Explore Verses Related to Parents
At a Glance
📖 Quranic Context
A central theme of Islamic ethics, placed immediately after the command to worship Allah alone in key verses like 17:23.
Kindness to parents is presented as a fundamental act of faith and a direct corollary to the worship of God.
💭 Theological Perspective
The parent-child bond is a primary sign (ayah) of Allah's mercy and creative power.
The relationship serves as the foundation for developing virtues like mercy, gratitude, and patience.
It is a primary arena for spiritual testing, balancing love and duty with adherence to divine law.
Serving one's parents, especially in their old age, is a major path to Paradise.
📜 Hadith Perspective
Countless hadith elevate the status of parents, with the Prophet Muhammad (ﷺ) identifying kindness to them as one of the most beloved deeds to Allah.
- Paradise lies at the feet of mothers
- The pleasure of the Lord is in the pleasure of the father
- The gravity of disrespecting parents as a major sin
Universal agreement across all schools of Islamic thought on the profound obligation of kindness and respect towards parents.
💎 Deeper Insights
Search grounding reveals a profound linguistic insight from classical tafsir on Surah Al-Isra 17:23. The word 'uff' is the mildest expression of annoyance, a mere sound of displeasure. By forbidding even this, the Quran establishes an unprecedentedly high standard of respect, indicating that the internal feeling of annoyance itself is the boundary of prohibited behavior, not just outward actions.
— Al-Tabari, Al-Qurtubi
A cross-verse synthesis of the social commands (e.g., 46:15) and the theological commands (e.g., 112:3) reveals that the topic of 'Parents' functions as a 'Social-Theological Barometer' in the Quran. It simultaneously measures the health of one's social conduct (through kindness) and the purity of one's monotheistic belief (by rejecting divine parentage). A flaw in one's relationship with parents often indicates a deeper flaw in one's relationship with God.
— Synthesis of Ibn Taymiyyah's works on Tawheed with Al-Ghazali's works on social ethics.
