Explore Verses Related to Cowardice
At a Glance
📖 Quranic Context
A central characteristic of the hypocrites (Munafiqun) and a major spiritual disease contrasted with courage (Shaja'ah) and trust in Allah (Tawakkul).
It stems from a weak connection to Allah, fear of creation over the Creator, and leads to divine wrath and displeasure.
💭 Theological Perspective
A blameworthy trait and spiritual disease of the heart that must be overcome through faith and reliance on Allah.
Seen as a symptom of a deeper spiritual illness, rooted in excessive love for the world (Hubb al-Dunya) and fear of death.
The Quran and Sunnah strongly condemn cowardice and provide guidance to cultivate courage.
Overcoming cowardice is a critical step in attaining spiritual maturity, sincerity (Ikhlas), and true reliance on Allah.
📜 Hadith Perspective
The Prophet Muhammad (ﷺ) frequently sought refuge in Allah from cowardice (al-Jubn).
- Seeking refuge from cowardice alongside miserliness, laziness, and debt.
- Cowardice being one of the worst qualities in a person.
- Fleeing from the battlefield listed as one of the seven destructive sins.
Universal agreement among scholars that cowardice is a condemned trait and its extreme manifestation in battle is a major sin.
💎 Deeper Insights
Cowardice is presented not just as a fear of physical harm, but as a flawed theological calculation. Verse 3:156 reveals that the cowardly hypocrite fundamentally misunderstands Divine Decree (Qadr), believing their own caution, rather than Allah's will, determines life and death. This makes cowardice a symptom of a creedal defect.
— Al-Tabari, Ibn Kathir
The Quran's psychological profile of a coward (4:72-73) shows their emotional responses are inverted: they see avoiding martyrdom as a 'favor' from Allah and missing out on worldly booty as a 'great loss'. This reveals that cowardice is rooted in a worldview where the values of the Dunya (worldly life) completely eclipse the values of the Akhirah (Hereafter).
— Al-Qurtubi, Sayyid Qutb
