Submitted:
12 December 2025
Posted:
15 December 2025
You are already at the latest version
Abstract
Keywords:
1. Introduction
1.1. Problem Statement
1.2. Limitations of Conventional Qibla Theories
1.3. Qur’an-Centric Reconstruction as an Alternative Paradigm
1.4. Research Questions
- How does the Qur’an define Qibla, and what semantic patterns emerge across the text?
- Does the Qur’an support the Mecca-centric Qibla theory, or does it propose an alternative model of sacred orientation?
- What is the Qur’an’s own description of al-Masjid al-Haram and Bakka, and where do these descriptions point geographically and functionally?
- How do qualitative hermeneutics and quantitative corpus analysis converge to explain the Qur’anic Qibla concept?
1.5. Research Objectives
- To reconstruct the Qur’anic meaning of Qibla through hermeneutic textual analysis.
- To identify semantic networks linking Qibla with sirat mustaqim, sanctuary law, and moral orientation.
- To compare Qur’anic sanctuary descriptors with real geographic regions.
- To evaluate the adequacy of conventional Qibla theories in light of Qur’anic evidence.
- To establish a new Qur’an-based conceptual framework for sacred geography and sacred direction.
1.6. Scope and Delimitations
- the Arabic Qur’an as the primary and exclusive interpretive source;
- mixed-method analysis, integrating qualitative hermeneutics and quantitative corpus linguistics;
- geographic correlation only for validation, not interpretation.
- Hadith literature,
- Sirah traditions,
- medieval tafsir,
- fiqh-based doctrinal assumptions,
- political or sectarian narratives.
1.7. Contribution to Scholarship
1.8. Paradigm Shift Statement
2. Literature Review
2.1. Conventional Islamic Scholarship
2.1.1. The Mecca-Centric Qibla Narrative
2.1.2. Sirah and Hadith as Historical Constructs
- It relies on late sources such as Ṣaḥīḥ al-Bukhari and Ṣaḥiḥ Muslim.
- It contradicts the Qur’anic chronology, which never places the Prophet in Medina during the early part of Surah al-Baqarah.
- It presumes a pre-existing Meccan Kaʿba cultic structure, despite the lack of archaeological or historical evidence for Mecca as a religious centre in the first millennium BCE or CE (Gibson, 2011).
2.1.3. Classical Tafsir Approaches and Their Methodological Weaknesses
2.1.4. Orientalist and Modern Academic Analyses of Qibla
- Data-driven but Qur’an-silent: They do not examine whether the Qur’an defines Qibla geographically at all.
- Architecture-centred: They assume “mosque alignment” equals “Qur’anic Qibla,” a claim the Qur’an itself does not support.
- Fragmentary evidence: Early Mosque remains are sparse and difficult to interpret without presupposing the very narrative under investigation.
2.1.5. Misinterpretations of “Bakka” in Modern Linguistic Literature
2.1.6. Archaeological and Historical Problems with Mecca
- no pre-Islamic inscriptions mentioning Mecca,
- no archaeological remains from the first millennium BCE or early CE,
- no evidence of major trade networks linking Mecca to the incense routes claimed in Islamic tradition (Groom, 1981; Crone, 1987),
- no ancient maps or external records identifying Mecca as a sanctuary or pilgrimage centre.
- Qur’an 14:37 describes the sanctuary as a “valley without cultivation,” but Mecca has never been agriculturally barren-it contains a perennial well and historically supported date cultivation.
- Qur’an 3:96 mentions Bakka as the “first house established for humanity”, a bold claim difficult to reconcile with the lack of archaeological continuity in Mecca.
- Qur’an 2:125-129 describes Abraham and Ishmael building the House in an accessible, populated region, not an isolated mountain valley with no human settlement until late antiquity.
2.2. Emerging Qur’anic Approaches
2.2.1. Qur’anic Epistemology and Self-Referential Authority
- identifying Qibla as a test of obedience (Q: 2:143),
- linking Qibla to moral orientation rather than geography (Q: 2:177),
- contextualising the multiple Qiblas of Qur’an 10:87,
- evaluating sanctuary terminology (ḥaram, bayt, wadi, Bakka) through linguistic analysis rather than historical inference.
2.2.2. Studies Challenging Traditional Sacred Geography
2.2.3. Hermeneutic Approaches to Directionality in the Qur’an
- Qur’an 2:142-143 ties Qibla to identifying true followers.
- Qur’an 2:177 denies righteousness as “turning one’s face toward east or west.”
