Generally, belief in angels is one of the core tenets within Islam, as it is one of the
six articles of faith.[7][8] Angels are more prominent in Islam compared to Judeo-Christian tradition.[9] The angels differ from other spiritual creatures in their attitude as creatures of virtue, in contrast to evil devils (
Arabic: شَيَاطِين,
romanized: šayāṭīn or
Persian: دیو,
romanized: dīv) and ambiguous
jinn (
Arabic: جِنّ or
Persian: پَری,
romanized: parī).[10][3][11][12]
Angels are conceptualized as servants of God. As such, they are said to lack passion and bodily desires. If angels can nevertheless fail, is debated in Islam. Many
Māturīdites say that the heavenly creatures are tested, and angels may fail such a test, whereupon they are dismissed from their duties. Some
Ashʿarite likewise argue that angels can fail. In contrast, most
Mu'tazilites, including some Asharis such as
al-Razi, consider angels to be infallible. Though some Muslim scholars may accept a certain degree of angelic fallibility, these angels do not rebel on their own part against God but fail to complete their task properly.
In
Sufism, angels are related to the nature of
reason ('aql). According to
Sufi cosmology, they connect the higher realms of the intellect with the lower world of matter. Thus, the human mind is conceptualized to form a connection with the
heavenly spheres (malakūt) through such heavenly entities associated with (Nūr). In contrast, the devils attempt to disturb the connection by diverging the mind to the
lower spheres, thus associated with
fire (nār).
Etymology
The Quranic word for angel (Arabic: ملك, romanized: malak) derives either from Malaka, meaning "he controlled", due to their power to govern different affairs assigned to them,[13] or from the triliteral root '-l-k, l-'-k or m-l-k with the broad meaning of a "messenger", just as its counterpart in
Hebrew (malʾákh). Unlike the
Hebrew word, however, the term is used exclusively for heavenly spirits of the divine world, as opposed to human messengers. The Quran refers to both angelic and human messengers as rasul instead.[14]
Characteristics
In Islam, angels are heavenly creatures created by
God. They are considered older than humans and
jinn.[15] Although Muslim authors disagree on the exact nature of angels, they agree that they are autonomous entities with subtle bodies.[16]: 508 Yet, both concepts of angels as
anthropomorphic creatures with wings and as abstract forces are acknowledged.[5] Angels play an important role in Muslim everyday life by protecting the believers from evil influences and recording the deeds of humans. They have different duties, including their praise of God, interacting with humans in ordinary life, defending against
devils (shayāṭīn) and carrying on natural phenomena.[4] Angelic qualities, just as devilish ones, are assumed to be part of human's nature, the angelic one related to the spirit (ruh) and reason (aql), while the devilish one to egoism.[17] Angels might accompany aspiring saints or advise pious humans. Angels are believed to be attracted to clean and sacred places.
One of the Islamic major characteristic is their lack of bodily desires; they never get tired, do not eat or drink, and have no anger.[18] According to a Hadith tradition recorded by
Muslim ibn al-Hajjaj on the authority of
Anas ibn Malik, angel is solid creatures which doesn't have any cavity or hollow space within their body.[19] Various Islamic scholars such as
Ibn Kathir,
Ibn Taymiyya,
Al-Tabari,
Fakhr al-Din al-Razi, and
Umar Sulaiman Al-Ashqar also quoted that angels does not need consuming food and drinks.[20] They are also described as immortal, unlike jinn.[21] In Islamic traditions, they are described as being created from incorporeal
light (Nūr) or fire (Nar).[22][23][a]Ahmad Sirhindi, a 17th-century Indian scholar, has added, that Angels can take various shapes.[32] Some scholars assert that such circumstances might interfere with an angels' work and thus impede their duty. For example, dogs, unclean places, or something confusing them might prevent them from entering a home.[33][34][35][36]
Nobility
As with other monotheistic religions, angels are characterized by their purity and obedience to God.[37] Groups of modern scholars from
Imam Mohammad Ibn Saud Islamic University in Yemen and Mauritania issued fatwa that the angels should be invoked with blessing
Islamic honorifics (ʿalayhi as-salāmu), which is applied to human prophets and messengers.[38] This fatwas were based on the ruling from
Ibn Qayyim al-Jawziyya.[38] Medieval
Hanafite jurist
Ibn Abi al-Izz further emphasising the importance of belief in angels existence in Islamic tenet in his commentary of
al-Aqida al-Tahawiyya, whereas he condemn that any doubts of angel existence were regarded as sign of heathen.[39]
Angels usually symbolize virtuous behavior, while humans have the ability to sin, but also to repent. Humans are considered to be able to reach a higher level than angels due to their ability to choose to avoid sin. Angels are free from such inferior urges and therefore superior, a position especially found among
Mu'tazilites and some
Asharites.[40] A similar opinion was asserted by
Hasan al-Basri, who argued that angels are superior to humans and prophets due to their infallibility, originally opposed by both
Sunnis and
Shias.[41] This view is based on the assumption of superiority of pure spirit against body and flesh.
Maturidism generally holds that angels' and prophets' superiority and obedience derive from their virtues and insights to God's action, but not as their original purity.[42] The
al-Sahifa al-Sajjadiyya, a book of
prayers attributed to
Ali ibn Husayn Zayn al-Abidin, contains a chapter praying for blessings for the angels.[43]
Purity
Angels believed to be engaged in human affairs are closely related to Islamic purity and modesty rituals. Many
hadiths, including
Muwatta Imam Malik from one of the
Kutub al-Sittah, talk about angels being repelled by humans' state of impurity.[44]: 323 It is argued that if driven away by ritual impurity, the
Kiraman Katibin, who record people's actions,[44]: 325 and the
guardian angel,[44]: 327 will not perform their tasks assigned to the individual. Another hadith specifies, during the state of impurity, bad actions are still written down, but good actions are not. When a person tells a lie, angels nearby are separated from the person from the stench the lie emanates.[44]: 328 Angels also depart from humans when they are naked or are having a bath out of decency, but also curse people who are nude in public.[44]: 328 Ahmad Sirhindi has mentioned that the angels nobility are because their substances are created from luminous light.[32]
The possibility and degree of angels errability is debated in Islam.[45]Hasan of Basra (d. 728) is often considered one of the first who asserted the doctrine of angelic infallibility. Others accepted the possibility of fallible angels, with most debated topic in Islam were the story about competing angels and humans in the tale of
Harut and Marut, who were tested to determine, whether or not, angels would do better than humans under the same circumstances,[46] a tradition opposed by some scholars, such as
Ahmad ibn Taimiyya, but still accepted by others, such as
Ahmad ibn Hanbal.[47] In a comment by
Gibril Haddad on
Qadi Baydawi's defense on angelic fallibility in his Tafsir al-Baydawi it is said that the angels' "obedience is their nature while their disobedience is a burden, while human beings' obedience is a burden and their hankering after lust is their nature."[16]: 546 Since obedience of angels is rarely mentioned in early tafsir when discussing fallen angels, the idea that angels are unable to sin was probably not an universal one in early Islam.[48]
Infallible
Islamic scholars which supported the notion that angels were infallible and rejected the entire concept of the
fallen angel, as they based Quran describes angels in
