
Mazooron Ke Huqooq Ka Tahafuz
The Blessings Of Saying Bismillah-ir-Rahman-ir-Rahim
There are many blessings and virtues of saying “Bismillah-ir-Rahman-ir-Rahim”. The following provides some of them from the Quran and hadith.
Bismillah – The First Verse of the Quran (Mushaf)
“Bismillah-ir-Rahman-ir-Rahim” is the first verse of the first chapter (Surah Al-Fatihah) of the Quran. The fact that the word of Allah, the Quran, starts with this first verse, alone signifies the importance of this verse and further emphasizes the need to start all our tasks in the name of Allah (God).
Amongst the many benefits that Sheikh Modudi states in hisQuranic Tafseer of this verse, here are some of them:
(Saying bismillah) allows one to restrain oneself from any misdeeds, since the habit of pronouncing the name of God is bound to make one wonder when about to commit some offense and how such an act can be reconciled with the saying of God’s holy name.
When a person begins something by pronouncing Allah’s (God’s) name (with sincerity in his heart), he will enjoy Allah’s support and succor; Allah will bless his efforts and protect him from the machinations and temptation of satan. For whenever man turns to Allah (God), Allah turns to him as well.
Starting with Bismillah
(In the name of Allah, the Most Gracious, the Most Merciful.)
When one says “Bismillaah” before starting anything, it means, “I start this action accompanied by the name of Allah or seeking help through the name of Allah, seeking blessing thereby. Allah is God, the beloved and worshipped, to Whom hearts turn in love, veneration, and obedience (worship). He is al-Rahman (the Most Gracious) Whose attribute is vast mercy; and al-Raheem (the Most Merciful)Who causes that mercy to reach His creation.” (Sheikh Muhammed Salih Al-Munajjid)
Hence this name (al-Rahmaan) often appears after the name Allah, as in the Qur’anic verse below:
“Say (O Muhammad): Invoke Allah or invoke the Most Gracious [al-Rahmaan] (Allah)” [Quran, Surah al-Isra’ 17:110]
Ibn Jareer (may Allah have mercy on him) said: “Allah, may He be exalted and His name sanctified, taught His Prophet Muhammad (S.A.W.S.) proper manners by teaching him to mention His most beautiful names before all his actions. He commanded him to mention these attributes before starting to do anything and made what He taught him a way for all people to follow before starting anything, words to be written at the beginning of their letters and books. The apparent meaning of these words indicates exactly what is meant by them, and it does not need to be spelled out.”
First Revelation of the Quran (“Read in the name of your lord”)
We also observe that the first verse revealed to the prophet(S.A.W.S.) was “Iqra’ bismi Rabbika” (Read(or recite) in the name of your Lord – [Surah al-‘Alaq 96:1). The verse commands the prophet (S.A.W.S.) to read “in the name of Allah).
Bismillah in Other Chapters of the Quran
With the exception of Surah At-Tawbah (9), all Surahs (chapters)start with Bismillah. Furthermore, Surah An-Naml in the Quran has another verse(number 30) that mentions Bismillah. The Quran states:
(29) She (Sheba / Saba) said: “O chiefs! Verily! Here is delivered to me a noble letter,
(30) “Verily! It is from (Prophet) Sulaiman (Solomon), and verily! It (reads): In the Name of Allah, the Most Beneficent, the MostMerciful;
Quran, Surah An-Naml (27:29-30)
The Story of ‘Bismillah’ and the hairdresser of the pharaoh’s daughter and her children
It was narrated that Ibn ‘Abbaas (may Allah be pleased with him) said: The Messenger of Allah (peace and blessings of Allah be upon him) said: “On the night on which I was taken on the Night Journey(Isra’), a beautiful fragrance came to me. I said: O Jibreel, what is this beautiful fragrance? He said: This is the fragrance of the hairdresser of Pharaoh’s daughter and her children. I said: What is their story? He said: Whilst she was combing the hair of Pharaoh’s daughter one day, the iron comb fell from her hand and she said, ‘Bismillaah (in the name of Allah).’ The daughter of Pharaoh said: ‘My father?’ She said:‘No. My Lord and the Lord of your father is Allah.’She said: ‘I will tell him about that.’ She said:‘Yes.’ So she told him and he summoned her and said: ‘O So and so, do you have a Lord other than me?’ She said: ‘Yes, my Lord, and your Lord is Allah.’ He ordered that a Baqarah(lit. “cow”) made of copper be heated up, and then he ordered that she and her children be thrown into it. She said: ‘I have a request to make of you.’ He said: ‘What is your request?’ She said: ‘I would like my bones and my children’s bones to be gathered together in one cloth and buried.’ He said: ‘This will be done for you.’ He ordered that her children be thrown into it in front of her, one by one, until they came to the last one who was an infant boy who was still being breastfed. It was as if she wavered because of him, but he said: ‘O mother, go ahead, for the punishment of this world is easier to bear than the punishment of the hereafter.’ So she went ahead.” Ibn ‘Abbaas(may Allah be pleased with him) said: Four infants spoke: ‘Eesa ibn Maryam (peace be upon him), the companion of Jurayj, the witness of Yoosuf and the son of the hairdresser of Pharaoh’s daughter.
