Permanent Links Quran-only hope for muslims: there is no grave punishment

Monday 3 October 2011

there is no grave punishment


According to the Quran, there is no such concept as a ‘punishment in the grave’. This is a concept
completely alien, unsupported by the Quran and is found primarily (with all its details) in Islamic
secondary sources.
 
From a Quran's perspective, the evidence seems overwhelming that at the point of death, one will
become aware of the ‘truth’. Then one will enter ‘Barzakh’, a quintessential state of ‘sleep’ where all
concept of time will be lost. When one finally awakes, they will be confronting the Day of Judgment.
The time lapse will feel as if one had only slept for a small part of the day when in truth, they would
have tarried all the way to the Day of Judgment.
 
Before we take a look at the verses, an immediate question should arise:
What would be the purpose of an appointed Day of Judgment if after death, one were to receive 
their punishment in their graves before the trial had even taken place? 
  
Conviction before trial is not a concept of justice and God is the most Just. In effect, this would
render the Day of Judgment meaningless, a fundamental belief posited by the Quran underscored by
numerous Surahs and verses. God repeatedly informs His creation that He will never be unjust to his
slaves and not an atom's weight of injustice will take place. All actions will be recorded in a clear
record (10:61; 34:3; 99:7-8; 4:40)  


Also:
FROM THE MOMENT ONE DIES AND ARE SUBSEQUENTLY RAISED, IT WILL FEEL LIKE A 
MOMENTARY TIME LAPSE



017:052
"It will be on a Day when He will call you, and you will answer (His call) with (words of) His praise, 
and you will think that you tarried but a little while!"
030.055-56  
On the Day that the Hour (of Reckoning) will be established, the transgressors will swear that they 
tarried not but an hour: thus were they used to being deluded!  But those endued with knowledge 
and faith will say: "Indeed ye did tarry, within God's Decree, to the Day of Resurrection, and this is 
the Day of Resurrection: but you - you were not aware”
  
010:045
“One day He will gather them together: (It will be) as if they had tarried but an hour of a day: they 
will recognise each other: assuredly those will be lost who denied the meeting with God and refused 
to receive true guidance” 
  
046:035
"Therefore patiently persevere, as did (all) messengers of determination; and be in no haste about 
the (Unbelievers). On the Day that they see what they were promised, (it will be) as if they had not 
tarried more than an hour in a single day. (Yours is but) to proclaim the Message: but shall any be 
destroyed except those who transgress?" 
  
079:046
"On the day that they see it, it will be as though they had not tarried but the latter part of a day or 
the early part of it"
  
Similar wisdom is imparted in other verses: 
The Sleepers of the Cave slept for many hundreds of years (God knows best the exact 
period) but they felt they had only slept for a little while (18:19)
• A man slept for a 100 years but he only felt like that he slept for a part of a day (2:259)
  
THE DAY OF JUDGMENT IS ONLY A BLINKING OF AN EYE AWAY
  
In the context of the above verses, it becomes clear what is meant by the following verse which 
completely resonates with the theme of the Quran. At the point of death (which can come upon any 
of us at a stroke) and the Day of raising, it is but a blink of an eye. 
  
016:077
“And to God belongs the Unseen of the heavens and the earth, and the matter of the Hour (of 
Doom) is but as a twinkling of the eye, or it is nearer still. Indeed! God is Able to do all things”



WHEN ONE DIES, THEY ENTER 'BARZAKH' - HUMAN CONCEPT OF TIME IS LOST
023:100
"That I may do right in that which I have left behind! But nay! It is but a word that he speaks; and 
behind them is a barrier (Arabic: Barzakhun) until the day when they are raised."

010:045
“And on the day when He shall gather them together, (when it will seem) as though they had tarried 
but an hour of the day, recognising one another, those will verily have perished who denied the 
meeting with God and were not guided”


AT THE POINT WHEN YOU DIE, THE ACTUAL TRUTH (OF PURPOSE) WILL BE KNOWN 
ESPECIALLY FOR DISBELIEVERS
  
006.093
"And who is more unjust than he who forges a lie against God, or says: It has been revealed to me; 
while nothing has been revealed to him, and he who says: I can reveal the like of what God has 
revealed? and if you had seen when the unjust shall be in the agonies of death and the angels shall 
spread forth their hands: Give up your souls; today you shall be recompensed with an ignominious 
chastisement because you spoke against God other than the truth and (because) you showed 
pride against His communications



A MISQUOTED VERSE

Regrettably, without reconciling the Quranic narratives in full and due to beliefs stemming from 
popular traditions, one often finds use being made of isolated Quranic verses to authenticate 
doctrines not taught by the Quran. 
  
