Showing posts with label righteous deeds. Show all posts
Showing posts with label righteous deeds. Show all posts

Monday, 11 February 2013

10 January 2013


Summary
Lives of the Prophets:
We study the Lives of the Prophets because:
- Allah commanded the Prophet* to tell these stories
- So we can reflect on these
- We should follow their advice (as role models)
- So we learn to love them
Nabi (plural Ambiya) are Prophets from Allah (124,000)
Rasool (plural Musul) are special Prophets that have also been given a Law for people to follow
Everything was written down by Allah 50,000 years before the creation of the Heavens and Earth

Main Topic: Short video reminder on Surah al-Asr
Allah says:
- Time is Running Out
- Man is in Drowned in Deep Loss
- Except:
- Those who Believe
- (that they are in Loss, hence they try to reconcile the situation by swimming = DOING GOOD DEEDS to correct the situation)
- And Tell Others the Truth (over and over again)
- And keep Persistently doing these with Patience (Sabr)
Hence all 4 conditions required to SURVIVE!


LOGO
Don’t forget to design a LOGO for the Harborne Islamic Study Circle
Something that will go on all handouts and the website….Get designing.
Winning entries to be chosen by the group!!


Lives of the Prophets:
Lives of the Prophets: Introduction
Why should we talk about the Lives of the Prophets? It’s not just history….Benefits of Talking about the Prophets include:
1. Because Prophet Muhammed*  was commanded to do so. Allah says “relate unto them the stories.” This is a command from Allah to the Prophet*. It becomes a duty upon us to convey the message of the Prophets of Allah and their stories. So this is first an ‘ibaadah – a worship.
2. “Relate and convey to them so that they may reflect.” (TMQ 7:176) These stories are not for entertainment; they are to derive lessons, deeply reflect and contemplate. At the time of the Prophet* the Quraish would try to distract the people with other ‘stories’ from Persia. These stories do not have the details you will find in JKRowling or Tolkien books!
3. Allah says: “They are those whom Allah had guided. So follow their guidance.” (TMQ 6:90) Allah is instructing the Prophet*. It is very important to have role models. You find that every human being has role models. If they aren’t good, they are going to be bad. It is our make up as human beings – we have to have people that we look up to. If we don’t provide our children and youth with the role models of the sahabah and Prophets, they will find role models somewhere else. If Allah is telling the Prophet* to follow the example of the Prophets, then what about us? We need to study the lives of the Prophets so that they become our role models.
4. To love them – if you do not know someone, you cannot love them. We all claim that we love the Prophets of Allah. If we do not know them, what they went through, how could we have respect for them?


Terminology: Nabi (Prophet) vs. Rasool (Messenger)
Abu Dharr came to the Prophet* and asked him, “What is the total number of Prophets?” The Prophet* said, “The number of ambiya (Prophets) is 124,000 and the Rusul (Messengers) among them are 315.” We are translating Nabiy as Prophet and Rasool as Messenger.
They are two different things: nabiy and rasool. The plural of nabiy is ambiya. The plural of rasool is rusul.
So what is the difference between the Prophet (nabiy) and Messenger (rasool)? There are a few opinions about this: the rasool is the nabiy that is given a law. But the nabiy, who is not a rasool, is following the law of another rasool. So every rasool is a nabiy, but not every nabiy is a rasool.
If a Prophet is given a new law, he is a rasool and a nabiy. If he is not given a new law, he is just a nabiy. An example of this: Musa (Moses) is a Rasool – a Prophet – because he was given the Taurah. Haroon is just a Nabi, because he is following the law of his brother.
 

