Explore Verses Related to His infinite power
At a Glance
📖 Quranic Context
Central to Tawheed (monotheism), establishing Allah as the sole source of all power and control in existence.
Understanding His infinite power is the basis for Tawakkul (reliance), Dua (supplication), and humility.
💭 Theological Perspective
Recognizing Allah's infinite power liberates humanity from reliance on and fear of created things.
Belief in His power fosters resilience, hope, and patience in the face of hardship, knowing that the ultimate controller is Allah.
The Quran consistently points to signs of Allah's power in creation as proof of His right to be worshipped.
Internalizing this attribute leads to the spiritual states of submission (Islam) and trust (Tawakkul).
📜 Hadith Perspective
The Prophet Muhammad (ﷺ) consistently emphasized turning to Allah as the only source of power and help through various supplications.
- The supplication 'La hawla wa la quwwata illa billah' (There is no might nor power except with Allah).
- Stories demonstrating that honor and humiliation are ultimately from Allah alone.
A universal and foundational principle of Islamic creed (Aqeedah) agreed upon by all classical scholars.
💎 Deeper Insights
Verses 3:26-27 uniquely demonstrate a 'Unified Field of Power.' By immediately following His control over kingdoms and honor with His control over day/night and life/death, the Quran teaches that Allah's power is a single, indivisible attribute that governs both the seen social world and the unseen laws of the universe with equal ease. There is no separation between His power over politics and His power over physics.
— Ibn Kathir, Al-Qurtubi
The phrase 'In Your Hand is [all] good' (biyadikal khair) in 3:26 is a profound theological statement on divine power. While the verse mentions both honoring (a perceived good) and humbling (a perceived negative), it concludes by affirming only 'good' is in His hand. Scholars interpret this to mean that even the acts of removing power or humbling someone, which may appear negative to humans, are ultimately good because they originate from the All-Wise, All-Just source and serve a greater divine purpose.
— Classical commentators