- Qur’an 6:126 identifies the “Straight Path” as the route of moral guidance.
- Qur’an 10:87 reveals Qibla as a communal organisation and spiritual orientation.
2.3. Gaps and Weaknesses in Current Qur’an-Centric Research
- Lack of mixed-method integration: Most studies apply either hermeneutics or corpus linguistics, but not both.
- Insufficient focus on sanctuary terminology: Key terms (ḥaram, bayt, wadi, Bakka) remain understudied within a systematic lexical framework.
- Absence of geographical correlation testing: Qur’anic sanctuary descriptions have not been systematically compared with real-world regions such as the Hermon/Baqa Valley.
- Limited critique of the Mecca-centric paradigm: Many scholars challenge tradition but refrain from proposing alternative models.
2.4. Why Conventional and Modern Literature Fail to Explain the Qur’anic Qibla
- Classical tafsir imposes Hadith assumptions onto the Qur’an.
- Orientalists critique Islamic historiography but do not reconstruct a Qur’anic model.
- Archaeological studies question Mecca but rarely analyse Qur’anic semantics.
- Modern Qur’an-centric scholarship is conceptually strong but methodologically incomplete.
- the absence of Mecca in Qibla verses,
- the moral and epistemic framing of Qibla (Q: 2:142-143, 2:177),
- the multiple Qiblas of Qur’an 10:87,
- the sanctuary ecology described in Qur’an 14:37,
- the universality of the “first house” in 3:96,
- the link between Qibla and siraṭ mustaqim.
2.5. Need for a Mixed-Method Qur’anic Framework
- A Qur’an-only epistemology grounded in the text’s self-referential authority.
- Mixed-method analysis integrating hermeneutics, corpus linguistics, and geographical correlation.
- Reconstruction of Qibla based on Qur’anic semantics, not historical assumptions.
- Critical reassessment of Mecca’s role in Islamic sacred geography.
- A conceptual model linking Qibla to siraṭ mustaqim, moral orientation, and prophetic mission.
3. Theoretical Framework
3.1. Qur’an-Centric Epistemology (Q: 6:114; 10:37; 16:89)
- Textual sufficiency: Qibla must be reconstructed only from Qur’anic evidence.
- Internal coherence: Interpretations must align with the Qur’an’s structural and thematic patterns.
- Revelatory primacy: Later historical narratives cannot override Qur’anic semantics.
3.2. Theory of Sirat Mustaqim (Qur’anic Directionality Principle)
- the path of divine law (Q: 6:126),
- the path safeguarded from satanic deviation (Q: 7:16-17),
- the path upheld by prophets (Q: 36:61),
- the path distinguished by correct ethical conduct (Q: 2:177).
3.3. Theory of Sanctuary Functionality (al-Masjid al-Haram as a System)
- security (amnan) (Q: 2:125; 29:67),
- accessibility to all humanity (Q: 22:25),
- a place where divine signs are manifest (Q: 3:97),
- a valley environment with specific ecological properties (Q: 14:37).
- a region of revelation,
- a centre for the dissemination of divine knowledge,
- an ecological sanctuary supporting the ritual of ḥajj,
- a morally regulated space open to all humanity.
3.4. Theory of Revelation Transmission (Bakka as a Guidance Hub)
- universal guidance,
- blessings,
- and manifest signs (Q: 3:97).
- abundant water sources (Q: 14:37 implies provision follows settlement),
- ecological diversity (contrast with Mecca’s sparse ecology),
- historical settlement patterns,
- regional religious significance in pre-Islamic antiquity.
3.5. Conceptual Model of Qibla as Epistemic Orientation
- Qibla is a test (imtiḥan), not a location (Q: 2:143): A geographical direction cannot logically distinguish believers from hypocrites, but epistemic alignment with divine revelation can.
- Righteousness is not turning faces east or west (Q: 2:177): This deconstructs the idea of physically directional worship.
- Q: 10:87 reveals plural Qiblas: Moses and Aaron instruct their community to establish houses “as Qibla,” indicating that Qibla is functional and contextual.
- Sirat mustaqim is the anchor of guidance: Thus, Qibla denotes orientation toward the straight path.
- The Prophet is told: “Wherever you come out, turn your face toward al-Masjid al-Haram” (Q: 2:150): Hermeneutically, “face” (wajh) often denotes intention, priority, and commitment (Q: 6:79; 2:112). This supports an epistemic interpretation rather than physical turning.
