Encyclopedia of Islam



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creation

  

171  J




day and night, the Sun, the 

moon


, and the signs 

of the zodiac (Q 21:33; 25:61–62). The Quran 

also states in several places that God created the 

heavens and Earth in six days and then estab-

lished his throne (Q 7:54; 10:3, 11:7). Unlike the 

Genesis account, however, the Quran refutes the 

idea that God ever took the seventh day as a day 

of rest (Q 2:255), which Jews and Christians have 

celebrated as the holy Sabbath day. God is also 

praised for creating 

gardens

 with different kinds 

of fruits and vegetables for people to eat, and he 

is the source of the water that nourishes them (Q 

6:141; 21:19). Moreover, he is even remembered 

for having provided people with houses and cloth-

ing (Q 16:80–81). The absolute creative power 

attributed to God in the Quran later became the 

basis for the theological claim that God did not 

just create the world “in the beginning,” but that 

he is active as a creator at each moment in time 

as long as the world exists. It also was invoked in 

support of the prohibition against making statues 

and paintings of living beings, for in doing so the 

artist was thought to be attempting to assume 

God’s creative power.

In addition to craftsmanship, God was also 

believed to be able to create through speech. Once 

he decides to create something, according to the 

Quran, all he has to do is say, “Be!” and it is so 

(kun fa yakun) (Q 2:117). This kind of creation 

is not as common as the craftsman type, but it is 

said to have been involved with the creation of the 

heavens and Earth, Adam, and Jesus (Q 3:59).

The Quran describes the creation of human 

beings in two ways. One concerns the origin of 

the first human being, a

dam


. He was fashioned by 

God from dust or wet clay (Q 30:20; 6:2; 7:12); 

the commentaries likened the process to making 

a hollow clay pot. Some early writings said God 

used different colors of dust from different places 

on Earth, thus explaining the variety of skin col-

ors and personalities that distinguish people from 

one another. Alternately, they mentioned that the 

dust was taken from the k

aaba


, J

erUsalem


, y

emen


,

the Hejaz, e

gypt

, the east, and the west. As in the 



biblical account, God then breathed his spirit (ruh

into Adam, thus giving him life (Q 15:29). Also, 

as indicated above, the Quran says that Adam was 

created when God conceived a design and spoke to 

the dust, saying, “Be!” (Q 3:59). It does not detail 

the creation of Eve other than in very general 

terms (Q 4:1). Nonetheless, the commentaries, 

drawing upon biblical lore, reported that she was 

created from one of Adam’s ribs while he slept.

The second way in which the Quran describes 

God’s involvement in creating humans is in terms 

of human reproduction. God created humans from 

sperm (Q 16:4; 36:77) in the wombs of mothers 

(Q 3:6; 39:6). The very first verses many Muslims 

believe were revealed to Muhammad were those at 

the beginning of Sura 96, which declare, “Recite 

in the name of your lord who created, created the 

human being from clotted blood” (vv. 1–2). This 

passage links God’s creative power to the forma-

tion of the embryo.

The idea that God’s creation is designed for the 

material and spiritual benefit of human beings is 

central to the Quran. Indeed, God created them to 

be his deputies (khalifa) on Earth (Q 2:30). Materi-

ally, the Earth provides people with what they need 

to live and enjoy their appointed time on Earth. 

Spiritually, everything in creation is intended to 

be a reminder that God was the source of all and 

that people should worship him. To be ungrateful 

and forgetful of God were equivalent to disbelief 

and infidelity (kufr). This idea is connected to the 

quranic concept of signs (ayat), which are mani-

fest both in the created world and in the sacred 

book, for ayat also means verses of scripture. The 

interwoven signs of the world and the holy book, 

if they are recognized and heeded, lead to God and 

salvation. If they are rejected and ignored, they 

lead to suffering and damnation (Q 2:164–165; 

50:6–8). Although the world of everyday existence 

is essentially true and good, the Quran emphasizes 

that humans must be more attentive to the affairs 

of the next world in anticipation of J

Udgment

d

ay



. Recognizing that human beings are mortal 

and that the world will end one day, the Quran 

K  172  


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