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Living \r\n the Quran

Al-Ma'idah \r\n (The Table)
\r\n Chapter 5: Verse 119

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The \r\n True Believer
\r\n God will say: "This is a day on which \r\n the truthful will profit from their truth: theirs are gardens, with rivers \r\n flowing beneath,- their eternal Home: God well-pleased with them, and \r\n they with God: That is the great salvation, (the fulfilment of all desires).

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A strong faith unveils itself \r\n in strong hardships.

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The believer is not one \r\n who performs the ordained religious duties superficially and avoids what \r\n is forbidden only, but he is one whose faith is absolute, \r\n with no objection whatsoever arising in his heart and no obsession dwelling \r\n in his soul. The more hardships he faces, \r\n the more his faith grows and the more his submission strengthens.

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He could pray and not see \r\n a trace of an answer to his prayers, yet he does not change \r\n because he knows that he is owned by One who deals with him in whatever \r\n way He chooses. For if an objection was to arise in his heart, he then \r\n forsakes the role of the slave and takes on the role of a protester such \r\n as that of Iblees (the devil).

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The Prophets were subjected to \r\n hardships.

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A believer sees in Yahya, son of Zakariyya, a fine example. \r\n He was killed by a tyrant who confronted him, yet He, who made him a prophet, \r\n did not intervene nor defend him.

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Similarly all the tyranny that befell the prophets and \r\n the believers was not held back from them. If one goes to think that Divinity \r\n cannot answer for them then one is an unbeliever. However if one believes \r\n that Divinity can answer for them but chooses not to, and that God can \r\n make the believers go hungry while infidels are full and inflict the believers \r\n with sickness and grant the infidels health, then one is only left with \r\n submission to the Owner even when tormented \r\n or scorched.

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Jacob cried for eighty years when Joseph son of Jacob \r\n (peace be upon him) was gone, he never gave up; all he said when his other \r\n son was gone too is “May God bring all of them back to me”.

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Moses (peace be upon him) prayed against Pharaoh, who \r\n killed children and crucified magicians and cut their hands, for 40 years \r\n before he was answered.

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In such submission the intensity \r\n of one’s strong faith is manifested not in mere rak`at (bowings \r\n in prayer).

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So many of those who glorify Qadar were afflicted with \r\n tribulations and this did not increase them except in submission and pleasure \r\n (with their Lord), and there lies an explanation of the meaning of His \r\n words, "Allah is pleased with them".

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Al-Hasan Al-Basree said: people \r\n are the same in health but when hardship befalls they show distinction.

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Source:
\r\n “Sayd \r\n ul-Khatir” – Ibn ul Jawzee, p. 364

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\r\n Understanding the Prophet's Life

Feelings \r\n of Others

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Bukhari relates on the authority of Thabit ibn Dhahhak, \r\n who was one of those who took the famous oath of allegiance under the \r\n Tree, that the Prophet, peace be upon him, said: "... if \r\n somebody curses a believer then his sin will be as if he had murdered \r\n him; and whoever accuses a believer of kufr (deliberate disbelief), then \r\n it is as if he had killed him."

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A number of basic manners and primary obligations in Islam \r\n stem from this very principle of refraining from injuring the feelings \r\n of others. Keeping one's tongue from slander and detraction, that is, \r\n from inventing faults about a person or simply telling the truth about \r\n another's faults, is equally important. These two are major public sins, \r\n and undermine the whole society.

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Bukhari relates from Human who reports Hudhaifa as saying: \r\n "I heard the Prophet saying that a \r\n detractor (one who carries true tales with an evil intention of poisoning \r\n relations) will not enter Paradise."

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Source:
\r\n "Freedom and Responsibility" - Hasan al-Anani, p 61, 62

Cool \r\n Concepts!
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Sunnah - An integral source \r\n of Shariah

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In today’s day and age, it is not rare to find \r\n a Muslim (or one who claims to be one), who might accept the Quran \r\n as a source of divine guidance, yet have doubts about the status of \r\n the Sunnah. And it is this confusion that leads these people away \r\n from the Quranic message, itself. For, we have to realize that a \r\n text can only come alive when someone lives by that text, \r\n to its fullest with the proper understanding of it. Now since this \r\n text (the Quran) is of divine origin, who better to exemplify its \r\n message than the bearer of the message himself. \r\n The Prophet Muhammad (may Allah bless him) was not a mere \r\n postman who delivered the message and disappeared. \r\n Acting under divine guidance, he not only delivered the message but \r\n launched a movement. He changed man \r\n and society; founded a community, established a state; and spent every \r\n moment of his Prophethood in guiding, directing and leading his followers. \r\n His life example of living by God’s guidance, consisting of \r\n whatever he did or said or approved, is the Sunnah. The authority \r\n of the Sunnah is firmly rooted in the Quran and in the historically \r\n continuous consensus of the Muslim Ummah.

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The explicit statements in the Quran in this respect \r\n are many.

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    Every Prophet was \r\n sent to be obeyed (al-Nisa 4:64).
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    The Prophet Muhammad \r\n is the last and perfect model (Al Ahjab 33:21, 40). \r\n
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    To obey him is to \r\n obey God (al Nisa 4:80).
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    To follow and obey \r\n the Prophet is the only way one can love his God and be loved by \r\n Him and have one's sins forgiven (Ale-'Imran 3: \r\n 31-32).
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    All matters which \r\n cause differences or disputes are to be referred to God and His \r\n Prophet as the final authority (al-Nisa' 4: 59). \r\n
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    No one can be truly \r\n a believer unless he accepts the Prophet as the final judge in all \r\n affairs and submits to his decisions, willingly and free from all \r\n misgivings (al-Nisa' 4: 65).
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    The Prophet has \r\n the authority to permit and prohibit (al-A'raf 7: \r\n 157).
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    And, finally, whatever \r\n the Prophet gives must be taken; whatever he forbids, must be avoided \r\n (al-Hashr 59: 7).
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Source:
\r\n "Shariah \r\n - The Way to God" - Khurram Murad, Pg 10

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