Quran, Culture And Civilization

Quran, Culture And Civilization

The Five fold Model of Foresight-Based Education in Islamic Civilization: A Qur’anic and Hadith-Based Reinterpretation of Civilizational Education

Authors
1 Assistant Professor, Department of Islamic Education, Farhangian University, Tehran, Iran
2 Associate Professor, Department of Quranic and Hadith Sciences, Faculty of Theology and Islamic Knowledge, Ilam University.
10.22034/jksl.2026.541716.1499
Abstract
In the cultural and civilizational framework of Islam, the education of children transcends a mere familial duty and represents a strategic and civilization-building mission designed to nurture a generation that is responsible, foresighted, and committed to divine and social values. The Holy Qur’an, emphasizing concepts such as ʿāqibat-andīshī (foresight), tadbīr (prudence), ḥilm (forbearance), and naẓar fī al-ʿawāqib (reflection on consequences), outlines a strategic framework for education that renders the individual accountable not only for personal destiny but also for the collective future of the community and the ummah.



Within this paradigm, ʿāqibat-andīshī—defined as conscious reflection on the long-term consequences of actions and decisions for future generations—functions as the strategic intelligence of Islamic civilization and is institutionalized within the family, educational, and social structures. The teachings of the Ahl al-Bayt (peace be upon them), focusing on knowledge, livelihood management, life skills, and cultural testament, present five key approaches to foresight-oriented education: knowledge-based, skill-based, economically prudent, model-based, and testament-based formation. Each of these pillars, grounded in Qur’anic and prophetic sources, not only addresses individual needs but also cultivates the “civilizational human” — one endowed with insight, resilience, and agency amid contemporary challenges such as generational disruption, identity crisis, and the dominance of trivial technologies.



Employing a descriptive–analytical method and primary Qur’anic–hadithic sources, this study argues that foresight-oriented education in Islam constitutes a purposeful, meaning-centered system integrating material and spiritual dimensions. It concludes that education, within the Qur’anic worldview, is not merely personal cultivation but the dynamic engine of civilization itself.
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Articles in Press, Accepted Manuscript
Available Online from 20 May 2026

  • Receive Date 27 August 2025
  • Revise Date 17 December 2025
  • Accept Date 22 February 2026
  • Publish Date 20 May 2026