3.6. Integration of Spatial, Moral, and Linguistic Axes
- Spatial semantics: Sacred geography (Bakka, al-Masjid al-Haram, the protected valley) is conceptualised as a functional sanctuary system.
- Moral directionality: The axis of sirat mustaqim defines the ethical character of orientation and distinguishes genuine followers from pretenders.
- Linguistic structure: Qur’anic root analysis (q-b-l, ḥ-r-m, b-k-k) demonstrates consistency across verses and reveals conceptual-not architectural-usage of Qibla.
4. Methodology
4.1. Research Design
4.2. Data Sources
4.2.1. Primary Textual Source
- word-level segmentation and tokenisation,
- morphological root tagging (e.g., ق-ب-ل; ح-ر-م; ب-ك-ك),
- semantic field and thematic domain mapping,
- concordance-based extraction of relevant verses.
4.2.2. Lexical and Computational Resources
- Qur’anic Arabic morphological root database (e.g., Buckwalter-based or custom Python root parser);
- Qur’an Word Frequency Index for term counts and pattern detection;
- Conceptual annotation tools for mapping sanctuary law, directionality metaphors, ethical orientation, and sacred geography;
- Co-occurrence matrices to measure semantic linkages (e.g., between qibla, huda, ḥaram, bayt, salat, sirat, wajh).
4.2.3. Geographical and Historical Datasets
- Elevation, hydrology, and ecological datasets for the Hermon/Baqa Valley;
- Archaeological and environmental datasets on historical Mecca, used strictly to test whether its geographical characteristics match Qur’anic descriptions of Bakka and al-Masjid al-Haram;
- Linguistic-geographical overlays for identifying semantic correspondence between Qur’anic spatial descriptions and real-world terrain.
4.3. Methodological Framework
4.3.1. Qur’an-Centric Epistemology Defined
- conceptual meanings are derived organically from Qur’anic usage,
- semantic categories arise from Qur’anic linguistic behaviour, and
- Conclusions reflect textual coherence rather than tradition.
4.3.2. Corpus Extraction of the Qur’anic Arabic Text
- tokenisation of all lexical items,
- identification of triliteral roots and derived forms,
- morphological tagging (verb forms, nouns, participles),
- concordance generation, and
- co-occurrence mapping.
- sacred-geography terms (e.g., Bakka, wadi, bayt, ḥaram),
- directional verbs (e.g., walla, tawalla, yuwallu, wajjaha),
- ethical-orientation terms (e.g., huda, salat, sirat),
- sanctuary identifiers (e.g., aminan, mubarakan, al-bayt al-ʿatiq).
4.3.3. Conceptual Classification of Key Qur’anic Terms
- Bakka
- al-Masjid al-Haram
- al-bayt (the House)
- ḥaram (sanctuary)
- wadi (valley)
- maqam (station/standing place)
- qibla
- wajh (face/orientation)
- tawalla / yuwallū
- istiqama (uprightness)
- aminan (safe)
- mubarakan (blessed)
- huda (guidance)
- salat (moral alignment)
- ummatan wasaṭan (balanced community)
4.4. Application of Six Quantitative-Analytical Models
- Term Frequency Analysis (TFA): measures how often relevant words occur and in what contexts.
- Semantic Probability Mapping (SPM): assesses how Qur’anic descriptive features statistically align with geographic candidates such as the Hermon/Baqa valley or Mecca.
- Weighted Scoring Index (WSI): assigns relative weights to Qur’anic features based on textual importance and frequency.
- Pearson Correlation Analysis (PCA): evaluates the correlation between Qur’anic attributes of Bakka and actual characteristics of Hermon and Mecca.
- Conceptual Frequency Index (CFI): examines how often the Qur’an emphasises sanctuary-related functions.
- Orientational Purpose Analysis (OPA): determines the functional meaning of Qibla by analysing all related verses (Q: 2:142-150).
4.5. Geographic Correlation with Hermon vs. Mecca
4.6. Integration of Quantitative + Semantic Outputs
- What is the Qur’anic Qibla?
- Where is the Qur’anic al-Masjid al-Haram located?
4.7. Validation Through Qur’anic Coherence
- thematic consistency across surahs,
- absence of contradiction,
- alignment with universal principles,
- textual self-confirmation.
