Al-Mawt: Does the Qur'an Mean More Than Physical Death?
One of the most familiar words in the Qur'an is Al-Mawt (Death). Most readers naturally assume that whenever the Qur'an speaks of death, it refers to the end of biological life. But is that always the case?
Consider the advice that Ibrahim gave to his sons:
2:132 And enjoined with it Ibrahim, his sons and Ya’qub,
"O my sons! Indeed, Allah has chosen for you the Deen,
so not you die except while you are Muslim.
This raises an important question: could the Qur'an be using the word mawt (death) in a deeper sense?
A careful reading of the Qur'an reveals that death is not always presented as the cessation of physical life.
One verse that immediately illustrates this distinction is:
6:122 "Is one who was dead, then We gave him life and made for him a light by which he walks among the people, like one who is in darknesses from which he cannot emerge?"
The person described here was once "dead" and then brought to "life," yet he continues to walk among people.
Clearly, this is not a physical resurrection.
Rather, it is a transition from darkness to light, from ignorance to understanding, from unconsciousness to awareness.
Could this be the key to understanding many other references to death in the Qur'an?
In this study, we shall explore the Qur'anic concept of Al-Mawt, examining whether the Qur'an speaks only of biological death, or whether it also employs death as a powerful metaphor for the human condition when separated from truth, guidance, and the remembrance of Allah.
Verse 35:22 is perhaps the clearest Qur'anic example of symbolic death and life.
“And not equal are the living and not the dead.
Indeed, whom is willing, will hear of Allah,
and not you can make hear those who are in the graves.”
The context is not about resurrecting corpses.
The surrounding verses compare:
- blind and seeing,
- darkness and light,
- shade and heat,
- living and dead.
Similarly in verse 27:80
"Indeed, you cannot make the dead hear, nor can you make the deaf hear the call when they turn away."
The parallelism with "the deaf" indicates that "dead" here is describing people who refuse to receive the message, turning themselves away from the signs.
Now returning to verse 2:132
"...So do not die except while you are muslimūn."
If death here is taken only as biological death, there is a difficulty, as we have noted.
A person does not control the moment of physical death.
However, if "die" refers to entering a state of separation from submission, then Ibrahim's instruction becomes meaningful:
Remain in a state of submission.
- Do not abandon the path.
- Do not let your consciousness become disconnected from Allah.
In other words, "Do not become among the spiritually dead except while you are in submission."
Another verse that may support the understanding of spiritual death:
57:16 "Has the time not come for those who believe that their hearts should humble themselves to the remembrance of Allah and what has come down of the truth, and not become like those who were given the Book before?
The period became long for them, so their hearts hardened..."
A hardened heart in the Qur'an often functions as the equivalent of spiritual death.
The body is alive, but the heart no longer responds.
And perhaps the strongest conceptual link is:
8:24 "Respond to Allah and the Messenger when he calls you to that which gives you life..."
The audience or reader was already physically alive.
Therefore the "life" being offered is another kind of life — the life that comes from responding to revelation.
Taken together:
State | Qur'anic imagery |
Ignorance, heedlessness, rejection | Death, graves, deafness, darkness |
Receiving guidance, understanding, submission | Life, hearing, sight, light |
Under this framework, it explicitly speaks of a person who was "dead" and then became "alive" while still living on earth.
In fact, one could construct the Qur'anic pattern as:
Death → Darkness → Deafness → Blindness
Life → Light → Hearing → Seeing
These appear repeatedly as parallel metaphors throughout the Qur'an and may be describing states of consciousness rather than merely biological conditions.
This would fit quite closely with this thesis we have discussed before regarding the Scripture (Al-Kitab) as a source of understanding and evidence that brings a person from a state of "death" into a state of "life."
What is compelling is that the Qur'an itself seems to define its own terminology through these recurring pairs:
Death (mawt) | Life (ḥayāt) |
Darknesses (ẓulumāt) | Light (nūr) |
Blindness (ʿamā) | Sight (baṣar) |
Deafness (ṣamam) | Hearing (samʿ) |
Hardened heart | Living heart |
Turning away | Responding |
Ignorance | Knowledge |
When these themes are read together, verses such as 6:122 and 8:24 become interpretive keys.
