Explore Verses Related to Moon
At a Glance
📖 Quranic Context
A key celestial body used as a sign (ayah) of Allah's creative power, a means for calculating time, a subject of a major prophetic miracle, and an indicator of the Day of Judgment.
A subservient creation that follows a precise, divinely-ordained orbit, reflecting light and serving humanity.
💭 Theological Perspective
Its phases are divinely appointed markers for humanity to calculate time and determine periods of worship.
📜 Hadith Perspective
Numerous hadith detail the miracle of the splitting of the moon, confirming the event seen by the people of Makkah.
- The splitting of the moon as a sign for the Quraysh.
- Sighting the crescent moon to determine the start of Islamic months like Ramadan and Shawwal.
- The faces of the believers entering Paradise will shine like the full moon.
Universal agreement among classical scholars on the literal splitting of the moon as a physical miracle.
💎 Deeper Insights
The Quran's differentiation between the Sun as a 'lamp' (siraj) and the Moon as a 'light' (nur) is a subtle yet profound scientific and theological statement. Search grounding reveals classical scholars like Al-Razi noted this distinction, understanding 'nur' as a reflected light centuries before modern science confirmed it. This transforms the description from simple poetry into a subtle miracle of divine knowledge, reinforcing the Quran's authenticity.
— Al-Razi, Al-Qurtubi
The miracle of the splitting moon (Shaqq al-Qamar) is not just a historical event but a theological bookend. Tafsir on Surah Al-Qamar (54:1) explicitly links it to the 'Hour drawing near'. Cross-referencing this with Surah Al-Qiyamah (75:8-9), which describes the moon's final fate, reveals the splitting as a miniature preview of the final cosmic collapse. This synthesis shows the miracle serves a dual purpose: a proof for the people of Makkah and a timeless warning and sign for all future generations of the reality of the Day of Judgment.
— Ibn Kathir, Sayyid Qutb
