At a Glance
📖 Quranic Context
Central metaphor for disbelief, sin, ignorance, and despair, contrasted with the Light of Allah's guidance.
Allah brings believers from the darknesses (Zulumat) into the light (Nur), while wrongdoers are left in them.
💭 Theological Perspective
Represents the state of being veiled from divine truth and guidance.
Symbolizes despair, grief, and the internal state of sin and distance from God.
It is the condition from which the Quran and prophets are sent to rescue humanity.
Overcoming spiritual darkness is a key goal of a Muslim's journey towards Allah.
📜 Hadith Perspective
The Prophet Muhammad ﷺ taught believers to seek refuge from the evils that emerge in the darkness of the night.
- Injustice (Zulm) will be darknesses (Zulumat) on the Day of Judgment.
- Seeking refuge from the darkness when it settles (Surah Al-Falaq).
- Prayers for light to overcome the darknesses of the grave and Day of Judgment.
Universal agreement among scholars on the symbolic representation of darkness as kufr (disbelief), shirk (polytheism), and sin.
💎 Deeper Insights
Search grounding and cross-verse synthesis reveal a profound rhetorical masterpiece in the Quran's use of 'darkness'. While it is overwhelmingly used to symbolize the ultimate evil—the layered, inescapable spiritual darkness of disbelief (24:40)—it is completely redeemed in Surah Ar-Rahman (55:64) where 'dark green' (Mudhaammataan) signifies the highest level of Paradise. This demonstrates that no concept is inherently evil; its value is determined by its relationship to Allah. Darkness away from Allah is Hell; 'darkness' in Allah's blessing is Heaven.
— Ibn Kathir, Linguistic Scholars on Ar-Rahman
The shared Arabic root 'ظ-ل-م' for both 'darkness' (Zulumat) and 'injustice' (Zulm) creates an inseparable conceptual link. A hadith stating 'Injustice (Zulm) will be darknesses (Zulumat) on the Day of Judgment' is not just a simile but a statement of inherent connection. The synthesis reveals that, from an Islamic perspective, injustice is not merely a social wrong but an act that actively creates spiritual darkness, both within the perpetrator's heart and in their fate in the Hereafter.
— Linguistic commentators, Hadith commentators
