At a Glance
📖 Quranic Context
Serves as a key piece of evidence for God's power and wisdom in the process of creation, arguing for His right to be worshipped.
Highlights Allah's role as Al-Khaliq (The Creator) who meticulously plans and executes creation through wise, deliberate phases.
💭 Theological Perspective
Refers to the physical stages of human creation, primarily embryology and the phases of life (infancy, youth, old age).
The concept reinforces that human existence is a journey through divinely ordained stages, both physically and spiritually.
Used as a logical argument (a sign or 'ayah') by Prophet Nuh to call his people to recognize the greatness of the Creator.
By analogy, scholars infer that just as physical creation has stages, so too does spiritual development.
📜 Hadith Perspective
The detailed Hadith of Abdullah ibn Mas'ud (in Bukhari and Muslim) on the stages of creation in the womb (40 days as a drop, 40 as a clot, 40 as a lump of flesh) is the primary prophetic explanation for the concept of 'Atwaran'.
- embryology
- predestination of deeds, lifespan, and provision
- the ensoulment process
Universal scholarly agreement that 'Atwaran' in 71:14 refers to the stages of creation in the womb and/or life, not Darwinian evolution.
💎 Deeper Insights
The sequence in Surah Nuh presents a powerful rhetorical structure: from the microscopic (the stages in the womb, 71:14) to the macroscopic (the heavens and earth, 71:15-19) and finally to the eschatological (resurrection, 71:18). This demonstrates how reflection on creation at all scales leads to the same theological conclusion: belief in the Creator and the Last Day.
— Ibn Kathir
The term 'Atwaran' (stages) provides an authentic Islamic framework for appreciating development and gradualism as a divine principle ('sunnah') in creation, without necessitating an adoption of Darwinian theory. This allows Muslims to engage with modern science by appreciating developmental biology as an exploration of God's established patterns.
— Contemporary Islamic Scholars
