7 Names Of Shaitan Page

Da’si works through people . Rayan’s best friend mocked him: “Oh, look at the saint. Did you get a halo?” His mother said, “You’re becoming an extremist.” A stranger online called him a “show-off.”

Rayan almost became a judge. But he recalled the Hadith: “None of you truly believes until he wants for his brother what he wants for himself.” He realized A‘war makes you see the splinter in your brother’s eye while ignoring the log in your own. When Rayan controlled his tongue, Tana’ash (The One who commands the unlawful) attacked. This Shaitan does not whisper doubts; he commands desires.

Rayan almost surrendered. But he remembered a verse: “Do not despair of the mercy of Allah” (39:53). He realized that the first and greatest name of Shaitan is not sin, but the belief that sin is greater than God’s mercy. Defeated but not destroyed, Iblis transformed into his second name: Zalzul (The Shaking One). His job is not to make you evil, but busy. 7 names of shaitan

The next day, as Rayan sat to read the Qur’an, his phone buzzed. Then the doorbell rang. Then he remembered he had to organize his bookshelf. Hours passed. He had done many good things—cleaning, replying to friends, organizing—but he had not remembered God once.

One night, he saw a vision. The seven Shaitans stood before him, merging into one form—the original Iblis. Da’si works through people

“It’s just one glance. It’s just a white lie. It’s just interest on a loan for a house—everyone does it.”

At that moment, a cold whisper entered his heart. It did not command him to sin. It was more subtle. It was himself in his original form—the Despairer . But he recalled the Hadith: “None of you

Rayan was newly married. Al-Khanzab tried to turn his marital bed into a battlefield of shame and lust. But Rayan remembered the Sunnah: to say “Bismillah” before intimacy and to make ghusl without gossip. Al-Khanzab retreated, hissing, “You have no poetry in your passion.” But Rayan knew: sanctity is greater than savagery. Rayan did not defeat the seven names in a single battle. He learned that Iblis is the despair, Zalzul the distraction, Al-Waswas the doubt, Da’si the social crushing, A‘war the hypocritical judgment, Tana’ash the slippery boundary, and Al-Khanzab the profanation of the sacred.

“Did you actually wash your nose properly in wudu? Did you say ‘Bismillah’? Did you just see a speck of dust move? Your prayer is invalid. You’re a hypocrite. Start over. Start over again.”