and the Last Day and did righteousness—will have their reward with their Lord, and no fear will there be concerning them, nor will they grieve," (Q.2:62).

Those arguing against non-Muslim salvation regard this verse to have applied only until the arrival of Muhammad, after which it was abrogated by another verse:

  • "And whoever desires other than Islam as religion—never will it be accepted from him, and he, in the Hereafter, will be among the losers. (Q.3:85).[107][108][109][110]

Although the Quran acknowledges the Bible as gospel, rejecting Muhammad and his message is seen as a rejection of salvation by them.[109]

According to Mohammad Hassan Khalil, on the subject of whether self-proclaimed non-Muslims might be allowed into Jannah, Islamic theologians can be classified as

  • 'Exclusivists' – who maintain that only Muslims will be saved and that adherents of all other beliefs will burn in Hell.[111]
  • 'Inclusivists' – who also affirm that Islam is the path to Heaven, but that some others are actually on the same path (and will go to Jannah) though they call themselves non-Muslims and call their path by a different name.[111]
  • 'Pluralists' – assert that there are several religious traditions or interpretations that are equally effective saving their adherents from damnation, regardless of the circumstances.[111]
  • 'Universalists' – 'believe that all of Hell's inhabitants will be admitted into Heaven following a significant period of time' suffering in hell.[111]

(In addition there are those who could be described as 'interim inclusivists' or [111] 'ultimate universalists'.)[112]

Based on these categories, four "well-known and particularly influential Muslim thinkers" can be sorted as:

  • al-Ghazālī – "optimistic" or "liberal inclusivist",[111]
  • Ibn al-ʿArabī – "liberal inclusivist" to "quasi-universalist",[111]
  • Ibn Taymiyya and
  • Ibn Qayyim al-Jawziyya – both universalists, (despite their status as "darlings" of "many who call themselves Salafīs"),
  • Rashīd Riḍā – was a lenient inclusivist to cautious universalist.[111]
  • Ibn Hazm – "proclaimed that even the most upright and flawless moral-ethical monotheist is damned to Hell if he knows anything about a person named Muḥammad or a religion called Islam and does not join, while even the most brutal and immoral person who converts sincerely to Islam the moment before he dies, is saved". Furthermore, "any Muslim who does not agree is not a Muslim himself."[111]

Ash'arism edit

Ashʿarism (/æʃəˈriː/; Arabic: أشعرية: al-ʾAshʿarīyah), one of the main Sunni schools of Islamic theology, founded by the Islamic scholar, Shāfiʿī jurist, Abū al-Ḥasan al-Ashʿarī in the 10th century,[113] is known for an optimistic perspective on salvation for Muslims, repeatedly addressing God's mercy over God's wrath.[114]: 165 [115] However, according to Ash'arism, God is neither obligated to punish disobedience nor to reward obedience.[114]: 167 

Ash'aris hold revelation necessary to understand good and evil, as well as religious truths.[116]: 109  Accordingly, revelation is necessary to reach moral and religious truths and thus, people who hear from a prophet or messenger are obligated to follow the revealed religion. However, those who have not received revelation are not obligated, and can hope for salvation.[117]: 215 

Al-Ghazali

Ash'arite scholar al-Ghazali divided non-Muslims into three categories for purposes of the Afterlife according to Mohammad Hassan Khalil:[118][110]

  1. Those who never heard the message of Islam, who live in far away lands, such as the Byzantines ("Romans"). These will be forgiven.
  2. Those who were only exposed to a distorted understanding of Islam and had no opportunity to hear the correct version. These too will be forgiven.
  3. People who heard of Islam because they lived in neighboring lands and/or mixed with Muslims. These have no hope of salvation.[110]

Of these three, only the last group would be punished.[118]Ghazali distinguished between the "saved" and "those who will attain success". Therefore, righteous non-Muslims will neither enter hell nor Jannah, but will stay in al-Araf (a realm between Jannah and Jahannam inhabited by those who are neither entirely evil nor entirely good).[119]

Maturidism edit

Māturīdism (Arabic: الماتريدية: al-Māturīdiyyah) is also one of the main Sunni schools of Islamic theology[120] developed and formalized by the Islamic scholar, Ḥanafī jurist Abū Manṣūr al-Māturīdī in the 10th century.[120] Māturīdi scholars are thought to have been less optimistic about the chances of sinners entering paradise than Ash'aris, but more optimistic than Muʿtazila.[115] They agree that Muslims who have committed grave sins will be punished but generally acknowledge that even these people will eventually enter paradise.[86]: 177 [121] Regarding the fate of non-Muslims, scholars have different opinions.[116]: 110  Māturīdism holds people responsible for believing in a creator due to their intellectual capacities, even if they haven't heard about any prophetic mission.[122]: 5 [117]: 215 [116]: 110  While some (like Rifat Atay) regard Māturīdism to be exclusivistic, only allowing people who are Muslims to enter paradise,[116]: 110  others argue that Māturīdi understood that "to believe in Islam" meant having a subjective conceptualization of God and his laws by reason alone. This fits the doctrine, upheld by Māturīdism, that human reason suffices to grasp good and evil, and arrive at religious truths.[116]: 109  Accordingly, people are judged by their degree of understanding God's universal law, not by their adherence to a particular belief system.[117]: 215 [116]: 110  In modern times, Yohei Matsuyama largely agrees with this interpretation.[122]: 5  According to Abu'l-Qasim Ishaq, children cannot be considered unbelievers, thus all of them go to paradise.[123]

Muʿtazila edit

Muʿtazila (Arabic: المعتزلة al-muʿtazilah) emphasized God's justice, free will, and the responsibility of each human being for their actions. They have been called the "best known exponents" of Qadariyah, the idea that human free will was necessary "as a guarantee of divine justice".[124] Compared to Maturidi and Ashʿarī, Muʿtazila had the least amount of "salvific optimism".[115] The "divine threat" (al-wa'id) and "divine promise" (al wa'd) became key tenets of the Mu'tazilites,[86]: 173  who stressed that they applied to both Muslims and non-Muslims. This meant that those who committed grave or heinous sins (Kabirah), even Muslims, might denied entry to paradise forever.[86]: 173  The only way for a grave sinner to be forgiven, many theologians believed, is by repentance (tawba). Mu'tazilites believed God's justice obligated Him to forgive those who had repented (other schools believed He was not so constrained).[86]: 175  The Mu'tazilites stress on individual accountability meant a rejection of intercession (Shafa'a) on behalf of Muhammad.[86]: 178  Another controversial belief of many (but not all)[86]: 168  Mu'tazilites was that paradise and hell would be created only after Judgement Day. This meant rejection of the commonly accepted idea that paradise and hell coexist with the contemporary world. Their reasoning was that since God does everything for a purpose, and since paradise and hell are created to reward or punish people, they will only be created after judegement has been passed on people and they are assigned to these abodes.[86]: 167–168 

Twelver Shia edit

Like most Sunni, Shia Islam hold that all Muslims will eventually go to Jannah.[nb 3]

On the fate of non-Muslims in the hereafter, Shia Islam (or at least cleric Ayatullah Mahdi Hadavi Tehrani of Al-Islam.org), takes a view similar to Ash'arism. Tehrani divides non-Muslims into two groups: the heedless and stubborn who will go to hell and the ignorant who will not "if they are truthful to their own religion":

  1. Those who are termed 'Jahil-e-Muqassir' (lit. 'culpable ignorant' – jahil suggesting unbelief rather than literal ignorance). These are non-believers to whom the message of Islam has reached and who have understood its truthfulness. However, they are not prepared to accept the truth due to their obstinacy and stubbornness. This group deserves to be punished in Hell.
  2. Those who are termed 'Jahil-e-Qasir' (lit. 'inculpable ignorant'). These are non-believers to whom the message of Islam has not reached, or it has been presented to them in a very incomplete and untruthful manner. Such people will attain salvation if they are truthful to their own religion.[128]

(At least one Twelver Shia scholar 'Allama al-Hilli, insists that not only will non-Muslims be damned but suggests Sunni Muslim will be as well, as it is not possible for any Muslim to be ignorant of "the imamate and of the Return", and thus "whoever is ignorant of any of them is outside the circle of believers and worthy of eternal punishment."[129] This statement is not indicative of all Shia eschatological thought.)

Also like mainstream schools, and unlike Muʿtazila, Twelver Shia hold that Jannah and hellfire "exist at present ... according to the Qur`an and ahadith". However, they will not "become fully apparent and represented" until Judgement Day.[130] As for three other issues in Islamic eschatology:

  • the differences between Adam and Eve's Garden of Eden,
  • "the heaven or hell of one's actions which envelopes a person"; and
  • the Barzakh state of "purgatory" in Islam after death and before Resurrection; in Shia Islam,

these three "types" of jannah (or Jahannam) are "all simply manifestations of the ultimate, eternal heaven and hell".[130]

Contemporary debate of non-Muslim fate edit

Modernist scholars Muhammad Abduh and Rashid Rida rejected the notion that the People of the Book would be excluded from Jannah, based on Q.4:123-124 (see above).[131] The Fate of the unlearned is also a matter of dispute within Islamic theology.

Turkish theologian Süleyman Ateş cites the Quran 5:66 to argue that there are good and bad people in any religion, and that some Muslims may not enter paradise, but those who believe without doubt in the hereafter and a God without partners, and who do good and useful deeds may enter paradise, whatever their religions.[132]

On the other hand, those who argue that only Islam is the "completed" and "perfected", and that it is necessary to believe in the all teaching of God – the prophets, the angels etc. – insist that only Muslims can enter paradise.[133]

The fate of Jews edit

While "some traditional and contemporary commentators" have interpreted the Quran as condemning all Jews, Farid Esack argues this condemnation is neither "universal" nor "eternal", and asks, 'if the Qur'an is to consign the Jews to eternal damnation, then what becomes of the sacred text as a means of guidance for all humankind? Would that vision too be damned?'[109][111]

An example of a line criticizing the Jews can be found in Surah 5:

  • "The Jews say, 'God's Hand is shackled.' Shackled are their hands, and they are cursed for what they say. Nay, but His two Hands are outstretched, He bestows as He wills. Surely that which has been sent down unto thee from thy Lord will increase many of them in rebellion and disbelief. And we cast enmity and hatred among them till the Day of Resurrection. As often they ignite a flame for war, God extinguishes it. They endeavor to work corruption upon the earth. And God loves not thee workers of corruption." (Q.5:64)[134]

A Sahih hadith concerning Jews and one of the signs of the coming of Judgement Day has been quoted many times, (it became a part of the charter of Hamas).[135]

  • The Day of Judgement will not come about until Muslims fight the Jews, when the Jew will hide behind stones and trees. The stones and trees will say O Muslims, O Abdullah, there is a Jew behind me, come and kill him. Only the Gharkad tree, (the Boxthorn tree) would not do that because it is one of the trees of the Jews.[nb 4]

However, some scripture praises the dedication of Jews to monotheism,[136] and this verse of the Qur'an in surah 3, can be interpreted as taking a more reconciliatory tone:

  • "They are not all alike. Among the People of the Book is an upright community who recite God's signs in the watches of the night, while they prostrate. They believe in God and the Last Day, enjoin right and forbid wrong, and hasten unto good deeds. And they are among the righteous. Whatsoever good they do, they will not be denied it. And God knows the reverent". (Q.3:113–115)[137]

After reconciling the different descriptions, one can conclude that the transgressions of the "apes and pigs" are not indicative of the entire community,[138] and that while some Jews are on their way to damnation, others are not.[138]

Islamic eschatology among Muslims in 20th and 21st centuries edit

Prior to the 20th century, Islam had "strongly emphasized the hereafter" (ākhira). Desire to counter colonialism and "achieve material and technological parity with the West" turned modern thinkers to stress this world (dunyā), without suggesting ākhira was less important.[71] The focus on end times/Eschatology in Islam has tended to occur among those less exposed to scholarly learning. In the 1980s however, it again became much more popular generally. Islamic leaders and scholars have always urged Muslim to be prepared for Judgement Day, but "the particulars of the end of the world are not a mainstream concern in Islam," according to Graeme Wood.[139][nb 5]

However, in 2012 poll conducted by the Pew Research Center found that 50% or more respondents in several Muslim-majority countries (Lebanon, Turkey, Malaysia, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Iraq, Tunisia, Algeria, and Morocco) expected the Mahdi (the final redeemer according to Islam)[140] to return during their lifetime.[141] The expectation is most common in Afghanistan (83%), followed by Iraq (72%), Turkey (68%), Tunisia (67%), Malaysia (62%), Pakistan (60%), Lebanon (56%), and Muslims in southern Thailand (57%).[141]

Stories of end times and doomsday tend to be passed on as bedtime stories or informal talk among the lay Muslims, rather than in the Imam's Friday khutbah. "Even Muslims with low levels of knowledge have heard parts of parts of it", according to scholar Jean Pierre Filiu.[nb 6] In Islamic bookstores, their "dramatic and sensational stories of final battles between good and evil, supernatural powers, the ultimate rise of a Muslim elite," are naturally more attention getting than more orthodox/studious works on prayer, purity or the lives of exemplary Muslims.[142] More official Muslim sources have often either kept quiet about apocalyptic hadith or outright denied their existence—an example being Nihad Awad of the Council on American-Islamic Relations who stated "There is no apocalyptic bloodbath in Islam."[142]

Popular Islamic pamphlets and tracts on the End Times have always been in circulation, but until around 2010 their "impact on political and theological thinking was practically nil" among Sunnis.[143] Interest in the End Times is particularly strong among jihadis and "since the mid-2000s, the apocalyptic currents in jihadism have surged."[142] As of 2011, the belief that the end of the world is at hand and will be precipitated by an apocalyptic Great Battle has been noted as a "fast-growing belief in Muslim countries" though still a minority belief.[nb 7]

Shiʿi Islam

According to J.-P. Filiu, the uprising of the (Shiʿi) Mahdi Army in Iraq and July 2006 war between Israel and (Shiʿi) Hizbullah are "at least in part" a consequence of "mounting eschatological expectations" coming from copious literature preaching that the return of the Hidden Imam was imminent; literature emanating from the Shiʿi seminaries and scholars of holy city of Najaf, Iraq, from Lebanon, and from Iran during the administration of its president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.[145] One Shiʿi Ayatollah, Muhammad Baqir al-Sadr, revered as "the fifth martyr" of Shiʿi Islam (killed by Saddam Hussein), went to the trouble of trying to explain how the Hidden Imam could be over 1000 years old, and why the present is a propitious time for the reappearance of him.[146] Muqtada al-Sadr's Mahdi army waged a violent struggle against the American military through 2004, and its ranks swelled with thousands of recruits. Muqtada's political faction won seats in parliament.[147] During Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's presidency (2005-2013), he shared with Iranians his "avowed conviction" that believers must actively work for the Mahdi's reappearance, despite this bringing him "into conflict with the highest authorities of Shiism".[148]

