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  2. Qard al-Hasan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Qard_al-Hasan

    It is based on the principle of helping others without expecting a financial gain. However some Ulama deem it a form of interest-free loan (fungible, marketable wealth) that is extended by a lender to a borrower on the basis of benevolence (ihsan). Al-qardh, from a shari’a point of view, is a non commutative contract, as it involves a ...

  3. Sadaqah - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sadaqah

    According to the Quran, sadaqa leads to the purification of the benefactor. [3] The Quran says that sadaqa does not need to be in a material form [11] and can also be a "voluntary effort", or a kind word. [Quran 9:79] [8] This is in agreement with a narration attributed to Muhammad which says "every good deed is a form of sadaq." [1]

  4. Al-Baqara 256 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Al-Baqara_256

    However, as stated by the famous British orientalist Sir Thomas Walker Arnold the verse in question is a Medinan verse, when Muslims lived in their period of political ascendance. [6] Moreover, Muslim scholars have established the abrogated verses and Q.2:256 isn't among them.

  5. The Meadows of the Righteous - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Meadows_of_the_Righteous

    The Meadows of the Righteous (Gardens of the Righteous) by Al-Nawawi contains a total of 1,896 hadith divided across 344 chapters, many of which are introduced by verses of the Quran. [2] [3] The book is about studying the Hadiths in an effort to translate the teaching from Quran verses into Sunnah, or practical tradition, in the form of ...

  6. Al-Fajr (surah) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Al-Fajr_(surah)

    The Quran mentions Iram in connection with ‘imad (pillars): Quran 89:6-14 [14] ۝ [15] 89:6 Did you not see how your Lord dealt with ʿĀd— ۝ 89:7 ˹the people˺ of Iram—with ˹their˺ great stature, ۝ 89:8 unmatched in any other land; ۝ 89:9 and Thamûd who carved ˹their homes into˺ the rocks in the ˹Stone˺ Valley;

  7. Verse of the mawadda - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Verse_of_the_mawadda

    The verse of the mawadda (Arabic: آية الْمَوَدَّة, lit. ' verse of affection/love ') refers to verse al-Shura 42:23 of the Quran, the central religious text of Islam. This verse is often cited in Shia Islam to support the elevated status of the family of the Islamic prophet Muhammad, known as the Ahl al-Bayt.

  8. Al-Maarij - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Al-Maarij

    To Wild, the Quran is highly self-referential. The feature is more evident in early Meccan chapters. [37] [38] Abul A'la Maududi (September 25, 1903 – September 22, 1979) was a journalist, theologian, Muslim revivalist leader and political philosopher, and a 20th-century Islamist thinker in India, and later Pakistan. [39]

  9. Al-Insan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Al-Insan

    Yet others, a minority, say that the entire chapter was revealed in Mecca, thus classifying it as a Meccan surah. [ 2 ] Most Shia sources, and some Sunni ones, linked the revelation of the verses 5–22—which discuss "the pious" ( al-abrar ) and the rewards that await them [ 3 ] —to an experience of the family of Ali (Muhammad's son-in-law ...