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Although Azrail is One, How does He Capture the Souls of Many People Who Die at the Same Instant?


Although Azrail is One, How does He Capture the Souls of Many People Who Die at the Same Instant?


By the angels who tear out (the souls of the wicked). By those who  gently draw out (the souls of the blessed). And by those who glide along  (on errands of mercy). (Nazi'at 79:1-3)



With this question, we  again face a subject which, if we tackle it by making human analogies,  will mislead us. It is a mistake to liken an angel to a human being,  just as it is a mistake to seek the mind in the brain, or the emotions  in the heart, or the soul in the body, or—in the language of  philosophy—to seek the noumenal in the phenomenal. It would be improper  to attempt this question without first pointing out that mistake in  thinking and terminology which (probably) is what gives rise to it and  other questions like it.




Angels are, as regards their creation and  essence, the realm they exist in, and their responsibilities and  duties, creatures wholly different from all others. Any argument or  judgment made without taking full account of that difference is bound to  go wrong. The nature of angels should therefore be approached through  consideration of their different creation and essence, their different  realm of existence, and their different responsibilities and duties.




Malak (angel) in Arabic relates to malk which has the meaning power, or to mal'ak which has the meaning messenger.  The shared point of reference is to one most powerful or to the power  itself or to one who, as messenger, holds and carries that power: thus,  an angel comes to mean one who, as messenger, holds and carries the  divine commands. Such an elevated rank belongs to all angels as such.  For the angel commissioned to convey the Divine Message to humankind, it  is necessary to have the most elevated rank and the most superior  attributes of all. Angels are commissioned to oversee all kinds of  events—from supervising birth, life, and death to carrying the Throne (arsh)  and observing the Divine Actions in wonder, admiration and praise. All  so-called natural laws, from attraction and repulsion between masses to  the principles that regulate electrons spinning around the nucleus, and  the putting into effect of these laws, and all changes and  transformations, compositions and decompositions, exist under the  administration of angels, who are the medium of the messengership and  power. Angels are so related to things and events that neither a drop of  rain nor a clap of thunder can ever be conceived without them. The laws  operating in the universe (shari'at al-fitriyya) are the  manifestation of the limitless power of the Creator, the All-Mighty, the  Absolute Sovereign, on angels according to their skills and capacities. 



Similarly, all legislative (tashri'i) commands to humankind from the attributes of kalam  are conveyed by angels. Since humanity is the focus of all great and  majestic manifestations of the Creator, the Divine inspiration and  revelation that come to humanity to guide and regulate his actions are  nothing other than the manifestations of God to angels. In this respect,  it is ignorance and an error in thinking to liken to human beings, the  angelic beings who are a medium or a means between God and His servants,  who are charged with supervising or administering all things from atoms  to nebulae in dependence on the power of the All-Mighty. It is likewise  a misjudgment and an error to consider restrictions by which human  existence is bound as applicable also to angels. If the angels had a  physical form like that of humankind and were subject to decay and  decomposition, if they too were aged and eroded by time, we might use  the same criteria for both. However, there is a world of difference  which makes such a comparison impossible.




As regards their  creation and nature, the angels are different from humankind. The powers  and responsibilities of angels are not bounded by space and time. The  purity, light (nur) and splendor in their essence make them more  powerful, influential, quick and active. They can be in touch with many  souls, be seen by many eyes, and manifest their oneness in plural forms,  at any instant of time or space, even though they are one. In a hadith  narrated by 'Aisha, Prophet Muhammad said: "The angels were created out  of light (nur)."[SUP][1][/SUP]That is why, they are given and thus manifest all the attributes of light.




Luminous  things, like the sun, though single, are reflected by and so seen in  each transparent object; they can reach and be seen by each and every  eye. Similarly, the angels, who are created out of light, can meet and  be reflected in many souls; and they can deal with thousands of them at  an instant. The angels, whose essence is latif (fine, subtle),  are very different from what has material form and is therefore heavy  and dense. The angels can take different shapes and forms; also, they  can be seen in different shapes and forms at the same instant. Tamassul,  the souls' or angels' assuming visible forms, has long been known among  religious people, and there are many examples of it. It is even now not  uncommon to hear claims (something, alas, of a pastime among the  so-called "idle rich") of some individual's "spirit" or "double" being  in a place separate and distant from where the body is and able to  produce material effects. Whatever the truth of such reports and claims,  they indicate that all fine beings like souls, in comparison to  physical beings, are more capable, quick and active. Angels are far more  capable, quick and active than souls, which is another indication that  angels operate beyond the bounds of physical nature.