Popular apocalyptic literature edit

"Dramatic and sensational stories" of the apocalypse first made an impact in the mid-1980s when Said Ayyub's Al-Masīh al-Dajjāl (The AntiChrist) started a whole new genre of Islamic "apocalyptic fiction"[149] or "millenarian speculation"[150] throughout the Arab world. The book was so successful Ayyub went on to write a half-dozen other spinoff books, inspired imitators who enjoyed even greater success (Muhammad Izzat Arif, Muhammad Isa Dawud,[151] and Mansur AbdelHakim).[152]

The book (and the genre) was noteworthy for rupturing the "organic link between Islamic tradition and the last days of the world",[149] using Western sources (such as Gustave Le Bon and William Guy Carr) that previously would have been ignored; and lack of Sahih Bukhari (i.e. top quality) hadith (he does quote Ibn Kathir and some hadith "repeated at second hand"); and for an obsessively anti-Jewish point of view ("in all great transformations of thought, there is a Jewish factor, avowed and plain, or else hidden and secret",[153] "the Jews are planning the Third World War in order to eliminate the Islamic world and all opposition to Israel",[154] and cover art featuring a grotesque cartoon figure with a Star of David and large hooked nose).[153][155]

Unlike traditional popular works of Islamic eschatology that kept close to scripture and classical manuals of eschatology in describing al-Dajjāl, Said Ayyub portrayed the Dajjāl as 1) the true Jewish messiah, that Jews had been waiting for, 2) a figure who will appear or reappear not only in end times, but one who has been working throughout the history of humanity to create havoc with such diabolical success that human history is really "only a succession of nefarious maneuvers" by him. Intermediaries of al-dajjal (according to Ayyub) include St. Paul the Apostle, who (Ayyub maintains) created Christianity by distorting the true story of Jesus, the Emperor Constantine who made possible "the Crusader state in service to the Jews", the Freemasons, Napoleon, the United States of America, Communists, Israel, etc. He concludes that the dajjal is hiding in Palestine (but will also "appear in Khurasan as the head of an expansionist state") and the Great Battle between Muslims and his forces will be World War III fought in the Middle East.[156]

Later books, The Hidden Link between the AntiChrist, the Secrets of the Bermuda Triangle, and Flying Saucers (1994), by Muhammad Isa Dawud, for example, move even farther away from traditional themes, disclosing that the Anti-Christ journeyed from the Middle East to the archipelago of Bermuda in the 8th century CE to make it his home base and from whence he fomented the French Revolution and other mischief, and now sends flying saucers to patrol Egypt and prepare for his eventual triumphal return to Jerusalem.[157]

The success of the genre provoked a "counteroffensive" by pious conservatives (Abdellatif Ashur, Muhammad Bayyumi Magdi, and Muhammad Shahawi) disturbed by the liberties Said Ayyub and others had taken with Islamic doctrine.[151]

Jihadist references edit

In the early 1980s, when Abdullah Azzam, called on Muslims around the world to join the jihad in Afghanistan, he considered the fight "to be a sign that the end times were imminent". Also around that time, popular Islamic writers, such as Said Ayyub, started blaming Islamic decline in the face of the Western world, not on lack of technology and development, but on the forces of the Dajjal.[33]

Al-Qaeda used "apocalyptic predictions in both its internal and external messaging" according to Jessica Stern, and its use of "the name Khorasan, a region that includes part of Iran, Central Asia, and Afghanistan, and from which, it is prophesied, the Mahdi will emerge alongside an army bearing black flags", was thought to be a symbol of end times.[143] But these claims were "mostly symbolic",[143] and according to Wood, Bin Laden "rarely mentioned" the Apocalypse and when he did, "he implied he would be long dead when it arrived" (a reflection of his more "elite" background according to Will McCants).[158] According to J.-P. Filiu, out of the mass of Al-Qaeda documents seized after the fall of the Taliban, only one letter made any reference to the apocalypse.[159]

A prominent jihadist, Abu Musʿab al-Sūri, (called a "sophisticated strategist" and "articulate exponent of the modern jihad"),[160][161] somewhat independent and critical of Al-Qaeda, was also much more interested in end times. He wrote, "I have no doubt that we have entered into the age of battles and tribulations [zāman al-malāhim wal-fitan]"[162] He devoted the last 100 pages of his magnum opus on jihad (A Call to Global Islamic Resistance, made available online around 2005) to matters such as the proper chronology and location of related battles and other activities of the Mahdi, the Antichrist, the mountain of gold to be found in the Euphrates river, the Sufyani, Gog and Magog, etc.[163]

Abu Musʿab al Zarqawi, the founder of what would become the Islamic State "injected" the apocalyptic message into jihad.[158] ISIS has evoked "the apocalyptic tradition much more explicitly" than earlier jihadis. Dabiq, Syria – a town understood "in some versions" of the eschatological "narrative to be a possible location for the final apocalyptic battle" – was captured by ISIS and made its capital. ISIS also declared its "intent to conquer Constantinople" – Muslims conquering Constantinople being another end times prophesy.[143] Interviews by the New York Times,[164] and Jurgen Todenhöfer[165] with many dozens of Muslims who had traveled to fight with Islamic State, and by Graeme Wood with Islamic State supporters elsewhere, found "messianic expectation" a strong motivator to join Islamic State.[164]

Shiʿi Islam

While Al-Qaeda and Islamic State are Sunni, Shia insurgents/militants have also been "drawn to the battlefield" by "apocalyptic belief", according to William McCants, who quotes a Shia fighter in Iraq saying, “'I was waiting for the day when I will fight in Syria. Thank God he chose me to be one of the Imam's soldiers.'”[166]

Some dissident Shiʿa in Iraq, oppose not only Sunni, US and Iraqi government forces, but the Shiʿi religious hierarchy as well. In Najaf, in late January 2007, at least 200 were killed in the Battle of Najaf,[167][168][169] when several hundred members of an armed Iraqi Shi'a messianic sect known as the Soldiers of Heaven or Jund As-Samāʾ(Arabic: جند السماء), allegedly attempted to start a "messianic insurrection" during the holy day of Ashura in the holy city of Najaf;[170] planning to disguise themselves as pilgrims and kill leading Shi'a clerics.[171] The group allegedly believed that spreading chaos would hasten the return of the 12th Imam/Mahdi,[172][173][174] or alternately, that their leader, Dia Abdul Zahra Kadim, was the awaited Mahdi.[175] The next year during Ashura a reported 18 officers and 53 militia members were killed in clashes between "millenarian rebels" and police,[176] the violence blamed on followers of one Ahmad al-Hassan, a man claiming the Hidden Iman had designated him as his (the Hidden Imam's) representative (wassi), and who accused Ayatollahs/Shia clerics of being guilty of "aberration and treason, of occupation and tyranny".[177]

Islamic State claims of prophecy fulfilment edit

Jihadis of the Islamic State see the fulfillment of many of the "lesser signs" of the coming of Judgement Day in current events. Its generally agreed that Israel Arab wars have been wars between Muslims and Jews (which were prophesied), and that moral standards have declined leading to rampant fornication, alcohol consumption, and music listening.[178] "A slave giving birth to her master" can happen when the child of a slave woman and the slave's owner inherits the slave after the owner's death—slavery being practiced in the Islamic State (until its defeat).[178] An embargo of Iraq[178] is alleged to be foretold in the hadith "Iraq would withhold its dirhams and qafiz".[179] That Muslim states are being led by those who do not deserve to lead them,[180] is an article of faith among jihadis and many other Muslims. ISIS alleges that worship of the pre-Islamic deity al-Lat is being practiced by its Shia enemy Hezbollah. The naked shepherds who will build tall buildings is interpreted to refer to Gulf State builders of skyscrapers[181] are "only a generation or two out of desert poverty".[178]

But the Islamic State is also attempting to fulfill prophecies itself to hasten end times. Zarqawi published "communiqués detailing the fulfillment of specific predictions" found in a famous book on jihad and end times called, A Call to a Global Islamic Resistance by Abu Musab al Suri. His successor, Al-Baghdadi, took "the fulfillment of apocalyptic portents even more seriously".[182] According to Hassan Abbas,[nb 8] at least part of ISIS's motivation in killing and otherwise provoking Shia is to "deliberately ... instigate a war between Sunnis and Shi'a, in the belief that a sectarian war would be a sign that the final times has arrived"; and also explains the ISIS Siege of Kobanî: "In the eschatological literature, there is reference to crisis in Syria and massacre of Kurds—this is why Kobane is important."(The town of 45,000 was under siege by ISIS from September 2014 to January 2015.)[183]

Thus, "ISIS's obsession with the end of the world" helps explain its lack of interest in the "ordinary moral rules" of the temporal world, according to Jessica Stern. If you are "participating in a cosmic war between good and evil", (and if everyone will be dead and then resurrected relatively soon anyway), pedestrian concerns about saving the lives of the innocent are of little concern.[184]

Questions and criticism edit

Among the problems critics see with some of the concepts of, and attention given to, the eschatology of Islam, are its effect on the socio-economic health of the Muslim world, the basis of the scripture (particularly the hadith) dealing with end times, and the rational implausibility of some of the theological concepts such as resurrection of the dead.

Mustafa Akyol criticizes the current focus of the Muslim community on apocalypticism and the use of the forces of the Dajjal to explain stagnation in the Muslim world in the past two centuries vis-à-vis the West (and now East Asia). He argues that if supernatural evil is believed to be the cause of the problems of Muslims, then practical solutions such as "science, economic development and liberal democracy" will be ignored in favor of divine intervention.[185][141] (On the other hand, a sahih hadith reports Muhammad saying that "If the Final Hour comes while you have a shoot of a plant in your hands and it is possible to plant it before the Hour comes, you should plant it.")[186]

Western scholars (William McCants, Jane Smith, Yvonne Haddad, Jean-Pierre Filiu) agree that the apocalyptic narratives are strongly connected to the early jihad wars against the Byzantine Empire and civil wars against other Muslims. McCants, writes that the fitan ("tribulations") of the minor and lesser signs come from the fitan of the early Islamic civil wars (First Fitna (656–661 CE), Second Fitna (c. 680/683–c. 685/692 CE), Third Fitna (744–750/752 CE)), where Muhammad's companions (Sahabah) and successor generations (Tabi'un and Taba Tabi'in) fought each other for political supremacy.[166] "Before and after each tribulation, partisans on both sides circulated prophecies in the name of the Prophet to support their champion. With time, the context was forgotten but the prophecies remained."[166] Smith and Haddad also write that "the political implications of the whole millennial idea in Islam, especially as related to the understanding of the mahdi and the rise of the 'Abbasids in the second Islamic century, are very difficult to separate from the eschatological ones."[187] They also argue that it's "difficult to determine whether" Muḥammad "actually anticipated the arrival" the Mahdi as "an eschatological figure" – despite the fact that "most of the traditions about the Mahdi are credited to Muḥammad.[187] Filiu has also stated that "the apocalyptic narrative was decisively influenced by the conflicts that filled Islam's early years, campaigns and jihad against the Byzantine Empire and recurrent civil wars among Muslims."[188] Consequently, the reliability of hadith on end times has been questioned.

Skepticism of the concept of the resurrection of the dead has been part of both "the compatriots" of Muhammad and the "rational and scientifically-infused" inhabitants of the contemporary world.

The fact of the resurrection of the body has been of continuing importance to Muslims and has raised very particular questions in certain circles of Islamic thought, such as those reflected in the later disputations between philosophy and theology.[nb 9] It was not really a point of issue for early Islam, however, and bodily resurrection has never been seriously denied by orthodoxy. It is, as many have observed, basic to the message of God as proclaimed by the Prophet and articulated clearly by the Qur'an,[nb 10] especially in those passages in which the contemporaries of the Prophet are presented as having scoffed or raised doubts. It continues to be, ... a point of conviction for many of the contemporary interpreters of Islam to a world in which a rational and scientifically-infused populace continues to raise the same eyebrows of skepticism as did the compatriots of the Prophet.[78]

Early skeptics being quoted in the Quran as saying: "Are we to be returned to our former state when we have become decayed bones? They say, that would be a detrimental return!" (Q79: 10–12).[189]

Visitation of tombs edit

Death is also seen as a homecoming.[85] When people visit tombs, they are having a specific spiritual routine.[85] The correct way to visit someone's tomb is to recite parts of the Quran and pray for the deceased.[85]

Literature on Islamic eschatology edit

The writings of five medieval Sunni scholars on Islamic eschatology stand out for their "depth and originality", according to Jean-Pierre Filiu. Taking a work by each of them on the subject of the signs of end times, (or that includes the subject of the signs of end times), Filiu points out their characteristics, differences, and influences (where the Mahdi will first appear, where Jesus will descend to, how many human and angel warriors will fight with the Mahdi, etc.).