At-Tahrim66:6 "not disobeying",
Al-Anbiya21:19 of "not acting arrogant",[49] and in Al-Anbiya
21:27 of "not presumptuous",[50] which served as a base for the doctrine of angelic impeccability. This notion of angel absolute obedience to fulfill their duties based on that verse were supported by
Fethullah Gülen.[51][52] Aside from the narration al Kahf, similar narration from
Al-Hijr15:30-31 also quoted by Muhammad Sulaiman Al-Asyqar, Quran exegesis expert from
Islamic University of Madinah, and
Salih bin Abdullah al Humaid, Imam of
Masjid al-Haram, to interpret the similar case about the exclusion of Satan and the purity of angels.[53][54]
One of the prominent scholar who reject the fallen angel concept is Hasan al-Basri, who brought out his argumentation based on
Hadith from
Sahih Muslim which authored from
Aisha, wife of Muhammad, where Muhammad stated that the angels created from light while djinn were created from fire.[55][56] Furthermore, Hasan al-Basri said that the doctrine of angelic impeccability, Hasan al-Basri interpreted verses implying fallen angels differently, and argued that Harut and Marut were human kings but not angels. Likewise, he was a strong advocate for rejecting Iblis' angelic origin.[57]
However, the approach of Hasan al Basri interpretation were not universally accepted among Muslim scholars who defend the infallibility of angels, as this interpretation of Hasan al-Basri, which followed by Tabari, were rejected by Muhammad ibn Kathir who wrote his interpretation In
Tafsir Ibn Kathir, that he argues, on the authority of
Mujahid ibn Jabr and
Qatada ibn Di'ama, that Harut and Marut were not humans, but they were indeed an angels which are sent by God with a mission to test the mankind.[58][59] Thus by this interpretation, Ibn Kathir argued about this verse of
Al-Baqara2:102 that actually Harut and Marut were simply carrying noble task from God to test whether or not the mankind would fall into temptation of sins and black magic which brought by Harut and Marut, not the angels can be tempted to commit sin or error.[58][59] This view were followed by most scholars of
Salafism, that they rejecting account of fallen angels entirely,[60] and choosing the interpretation of
Ibn Kathir in defending Harut and Marut innocence in this case.[58][61]
On the other hand, unlike philosophers, who accepted view to a certain degree that angels might commit error, most mutakallimūn such as
Fakhr al-Din al-Razi is an exception and agrees with the Mu'tazilites that angels cannot commit sin. He goes further and includes to
the six articles of faith not only belief in angels, but one must also believe in their infallibility.[62]
[50] And (remember) when We said unto the angels: Fall prostrate before Adam, and they fell prostrate, all save Iblis. He was of the jinn, so he rebelled against his Lord's command. Will ye choose him and his seed for your protecting friends instead of Me, when they are an enemy unto you? Calamitous is the exchange for evil-doers.
Ibn Taymiyya interpreting it lexically the letter "fa'" (
so) in the verse above indicates
causality, which according to Ibn Taymiyyah, if the devil were an angel like the other angels who bowed down to Adam, of course the devil would not disobey the order to bow.[65][66] ibn Taymiyya also further considered the verse as Istithna Munqathi in Arabic linguistic form, or the form of exclusions of the subject from the main grouping, which indicating the verse meant the exclusion of Iblis from angel as species, as Iblis were considered from
jinn species.[66][65]
Fallible
Those who support that angels could commit sins or are fallible argue that if angels couldn't sin, there was no reason to praise them for obedience.[16]: 546 Al-Maturidi (853–944 CE) states that, like humans, the angels were tested[42] and concludes angels have free-will:[67]
"By calling the stars adornment of the heavens, we can deduce another meaning: that is, the inhabitants of the heavens themselves are put to the test to see which of them is the best in deeds, exactly as the inhabitants of the earth were put to test by these very adornments, for don't you see that God has said in Sūrat al-Kahf [Q. 18:7], We have made what is on earth an adornment for them, that they be tested which of them is best in deeds. Thus, God in this verse is stating that adornment is there for testing here for testing. (anna'l-zīna li'l-imtihãn).
Asharite scholar al-Baydawi also added that "certain angels are not infallible even if infallibility is prevalent among them — just as certain human beings are infallible but fallibility is prevalent among them."[16]: 545 Similarly al-Anbiya (21:29) stresses out that if an angel were to claim divinity for himself, he would be sentenced to hell, implying that angels might commit such a sin.[42][68] This verse is generally associated with
Iblis (Satan), who is generally thought of as an angel in these reports. In response to the reference to Iblis as "one of the jinn" somewhere else in the Quran, an alternative translation reads "became one of the jinn", indicating that took away his angelic qualities.[69] Yet others say that the term doesn't refer to the (genus of) jinn at all, but calls Iblis and his angels "al-jinn" due to their origin in jannah.[70] The presence of two fallen angels referred to as
Harut and Marut, further hindered their complete absolution from potentially sinning.[16]: 548 [71]
İsmail Hakkı reports that only the "angels of the earth" (ملائكة الارض), who battled the jinn, were the ones disputing the creation of Adam. Among them were also Harut and Marut, as well as Iblis, known as ʿAzāzīl at that moment. Due to their abode on earth, their perception of heavenly wisdom is veiled, unlike that of the angels in the "higher realms". İsmail Hakkı concluded that the angels in the higher heavens are considered infallible, but the angels of the earth are subject to misguidance, along with the jinn and devils.[72]
Abu Hanifa (d. 767) also supported the fallibility of angels as he ranked angels based on their examples in the Quran and distinguishes them from the devils and jinn.[73]
Al-Taftazani (1322 AD –1390 AD) accepted that angels might slip into error and become disobedient, like Harut and Marut, but agrees with al-Basri that angels wouldn't become unbelievers, like as Iblis did.[74]
In philosophy
Inspired by
Neoplatonism, the medieval Muslim philosopher
Al-Farabi developed a cosmological hierarchy, governed by several Intellects. For al-Farabi, human nature is composed of both material and spiritual qualities. The spiritual part of a human exchanges information with the angelic entities, who are defined by their nature as knowledge absorbed by the Godhead.[75] A similar function is attested in the cosmology of the Muslim philosopher
Ibn Sina, who, however, never uses the term angels throughout his works. For Ibn Sina, the Intellects have probably been a necessity without any religious connotation.[76]Islamic Modernist scholars such as
Muhammad Asad and
Ghulam Ahmed Parwez have suggested a metaphorical reinterpretation of the concept of angels.[77] According to Seyyed Hossein Nasr, human and angels. Muslim philosophers usually define angels as substances endowed with reason and immortality. Humans and animals are mortal, but only men have reason. Devils are unreasonable like animals, but immortal like angels.[78][79]
However, Muslim theologians, such as al-Suyuti, rejected the philosophical depiction on angels, based on hadiths stating that the angels have been created through the light of God (nūr). Thus, angels would have substance and could not merely be an intellectual entity as claimed by some philosophers.[80] This view is similar to the
Salafi methodology of
Muhammad ibn al-Uthaymin. He puts emphasis on that the belief in angels as literal, physical, and sentient creatures, is one of the pillars of faith.[7]
Sufism
Just as in non-Sufi-related traditions, angels are thought of as created of light.
