Skip to main content
NewQuran Gallery Chatbot is live!
Start Chat with AI
Logo
Storms
العواصف

Explore Verses Related to Storms

At a Glance

According to search-discovered classical Islamic scholarship, storms (العواصف) in the Quran are depicted not as random natural events, but as profound signs (ayat) of Allah's absolute power and instruments of His divine will. The tafsir of verses 17:68-69 in Surah Al-Isra, as explained by commentators, focuses on storms as a critical test of human nature. They reveal the tendency of people to be thankless (kafuran), desperately invoking Allah during the peril of a storm at sea, only to turn away once delivered safely to shore. These verses serve as a powerful warning that divine power is inescapable; one is no safer on land from being swallowed by the earth or struck by a sand-storm than they are at sea from a hurricane. Thus, the Quranic concept of storms is a theological allegory for our vulnerability, our ultimate dependence on God, and the spiritual imperative of maintaining gratitude in all circumstances.

📖 Quranic Context

Storms are used as a dramatic manifestation of Allah's power, a test for humanity, and a sign (ayah) for those who reflect.

Storms function as instruments of both divine mercy (bringing rain) and punishment (as a destructive force).

References: Key verses 17:68-69 serve as a powerful allegory for faith and human nature.

💭 Theological Perspective

Illustrates the inherent weakness of humanity and its ultimate dependence on a higher power, especially in moments of crisis.

Serves as a stark reminder of Allah's omnipotence and the folly of feeling secure and forgetting Him after being saved from peril.

Represents the external and internal trials that test a believer's sincerity, patience, and gratitude.

📜 Hadith Perspective

Prophetic traditions describe specific supplications during storms, acknowledging Allah's power and seeking His mercy.

  • Seeking refuge in Allah from the evil of the storm
  • Recognizing storms as being under divine command
  • Prayers for the storm to be a source of benefit (rain) rather than destruction

Universal agreement among Islamic scholars that all natural phenomena, including storms, occur by the will and decree of Allah.

💎 Deeper Insights

The verses reveal a 'Spiritual Law of Reciprocity'. The storm mentioned in verse 17:69 is not a random second storm; it is a direct consequence ('because of your ingratitude') of the human response to the first rescue. This transforms the storm from a mere natural event into a divine response to human action, showing that our spiritual state can directly influence our worldly condition.

Ibn Kathir, Al-Tabari

The threat in verse 17:68 is not just about a storm, but about 'ontological insecurity'. Allah doesn't just threaten with another storm, but with the very ground beneath one's feet ('swallow you up'). This is a profound psychological tool, deconstructing the primary human assumption of the stability of the land itself, proving that no aspect of existence is stable without Allah's sustaining will.

Tafsir Al-Jalalayn

Ask AI