  • Ibn Arabi (1165–1240 CE), Al-futūhāt al-makkiyya (Meccan Illuminations);[190] Among other things, Ibn Arabi wrote that "70,000 Muslim, all descended from Isaac" would follow the Mahdi and chanting "Allahu Akbar!", and crumble the ramparts of Constantinople; The Great Battle would take place on the plain of Acre.[191]
  • Al-Qurtubi (1214-1273 CE), Al-tadhkira fī ahwāl al-mawtā wa umūr al-ahkīra (Remembrance of the Affairs of the Dead and Matters of the Hereafter);[192] Known for his opposition to both partisanship in Islam and the Umayyad dynasty, Al-Qurtubi prophesied the Mahdi would emerge in Morocco and preach there for ten years before rescuing the Muslims of Spain and moving on to conquer the Byzantines.[193]
  • Ibn Kathir (c. 1300–1373 CE), Ashrāt al-sāʿat (Signs of the Hour);[194] Popular among the ulama and common people of Syria for his preaching of strictness, Ibn Kathir had a highly developed vision of the signs of the Last Hour. The Mahdi was distinct from the Shia Hidden Imam; there would be great battles between Muslims and Byzantines, and then with the forces of the Dajjal.[195]
  • Ibn Khaldun (1332–1406), Kitāb al-ʿibar (Book of Examples);[196] Despite his association with modernism, Ibn Khaldun thought none of what was mentioned in the Quran of "the hour" and its signs was "subject to the least ambiguity"; he endorsed apocalyptic hadith in the collections of Bukhari and Muslim (but not other collections), as well as the "classical scenario" of end times.[197]
  • Jalal al-Din al-Suyuti (1446-1505), fatwa on "the descent of Jesus, son of Mary at the end times" from Al-hāwī lil-fatāwī.[198] Al-Suyuti preached against the millenarian claim that the earth would end in 1000 A.H. (1591 C.E.), believing Judgement Day would come in 1500 A.H. (2076 C.E.).
  • Ibn al-Nafis (1213-1288 CE), Theologus Autodidactus (circa CE 1270). In the form of a theological fiction novel, he wrote on Islamic eschatology where he used reason, science, and early Islamic philosophy to explain how he believed al-Qiyamah would unfold.[199]

Contemporary literature edit

  • Imran Nazar Hosein (b.1942 CE) wrote numerous books that deal with Islamic eschatology (Ilmu Ākhir al-Zamān – Knowledge of the later days), among which the most famous is Jerusalem in the Qur'an.[200]
  • Said Ayyub's Al-Masīh al-Dajjāl (often translated as The AntiChrist) came out in August 1986, (see above) was enormously popular and started a new genre of Islamic "apocalyptic fiction"[149] that added western themes such as flying saucers, the Bermuda Triangle and European Antisemitism to traditional Islamic eschatology.[156]
  • AbuBilaal Yakub published his The One-Eyed Impostor:Messiah and False Messiah, in addition to an earlier publication The Three Questions. His Islamic High Fantasy works beginning with The Amulets of Sihr incorporates apocalyptic themes.[201]

See also edit

References edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ "as it is presented in the context" of monotheism
  2. ^
    • one trumpet blast Q.69:13
    • two blasts in Q.39:68,
    • "some eschatological manuals" expand this to three (a belief also expressed in some Jewish traditions).[48]
    the Qur'an itself "does not make explicit the chronology" involved with the blowing(s) of the horn" and "the traditions do not present a consistent picture"; but "The general understanding seems to be" that Isrāfīl will be the first of creation to be resurrected and he will give the blast that brings the dead back to life.[49]
  3. ^ Sayyed Mohammad Al-Musawi quotes
    • Shaikh al-Mufeed: The Imami (Shia) scholars are unanimous that remaining in Hellfire for ever is for the Kuffaar only and not for the major sinners from those who believe in Allah.[125][126]
    • Shaikh al-Sadouq: The Hellfire is the place of those who did not believe in Allah and some of the believers in Allah who committed major sins but they will not remain in it. No one will remain in Hellfire for ever but the non believers.[127][126]
  4. ^ (related by al-Bukhari (Sahih al-Bukhari, ,(Sahih al-Bukhari, ) and Muslim (Sahih Muslim, , see also Sahih Muslim, , Sahih Muslim, , Sahih Muslim, , Sahih Muslim, )
  5. ^ Smith and Haddad write, the "great majority of contemporary Muslim writers, ... choose not to discuss the afterlife at all. They are satisfied with simply affirming the reality of the day of judgment and human accountability without providing any details or interpretive discussion.[71]
  6. ^ In conversation to Graeme Wood.[142]
  7. ^ from blurb for Filiu, Jean-Pierre (2011). Apocalypse in Islam. Translated by DeBevoise, M. B. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-26431-1.[144]
  8. ^ "an expert on jihadi movements"
  9. ^ See al-Ghazali's Tahafut al-falasifa, Problem XX, "Refutation of their Denial of the Resurrection of Bodies" (tr. S. A. Kamali, [1963]), in which al-Ghazali replies point by point to objections raised by Muslim philosophers to the fact of physical resurrection. This position was countered by Ibn Rushd in his Tahafut al-tahafut, in which he contends that only the soul survives the death of the physical body.
  10. ^ Ash'ari theology taught that the resurrection of the body is not an element of faith common to Judaism, Christianity, and Islam, but that it was revealed in its full understanding for the first time in the Qur'an.

Citations edit

  1. ^ Smith, Jane I. (2006). "Eschatology". In McAuliffe, Jane Dammen (ed.). Encyclopaedia of the Qurʾān. Vol. II. Leiden: Brill Publishers. doi:10.1163/1875-3922_q3_EQCOM_00055. ISBN 978-90-04-14743-0.
  2. ^ Hasson, Isaac (2006). "Last Judgment". In McAuliffe, Jane Dammen (ed.). Encyclopaedia of the Qurʾān. Vol. III. Leiden: Brill Publishers. doi:10.1163/1875-3922_q3_EQCOM_00105. ISBN 978-90-04-14743-0.
  3. ^ "Eschatology - Oxford Islamic Studies Online". Oxfordislamicstudies.com. 6 May 2008. Retrieved 3 July 2017.
  4. ^ AbdulGhaffar, Suhaib Hasan. "50 Signs of the Day of Judgment from the Words of Allah and His Messenger - English - Suhaib Hasan AbdulGhaffar". IslamHouse.com. Retrieved 26 August 2022.
  5. ^ "Judgment Day in Quran". www.al-islam.org. 13 January 2015. Retrieved 26 August 2022.
  6. ^ tech@whyislam.org. "Belief in Judgement Day". Facts about the Muslims & the Religion of Islam - Toll-free hotline 1-877-WHY-ISLAM. Retrieved 26 August 2022.
  7. ^ Musa, Aisha Y. (2008). Hadith as Scripture. Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-1282050730. OCLC 823841821.
  8. ^ Gardet, L. Qiyama. Encyclopaedia of the Qurʾān.
  9. ^ a b Quran 74:38
  10. ^ "Sunan Abi Dawud. 39 Battles (Kitab Al-Malahim)". Sunnah.com. Retrieved 14 April 2022.
  11. ^ Stowasser, Barbara Freyer (2002). "The End is Near: Minor and Major Signs of the Hour in Islamic Texts and Context" (PDF). ETH Zurich. Retrieved 17 April 2022.
  12. ^ . www.discoveringislam.org. Archived from the original on 4 September 2022. Retrieved 10 June 2021.
  13. ^ Smith & Haddad, Islamic Understanding, 1981: p.5
  14. ^ "Yājūj and Mājūj | Islamic mythology | Britannica". www.britannica.com. Retrieved 26 August 2022.
  15. ^ "Chapter 18: The rising of as-Sufyani". www.al-islam.org. 23 July 2015. Retrieved 26 August 2022.
  16. ^ "The Expected Mahdi ('a) and His Government of Justice". www.al-islam.org. 18 September 2012. Retrieved 26 August 2022.
  17. ^ Boulter, Jeremy. "The Return of Jesus". www.islamreligion.com. Retrieved 26 August 2022.
  18. ^ Farhang, Mehrvash (2017). "Dajjāl". Encyclopaedia Islamica. Leiden and Boston: Brill Publishers. doi:10.1163/1875-9831_isla_COM_035982. ISSN 1875-9823.
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ISIS, 2022

Further reading edit

  • "Fath al-Bari" (from Sahih al-Bukhari by ibn Hajar al-Asqalani).
  • Esposito, John, The Oxford Dictionary of Islam, Oxford University Press, 2003, ISBN 0-19-512558-4.
  • Richard C. Martin, Said Amir Arjomand, Marcia Hermansen, Abdulkader Tayob, Rochelle Davis, John Obert Voll, Encyclopedia of Islam and the Muslim World, MacMillan Reference Books, 2003, ISBN 978-0028656038.
  • Lawson, Todd (1999). Duality, Opposition and Typology in the Qur'an: The Apocalyptic Substrate. Journal of Quranic Studies. 10: 23–49.