The Story of Creation
Before we start talking about Adam, let’s look at the story of creation. Narrated in Bukhari, ‘Imran ibn Hussain said, people from Yemen came to the Prophet* and said, “We have come to you to learn our religion and ask how all of this started.” The Prophet* said, “There was Allah, and nothing before Him and His Throne was on water. And He wrote everything in the tablet, and He created the heavens and the earth.” [Also see Bukhaari, 9/93/514]  The Prophet* says, “The first thing Allah created was the pen, then Allah ordered it to write. So it wrote everything that will happen until the day of judgment.”
We worry about our rizq – our sustenance. We have a problem of paranoia of rizq. We are always in a state of despair, when it comes to wealth. The Prophet* says, in a hadith narrated by Muslim, “Allah wrote down the sustenance of the creation 50,000 years before He created the heavens and the earth.” Everything that you will get is already written down – not 50,000 year before this day – but 50,000 years before the creation of the heavens and the earth. What you will get is already written down as well as how long you will live.
Time, after all, is your currency of life and we need to spend it wisely. Hence, we will have a reminder about Surah al-Asr…


Surah al-Asr (Reminder Video) by Nouman Ali Khan

(click on the link below or click HERE)









Highlights from the short clip:
You are Drowning and you are Unconscious
Time is running out
Asr literally means time that is running out last part of the day when the day is running out , or like when juice they squeezed out  - time that's being squeezed out like a cloth drenched in water and to squeeze it out.
4 parts to Survival:
1. What do you need to do to survive = WAKE UP. (Even if your having a great dream!)
If you go back to sleep you would be insane! Only blame yourself!
2. Hence – you would SWIM (or try to!)
Pulled back down by a sleeping cousin chained to you!
You try to wake him up (for yourself) but he wants to stay asleep. So both try to swim…
3. TELL OTHERS THE TRUTH
4. Have Patience and Persevere
Allah says:
-       Time is Running Out
-       Man is in Drowned in Deep Loss
-       Except:
-       Those who Believe
-       (that they are in Loss, hence they try to reconcile the situation by swimming = DOING GOOD DEEDS to correct the situation)
-       And Tell Others the Truth (over and over again)
-       And keep Persistently doing these with Patience (Sabr)
Hence all 4 conditions required to SURVIVE!










 




Children's Feedback

How to start doing Dawah
Study Circle history
What I have leaned from the Study Circle
Hoe the Study Circle has helped me

Information about the London Trip to British Library Mughal Exhibition





Link to the Exhibition - click HERE


Also, we are looking for interest in this Spring’s Study Circle trip. It has been suggested we go to London again for a short exhibition on Mughal India at the British Library.


This is titled ‘Mughal India: Art, Culture and Empire’ and the Exhibition runs until 2 April 2013. We would like, if possible, to take a coach with children & adults to London for the day where we would see the Library Exhibition in the morning, have lunch or a picnic, then do some other activity before returning to Birmingham in the evening. For last year’s trip see the photos on the following link: http://www.facebook.com/media/set/?set=a.10150650782640938.388706.666745937&type=1&l=5e6185db67

Prices = Adults £9; Under 18s FREE; Over 60s £7; Students £5

We haven’t booked the coach but that could cost about £10-£15 per person.

If you are interested – please:

  1. Check the British Library website to more information (http://www.bl.uk/mughalindia/). The exhibition usually takes 2 hours or so.
  2. Also, let us know if you want to take your own sandwiches/picnic or would prefer us to organise catering for food.
  3. Tell us what dates you would like to go: Saturday Saturday 23 March
  4. Finally, suggestions for what to do / where to go after lunch. Such as Kew Gardens, or a local mosque or other attraction...

An example of the exhibits: http://www.bl.uk/whatson/exhibitions/mughalindia/zoomifycrown.html 
 

Homework:
- Lives of the Prophets: What was Adam made from? What are the different terms used in the Quran to describe what Adam (mankind) is made from? 
- Any questions on Evolution?

Monday, 28 January 2013

27 January 2012

6th Anniversary of the Harborne IslamicStudy Circle

Full Survey Results

Thank you all for the 52 responses to the online survey.