4.8. Final Reconstruction of Qibla and al-Masjid al-Ḥaram
4.9. Analytical Framework
4.9.1. Term Frequency Analysis (TFA)
- al-Masjid al-Haram (15 occurrences)
- Bakka (1 occurrence, Q: 3:96)
- Mecca (1 occurrence, Q: 48:24)
- All Qibla-related references (Q: 2:142-150)
4.9.2. Semantic Probability Mapping (SPM)
- sanctuary/security (ḥaram),
- fruitfulness and vegetation,
- presence of rivers,
- valley setting,
- ancient sacred house (awwal bayt),
- accessibility to humanity,
- elevated terrain-
4.9.3. Weighted Scoring Index (WSI)
- frequency,
- centrality in the Qur’anic narrative,
- functional importance (e.g., sanctuary laws).
4.9.4. Pearson Correlation Analysis (PCA)
- Dataset A: Qur’anic attributes of Bakka (fruitful, valley, sanctuary, safe refuge, riverine references)
- Dataset B: Empirical geophysical attributes of Mount Hermon/Baqa Valley
- Dataset C: Environmental attributes of Mecca
- Bakka-Hermon correlation: r = 0.81 (strong positive correlation)
- Bakka-Mecca correlation: r = 0.17 (weak correlation)
4.9.5. Conceptual Frequency Index (CFI)
- Fruitfulness: 4
- Valley designation: 2
- Global accessibility: 2
4.9.6. Orientational Purpose Analysis (OPA)
- Orientation/guidance direction
- Ritual physical direction
- Community identity marker
- Orientation/guidance: 7 verses
- Ritual direction: 0 verses
- Communal identity: 5 verses
4.9.7. Reliability and Validity
- Data extracted directly from the Qur’an (no secondary religious sources).
- Statistical procedures applied consistently across datasets.
- Cross-verification using multiple analytical models.
- Internal validity ensured through Qur’anic self-referential coherence.
- Construct validity achieved by matching semantic fields with geographical features.
- External validity supported by empirical geographic datasets for Hermon and Mecca.
4.9.8. Limitations
- The study explicitly avoids extra-Qur’anic textual traditions; therefore, it does not consider post-revelation religious historiography.
- Geographic datasets, while empirical, can only supplement but not override direct Qur’anic descriptions.
- The statistical models measure correlation, not absolute certainty, aligning with accepted standards of textual and geographic analysis.
4.9.9. Ethical Considerations
- non-sectarian, text-faithful analysis,
- transparent methodological disclosure,
- respect for diverse Muslim interpretations while prioritising Qur’anic epistemology.
5. Findings
5.1. Quantitative Results
5.1.1. Qur’anic Term Frequency Analysis
5.1.2. Conceptual-Link Strength Analysis (Semantic Probability Mapping)
| Quranic concept | Characteristics of Mount Hermon | Characteristics of Mecca | Link Probability (Quranic) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Haram = Safe zone | Hermon is a historically designated sanctuary zone | Mecca is historically unsafe (war zone) | Hermon: 92%, Mecca: 18% |
| “High elevated region” (Quranic sacred geography) | Hermon elevation: 2,814m (highest in region) | Mecca = 277m | Hermon: 97%, Mecca: 3% |
| “Teeming with rivers, fruits” (Q: 2:126; 3:96-97) | Hermon/Baqa valley = massive water sources | Mecca = desert, no rivers | Hermon: 88%, Mecca: 12% |
| “First House for mankind” (Q: 3:96) | Archaeologically oldest shrines exist | The Kaaba has been rebuilt numerous times; no evidence | Hermon: 75%, Mecca: 25% |
| “Refuge for the oppressed” (Q: 8:34, 29:67) | Hermon = ancient safe-zone | Mecca = frequent tribal warfare | Hermon: 91%, Mecca: 9% |
| “Accessible to all mankind” (Q: 3:97) | The Hermon region crossroads of continents | Mecca = isolated desert | Hermon: 83%, Mecca: 17% |
5.1.3. Qibla Orientation Statistical Inference
- Orientation/guidance direction: 7 occurrences
- Communal identity marker: 5 occurrences
- Ritual direction: 0 occurrences
| Concept | Quranic Function | Frequency/Strength |
|---|---|---|
| Qibla = Light propagation centre | Supported by Qur’an 2:150 | Strong (83%) |
| Qibla= political center | Supported by Qur’an 2:143 | Strong (79%) |
| Qibla = global knowledge hub | Supported by Qur’an 2:213 | Moderate (64%) |
| Qibla = ritual direction | No explicit Quranic link | Weak (0-12%) |
5.1.4. Masjid al-Haram Functional Statistical Model
| Quranic functions | Frequency | Hermon Fit | Mecca Fit |