islamic, eschatology, this, article, contain, excessive, inappropriate, references, self, published, sources, please, help, improve, removing, references, unreliable, sources, where, they, used, inappropriately, august, 2022, learn, when, remove, this, templat. This article may contain excessive or inappropriate references to self published sources Please help improve it by removing references to unreliable sources where they are used inappropriately August 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Islamic eschatology Arabic ع ل م آخر الزمان في الإسلام ilm akhir az zaman fi al islam is a field of study in Islam concerning future events that would happen in the end times It is primarily based on sources from the Quran and Sunnah Aspects from this field of study include the signs of the final age the destruction of the universe and Judgement Day 1 2 3 The general consensus of Muslim scholars agree there would be tremendous and distinctive signs before the world ends Among which would be an era of trials and tribulations a time of immorality followed by mighty wars worldwide unnatural phenomena and the return of justice to the world Defining figures are also prophesied such as the Mahdi and the Second Coming of Isa known as Jesus in Christianity who bring about a heavenly victory against Dajjal Antichrist according to Christianity ending with the release of Yajuj and Majuj Gog and Magog to the world 4 Once all the events are completed the universe shall be destroyed and every human being would be resurrected to be held accountable for their deeds 5 6 Contents 1 Sources for Islamic eschatology 2 Signs of the End Times 3 Small Resurrection 4 Resurrection and final judgement 4 1 Resurrection of the dead 4 2 Separation of the righteous and the damned 5 Eschatological theological questions 5 1 Basis of belief 5 2 Early Muslim thought on damnation 5 3 Resurrection theories 5 4 Literal or allegorical 5 5 Modernist postmodernist thought 5 5 1 Gender equity 5 6 Limbo or al aʿraf in Islam 5 7 The Current existence of the Afterlife 5 8 The Concept of Eternity 5 9 Predestination 5 10 Who will enter Heaven or hell 5 10 1 Scholars 5 10 2 Ash arism 5 10 3 Maturidism 5 10 4 Muʿtazila 5 10 5 Twelver Shia 5 10 6 Contemporary debate of non Muslim fate 5 10 7 The fate of Jews 6 Islamic eschatology among Muslims in 20th and 21st centuries 6 1 Popular apocalyptic literature 6 2 Jihadist references 6 3 Islamic State claims of prophecy fulfilment 7 Questions and criticism 8 Visitation of tombs 9 Literature on Islamic eschatology 9 1 Contemporary literature 10 See also 11 References 11 1 Notes 11 2 Citations 11 3 Bibliography 12 Further readingSources for Islamic eschatology editAlike with other tenets of Islamic faith sources of Islamic eschatology are taken from two primary sources namely the Quran itself and Sunnah literature which are accounts of the traditions of the Islamic prophet Muhammad during his lifetime 7 These two foundational sources would pave the way for interpretations by later scholars such as al Ghazali Ibn Kathir and Muhammad al Bukhari 8 9 Signs of the End Times edit nbsp Events in Islamic eschatology based on Sunan Abu Dawood Battles Kitab Al Malahim 10 nbsp Eschatological timeline of minor and major signs preceding the Day of JudgementMain article Signs of the coming of Judgement Day The arrival of Judgement Day is prophesied to be preceded by apocalyptic signs of its arrival in various hadith collections 11 12 13 Senseless immorality would prevail The prevalence of tyrants alcohol usury satanic music fornication homosexuality and disobedience by wives murders lying and cheating disinterest in and ignorance of religion Unnatural phenomenons would occur The rise of frequent sudden deaths excessive lightning destructive rainfall terrible drought a huge cloud of smoke the opening up of huge cracks in the earth the sun rising in the west the breeze that take the souls of the faithful The appearance of dark satanic evils such as the Antichrist Gog and Magog 14 15 The arrival of messianic saviors such as the Mahdi and Jesus who along with divine intervention will restore justice 16 17 The signs are divided into two categories 18 19 Minor signs are uneventful signs that happen in the timeframe of centuries Major signs are seismic events that happen very rapidly and is the immediate precursor to the end 20 21 22 23 Savior and evil doing figures that appear in the major signs include Al Masih ad Dajjal Arabic المسيح الدج ال romanized al Masiḥ ad Dajjal lit Deceitful Messiah 24 is blind in one eye and will deceive starving masses especially the Jews by performing miracles 25 26 citation needed He will raise an army that will kill and conquer 27 and corner his nemesis the Mahdi along with a small army of Muslim fighters in Jerusalem Jesus will descend from heaven just in time to kill him and defeat his army 25 citation needed nbsp Iskandar Alexander builds a wall to seal Yajuj and Majuj here aided by divs demons Persian miniature from a Falnama 16th century 28 29 The Mahdi Arabic ٱل م ه د ي romanized al mahdiy i e the Rightly Guided One is a messianic figure descended from Muhammad through Ali who with the help of Jesus will defeat the Dajjal reestablish Islamic law rid the world of bid a religious innovation and fill it with justice 30 Sunni and Shia disagree on details such as whether he is currently alive will kill the Dajjal himself what he looks like his exact ancestry etc Jesus Arabic ع يس ى ٱب ن م ر ي م romanized ʿisa ibn Maryam lit Isa son of Maryam will make a second coming descending to earth but unlike in Christianity it will be to assist the Mahdi by killing the dajjal break ing the cross kill ing the pigs and abolish ing the Jizya tax 31 32 i e put an end to Christians misconceptions about his being the Son of God and there being no need to follow dietary laws 33 Jesus and the Mahdi will then rule the earth in perfect justice for a time before Judgement Day Shia believe it is the Mahdi who will kill the dajjal others believe the Mahdi is not a distinct person but just the title given to Jesus Gog and Magog Arabic يأجوج ومأجوج are mentioned in the Quran as doing great mischief on earth and being suppressed by a figure called Dhul Qarnayn the two horned one 34 who builds a wall to contain their mischief warning their local victims that when the time comes believed to mean the end times Allah will remove the barrier 35 Non Quranic Islamic apocalyptic literature describes Gog and Magog as a subhuman pestilence who are released from thousands of years of imprisonment to do much killing pillaging and devouring of vast resources until being wiped out after God commands an insect or worm to burrow into their necks and kill them 36 37 Small Resurrection editSmall Resurrection al qiyamah al sughra happens when the soul is separated from the body The soul then turns to the afterlife akhira or malakut where it is interrogated by two angels Munkar and Nakir 38 Resurrection and final judgement editMain article Judgement Day in Islam nbsp Diagram of Ard al Hashr the Plain of Assembly on the Day of Judgement from an autograph manuscript of Futuhat al Makkiyya written by the Sufi mystic and Muslim philosopher Ibn Arabi ca 1238 Shown are the ʿArsh Throne of God al Aminun pulpits for the righteous seven rows of angels al Ruh Gabriel A raf the Barrier Ḥawḍ al Kawthar the Pond of Abundance al Maqam al Mahmud the Praiseworthy Station where the Prophet Muhammad will stand to intercede for the faithful Mizan the Scale As Sirat the Bridge Jahannam Hell and Marj al Jannat Meadow of Paradise 39 In Islam the promise and threat waʿd wa waʿid 40 of Judgement Day Arabic یوم القيامة romanized Yawm al qiyamah lit Day of Resurrection or Arabic یوم الدین romanized Yawm ad din lit Day of Judgement has been called the dominant message of the Quran nb 1 41 and is considered a fundamental tenet of faith by all Muslims and one of the six articles of Islamic faith The two themes central to the understanding of Islamic eschatology are the resurrection of bodies joined with spirits in a reunion of whole cognizant and responsible persons and a final judgement of the quality of each persons life lived on earth and a subsequent recompense carried out with absolute justice through the prerogative of God s merciful will 42 The trials tribulations and details associated with it are detailed in the Quran and the hadith sayings of Muhammad these have been elaborated on in creeds Quranic commentaries tafsịrs theological writing 43 eschatological manuals to provide more details and a sequence of events on the Day 41 Islamic expositors and scholarly authorities who have explained the subject in detail include al Ghazali Ibn Kathir Ibn Majah Muhammad al Bukhari and Ibn Khuzaymah Resurrection of the dead edit After the final signs of The Hour the defeat of the Sufyani the end of the just reign of the Mahdi and or Jesus the rising of the sun from the west 44 the peaceful death all believers from inhalation of a lethal breeze 45 46 47 a trumpet will blast signaling the destruction of earth Q 69 13 16 A second blast will signal the death of any being still living 48 The dead will then be resurrected and Afterlife commence with yet another trumpet blast different sources give different numbers of trumpet blasts nb 2 The first to arise will be Muhammad 50 followed by the other members of the Muslim community 51 with all gathering at the place of assembly al maḥshar 52 In between resurrection and the actual judgement will be an agonizing time of waiting Q 21 103 Q 37 20 for unbelievers 52 Separation of the righteous and the damned edit At divine judgement the resurrected will stand in a grand assembly each person s Book of Deeds where every small and great thing is recorded will be read 53 and ultimate judgement made 9 54 The resurrected will then walk over the bridge of As Sirat those judged worthy for the Garden continuing to their heavenly abode those damned to The Fire falling off the bridge into the pit of Jahannam 55 There will also be a punishment of the grave for those who disbelieved between death and the resurrection 56 Not everyone consigned to hell will remain there as it is believed by both scholars and lay Muslims that all but the mushrikun those who have committed the worst sin of impugning the tawḥid of God have the possibility of being saved 57 and God s intercession to save sinners from hellfire is a major theme in popular Islamic stories about Judgement Day 58 Eschatological theological questions editScholars did not always agree on questions of who might go to hell whether the creation of heaven and hell would wait until Judgement Day whether there was a state between heaven and hell whether those consigned to hell would be there for eternity Basis of belief edit Fear hope and finally faith have been given by Jane I Smith Yvonne Y Haddad as motivations offered by the Quran for the belief of Muslims in an Afterlife 59 although some Abu Aʿla al Mawdudi have asserted it is simply a matter of reason The fact is that whatever Muhammad peace be upon him has told us about life after death is clearly borne out by reason Although our belief in that Day is based upon our implicit trust in the Messenger of God rational reflection not only confirms this belief but it also reveals that Muhammad s peace be upon him teachings in this respect are much more reasonable and understandable than all other view points about life after death 60 Early Muslim thought on damnation edit One of the primary beliefs pertaining to Islamic eschatology during the Early Muslim Period was that all humans could receive God s mercy and were worthy of salvation 61 These early depictions even show how small insignificant deeds were enough to warrant mercy 62 Most early depictions of the end of days depict only those who reject Tawhid the concept of monotheism are subject to eternal punishment However everybody is held responsible for their actions Concepts of reward and punishment were seen as beyond this world a view that is also held today 62 Resurrection theories edit Although Islamic philosophers and scholars were in general agreement on a bodily resurrection after death interpretations differ in regard to the specifications of bodily resurrection Some of the theories are the following The return to the same material body someone had during lifetime that will be restored 63 Conjunction of the soul with a Mithali body which is congenial to the worlds of Barzakh and the Akhirah 64 Resurrection with a Hurqaliyati body accordingly a second invisible body that survives death 65 Literal or allegorical edit According to scholars Jane I Smith Yvonne Y Haddad the vast majority of believers understand verses of the Quran on Jannah and hellfire to be real and specific anticipating them with joy or terror 66 Besides the material notion of the paradise descriptions of it are also interpreted as allegories whose meaning is the state of joy believers will experience in the afterlife For some theologians seeing God is not a question of sight but of awareness of God s presence 67 Although early Sufis such as Hallaj took the descriptions of Paradise literal later Sufi traditions usually stressed out the allegorical meaning 68 On the issue of Judgement Day early Muslims debated whether scripture should be interpreted literally or figuratively and the school of thought that prevailed Ashʿari affirmed that such things as connected with Judgement day as the individual records of deeds including the paper pen and ink with which they are inscribed the bridge the balance and the pond are realities and to be understood in a concrete and literal sense 69 Modernist postmodernist thought edit According to Smith and Haddad The great majority of contemporary Muslim writers choose not to discuss the afterlife at all 70 Islamic Modernists according to Smith and Haddad express a kind of embarrassment with the elaborate traditional detail concerning life in the grave and in the abodes of recompense called into question by modern rationalists 71 72 73 Consequently most of modern Muslim Theologians either silence the issue or reaffirm the traditional position that the reality of the afterlife must not be denied but that its exact nature remains unfathomable 74 71 The beliefs of Pakistani modernist Muhammad Iqbal died 1938 were similar to the Sufi spiritual and internalized interpretations of hell of ibn ʿArabi and Rumi seeing paradise and hell primarily as metaphors for inner psychic developments Thus hellfire is actually a state of realization of one s failures as a human being and not a supernatural subterranean realm 75 Egyptian modernist Muhammad ʿAbduh thought it was sufficient to believe in the existence of an afterlife with rewards and punishment to be a true believer even if you ignored clear ẓahir hadith about hell 76 Gender equity edit Some postmodernists have found at least one sahih authentic hadith on hell unacceptable the tradition of Muhammad stating most people in hell are women 77 has been explained as an attempt to legitimate social control over women Smith and Haddad 78 or perpetuate the moral social political sectarian hierarchies of medieval Islam Lange 73 Amina Wadud notes that the Qur an does not mention any specific gender when talking about Hell Q 43 74 76 for example states that the guilty are immortal in hell s torment and when discussing paradise includes women Q 3 14 15 for example states that Beautiful of mankind is love of the joys that come from women and offspring 79 Limbo or al aʿraf in Islam edit See also Araf Islam In terms of classical Islam the only options afforded by the Qur an for the resurrected are an eternity of horrible punishments of The Fire or the delightful rewards of The Garden Islamic tradition has raised the question of whether or not consignment to the Fire is eternal or eternal for all but has found no reason to amend the limit of two options in the afterlife 80 But one verse in the Quran has led to a great deal of speculation concerning the possibility of a third place 80 There will be a barrier ḥijab between Paradise and Hell And on the heights al aʿraf of that barrier will be people who will recognize the residents of both by their appearance They will call out to the residents of Paradise Peace be upon you They will have not yet entered Paradise but eagerly hope to Q 7 46 80 What some have called the Limbo Theory of Islam as described by Jane Smith and Yvonne Haddad implies that some individuals are not immediately sent to The Fire or The Garden but are held in a state of limbo 80 Smith and Haddad believe it is very doubtful that the Qur anic meant for al aʿraf to be understood as an abode for those in an intermediate category but this has come to be the most commonly held