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Allah the most merciful

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    Basirah's Avatar Full Member
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    Allah the most merciful

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    Why is Allah the most merciful, like how do we know this? Is there a rational explanation to this? I have always thought that Allah could not have any emotions or verbs attatched to His character.

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    Malaikah's Avatar Full Member
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    Re: Allah the most merciful

    Because He said He is:

    All the praises and thanks be to Allâh, the Lord of the 'Alamîn (mankind, jinns and all that exists).

    The Most Beneficent, the Most Merciful.

    The Quran- chapter 1 verses 2-3

    Sorry I don't think that was very helpful.
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    Re: Allah the most merciful

    format_quote Originally Posted by Malaikah View Post
    Because He said He is:

    All the praises and thanks be to Allâh, the Lord of the 'Alamîn (mankind, jinns and all that exists).

    The Most Beneficent, the Most Merciful.

    The Quran- chapter 1 verses 2-3

    Sorry I don't think that was very helpful.
    So Allah also says "all praises and thanks be to Allah"? If I was to say "All praises and thanks be to Me" that would seem kind of odd. Either way, I know it says it in the Quran, but all religions generally believe that God is the most merciful, but why is this? I'm looking for a logical aproach to the situation. Thank you for trying to help though. Regards.
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    Re: Allah the most merciful

    You have to establish some 3aqeeda to build upon in order for some things to make sense to you... we can't discuss transamination, if you have no idea what an amino acid or an alpha-keto acid is...
    I think this sura and its translation is a perfect example of G-D's mercy and the human condition!

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    The Message of the Quran

    Muhammad Asad



    AD-DUHA (THE BRIGHT MORNING HOURS)

    THE NINETY-THIRD SURAH
    Total Verses: 11
    MECCA PERIOD



    Introduction



    IT IS SAID that after surah 89 (Al-Fajr) was revealed, some time elapsed during which the Prophet did not receive any revelation, and that his opponents in Mecca taunted him on this score, saying, "Thy God has forsaken and scorned thee!" - whereupon the present surah was revealed. Whether or not we accept this somewhat doubtful story, there is every reason to assume that the surah as such, although in the first instance addressed to the Prophet, has a far wider purport: it concerns - and is meant to console - every faithful man and woman suffering from the sorrows and bitter hardships which so often afflict the good and the innocent, and which sometimes cause even the righteous to question God's transcendental justice.



    IN THE NAME OF GOD, THE MOST GRACIOUS, THE DISPENSER OF GRACE:



    1) CONSIDER the bright morning hours,



    (2) and the night when it grows still and dark.*



    * The expression "bright morning hours" apparently symbolizes the few and widely-spaced periods of happiness in human life, as contrasted with the much greater length of "the night when it grows still and dark", i.e., the extended periods of sorrow or suffering that, as a rule, overshadow man's existence in this world (cf. 90 : 4). The further implication is that, as sure as morning follows night, God's mercy is bound to lighten every suffering, either in this world or in the life to come - for God has "willed upon Himself the law of grace and mercy" (6:12 and 54).



    (3) Thy Sustainer has not forsaken thee, nor does He scorn thee:*



    *Sc., ''as the thoughtless might conclude in view of the suffering that He has willed thee to bear".



    (4) for, indeed, the life to come will be better for thee than this earlier part [of thy life]!



    (5) And, indeed, in time will thy Sustainer grant thee [what thy heart desires], and thou shalt be well-pleased.



    (6) Has He not found thee an orphan, and given thee shelter?*



    *Possibly an allusion to the fact that Muhammad was born a few months after his father's death, and that his mother died when he was only six years old. Apart from this, however, every human being is an "orphan" in one sense or another, inasmuch as everyone is "created in a lonely state" (cf. 6:94), and "will appear before Him on Resurrection Day in a lonely state" (19:95).



    (7) And found thee lost on thy way, and guided thee?



    (8) And found thee in want, and given thee sufficiency?



    (9) Therefore, the orphan shalt thou never wrong,



    (10) and him that seeks [thy] help shalt thou never chide,*



    *The term sa'il denotes" literally, "one who asks", which signifies not only a "beggar" but anyone who asks for help in a difficult situation, whether physical or moral, or even for enlightenment.



    (11) and of thy Sustainer's blessings shalt thou [ever] speak.*



    *Sc., "rather than of thy suffering".
    Allah the most merciful

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