The Qur'an speaks to people who are biologically alive,
yet says they were "dead" and need to be "given life."
This strongly suggests that the Qur'an defines another dimension of life and death beyond the physical.
This therefore sheds light on Ibrahim's instruction in 2:132:
"Do not die except while you are muslimūn."
Rather than focusing on the uncontrollable or unpredictable moment of physical death, the emphasis appears to be on remaining in a state of submission and awareness of Allah, avoiding the condition of spiritual death that comes from turning away from guidance.
There is also a beautiful connection with the invocation found in the opening chapter:
Guide us to the straight path. (1:6)
The Qur'an consistently presents guidance not merely as information, but as something that keeps a person spiritually alive. Hence:
"Respond to Allah and the Messenger when he calls you to that which gives you life." (8:24)
The call itself is life-giving.
This understanding can also illuminate many passages where Allah "brings the dead to life" and "brings the living from the dead."
While some verses certainly refer to physical phenomena and resurrection, others may simultaneously carry a deeper message about guidance emerging from ignorance, and awareness emerging from heedlessness.
The Qur'an often portrays revelation not as creating a new religion, but as awakening something dormant — bringing a person from darkness into light, from death into life, and from conjecture into understanding.
Currently verse 6:122 and 8:24 together form one of the strongest Qur'anic foundations for this line of inquiry.
The Case of Isa
In 3:49, Isa says:
"… I heal the blind and the leper, and I bring the dead to life by Allah's permission…."
Traditionally this is understood as a series of physical miracles:
- healing physical blindness,
- curing physical disease,
- resurrecting physical corpses.
However, if we pay attention to the Qur'an's recurring symbolic language, we notice that "blindness" is very often used for lack of understanding due to blind faith to ancestral beliefs.
"It is not the eyes that become blind, but the hearts within the chests become blind." (22:46)
Likewise, "death" can refer to a state of being unreceptive to guidance, as discussed from 6:122 and 8:24.
Under this reading, Isa's mission was to restore people:
- from blindness to sight,
- from corruption to wholeness,
- from death to life.
In other words, he was a reformer and teacher who revived hearts through the revelation he brought.
What makes this observation particularly noteworthy is that the Qur'an consistently describes messengers as calling people from darkness to light.
If "bringing the dead to life" means restoring awareness and understanding, then it aligns naturally with the function of revelation.
There is another verse that support this line of thought:
"And thus We revealed to you a Ruh from Our command. You did not know what the Kitab was, nor faith; but We made it a light by which We guide whom is willing..." (42:52)
But the condition of this revelation is our own respond to Allah, whether we are willing, or to turn away.
Notice the progression:
- revelation (Ruh),
- light (Nur),
- guidance.
This is the same pattern found in 6:122 where the dead person is given life and then a light to walk with among people.
Also, from a narrative perspective, if Isa's primary mission were to revive physical corpses, one might expect the Qur'an to provide examples or stories of those individuals.
Instead, the Qur'an focuses overwhelmingly on his message, his signs, his wisdom, and his teaching of the Kitab.
So by reading 3:49 metaphorically, it does show that a symbolic reading is deeply rooted in Qur'anic language itself and not merely an external interpretation.
What is most compelling is that the Qur'an repeatedly presents revelation as the force that gives life:
"Respond to Allah and the Messenger when he calls you to that which gives you life." (8:24)
If revelation gives life, then a messenger bringing people from ignorance into understanding is, in a very real Qur'anic sense, "bringing the dead to life."
This also creates a remarkable parallel between Isa's mission and the mission of every messenger:
not to animate corpses, but to awaken human beings who are alive physically yet dead to divine guidance
Another parallel to being dead is being deaf.
