True Islamic understanding would encourage scientific enquiry and put no restrictions on its pursuit, except the ones that are either immoral or faith-challenging. In both cases, Islam would expect its intelligent followers to put across its case to show that the apparent scientific enquiry is either immoral or illogical. However, Islamic guidance would urge its followers to be very careful while dealing with experiences that have to do with magic and superstition since they derive their conclusions from the unseen world.
There are two different questions that arise about magic: Is it a reality? Are Muslims allowed to indulge in it?
The first question is not primarily religious in nature. It is a matter of human experience whether magic actually exists or not. However, it seems from the mention in some passages of the Quran that magic is a reality. That doesn’t necessarily mean that every claim of magic is true. Many people believe that magic was the cause of an event, even though their claim might be unfounded. However, some claims of the phenomenon of unseen forces causing certain things to happen in a way that defies common human experience and logic can be true. The fact that Musa, AH, (Moses) confronted a bunch of magicians who caused ropes to appear like snakes is a case in point (Quran; 7:116). The Quran also mentions the fact that some people wrongly accused Sulaiman, AH, (Solomon) of having indulged in magic (Quran; 2:102). Instead, it is the disbelievers, it clarifies, who indulged in it. Thus the book mentions the fact that magic is an evil reality that causes the one doing it to be described as someone disbelieving.
There is another relevant clarification the Quran makes. This is that there are some extraordinary happenings in our surroundings the occurrence of which human logic cannot grasp and yet these do not fall in the category of magic and are therefore not evil. A man during Solomon’s time, according to the Quran, for instance, was able to cause the throne of Queen Sheba (Bilqis) to be removed from its place of origin to another one in no time (Quran; Surah Al-Naml). Thus supernatural happenings, other than the miracles caused directly by God, can be both evil and non-evil.
How do magic and magic-like phenomena come about? It seems that apart from the extraordinary feats of modern-day Science, which can be understood through a logic based on cause-effect relationship, there is another world of potential outstanding feats which is based on a similar relationship which as yet has not been properly studied and understood. One way of achieving those feats is evil, often referred to as black magic, which is declared as disbelief by the Quran while another is morally neutral.
Another point which verse 102 of Surah al-Baqarah, the second chapter of the Quran, clarifies is the fact that while black magic is forbidden, the antidote of it is allowed even though the latter carries the possibility of misuse (Quran; 2:102).
Superstition is primarily a faith-like understanding that a certain event happens because of another seemingly unrelated one. The cause-effect relationship is based on neither scientific nor religiously valid justification. It is in effect another faith which is based on neither textual nor logical religious grounds. Considering a black cat crossing one’s path as a bad omen is one of the many examples of superstitious beliefs. A degenerated religious society abounds in superstition. While Islamic faith is based on sound reasoning as is evident from the verses of the Quran, superstition is completely devoid of reasoning except a vague reference to the experiences of some individuals.
A superstitious individual can never be confident in taking decisions nor can he ever have a clear faith in the fact that it is only one God who alone is running the affairs of this world. It is a part of the belief of a superstitious individual that many different, unrelated forces cause events to happen in this world. Superstition thus leads to polytheism which is an understanding that there are many gods who are simultaneously responsible for running this world. Monotheism, the cornerstone of Islamic faith, is based on the principle that this world was created, and is run, by one God alone.
Published in The Express Tribune, Sunday Magazine, September 25th, 2011.
COMMENTS (19)
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Ali
Hope you really get some free time to share your miracles of the Quran. But please make sure that, as Antony said above, "Your example should be new [original in the sense that no one could have known it before Islam] which until now no scientist has figured it out after all their hardwork".
@Ali, I like your strategy of response.IF some body asks for proof you ask go find it in youtube. Another common deceptive technique is scientific discoveries always will be found by hard work and brilliance by newton /galileo /dalton but once they discovered there would be folks like you quoting these are all said clearly much earlier .IF I ask you can you quote one scientific discovery which can benefit human kind which you have found through reading thoroughly and that helps human kind which scientist verifies and delightly attest yes this is incredible !!! Voila great scientific phenomenon revealed here which we are breaking our heads ..Please note before throwing up something gibberish I give you example..say electricity how useful it is for human kind ..Your example should be new which until now no scientist has figured it out after all their hardwork and your discovery of revealation should shut my mouth and create more followers only if you can prove!!!