interpretation 81 82 As for who the inhabitants of the inhabits al aʿraf are the majority of exegetes support the theory that they are persons whose actions balance in terms of merit and demerit whose good deeds keep them from the Fire and whose evil deeds keep them from the Garden They will be the last to enter the Garden at the mercy of their Lord 83 The Current existence of the Afterlife edit nbsp Pomegranate flower and fruit considered a fruit from paradise in Muslim tradition Therefore it is used as an ingredient in a dessert Ashure used to commemorate prophetic events There was considerable debate regarding whether heaven and hell exists at the current moment 84 85 The Mu tazila argued that since the Quran states that once the trumpet sounds all except God will be destroyed this would include the destruction of heaven and hell 84 85 However the Ash ariya argued that although the trumpet s sounding will precede all being destroyed creation was a constant process 84 85 Maturidism also defends the idea that paradise and hell are coexisting with the temporal world The attributes of paradise and hell would already take effect on this world dunya Abu al Layth al Samarqandi 944 983 states that the purpose of simultaneous existence of both worlds is that they inspire hope and fear among humans 86 168 Evidence that Jannah and the Fire already exists is supported by a number of verses in the Quran It is implied someone has gone to the Garden or the hell 3 169 36 13 26 66 10 3 10 11 6 93 87 In the Story of Adam and Eve they once resided in Garden of Eden which is often considered to be Jannah This identification however is not universal Al Balluti 887 966 reasoned that the Garden of Eden lacked the perfection and eternal character of a final paradise 86 167 Adam and Eve lost the primordial paradise while the paradisiacal afterlife lasts forever if Adam and Eve were in the otherworldly paradise the devil Shaiṭan could not have entered and deceive them since there is no evil or idle talk in paradise Adam slept in his garden but there is no sleep in paradise 86 167 Besides the Quranic allusions hadiths are taken into consideration to evaluate the afterlife s coexistence with the temporary world Reports pertaining to the Night Journey Mi raj state that Muhammad saw visions of both destinations and creatures inhabiting it 84 85 Thus heaven and hell are usually regarded as coexisting with the current world 88 According to another common tradition Muhammad is supposed to have taken a pomegranate from jannah and shared it with Ali as recorded by Nasir al Din al Tusi However some scholars like Ghazali reject that Muhammad grabbed the fruit argued he had only a vision instead 86 215 The Concept of Eternity edit In Classical Islam there was a consensus among the theological community regarding the finality of Jannah also called Heaven paradise the Gardens after Judgement Day faithful servants of God would find themselves here for eternity 89 90 However some practitioners in the early Muslim community held that the other abode of the hereafter hell Jahannam or at least part of that abode might not be eternal 89 90 This belief was based upon an interpretations of scripture that since the upper less tortuous levels of Hell were reserved for Muslims who were only in hell for as long as God deemed necessary Once Muslims had their sins purged and were allowed into heaven these levels would be empty and the need for their existence gone 89 90 These interpretations are centered on verses 11 106 107 in the Quran stating As for those who are wretched they shall be in the Fire wherein there shall be for them groaning and wailing abiding therein for so long as the heavens and the earth endure save as thy Lord wills Surely thy Lord does whatsoever He wills 91 This possibility that God may yet commute a sentence to Hell interprets parts of hell as being similar in function to Purgatory in Christianity with the exception to this comparison being that Hell in this context is for the punishment of the sinner s complete body as opposed to the only the soul being punished in Purgatory 89 90 Arguments questioning the permanence of Hell take the view that Hell is not necessarily solely there to punish the evil but to purify their souls whereas the purpose of the Garden is simply to reward the righteous 92 93 Evidence against the concept of hell being in part temporary is the Quran verse stating that Hell will endure as long as Heaven will which has been established as eternal 94 Predestination edit Main article Predestination in Islam Orthodox Islam teaches the doctrine of Qadar Arabic قدر aka Predestination or divine destiny in Islam 95 whereby everything that has happened and will happen in the universe including sinful human behavior is commanded by God 96 At the same time we human beings are responsible for our actions and rewarded or punished for them in the Afterlife 97 98 Qadar predestination divine destiny is one of Sunni Islam s six articles of faith and is mentioned in the Quran Nothing will ever befall us except what Allah has destined for us Q 9 51 99 Allah leaves whoever He wills to stray and guides whoever He wills Q 14 4 99 Of course the fate of human beings in the Afterlife is especially crucial It is reflected in Quranic verses such as Had We willed We could have easily imposed guidance on every soul But My Word will come to pass I will surely fill up Hell with jinn and humans all together Q 32 13 99 Muhammad also talked about the doctrine of predestination multiple times during his mission 62 Thus the consensus of the Sunni Muslim community has been that scripture indicates predestination 62 Nonetheless some Muslim theologians have argued against predestination including at least some Shia Muslims whose article of faith includes Adalah justice but not Qadar At least some Shia such as Naser Makarem Shirazi denounce predestination 100 Opponents of predestination in early Islam al Qadariyah Muʿtazila argued that if God has already determined everything that will happen God s human creation cannot really have free will over decisions to do good or evil or control of whether they suffer eternal torment in Jahannam which is something that the opponents believe a just God would never allow to happen 99 While Qadar is the consensus of Muslims it is also an issue scholars discourage debate and discussion about Hadith narrate Muhammad warning his followers to refrain from speaking about qadar 101 and according to the creed of Al Tahawi the principle of providence is such a secret that God did not let even angels prophets and messengers in on the mystery 97 102 Who will enter Heaven or hell edit Scholars do not all agree on who will end up in Jannah and who in Jahannam and the criteria for deciding Issues include whether all Muslims even those who ve committed major sins will end up in Jannah whether any non Muslims will be saved or all will go to Jahannam According to the Quran the basic criterion for salvation in the afterlife is the belief in the oneness of God tawḥid angels revealed books messengers as well as repentance to God and doing good deeds amal salih 103 51 This is qualified by the doctrine that ultimately salvation can only be attained through God s judgement 104 Muslim scholars mostly agree that ultimately all Muslims will be saved though many may need to be purified by a spell in hellfire 87 but disagree about the possibility for salvation of non Muslims The idea that jinn as well as humans could find salvation was widely accepted 105 Like humans their destiny in the hereafter depends on whether they accept God s guidance The surah Al Jinn says And among us are those who have submitted to Allah and those who are deviant So as for those who submitted it is they who have attained Right Guidance And as for the deviant they will be fuel for Hell Q 72 14 15 Angels who are not subject to desire and do not commit sin are found in both paradise and the Fire punishing sinners in hell and praising and serving humans and jinn in paradise 106 Scholars edit Muslim scholars arguing in favor of non Muslims being able to enter paradise cite the verse Indeed those who believed and those who were Jews or Christians or Sabians those who believed in Allah and the Last Day and did righteousness will have their reward with their Lord and no fear will there be concerning them nor will they grieve Q 2 62 Those arguing against non Muslim salvation regard this verse to have applied only until the arrival of Muhammad after which it was abrogated by another verse And whoever desires other than Islam as religion never will it be accepted from him and he in the Hereafter will be among the losers Q 3 85 107 108 109 110 Although the Quran acknowledges the Bible as gospel rejecting Muhammad and his message is seen as a rejection of salvation by them 109 According to Mohammad Hassan Khalil on the subject of whether self proclaimed non Muslims might be allowed into Jannah Islamic theologians can be classified as Exclusivists who maintain that only Muslims will be saved and that adherents of all other beliefs will burn in Hell 111 Inclusivists who also affirm that Islam is the path to Heaven but that some others are actually on the same path and will go to Jannah though they call themselves non Muslims and call their path by a different name 111 Pluralists assert that there are several religious traditions or interpretations that are equally effective saving their adherents from damnation regardless of the circumstances 111 Universalists believe that all of Hell s inhabitants will be admitted into Heaven following a significant period of time suffering in hell 111 In addition there are those who could be described as interim inclusivists or 111 ultimate universalists 112 Based on these categories four well known and particularly influential Muslim thinkers can be sorted as al Ghazali optimistic or liberal inclusivist 111 Ibn al ʿArabi liberal inclusivist to quasi universalist 111 Ibn Taymiyya and Ibn Qayyim al Jawziyya both universalists despite their status as darlings of many who call themselves Salafis Rashid Riḍa was a lenient inclusivist to cautious universalist 111 Ibn Hazm proclaimed that even the most upright and flawless moral ethical monotheist is damned to Hell if he knows anything about a person named Muḥammad or a religion called Islam and does not join while even the most brutal and immoral person who converts sincerely to Islam the moment before he dies is saved Furthermore any Muslim who does not agree is not a Muslim himself 111 Ash arism edit Further information Ash ari Ashʿarism aeʃeˈriː Arabic أشعرية al ʾAshʿariyah one of the main Sunni schools of Islamic theology founded by the Islamic scholar Shafiʿi jurist Abu al Ḥasan al Ashʿari in the 10th century 113 is known for an optimistic perspective on salvation for Muslims repeatedly addressing God s mercy over God s wrath 114 165 115 However according to Ash arism God is neither obligated to punish disobedience nor to reward obedience 114 167 Ash aris hold revelation necessary to understand good and evil as well as religious truths 116 109 Accordingly revelation is necessary to reach moral and religious truths and thus people who hear from a prophet or messenger are obligated to follow the revealed religion However those who have not received revelation are not obligated and can hope for salvation 117 215 Al GhazaliAsh arite scholar al Ghazali divided non Muslims into three categories for purposes of the Afterlife according to Mohammad Hassan Khalil 118 110 Those who never heard the message of Islam who live in far away lands such as the Byzantines Romans These will be forgiven Those who were only exposed to a distorted understanding of Islam and had no opportunity to hear the correct version These too will be forgiven People who heard of Islam because they lived in neighboring lands and or mixed with Muslims These have no hope of salvation 110 Of these three only the last group would be punished 118 Ghazali distinguished between the saved and those who will attain success Therefore righteous non Muslims will neither enter hell nor Jannah but will stay in al Araf a realm between Jannah and Jahannam inhabited by those who are neither entirely evil nor entirely good 119 Maturidism edit Further information Maturidi Maturidism Arabic الماتريدية al Maturidiyyah is also one of the main Sunni schools of Islamic theology 120 developed and formalized by the Islamic scholar Ḥanafi jurist Abu Manṣur al Maturidi in the 10th century 120 Maturidi scholars are thought to have been less optimistic about the chances of sinners entering paradise than Ash aris but more optimistic than Muʿtazila 115 They agree that Muslims who have committed grave sins will be punished but generally acknowledge that even these people will eventually enter paradise 86 177 121 Regarding the fate of non Muslims scholars have different opinions 116 110 Maturidism holds people responsible for believing in a creator due to their intellectual capacities even if they haven t heard about any prophetic mission 122 5 117 215 116 110 While some like Rifat Atay regard Maturidism to be exclusivistic only allowing people who are Muslims to enter paradise 116 110 others argue that Maturidi understood that to believe in Islam meant having a subjective conceptualization of God and his laws by reason alone This fits the doctrine upheld by Maturidism that human reason suffices to grasp good and evil and arrive at religious truths 116 109 Accordingly people are judged by their degree of understanding God s universal law not by their adherence to a particular belief system 117 215 116 110 In modern times Yohei Matsuyama largely agrees with this interpretation 122 5 According to Abu l Qasim Ishaq children cannot be considered unbelievers thus all of them go to paradise 123 Muʿtazila edit Further information Muʿtazila Muʿtazila Arabic المعتزلة al muʿtazilah emphasized God s justice free will and the responsibility of each human being for their actions They have been called the best known exponents of Qadariyah the idea that human free will was necessary as a guarantee of divine justice 124 Compared to Maturidi and Ashʿari Muʿtazila had the least amount of salvific optimism 115 The divine threat al wa id and divine promise al wa d became key tenets of the Mu tazilites 86 173 who stressed that they applied to both Muslims and non Muslims This meant that those who committed grave or heinous sins Kabirah even Muslims might denied entry to paradise forever 86 173 The only way for a grave sinner to be forgiven many theologians believed is by repentance tawba Mu tazilites believed God s justice obligated Him to forgive those who had repented other schools believed He was not so constrained 86 175 The Mu tazilites stress on individual accountability meant a rejection of intercession Shafa a on behalf of Muhammad 86 178 Another controversial belief of many but not all 86 168 Mu tazilites was that paradise and hell would be created only after Judgement Day This meant rejection of the commonly accepted idea that paradise and hell coexist with the contemporary world Their reasoning was that since God does everything for a purpose and since paradise and hell are created to reward or punish people they will only be created after judegement has been passed on people and they are assigned to these abodes 86 167 168 Twelver Shia edit Further information Twelver Shi ism Like most Sunni Shia Islam hold that all Muslims will eventually go to Jannah nb 3 On the fate of non Muslims in the hereafter Shia Islam or at least cleric Ayatullah Mahdi Hadavi Tehrani of Al Islam org takes a view similar to Ash arism Tehrani divides non Muslims into two groups the heedless and stubborn who will go to hell and the ignorant who will not if they are truthful to their own religion Those who are termed Jahil e Muqassir lit culpable ignorant jahil suggesting unbelief rather than literal ignorance These are non believers to whom the message of Islam has reached and who have understood its truthfulness However they are not prepared to accept the truth due to their obstinacy and stubbornness This group deserves to be punished in Hell Those who are termed Jahil e Qasir lit inculpable ignorant These are non believers to whom the message of Islam has not reached or it has been presented to them in a very incomplete and untruthful manner Such people will attain salvation if they are truthful to their own religion 128 At least one Twelver Shia scholar Allama al Hilli insists that not only will non Muslims be damned but suggests Sunni Muslim will be as well as it is not possible for any Muslim to be ignorant of the imamate and of the Return and thus whoever is ignorant of any of them is outside the circle of believers and worthy