With regards the example of Pharaoh, the following verse is often cited to justify the belief of 
‘punishment in the grave’. 
040:046
“In front of the Fire will they be brought, morning and evening: and (the sentence will be) on the Day 
that Judgment will be established: "Cast ye the People of Pharaoh into the severest Penalty” 


If read in context, it becomes absolutely clear that this is a reference to the Day of Judgment.
040:047
“And when they shall contend one with another in the fire, then the weak shall say to those who 
were proud: Surely we were your followers; will you then avert from us a portion of the fire?”
It is difficult to accept 40:46 as a reference to a ‘punishment in the grave’. Mutual disputes between 
the people of Pharaoh in the fire clearly indicate a state of communal punishment and not a 
punishment in separate graves.  
  
The very next verse provides even more clarity: 
040:048
“Those who were proud shall say: Surely we are all in it: surely God has judged between the 
servants”
Furthermore, given the descriptive traditions which deal with punishment in the grave, one has to 
acknowledge that Pharaoh actually drowned but was later preserved in body (10:92) and has no 
grave in the sense we commonly understand it.  So the difficulty with traditional understanding 
continues in so much as how one then reconciles Pharaoh's punishment in the grave when his body 
was never buried. Clearly, the verses are misquoted.
  
The key to understand any Quranic theme is to remain consistent with all the Quranic verses. 



FINAL THOUGHTS 


In keeping with all the Quranic verses and with a view to remain consistent, it is clear that the Quran 
informs the reader that death can approach one at any point. At the point of death, one will come to 
know the TRUTH, the possible REALITY of his actual purpose on earth. One will then enter a state of 
‘Barzakh’ where all human concept of time will cease. Once awoken, one would be face to face with 
the Day of judgment and it would have felt that one had tarried just a short while (regardless of 
actual time).   
  
This is when the final judgment would then begin, where not an atom's weight of injustice would 
take place (99:7-8). God’s concept of time is completely different from our own (22:47; 32:5; 70:4) 



SOME QUESTIONS:
• Is it possible that mankind, impatient as they are, have devised stories to attribute 
punishment to disbelieving dead ones to cover the period of existence of man? After all, why 
should one wait for the Day of Resurrection when it is far more comforting to know that a 
disbeliever is being punished incessantly till the Day of Resurrection? This is in stark contrast with the consistent message from the Quran that mankind will only be raised on the Day of 
Resurrection. There is no intermediate rising which will be a necessary precursor in order to 
feel the punishment of the grave and any associated questions one may be asked as a prelim 
to this process.
• If there was such an unjust concept of grave punishment, how could one reconcile the 
period of the Azaab (punishment) of someone who died as a disbeliever 5000 years ago and 
one that dies 2 minutes before the Day of Resurrection? It seems awfully unjust that 
someone who dies 5000 years ago should receive a greater period of punishment in the 
grave than someone who died moments before the day of resurrection and who may 
actually be a greater sinner. In parallel, it seems equally unfair to the individual born 5000 
years ago that due to his period of birth, his punishment would be prolonged. 
• Not everyone is buried in a grave, some are cremated, some are frozen on the tips of 
mountains (e.g. unsuccessful climbs), some die in aviation accidents and of course in many 
others ways. For those who would wish to reconcile this, a plausible explanation would be to 
introduce the concept of punishment in ‘Barzakh’, a state not confined to graves.  If this line 
of argument is to be followed, then why is the Quran absolutely silent about punishment 
within this state of Barzakh and why does most of the Ahadith corpus allude to a physical 
punishment in the grave? Furthermore, the Quran clearly states that from the time of death 
to awakening, it will feel like a mere part of a day.
  
Answer-Every night we are put to sleep (which in Quranic terms is expressed as death 39:42) and every 
morning there is a new rising. Every night, we are reminded of this ‘practice run’ akin to death and 
the final awakening, yet many remain blind to God’s portents. 


039:042
“ It is God that takes the souls (of men) at death; and those that die not (He takes) during their sleep: 
those on whom He has passed the decree of death, He keeps back (from returning to life), but the 
rest He sends (to their bodies) for a term appointed verily in this are Signs for those who reflect”







3 comments:

  1. BRO YOU SHOULD ALSO ADD THE AYAT IN SURE YAASIN 51 52 IT ALSO TALKS ABOUT GRAVE

    ReplyDelete
  2. i will try..you can put that verse in comments

    ReplyDelete
  3. 36:50
    And they will not be able [to give] any instruction, nor to their people can they return
    36:51
    And the Horn will be blown; and at once from the graves to their Lord they will hasten.
    36:52
    They will say, "O woe to us! Who has raised us up from our sleeping place?" [The reply will be], "This is what the Most Merciful had promised, and the messengers told the truth."
    36:53
    It will not be but one blast, and at once they are all brought present before Us.

    ReplyDelete