"You cannot make the dead hear." (27:80)
So we have four signs that form a coherent pattern:
Condition | Physical reading | Spiritual reading |
Blind | Cannot see | Cannot perceive truth |
Leper | Diseased body | Corrupted or excluded condition |
Dead | Physically dead | Spiritually dead |
Deaf | Lost of Hearing | Refusal to listen |
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Death is followed by resurrection on the Day of Al-Qiyamah
Subsequent to our previous post on Al-Qiyamah, we now know that the consequence of the resurrection in the following verses are not ending with raising the souls in the Mahsyar after the cosmic end of days, according to traditional understanding.
In Surah Al-Qiyamah, many of the images can be read as the collapse of a person's former worldview and the confrontation with truth. Therefore, the recurring theme of returning to Allah through recognition of reality is consistent with the Qur'an's broader message of Qiyamah as an awakening into reality.
In fact, one could say that the Qur'an repeatedly describes moments of recognition as mini-qiyamahs
23:12 | And indeed, We created the humankind from an essence of clay. |
23:13 | Then We placed him as a semen-drop in a resting place firm. |
23:14 | Then We created the semen-drop into a clinging substance, then We created the clinging substance into an embryonic lump, then We created the embryonic lump, into bones, then We clothed the bones with flesh; then We produce it as a creation another. So blessed is Allah the Best of the Creators. |
23:15 | Then indeed, you after that surely will die |
23:16 | Then indeed, you on the Day of Al-Qiyamah, will be resurrected (tub'ʿathūna) |
Unpacking the sequence of the verses, observation becomes more compelling when we consider that the Qur'an often layers meanings.
The biological sequence may simultaneously serve as a template for the spiritual journey:
Physical | Spiritual |
Creation (23:14) | Initial Awareness |
Death (23:15) | Loss of Guidance |
Qiyamah (23:16) | Standing in Truth |
Return to Allah (23:16) | Recognition of Reality |
In comparison to verse 2:28
"How can you deny Allah?
You were dead, then He gave you life; then He will cause you to die; then He will bring you to life; then to Him you will return."
This verse explicitly distinguishes:
Verse | Quranic Imagery |
You were dead, | unborn / a prior state of non-living, |
then He gave you life; | Physical birth / earthly life, |
then He will cause you to die; | Spiritual Death / Falling into misguidance due to imposed ancestral belief, assumptions, heedlessness. |
then He will bring you to life; | Spiritual Awakening / Al-Qiyamah |
then to Him you will return | Recognition of Ultimate Reality |
As a thematic reading, it fits surprisingly well with the Qur'an's constant call to awaken from unconscious acceptance of inherited beliefs.
What is particularly interesting is the final phrase:
"ثم إليه ترجعون"
"Then to Him you return."
If the second "life" is interpreted as awakening, then the return is not merely an event after physical death but a process of reorientation toward Allah while still alive.
This resonates with many Qur'anic passages where "returning" (ruju') seems to occur through repentance, reflection, and recognition of truth, not only after bodily death.
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The Second Death – Falling into Misguidance
If we consider the state of unborn before the earthly life as the first death (2:28 you were dead), then the second death is the inevitable fall into misguidance due to various reasons.
We often emphasized that the Qur'an's central struggle is against:
- inherited religion,
- conjecture (zann),
- blind following of forefathers,
- false authorities,
- fabricated associations.
The Qur'an repeatedly describes people of blind faith as:
2:170 And when it is said to them, "Follow what Allah has revealed," they say, "Rather, we will follow that which we found our fathers doing." even though their fathers understood nothing, nor were they guided
Even though their forefathers knew nothing.
5:104 And when it is said to them, Come to what Allah has revealed and to the Messenger, they say: That on which we found our fathers is sufficient for us. What! even though their fathers knew nothing and did not follow the right way.
In this framework, this condition is not merely an intellectual error but a form of death.
An important reminder from the Quran when dealing with blind faith is to have the actual knowledge of what we are doing – The importance of Knowledge
Do not follow what you do not know.
17:36 And follow not that of which you have not the knowledge; surely the hearing and the sight and the heart, all of these, shall be questioned about that.
That would make awakening to evidence (ayat) the true resurrection.
