At a Glance
📖 Quranic Context
Central to understanding the consequences of disbelief and sin, and the urgency of repentance in this life.
Regret in this world is a catalyst for turning back to Allah (Tawbah), while regret in the Hereafter is a component of divine justice and punishment.
💭 Theological Perspective
A natural emotional response to wrongdoing that serves as a spiritual warning system.
The foundational emotion for sincere repentance (Tawbah). The Prophet Muhammad ﷺ is reported to have said, 'Regret is repentance.'
Quranic descriptions of future regret serve as a powerful deterrent against heedlessness and sin.
Productive, worldly regret is the first step towards rectifying one's relationship with Allah.
📜 Hadith Perspective
The Prophet ﷺ emphasized that regret is the cornerstone of repentance, a necessary condition for it to be accepted.
- The one who repents from sin is like one who did not sin.
- Even the righteous will feel a type of regret, wishing they had done more good deeds.
- Allah accepts repentance until the soul reaches the throat at death.
Classical scholars like Imam Ibn al-Qayyim unanimously agree that sincere regret (Nadam) is an indispensable condition for valid repentance.
💎 Deeper Insights
The Quran presents Hereafter Regret as a sensory punishment. It's not just a feeling but an action—the wrongdoer 'bites his hands' (Quran 25:27). This transforms an internal emotion into a physical, tormenting act, demonstrating that in the Hereafter, even one's emotional state becomes a source of suffering, a self-inflicted punishment born of final realization.
— Ibn Kathir, Al-Qurtubi
Search grounding reveals that Regret is the only emotion that functions as a spiritual 'time machine'. While worldly regret cannot change the past, it completely alters the past's consequences through Tawbah, as the Prophet ﷺ said the repenter is 'like one who did not sin'. In the Hereafter, this 'time machine' is jammed, forcing the person to eternally relive the past's consequences without any hope of change, making it the ultimate prison.
— Ibn al-Qayyim, Prophetic Hadith