Narrated by Imam Ahmad in al-Musnad (1/309),al-Tabaraani (12280), Ibn Hibbaan (2903), and al-Haakim (2/496).
The Guidance to say Bismillah according to Hadith
We also observe that the prophet (S.A.W.S.) taught us to say bismillah at the start of many tasks such as the following:
BISMILLAH AT THE BEGINNING OF ABLUTION (WUDU)
Bismillah is recommended at the beginning of ablution, for Imam Ahmad and the Sunan compilers recorded that Abu Hurayrah, Sa’id bin Zayd, and Abu Sa’id narrated from the Prophet (There is no valid ablution for he who did not mention Allah’s Name in it.) This Hadith is Hasan (good).
SAYING BISMILLAH BEFORE EATING AND DRINKING
Also, the Bismillah is recommended before eating, for Muslim recorded in his Sahih that the Messenger of Allah said to `Umar bin Abi Salamahwhile he was a child under his care, (Say Bismillah, eat with your right hand and eat from whatever is next to you.)
Some of the scholars stated that Bismillah before eating is obligatory.
The Prophet (S.A.W.S.) said: “When one of you eats some food, let him say Bismillah, and if he forgets to do so at the beginning, let him say Bismillah fi awwalihi wa aakhirihi (In the name of Allah at the beginning and end). Narrated by at-Tirmidhi, 1781; classed as saheeh by Shaykh al-Albaani (may Allah have mercy on him).
BISMILLAH FOR BELITTLING THE SHAYTAN(SATAN)
Imam Ahmad recorded in his Musnad, that a person who was riding behind the Prophet (S.A.W.S.) said, “The Prophet’s animal tripped, so I said, `Cursed Shaytan.’ The Prophet said, (Do not say, ‘Cursed Shaytan,’ for if you say these words, Satan becomes arrogant and says, ‘With my strength, I made him fall.’ When you say, ‘Bismillah,’ Satan will become as small as a fly.)
HALAL MEAT
Allah says in the Quran: “Eat not (O believers) of that (meat) on which Allah’s Name has not been pronounced (at the time of the slaughtering of the animal)” Quran (Surah Al-Anaam, 6:121)
And the Prophet (S.A.W.S.) said: “If the blood (of the slaughtered animal) flows and the name of Allah is mentioned, then eat.”
PERFORMING RUQYAH
The Prophet (S.A.W.S.) said, “There is no ruqyah(treatment from evils) except in the case of the evil eye or fever.”(al-Tirmidhi, Abu Dawood.) Angel Jibril (peace be upon him) used to do ruqyah for the Prophet (S.A.W.S.) and say, “Bismillahi arqeeka minkulli shayin yudheeka, min sharri kulli nafsin aw ‘aynin hasid Allaahuyashfeek, bismillahi arqeek (In the name of Allah I perform ruqyah for you, from everything that is harming you, from the evil of every soul or envious eye may Allah heal you, in the name of Allah I perform ruqyah for you).”
