Friday, July 3, 2026

Islamic Jinns have Prophets

 

Messengers Among the Jinn and Angels?

A Critical Examination of an Internal Tension in the Qur'an

By Dr. Maxwell Shimba

Shimba Theological Institute


Messengers Among the Jinn and Angels?

A Critical Examination of Qur'anic Teaching on Divine Messengers

Abstract

One of the central themes of the Qur'an is that God (Allah) never judges a people without first sending them a messenger. However, a careful examination of the Qur'anic text raises significant theological questions regarding the identity of those messengers. Were they exclusively human? Were angels also sent as messengers to humanity? Were there prophets from among the jinn?

The Qur'an appears to affirm all three possibilities at different places. Classical Islamic commentators likewise offer divergent explanations that often contradict one another. This study examines the relevant Qur'anic passages alongside classical tafsir literature, particularly al-Tabari and Ibn Kathir, to evaluate whether these texts can be harmonized or whether they reveal genuine internal tensions within Islamic theology.


1. The Universal Principle of Divine Justice

The Qur'an repeatedly teaches that Allah never punishes a people until they have first received a divine messenger.

Examples include:

  • Qur'an 16:36

  • Qur'an 17:15

  • Qur'an 35:24

  • Qur'an 6:130–131

This establishes an important theological principle:

Every accountable community must first receive a messenger before divine judgment.

The question immediately becomes:

Who were these messengers?


2. Qur'an 6:130 — Messengers "From Among You"

Allah declares:

"O assembly of jinn and mankind! Did there not come to you messengers from among yourselves, reciting My verses to you and warning you of the meeting of this Day?" (Qur'an 6:130)

At first reading the verse naturally suggests:

  • humans received human messengers

  • jinn received jinn messengers

This is the straightforward reading of the Arabic phrase:

rusulun minkum

"messengers from among yourselves."

If this reading is accepted, then the Qur'an appears to teach that there were messengers from among the jinn.


3. Yet Elsewhere the Qur'an Says All Messengers Were Human

Several passages appear to limit prophethood exclusively to mankind.

Qur'an 12:109

"We sent before you only men whom We inspired."

Qur'an 21:7

"We sent before you only men to whom We revealed."

Qur'an 25:20

"All the messengers before you were men who ate food and walked in the marketplaces."

These verses seem intentionally emphatic.

They do not merely say Muhammad was human.

They state that all previous messengers were human beings.

This creates the first theological tension.


4. Were There Messengers from the Jinn?

Many Muslim scholars recognized this difficulty.

Some concluded that there were indeed prophets among the jinn.

Others rejected that conclusion entirely.

Ibn Kathir writes concerning Qur'an 6:130:

"There is no doubt that Allah did not send messengers from among the jinn."

He then appeals to:

  • Qur'an 12:109

  • Qur'an 25:20

  • Qur'an 29:27

to argue that prophethood belongs exclusively to human beings.

However, this explanation immediately raises another question:

If there were no messengers from among the jinn, why does Qur'an 6:130 address both humans and jinn by saying "messengers from among yourselves"?


5. Ibn Kathir's Harmonization

Ibn Kathir argues that the expression "from among yourselves" refers collectively to humans and jinn, while the actual messengers belonged only to mankind.

He compares this to Qur'an 55:22:

"From both of them emerge pearls and coral."

although pearls actually come from only one type of water.

This is offered as a grammatical solution.

However, critics argue that this explanation appears forced because:

  • the wording naturally implies representatives from each group;

  • no explicit limitation appears within the verse itself;

  • the interpretation depends upon importing other passages into the text.


6. The Jinn Followed Human Prophets

Other Qur'anic passages present an entirely different picture.

Qur'an 46:29–32

A group of jinn hear Muhammad reciting the Qur'an.

They return to their own people saying:

"Respond to Allah's caller."

Likewise,

Qur'an 72:1–15

describes jinn embracing Islam after hearing Muhammad.

These passages strongly suggest:

  • Muhammad served as God's messenger to both humans and jinn.

This supports Ibn Kathir's conclusion that the jinn received warning through human prophets rather than through prophets of their own race.

Yet this creates another question:

How should Qur'an 6:130 then be understood?


7. Allah Chooses Messengers from Angels

The discussion becomes even more complicated with another Qur'anic passage.

Qur'an 22:75

"Allah chooses messengers from among the angels and from among mankind."

Likewise:

Qur'an 35:1

calls angels

"messengers."

Unlike human prophets, these are unquestionably angelic messengers.

Thus the Qur'an explicitly recognizes angelic messengers.