Al-Jili specifies that the angels are created from the
Light of Muhammad and in his attribute of guidance, light and beauty.[82] Influenced by Ibn Arabi's
Sufi metaphysics,
Haydar Amuli identifies angels as created to represent different names/attributes of God's beauty, while the devils are created in accordance with God's attributes of Majesty, such as "The Haugthy" or "The Domineering".[83]
Andalusianscholaribn Arabi argues that a human generally ranks below angels, but developed to
Al-Insān al-Kāmil, ranks above them. While most earlier Sufis (like
Hasan al-Basri) advised their disciples to imitate the angels, Ibn-Arabi advised them to surpass the angels. The angels being merely a reflection of the Divine Names in accordance within the spiritual realm, humans experience the Names of God manifested both in the spiritual and in the material world.[84][85] This reflects the major opinion that prophets and messengers among humans rank above angels, but the ordinary human below an angel, while the messengers among angels rank higher than prophets and messengers among humans.[40] Ibn Arabi elaborates his ranking in al-Futuhat based on a report by Tirmidhi. Accordingly, Muhammad intercedes for the angels first, then for (other) prophets, saints, believers, animals, plants and inanimate objects last, this explaining the hierarchy of beings in general Muslim thought.[86]
In later Sufism, angels do not appear as merely models for the mystic but also their companions. Humans, in a state between earth and heaven, seek angels as guidance to reach the upper realms.[84] Some authors have suggested that some individual angels in the microcosmos represent specific human faculties on a macrocosmic level.[87] According to a common belief, if a Sufi can not find a sheikh to teach him, he will be taught by the angel
Khidr.[88][89] The presence of an angel depends on human's obedience to divine law. Dirt, depraved morality and desecration may ward off an angel.[84] A saint might be given the ability to see angels as gift (karāmāt) from God.[90]
Ahmad al-Tijani, founder of the
Tijaniyyahorder, narrates that angels are created through the words of humans. Through good words an angel of mercy is created, but through evil words an angel of punishment is created. By God's degree, if someone repents from evil words, the angel of punishment may turn into an angel of mercy.[91]
The
Sufi Muslim and philosopher
Al Ghazali (
c. 1058–19 December 1111) divides human nature into four domains, each representing another type of creature: animals, beasts, devils and angels.[92] According to al-Ghazali, humans consist of animalistic and spiritual traits. From the spiritual realm (malakut), the plane in which symbols take on form, angels and devils advise the human hearth (qalb).[21] However, the angels also inhabit the realm beyond considered the realm from which reason ('aql) derives from and devils have no place.
While the angels endow the human mind with reason, advices virtues and leads to worshipping God, the devil perverts the mind and tempts to abusing the spiritual nature by committing sins, such as lying, betrayal, and deceit. The angelic natures advices how to use the animalistic body properly, while the devil perverts it.[93] In this regard, the plane of a human is, unlike whose of the jinn (here: angels and devils) [94] and animals, not pre-determined. Humans are potentially both angels and devils, depending on whether the
sensual soul or the
rational soul develop.[95][96]
In Salafism
Contemporary Salafism continues to regard the belief in angels as a pillar of Islam and regards the rejection of the literal belief in angels as
unbelief and an
innovation brought by
secularism and
Positivism. Modern reinterpretations, as for example suggested by
Nasr Abu Zayd, are strongly disregarded. Simultaneously, many traditional materials regarding angels are rejected on the ground, they would not be authentic. The
Muslim Brotherhood scholars
Sayyid Qutb and
Umar Sulaiman Al-Ashqar reject much established material concerning angels, such as the story of Harut and Marut or naming the Angel of Death Azrail. Sulayman Ashqar not only rejects the traditional material itself, he furthermore disapproves of scholars who use them.[97]
Classification of angels
Islam has no standard hierarchical organization that parallels the
division into different "choirs" or spheres hypothesized and drafted by early medieval
Christian theologians, but generally distinguishes between the angels in heaven (karubiyin) fully absorbed in the ma'rifa (knowledge) of God and the messengers (rasūl) who carry out divine decrees between heaven and earth.[98][99] Others add a third group of angels, and categorize angels into İlliyyûn Mukarrebûn (those around God's throne), Mudabbirât (carrying the laws of nature), and Rasūl (messengers).[100] Since angels are not equal in status and are consequently delegated to different tasks to perform, some
authors of tafsir (mufassirūn) divided angels into different categories.
Al-Baydawi records that Muslim scholars divide angels in at least two groups: those who are self-immersed in knowledge of "the Truth" (al-Haqq), based on "they laud night and day, they never wane" (21:29), they are the "highmost" and "angels brought near" and those who are the executors of commands, based on "they do not disobey Allah in what He commanded them but they do what they are commanded" (66:6), who are the administers of the command of heaven to earth.[16]: 509
Fakhr al-Din al-Razi (d. 1209) divided the angels into eight groups, which shows some resemblance to Christian angelology:[101]
Angels in Islamic art often appear in illustrated manuscripts of Muhammad's life. Other common depictions of angels in Islamic art include angels with Adam and Eve in the garden of Eden, angels discerning the saved from the damned on the Day of Judgement, and angels as a repeating motif in borders or textiles.[103] Islamic depictions of angels resemble winged Christian angels, although Islamic angels are typically shown with multicolored wings.[103] Angels, such as the archangel Gabriel, are typically depicted as masculine, which is consistent with God's rejection of feminine depictions of angels in several verses of
Quran.[104] Nevertheless, later depictions of angels in Islamic art are more feminine and androgynous.[103]
The 13th century book Ajā'ib al-makhlūqāt wa gharā'ib al-mawjūdāt(The Wonders of Creation) by
Zakariya al-Qazwini describes Islamic angelology, and is often illustrated with many images of angels. The angels are typically depicted with bright, vivid colors, giving them unusual liveliness and other-worldly translucence.[105] While some angels are referred to as "Guardians of the Kingdom of God," others are associated with hell. An undated manuscript of The Wonders of Creation from the Bavarian State Library in Munich includes depictions of angels both alone and alongside humans and animals.[105] Angels are also illustrated in
Timurid and
Ottoman manuscripts, such as The Timurid Book of the Prophet Muhammad's Ascension (Mir'ajnama) and the Siyer-i Nebi.[106]
List of angels
A narrative transmitted from
Abu Dharr al-Ghifari, audited and commented by two hadith commentary experts in the modern era,
Shuaib Al Arna'ut.[107] and Muḥammad 'Abd ar-Raḥmān al-Mubarakpuri,[108] has spoken a hadith that Muhammad said the number of angels were countless, to the point that there is no space in the sky as wide as four fingers, unless there is an angel resting his forehead, prostrating to God.[108][107]
The 13th century book Ajā'ib al-makhlūqāt wa gharā'ib al-mawjūdāt(The Wonders of Creation) by
Zakariya al-Qazwini describes Islamic angelology, and is often illustrated with many images of angels. The angels are typically depicted with bright, vivid colors, giving them unusual liveliness and other-worldly translucence.[105] While some angels are referred to as "Guardians of the Kingdom of God," others are associated with hell. An undated manuscript of The Wonders of Creation from the Bavarian State Library in Munich includes depictions of angels both alone and alongside humans and animals.[105] Angels are also illustrated in
Timurid and
Ottoman manuscripts, such as The Timurid Book of the Prophet Muhammad's Ascension (Mir'ajnama) and the Siyer-i Nebi.[106]
Archangels (karubiyin)
According to one source, there are four special angels (karubiyin)[109] considered to rank above the other angels in Islam. They have proper names, and central tasks are associated with them:
Jibrīl/Jibrāʾīl/Jabrāʾīl (
Arabic: جِبْرِيل,
romanized: Jibrīl; also
Arabic: جبرائيل,
romanized: Jibrāʾīl or Jabrāʾīl; derived from the Hebrew גַּבְרִיאֵל, Gaḇrīʾēl)[110][111][112][113] (English:
Gabriel),[114] is venerated as one of the primary archangels and as the Angel of Revelation in Islam.[110][111][112] Jibrīl is regarded as the archangel responsible for revealing the Quran to Muhammad, verse by verse;[110][111][112] he is primarily mentioned in the verses
2:97,
2:98, and
66:4 of the Quran, although the Quranic text does not explicitly refer to him as an angel.[111] Jibrīl is the angel who communicated with
all of the prophets and also descended with the blessings of God during the night of
Laylat al-Qadr ("The Night of Divine Destiny (Fate)"). Jibrīl is further acknowledged as a magnificent warrior in Islamic tradition, who led an army of angels into the
Battle of Badr and fought against
Iblis, when he tempted
ʿĪsā (Jesus).[115]
Mīkāl/Mīkāʾīl/Mīkhāʾīl (
Arabic: ميكائيل)(English:
Michael),[116] the archangel of mercy, is often depicted as providing nourishment for bodies and souls while also being responsible for bringing rain and thunder to Earth.[117] Some scholars have pointed out that Mikail is in charge of angels who carry the laws of nature.[118]
Isrāfīl (
Arabic: إسرافيل) (frequently associated with the Jewish and Christian angel
Raphael), is the archangel who blows into the trumpet in the end time, therefore also associated with music in some traditions.[119] Israfil is responsible for signaling the coming of Qiyamah (
Judgment Day) by blowing a horn.[citation needed] However,
Ali Hasan al-Halabi [
ar] (a student of
Muhammad Nasiruddin al-Albani),[120]Muhammad ibn al-Uthaymeen,[121] and
Al-Suyuti,[122] have given commentary that all the hadiths that describe Israfil as the horn-blower are classified as
Da'if, although given the multitude of narrative chains that support this concept, they state that it is still possible.[120][122][121]
These four angels were specifically regarded by Abd ar-Rahman ibn Sabith, a
Tabi'un as regulator of natural orders such as windblow, rain, plants growth, death, and tasks from God about aforementioned.[125][126]
However, modern Saudi scholar.
