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Soothsayer
الكاهن

Explore Verses Related to Soothsayer

At a Glance

According to search-discovered classical Islamic scholarship, the Soothsayer (Al-Kahin) is an individual who claims knowledge of the unseen (Al-Ghaib), a practice strictly prohibited (haram) in Islam and considered a form of disbelief (kufr). Ibn Kathir, in his tafsir of Quran 52:29, explains that this verse was revealed to defend the Prophet Muhammad ﷺ against the baseless accusations of the Quraysh, who labeled him a soothsayer to discredit the divine revelation he received. [6] The verse firmly establishes that prophethood is a grace from Allah, entirely distinct from the deceptive divination of soothsayers, who, as explained in authentic hadith, receive stolen fragments of truth from jinn mixed with a hundred lies. [4, 5] The scholarly consensus is absolute: any attempt to foretell the future—whether through pre-Islamic methods or modern forms like astrology and tarot reading—is a major sin that severs one's reliance on Allah and challenges His unique divine attributes. [12, 17]

📖 Quranic Context

Serves as a critical refutation of accusations against the Prophet Muhammad ﷺ, establishing a clear distinction between divine revelation and forbidden divination.

Soothsaying represents a direct challenge to Allah's exclusive knowledge of the Unseen (Al-Ghaib) and is considered a form of Shirk (associating partners with Allah).

References: 52:29

💭 Theological Perspective

Represents the prohibited human desire to know the future, which Islam redirects towards reliance on Allah (Tawakkul).

Consulting soothsayers is seen as a sign of weak faith and a deviation from trusting in Allah's divine decree (Qadr).

Soothsaying is the antithesis of divine guidance (Wahy), which is pure truth, whereas soothsaying is based on falsehoods from jinn and devils. [3, 5]

Complete avoidance of soothsaying and all its forms is a prerequisite for sound faith and spiritual purity.

📜 Hadith Perspective

The Prophet Muhammad ﷺ issued severe warnings against visiting, asking, or believing soothsayers, with punishments ranging from prayers not being accepted for forty nights to an act of disbelief. [1, 2, 3]

  • Prohibition of visiting soothsayers [1, 4]
  • Believing a soothsayer is an act of disbelief in the Quran [3]
  • Soothsayers mix one truth from a jinn with a hundred lies [4, 5]

There is a universal and absolute consensus (Ijma) among all Islamic scholars on the prohibition of soothsaying and consulting soothsayers.

💎 Deeper Insights

Search grounding reveals that the punishment for visiting a soothsayer (prayers not accepted for 40 nights) is for the act of *asking*, even without belief. This highlights that the sin is in giving legitimacy to a source of guidance other than Allah, which is a subtle form of Shirk, regardless of one's personal conviction in the answer.

Commentators on Sahih Muslim

The Quran's single, direct mention of 'soothsayer' in 52:29 acts as a 'theological litmus test'. It was used to force the Meccans to confront their own logic: if Muhammad ﷺ was a soothsayer, his message would be flawed and mixed with lies like theirs were. Since the Quran was perfect, he could not be a soothsayer, proving its divine origin by refuting the only alternative they understood.

Ibn Kathir, Al-Tabari

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