of eternal punishment 129 This statement is not indicative of all Shia eschatological thought Also like mainstream schools and unlike Muʿtazila Twelver Shia hold that Jannah and hellfire exist at present according to the Qur an and ahadith However they will not become fully apparent and represented until Judgement Day 130 As for three other issues in Islamic eschatology the differences between Adam and Eve s Garden of Eden the heaven or hell of one s actions which envelopes a person and the Barzakh state of purgatory in Islam after death and before Resurrection in Shia Islam these three types of jannah or Jahannam are all simply manifestations of the ultimate eternal heaven and hell 130 Contemporary debate of non Muslim fate edit Modernist scholars Muhammad Abduh and Rashid Rida rejected the notion that the People of the Book would be excluded from Jannah based on Q 4 123 124 see above 131 The Fate of the unlearned is also a matter of dispute within Islamic theology Turkish theologian Suleyman Ates cites the Quran 5 66 to argue that there are good and bad people in any religion and that some Muslims may not enter paradise but those who believe without doubt in the hereafter and a God without partners and who do good and useful deeds may enter paradise whatever their religions 132 On the other hand those who argue that only Islam is the completed and perfected and that it is necessary to believe in the all teaching of God the prophets the angels etc insist that only Muslims can enter paradise 133 The fate of Jews edit While some traditional and contemporary commentators have interpreted the Quran as condemning all Jews Farid Esack argues this condemnation is neither universal nor eternal and asks if the Qur an is to consign the Jews to eternal damnation then what becomes of the sacred text as a means of guidance for all humankind Would that vision too be damned 109 111 An example of a line criticizing the Jews can be found in Surah 5 The Jews say God s Hand is shackled Shackled are their hands and they are cursed for what they say Nay but His two Hands are outstretched He bestows as He wills Surely that which has been sent down unto thee from thy Lord will increase many of them in rebellion and disbelief And we cast enmity and hatred among them till the Day of Resurrection As often they ignite a flame for war God extinguishes it They endeavor to work corruption upon the earth And God loves not thee workers of corruption Q 5 64 134 A Sahih hadith concerning Jews and one of the signs of the coming of Judgement Day has been quoted many times it became a part of the charter of Hamas 135 The Day of Judgement will not come about until Muslims fight the Jews when the Jew will hide behind stones and trees The stones and trees will say O Muslims O Abdullah there is a Jew behind me come and kill him Only the Gharkad tree the Boxthorn tree would not do that because it is one of the trees of the Jews nb 4 However some scripture praises the dedication of Jews to monotheism 136 and this verse of the Qur an in surah 3 can be interpreted as taking a more reconciliatory tone They are not all alike Among the People of the Book is an upright community who recite God s signs in the watches of the night while they prostrate They believe in God and the Last Day enjoin right and forbid wrong and hasten unto good deeds And they are among the righteous Whatsoever good they do they will not be denied it And God knows the reverent Q 3 113 115 137 After reconciling the different descriptions one can conclude that the transgressions of the apes and pigs are not indicative of the entire community 138 and that while some Jews are on their way to damnation others are not 138 Islamic eschatology among Muslims in 20th and 21st centuries editPrior to the 20th century Islam had strongly emphasized the hereafter akhira Desire to counter colonialism and achieve material and technological parity with the West turned modern thinkers to stress this world dunya without suggesting akhira was less important 71 The focus on end times Eschatology in Islam has tended to occur among those less exposed to scholarly learning In the 1980s however it again became much more popular generally Islamic leaders and scholars have always urged Muslim to be prepared for Judgement Day but the particulars of the end of the world are not a mainstream concern in Islam according to Graeme Wood 139 nb 5 However in 2012 poll conducted by the Pew Research Center found that 50 or more respondents in several Muslim majority countries Lebanon Turkey Malaysia Afghanistan Pakistan Iraq Tunisia Algeria and Morocco expected the Mahdi the final redeemer according to Islam 140 to return during their lifetime 141 The expectation is most common in Afghanistan 83 followed by Iraq 72 Turkey 68 Tunisia 67 Malaysia 62 Pakistan 60 Lebanon 56 and Muslims in southern Thailand 57 141 Stories of end times and doomsday tend to be passed on as bedtime stories or informal talk among the lay Muslims rather than in the Imam s Friday khutbah Even Muslims with low levels of knowledge have heard parts of parts of it according to scholar Jean Pierre Filiu nb 6 In Islamic bookstores their dramatic and sensational stories of final battles between good and evil supernatural powers the ultimate rise of a Muslim elite are naturally more attention getting than more orthodox studious works on prayer purity or the lives of exemplary Muslims 142 More official Muslim sources have often either kept quiet about apocalyptic hadith or outright denied their existence an example being Nihad Awad of the Council on American Islamic Relations who stated There is no apocalyptic bloodbath in Islam 142 Popular Islamic pamphlets and tracts on the End Times have always been in circulation but until around 2010 their impact on political and theological thinking was practically nil among Sunnis 143 Interest in the End Times is particularly strong among jihadis and since the mid 2000s the apocalyptic currents in jihadism have surged 142 As of 2011 the belief that the end of the world is at hand and will be precipitated by an apocalyptic Great Battle has been noted as a fast growing belief in Muslim countries though still a minority belief nb 7 Shiʿi IslamAccording to J P Filiu the uprising of the Shiʿi Mahdi Army in Iraq and July 2006 war between Israel and Shiʿi Hizbullah are at least in part a consequence of mounting eschatological expectations coming from copious literature preaching that the return of the Hidden Imam was imminent literature emanating from the Shiʿi seminaries and scholars of holy city of Najaf Iraq from Lebanon and from Iran during the administration of its president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad 145 One Shiʿi Ayatollah Muhammad Baqir al Sadr revered as the fifth martyr of Shiʿi Islam killed by Saddam Hussein went to the trouble of trying to explain how the Hidden Imam could be over 1000 years old and why the present is a propitious time for the reappearance of him 146 Muqtada al Sadr s Mahdi army waged a violent struggle against the American military through 2004 and its ranks swelled with thousands of recruits Muqtada s political faction won seats in parliament 147 During Mahmoud Ahmadinejad s presidency 2005 2013 he shared with Iranians his avowed conviction that believers must actively work for the Mahdi s reappearance despite this bringing him into conflict with the highest authorities of Shiism 148 Popular apocalyptic literature edit Dramatic and sensational stories of the apocalypse first made an impact in the mid 1980s when Said Ayyub s Al Masih al Dajjal The AntiChrist started a whole new genre of Islamic apocalyptic fiction 149 or millenarian speculation 150 throughout the Arab world The book was so successful Ayyub went on to write a half dozen other spinoff books inspired imitators who enjoyed even greater success Muhammad Izzat Arif Muhammad Isa Dawud 151 and Mansur AbdelHakim 152 The book and the genre was noteworthy for rupturing the organic link between Islamic tradition and the last days of the world 149 using Western sources such as Gustave Le Bon and William Guy Carr that previously would have been ignored and lack of Sahih Bukhari i e top quality hadith he does quote Ibn Kathir and some hadith repeated at second hand and for an obsessively anti Jewish point of view in all great transformations of thought there is a Jewish factor avowed and plain or else hidden and secret 153 the Jews are planning the Third World War in order to eliminate the Islamic world and all opposition to Israel 154 and cover art featuring a grotesque cartoon figure with a Star of David and large hooked nose 153 155 Unlike traditional popular works of Islamic eschatology that kept close to scripture and classical manuals of eschatology in describing al Dajjal Said Ayyub portrayed the Dajjal as 1 the true Jewish messiah that Jews had been waiting for 2 a figure who will appear or reappear not only in end times but one who has been working throughout the history of humanity to create havoc with such diabolical success that human history is really only a succession of nefarious maneuvers by him Intermediaries of al dajjal according to Ayyub include St Paul the Apostle who Ayyub maintains created Christianity by distorting the true story of Jesus the Emperor Constantine who made possible the Crusader state in service to the Jews the Freemasons Napoleon the United States of America Communists Israel etc He concludes that the dajjal is hiding in Palestine but will also appear in Khurasan as the head of an expansionist state and the Great Battle between Muslims and his forces will be World War III fought in the Middle East 156 Later books The Hidden Link between the AntiChrist the Secrets of the Bermuda Triangle and Flying Saucers 1994 by Muhammad Isa Dawud for example move even farther away from traditional themes disclosing that the Anti Christ journeyed from the Middle East to the archipelago of Bermuda in the 8th century CE to make it his home base and from whence he fomented the French Revolution and other mischief and now sends flying saucers to patrol Egypt and prepare for his eventual triumphal return to Jerusalem 157 The success of the genre provoked a counteroffensive by pious conservatives Abdellatif Ashur Muhammad Bayyumi Magdi and Muhammad Shahawi disturbed by the liberties Said Ayyub and others had taken with Islamic doctrine 151 Jihadist references edit In the early 1980s when Abdullah Azzam called on Muslims around the world to join the jihad in Afghanistan he considered the fight to be a sign that the end times were imminent Also around that time popular Islamic writers such as Said Ayyub started blaming Islamic decline in the face of the Western world not on lack of technology and development but on the forces of the Dajjal 33 Al Qaeda used apocalyptic predictions in both its internal and external messaging according to Jessica Stern and its use of the name Khorasan a region that includes part of Iran Central Asia and Afghanistan and from which it is prophesied the Mahdi will emerge alongside an army bearing black flags was thought to be a symbol of end times 143 But these claims were mostly symbolic 143 and according to Wood Bin Laden rarely mentioned the Apocalypse and when he did he implied he would be long dead when it arrived a reflection of his more elite background according to Will McCants 158 According to J P Filiu out of the mass of Al Qaeda documents seized after the fall of the Taliban only one letter made any reference to the apocalypse 159 A prominent jihadist Abu Musʿab al Suri called a sophisticated strategist and articulate exponent of the modern jihad 160 161 somewhat independent and critical of Al Qaeda was also much more interested in end times He wrote I have no doubt that we have entered into the age of battles and tribulations zaman al malahim wal fitan 162 He devoted the last 100 pages of his magnum opus on jihad A Call to Global Islamic Resistance made available online around 2005 to matters such as the proper chronology and location of related battles and other activities of the Mahdi the Antichrist the mountain of gold to be found in the Euphrates river the Sufyani Gog and Magog etc 163 Abu Musʿab al Zarqawi the founder of what would become the Islamic State injected the apocalyptic message into jihad 158 ISIS has evoked the apocalyptic tradition much more explicitly than earlier jihadis Dabiq Syria a town understood in some versions of the eschatological narrative to be a possible location for the final apocalyptic battle was captured by ISIS and made its capital ISIS also declared its intent to conquer Constantinople Muslims conquering Constantinople being another end times prophesy 143 Interviews by the New York Times 164 and Jurgen Todenhofer 165 with many dozens of Muslims who had traveled to fight with Islamic State and by Graeme Wood with Islamic State supporters elsewhere found messianic expectation a strong motivator to join Islamic State 164 Shiʿi IslamWhile Al Qaeda and Islamic State are Sunni Shia insurgents militants have also been drawn to the battlefield by apocalyptic belief according to William McCants who quotes a Shia fighter in Iraq saying I was waiting for the day when I will fight in Syria Thank God he chose me to be one of the Imam s soldiers 166 Some dissident Shiʿa in Iraq oppose not only Sunni US and Iraqi government forces but the Shiʿi religious hierarchy as well In Najaf in late January 2007 at least 200 were killed in the Battle of Najaf 167 168 169 when several hundred members of an armed Iraqi Shi a messianic sect known as the Soldiers of Heaven or Jund As Samaʾ Arabic جند السماء allegedly attempted to start a messianic insurrection during the holy day of Ashura in the holy city of Najaf 170 planning to disguise themselves as pilgrims and kill leading Shi a clerics 171 The group allegedly believed that spreading chaos would hasten the return of the 12th Imam Mahdi 172 173 174 or alternately that their leader Dia Abdul Zahra Kadim was the awaited Mahdi 175 The next year during Ashura a reported 18 officers and 53 militia members were killed in clashes between millenarian rebels and police 176 the violence blamed on followers of one Ahmad al Hassan a man claiming the Hidden Iman had designated him as his the Hidden Imam s representative wassi and who accused Ayatollahs Shia clerics of being guilty of aberration and treason of occupation and tyranny 177 Islamic State claims of prophecy fulfilment edit Jihadis of the Islamic State see the fulfillment of many of the lesser signs of the coming of Judgement Day in current events Its generally agreed that Israel Arab wars have been wars between Muslims and Jews which were prophesied and that moral standards have declined leading to rampant fornication alcohol consumption and music listening 178 A slave giving birth to her master can happen when the child of a slave woman and the slave s owner inherits the slave after the owner s death slavery being practiced in the Islamic State until its defeat 178 An embargo of Iraq 178 is alleged to be foretold in the hadith Iraq would withhold its dirhams and qafiz 179 That Muslim states are being led by those who do not deserve to lead them 180 is an article of faith among jihadis and many other Muslims ISIS alleges that worship of the pre Islamic deity al Lat is being practiced by its Shia enemy Hezbollah The naked shepherds who will build tall buildings is interpreted to refer to Gulf State builders of skyscrapers 181 are only a generation or two out of desert poverty 178 But the Islamic State is also attempting to fulfill prophecies itself to hasten end times Zarqawi published communiques detailing the fulfillment of specific predictions found in a famous book on jihad and end times called A Call to a Global Islamic Resistance by Abu Musab al Suri His successor Al Baghdadi took the fulfillment of apocalyptic portents even more seriously 182 According to Hassan Abbas nb 8 at least part of ISIS s motivation in killing and otherwise provoking Shia is to deliberately instigate a war between Sunnis and Shi a in the belief that a sectarian war would be a sign that the final times has arrived and also explains the ISIS Siege of Kobani In the eschatological literature there is reference to crisis in Syria and massacre of Kurds this is why Kobane is important The town of 45 000 was under siege by ISIS from September 2014 to January 2015 183 Thus ISIS s obsession with the end of the world helps explain its lack of interest in the ordinary moral rules of the temporal world according to Jessica Stern If you are participating in a cosmic war between good and evil and if everyone will be dead and then resurrected relatively soon anyway pedestrian concerns about saving the lives