Creation Story (Cosmogony)
Islam presents a creation ex nihilo model: God brings the universe into existence by command (“Be, and it is”).
No primordial chaos, no pre-existing matter, no divine conflict.
Agents of creation:
- Allah alone — no subordinate creator beings, no emanations.
- Angels witness but do not participate.
- The act of creation is volitional, instantaneous, and sovereign, not emergent or accidental.
Key narrative elements:
- Creation of heavens and earth in six “days” (periods), not human solar days.
- Creation of Adam from clay, then God’s breath animates him — giving humanity a unique ontological status.
- The fall of Iblīs arises after creation, reconfiguring moral history but not shaping cosmogony.
Islamic cosmology is therefore pure monotheistic creationism, stripped of the mythic combat motifs common to the ancient Near East.
Structure of the Universe (Cosmos Layout)
Islamic cosmology uses a vertical, multi-layered universe:
Heavens:
- Traditionally seven heavens, each a distinct realm, inhabited by angels and marked by increasing proximity to the Divine Presence.
- The Throne (ʿArsh) and Footstool (Kursī) lie beyond the heavens, marking the cosmic sovereignty of God.
Earth:
- A single inhabited world, spread with signs of God’s creation.
- Human moral drama occurs here exclusively.
Underworld / Barzakh:
- Not a mythic underworld ruled by deities.
- Barzakh is a boundary realm for the dead awaiting resurrection — neither heaven nor hell yet.
Hell (Jahannam) and Paradise (Jannah):
- Real, physical, created realms that exist now and will fully activate in the afterlife.
Boundaries:
- No cosmic tree or axis mundi; instead, the universe is bound by God’s Throne, which encloses all creation.
- The cosmos is “layered” not by geography but hierarchy of nearness to God.
This system is architecturally coherent but not mythopoetic. It is a metaphysical map, not an allegory.
Time and Cycles
Time structure:
- Linear, from creation → prophecy → judgment → eternity.
- No cyclical dissolutions or world-renewals.
Sacred vs profane time:
- Sacred time concentrates in events tied to revelation (e.g., Ramadan, Laylat al-Qadr), but history itself is not cyclical.
- Time is moral: the world’s unfolding is a test.
Ages of the world:
- Pre-Adam → prophetic eras → final prophet (Muhammad) → waiting period → apocalypse → resurrection → eternal afterlife.
- Muhammad’s era is “seal of prophetic time,” closing the cycle of revelation.
Islam’s temporal framework is historical and eschatological, not mythically recursive.
Order and Disorder
Principles sustaining cosmic order:
- Tawḥīd — the unity and sovereignty of God is the metaphysical structure of reality.
- ʿAdl (justice) — moral order rooted in divine law.
- Fiṭra — innate human orientation toward truth and goodness.
Forces of disorder:
- Iblīs (Satan) — archetype of rebellion, introduces temptation but not cosmic threat.
- Shayāṭīn — demonic tempters who exploit human weakness.
- Human sin — disorder originates in human will, not rival gods.
Mythic struggle:
Islam has no cosmic battle between gods.
Conflict is ethical, not ontological: obedience vs rebellion, guidance vs misguidance.
Order is maintained because God’s will cannot be opposed metaphysically; evil is parasitic, not dualistic.
Hero and Culture Myths
Islam replaces mythic heroes with historical-prophetic figures:
Founders / prophets:
- Adam, Noah, Abraham, Moses, Jesus, and Muhammad — all historical actors within sacred time, not demi-gods.
- Their stories explain the formation of human institutions: worship, law, sacrifice, pilgrimage.
Culture origins:
- Agriculture, writing, city-building are not tied to divine theft or cosmic conflict; they unfold within prophetic narratives.
- The Kaaba’s origins: reconstructed by Abraham and Ishmael, establishing pilgrimage as a covenantal act.
Trickster figures:
- None in divine form; the “trickster” role is played by Iblīs, but without the creative ambiguity common in mythologies — he is purely adversarial.
Islam’s “mythology” is mythic history, not mythic fiction.
Eschatology (End of Time)
Islam has one of the most detailed eschatologies in world religion.
Final destiny:
- A single, irreversible Apocalypse (al-Sāʿa).
- Resurrection of all humans in bodily form.
- Judgment by God based on belief and deeds.
- Eternity in Paradise or Hell.
Prophetic markers:
- Appearance of major eschatological figures: Mahdi, Jesus (ʿĪsā) returning, Dajjāl (antichrist).
- Cosmic upheavals: sun darkened, mountains moved, trumpet of Isrāfīl.
Afterlife geography:
- Paradise with multiple levels of reward.
- Hell with multiple levels of punishment.
- Barzakh persists as the intermediate world until resurrection.
Unlike cyclical religions, Islam’s eschatology is final, decisive, and permanent.
Function in Practice
Islam’s cosmology actively shapes lived religion:
Ritual:
- Ramadan reenacts prophetic revelation.
- Hajj reenacts Abraham’s acts and the founding of monotheist worship in Mecca.
- Funeral rites reflect belief in Barzakh and resurrection.
Teaching and narrative:
- Stories of prophets teach morality, divine justice, and historical continuity.
- Eschatological warnings guide ethical behavior and law.
Explanatory framework:
- Suffering = test, purification, or divine decree.
- Natural events = signs of God, not actions of gods or spirits.
- Moral order grounded in divine judgment, not cosmic cycles.
Islam’s cosmology is not myth for entertainment; it is a moral architecture embedded into ritual, law, and daily consciousness.