Conclusion
Let’s make it a point to bring “Bismillah” more into our lives and to start all our tasks in the name of Allah by saying “Bismillah-ir-Rahman-ir-Rahim”
Courtesy: IqraSense
Huzoor-e-Aqdas (Sallallahu Alaihi Wasallam) Kay Mubarak Ikhlaq

Huzoor-e-Aqdas (Sallallahu Alaihi Wasallam) Kay Mubarak Ikhlaq
Eat And Spend From Good (Alttayyibat)
[Sahih Muslim: Book 5 Kitab Al-Zakat, Number 2214] Abu Huraira (Radi Allah Anhu) reported Allah’s Messenger (sal-allahu-alleihi-wasallam) as saying: O people, Allah is Good and He therefore, accepts only that which is good. And Allah commanded the believers as He commanded the Messengers by saying:” O Messengers, eat of the good things, and do good deeds; verily I am aware of what you do”. And He said: ‘ O those who believe, eat of the good things that We gave you” He then made a mention of a person who travels widely, his hair disheveled and covered with dust. He lifts his hand towards the sky (and thus makes the supplication):” O Lord,0 Lord,” whereas his diet is unlawful, his drink is unlawful, and his clothes are unlawful and his nourishment is unlawful. How can then his supplication be accepted?
[Sahih Muslim: Book 5 Kitab Al-Zakat, Number 2211] Abu Huraira (Radi Allah Anhu) reported Allah’s Messenger (sal-allahu-alleihi-wasallam) as saying: If anyone gives as Sadaqa the equivalent of a date from that (earning) earned honestly, for Allah accepts that which is lawful, the Lord would accept it with His Right Hand, and even if it is a date, it would foster in the Hand of the lord, as one of you fosters his colt, till it becomes bigger than a mountain.
[2. Surah Al-Baqarah : Ayah 267] O you who believe! spend (benevolently) of the good things that you earn and or what We have brought forth for you out of the earth, and do not aim at what is bad that you may spend (in alms) of it, while you would not take it yourselves unless you have its price lowered, and know that Allah is Self-sufficient, Praiseworthy.
[2. Surah Al-Baqarah: Ayah 268] Shaitan threatens you with poverty and enjoins you to be niggardly, and Allah promises you forgiveness from Himself and abundance; and Allah is Ample-giving, Knowing.
Our Lord! grant us good in this world and good in the hereafter, and save us from the chastisement of the fire.
Buzurgan e Deen Ka Andaz Tafheem o Tarbiyat

Buzurgan e Deen Ka Andaz Tafheem o Tarbiyat
Aishah Bint Abu Bakr (May Allah Be Pleased With Her) The Teacher Of The Whole World
The life of Aishah (RA) is proof that a woman can be far more learned than men and that she can be a teacher of scholars and experts. Her life is also proof that a woman can exert influence over men and women and provide them with inspiration and leadership. Her life is also proof that the same woman can be totally feminine and be a source of pleasure, joy, and comfort to her husband.
She did not graduate from any university there were no universities as such in her day. But still, her utterances are studied in faculties of literature, her legal pronouncements are studied in colleges of law, and her life and works are studied and researched by students and teachers of Muslim history as they have been for over a thousand years.
The bulk of her vast treasure of knowledge was obtained while she was still quite young. In her early childhood, she was brought up by her father who was greatly liked and respected for he was a man of wide knowledge, gentle manners, and an agreeable presence. Moreover, he was the closest friend of the noble Prophet (SAW- may the peace and blessings of Allah be upon him) who was a frequent visitor to their home since the very early days of his mission.
In her youth, already known for her striking beauty and her formidable memory, she came under the loving care and attention of the Prophet (SAW) himself. As his wife and close companion, she acquired from him knowledge and insight such as no woman has ever acquired.
Aishah (RA) became the Prophet’s (SAW) wife in Makkah when she was most likely in the tenth year of her life but her wedding did not take place until the second year after the Hijrah when she was about fifteen years old. Before and after her wedding she maintained a natural jollity and innocence and did not seem at all overawed by the thought of being wedded to him who was the Messenger of God (SAW) whom all his companions (RA- may Allah be pleased with them all), including her own mother and father, treated with such love and reverence as they gave to no one else.
About her wedding, she related that shortly before she was to leave her parent’s house, she slipped out into the courtyard to play with a passing friend: “I was playing on a see-saw and my long streaming hair was disheveled,” she said. “They came and took me from my play and made me ready.”
They dressed her in a wedding dress made from fine red-striped cloth from Bahrain and then her mother took her to the newly-built house where some women of the Ansar were waiting outside the door. They greeted her with the words “For good and for happiness may all be well!” Then, in the presence of the smiling Prophet (SAW), a bowl of milk was brought. The Prophet (SAW) drank from it himself and offered it to Aishah (RA). She shyly declined it but when he insisted she did so and then offered the bowl to her sister Asma (RA) who was sitting beside her. Others also drank of it and that was as much as there was of the simple and solemn occasion of their wedding. There was no wedding feast.