Muhammad ibn al-Uthaymin, and Ibn Abi al-Izz has written their respective commentaries of
Al-Aqidah Al-Waasitiyyah, that the archangels who led the angels were only consisted of three angels, which is Gabriel, Michael, and Israfil.[127][128]
Kiraman Katibin (
Honourable Recorders),[130] two of whom are charged to every human being; one writes down good deeds and another one writes down evil deeds. They are both described as 'Raqeebun 'Ateed' in the Qur'an.
Mu'aqqibat (the Protectors)[131] who keep people from death until its decreed time and who bring down blessings.
Mālik, chief of the angels who govern
Jahannam (Hell).
Nineteen angels of hell, commanding the
Zabaniyah, to torment sinful people in hell. The nineteen angel chiefs of hell were depicted in Quran chapter
Al-Muddaththir verse
Quran74:10–11.[132] The
Saudi Arabia religious ministry released their official interpretation that Zabaniyah were collective names of angels group which included those nineteen chief angels.[132] Those nineteen angels of hell were standing tall above
Saqar, one of levels in hell.[133] Muhammad Sulaiman al-Asqar, professor from
Islamic University of Madinah argued the nineteen instead were nineteen type of hell angels which each type has different kind of form.[132]
Angels who distribute provisions, rain, and other blessings by God's command.[134]
Ra'd or angels of thunders, a name of angels group who drive the clouds.[135][136] The angels who regulating the clouds and rains in their task given by God were mentioned in
Quran13:13Ibn Taymiyyah in his work,
Majmu al-Fatwa al-Kubra, has quoted the
Marfu hadith transmitted by
Ali ibn abi Thalib, that Ra'd were the name of group of angels who herded the dark clouds like a shepherd.[136][137] Ali further narrated that
thunder (Ra'danArabic: رعدان) was the growling voices of those angels while herding the clouds, while
lightning strikes (Sawa'iqArabic: صوائق) were a flaming device used by the said angel in gathering and herding the raining clouds.[136]Al-Suyuti narrated from the hadith transmitted from
Ibn Abbas about the lightning angels, while giving further commentary that hot light produced by
lightning (BarqArabic: برق) were the emitted light produced from a whip device used by those angels.[136][137] Saudi
Grand MuftiAbd al-Aziz Bin Baz also ruled on the sunnah practice of reciting Sura Ar-Ra'd,
Ayah 13
Quran13:13(
Translated by
Shakir) whenever a Muslim hears the sound of
thunder, as this was practiced according to the hadith tradition narrated by
Zubayr ibn al-Awwam.[138] The non-canonical interpretation from
Salaf generation scholars regarding the tradition from Ali has described that "It is a movement of celestial clouds due to air compression in the cloud. However, this does not contradict that (the metaphysical explanation), [...] the angels move the clouds from one place to another. Indeed, every movement in the upper and lower World results from the action of the angels. The voice of a person results from the movement of his body parts, which are his lips, his tongue, his teeth, his epiglottis, and his throat; he, however, along with that, is said to be praising his Lord, enjoining good, and forbidding evil."[139]
Jundullah, those who helped Muhammad in the battlefield.[143]
Those that give the spirit to the fetus in the womb and are charged with four commands: to write down his provision, his life-span, his actions, and whether he will be wretched or happy.[144]
Malakul Jibaal (The Angel of the Mountains), met by the Prophet after his
ordeal at Taif.[145]
Angel of ice and fire, an angel
Muhammad met during his night
journey composed of ice and fire.
Angel who bestowed with strength equal of 70,000 angels and has 70,000 wings.[147] This angel were narrated in
Al-Dur al-Manthur were able to see
Al-ʽArsh, which were made of red ruby.[147]
According to hadith transmitted by
Ibn Abbas,
Muhammad encountered several significant angels on his
journey through the celestial spheres.[149][150] Many scholars such as
Al-Tha'labi drew their exegesis upon this narrative, but it never led to an established angelology as known in Christianity. The principal angels of the heavens are called Malkuk, instead of Malak.[151]
The rooster angel, in Miraj Literature, was held to be "enormous" and "white", and the comb on the top of his head "graze[d] the foot of Allah's celestial throne, its feet reach[ed] the earth", and its wings were thought to be large enough to "envelop both heaven and earth" and were covered with emeralds and pearls.[152] It is also thought to wake up mankind every morning through means like making "
cocks below on Earth...crow" when it opens its mouth.[153]
Khidr, sometimes regarded as an angel which took human form and thus able to reveal hidden knowledge exceeding those of the prophets to guide and help people or prophets.[158]
Azazil, considered the name of Satan before his fall by those who agree that he was an angel once. Ibn Taymiyya rejected this notion as he argued satan hailed from
Jinn instead of angel origin.[159]
^"Differences between nūr and nar have been debated in Islam. In Arabic, both terms are closely related
morphologically and
phonetically.[24]Baydawi explains that the term light serves only as a
proverb, but fire and light refers actually to the same substance.[25] Apart from light, other traditions also mention exceptions about angels created from fire, ice or water.[26]Tabari argued that both can be seen as the same substance, since both pass into each other but refer to the same thing on different degrees.[27] Asserting that both fire and light are actually the same but on different degrees can also be found by
Qazwini and Ibishi.[28][29] In his work Al-Hay'a as-samya fi l-hay'a as-sunmya, Suyuti asserts that the angels are created from "fire that eats, but does not drink".[30] Abd al-Ghani al-Maqdisi argued that only the angels of mercy are created from light, but angels of punishment have been created from fire.[31]
^MacDonald, D.B. and Madelung, W., "Malāʾika", in: Encyclopaedia of Islam, Second Edition, Edited by: P. Bearman, Th. Bianquis, C.E. Bosworth, E. van Donzel, W.P. Heinrichs. Online, retrieved 4 January 2024 <
http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/1573-3912_islam_COM_0642>
Erste Online-Publikation: 2012
Erste Druckedition: ISBN 9789004161214, 1960-2007
^
abcKassim, Husain (2007). Beentjes, Pancratius C.; Liesen, Jan (eds.). "Nothing can be Known or Done without the Involvement of Angels: Angels and Angelology in Islam and Islamic Literature". Deuterocanonical and Cognate Literature Yearbook. 2007 (2007).
