How to Benefit from Qur’an By Sheikh Abu Rumaysah Refi Shafi - TopicsExpress



          

How to Benefit from Qur’an By Sheikh Abu Rumaysah Refi Shafi If you truly want to benefit from the Quran, your heart must be attentive and alert when reciting it or listening to it. Listen to it carefully with presence of mind, paying attention to it as if Allah Himself was speaking to you directly. Understand that this Quran is an address directed to you from Allah, Most High, upon the tongue of His Messenger (peace and blessings be upon him). Allah, Most High, says: {Truly there is a reminder in this for anyone who has a heart, or who listens attentively with presence of mind.} (Qaf 50 :37) A deep and lasting impression is dependant upon something that will stimulate a person, a location that can be influenced, his being in the right condition, and removing any barrier that would impede this from happening. This verse mentions of all of these in the most succinct and lucid of ways; clearly articulating the intended meaning. Truly there is a reminder in this refers to the previous verses of this chapter. This, the Quran, is the stimulus. for anyone who has a heart refers to the location that can be influenced. The heart referred to here is the living heart: the heart that is aware of Allah. He, Most High, says: {it is simply a reminder and a clear Quran so that you may warn those who are truly alive,} (Ya-Sin 36: 69-70) i.e. those whose hearts are alive. Read Also: • Value of Two Rakah (Units) Salaah • Conscience: Gods Inspiration to Every Man • Breathe and Believe • How to Perform Tahajjud The Night Vigil Prayer? • Revivalism in Islam • 7 Reasons to Read the Glorious Qur’an • 10 Tools to Strengthen Our Self Against Sins (P.2) or who listens attentively, i.e. directs his faculty of hearing towards it and pays it the utmost attention. This is the condition that must exist for a person to be roused by the words. with presence of mind, i.e. with an alert and present heart, not one that is unmindful and absent. Ibn Qutaybah said, i.e. a person who listens attentively to Allahs Book with presence of heart and mind, not someone who is unmindful with an absent air. Ibn Qutaybah, Gharibul-Quran, pg. 419. This then alludes to the barrier: an unmindful and inattentive heart which does not understand what is being said and, as such, is unable to reflect upon it or direct any conscious thought towards it. Therefore, if all these things come together, the end-result is obtained: benefiting from the Quran and taking heed. If someone were to ask: if the end-result, the lasting impression, is only attained by the combination of these matters, why then did Allah say or in the verse, or who listens attentively which implies a choice between one or another option? Surely and should have been mentioned in its place? It is said in reply: this is a good question; or has been mentioned by taking into consideration the state of the addressee. Some people have hearts which are alive, hearts that will readily accept the truth and whose innate nature (fitrah) is intact; if such a person was to reflect in his very heart and turn his mind to it, he would conclude that the Quran is authentic and true. His heart would witness what the Quran informs it of and the subsequent impression upon it would be light layered on top of the light of its innate nature. This is the description of those about whom it is said: {those who have been given knowledge see that what has been sent down to you from your Lord is the truth.} (Saba’ 34:6) Concerning them, Allah says: The person who has this type of attentive heart receives the meanings of the Quran and readily accepts them so much {Allah is the Light of the heavens and the earth. The metaphor of His light is that of a niche in which there is a lamp, the lamp inside a glass, the glass like a brilliant start, lit from a blessed tree, an olive, neither of the east nor the west, its oil all but giving off light even if no fire touches it. Light upon light! Allah guides to His Light whoever He wills, Allah propounds metaphors for mankind and Allah has knowledge of all things.} (An-Nur 24: 35). This verse refers to the light of the innate nature covered by the light of revelation; this is the condition of the person who has a living, receiving heart. We have explained this verse, its subtleties and lessons in detail in our book, Ijtima` al-Juyush al-Islamiyyah `ala Ghazw al-Mu`attila wal-Jahmiyyah. Therefore, the person who has this type of attentive heart receives the meanings of the Quran and readily accepts them so much so that it seems as if the words have been inscribed in his heart and he is able to recite them fluidly from memory. Other people have hearts which fall below the level of those mentioned above; their hearts are not as ready to receive the truth, they are not completely alive, and their innate nature is not as refined. Therefore, they stand in need of a witness who would differentiate the truth from falsehood for them. All the matters of the unseen that the Messengers informed us of will be seen by the eye in the Hereafter In order to be guided, such a person must pay the utmost attention to the Qurans words, he must devote his heart to it, ponder it and comprehend its meanings, and only after this will he come to realise that it is true. The first type of person sees the truth of what he is invited to and informed of with his own eyes. The second type of person has learned that it is the truth, has certainty in it and is satisfied. The first has attained the ranking of beneficence, ihsan and the second has attained the ranking of faith, iman. The first has attained `ilm al-yaqin from which his heart has ascended to the degree of `ayn al-yaqin. The second has acquired that level of unwavering belief which takes him out of the fold of disbelief and into the fold of Islam. `Ayn al-Yaqin is of two categories: what is acquired in this world and what is acquired in the Hereafter. In this world it is to the heart what the beheld is to the eye. All the matters of the unseen that the Messengers informed us of will be seen by the eye in the Hereafter and the inner sight in this world; in both cases, this is `ayn al-yaqin. References Taken with slight modifications from: a2youth/articles/soul_purification/how_to_benefit_from_the_quran/ He studies with Shaykh Haitham Al-Haddad and Shaykh Abu AbdiRahman Al-Libee. He graduated from Imperial College from the faculty of Computer Sciences. He is currently a Java Programmer Manager. He is the chairman for the WISE (Wycombe Islamic Society). He is very active in his local community especially with his Masjid and working with youth via Islamic Scouts He has translated a number of books such as The criterion between the friends of Allah and the friends of shaytan, The relief from distress (the dua of Yunus Alayhisalam, both by Ibn Taymiyyah and many others. He has also written an explanation of Surah Al-Faatiha called ‘The spiritual cure.’ He currently gives weekly circles in High Wycombe and Watford. He is also a Lecturer for MRDF.
Posted on: Mon, 20 Oct 2014 11:20:56 +0000

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