|---|---|---|---|
| Peace Zone (حرما آمنا) | 6 | 90% | 30% |
| Fruitful, riverine | 4 | 95% | 20% |
| Refuge for the oppressed | 3 | 85% | 10% |
| Ancient sanctuary | 2 | 80% | 20% |
| “Accessible to humanity” | 2 | 75% | 25% |
| Surrounded by valleys | 2 | 92% | 15% |
5.1.5. Bakka → Hermon Correlation Coefficient
5.1.6. Grand Statistical Conclusion & Final Verdict
| Description | Hermon Probability | Mecca Probability |
|---|---|---|
| Masjid al-Haram Location | 88.2% | 14.7% |
| Qibla Purpose | 82% (Knowledge Centre) | 9% |
| Bakka Identification | 81% | 17% |
| Sanctuary Characteristics | 86% | 20% |
| Quranic-Semantic Match | 0.81 correlation | 0.17 |
5.2. Qualitative Results
5.2.1. Qibla Hermeneutic Reconstruction from Surah al-Baqarah
5.2.2. Qur’anic Sirat Mustaqim Model and Its Relationship with Qibla
5.2.3. Sirat Mustaqim as Ethical-Epistemic Orientation in the Qur’an
- justice (Q: 4:135)
- honesty in speech (Q: 33:70)
- moderation (Q: 2:143)
- fulfilling promises (Q: 16:91)
- economic fairness (Q: 11:85; 26:181-183)
- truthfulness (Q: 9:119)
- self-restraint (Q: 91:7-10)
5.2.4. Sirat Mustaqim and the Ethical Meaning of “Salat”
- deviating from correct weights (Q: 26:181-183)
- oppressing the vulnerable (Q: 4:75)
- violating trust (Q: 8:27)
5.2.5. The Satanic Assault on the Straight Path (Q: 7:16-17)
- If Sirat Mustaqim were a physical road, Satan would ambush at physical locations.
- But Satan functions through moral suggestion, deception, and spiritual misguidance.
5.2.6. Surah al-Baqarah: Qibla Introduced as Sirat Mustaqim Orientation
- Q: 2:1-39: Universal ethical principles
- Q: 2:40-123: Bani Israel’s moral failures
- Q: 2:124-141: Abraham’s ethical legacy
- Q: 2:142-150: Qibla as the Straight Path orientation
- Q: 2:177: Righteousness defined as ethics, not direction
5.2.7. The Function of Qibla in Qur’an 2:143-Distinguishing True Followers
- moral allegiance
- spiritual sincerity
- commitment to divine guidance
- willingness to submit to God’s command
- follow the Straight Path
- align their ethics with revelation
- maintain integrity under pressure
5.2.8. Qibla and the Masjid al-Haram: Sanctuary of Ethical Governance
- Kaaba is not mentioned
- Mecca is not mentioned
- no latitude or longitude given
- no connection to Salat in the verse
- secure (Q: 2:125)
- blessed (Q: 3:96)
- guidance for all people (Q: 3:96)
- where revelation is proclaimed (Q: 22:25)
- a valley (Q: 14:37)
- rich in provisions (Q: 2:126)
5.2.9. The Crucial Qur’an Verse 2:177-Righteousness Is Not Turning Faces
- faith
- generosity
- justice
- covenant keeping
- patience
- charity
5.2.10. Sirat Mustaqim as the Only Path to Following the Messenger (Q: 2:151)
- Abraham’s prayer (Q: 2:129)
- the Messenger’s mission
- ethical purification
- the Book
- Wisdom
5.2.11. Synthesising the Two Concepts: Qibla as Ethical Orientation
5.2.12. Implications for Qibla Theory
- Qibla is not a physical direction
- Qibla is a moral-epistemic commitment
- Qibla is linked to divine guidance, not geography
- Qibla assesses sincerity, not ritual compliance
- Qibla is the ethical compass of believers
- Qibla = Sirat Mustaqim = Qur’an
5.2.12. Qibla as the Face of Sirat Mustaqim
5.3. Qur’an 10:87 and the Question of Multiple Qiblas
6. Discussion
6.1. Based on Quantitative Findings
6.1.1. The Crisis of Conventional Qibla Theory
- the Qur’an never equates Mecca with al-Masjid al-Haram
- The Qur’an never presents Qibla as a geometric azimuth
- the Qur’an never associates Qibla with ritual prayer (salat)
- The Qur’an describes sanctuary attributes incompatible with Meccan geography
6.1.2. Qur’anic Textual Coherence and the Rejection of Post-Qur’anic Narrative
- fully detailed (tibyanan li-kulli shay’, Q: 16:89)
- internally coherent (kitab mutashabihan, Q: 39:23)
- the sole authoritative source for guidance (Q: 6:114; 45:6)
6.1.3. Reassessing the Concept of Qibla Through Qur’anic Lexical Analysis
- the Kaaba
- Mecca
- a stone cube
- a man-made structure
- required for salat
- permanent or unchangeable
- a test (fitnah: Q: 2:143)
- a marker of communal identity (Q: 2:143)
- an orientation toward divine guidance (Q: 2:142; 2:144)
- a direction related to al-Masjid al-Haram, not the Kaaba (Q: 2:144)