As we said, tamassul  of souls and angels is a phenomenon that has long been known and  reported. The Prophets in the first place and then the saints have  recounted their experiences, and many ordinary people around them  witnessed such incidents. The coming and appearance of the archangel  Gabriel, in different guises and personalities, according to the reasons  and missions he was given, such as being a messenger while conveying  the Revelations and being a warrior during battles, are good examples of  tamassul:Gabriel appeared in the form of Dihya[SUP][2][/SUP]; as another angel, whose name we do not know, fought till evening in front of the Prophet as Mus'ab ibn 'Umayr[SUP][3][/SUP]; many angels took part in the battle of Badr in the guise of Zubayr ibn Awwam to boost the morale of the Muslims.[SUP][4]

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There  are many incidents which indicate that some saints are in touch with  the heroes of the Unseen, among them former saints and Companions of the  Prophet. Also, their appearance to ordinary people in dreams and  trance-like states supports the argument. A number of godly men and  women have testified that, in their dreams, particular noble souls  always keep in touch with them, and give them guidance. To be sure,  there will be people who refer all such experiences to the  "subconscious" and so make the whole subject incomprehensible. Alas for  their ignorance and arrogance!




To sum up what we have said so far:  just as all beings are seen reflected in a mirror, so angels are seen  in everything that can be a mirror to them, but with this difference  that angels are not merely a picture or image, as a reflection in a  mirror is, but are as themselves, with all their powers and faculties.  Like a beam of light, angels can reach and be in various places at the  same time and carry out their duties, the distance of the place or the  number of people concerned are of no relevance and can present no  hindrance. The sun is single but is reflected, seen, and its effects are  felt, everywhere on every object according to the object's qualities.  Similarly, the angels, being created of light, can be seen, breathe life  into human beings or recapture their souls or carry out any other of  their duties everywhere at any time.




In reality it is, of course,  God who gives and takes life. Azrail is only a medium and means,  commissioned to superintend the giving of life and recapturing of souls  and to praise the All-Mighty in His Divine Actions. As God is everywhere  at every instant and performs innumerable actions beyond the power of  our imaginations to conceive, it is not difficult to accept that He can  create, give and take innumerable lives all in a single instant. Such  omniscience and omnipotence can undoubtedly see, administer and govern  the deeds, and give and take the lives, of as many people as there may  be particles in the whole universe, at the same instant, though some  unfortunate atheists may refuse to believe.




Whether God or Azrail  captures the souls, each soul whose time of death has come turns to God  at its last moment and then is taken. We can make this more  comprehensible by an analogy. Let us suppose that there are thousands of  radio-like receivers operating on the same frequency. If any  transmitter sends signals on that frequency, they will be heard on all  the receivers. In the same way, all beings live in dependence for  everything on the All-Mighty, All-Generous Creator, and when they ask  for anything from Him, they do so through their poverty, that is,  through their needs, their helpless impotence. And when they reach the  last minute of their life and turn to God by, as it were, switching on  to their life-ending frequency, they begin to perceive the signals of  death. If a weak, powerless human being can make contact with systems  hundreds of miles away simply by pressing a button, why cannot the  All-Mighty Creator, who is free from all our weakness, impotence and  deficiencies, make contact with souls, each of which is, in a sense, a  living machine? Why cannot He make them all start or stop functioning in  an instant?




Summary

1. It is God who gives  and takes life. Azrail is only an agent who is commissioned to oversee  and administer and praise the work of God.

2. While carrying out his task, Azrail acts only with the permission and approval of God.

3.  As a great number of angels administer tasks in the universe as  representatives of the Divine Authority, Power and Will, there are many  angels that can help Azrail with his work. They are even grouped into  classes according to their tasks. Some of them take the lives of people  without causing them any distress or hurt—they carry out their task  peacefully. After souls have been recaptured, other angels at once take  the souls before the Divine Presence, and so on. The Qur'an refers to  all of them: By the angels who tear out (the souls of the wicked). By  those who gently draw out (the souls of the blessed). And by those who  glide along (on errands of mercy) (Nazi'at 79:1-3).

Thus there  are different angels dispatched according to the level of the people  they will deal with. They are all under the supervision of Azrail, and  God commissions them according to whether the individuals concerned were  good or wicked.

In conclusion, we can say that the understanding  which gives rise to such questions begins in an error of thinking in  that it mistakenly likens angels to human beings. We have pointed out  that angels are quite different from beings with physical form; not only  in their essence and creation but also in their tasks, servanthood and  responsibilities, angels are quite different from other creatures.  Angels can assume different forms (tamassul), be in many places,  and do many things, as human beings' souls can. What is popularly read  about in our day in connection with spirit-mediums, necromancy, and  other such efforts to communicate with the Unseen, are in their way  evidence of metaphysical elements operating in the physical universe.  Angels, as beings far superior to these elements, can function and carry  out their missions in a way far superior to all other beings. And  certainly, at the time of death, when people share the same "frequency"  with the angels, an angel can deal with thousands of people at the same  instant. Finally, we must remember that the angel for death is not  alone; rather, there are innumerable angels appointed for taking souls,  and when we consider that there is an angel for each individual death,  no further point remains to raise the kind of doubts expressed in the  question.

God knows best.[NOT]



[1] Muslim, Zuhd, 10; Musnad, 4/168.

[2] Bukhari, Manaqib 22; Muslim, Fadail al-Sahaba, 100.

[3] Ibn Sa'd, Tabaqat, 2/121.

[4] Muslim, Jihad and Siyar 58, Ibn Kathir, Tafsir, 3/560-561.


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