Marriage to the Prophet (SAW) did not change her playful ways. Her young friends came regularly to visit her in her own apartment. “I would be playing with my dolls,” she said, “with the girls who were my friends, and the Prophet (SAW) would come in and they would slip out of the house and he would go out after them and bring them back, for he was pleased for my sake to have them there.” Sometimes he would say “Stay where you are” before they had time to leave, and would also join in their games. Aishah (RA) said: “One day, the Prophet (SAW) came in when I was playing with the dolls and he said: ‘O Aishah (RA), what game is this?’ ‘It is Solomon’s horses,’ I said and he laughed.” Sometimes as he came in he would screen himself with his cloak so as not to disturb Aishah (RA) and her friends.
Aishah’s (RA) early life in Madinah also had its more serious and anxious times. Once her father and two companions (RA – may Allah be pleased with them) who were staying with him fell ill with a dangerous fever which was common in Madinah at certain seasons. One morning Aishah (RA) went to visit him and was dismayed to find the three men lying completely weak and exhausted. She asked her father how he was and he answered her in verse but she did not understand what he was saying. The two others also answered her with lines of poetry that seemed to her to be nothing but unintelligible babbling. She was deeply troubled and went home to the Prophet (SAW) saying:
“They are raving, out of their minds, through the pangs of the fever.” The Prophet (SAW) asked what they had said and was somewhat reassured when she repeated almost word for word the lines they had uttered which made sense although she did not fully understand them then. This was a demonstration of the great retentive power of her memory which as the years went by was to preserve so many of the priceless sayings of the Prophet (SAW).
Of the Prophet’s (SAW) wives (RA- may Allah be pleased with them all) in Madinah, it was clear that it was Aishah (RA) that he loved most. From time to time, one or the other of his companions would ask:
“O Messenger of God (SAW), whom do you love most in the world?” He did not always give the same answer to this question for he felt great love for many for his daughters and their children, for Abu Bakr (RA- may Allah be pleased with him) for Ali (RA), for Zayd (RA) and his son Usamah (RA). But of his wives (RA) the only one he named in this connection was Aishah (RA). She too loved him greatly in return and often would seek reassurance from him that he loved her. Once she asked him: “How is your love for me?”
“Like the rope’s knot,” he replied meaning that it was strong and secure. And time after time thereafter, she would ask him: “How is the knot?” and he would reply: “Ala haaliha in the same condition.”
As she loved the Prophet (SAW) so was her love a jealous love and she could not bear the thought that the Prophet’s (SAW) attention should be given to others more than seemed enough to her. She asked him:
“O Messenger of God (SAW), tell me of yourself. If you were between the two slopes of a valley, one of which had not been grazed whereas the other had been grazed, on which would you pasture your flocks?”
“On that which had not been grazed,” replied the Prophet (SAW). “Even so,” she said, “and I am not as any other of your wives (RA). “Everyone of them had a husband before you, except myself.” The Prophet (SAW) smiled and said nothing. Of her jealousy, Aishah (RA) would say in later years:
“I was not, jealous of any other wife of the Prophet (SAW) as I was jealous of Khadijah (RA), because of his constant mentioning of her and because God had commanded him to give her good tidings of a mansion in Paradise of precious stones. And whenever he sacrificed a sheep he would send a fair portion of it to those who had been her close friends. Many a time I said to him: “It is as if there had never been any other woman in the world except Khadijah (RA).”
Once, when Aishah (RA) complained and asked why he spoke so highly of “an old Quraysh woman” i.e. Khadijah (RA), the Prophet (SAW) was hurt and said: “She was the wife who believed in me when others rejected me. When people accused me of lies, she affirmed my truthfulness. When I stood forsaken, she spent her wealth to lighten the burden of my sorrow.”
Despite her feelings of jealousy which nonetheless were not of a destructive kind, Aishah (RA) was really a generous soul and a patient one. She bore with the rest of the Prophet’s (SAW) household poverty and hunger which often lasted for long periods. For days on end, no fire would be lit in the sparsely furnished house of the Prophet for cooking or baking bread and they would live merely on dates and water. Poverty did not cause her distress or humiliation; self-sufficiency when it did come did not corrupt her style of life.