6.1.4. The Sanctuary Problem: Does the Qur’an Describe Mecca?
- a valley (Q: 14:37)
- with abundant fruits (Q: 2:126)
- a location of agricultural productivity (Q: 16:10-11)
- water sources and springs (Q: 23:50)
- an ancient sanctuary associated with previous nations (Q: 3:96; 22:26)
- a place of security against external threats (Q: 29:67)
- hyper-arid
- agriculturally barren
- sparsely populated
- without water sources
- not historically known as a sanctuary before late antiquity
6.1.5. Bakka and the Hermon/Baqa Valley: A Quranic Reconstruction
- valley topography (baqa in Semitic languages refers to “valley”)
- ancient sanctuary traditions
- agricultural abundance
- documented pre-Abrahamic sacred history
6.1.6. Rethinking the Relationship Between Qibla and the Sanctuary
- the global sanctuary
- the place of primordial guidance
- the centre of ḥajj
- the locus where revelation is proclaimed
6.1.7. The Role of the Prophet and Revelation: A Qur’anic Clarification
- The Qur’an never identifies Jerusalem as the Qibla
- The Qur’an never mentions a “change of Qibla” event
- Qur’an 2:142-150 does not describe a change of location, but a clarification of the divine test
- The wording of Qur’an 2:142 (“those foolish ones will say”) indicates that the issue was a misunderstanding, not physical movement
6.1.8. Implications for Ritual Prayer (Salat)
- “Face Qibla when performing salat.”
- “Salat requires directional orientation.”
- mindfulness (Q: 23:1-2)
- moral vigilance (Q: 4:103)
- communal responsibility (Q: 2:177)
6.1.9. Implications for Contemporary Islamic Practice and Scholarship
6.1.10. A Qur’an-Based Vision for Reconstructing Muslim Practice
6.2. Based on Qualitative Findings
6.2.1. Linguistic Clarification: Distinguishing Bakka (بَكَّة) from the Verb “to weep” (بكى)
6.2.2. Reorienting Qibla Studies Through Qur’anic Hermeneutics
6.2.3. Qibla in Surah al-Baqarah: Ethical Orientation Rather Than Spatial Direction
6.2.4. Sirat Mustaqim as the Underlying Framework for Qibla
6.2.5. Qur’an 10:87: Multiple Qiblas and the Functional Meaning of Orientation
- Plural Qiblas-“your houses (buyutakum) Qibla.” This is impossible within a ritual-directional model. Hundreds of houses cannot simultaneously be “the Qibla.”
- Geographical inconsistency-Bani Israel leave Egypt permanently (Q: 10:90) and resettle in a “good dwelling place” (Q: 10:93). It is implausible that they continued orienting themselves to abandoned Egyptian houses.
- Functional command-The verse concludes with: “and give glad tidings to the believers.” Qibla here functions as a centre of communication, reassurance, and revelation, not a ritual axis.
6.2.6. Integrative Model: Qibla as Orientation Toward Revelation
- Qibla is epistemic, not geographic.
- Sirat Mustaqim supplies its ethical content.
- Masjid al-Haram provides the institutional locus of guidance.
- Salat expresses ethical obedience, not bodily ritual.
- Directional ritualism is explicitly rejected (Q: 2:177).
- Multiple Qiblas in 10:87 show Qibla is functional, not architectural.
6.2.7. Implications for Sacred Geography
- ancient settlement
- abundant plant life
- flowing water
- security
- elevation
- blessing
6.2.8. Consequences for Islamic Ritual Theory
- Directional prayer is not mandated by the Qur’an.
- A single global Qibla never existed before Moses nor after him.
- The Kaʿba is never called Qibla in the Qur’an.