of the innocent are of little concern 184 Questions and criticism editAmong the problems critics see with some of the concepts of and attention given to the eschatology of Islam are its effect on the socio economic health of the Muslim world the basis of the scripture particularly the hadith dealing with end times and the rational implausibility of some of the theological concepts such as resurrection of the dead Mustafa Akyol criticizes the current focus of the Muslim community on apocalypticism and the use of the forces of the Dajjal to explain stagnation in the Muslim world in the past two centuries vis a vis the West and now East Asia He argues that if supernatural evil is believed to be the cause of the problems of Muslims then practical solutions such as science economic development and liberal democracy will be ignored in favor of divine intervention 185 141 On the other hand a sahih hadith reports Muhammad saying that If the Final Hour comes while you have a shoot of a plant in your hands and it is possible to plant it before the Hour comes you should plant it 186 Western scholars William McCants Jane Smith Yvonne Haddad Jean Pierre Filiu agree that the apocalyptic narratives are strongly connected to the early jihad wars against the Byzantine Empire and civil wars against other Muslims McCants writes that the fitan tribulations of the minor and lesser signs come from the fitan of the early Islamic civil wars First Fitna 656 661 CE Second Fitna c 680 683 c 685 692 CE Third Fitna 744 750 752 CE where Muhammad s companions Sahabah and successor generations Tabi un and Taba Tabi in fought each other for political supremacy 166 Before and after each tribulation partisans on both sides circulated prophecies in the name of the Prophet to support their champion With time the context was forgotten but the prophecies remained 166 Smith and Haddad also write that the political implications of the whole millennial idea in Islam especially as related to the understanding of the mahdi and the rise of the Abbasids in the second Islamic century are very difficult to separate from the eschatological ones 187 They also argue that it s difficult to determine whether Muḥammad actually anticipated the arrival the Mahdi as an eschatological figure despite the fact that most of the traditions about the Mahdi are credited to Muḥammad 187 Filiu has also stated that the apocalyptic narrative was decisively influenced by the conflicts that filled Islam s early years campaigns and jihad against the Byzantine Empire and recurrent civil wars among Muslims 188 Consequently the reliability of hadith on end times has been questioned Skepticism of the concept of the resurrection of the dead has been part of both the compatriots of Muhammad and the rational and scientifically infused inhabitants of the contemporary world The fact of the resurrection of the body has been of continuing importance to Muslims and has raised very particular questions in certain circles of Islamic thought such as those reflected in the later disputations between philosophy and theology nb 9 It was not really a point of issue for early Islam however and bodily resurrection has never been seriously denied by orthodoxy It is as many have observed basic to the message of God as proclaimed by the Prophet and articulated clearly by the Qur an nb 10 especially in those passages in which the contemporaries of the Prophet are presented as having scoffed or raised doubts It continues to be a point of conviction for many of the contemporary interpreters of Islam to a world in which a rational and scientifically infused populace continues to raise the same eyebrows of skepticism as did the compatriots of the Prophet 78 Early skeptics being quoted in the Quran as saying Are we to be returned to our former state when we have become decayed bones They say that would be a detrimental return Q79 10 12 189 Visitation of tombs editDeath is also seen as a homecoming 85 When people visit tombs they are having a specific spiritual routine 85 The correct way to visit someone s tomb is to recite parts of the Quran and pray for the deceased 85 Literature on Islamic eschatology editThe writings of five medieval Sunni scholars on Islamic eschatology stand out for their depth and originality according to Jean Pierre Filiu Taking a work by each of them on the subject of the signs of end times or that includes the subject of the signs of end times Filiu points out their characteristics differences and influences where the Mahdi will first appear where Jesus will descend to how many human and angel warriors will fight with the Mahdi etc Ibn Arabi 1165 1240 CE Al futuhat al makkiyya Meccan Illuminations 190 Among other things Ibn Arabi wrote that 70 000 Muslim all descended from Isaac would follow the Mahdi and chanting Allahu Akbar and crumble the ramparts of Constantinople The Great Battle would take place on the plain of Acre 191 Al Qurtubi 1214 1273 CE Al tadhkira fi ahwal al mawta wa umur al ahkira Remembrance of the Affairs of the Dead and Matters of the Hereafter 192 Known for his opposition to both partisanship in Islam and the Umayyad dynasty Al Qurtubi prophesied the Mahdi would emerge in Morocco and preach there for ten years before rescuing the Muslims of Spain and moving on to conquer the Byzantines 193 Ibn Kathir c 1300 1373 CE Ashrat al saʿat Signs of the Hour 194 Popular among the ulama and common people of Syria for his preaching of strictness Ibn Kathir had a highly developed vision of the signs of the Last Hour The Mahdi was distinct from the Shia Hidden Imam there would be great battles between Muslims and Byzantines and then with the forces of the Dajjal 195 Ibn Khaldun 1332 1406 Kitab al ʿibar Book of Examples 196 Despite his association with modernism Ibn Khaldun thought none of what was mentioned in the Quran of the hour and its signs was subject to the least ambiguity he endorsed apocalyptic hadith in the collections of Bukhari and Muslim but not other collections as well as the classical scenario of end times 197 Jalal al Din al Suyuti 1446 1505 fatwa on the descent of Jesus son of Mary at the end times from Al hawi lil fatawi 198 Al Suyuti preached against the millenarian claim that the earth would end in 1000 A H 1591 C E believing Judgement Day would come in 1500 A H 2076 C E Ibn al Nafis 1213 1288 CE Theologus Autodidactus circa CE 1270 In the form of a theological fiction novel he wrote on Islamic eschatology where he used reason science and early Islamic philosophy to explain how he believed al Qiyamah would unfold 199 Contemporary literature edit Imran Nazar Hosein b 1942 CE wrote numerous books that deal with Islamic eschatology Ilmu Akhir al Zaman Knowledge of the later days among which the most famous is Jerusalem in the Qur an 200 Said Ayyub s Al Masih al Dajjal often translated as The AntiChrist came out in August 1986 see above was enormously popular and started a new genre of Islamic apocalyptic fiction 149 that added western themes such as flying saucers the Bermuda Triangle and European Antisemitism to traditional Islamic eschatology 156 AbuBilaal Yakub published his The One Eyed Impostor Messiah and False Messiah in addition to an earlier publication The Three Questions His Islamic High Fantasy works beginning with The Amulets of Sihr incorporates apocalyptic themes 201 See also editEschatology Signs of the coming of Judgement Day Imran N Hosein Nafs e Zakiyyah Pure soul Schools of Islamic theology Shia eschatology Signs of the reappearance of Muhammad al MahdiReferences editNotes edit as it is presented in the context of monotheism one trumpet blast Q 69 13 two blasts in Q 39 68 some eschatological manuals expand this to three a belief also expressed in some Jewish traditions 48 the Qur an itself does not make explicit the chronology involved with the blowing s of the horn and the traditions do not present a consistent picture but The general understanding seems to be that Israfil will be the first of creation to be resurrected and he will give the blast that brings the dead back to life 49 Sayyed Mohammad Al Musawi quotes Shaikh al Mufeed The Imami Shia scholars are unanimous that remaining in Hellfire for ever is for the Kuffaar only and not for the major sinners from those who believe in Allah 125 126 Shaikh al Sadouq The Hellfire is the place of those who did not believe in Allah and some of the believers in Allah who committed major sins but they will not remain in it No one will remain in Hellfire for ever but the non believers 127 126 related by al Bukhari Sahih al Bukhari 4 56 791 Sahih al Bukhari 4 52 177 and Muslim Sahih Muslim 41 6985 see also Sahih Muslim 41 6981 Sahih Muslim 41 6982 Sahih Muslim 41 6983 Sahih Muslim 41 6984 Smith and Haddad write the great majority of contemporary Muslim writers choose not to discuss the afterlife at all They are satisfied with simply affirming the reality of the day of judgment and human accountability without providing any details or interpretive discussion 71 In conversation to Graeme Wood 142 from blurb for Filiu Jean Pierre 2011 Apocalypse in Islam Translated by DeBevoise M B Berkeley University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 26431 1 144 an expert on jihadi movements See al Ghazali s Tahafut al falasifa Problem XX Refutation of their Denial of the Resurrection of Bodies tr S A Kamali 1963 in which al Ghazali replies point by point to objections raised by Muslim philosophers to the fact of physical resurrection This position was countered by Ibn Rushd in his Tahafut al tahafut in which he contends that only the soul survives the death of the physical body Ash ari theology taught that the resurrection of the body is not an element of faith common to Judaism Christianity and Islam but that it was revealed in its full understanding for the first time in the Qur an Citations edit Smith Jane I 2006 Eschatology In McAuliffe Jane Dammen ed Encyclopaedia of the Qurʾan Vol II Leiden Brill Publishers doi 10 1163 1875 3922 q3 EQCOM 00055 ISBN 978 90 04 14743 0 Hasson Isaac 2006 Last Judgment In McAuliffe Jane Dammen ed Encyclopaedia of the Qurʾan Vol III Leiden Brill Publishers doi 10 1163 1875 3922 q3 EQCOM 00105 ISBN 978 90 04 14743 0 Eschatology Oxford Islamic Studies Online Oxfordislamicstudies com 6 May 2008 Retrieved 3 July 2017 AbdulGhaffar Suhaib Hasan 50 Signs of the Day of Judgment from the Words of Allah and His Messenger English Suhaib Hasan AbdulGhaffar IslamHouse com Retrieved 26 August 2022 Judgment Day in Quran www al islam org 13 January 2015 Retrieved 26 August 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Return of Jesus www islamreligion com Retrieved 26 August 2022 Farhang Mehrvash 2017 Dajjal Encyclopaedia Islamica Leiden and Boston Brill Publishers doi 10 1163 1875 9831 isla COM 035982 ISSN 1875 9823 Zarabozo Jamaal al Din 13 August 2007 THE MAJOR SIGNS OF THE DAY OF JUDGMENT 7 parts Religion of Islam Retrieved 1 May 2022 Signs of the Day of Judgment What Are They 78329 Islam Question and Answer 30 January 2006 Retrieved 16 April 2022 Signs of the Day of Judgment Past Present amp Future Islam Online August 2004 Retrieved 1 May 2022 IBN KATHIR Signs Before the Day of Judgement The Sunna Online Retrieved 1 May 2022 Anwaar Amna 3 December 2018 48 signs of Qiyamah Islamic Finder Retrieved 1 May 2022 Farhang Mehrvash 2017 Dajjal In Madelung Wilferd Daftary Farhad eds Encyclopaedia Islamica Translated by Negahban Farzin Leiden and Boston Brill Publishers doi 10 1163 1875 9831 isla COM 035982 ISSN 1875 9823 a b Cook David 2021 2002 Studies in Muslim Apocalyptic Berlin and London Gerlach 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Times New York Times Retrieved 29 January 2022 Van Donzel amp Schmidt 2010 pp 57 fn 3 Hughes Patrick Thomas 1895 1885 Gog and Magog Dictionary of Islam London W H Allen amp Co ISBN 9788120606722 Retrieved 22 May 2022 Wood The Way of the Strangers 2016 p 258 Chapter 3 Mahdi in classical and modern 30 September 2015 Nakamura Kojiro Imam Ghazali s Cosmology Reconsidered with Special Reference to the Concept of Jabarut Studia Islamica no 80 1994 pp 29 46 JSTOR https doi org 10 2307 1595850 Accessed 12 Sep 2022 Begley Wayne E The Garden of the Taj Mahal A Case Study of Mughal Architectural Planning and Symbolism in Wescoat James L Wolschke Bulmahn Joachim 1996 Mughal Gardens Sources Places Representations and Prospects Dumbarton Oaks Washington D C ISBN 0884022358 pp 229 231 Taylor John B October 1968 Some Aspects of Islamic Eschatology Religious Studies 4 1 59 doi 10 1017 S0034412500003395 S2CID 155073079 Retrieved 2 May 2022 a b Smith amp Haddad Islamic Understanding 1981 p 63 Smith amp Haddad Islamic Understanding 1981 p 64 Smith amp Haddad Islamic Understanding 1981 p vii طلوع الشمس من مغربها Rising of the sun from the west in Arabic Sahih Muslim 2937a Anwaar Amna 48 signs of Qiyamah islamic finder Retrieved 17 May 2022 Hava Lazarus Yafeh Some Religious Aspects of Islam A Collection of Articles Brill Archive 1981 ISBN 9789004063297 p 52 a b Smith amp Haddad Islamic Understanding 1981 p 71 Smith amp Haddad Islamic Understanding 1981 p 73 Esposito John 2003 The Oxford Dictionary of Islam Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 512558 4 p 264 Smith amp Haddad Islamic Understanding 1981 p 74 a b Smith amp Haddad Islamic Understanding 1981 p 75 Quran 54 52 53 Muhammad S Umar 1999 Muslims Eschatological Discourses on Colonialism in Northern Nigeria Journal of the American Academy of Religion Oxford University Press 67 1 59 84 doi 10 1093 jaarel 67 1 59 JSTOR 1466033 Reward and Punishment Encyclopedia of the Qur an 2005 Leor Halevi 1 Smith amp Haddad Islamic Understanding 1981 p 81 Smith amp Haddad Islamic Understanding 1981 p 25 Smith amp Haddad Islamic Understanding 1981 p x Abu Aʿla al Mawdudi Towards Understanding Islam 1960 p 130 Lange Christian ed 2015 Locating Hell in Islamic traditions Brill ISBN 9789004301214 OCLC 945783598 a b c d Arthur Jeffery 1958 Islam Muhammad and his religion Indianapolis Bobbs Merrill ISBN 0672603489 OCLC 846858 Joseph Hell Die Religion des Islam Motilal Banarsidass Publishe 1915 page 201 Zailan Moris Revelation Intellectual Intuition and Reason in the Philosophy of Mulla Sadra An Analysis of the al hikmah al arshiyyah Routledge ISBN 978 1 136 85866 6 page 107 Juan Cole Sacred Space And Holy War The Politics Culture and History of Shi ite Islam I B Tauris 2002 ISBN 978 1 860 64736 9 page 55 Smith amp Haddad Islamic Understanding 1981 p 84 Cyril Glasse Huston Smith The New Encyclopedia of Islam Rowman Altamira 2003 ISBN 978 0 759 10190 6 page 237 Jane Dammen McAuliffe Encyclopaedia of the Qurʾan Volume 2 Georgetown University Washington DC p 268 Smith amp Haddad Islamic Understanding 1981 p 65 Smith amp Haddad Islamic Understanding 1981 p 100 a b c d Smith amp Haddad Islamic Understanding 1981 p 100 Smith Haddad Islamic Understanding 100 quoted in Christian Lange p 19 Lange Introducing Hell in Islamic Studies 2016 p 19 a b Lange Introducing Hell in Islamic Studies 2016 p 18 quoting Lange describing Smith Haddad Islamic Understanding 100 Iqbal Reconstruction 98 quoted in Lange Introducing Hell in Islamic Studies 2016 p 20 ʿAbduh Risalat al tawḥid 178 quoted in Lange Introducing Hell in Islamic Studies 2016 p 20 Search Results most people in hell are women Sunnah com Retrieved 17 April 2022 a b Smith amp Haddad Islamic Understanding 1981 p 163 Wadud Amina 1999 Qurʼan and woman rereading the sacred text from a woman s perspective 2nd ed ed New York Oxford University Press ISBN 9780198029434 OCLC 252662926 a b c d Smith amp Haddad Islamic Understanding 1981 p 90 Smith amp Haddad Islamic Understanding 1981 p 90 91 For Western analyses of this question see Richard Bell The Men on the A raf Muslim World 22 1932 43 48 Louis Gardet Dieu pp 330 34 Tor Andrae Les Origins p 85 Rudi Paret Al A raf EI New Ed I pt 1 10 pp 603 04 Asin Palacios Islam and the Divine Comedy pp 81 ff Smith amp Haddad Islamic Understanding 1981 p 91 a b c d Smith amp Haddad Islamic Understanding 1981 p 92 a b c d e f g Smith Jane I 1981 The Islamic understanding of death and resurrection Haddad Yvonne Yazbeck 1935 Albany State University of New York Press p 92 ISBN 0873955064 OCLC 6666779 a b c d e f g h i j k Lange Christian 2016 Paradise and Hell in Islamic Traditions Cambridge United Kingdom Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 50637 3 a b Lange Paradise and Hell in Islamic Traditions 2016 p 40 Lange Introducing Hell in Islamic Studies 2016 p 12 a b c d Smith Jane I 1981 The Islamic understanding of death and resurrection Haddad Yvonne Yazbeck 1935 Albany State University of New York Press p 93 ISBN 0873955064 OCLC 6666779 a b c d Smith amp Haddad Islamic Understanding 1981 p 93 Nasr Seyyed Hossein Dagli Caner K Dakake Maria Massi