Once the Prophet (SAW) stayed away from his wives for a month because they had distressed him by asking of him that which he did not have. This was after the Khaybar expedition when an increase of riches whetted the appetite for presents. Returning from his self-imposed retreat, he went first to Aishah’s (RA) apartment. She was delighted to see him but he said he had received Revelation which required him to put two options before her. He then recited the verses:
“O Prophet! Say to your wives: If you desire the life of this world and its adornments, then come and I will bestow its goods upon you, and I will release you with a fair release (divorce). But if you desire God and His Messenger and the abode of the Hereafter, then verily God has laid in store for you an immense reward for such as you who do good.”
Aishah’s (ra) reply was: “Indeed I desire God and His Messenger (SAW) and the abode of the Hereafter,” and her response was followed by all the others.
She stuck to her choice both during the lifetime of the Prophet (SAW) and afterward. Later when the Muslims were favored with enormous riches, she was given a gift of one hundred thousand dirhams. She was fasting when she received the money and she distributed the entire amount to the poor and the needy even though she had no provisions in her house. Shortly after, a maidservant said to her: “Could you buy meat for a dirham with which to break your fast?”
“If I had remembered, I would have done so,” she said. The Prophet’s (SAW) affection for Aishah (RA) remained to the last. During his final illness, it was to Aishah’s (RA) apartment that he went at the suggestion of his wives (RA). For much of the time he lay there on a couch with his head resting on her breast or on her lap. She it was who took a toothstick from her brother, chewed upon it to soften it, and gave it to the Prophet (SAW). Despite his weakness, he rubbed his teeth with it vigorously. Not long afterward, he lost consciousness and Aishah (RA) thought it was the onset of death, but after an hour he opened his eyes.
Aishah (RA) it is who has preserved for us these dying moments of the most honored of God’s creation, His beloved Messenger (SAW) may He shower His choicest blessings on him.
When he opened his eyes again, Aishah (RA) remembered Iris having said to her: “No Prophet is taken by death until he has been shown his place in Paradise and then offered the choice, to live or die.”
“He will not now choose us,” she said to herself. Then she heard him murmur: “With the supreme communion in Paradise, with those upon whom God has showered His favor, the Prophets, the martyrs, and the righteous…” Again she heard him murmur: “O Lord, with the supreme communion,” and these were the last words she heard him speak. Gradually his head grew heavier upon her breast, until others in the room began to cry, and Aishah (RA) laid his head on a pillow and joined them in crying.
On the floor of Aishah’s (RA) room near the couch where he was lying, a grave was dug which was buried the Seal of the Prophets (SAW) amid much bewilderment and great sorrow.
Aishah (RA) lived on for almost fifty years after the passing away of the Prophet (SAW). She had been his wife for a decade. Much of this time was spent in learning and acquiring knowledge of the two most important sources of God’s guidance, the Quran and the Sunnah of His Prophet (SAW). Aishah (RA) was one of three wives (the other two being Hafsah (RA) and Umm Salamah (RA) who memorized the Revelation (the Quran). Like Hafsah (RA), she had her own script of the Quran written after the Prophet (SAW) had died.
So far as the Ahadith or sayings of the Prophet (SAW) are concerned, Aishah (RA) is one of four persons (the others being Abu Hurayrah (RA), Abdullah ibn Umar (RA), and Anas ibn Malik (RA) who transmitted more than two thousand sayings. Many of these pertain to some of the most intimate aspects of personal behavior which only someone in Aishah’s (RA) position could have learned. What is most important is that her knowledge of hadith was passed on in written form by at least three persons including her nephew Urwah (RA) who became one of the greatest scholars among the generation after the Companions (RA- may Allah be pleased with them all).
Many of the learned companions of the Prophet (SAW) and their followers benefitted from Aishah’s (RA) knowledge. Abu Musa al-Ashari once said: “If we companions (RA – may Allah be pleased with them all) of the Messenger of God (SAW) had any difficulty on a matter, we asked Aishah (ra) about it.”
Her nephew Urwah (RA) asserts that she was proficient not only in fiqh (Islamic law) but also in medicine (tibb) and poetry. Many of the senior companions (RA) of the Prophet (SAW) came to her to ask for advice concerning questions of inheritance which required a highly skilled mathematical mind. Scholars regard her as one of the earliest fuqaha (Islamic jurists) of Islam along with persons like Umar ibn al-Khattab (RA), Ali (RA), and Abdullah ibn Abbas (RA). The Prophet (SAW) referring to her extensive knowledge of Islam is reported to have said: “Learn a portion of your religion (din) from this red-colored lady.” “Humayra” meaning “Red-coloured” was an epithet given to Aishah (RA) by the Prophet (SAW).
