Further reading: Ignaz Golziher, Introduction to Islamic
Theology and Law. Translated by A. and R. Hamori
(Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1981);
Wael Hallaq, The Origins and Evolution of Islamic Law
(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2004); Fazlur
Rahman, Islam. 2d ed. (Chicago: University of Chicago
Press, 2002); Joseph Schacht, An Introduction to Islamic
Law (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1964).
Fire
(Arabic:
al-nar)
Fire is not just an element of nature in Islam, it
is also the equivalent of hell. Belief in a place of
punishment for wrongdoers in the
aFterliFe
is
widespread among the world’s religions. In Islam,
belief in a fiery hell, together with belief in a
heavenly
paradise
for the righteous, is regarded as
an important component of
Faith
. Muslims base
their afterlife beliefs on the q
Uran
and the
hadith
,
where there are numerous statements about both
the Fire and paradise. Historically, however, these
beliefs were developed from afterlife ideas that
had originated earlier among the ancient civiliza-
tions of the Middle East, Zoroastrianism and early
Judaism and Christianity.
According to the Quran, the Fire was a hor-
rific “home” or “dwelling” where the sinful
and unbelievers were forced to wear clothing
of fire, drink scalding water, and eat poisonous
fruit (Q 37:62–68; 22:19–21). Another Quranic
name for the Fire was Gehenna (jahannam), a
term for hell used in Judaism and Christianity.
The Quranic depiction of the Fire was greatly
enhanced in later medieval accounts about the
afterlife that occur in the hadith, theological
works, and visionary literature. According to
some imaginative traditions, the realm of the
K 240
Fire
Fire was composed of seven levels, each with its
own distinctive name, such as “abyss,” “blaze,”
and “furnace.” People were assigned to the
level that suited the degree of their sinfulness,
together with the corresponding punishments
that were administered by the angel Malik and
his assistants. Some accounts described the Fire
as a living creature—a monster with thousands
of heads and mouths. According to Muslim
theologians, wrongdoers would not necessar-
ily be punished in the Fire for eternity. Rather,
punishment was finite, and wrongdoers might
eventually be admitted to paradise once their
sins had been atoned.
Belief in the Fire helped focus the attention
of Muslims on holding fast to their faith and
performing their religious obligations. Some
medieval Sufis, however, held that too much
concern with the Fire and paradise could dis-
tract spiritually minded mystics from achieving
union with God. Others saw fire as a metaphor
for the passion of the spiritual lover that ended
with his or her annihilation in the beloved, God,
or they interpreted it as the intense pain experi-
enced as a result of one’s separation from God.
In more recent times, modernist thinkers and
reformers have attempted to explain the Fire and
paradise as psychological or spiritual conditions
rather than actual places where people would
live in the afterlife. Nonetheless, the prevailing
view among Muslims today, as with most Mus-
lims in the past, is that punishment in the fires
of hell is a reality that awaits all wrongdoers and
unbelievers.
See also
angel
;
death
;
eschatology
; s
atan
.
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