Explore Verses Related to magic
At a Glance
📖 Quranic Context
Presented as a major sin, an act of disbelief (kufr), and a practice taught by devils (shayatin) to cause harm and discord.
Strictly forbidden as it involves seeking help from beings other than Allah, such as jinn and devils, and represents a rejection of divine guidance.
💭 Theological Perspective
A great trial (fitnah) that tests a person's faith and reliance on Allah alone.
Associated with deception, illusion, and causing real harm to people's minds, bodies, and relationships, particularly separating spouses.
Explicitly warned against as a path that leads to loss in the Hereafter, with no share of divine reward.
Learning or practicing magic is considered an act of disbelief that nullifies faith. Protection against it is sought through faith, prayer, and recitation of the Quran.
📜 Hadith Perspective
The Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him) listed magic (Sihr) as one of the seven great destructive sins.
- prohibition of visiting soothsayers and magicians
- methods of protection (Ruqyah) using Quranic verses
- punishment for magicians
Universal agreement among all major schools of Islamic law that practicing magic is unequivocally haram (forbidden), with many scholars ruling it as an act of apostasy.
💎 Deeper Insights
Search grounding reveals a profound concept in 2:102: the angels Harut and Marut didn't just teach a subject; their very existence and mission *was* the test. Their statement, 'We are only a trial (fitnah),' means their presence itself was the temptation. Unlike a normal teacher who is separate from their subject, the angels embodied the test. This insight, synthesized from Ibn Kathir and Al-Qurtubi, shows that interacting with them for this knowledge was, by definition, engaging in the trial and failing it by choosing disbelief.
— Ibn Kathir, Al-Qurtubi
Cross-verse synthesis highlights a critical distinction: magic causes 'separation between a man and his wife,' yet its power is nullified 'except by permission of Allah.' This reveals a 'Spiritual Sovereignty Principle': while Allah allows the secondary cause (magic) to function as a test, He retains ultimate control. Ibn Kathir explains this means no magician can harm anyone unless it aligns with Allah's universal will and foreknowledge. This gem provides immense comfort, reframing magic from an independent evil power to a subordinate phenomenon completely governed by divine decree.
— Ibn Kathir, Consensus of Ahlus-Sunnah