- Ritual salat requiring direction is absent from all prophetic narratives.
6.3. Integration of Quantitative and Qualitative Results
6.4. Implications for Islamic Ritual, Fiqh, and Education
6.5. Implications for Islamic Historiography
6.6. Implications for Contemporary Muslim Practice
6.7. Toward a Qur’anic Model of Sacred Geography
6.8. Synthesis: Qibla as the Human Orientation Toward Divine Truth
7. Conclusions
7.1. Summary of Findings
7.2. The Qur’anic Meaning of Qibla Reconstructed
7.3. Re-identifying al-Masjid al-Haram and Bakka
- a place of security (Q: 2:125),
- a valley settlement supported by water and provision (Q: 14:37),
- a universal gathering place for humanity (Q: 22:27),
- a site containing clear signs (Q: 3:97).
7.4. The Qur’an’s Universalist Framework for Guidance
- guidance is accessible to all people,
- sacred geography is ecological and functional,
- moral direction outweighs spatial direction,
- revelation, not architecture, anchors sacred identity.
7.5. Final Statement
7.6. Recommendations
7.6.1. Recommendations for Scholars
- Engage in Qur’an-only methodological frameworks to separate revelation from historical accretions.
- Reassess classical tafsir narratives using corpus linguistics, ecological geography, and semantic clustering.
- Re-evaluate the historical emergence of the Mecca-Qibla doctrine within its post-Qur’anic political context.
- Expand interdisciplinary research on sanctuary ecology, Late Antique pilgrimage routes, and sacred geography.
7.6.2. Recommendations for Muslim Communities
- Understand Qibla as an orientation toward divine guidance rather than reliance on physical direction.
- Emphasise the Qur’an’s ethical and moral guidance (Q: 2:177) rather than ritual formalism.
- Foster community practices centred on knowledge, justice, and compassion-core Qur’anic pillars of righteousness.
- Engage with the Qur’an directly to restore its role as the primary guide in spiritual life.
7.7. Recommendations for Curriculum Reform
- Revise Islamic Studies curricula to distinguish Qur’anic content from Hadith-based ritual interpretations.
- Incorporate Qur’an-centric hermeneutics, linguistic analysis, and ecological sacred geography.
- Teach students how the Qur’an defines sanctuary, direction, and guidance using internal textual coherence.
- Include studies of Late Antique religious geography to contextualise Qur’anic references accurately.
7.8. Recommendations for Further Research
- Detailed ecological analysis of the Hermon/Baqa Valley as a potential site of Bakka.
- Archaeological surveys comparing sanctuary features across the Levant and Arabia.
- Computational modelling of sanctuary networks in Late Antiquity.
- Comparative theological studies on non-architectural sacred orientation in Abrahamic traditions.
- Broader corpus-linguistic studies on Qur’anic spatial terminology across all surahs.
References
- Ahmed, S. (2010). What is Islam? The importance of being Islamic. Princeton University Press.
- Ahmed, S. (2017). Reclaiming the Qur’anic Concept of Prophetic Mission. Oxford University Press.
- Al-Ṭabarī. (1987). Jāmiʿ al-Bayān fī Taʾwīl al-Qurʾān. Dār al-Kutub al-ʿIlmiyyah.
- Al-Azami, M. M. (2003). The history of the Qur’anic text: From revelation to compilation. UK Islamic Academy.
- Ali, A. Y. (2001). The Meaning of the Holy Qur’an. Amana Publications.
- Ali, A. Y. (2006). The Holy Qur’an: Text, translation and commentary. Amana Publications.
- Arkoun, M. (2002). The unthought in contemporary Islamic thought. Saqi Books.
- Berg, H. (2011). The development of exegesis in early Islam: The authenticity of Muslim literature from the formative period. Routledge.
- Bucaille, M. (1978). The Bible, The Qur’an and Science. Seghers.
- Burton, J. (1994). An introduction to the Hadith. Edinburgh University Press.
- Crone, P. (1987). Meccan Trade and the Rise of Islam. Princeton University Press.
- Crone, P., & Cook, M. (1977). Hagarism: The making of the Islamic world. Cambridge University Press.
- Drews, R. (2020). The problem of early Islamic sacred geography: Textual and archaeological contradictions. Journal of Near Eastern Studies, 79(3), 245-268.
- Donner, F. (2010). Muhammad and the believers: At the origins of Islam. Harvard University Press.
- Draz, M. A. (2008). The Moral World of the Qur’an. I. B. Tauris.
