بِسْمِ اللهِ الرَّحْمنِ الرَّحِيم
Among the beautiful names of Allah is al-Samīʿ, the All-Hearing, a name through which He tells us who He is and establishes the nature of our relationship with Him. Just as we naturally feel close to those who truly listen to us and feel distant from those who neglect us, Allah invites us to speak to Him, assuring us that He hears both what is on our tongues and what lies hidden in our hearts. This reassurance is evident in the story of Mūsā and Hārūn عليهما السلام, who feared confronting Pharaoh and pleaded, “Our Lord, indeed we are afraid that he will hasten [punishment] against us or that he will transgress” (Qur'an 20:45), to which Allah responded, “Fear not. Indeed, I am with you both; I hear and I see” (Qur'an 20:46). The Prophet ﷺ likewise instilled this teaching in his Companions when, during a journey, they raised their voices in exaltation, and he said, “O people, be gentle with yourselves. You are not calling upon One who is deaf or absent; rather, you are calling upon One who hears, sees, and is very near.”
The Arabic root of al-Samīʿ, sīn-mīm-ʿayn, carries the meanings of hearing, listening, paying attention, and accepting. From this, two main meanings emerge: that Allah listens, and that He responds to what He hears. Regarding His listening, Allah hears everything, including our whispers and silent pleas, for secret utterances are no different to Him than public ones. Al-Ghazālī explains that al-Samīʿ hears even that which is subtler than whispers or secrets, and Allah affirms, “Surely Allah knows best what is hidden in the heart” (Qur'an 5:7). Ibn al-Qayyim explains that Allah hears every single person without one voice distracting Him from another, and He understands all languages and all needs—a source of reassurance for those who worry whether Allah understands their struggles or whether He only listens to the most pious. This is why al-Samīʿ is often paired with al-ʿAlīm (the All-Knowing), comforting us that He both hears and knows what we endure.
The second meaning, acceptance and response, is illustrated by Zakarīyā عليه السلام, who “called to his Lord [with] a private supplication” (Qur'an 19:3), and Allah responded, giving him glad tidings of Yaḥyā. This meaning is embedded in our prayer, for when we rise from rukūʿ we say, “Allah hears those who praise Him,” which implies both awareness and action. We then declare, “Our Lord, to You is all praise,” entering the realm of those who praise Him, and are given the opportunity to supplicate in prostration, for the Prophet ﷺ said, “The servant is closest to his Lord during prostration, so increase your supplications therein.” The hadith scholar Abū Sulaymān al-Khaṭṭābī (d. 388 AH) noted that hearing can signify acceptance, as in the Prophet's ﷺ supplication seeking refuge “from a prayer that is not heard”—meaning a prayer left unanswered. This name is also paired with al-Qarīb (the Near One), and the generosity of al-Karīm means Allah may respond even to hopes never uttered, as He did for Yūnus عليه السلام, who cried out from the darkness of the whale's belly and was saved: “We answered him and saved him from distress” (Qur'an 21:88).
Some mistakenly refrain from asking Allah because He already knows their hearts, yet this contradicts His command, “Call upon Me, I will respond to you” (Qur'an 40:60), and the words of the Prophet ﷺ, “Duʿāʾ is the essence of worship.” Supplication expresses need and acknowledges Allah's names and attributes, while withholding it may denote pride or fall into a trick of Satan. The Prophet ﷺ said, “Whoever is afflicted by a pressing need and complains to people, his need will never be satisfied. But whoever is afflicted by a pressing need and complains to Allah, Allah will provide for him sooner or later.” Asking also allows us to recognize the Giver, and some answers are deferred to Paradise.
The name al-Samīʿ appears forty-five times in the Qur'an, paired with al-ʿAlīm thirty-two times and with al-Baṣīr ten times. Paired with al-Baṣīr, it indicates the comprehensiveness of Allah's awareness, as He reassured Mūsā and Hārūn عليهما السلام, “I am with you both, hearing and seeing everything” (Qur'an 20:46), and as Ibrāhīm عليه السلام rebuked idol-worship, asking his father, “why do you worship that which does not hear and does not see” (Qur'an 19:42). This awareness should also make us vigilant over our speech and actions. Paired with al-ʿAlīm, it teaches that Allah hears, responds, and knows what is best, as with Yūsuf عليه السلام, whose plea to be spared temptation was answered when Allah “averted from him their plan” (Qur'an 12:34), even though the path involved imprisonment that ultimately led to his elevation. Likewise, the wife of ʿImrān addressed Allah as “the All-Hearing, All-Knowing,” yet received a daughter rather than the son she desired, teaching that what we want is not always what we need. A delayed answer is not an unanswered one, and the Prophet ﷺ urged, “Call upon Allah while being certain that He will answer.”
Allah's hearing is utterly distinguished, for “There is nothing like Him: He is the All-Hearing, the All-Seeing” (Qur'an 42:11). Abū al-Qāsim al-Isfahānī (d. 535 AH) contrasted the limited, temporary hearing of man with the eternal, comprehensive hearing of Allah, who hears all His creation simultaneously in every language. This comprehensiveness was demonstrated when Khawlah bint Thaʿlabah disputed with the Prophet ﷺ concerning her husband, and Allah revealed, “Allah has heard the words of the woman who disputed with you” (Qur'an 58:1); ʿĀʾishah رضي الله عنها, though present in the same house, could not hear what was said. Allah hears the plotters and slanderers, warning that everything is recorded and that ears, eyes, and skins will testify on the Day of Judgment (Qur'an 41:20-22). This name comforted the Prophet ﷺ after his rejection at Ṭāʾif, when the angel of the mountains conveyed that “Allah, the Exalted, heard what your people said to you,” and it consoled ʿĀʾishah رضي الله عنها during the slander of al-ifk, from which Allah exonerated her.
Because Allah hears all, we must train our tongues toward what He loves and guard against evil speech, for “Not a word does he utter, but there is a watcher by him ready to record it” (Qur'an 50:18). The Prophet ﷺ warned that most sins emanate from the tongue and instructed, “Whoever believes in Allah and the Last Day should say that which is good or keep silent,” and “Whoever remains silent has been saved.” Allah forbids suspicion, spying, and backbiting (Qur'an 49:12), and warns against seeking to be heard for show. Likewise, we should use the gift of hearing well, avoiding backbiting and slander, for Imam al-Nawawi held that one who hears backbiting is obliged to forbid it where no harm is feared, and Allah praises those “who turn away from ill speech” (Qur'an 23:3).
The servants of al-Samīʿ manifest certain qualities: they hear and obey, giving precedence to revelation, saying “We hear and obey” (Qur'an 2:285) rather than resembling those who said “We heard” without listening; they become good listeners toward others, for the Prophet ﷺ said the most beloved deed to Allah is making a Muslim happy or removing his trouble; and they supplicate using this name, as the Prophet ﷺ frequently invoked, “In the Name of Allah, with Whose Name nothing is harmed... and He is the All-Hearing, the All-Knowing,” and as we seek refuge from Satan in “Allah, the Hearing, the Knowing” (Qur'an 41:36). We are also commanded to “say what is best” (Qur'an 17:53), and Shaykh ʿAbdur-Raḥmān al-Saʿdī (d. 1373 AH) explained that good speech leads to good manners and righteous deeds. Ultimately, the name al-Samīʿ inspires the three essentials of worship—love, fear, and hope—for we love the One who listens, fear displeasing the One from whom nothing is hidden, and hope in the One who hears and accepts our prayers. So wherever you are, speak to Him in your lowest voice, certain that no one hears but al-Samīʿ, the Near One, who has not left your difficulty unnoticed.