The results are below:


Hence, by popular demand we hall start to study the Lives of the Prophets (I/A) now that we have chronologically finished the Seerah. That is not to say we know everything about the Prophet*'s life, but are merely acquainted with the major political and social events in his* life. There is, of course, far more to study about the life of the Greatest Man, ever!



By popular demand, we shall keep the Circle to one hour!
However, it is important that people keep to time!!



I have made careful notes on how to improve the Study Circle.I am an constantly seeking to makes things better and to improve the learning experience for people, and welcome all these useful suggestions. InshaAllah, the Circles will be more interactive and inspiring with more quizes and the occasional guest speaker.



It is reassuring that the effort going in to make the handout (and emailed out) is being used by some of you!



It is reassuring that the effort going in to update the blog (website) is being used by some of you!



The respondents were mainly children and teenagers, and more boys than girls...
 



Time and short Tafsir on Surah al-Asr

Surah al-Asr
The Surah is Makki and it has 3 verses.
With the name of Allah, the All-Merciful, the Very-Gracious
I swear by time,[1] man is in a state of loss indeed,[2]except those who believed and did righteous deeds, and advised each other for truth and advised each other for patience.[3]


Virtues of Studying Surah al-Asr

Ubaidullah ibn Hion reports that whenever two companions of the Holy Prophet met, they would not part company until one of them had recited Surah Al-Asr in its entirety to the other ( transmitted by Al-Tabaarani). Imam Shafi says that if people thought about Surah Al-Asr carefully, it would be enough for their guidance. It is a concise but comprehensive Surah, which in three verses, outlines a complete way of human life based on the Islamic world view.
In the Surah Allah swears an oath by the 'Time" and says that mankind is in a state of loss: exception, however, is made of people ho are characterized by 4 qualities: [1]faith [2]righteous deeds;[3]advising each other for truth and [4] advising each other for patience. this is the only path to salvation in this world, as well as in the next world. The Qur’anic prescription comprises, as we have just seen of four elements. the first two of  them relate to man's own personal betterment and other two relate to other people's guidance and reform [Ibn Kathir]
 