In fact, one could summarize this thesis in comparison to traditional reading as:
Conventional Reading | Symbolic Reading |
Death = cessation of bodily life | Death = loss of awareness of truth |
Qiyamah = end of the world | Qiyamah = standing upon reality |
Resurrection = future event raising of all the souls | Resurrection = awakening through guidance |
Return to Allah = afterlife only | Return to Allah begins with recognition of truth |
This reading of the Quran must be constantly supported with coherent hermeneutical framework, and importantly, it is not being imposed arbitrarily — it arises from Qur'anic verses that themselves use death and life metaphorically.
The key methodological question going forward would be:
When the Qur'an uses "death" and "life," what textual markers tell us whether the meaning is biological, spiritual, or both simultaneously?
If we can establish those markers consistently across the text, then the framework becomes much stronger and easier to apply objectively rather than selectively.
That may ultimately be one of the most fruitful lines of investigation in our study of the underlying message, because the Qur'an seems to blur the boundary between physical and spiritual life far more often than traditional interpretations usually acknowledge.
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Submission to Allah
This also connects beautifully with our reading of Islam itself.
If Islam is fundamentally:
- surrendering falsehood,
- abandoning inherited conjecture,
- turning towards an idea using all of our faculties, to examine and test
- aligning oneself with reality as Allah created it,
then "returning to Allah" is not primarily a journey through space or time.
It is a return from illusion to truth.
A return from:
- assumptions to evidence,
- inherited beliefs to understanding,
- dependence on intermediaries to direct accountability before Allah.
This is submission
In fact, when we look at verses such as:
"Indeed we belong to Allah, and indeed to Him we return." (2:156)
The traditional reading immediately projects the meaning into the future after death.
But linguistically, one could also understand:
- we originate from Allah,
- we continually return to Allah.
That return is the process of recognizing our true source and orientation.
What we will find particularly interesting is how this relates to Ibrahim in 2:132.
We have pointed out in the beginning :
"Do not die except while you are muslimūn."
If "death" is understood as falling into a state of separation from submission,
then the opposite would be:
return to Allah.
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Returning to Allah
The Arabic verb rajaʿa (to return) and its derivatives occur throughout the Qur'an, and many occurrences clearly cannot be referring exclusively to physical death or the afterlife.
For example:
"Turn (return) to your Lord and submit to Him..." (39:54)
This return is happening during one's lifetime.
Likewise:
6:79 "Indeed, I have turned my purpose (wajjahtu) toward the One who originated the heavens and the earth..."
Although a different verb is used (wajjahtu), the concept is similar:
reorientation toward Allah while alive.
And repeatedly the Qur'an calls people to:
repent (tawbah)
The root of tawbah itself means to return.
So the idea of returning to Allah as a present reality is deeply Qur'anic.
In other words:
State | Quranic Imagery |
Following inherited falsehood | Death |
Awakening to truth | Life |
Establishing oneself upon reality | Qiyamah |
Aligning oneself with Allah | Return (ruju') |
Remaining in that alignment | Islam |
Notice how naturally these concepts fit together.
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BIOLOGICAL DEATH VS SPIRITUAL DEATH
This is actually an important distinction because the Qur'an speaks about two different kinds of death:
Biological death (mawt) | – the end of physical life. |
Metaphorical/spiritual death | – a state of ignorance, heedlessness, or disconnection from guidance. |
When we isolate the verses that clearly refer to biological death, a remarkably consistent picture emerges.
1. Every soul experiences death
Perhaps the most famous statement is:
"Every soul shall taste death..." (3:185, 21:35)
Here death is clearly the universal biological event that every living creature undergoes.
The expression is interesting because the Qur'an says taste death (dhā'iqatu al-mawt) rather than "be destroyed." Death is presented as an experience or transition.
2. Death has an appointed term
The Qur'an repeatedly states that death occurs according to a fixed decree:
"No soul can die except by Allah's permission, at a prescribed term." (3:145)
"When their term comes, they can neither delay it by an hour nor advance it." (7:34)
This is one reason our observation about 2:132 is significant. If death occurs at an appointed term beyond human control, then Ibrahim's instruction appears to have a deeper dimension than merely timing one's final moment.