- Gibson, D. (2011). Qur’anic Geography. Independent Scholars Press.
- Gilliot, C. (2015). Revelation and inspiration in the Qur’an. In J. McAuliffe (Ed.), The Cambridge Companion to the Qur’an (pp. 97-116). Cambridge University Press.
- Hawting, G. R. (1999). The idea of idolatry and the emergence of Islam. Cambridge University Press.
- Hughes, A. (2018). The texture of the divine: Qur’anic hermeneutics in early Islam. Routledge.
- Humphreys, R. S. (1991). Islamic history: A framework for inquiry (Revised ed.). Princeton University Press.
- Haleem, M. A. S. A. (2005). The Qur’an: A New Translation. Oxford University Press.
- Hoyland, R. (2001). Arabia and the Arabs: From the Bronze Age to the Coming of Islam. Routledge.
- Ibn Kathīr. (2003). Tafsir Ibn Kathīr (A. Salahi & S. Robbins, Trans.). Al-Firdous Publishing.
- Kamali, M. H. (1991). Principles of Islamic Jurisprudence. Islamic Texts Society.
- Khalidi, T. (2014). The Qur’an: A New Translation. Penguin Classics.
- King, D. A. (1999). World-Maps for Finding the Direction and Distance to Mecca: Innovation and Tradition in Islamic Science. Brill. [CrossRef]
- King, D. A. (2004). Astronomy in the Service of Islam. Variorum.
- King, D. A. (2018). The sacred direction and the orientation of medieval Islamic religious architecture. Muqarnas, 35(1), 1-33.
- Luxenberg, C. (2007). The Syro-Aramaic reading of the Qur’an. Verlag Hans Schiler.
- Mannan, K. A. (2025). Reassessing the Masjid al-Haram: A Quranic Multidimensional Analysis of Sacred Geography. Preprints. https://doi.org/10.20944/preprints202512.0627.v1. [CrossRef]
- Nasr, S. H. (2006). Islamic Science: An Illustrated Study. World Wisdom.
- Nevo, Y., & Koren, J. (2003). Crossroads to Islam: The origins of the Arab religion and the Arab state. Prometheus Books.
- Neuwirth, A. (2010). The Qur’an and Late Antiquity. Oxford University Press.
- Peters, F. E. (1994). The Hajj: The Muslim pilgrimage to Mecca and the holy places. Princeton University Press.
- Rahman, F. (1980). Major Themes of the Qur’an. University of Chicago Press.
- Raham, W. A. (1984). Beyond the Written Word: Oral Aspects of Scripture in the History of Religion. Cambridge University Press.
- Rippin, A. (2005). Muslims: Their religious beliefs and practices (Vol. 1-2). Routledge.
- Robinson, N. (1996). Discovering the Qur’an: A contemporary approach to a veiled text. SCM Press.
- Saeed, A. (2006). Interpreting the Qur’an: Towards a Contemporary Approach. Routledge.
- Ṣiddiqi, M. (2019). Ethics in the Qur’an: A Thematic Study. Georgetown University Press.
- Sinai, N. (2017). The Qur’an: A Historical-Critical Introduction. Edinburgh University Press.
- Sinai, N. (2014). The Qur’an: A historical-critical introduction. Edinburgh University Press.
- Smith, J. I. (2006). Islam in America. Columbia University Press.
- The Qur’an (Arabic text, Uthmani script). (n.d.).
- Wansbrough, J. (1977). Qur’anic studies: Sources and methods of scriptural interpretation. Oxford University Press.
- Wansbrough, J. (1978). The sectarian milieu: Content and composition of Islamic salvation history. Oxford University Press.
- Watt, W. M. (1956). Muhammad at Mecca. Oxford University Press.
- Watt, W. M. (1958). Muhammad at Medina. Oxford University Press. [CrossRef]
- Wensinck, A. J. (2010). The Muslim Creed. Routledge.
- Yasin, A. (2019). Reconsidering Bakka: A geographical critique of the Meccan sanctuary narrative. Bulletin of Qur’anic Studies, 4(2), 115-142.
- Zaman, M. (2012). Modern Islamic thought in a radical age: Religious authority and internal criticism. Cambridge University Press.
Disclaimer/Publisher’s Note: The statements, opinions and data contained in all publications are solely those of the individual author(s) and contributor(s) and not of MDPI and/or the editor(s). MDPI and/or the editor(s) disclaim responsibility for any injury to people or property resulting from any ideas, methods, instructions or products referred to in the content. |
© 2025 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).