Aishah (RA) not only possessed great knowledge but took an active part in education and social reform. As a teacher she had a clear and persuasive manner of speech and her power of oratory has been described in superlative terms by al-Ahnaf who said: “I have heard speeches of Abu Bakr and Umar, Uthman, and Ali (RA- may Allah be pleased with them all) and the Khulafa up to this day, but I have not heard speech more persuasive and more beautiful from the mouth of any person than from the mouth of Aishah (RA).”
Men and women came from far and wide to benefit from her knowledge. The number of women is said to have been greater than that of men. Besides answering inquiries, she took boys and girls, some of them orphans, into her custody and trained them under her care and guidance. This was in addition to her relatives who received instruction from her. Her house thus became a school and an academy.
Some of her students were outstanding. We have already mentioned her nephew Urwah (RA) as a distinguished reporter of hadith. Among her women, pupils is the name Umrah bint Abdur Rahman (RA). She is regarded by scholars as one of the trustworthy narrators of hadith and is said to have acted as Aishah’s secretary receiving and replying to letters addressed to her. The example of Aishah in promoting education and in particular the education of Muslim women in the laws and teachings of Islam is one which needs to be followed.
After Khadijah al-Kubra (the Great) and Fatimah az-Zahra (the Resplendent), Aishah as-Siddiqah (the one who affirms the Truth) is regarded as the best woman in Islam. Because of the strength of her personality, she was a leader in every field in knowledge, in society, in politics, and in war. She died in the year 58 AH in the month of Ramadan and as she instructed, was buried in the Jannat al-Baqi in the City of Light, beside other companions of the Prophet.
Aib Joi, Tana Denay Aur Chugli Ki Muzammat

Aib Joi, Tana Denay Aur Chugli Ki Muzammat
Love For God In Islam – The Highest Attribute Of Spiritual Attainment
In Islam fear of God, obedience to God, and sacrificing for God’s cause are stages (that should be maintained) on the spiritual path to something better; love for God.
There are many reasons people become Muslim. Among those reasons are feelings of the need to be a part of something better than what they have, believing that Islam holds more truth than other beliefs, or rejecting something once believed. Attributes that are obtained by the Muslims are fear of God and love for God. The last is the highest reason to worship. Yet obtaining Love for God is a process. It is something to be achieved. One does not simply wake up loving God. But once the love of God is had it is like no other type of love that has been experienced.
Those Who Love God
Love of God causes one to enjoy life more fully. It causes the Muslims to realize that God is the only non-changing reality. He is the Sure Reality and Truth (al-haqq).
“Yet there are men who take (for worship) others besides Allah, as equal (with Allah): They love them as they should love Allah. But those of Faith are overflowing in their love for Allah.” (Quran 2:165)
Hence, faith is first mentioned as a necessary component of achieving Love for God. It is misplaced when feelings for created things, or beings, cause a diversion from focusing on the Conscious Reality that created all. The Conscious Reality that sustains all. Faith is the decision of the believer to worship that which is unseen and un-seeable in this life.
Developing Love for God
Developing love for God begins with the study of the divine. Science now tells us that there is a component in the brain that creates within humans the desire to believe in a higher power. When we intentionally work to develop that part of our being, new paths are created and opened within the person. The Muslim begins to feel the need to worship (Ibadda), pray (salat), and remember (Dhikr – a form of meditation) God. God begins to take precedence over the Muslim’s life. She/He begins to look at God with reverence and becomes a seeker on the path after God’s Greatness.
“Those that turn (to Allah) in repentance; that serve Him, and praise Him; that wander in devotion to the cause of Allah,: that bow down and prostrate themselves in prayer; that enjoin good and forbid evil; and observe the limit set by Allah;- (These do rejoice). So proclaim the glad tidings to the Believers”. (Quran 9:112)
Attributes of Those Who Love God
Love of God brings about the best in the individual whose actions benefit those around them. Out of love for God the Muslim will do everything, from waking moment to sleep, courageously battling lower desires to please her/his lord. Sacrificing what she/he is in possession of for the sake of the Beloved.
