Intermediate Madani Events Surah: Al-Anfal (17)

Badr in the Quran — You Did Not Throw When You Threw But Allah Threw

فَلَمۡ تَقۡتُلُوهُمۡ وَلَٰكِنَّ ٱللَّهَ قَتَلَهُمۡ ۚ وَمَا رَمَيۡتَ إِذۡ رَمَيۡتَ وَلَٰكِنَّ ٱللَّهَ رَمَىٰ
— الأنفال الآية 17
Verse: "You did not kill them, but Allah killed them. And you did not throw when you threw, but Allah threw." (Al-Anfal 17)

Context: The Muslim army: 313 fighters — Quraysh: over a thousand. The victory was not mathematically calculated. The Prophet (PBUH) threw a handful of dust toward the enemy saying "Shahhat Al-Wujuh!" — something reached each of them in their eye or mouth.

The Quranic equation:
  • "You did not throw when you threw": affirming the human action + negating the human effect — the throw came from you, but the impact was not from your power
  • "But Allah threw": the real effect belongs to Allah — not a cancellation of effort but a binding of the result to its true source
  • Al-Anfal 44: "He made them appear few in your eyes to carry out a matter already resolved" — Allah managed the battlefield in sight and outcome
Lesson:
There is no contradiction between exerting effort and attributing results to Allah alone. Badr taught: do everything you can, then know that the decision comes from Allah not from swords. "How many a small company has overcome a large company by permission of Allah."
Source: Ibn Kathir (4/17); Al-Tabari (9/220); Al-Sadi; Al-Qurtubi (8/4)
Tags: بدرالأنفالالتوكل مع الأخذ بالأسبابالتوحيد في النتائجالملائكة في بدرالنصر من عند الله

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How does the verse "You did not throw when you threw but Allah threw" simultaneously affirm the human action and negate the human effect?
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