The question becomes:

To whom were these angelic messengers sent?


8. Harut and Marut

Perhaps the greatest challenge comes from:

Qur'an 2:102

which names:

  • Harut

  • Marut

as two angels in Babylon.

Classical Islamic scholarship is deeply divided concerning their identity.

Some traditions say:

  • they were angels.

Others argue:

  • they were merely human beings.

Others maintain:

  • the verse should be read differently altogether.

Yet the plain reading identifies them as:

"the two angels."


9. Classical Islamic Disagreement

Al-Tabari preserves numerous early traditions.

Some narrations from Ibn Abbas describe Iblis as belonging to:

"an angelic tribe called the jinn."

Other reports say:

  • Harut and Marut were angels.

Others say:

  • they were ordinary men.

Still others deny that magic was ever sent to them.

Thus the earliest Islamic authorities were far from unanimous.


10. Ibn Kathir's Position

Ibn Kathir openly acknowledges these competing interpretations.

He ultimately states:

"Many among the Salaf said that Harut and Marut were angels."

He also attempts to explain how angels could apparently sin despite Islamic teaching concerning angelic obedience.

This demonstrates that even among respected Sunni scholars there was no universally accepted interpretation.


11. Angels Appearing to Human Beings

Elsewhere the Qur'an repeatedly depicts angels being sent directly to humans.

Examples include:

  • Mary (3:42–47; 19:16–21)

  • Abraham (11:69–76)

  • Sarah

  • Lot (11:77–83)

  • Abraham again (15:51–74)

These angels:

  • spoke with people,

  • delivered divine revelation,

  • announced judgment,

  • brought promises,

  • issued commands.

Thus angelic messengers clearly communicated God's message directly to human beings.


12. The Hadith Strengthens This Observation

Authentic hadith further state that Gabriel appeared publicly before Muhammad's companions.

Examples include:

  • Sahih al-Bukhari 47

  • Sahih Muslim 1

Gabriel questioned Muhammad before the assembled companions concerning:

  • Islam

  • faith

  • excellence

  • the Last Day.

Muhammad afterward declared:

"That was Gabriel who came to teach you your religion."

Therefore, angelic messengers were evidently sent to instruct human beings.


13. Yet the Qur'an Also Says All Messengers Were Men

The apparent tension now becomes clearer.

The Qur'an teaches:

Only men were sent as messengers

(Qur'an 12:109; 21:7; 25:20)

while also teaching:

Allah chooses messengers from angels

(Qur'an 22:75)

and

Harut and Marut were two angels associated with Babylon

(Qur'an 2:102).

The question naturally arises:

How should these passages be reconciled?


14. The Broader Theological Question

The discussion ultimately revolves around several interconnected questions:

  • Were there prophets from among the jinn?

  • Were angels ever sent as messengers to ordinary human beings?

  • Was Muhammad the sole messenger to both mankind and jinn?

  • Does "messengers from among yourselves" (6:130) include both races individually, or only collectively?

  • How should Harut and Marut be understood?

The diversity of answers given by classical Muslim scholars demonstrates that these questions have long been debated within the Islamic tradition itself.


Conclusion

The Qur'an consistently affirms God's justice in sending warning before judgment. However, when the identity of those messengers is examined closely, several passages generate interpretive tensions.

On one hand, the Qur'an repeatedly declares that God's messengers were human beings. On the other hand, it speaks of angelic messengers, addresses both jinn and mankind as recipients of "messengers from among yourselves," and presents accounts involving Harut and Marut that have been interpreted in markedly different ways throughout Islamic history.

Classical commentators such as al-Tabari and Ibn Kathir proposed various harmonizations, yet they also preserved multiple, and sometimes conflicting, early interpretations. These differing explanations illustrate that the issue has never been entirely settled within the classical exegetical tradition.

From a Christian apologetic perspective, these passages are viewed as presenting unresolved internal tensions within the Qur'anic narrative concerning the nature and recipients of divine messengers. Muslim scholars, by contrast, generally argue that the verses can be reconciled through contextual, grammatical, or theological interpretation.

The discussion therefore remains an important subject for respectful scholarly dialogue, inviting careful examination of the Qur'anic text, classical tafsir, and the broader theological assumptions that shape each interpretation.


Dr. Maxwell Shimba
Shimba Theological Institute
"Test all things; hold fast what is good." (1 Thessalonians 5:21)


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Islamic Jinns have Prophets

  Messengers Among the Jinn and Angels? A Critical Examination of an Internal Tension in the Qur'an By Dr. Maxwell Shimba Shimba Theolog...

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