
social.group.members
🕋 Spirituality, hadiths, Islamic history and teachings. Connect with fellow members in enlightening conversations as we seek a deeper understanding and appreciation of Islam.
"FRIDAY"
▪︎Recite Surah Al Kahf
▪︎Make A Lot Of Duas
▪︎Give Charity
▪︎Send Salutation On Prophet Muhammad (saw)
#Jummah
If you increase your salawat upon the prophet ﷺ your sins will be forgiven, and your worries will be taken care of.
Increase your eman on WhatsApp by following Daily Hadith on the below link:
Daily Hadith UK
https://www.whatsapp.com/channel/0029Vb7rIUxADTOH05mVYz0u
Here is another one of my thoughts.
I wrote it years ago a few weeks before Ramadan started and during that time my family had no access to hot water for a week.
Washing my hair with cold water has made me realize something, are we going to treat Ramadan like how we are treating the water adjusting to it because we have no choice? And when the hot water returns we will go back to our daily normal life?
No!
Ramadan should be like hot water, when you use cold water to wash it can be difficult to get the dirt off leaving you barely clean and sometimes you still feel dirty unlike when you use hot water you feel nice and clean, we should feel clean during and after Ramadan has ended, we should use Ramadan like how we use hot water to clean our bodies, hearts, minds and souls, we should leave Ramadan feeling squeaky clean or close to it, we should not leave Ramadan still feeling dirty and nasty.
We need to use Ramadan like hot water to better ourselves and our actions are like soap doing something small everyday like praying your Sunnah prayers saying Alhumdulilah ten times a day or helping someone in your family do something that you don't normally do, if you are consistent with it soon it will be easy and inshallah when it does you can add something new to the list like learning a new Dua or trying to learn the first two ayahs of a surah, doing something like this will be like using hot water to clean yourself and before you know it Ramadan is over and you should feel clean inshallah, but in order to stay clean we must keep at it long after the holy month has ended and that will be hard but inshallah with Allah's help it will be easy for us, but we must keep at and put in the effort no matter how hard it is.
Inshallah we should enter Ramadan willing to change for the better even if it is something small like saying Bismillah, Allah Akbar, Subhana-Allah, Alhumdulilah, Astaghfirullah and mashallah more often, remember every small deed counts over time.
Sorry if this bad it was my first ever Islamic lecture/thought.
People who speak badly about you, think negatively of you, or try to damage your reputation...just observe them silently and leave these matters to Allah. Also leave the place, the people, and the platform where all of this is happening. Let those people stay busy with whatever they are doing.
Instead, move forward. Start a new life with new places, new people, and new friends. Leave such people to time.....time will reveal everything: what was true and what was not.
Do not worry. Simply wait for what Allah has written for you. Offer your prayers, read the Quran, and prepare yourself for the new challenges ahead.
Life is very short. Do not waste it on people who have destroyed your peace of mind and harmed your mental well-being. Keep yourself busy, work on improving and grooming yourself, and continue moving forward.
That is what life is all about🙂
Assalamulikum. I am new here.
I bet 100s if not thousands converted after this episode, man this sister is really a legend the buzz about this video is huge till today
They say she is a teenager come on
ما شاء الله
When was the last time you truly looked at a grain of rice? 🍚
Not a bowl.
Not a plate.
Just one grain.
Before it reached your mouth, it needed fertile soil, a tiny seed, rain from the sky, sunlight, the right temperature, the right humidity, protection from pests, a farmer’s effort, harvesting, milling, transport, a market, someone to buy it, clean water to wash it, heat to cook it, and countless unseen means.
Tell me, who controls all of that?
Could you command the clouds to rain?
Could you order the sun to shine?
Could you create a single seed that grows by itself?
Yet after eating, many of us say:
“I earned this.”
“I built my success.”
“I own this wealth.”
We speak as though everything begins with us, forgetting that we do not even own the next heartbeat.
Allah asks repeatedly in the Qur’an:
“So which of the favors of your Lord will you deny?”
The tragedy is not that we lack blessings.
The tragedy is that we have become so accustomed to them that we no longer see them.
A believer does not see a plate of rice as ordinary.
He sees rain, earth, sun, time, provision, mercy, and the permission of Allah – all gathered onto one plate.
Perhaps syukur (gratitude) is not merely saying Alhamdulillah after receiving a blessing.
Perhaps true syukur is seeing Allah behind every blessing before it reaches us.
May Allah make us among those who remember Him in abundance, recognize His countless favors, and never let our hearts become blind to the One who provides them all.
“And if you were to count the favors of Allah, you could never enumerate them.” (Qur’an 16:18)
Chapter 1: The Early Years & Orphaned Childhood (570–595 CE)
Born in Mecca into the noble tribe of Quraysh, Muhammad’s early life was marked by profound loss.
An Early Orphan: His father died before he was born, his mother passed away when he was six, and his grandfather died when he was eight. He was raised by his loving uncle, Abu Talib.
The Shepherd and Trader: As a young man, he worked as a shepherd and later became a successful merchant.
"Al-Amin" (The Trustworthy): Even before Islam, he was famous throughout Mecca for his flawless honesty, earning the nicknames Al-Amin (The Trustworthy) and As-Sadiq (The Truthful).