Intermediate
Heroes of Faith
Surah: Al-Buruj (4)
The Boy, the King, and the Sorcerer — Faith Heroism and Bearing Witness to Truth
قُتِلَ أَصۡحَٰبُ ٱلۡأُخۡدُودِ — ٱلنَّارِ ذَاتِ ٱلۡوَقُودِ
— البروج الآية 4
Quranic context: Al-Buruj 4-9 (The Trench) + the full hadith in Sahih Muslim 3005
Occasion (Sahih — Muslim): Suhaib Al-Rumi narrated from the Prophet a long story: A king had a sorcerer, and when the sorcerer aged he asked for a boy to be trained. The boy would pass a monk and learn monotheism from him. The boy guided people to the monk and to tawhid.
Three attempted killings:
Lesson: The boy chose his death on condition that monotheism would spread — his death became the cause of thousands believing. Heroism is sometimes not in survival, but in dying the right way.
Occasion (Sahih — Muslim): Suhaib Al-Rumi narrated from the Prophet a long story: A king had a sorcerer, and when the sorcerer aged he asked for a boy to be trained. The boy would pass a monk and learn monotheism from him. The boy guided people to the monk and to tawhid.
Three attempted killings:
- The mountain: They took him up and he supplicated — they fell and he survived. He said: "O Allah, suffice me from them as You will."
- The sea: He was taken out in a boat, he supplicated, they drowned and he survived.
- The arrow: He guided them to the method of his killing: "You cannot kill me except by saying: In the name of the Lord of the boy."
Lesson: The boy chose his death on condition that monotheism would spread — his death became the cause of thousands believing. Heroism is sometimes not in survival, but in dying the right way.
Source: Sahih Muslim (3005) — Narrated by Suhaib Al-Rumi; Ibn Kathir (8/373)
Test Yourself
Why did the boy guide his killers to the method of his killing, and what is the wisdom in that?
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