David in Islam

David in Islam
David in Islam

The biblical David, who was, according to the Hebrew Bible, the second king of the United Kingdom of Israel and Judah, reigning c. 1010–970 BCE, is also venerated in Islam as a prophet and messenger of God, and as a righteous, divinely-anointed monarch of the ancient United Kingdom of Israel, which itself is revered in Islam. Additionally, Muslims also honor David for having received the divine revelation of the Psalms. Mentioned sixteen times in the Quran, David appears in the Islamic scripture as a link in the chain of prophets who preceded Muhammad. Although he is not usually considered one of the "law-giving" prophets, "he is far from a marginal figure" in Islamic thought. In later Islamic traditions, he is praised for his rigor in prayer and fasting. He is also presented as the prototypical just ruler and as a symbol of God's authority on earth, having been at once a king and a prophet. David is particularly important to the religious architecture of Islamic Jerusalem.

From *.wikipedia.org,
General Info
.
Male
Social Networks , Links
Interest
Loading Chart...
Relatives
Lists
    index: 1x 0.019701957702637s
fmsppl-page-output: 1x 0.016354084014893s
t_/pages/fms-person-json: 1x 0.016319036483765s
t_/common/header: 1x 0.0079350471496582s
t_/blocks/person-card-json: 1x 0.0078601837158203s
router_page: 1x 0.0027539730072021s
headline: 2x 0.0021641254425049s
t_/common/head: 1x 0.0009458065032959s
head-facts: 1x 0.00089907646179199s
t_/common/footer: 1x 0.00025296211242676s
t_/common/searcher-result: 1x 1.4066696166992E-5s
----- END OF DUMP (2026-04-14 18:58:04)  -----