Lumbard Joseph E B Rustom Mohammed eds 17 November 2015 The study Quran a new translation and commentary First ed New York NY p 585 ISBN 9780061125867 OCLC 879553018 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Smith Jane I 1981 The Islamic understanding of death and resurrection Haddad Yvonne Yazbeck 1935 Albany State University of New York Press p 94 ISBN 0873955064 OCLC 6666779 Smith amp Haddad Islamic Understanding 1981 p 94 Shamoun Sam Katz Jochen Quran Contradiction Will people stay in Hell forever or not China s Christian Library Retrieved 14 June 2022 Qadar missionislam com Retrieved 27 March 2016 Guillaume Islam 1978 p 132 a b Parrott Justin 31 July 2017 Reconciling the Divine Decree and Free Will in Islam Yaqeen Institute Retrieved 16 June 2022 If things are decreed then how can a person be called to account for them 96978 Islam Question and Answer 29 April 2007 Retrieved 26 June 2022 a b c d Ibn Warraq Why I Am Not a Muslim 1995 p 124 Shirazi Naser Makarem 12 May 2015 The Issue of Predestination and Free Will The Justice of God Al Islam org Retrieved 14 June 2022 De Cillis Maria 22 April 2022 ISLAM Muslims and Free Will Oasis 6 Retrieved 16 June 2022 Is that a Muslim can believe in predestination if so why judge Muslims Answered according to Hanafi Fiqh by Tafseer Raheemi IslamQA org 13 October 2012 Retrieved 5 February 2022 Gunther Sebastian Lawson Todd 2017 Roads to Paradise Eschatology and Concepts of the Hereafter in Islam 2 vols Volume 1 Foundations and Formation of a Tradition Reflections on the Hereafter in the Quran and Islamic Religious Thought Volume 2 Continuity and Change The Plurality of Eschatological Representations in the Islamicate World Brill Publishers doi 10 1163 1875 9831 isla COM 0300 ISBN 978 9 004 33315 4 Moiz Amjad Will Christians enter Paradise or go to Hell Archived 2007 09 27 at the Wayback Machine Renaissance Monthly Islamic journal 11 6 June 2001 Lange Paradise and Hell in Islamic Traditions 2016 p 140 1 Lange Paradise and Hell in Islamic Traditions 2016 p 141 David Marshall Communicating the Word Revelation Translation and Interpretation in Christianity and Islam Georgetown University Press 2011 ISBN 978 1 589 01803 7 p 8 Lloyd Ridgeon Islamic Interpretations of Christianity Routledge 2013 ISBN 978 1 136 84020 3 a b c Khalil Mohammad Hassan ed 2013 Between heaven and hell Islam salvation and the fate of others Oxford Oxford University Press p 113 ISBN 9780199945412 OCLC 793726652 a b c Khalil Mohammad Hassan ed 2013 Between heaven and hell Islam salvation and the fate of others Oxford Oxford University Press p 111 ISBN 9780199945412 OCLC 793726652 a b c d e f g h i j Firestone Reuven June 2014 Review of two books by Mohammad Hassan Khalil Islam and the Fate of Others and Between Heaven and Hell Journal of Qur anic Studies 16 2 142 149 doi 10 3366 jqs 2014 0151 Retrieved 4 May 2022 Khalil Mohammad Hassan ed 2013 Between heaven and hell Islam salvation and the fate of others Oxford Oxford University Press p 13 ISBN 9780199945412 OCLC 793726652 Javad Anvari Mohammad 2015 al Ashʿari In Madelung Wilferd Daftary Farhad eds Encyclopaedia Islamica Translated by Melvin Koushki Matthew Leiden and Boston Brill Publishers doi 10 1163 1875 9831 isla COM 0300 ISSN 1875 9823 a b Reinhart Kevin Gleave Robert 2014 Sins expiation and non rationality in fiqh In Lange Christian ed Islamic Law in Theory Studies on Jurisprudence in Honor of Bernard Weiss Brill Publishers ISBN 9780567081612 a b c Lange Paradise and Hell in Islamic Traditions 2016 p 177 78 a b c d e f Isaacs Rico Frigerio Alessandro 2018 Pluralism in Jewish Christian and Muslim thought Theorizing Central Asian Politics The State Ideology and Power Springer International Publishing ISBN 9783319973555 a b c Solomon Norman Harries Richard 2014 Pluralism in Jewish Christian and Muslim thought Abraham s Children Jews Christians and Muslims in Conversation Bloomsbury Academic ISBN 9780567081612 LCCN 0567081613 a b McKim Robert 2016 Pluralism in Jewish Christian and Muslim thought Religious Perspectives on Religious Diversity Brill Publishers ISBN 9789004330436 Khalil Mohammad Hassan 2012 Islam and the Fate of Others The Salvation Question USA Oxford University Press pp 45 46 ISBN 978 0 199 79666 3 a b Rudolph Ulrich 2016 2014 Part I Islamic Theologies during the Formative and the Early Middle period Ḥanafi Theological Tradition and Maturidism In Schmidtke Sabine ed The Oxford Handbook of Islamic Theology Oxford and New York Oxford University Press pp 280 296 doi 10 1093 oxfordhb 9780199696703 013 023 ISBN 9780199696703 LCCN 2016935488 Lange Paradise and Hell in Islamic Traditions 2016 p 177 a b Zhussipbek Galym and Bakhytzhan Satershinov Search for the theological grounds to develop inclusive Islamic interpretations Some insights from rationalistic Islamic Maturidite theology Religions 10 11 2019 609 Tritton A S An Early Work from the School of Al Maturidi Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland no 3 4 Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland 1966 pp 96 99 http www jstor org stable 25202926 Smith amp Haddad Islamic Understanding 1981 p 22 Awaa il al Maqaalaat by Shaikh al Mufeed p 14 a b Al Musawi Sayyed Mohammad 2020 Is it a Shi i belief that every Muslim including people like Umar ibn Sa d and Ibn Ziyad will eventually enter paradise after being punished for their sins Is there any Islamic sect that has such a belief al Islam org Retrieved 4 May 2022 Sharh Aqaed al Sadouq Shaikh al Sadouq p 55 Tehrani Ayatullah Mahdi Hadavi 5 September 2012 Question 20 Heaven and Hell Faith and Reason Al Islam org Retrieved 25 April 2022 Renard John 2014 Islamic Theological Themes A Primary Source Reader Oakland California University of California Press pp 7 8 ISBN 978 0 520 28189 9 a b Tehrani Ayatullah Mahdi Hadavi 5 September 2012 Question 13 Non muslims and Hell Faith and Reason Al Islam org Retrieved 25 April 2022 Der Koran ed and transl by Adel Theodor Khoury Gutersloh 2004 p 67 footnote Sinasi Gunduz Cafer S Yaran Change and Essence Dialectical Relations Between Change and Continuity in the Turkish Intellectual Tradition CRVP 2005 ISBN 978 1 565 18222 6 p 9 Sinasi Gunduz Cafer S Yaran Change and Essence Dialectical Relations Between Change and Continuity in the Turkish Intellectual Tradition CRVP 2005 ISBN 978 1 565 18222 6 p 12 Nasr Seyyed Hossein Dagli Caner K Dakake Maria Massi Lumbard Joseph E B Rustom Mohammed eds 17 November 2015 The study Quran a new translation and commentary First ed New York NY pp 309 312 ISBN 9780061125867 OCLC 879553018 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Laqueur Walter The Changing Face of Antisemitism From Ancient Times To The Present Day Oxford University Press 2006 ISBN 0 19 530429 2 p 192 Khalil Mohammad Hassan ed 2013 Between heaven and hell Islam salvation and the fate of others Oxford Oxford University Press p 207 ISBN 9780199945412 OCLC 793726652 Nasr Seyyed Hossein Dagli Caner K Dakake Maria Massi Lumbard Joseph E B Rustom Mohammed eds 17 November 2015 The study Quran a new translation and commentary First ed New York NY pp 162 163 ISBN 9780061125867 OCLC 879553018 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link a b Khalil Mohammad Hassan ed 2013 Between heaven and hell Islam salvation and the fate of others Oxford Oxford University Press p 231 ISBN 9780199945412 OCLC 793726652 Wood The Way of the Strangers 2016 p 250 Madelung Wilferd 1986 al Mahdi In Bosworth C E van Donzel E J Heinrichs W P Lewis B Pellat Ch eds Encyclopaedia of Islam Second Edition Vol 5 Leiden Brill Publishers doi 10 1163 1573 3912 islam COM 0618 ISBN 978 90 04 16121 4 a b c The World s Muslims Unity and Diversity Chapter 3 Articles of Faith Pew Research Center Religion amp Public Life 9 August 2012 Retrieved 13 September 2019 a b c d Wood The Way of the Strangers 2016 p 251 a b c d Stern ISIS The coming final battle 2015 p 220 Filiu Jean Pierre January 2011 Apocalypse in Islam University of California Press ISBN 9780520272644 Retrieved 17 April 2022 Filiu Apocalypse in Islam 2011 p 141 Filiu Apocalypse in Islam 2011 p 142 3 Filiu Apocalypse in Islam 2011 p 148 Filiu Apocalypse in Islam 2011 p 151 a b c Filiu Apocalypse in Islam 2011 p 88 Filiu Apocalypse in Islam 2011 p 92 a b Filiu Apocalypse in Islam 2011 p 89 92 Filiu Apocalypse in Islam 2011 p 122 a b Filiu Apocalypse in Islam 2011 p 85 Filiu Apocalypse in Islam 2011 p 86 87 Filiu Apocalypse in Islam 2011 plate 1 a b Filiu Apocalypse in Islam 2011 p 83 89 Filiu Apocalypse in Islam 2011 p 93 94 a b Wood The Way of the Strangers 2016 p 252 Filiu Apocalypse in Islam 2011 p 185 Malise Ruthven 29 May 2008 The Rise of the Muslim Terrorists New York Review of Books pp 33 36 34 Retrieved 20 January 2009 MacLean William 10 June 2009 Al Qaeda ideologue in Syrian detention lawyers Retrieved 2 September 2009 In brief remarks to Reuters Nasar s wife Elena Moreno said she had also come to believe her husband was probably in Syria following what she called recent but unofficial confirmation page 62 of the Arabic version of A Call to Global Islamic Resistance that was published via a now defunct website in January 2005 quoted in Filiu Apocalypse in Islam 2011 p 187 Filiu Apocalypse in Islam 2011 p 186 191 a b Stern ISIS The coming final battle 2015 p 222 Wood The Way of the Strangers 2016 p 268 a b c McCants William 26 October 2014 The Foreign Policy Essay The Sectarian Apocalypse Brookings Institution Retrieved 22 April 2022 Zavis Alexandra 19 January 2008 80 killed in clashes in Iraq Los Angeles Times Paley Amit R 19 January 2008 Dozens Killed in Clashes In S Iraq Obscure Sect Presents First Major Challenge For Area s Iraqi Forces The Washington Post Fighters for Shiite Messiah Clash with Najaf Security 250 Dead Over 60 Dead in Baghdad Kirkuk Violence Informed Comment Juan Cole Filiu Apocalypse in Islam 2011 p 160 Page 2 US Iraqi forces kill 250 militants in Najaf The Age January 29 2007 DePillis Lydia 19 January 2008 Today s Papers Kick in the Pants Slate US Iraqi Forces Kill 250 Militants in Najaf The Age 29 January 2007 Cult plotted attack on Shiite clerics Iraqis say CNN January 29 2007 Abu Zeed Adnan 2 February 2015 Messengers of God multiply amidst Iraqi chaos Al Monitor Retrieved 2 June 2022 Filiu Apocalypse in Islam 2011 p 162 Filiu Apocalypse in Islam 2011 p 159 a b c d Wood The Way of the Strangers 2016 p 249 Sahih Muslim Book 041 Hadith Number 6923 Bukhari Sahih Bukhari Volume 8 Book 076 Hadith 503 Retrieved 14 April 2022 The Spread of Gulf State Skyscrapers The Globalist 21 May 2017 Retrieved 14 April 2022 Stern ISIS The coming final battle 2015 p 224 Stern ISIS The coming final battle 2015 p 220 221 Stern ISIS The coming final battle 2015 p224 225 Akyol v 3 October 2016 The Problem With the Islamic Apocalypse The New York Times Retrieved 13 September 2019 Al Adab Al Mufrad 27 Attending to this world Hadith 479 Sunnah com Retrieved 2 May 2022 a b Smith amp Haddad Islamic Understanding 1981 p 70 Filiu Apocalypse in Islam 2011 p 28 Smith amp Haddad Islamic Understanding 1981 p 1 Filiu Apocalypse in Islam 2011 p 31 34 Filiu Apocalypse in Islam 2011 p 32 Filiu Apocalypse in Islam 2011 p 34 37 Filiu Apocalypse in Islam 2011 p 35 36 Filiu Apocalypse in Islam 2011 p 37 41 Filiu Apocalypse in Islam 2011 p 38 39 Filiu Apocalypse in Islam 2011 p 41 44 Filiu Apocalypse in Islam 2011 p 41 42 Filiu Apocalypse in Islam 2011 p 44 48 Dr Abu Shadi Al Roubi 1982 Ibn Al Nafis as a philosopher Symposium on Ibn al Nafis Second International Conference on Islamic Medicine Islamic Medical Organization Kuwait cf Ibn al Nafis As a Philosopher Encyclopedia of Islamic World Jerusalem in the 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Studies in Muslim Apocalyptic Princeton The Darwin Press ISBN 9780878501427 Cook David 2002b Ḥadith Authority and the End of the World Traditions in Modern Muslim Apocalyptic Literature Oriente Moderno 82 1 31 53 doi 10 1163 22138617 08201004 hdl 1911 70538 JSTOR 25817811 Cook Michael 2016 Eschatology and the Dating of Traditions In Motzki Harald ed Ḥadith Origins and Developments London and New York Routledge ISBN 9781138247796 Daftary Farhad 2013 A History of Shi i Islam London I B Tauris ISBN 978 1 78076 841 0 Doi A R I 1971 The Yoruba Mahdi Journal of Religion in Africa 4 2 119 136 doi 10 1163 157006671x00070 JSTOR 1594738 Esposito John L 1998 Islam and Politics 4th ed Syracuse Syracuse University Press ISBN 0 8156 2774 2 Filiu Jean Pierre 2009 The Return of Political Mahdism Current Trends in Islamist Ideology 8 26 38 ISSN 1940 834X Archived from the original on 20 May 2022 Retrieved 15 April 2022 Filiu Jean Pierre 2011 Apocalypse in Islam Translated by DeBevoise M B Berkely University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 26431 1 JPFAiI2011 Fishman Jason Eric Soage Ana Belen 2013 The Nation of Islam and the Muslim World Theologically Divorced and Politically United Religion Compass 7 2 59 68 doi 10 1111 rec3 12032 Friedmann Yohanan 1989 Prophecy Continuous Aspects of Ahmadi Religious Thought and its Medieval Background Berkeley and Los Angeles University of California Press ISBN 0 520 05772 4 Furnish Timothy R 2005 Holiest Wars Islamic Mahdis Jihad and Osama Bin Laden Westport CT Praeger ISBN 0 275 98383 8 Halm Heinz 1997 Shi a Islam From Religion to Revolution Translated by Brown Allison Princeton Markus Wiener Publishers ISBN 1 55876 134 9 Halm Heinz 2004 Shi ism Translated by Watson Janet Hill Marian 2nd ed Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press ISBN 0 7486 1888 0 Halverson Jeffry R Goodall H L Jr Corman Steven R 2011 Master Narratives of Islamist Extremism New York Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 0 230 10896 7 Ibn Warraq 1995 Why I Am Not a Muslim Prometheus Books pp 123 127 Klemm Verena 1984 Die vier sufara des Zwolften Imam Zur formativen Periode der Zwolfersiʽa Die Welt des Orients 15 126 143 JSTOR 25683146 Lange Christian 2016 Introducing Hell in Islamic Studies In Christian Lange ed Locating Hell in Islamic Traditions BRILL pp 1 28 ISBN 978 90 04 30121 4 JSTOR 10 1163 j ctt1w8h1w3 7 Lange Christian 2016 Paradise and Hell in Islamic Traditions Cambridge United Kingdom Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 50637 3 Leirvik Oddbjorn 2010 Images of Jesus Christ in Islam 2nd ed London Continuum International Publishing Group ISBN 978 1 4411 7739 1 Madelung Wilferd 1981 ʿAbd Allah b al Zubayr and the Mahdi Journal of Near Eastern Studies 40 4 291 305 doi 10 1086 372899 S2CID 161061748 Madelung Wilferd 1986 Al Mahdi In Bosworth C E van Donzel E Lewis B amp Pellat Ch eds Encyclopaedia of Islam Volume V Khe Mahi 2nd ed Leiden E J Brill pp 1230 1238 ISBN 978 90 04 07819 2 Momen Moojan 1985 An Introduction to Shi i Islam the history and doctrines of Twelver Shiʻism Yale University Press ISBN 9780300034998 Rustomji Nerina 2009 The Garden and the Fire Heaven and Hell in Islamic Culture Columbia University Press ISBN 9780231140850 Retrieved 25 December 2014 Sachedina Abdulaziz A 1978 A Treatise on the Occultation of the Twelfth Imamite Imam Studia Islamica 48 109 124 doi 10 2307 1595355 JSTOR 1595355 Sachedina Abdulaziz A 1981 Islamic Messianism The Idea of Mahdi in Twelver Shi ism Albany NY State University of New York Press ISBN 9780873954426 Smith Jane I Haddad Yvonne Y 1981 The Islamic Understanding of Death and Resurrection Albany N Y SUNY Press Sonn Tamarra 2004 A Brief History of Islam Blackwell Publishing ISBN 978 1 4051 2174 3 Stern Jessica Berger J M 2015 10 The coming final battle ISIS the State of Terror PDF p 219 231 Retrieved 29 January 2022 Thomassen Einar 2009 Islamic Hell Numen 56 2 3 401 416 doi 10 1163 156852709X405062 JSTOR 27793798 Valentine Simon Ross 2008 Islam and the Ahmadiyya Jama at History Belief Practice New York Columbia University Press ISBN 978 0 231 70094 8 Van Donzel Emeri J Schmidt Andrea Barbara 2010 Gog and Magog in Early Eastern Christian and Islamic Sources Brill ISBN 978 9004174160 Wood Graeme 2016 The War of the End of Time The Way of the Strangers Encounters with the Islamic State Random House pp 246 269 ISBN 9780812988765 ISIS 2022Further reading edit Fath al Bari from Sahih al Bukhari by ibn Hajar al Asqalani Esposito John The Oxford Dictionary of Islam Oxford University Press 2003 ISBN 0 19 512558 4 Richard C Martin Said Amir Arjomand Marcia Hermansen Abdulkader Tayob Rochelle Davis John Obert Voll Encyclopedia of Islam and the Muslim World MacMillan Reference Books 2003 ISBN 978 0028656038 Lawson Todd 1999 Duality Opposition and Typology in the Qur an The Apocalyptic Substrate Journal of Quranic Studies 10 23 49 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Islamic eschatology amp oldid 1181205451, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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