“It is not righteousness that ye turn your faces Towards east or West, but it is righteousness- to believe in Allah and the Last Day, and the Angels, and the Book, and the Messengers; to spend of your substance, out of love for Him, for your kin, for orphans, for the needy, for the wayfarer, for those who ask, and for the ransom of slaves; to be steadfast in prayer, and practice regular charity; to fulfill the contracts which ye have made; and to be firm and patient, in pain (or suffering) and adversity, and throughout all periods of panic. Such are the people of truth, the Allah-fearing.” (Quran 2:177)
Example of One Who Loves God
God rewards those who work to develop a love for Him and who yearn for their meeting with Him. The Quran gives an example of one who strives and struggles through life while awaiting the final meeting with God. One who struggles to deal with the twists and turns that daily life presents. One who strives to keep his family intact while increasing their spiritual growth. In the Father of John (Yahya) the Baptist there is the following example of one pleading to his Lord out of Love in the midst of affliction and adversity.
So We listened to him: and We granted him Yahya: We cured his wife’s (Barrenness) for him. These (three) were ever quick in emulation of good works; they used to call on Us with love and reverence and humble themselves before Us. (Quran 21:90)
When afflicted with pain, sorrow, and adversity, the Muslim turns to God with Love.
Khalil Green has obtained a bachelor’s Degree with Departmental Honors in Religious Studies from Washburn University in Topeka, Kansas. His focus was, and remains, on Islamic and mystic traditions. He has held the title of Imam for the State of Kansas as its first Muslim Chaplain in a correctional institution.
Ehtram Aur Shafqat Kay Ahkam

Ehtram Aur Shafqat Kay Ahkam
Islam Is A Code Of Life
1. Spiritual Life
Islamic prescription: Prayer, fasting, charity giving, pilgrimage, love for God and His Messenger, love for truth and humanity for the sake of God, hope and trust in God at all times, and doing good for the sake of God.
2. Intellectual Life
Islamic prescription: True knowledge based on clear proofs and indisputable evidence acquired by experience or experiment or by both. The Quran points to the rich sources of knowledge in the whole universe.
Islam demands faith in God on the basis of knowledge and research and leaves wide open all fields of thought before the intellect penetrates as far as it can reach.
3. Personal Life
Islamic prescription: Purity and cleanliness, a healthy diet, proper clothing, proper behavior, and good healthy sexual relations within marriage.
4. Family Life
Islamic prescription: A family is a human social group whose members are bound together by the bond of blood ties and/or marital relationship and nothing else (adoption, mutual alliance, common law, trial marriage. . . etc.)
Marriage is a religious duty on all who are capable of meeting its responsibilities. Each member of the family has rights and obligations.
5. Social Life
Islamic prescription: Man is ordained by God to extend his utmost help and kindness to other family members, relations, servants, and neighbors. No superiority on account of class, color, origin, or wealth.
Humanity represents one family springing from one and the same father and mother. The unity of humanity is not only in its origin but also in its ultimate aims.
6. Economical Life
Islamic prescription: Earning one’s living through decent labor is not only a duty but a great virtue as well. Earning is man’s private possession. The individual is responsible for the prosperity of the state and the state is responsible for the security of the individual.
The Islamic economic system is not based on arithmetical calculations alone but also on morals and principles.
Man comes into this world empty-handed and departs empty-handed. The real owner of things is God alone. Man is simply a trustee.
7. Political Life
Islamic prescription: The sovereignty in the Islamic State belongs to God; the people exercise it by trusting Him to enforce His laws.
The ruler is only an acting executive chosen by the people to serve them according to God’s law. The State is to administer justice and provide security for all citizens.
Rulers and administrators must be chosen from the best-qualified citizens. If an administration betrays the trust of God and the people, it has to be replaced.
Non-Muslims can administer their personal life of marriage, divorce, food, and inheritance according to Islamic law or to their own religious teachings.
They may pay Zakah (Islamic tax) or a different tax “Tributes” “Jizyah”. They are entitled to full protection and security of the state including freedom of religion.
8. International Life
Islamic prescription: Man has a common origin, human status, and aim. Other people’s interests and rights to life, honor, and property are respected as long as the rights of Muslims are intact. Transgression is forbidden.
War is only justified if state security is endangered. During war destruction of crops, animals, and homes, killing non-fighting women, children, and aged people is forbidden.