Berlin:
De Gruyter: 645–662.
doi:
10.1515/9783110192957.6.645.
ISSN1614-337X.
S2CID201096692.
^Stephen Burge Angels in Islam: Jalal al-Din al-Suyuti's al-Haba'ik fi akhbar al-mala'ik Routledge 2015
ISBN978-1-136-50473-0 p. 22-23
^
abcMuhammad ibn al-Uthaymin (1998). "The Belief in Angel". In Saleh al-Saleh (ed.).
شرح اصل الايمان/Explaining the foundations of faith. Cooperative Office for Call & Islamic Guidance at Unaizah; King Fahd National Library Cataloglng-in-Publication Data; Riyadh. pp. 49–54.
ISBN9960-783-17-0. Retrieved 19 November 2023.
^Kiel, Micah D. The Catholic Biblical Quarterly, vol. 71, no. 1, 2009, pp. 215–18. JSTOR,
http://www.jstor.org/stable/43726529. Accessed 21 February 2023.
^(Mahmoud Omidsalar) Originally Published: December 15, 2000 Last Updated: February 7, 2012 This article is available in print. Vol. X, Fasc. 4, pp. 418-422
^Reynolds, Gabriel Said, "Angels", in: Encyclopaedia of Islam, THREE, Edited by: Kate Fleet, Gudrun Krämer, Denis Matringe, John Nawas, Devin J. Stewart. Consulted online on 02 January 2024 <
http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/1573-3912_ei3_COM_23204>
First published online: 2009
First print edition: 9789004181304, 2009, 2009-3
^Ali, Syed Anwer. [1984] 2010. Qurʼan, the Fundamental Law of Human Life: Surat ul-Faateha to Surat-ul-Baqarah (sections 1–21). Syed Publications. p. 121.
^Kuehn, Sara, Stefan Leder, and Hans-Peter Pökel. The intermediate worlds of angels: islamic representations of celestial beings in transcultural contexts. Orient-Institut, 2019. p. 336
^
abcdefibn ʿUmar al-Baydawi, ʿAbd Allah (2016). The Lights Of Revelation And The Secrets Of Interpretation. Translated by Haddad, Gibril Fouad. Beacon Books and Media Limited.
ISBN978-0-9926335-7-8.
^Glassé, Cyril; Smith, Huston (2003). The New Encyclopedia of Islam. Rowland Altamira. pp. 49–50.
ISBN978-0-759-10190-6.
^Ibn Qayyim al-Jawziyya (November 2016). Afkar, Dahyal; Maarif, Zainul (eds.).
Surga yang Allah Janjikan(paperback) (in Indonesian). Qisthi Press. p. 52.
ISBN978-979-1303-58-3. Retrieved 1 January 2024. ... berongga, Iblis tahu bahwa makhluk itu bukan malaikat. Iblis pun berkata, 'Jika Kau kuasakan dia pada malaikat, aku akan menghancurkannya. Jika Kau kuasakan dia padaku, maka aku akan menyesatkannya
^h Muhammad Singgih Pamungkas (15 December 2022).
"Mengenal Alam Malaikat (1)". muslim.or.id (in Indonesian). Al-Atsari Islamic Education Foundation /Kantor Sekretariat Yayasan Pendidikan Islam Al-Atsari (YPIA). Retrieved 21 December 2023. Dr. Sulaiman Al Asyqor, 'Alamul Malaikat, hal. 18
^
abAmira El-Zein (2009). Islam, Arabs, and Intelligent World of the Jinn. Syracuse University Press. pp. 34–51.
JSTORj.ctt1j5d836. Wings It is known angels have wings. However, jinn are represented only in folktales as flying ... immortal; their food and drink consist of praising God, while fiery jinn eat, drink, sleep, procreate, and die, after having ...
^Kuehn, Sara. "The Primordial Cycle Revisited: Adam, Eve, and the Celestial Beings." The intermediate worlds of angels (2019): 173-199.
^Jane Dammen McAuliffe Encyclopaedia of the Qurʾān Volume 3 Georgetown University, Washington DC p. 45
^Mustafa Öztürk Journal of Islamic Research Vol 2 No 2 December 200
^Houtsma, M. Th. (1993). E.J. Brill's First Encyclopaedia of Islam, 1913–1936, Band 5. Brill. p. 191.
ISBN978-9-004-09791-9 p. 191
^Fr. Edmund Teuma, O.F.M. Conv The Nature of "Ibli'h in the Qur'an as Interpreted by the Commentators p. 16
^Gauvain, Richard (2013). Salafi Ritual Purity: In the Presence of God. Abingdon, England: Routledge. p. 73.
ISBN978-0-7103-1356-0 p. 302
^Syrinx von Hees Enzyklopädie als Spiegel des Weltbildes: Qazwīnīs Wunder der Schöpfung: eine Naturkunde des 13. Jahrhunderts Otto Harrassowitz Verlag 2002
ISBN978-3-447-04511-7 page 270
^ANTON M. HEINEN ISLAMIC COSMOLOGY A STUDY OF AS-SUYUTI'S al-Hay'a as-samya fi l-hay'a as-sunmya with critical edition, translation, and commentary ANTON M. HEINEN BEIRUT 1982 p. 143
^Gibb, Hamilton Alexander Rosskeen (1995). The Encyclopaedia of Islam: NED-SAM. Brill. p. 94. ISBN 9789004098343
^Burge, Stephen (2015). Angels in Islam: Jalal al-Din al-Suyuti's al-Haba'ik fi akhbar al-mala'ik. Routledge. p. 140.
ISBN978-1-136-50473-0.
^
abAbdullaah Al-Faqeeh (2003).
"Saying 'Peace be upon him' to Angel Gabriel". Islamweb.net. Fatwa center of Imam Mohammad Ibn Saud Islamic University, Yemen, and Mauritania Islamic educational institues. Retrieved 14 March 2022.
^Ibn Abi al-Izz (1990). Ibn Abdul Muhsin Al Turki, Abdullah; Al Arna'ut, Shuaib (eds.).
سيرة الطحاوية (in Arabic). Al-Risalah Foundation. p. 297. Retrieved 22 December 2023.
^
abHoutsma, M. Th. (1993). E.J. Brill's First Encyclopaedia of Islam, 1913–1936, Band 5. BRILL. p. 191.
ISBN978-9-004-09791-9.
^Omar Hamdan Studien Zur Kanonisierung des Korantextes: al-Ḥasan al-Baṣrīs Beiträge Zur Geschichte des Korans Otto Harrassowitz Verlag 2006
ISBN978-3-447-05349-5 page 293 (in German)
^
abcUlrich Rudolph Al-Māturīdī und Die Sunnitische Theologie in Samarkand Brill, 1997
ISBN978-90-04-10023-7 pp. 54-56
^Gimaret, Daniel. "The Psalms of Islam. Al-ṣahīfat al-kāmilat al-sajjādiyya, Imam Zayn al-‛ Abidin‛ Alī ibn al-Ḥusayn, translated with an Introduction and Annotation by William C. Chittick. The Muhammadi Trust of Great Britain and Northern Ireland (London, 1988; distributed by Oxford University Press)." Bulletin critique des Annales islamologiques 7.1 (1991): 59-61.
