Experience vs. Explanation: Jinn and Demons in Islam and the Desert Fathers as a Case Study in Spirituality
Abstract
1. Introduction: Spirituality as Springboard for Dialogue
2. A Similar Experience: Jinn and Demons as Encountered in the Desert
Encounters with Jinn
The place immediately was filled with the appearances of lions, bears, leopards, bulls, and serpents, asps, scorpions and wolves, and each of these moved in accordance with its form. Struck and wounded by them, Antony’s body was subject to yet more pain… but being in control of his thoughts and as if mocking them he said: “If there were some power among you, it would have been enough for only one of you to come”.
3. Different Interpretations: Demons and Jinn as Explained
3.1. Jinn Explained as Other
3.2. Demons Explained Away
4. Similar Experiences, Differing Explanations
Quantum physics and traditional societies teach us the world of mental meaning and that of physical reality are not separate. They flow into each other. This is what Hinduism refers to as the Vedanta, which is a state of non-duality, of awareness, achievement, and cosmic consciousness. In such a condition of alertness, the human knows and lives the absence of borders between the external powers of the universe and the internal powers of the psyche. He/she understands there is only one sentience common to both the Self (Atman) and the Source of All Things (Brahman).
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1 | The etymology of the term jinn is uncertain. However, in Arabic, the two letters jim and nun occur together; as in jinn, they convey the meaning of invisible, unseen, or hidden. While it is clearly related to the Arabic root janna, meaning ‘hidden’ or ‘covered’ and also referring to paradise, some authors have suggested that it could also be a loan word from the latin genius, or from the Aramaic gene, a word also based on a root meaning of ‘covered’ and used by some Aramaic Christians to denote pagan gods demoted to the class of demons. |
2 | Jinn are not ghosts, as killing one leaves a corpse (Smith 1969, p. 120). |
3 | The border between wild animals and the spirit world seems to have been a porous one, as the words for some classes of jinn also denote groups of wild animals. Smith suggests that this may reflect an earlier totemic stage (124–128). Henninger is critical of this interpretation (Henninger 1963, pp. 299–300). |
4 | Zbinden 1953, p. 76. There is a hadith that begins, “These privies are peopled by jinn and devils” (Robson 1963, p. 76). |
5 | That jinn also inhabited forests has led some authors to suggest that the jinn were simply the human inhabitants of the African forests. See Lane (1913, p. 43). |
6 | Cassian writes of demons who inhabit certain roads simply for the sport of mocking and laughing at passersby (Cassian 1959, XVII.32). |
7 | Athanasius (1980, p. 50). Ward quotes Abba Poemen as having said, “Everything that goes to excess comes from the demons” (1983, p. 185). |
8 | Several different chronologies for the Qur’an have been postulated. Neither traditional Muslim dating nor the usual European hypotheses (Noldeke, Weil) place any jinn material in the Medinan period. Only Bell considers 34:41 and 6:112 to be possibly early Medinan. |
9 | Fahd (1971, p. 177). 55:15 also speaks of the creation of the jinn from smokeless fire. Humans were created from clay (15:26–28) and angels from light. As smokeless fire is basically light, Eickmann suggests jinn could be classified as angels (Eickmann 1908), but this idea is nowhere substantiated, except perhaps in the differing Surahs on the nature of Iblis. In 38:76, Iblis identifies himself with the jinn by stating that he was created from fire, an identification confirmed in 18:50. However, Iblis is grouped with the angels in 2:24, 7:11, 15:32, 17:61, and 20:16. The constitution of the jinn remains a matter of conjecture. In a symposium on Islamic science in Pakistan, Dr. Safdar Jany Rajput suggested that the jinn must be made of methane, as methane produces a smokeless flame. The same article further suggests that the “white races” might just be jinn! (Hoodbhoy 1991, p. 144). |
10 | Also 46:29–32. The conversion of the jinn is attested to in several hadith as well; the Prophet is said to have claimed, “I have recited it to the jinn on the night they came to me and they responded better than you” (Robson 1963, p. 176; See also p. 97). |
11 | Many verses of the Qur’an associate Jinn with men. See Surahs 6:130, 7:38, 179; 17:88; 32:13; 41:25, 29; 55:33, 39, 56, 74; 72:5; 114:6. |
12 | With the exception of Surah 55 where it is twice mentioned that the maiden companions of those in the gardens of Paradise have been touched by neither man nor jinn (55:56, 74). |
13 | Fahd suggests that the use of both jinn and satan reflects the inclusion of two separate demonologies in the Qur’an, jinn representing indigenous Arabic thought while satans reflect the Judeo-Christian tradition (Fahd 1971, p. 186). |
14 | Martin suggests that the use of both Shayatin and Jinn in the Quran reflects two demonologies of differing origin. (Martin 1989, p. 357). |
15 | Leemhuis (1990, pp. 219–26). Leemhuis points out that such marriages were, in general, considered unadvisable. |
16 | Letter VI. The authenticity of Antony’s letters has been widely debated but is now generally accepted. For evidence of their authenticity, see Rubenson (1995, pp. 35–42). |
17 | See, for example, Mk 1:21–26, Mk 5:1–20, Mk 7:26, Mk 9:20- 21, Mt 8:28–34, Mt 15:21–28, Lk 4:31–37, Lk 8:26–39. In this last, the demons also possess a herd of swine, but only after they have been cast out of a man by Jesus. |
18 | Athanasius (1980, p. 47). Athanasius is probably referring to the common belief that demons were fallen angels. However, there was little consensus among early Christians as to the origin of the demons. The Originist view was that they were the souls that had fallen the furthest from God and that they could eventually return to unity with God and be saved. On First Principles, I.5.5. Justin considered the demons to be the offspring of rebellious angels of Genesis 6:2 and human women. He also suggests that they might be the soul of deceased humans. Apology, I.8. |
19 | Though demons are not mentioned in Benedict’s Rule, they do make a brief appearance in Gregory’s Life of Benedict. As with Athanasius’ treatment of Antony, Gregory portrays Benedict as a heroic warrior against the personified forces of evil. See Gregory the Great (1995, II.8–13). |
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Herzfeld, N.L. Experience vs. Explanation: Jinn and Demons in Islam and the Desert Fathers as a Case Study in Spirituality. Religions 2025, 16, 1114. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16091114
Herzfeld NL. Experience vs. Explanation: Jinn and Demons in Islam and the Desert Fathers as a Case Study in Spirituality. Religions. 2025; 16(9):1114. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16091114
Chicago/Turabian StyleHerzfeld, Noreen LuAnn. 2025. "Experience vs. Explanation: Jinn and Demons in Islam and the Desert Fathers as a Case Study in Spirituality" Religions 16, no. 9: 1114. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16091114
APA StyleHerzfeld, N. L. (2025). Experience vs. Explanation: Jinn and Demons in Islam and the Desert Fathers as a Case Study in Spirituality. Religions, 16(9), 1114. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16091114