Relationship between 'Time' and 'Human Loss'
The first point that needs to be analysed here is the relationship between the 'oath of time' and 'its subject' because there needs to be a relationship between an 'oath' and 'its subject'. the commentators, generally, state, that all conditions of man, his growth and development, his movements, his actions and morality-all that take place within the space of 'Time'. Man will lose the capital of his existence. Hours, days, months and years of life pass quickly, spiritual and material potentialities, decline, and abilities fade. Man is like a person who possesses great capital and, without his permission and will, every day, a portion of that capital is taken away. This is the nature of life in this word; the nature of continual loss. How well this has been put poetically: "Your life comprises a few breath, that can be counted; when one of them is sent out, a part of your life has diminished."
Allah has granted man the invaluable capital of his life, so that he may invest it in profitable business venture. If he invests his capital of life sensibly in good works, then, let alone attracting profitable returns, he will even lose his capital, and: In addition, he will incur the dreadful scourge of committing numerous sins. If however a person did not invest his life-capital in good deeds or in evil deeds, then he at least, loses both the profit as well as the capital. This is not merely a poetic imagery but is supported by a Prophetic hadith, according to which the Messenger of Allah is reported to have said:
" When a person wakes up in the morning, he invests his soul or life in a business enterprise: some of the investors free or save the capital from loss and others destroy it."
The Quran itself has used the word tijarah in relation to 'faith' and righteous deed' thus: "shall I tell you about a trade that saves you from painful punishment?"( 61:10)
Since “Time" is a man's capital of life, the man himself is a trader. Under normal circumstances, his capital is not a frozen thing that may be kept for a while and used up later when the need arises. The capital is fluid or flowing all the time, every minute and every second. the man who invests it needs to be very wise, intelligent and agile, so that he is able to swiftly and readily reap the profit from a flowing a capital. One of the old scholars said that he had learnt the meaning of this verse from an ice-seller whose trade required utmost diligence, and if he were neglectful for a moment, his entire capital would melt away. that is why this verse has worn an oath by the 'time' to indicate that it is a melting capital and the only loss is to take every moment of his life as valuable, and uses it for the four acts mentioned in the Surah.
Another possible reason for swearing by 'Time' may be that the' time' ( in the sense of history) bears testimony to the fact mentioned in the Surah. If one thinks on the cases of rise and decline of individuals and nations, he would certainly believe that it is only these four acts (mentioned in the forthcoming verses) that may ensure the real success and betterment of mankind. Whoever has ever abandoned them has suffered a great loss, as is evident from numerous events recorded by history.
Let us now study the 'four principles' mentioned  in the Surah. As pointed out earlier, faith and righteous deeds are related to man's moral and spiritual growth and development. They are not in need of elaboration. However, the last two principles (' advising each other for truth') and (advising each other for patience') requires some elaboration.
The infinitive tawasi is derived from wasiyyah, which means 'to advise somebody strongly and effectively about the best thing to do in a particular situation'. The term wassiyyah also refers to a 'will or testament' where a estator advises his executor regarding the disposal of his estate on his death.
The two parts are in fact two chapters of the same testament [1] advice to truth; and [2] advice to patience and fortitude. These two concepts may be explained in different ways. One way to explain them is that haqq ( 'truth') refers to the package of 'correct faith' and ' good deeds' and sabr ( ' patience') refers to abstinence fro all sins and evil deeds. Thus the first cincept refers to 'enjoining good actions' and the second concept refers to 'forbidding evil actions'. The cumulative sense of the Surah is that believers have been enjoined not only to adopt right faith and good deeds themselves, but to advise others strongly and effectively to adopt them and thus help in the creation of a healthy atmosphere around them.
It is also possible to interpret ' Truth' as referring to articles of faith and to interpret 'patience' as referring to all good actions and abstinence from evil deeds. The word sabr, originally meaning to ' withhold oneself and bind oneself', encompasses binding oneself down to the performance of righteous deeds and abstaining from sins.
A scholar has stated in one of the monographs that there are normally two factors that restrain a person from faith and righteous deeds. The first cause is some doubts about the true faith. When such doubts arise in the mind of people, it destroys their faith and leaves them confused and confounded. As a result, it adversely affects their righteous deeds. The second cause is the selfish desires that stop man from doing good and involve him in evil deeds.  In this situation, he theoretically believes that he should do good and abstain from sins, but his selfish desires lead him to stray from the right oath. The current verse indicates to remove both causes of one's distraction. By stressing upon 'advice of truth' it has catered to the first cause and that it should be removed by reforming others on theoretical and academic level, and by emphasizing on ' advice of patience' it has taken care of the second cause by enjoining upon the Muslims to advise others to give up the base desires and remain firm  against their evil demands. Put differently, ' enjoining the truth' means ' improving the knowledge of Muslims or their intellectual development' and enjoining patience' means 'improving the practical life of Muslims'.


Need to Salvage the Entire Muslim Society
The Surah lays down the important principal of guidance for the Muslims that inviting other Muslims to keep to the true faith and good deeds is as much necessary as their own submission to the holy Quran and Sunnah. Without sincere efforts, to the best of one's ability, to invite others to the right path, one's own good deeds are not enough to one's salvation. Especially, if a person does not care of the spiritual and moral welfare of his wife, children and family and turns a blind eye to their unrighteous deeds, he is blocking his way to salvation-no matter how pious he himself might be. Therefore the Quran and Sunnah make it obligatory upon every Muslim to do his best to invite others to the good deeds, and warn them against the evil acts. Unfortunately, let alone the general public, many learned people are lax in this matter. They think it is sufficient for them to be concerned about their own moral and spiritual well-being. They are not concerned about the well-being of their family and children. May Allah grant us the ability to act upon this verse.



Children's Feedback:
6 years of the Study Circle

No Homework