@Shoaib: I agree that the extent we have started believing is quite wrong. But to think of jinns, black magic etc as a thing of mystic tales is a folly as well. One should not be ignorant of what is already accepted in the religion as a possibility (magic), though it has been condemned deeply.
@Mj: I think you missed the heading of this article. You don't have to believe what religious scriptures say. Its your choice. But since this article was based on the Islamic perspective of Magic, then you should't comment as well.
@All: I would have to agree with Ali. Study the religion before commenting on it.
@faisal.... go youtube it if you dont want to read some book or the Quran on your own.. ill even give u a hint... search miracles of Quran in the search bar after you type www.youtube.com in your address bar... and please dont watch some mullah's version... if u have trouble finding a neutral version... "holla' back" if thats what they say in ur terminologies.... lol
please also dont respond with oh there arent any thats why u dint etc etc... im really busy at work otherwise i would have ... thanks for replying bro :)
@Ali "people who like to take a shot at religion…. reek of ignorance of the Holy Quran and its many miracles"
Please provide some examples.
if a person has explained something in the context of religion doesn't mean he is unaware of science and its "inferences".... try to understand his purpose.... this article points towards random beliefs that people hold and is trying to show how our religion negates them.....
people who like to take a shot at religion.... reek of ignorance of the Holy Quran and its many miracles....i only ask you honestly sit down.... read through an authentic translation that is judged authentic by any sect you belong to.... read through it honestly not for the sake of amassing good deeds for the hereafter that u definitely dont believe in ... read through it for the sake of knowledge.... Dalton, Newton, galileo all would have been shocked had they read the Quran... The Holy Quran complements their views and doesn't negate them....
doesn't the mere thought of modern science being only 100-150 years old bother u....? comparing modern explanations to ancient ones and outright rejecting them because someone told you to ring no alarm bells?
Also attributing the creation of the universe to "chance" is an "assumption" and an attempt to explain a scientific/physical anomaly.... do you want to risk a possible hereafter to chance?
modern science is just an interpretation of physics in this reference point of time... a long time ago people actually believed the earth was flat as a fact....
but if that analogy seems childish... consider the fact that numerals are man made and are based on a system of 0 to 9 ... and are calculated in tens.... what if they were more than 9 numerals and calculated in 12's or 17's..... our perception of physics and 3 dimenstions would be quite different... :)
70000 angels ,Jinn are all reality is it ? ..Even hollywood doesnt deny them .Yes why would they ..The can make as many fiction ,horror movies to sell it to the masses and earn millions.. About countless people experiencing them yes in their minds!!!.
Fortunately or unfortunately black magic does exist as do the jinns. The existence of jinns has been mentioned in reference to the times of Hazrat Sulaiman (A.S) several times.
Similarly the existence of black magic was the reason that Surah Nas & Falaq were revealed to counter the magic done on our Prophet Muhammad (SAW).Although it is strictly prohibited to carry out black magic and has been described as an act of Evil.
To find all evidences only in the quran without referring to the authentic Hadith is very diverging and can lead to wrong conclusions. The life of prophet Muhammad (SAW) and his sayings are also central to understanding the Quran and Islam as whole.
Similarly "Nazr e Bud" is also existent.
@MJ - Jinn are a reality not a story. Countless people have experienced them. Even hollywood doesn't deny them.
@Loneliberal PK
Excellent rejoinder.
I used to believe in miracles, magic, jinn, talking snakes, parting sea and moon, world-wide flood... but I've grown up!
It is puzzling when people like Khalid poetically claim evidence for the unseen, the unheard and thus unobserved; It is a contradiction in terms.
Good article. What is the reality of "evil eye" or "nazr-e-bud"? Does anything like this exist?
And in order to for us to have a discussion of magic and whether we can indulge in it or not, we first have to prove whether such a thing even exists.
Just because you don't know how a magician saws a woman in half on stage, doesn't mean you freak out and start calling it a "supernatural phenomenon" or "magic". I don't know how the trick works, but I still believe that there's a perfectly natural explanation for it.
If you shy away from certain kinds of scientific research just because they can be "faith-challenging", then that's an epitome of your insecurity and lack of confidence in your own beliefs.
As Thomas Paine once said, "It is error only, not truth, that shrinks away from inquiry".
Thanks you for this useful article and quoting the relevant surahs!