^Welch, Alford T. (2008) Studies in Qur'an and Tafsir. Riga, Latvia: Scholars Press. p. 756.
^Patricia Crone. The Book of Watchers in the Qurån, page 11
^Reynolds, Gabriel Said, "Angels", in: Encyclopaedia of Islam, THREE, Edited by: Kate Fleet, Gudrun Krämer, Denis Matringe, John Nawas, Everett Rowson. Consulted online on 16 October 2019
doi:
10.1163/1573-3912_ei3_COM_23204 Erste Online-Erscheinung: 2009 Erste Druckedition: 9789004181304, 2009, 2009-3
^Abdul-Rahman al-Sa'di; professor Shalih bin Abdullah bin Humaid from Riyadh Tafsir center; Imad Zuhair Hafidz from Markaz Ta'dhim Qur'an Medina (2016).
"Surat Al-Anbiya Ayat 27". Tafsirweb (in Indonesian and Arabic).
Islamic University of Madinah;
Ministry of Religious Affairs (Indonesia);
Ministry of Islamic Affairs, Dawah and Guidance. Retrieved 30 January 2022. 27. لَا يَسْبِقُونَهُۥ بِالْقَوْلِ (mereka itu tidak mendahului-Nya dengan perkataan) Yakni para malaikat tidak mengatakan sesuatu sampai Allah yang mengakatannya atau memerintahkan mereka untuk mengatakannya. وَهُم بِأَمْرِهِۦ يَعْمَلُونَ (dan mereka mengerjakan perintah-perintah-Nya) Mereka menjalankan apa yang diperintahkan Allah kepada mereka dalam tugas-tugas mereka mengatur para makhluk-Nya. .
^Abdul-Rahman al-Sa'di; professor Shalih bin Abdullah bin Humaid from Riyadh Tafsir center; Imad Zuhair Hafidz from Markaz Ta'dhim Qur'an Medina (2016).
"Surat Al-Hijr Ayat 31". Tafsirweb (in Indonesian and Arabic).
Islamic University of Madinah;
Ministry of Religious Affairs (Indonesia);
Ministry of Islamic Affairs, Dawah and Guidance. Retrieved 30 January 2022. 31. إِلَّآ إِبْلِيسَ أَبَىٰٓ أَن يَكُونَ مَعَ السّٰجِدِينَ (kecuali iblis. Ia enggan ikut besama-sama (malaikat) yang sujud itu) Terdapat pendapat mengatakan bahwa iblis termasuk dari jenis malaikat, namun ia enggan untuk bersujud karena keangkuhan dan kedengkiannya terhadap Adam, maka ia layak mendapat laknat dari Allah. Namun pendapat yang benar adalah ia bukan termasuk malaikat, namun ketika itu ia bersama para malaikat sehingga ia termasuk yang diperintah untuk bersujud, namun ia menolak melakukannya; 31. Kecuali Iblis - yang saat itu bersama para Malaikat dan ia bukan salah satu dari mereka - menolak untuk sujud kepada Adam bersama para Malaikat.
^Omar Hamdan Studien zur Kanonisierung des Korantextes: al-Ḥasan al-Baṣrīs Beiträge zur Geschichte des Korans Otto Harrassowitz Verlag 2006
ISBN978-3-447-05349-5 pp. 291–292 (in German)
^
abcIbn Kathir (2004). Abdul, M; Yusuf Harun, M; al-Atsari, Abu Ihsan (eds.).
Tafsir Ibnu Kasir Jilid 1 (in Indonesian). Niaga Swadaya; Pustaka Imam Asy-Syafi'i. pp. 204–205.
ISBN979-3536-05-5. Retrieved 21 November 2023. Mengenai kisah Harut dan Marut ini, telah dikisahkan oleh sejumlah Tabi'in...
^Gauvain, Richard (2013). Salafi Ritual Purity: In the Presence of God. Abingdon, England, the U.K.: Routledge. pp. 69–74. ISBN 978-0-7103-1356-0.
^Muhammad Saed Abdul-Rahman (October 29, 2009).
Tafsir Ibn Kathir Juz' 1 (Part 1 Al-Fatihah 1 to Al-Baqarah 141 2nd Edition(ebook). MSA Publication Limited. pp. 189–190.
ISBN978-1-86179-673-8. Retrieved 21 November 2023. Learning Magic is Kufr Allah Said, (But neither of these two (angels) taught anyone (such things) till they had said, "We are for trial, so disbelieve not (by learning this magic from us).)
^Street, Tony. "Medieval Islamic doctrine on the angels: the writings of Fakhr al-Dīh al-Rāzī." Parergon 9.2 (1991): 111-127.
^Abdul-Rahman al-Sa'di; professor Shalih bin Abdullah bin Humaid from Riyadh Tafsir center; Imad Zuhair Hafidz from Markaz Ta'dhim Qur'an Medina (2016).
"Surat al Kahf 50". Tafsirweb (in Indonesian and Arabic).
Islamic University of Madinah;
Ministry of Religious Affairs (Indonesia);
Ministry of Islamic Affairs, Dawah and Guidance. Retrieved 30 January 2022. Allah memerintahkan para malaikat untuk bersujud kepada Adam, sebagai bentuk pemuliaan dan pengagungan serta menaati perintah Allah. Lalu mereka menaatinya "kecuali iblis. Dia adalah dari golongan jin, maka Dia mendurhakai perintah Rabbnya,"; para malaikat untuk bersujud kepada Adam sebagai penghormatan baginya; maka mereka bersujud semuanya kecuali Iblis yang ketika itu bersama para malaikat -dia berasal dari golongan jin-, dan dia menyelisihi perintah Allah dengan enggan bersujud karena kesombongan dan kedengkiannya; Sujudlah kamu kepada Adam, maka sujudlah mereka kecuali Iblis. Dia adalah golongan jin, maka ia mendurhakai perintah Tuhannya
^
abM. Saifudin Hakim (10 November 2021).
"Apakah Iblis termasuk Golongan Malaikat ataukah Jin?". muslim.or.id (in Indonesian). Al-Atsari Islamic Education Foundation (YPIA) Secretariat Office. Retrieved 28 November 2023. Pendapat ini juga dipilih dan dikuatkan oleh Syaikhul Islam Ibnu Taimiyah rahimahullah (Majmu' Fataawa, 4: 346). Mereka berdalil dengan firman Allah Ta'ala, كَانَ مِنَ الْجِنِّ فَفَسَقَ عَنْ أَمْرِ رَبِّهِ "Dia (iblis) adalah dari golongan jin, maka ia mendurhakai perintah Tuhannya." (QS. Al-Kahfi: 50) Huruf fa' dalam ayat di atas menunjukkan sebab-akibat. Maksudnya, Allah Ta'ala menjadikan iblis dari jenis jin disebabkan karena kedurhakaannya. Dengan kata lain, iblis adalah jin yang durhaka terhadap perintah Allah Ta'ala. Seandainya iblis adalah malaikat sebagaimana malaikat-malaikat lain yang bersujud kepada Adam, tentu iblis tidak akan melawan atau mendurhakai perintah Allah Ta'ala. Hal ini karena malaikat itu terjaga (ma'shum) dari perbuatan dosa, tidak sebagaimana golongan manusia dan jin.