3. Death is not annihilation
The Qur'an consistently presents death as separation rather than non-existence.
"Allah takes the souls at the time of their death, and those that do not die during their sleep..." (39:42)
This verse is fascinating because sleep is described as a temporary form of "taking" the soul, while death is a permanent form.
The person continues to exist; only the relationship between soul and body changes.
4. The Malaika of Death carries out the process
"Say: The Angel of Death who has been entrusted with you will take you, then to your Lord you will be returned." (32:11)
Death is not portrayed as random or mechanical but as a deliberate act within Allah’s governance.
5. The dead cannot return to earthly life
One of the clearest teachings:
"Until, when death comes to one of them, he says, 'My Lord, send me back so that I may do righteousness in what I left behind.' No! It is only a word he speaks..." (23:99-100)
The Qur'an repeatedly rejects the idea of returning to worldly life after biological death.
6. Allah gives life and causes death
A repeated formula:
"He gives life and causes death." (e.g., 10:56, 23:80, 57:2)
This pairing appears throughout the Qur'an and emphasizes divine sovereignty over the entire cycle of existence.
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A Possible Qur'anic Distinction
One pattern we have noticed is that the Qur'an often signals which meaning is intended by the surrounding context.
Biological death - Usually appears with:
- appointed term (ajal)
- soul (nafs)
- resurrection (ba'th)
- graves (qubur)
- return to Allah
- angel of death
Examples:
3:145 | And not is for a soul that he dies except by (the) permission (of) Allah, (at a) decree determined. And whoever desires reward (of) the world - We will give him thereof; and whoever desires reward (of) the Hereafter We will give him thereof. And We will reward the grateful ones. |
23:15-16 | Then indeed, you after that surely will die Then indeed, you on the Day of Al-Qiyamah, will be resurrected |
32:11 | Say, "Will take your soul (the) Angel (of) the death the one who has been put in charge of you. Then to your Lord you will be returned." |
39:42 | Allah takes the souls (at the) time (of) their death, and the one who (does) not die in their sleep. Then He keeps the one whom, He has decreed for them the death, and sends the others for a term specified. Indeed, in that surely (are) signs for a people who ponder. |
Metaphorical death - Usually appears with:
- blindness and sight
- darkness and light
- hearing and deafness
- guidance and misguidance
- revelation and faith
Examples:
6:122 | Is (one) who was dead and We gave him life and We made for him light, he walks whereby among the people, like (one) who [similar to him] (is) in the darknesses, not he comes out of it? Thus is made fair-seeming to the disbelievers what they were doing. |
8:24 | O you who believe! Respond to Allah and His Messenger when he calls you to what gives you life. And know that Allah comes (in) between a man and his heart, and that to Him you will be gathered. |
27:80 | Indeed, you (can) not cause to hear the dead and not can you cause to hear the deaf the call when they turn back retreating. |
35:22 | And not equal (are) the living and not the dead. Indeed, Allah causes to hear whom He wills, and not you can make hear (those) who (are) in the graves. |
This distinction is not absolute, because the Qur'an often uses physical realities as signs of spiritual realities. But it provides a useful framework for determining whether a particular occurrence of mawt is speaking about biological death or a state of consciousness.
What is particularly striking is that while the Qur'an speaks of biological death as inevitable, it often treats spiritual death as the greater danger, because a person can be physically alive and yet described as dead, blind, deaf, or in darkness.
Conclusion
So while the traditional interpretation tends to place "return to Allah" almost entirely after biological death, the findings of our thesis present substantial Qur'anic evidence that returning to Allah begins during life.
In fact, if we take the Qur'an's constant calls to reflection, repentance, submission, and guidance seriously, one might say:
The purpose of revelation is to enable the human being to return to Allah before biological death occurs.
That would make "return" less of a future event and more of a present transformation.
And that seems very much in harmony with the thread we have been following:
death, life, qiyamah, and return are not merely cosmic events, but also descriptions of states of consciousness and one's relationship to truth and reality.
