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Anas says that Muhammad said to Mu'adh bin Jabal; "Recite Qul ya-ayyuhal-kafirun at the time you go to bed, for this is immunity from polytheism." [ 10 ] [ 11 ] Both Fardah bin Naufal and Abdur Rahman bin Naufal have stated that their father, Naufal bin Muawiyah al-Ashjai, said to Muhammad: "Teach me something which I may recite at the time I ...
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Imam Ahmad also recorded that Ibn 'Umar said, "I watched the Prophet twenty-four or twenty-five times reciting in the two Rak'ahs before the Morning prayer and the two Rak'ahs after the Sunset prayer, 'Say: "O ye infidels!"' (Surah Al-Kafirun) and "Say: "He is Allah, One." [20]
[citation needed] Cyril Glasse criticizes the use of kafirun (plural of kafir) to describe Christians as "loose usage". [4] According to the Encyclopedia of Islam , in traditional Islamic jurisprudence , ahl al-kitab are "usually regarded more leniently than other kuffar [plural of kafir ]" and "in theory" a Muslim commits a punishable offense ...
The Message of The Qur'an received favorable reviews from discriminating scholars. Gai Eaton, a leading British Muslim thinker, after noting the limitations of Asad's rationalist approach, described Asad's translation as "the most helpful and instructive version of the Qur'an that we have in English.
The genre of these surahs has been described as prophylactic incantations, meant to ward off evil, and to be recited in a private as opposed to a public domain. [6] One stylistic feature of the Al-Mu'awwidhatayn, shared only in Surah 1 and Surah 109 elsewhere in the Quran, is the use of the first-person human voice throughout the entire surah. [7]
The hadith of the thaqalayn (Arabic: حديث الثقلين, lit. 'saying of the two treasures') refers to a statement, attributed to the Islamic prophet Muhammad, that introduces the Quran, the principal religious text in Islam, and his progeny as the only two sources of divine guidance after his death.
Yanabi al-Muwadda is a hadith collection purportedly authored in Baghdad in 1395 AH by Sulaiman [1] ibn Khawajah Killan Ibrahim ibn Baba Khawajah al-Balkhi al-Qunduzi al-Hanafi, a Sunni scholar.