^
abAhmad ibnMuhammad ibn ash-Shadiq an-Najar.
Haqiqat al-Malaikah (in Arabic). pp. 60–65. Retrieved 28 November 2023.
^Saleh, Walid A. "Rereading al-Ṭabarī through al-Māturīdī: New light on the third century hijrī." Journal of Qur'anic Studies 18.2 (2016): 180-209.
^Yüksek Lisans Tezi Imam Maturidi'nin Te'vilatu'l-kur'an'da gaybi konulara İstanbul-2020 2501171277
^Soğukoğlu, Fehmi. "Mâtürîdî'nin Te'vîlât'ı Çerçevesinde Kur'ân'da Varlık Türleri Arasındaki Üstünlük Meselesi." Kilitbahir 20 (2022): 53-69.
^MacDonald, D.B. and Madelung, W., "Malāʾika", in: Encyclopaedia of Islam, Second Edition, Edited by: P. Bearman, Th. Bianquis, C.E. Bosworth, E. van Donzel, W.P. Heinrichs. Consulted online on 12 October 2021
doi:
10.1163/1573-3912_islam_COM_0642
First published online: 2012
First print edition:
ISBN978-90-04-16121-4, 1960-2007
^İsmail Hakkı Bursevî Rūḥ al-bayān Tafsīr on Surah 2:30 (Arabic)
^Masood Ali Khan, Shaikh Azhar Iqbal Encyclopaedia of Islam: Religious doctrine of Islam Commonwealth, 2005
ISBN978-81-311-0052-3 p. 153
^Austin P. Evans A commentary on the Creed of Islam Translated by Earl Edgar Elder Columbia University Press, New York 1980
ISBN0-8369-9259-8 p. 135
^Zohreh Abdei "Alle Wesen bestehen aus Licht" Engel in der persischen Philosophie und bei Suhrawardi Tectum Band 23
ISBN978-3-8288-4104-8 p. 48
^Zohreh Abdei "Alle Wesen bestehen aus Licht" Engel in der persischen Philosophie und bei Suhrawardi Tectum Band 23
ISBN978-3-8288-4104-8 p. 50
^Seyyed Hossein Nasr An Introduction to Islamic Cosmological Doctrines SUNY Press, 1 January 1993
ISBN978-0-7914-1515-3 p. 236
^Syrinx von Hees Enzyklopädie als Spiegel des Weltbildes: Qazwīnīs Wunder der Schöpfung: eine Naturkunde des 13. Jahrhunderts Otto Harrassowitz Verlag 2002
ISBN978-3-447-04511-7 page 268 (in German)
^Stephen Burge Angels in Islam: Jalal al-Din al-Suyuti's al-Haba'ik fi akhbar al-mala'ik Routledge 2015 ISBN 978-1-136-50473-0
^Awn, Peter J. (1983). Satan's Tragedy and Redemption: Iblīs in Sufi Psychology. Leiden, Germany: Brill Publishers. p. 182
ISBN978-90-04-06906-0
^Ayman Shihadeh Sufism and Theology Edinburgh University Press, 21 November 2007
ISBN978-0-7486-3134-6 pp. 54-56
^
abcReynolds, Gabriel Said, "Angels", in: Encyclopaedia of Islam, THREE, Edited by: Kate Fleet, Gudrun Krämer, Denis Matringe, John Nawas, Everett Rowson. Consulted online on 17 August 2021 <
http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/1573-3912_ei3_COM_23204>
First published online: 2009 First print edition: 9789004181304, 2009, 2009-3
^Mohamed Haj Yousef The Single Monad Model of the Cosmos: Ibn Arabi's Concept of Time and Creation ibnalarabi 2014
ISBN978-1-499-77984-4 page 292
^Gallorini, Louise. The Symbolic Functions of Angels in the Qur'ān and Sufi Literature. Diss. 2021. p. 304
^John Renard Historical Dictionary of Sufism Rowman & Littlefield, 19 November 2015
ISBN978-0-8108-7974-4 p. 38
^Michael Anthony Sells Early Islamic Mysticism (CWS) Paulist Press 1996
ISBN978-0-809-13619-3 page 39
^Noel Cobb Archetypal Imagination: Glimpses of the Gods in Life and Art SteinerBooks
ISBN978-0-940-26247-8 page 194
^Maddenin bu bölümü TDV İslâm Ansiklopedisi'nin 2022 yılında Ankara'da basılan 25. cildinde, 265-268 numaralı sayfalarda "KERÂMET" başlığıyla yer almıştır. Matbu nüshayı pdf dosyası olarak indirmek için tıklayınız. Bu bölüm en son 13.02.2019 tarihinde güncellenmiştir
^Wright, Zachary Valentine. "Realizing Islam, Sustainable History Monograph Pilot OA."
^Zh. D. Dadebayev, M.T. Kozhakanova, I.K.Azimbayeva Human's Anthropological Appearance in Abai Kunanbayev's Works World Academy of Science, Engineering and Technology
Vol:6 2012-06-23 p. 1065
^Truglia, Craig. "AL-GHAZALI AND GIOVANNI PICO DELLA MIRANDOLA ON THE QUESTION OF HUMAN FREEDOM AND THE CHAIN OF BEING." Philosophy East and West, vol. 60, no. 2, 2010, pp. 143–166. JSTOR, www.jstor.org/stable/40666556. Accessed 17 Aug. 2021.
^Teuma, E. (1984). More on Qur'anic jinn. Melita Theologica, 35(1-2), 37-45.
^Amira El-Zein Islam, Arabs, and Intelligent World of the Jinn Syracuse University Press 2009
ISBN978-0-815-65070-6 page 43
^Khaled El-Rouayheb, Sabine Schmidtke The Oxford Handbook of Islamic Philosophy Oxford University Press 2016
ISBN978-0-199-91739-6 page 186
^Stephen Burge Angels in Islam: Jalal al-Din al-Suyuti's al-Haba'ik fi Akhbar al-malik Routledge 2015
ISBN978-1-136-50473-0 p. 13-14
^Wensinck, A. J. (2013). The Muslim Creed: Its Genesis and Historical Development. Vereinigtes Königreich: Taylor & Francis. p. 200
^Imam Abu Hanifa's Al Fiqh Al Akbar Explained By أبو حنيفة النعمان بن ثابت Abu 'l Muntaha Ahmad Al Maghnisawi Abdur Rahman Ibn Yusuf"
^Serdar, Murat. "Hıristiyanlık ve İslâm'da Meleklerin Varlık ve Kısımları." Bilimname 2009.2 (2009). p. 156
^Serdar, Murat. "Hıristiyanlık ve İslâm'da Meleklerin Varlık ve Kısımları." Bilimname 2009.2 (2009).
^
abGruber, Christiane J. (2008). The Timurid "Book of Ascension" (Micrajnama): A Study of the Text and Image in a Pan-Asian Context. Patrimonia. p. 254
^
abAmmi Nur Baits.
"How Many Angels are?". konsultasisyariah.com (in Arabic and Indonesian). yufid.org. Retrieved 27 March 2022. (HR. Ahmad 21516, Turmudzi 2312, Abdurrazaq in Mushanaf 17934. This hadith is rated as hasan lighairihi by Shuaib Al-Arnauth).
^Matthew L.N. Wilkinson A Fresh Look at Islam in a Multi-Faith World: A Philosophy for Success Through Education Routledge 2014
ISBN978-1-317-59598-4 page 106
^Syrinx von Hees Enzyklopädie als Spiegel des Weltbildes: Qazwīnīs Wunder der Schöpfung: eine Naturkunde des 13. Jahrhunderts Otto Harrassowitz Verlag 2002
ISBN978-3-447-04511-7 page 320 (in German)
^Sophy BurnhamA Book of Angels: Reflections on Angels Past and Present, and True Stories of How They Touch Our Lives Penguin 2011
ISBN978-1-101-48647-4
^
abMustafa bin Kamal Al-Din Al-Bakri (2013).
الضياء الشمسي على الفتح القدسي شرح ورد السحر للبكري 1-2 ج2 [Solar illumination on the divine conquest] (Religion / Islam / Theology) (in Arabic). Dar Al Kotob Al Ilmiyah. p. 132. Retrieved 3 March 2022. Al-Habaa-ik fii Akhbaaril Malaa'ik
^Syrinx von Hees Enzyklopädie als Spiegel des Weltbildes: Qazwīnīs Wunder der Schöpfung: eine Naturkunde des 13. Jahrhunderts Otto Harrassowitz Verlag 2002
ISBN978-3-447-04511-7 page 331 (in German)
^Juan Eduardo Campo Encyclopedia of Islam Infobase Publishing, 2009
ISBN978-1-438-12696-8 page 42
^Riḍāʾ Allāh ibn Muḥammad Idrīs Mubārakfūrī · (1998).
كتاب العظمة (in Arabic). the University of Michigan. p. 808. Retrieved 24 December 2023. عن علقمة بن مرثد ( ۲ ) ، عن ابن سابط ( ۳ ) ، قال : يدبر الأمور أربعة : جبريل وميكائيل وإسرافيل وملك [ ١/٦٤ ] الموت / صلى الله على نبينا وعليهم
^Ammi Nur Baits (Mar 1, 2018).
"Mengenal Malaikat Mikail". konsultasisyariah.com (in Indonesian). Yayasan Yufid Network. Retrieved 24 December 2023. Ada 4 malaikat yang mengatur urusan: Jibril, Mikail, Israfil dan Malaikat maut – semoga shalawat dan salam tercurah untuk nabi kita dan mereka – Jibril mengatur angin dan pasukan, Mikail mengatur hujan dan pepohonan, malaikat maut yang mencabut nyawa, dan Israfil menyampaikan kepada mereka apa yang diperintahkan kepada mereka. (HR. Abu Syaikh al-Ashbahani dalam al-Adzamah, no. 294. Hadis ini adalah hadis Maqthu', karena Abdurrahman bin Sabith adalah seorang tabi'in).
^Muhammad ibn al-Uthaymin (2009-09-16). ibn Fawzi Al-Shamil, Sa'd (ed.). شرح العقيدة الواسطية لشيخ الإسلام ابن تيمية (in Arabic). Dar Ibn Al-Jawzi. p. 45.
^
abcdAbduh Tuasikal, Muhammad (2009).
"Ada Apa di Balik Petir?". Rumaysho (in Indonesian). Retrieved 26 February 2022. Al Khoroithi, Makarimil Akhlaq, Hadith Ali ibn Abi Talib; Ibn Taymiyyah, Majm al-Fatawa; al-Suyuti; Tafsir Jalalayn, Hasyiyah ash Shawi 1/31
^
abStephen Burge (2012).
Angels in Islam Jalal Al-Din Al-Suyuti's Al-Haba'ik Fi Akhbar Al-mala'ik(ebook) (Religion / Islam / General, Social Science / Regional Studies, Angels -- Islam). Taylor & Francis. p. 186.
ISBN978-1-136-50474-7. Retrieved 26 February 2022. 257 Armad, al-Tirmidhc, al-Nasa'c, Ibn al-Mundhir, Ibn Abc latim, Abe 'l-Shaykh in al-'AVama, Ibn Mardawayh, Abe Nu'aym, in al-DalA'il, and al-kiya'in al-MukhtAra (Ibn 'Abbas)
^Abdullaah Al-Faqeeh (2003).
"Hadeeth stating that thunder is angel Fatwa No: 335923". Islamweb.net. Fatwa center of Imam Mohammad Ibn Saud Islamic University, Yemen, and Mauritania Islamic educational institues. Retrieved 14 March 2022.
^Hussein Abdul-Raof Theological Approaches to Qur'anic Exegesis: A Practical Comparative-Contrastive Analysis Routledge 2012
ISBN978-1-136-45991-7 page 155
^Surah Al-Anfaal Ayah #09
Where ALLAH said,
(Remember) when you asked help of your Lord, and he answered you, indeed, I will reinforce you with a thousand from the Angels, following one another.
This Ayah affirms the statement of Ar-Rabi bin Anas in Tafsir ibn e kathir while explaining the Tafsir of Ayah no 12 of surah Al-Anfal where he said in the Aftermath of badr, the people used to recognize whomever the Angels killed from those whom they killed, by the wound over their necks, fingers, and toes because those parts had Mark as if they were branded by fire.
^Muslim al-Atsariy (2007).
"Malaikat Turun Dari Langit Karena Bacaan Al-Qur'an". At-Tabi'in. Qiyam At-Tabi'in Foundation (YAQITA). Retrieved 10 November 2023. "Sakinah hanya turun di dalam pembacaan Al-Qur'an saja, adapun pembacaan hadits, maka malaikat lain yang akan berkumpul. Dan tidak-lah sampai (riwayat) kepada kami tentang turunnya Sakinah kecuali di dalam pembacaan Al-Qur'an, dan ini tidak diqiyaskan (disamakan dengan pembacaan hadits atau lainnya). Adapun Sakinah adalah jenis khusus malaikat yang turun untuk mendengarkan Al-Qur'an" En= Sakinah only descends for the readers of the Koran, as for the reading of the hadith, other angels will gather. And none (exegesis) has come to us about the revelation of the Sakinah except in the reading of the Al-Qur'an, and this cannot be analogized (qiyas). Sakinah is a special type of angel who descends to listen to the Koran. The commentary of Sahih Bukhari by Ibn Baaz
^Hajjah Amina Adil (2012). "Ezra". Muhammad the Messenger of Islam: His life & prophecy. BookBaby.
ISBN978-1-618-42913-1.
^Colby, Frederick S (2008). Narrating Muhammad's Night Journey: Tracing the Development of the Ibn 'Abbas Ascension Discourse. State University of New York Press.
ISBN978-0-7914-7518-8.
^Josef von Hammer-Purgstall Die Geisterlehre der Moslimen Staatsdruckerei, 1852 digit. 22 July 2010 p. 8 (in German)
^Carlson, Kathie; Flanagin, Michael N.; Martin, Kathleen; Martin, Mary E.; Mendelsohn, John; Rodgers, Priscilla Young; Ronnberg, Ami; Salman, Sherry; Wesley, Deborah A. (2010). Arm, Karen; Ueda, Kako; Thulin, Anne; Langerak, Allison; Kiley, Timothy Gus; Wolff, Mary (eds.). The Book of Symbols: Reflections on Archetypal Images. Köln:
Taschen. p. 328.
ISBN978-3-8365-1448-4.
^Vallance, Jeffrey.
"#6". Hotel. Chapelle de Poulet. United Kingdom. Retrieved 2023-05-18.
^Kelas 07 SMP Pendidikan Agama Islam dan Budi Pekerti Siswa 2017 (Islamic and Character Education for Grade 7 Junior High School 2017). Jakarta: Curriculum and Bookkeeping Center, Ministry of Education of Indonesia. 2017. p. 98.
ISBN978-602-282-912-6.