Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Quran 24:33 tells believers to keep their chastity if they do not marry. [29] [30] Quran 24:32 asserts that marriage is a legitimate way to satisfy one's sexual desire. [31] Islam recognizes the value of sex and companionship and advocates marriage as the foundation for families and channeling the fulfillment of a base need.
The Quran strictly prohibits homosexuality through the story of Lot (also in the Biblical Book of Genesis), in Surat Al-Nisa, Surat Al-A'raf, and possibly verses in other surahs. [ 152 ] [ 153 ] [ 154 ] For example, Abu Dawud states, [ 153 ] [ 155 ] Al-Nuwayri (1272–1332) in his Nihaya reports that Muhammad is "alleged to have said what he ...
In Kitab al-Kafi, Ja'far al-Sadiq writes a letter to his companions stressing the importance of obeying Allah, his Messenger, and the "Wali al Amr" (Progeny of Muhammad)- going so far as to say that those who disobey and deny their virtues are "liars and hypocrites". He asserts that these are the individuals described as "hypocrites" in the ...
An-Nisa 4:34 is the 34th verse in the fourth chapter of the Quran. [1] This verse adjudges the role of a husband as protector and maintainer of his wife and how he should deal with disloyalty on her part.
in virtue of Quran; in "Saghlien" (Quran [saghle akbar] and tradition [saghle asghar]) another chapter of the Noble Quran, has not collected in order of revelation; refrain from personal commentary, the commentator explicitly forbid others to changing the commentary, although here, his intention of commentary is about the interpretation
Surah al-Talaq (65) and Surah al-Tahrim (66) both these surahs form a pair with regard to their subject-matter. In the first surah, the limits which should be observed by a believer while parting from wives are explained while in the second surah, the limits he should observe at instances of expressing love to them are described.
Esoteric interpretation of the Quran (Arabic: تأويل, romanized: taʾwīl) is the allegorical interpretation of the Quran or the quest for its hidden, inner meanings. . The Arabic word taʾwīl was synonymous with conventional interpretation in its earliest use, but it came to mean a process of discerning its most fundamental understandings.
The Twelver exegete Shaykh Tusi (d. 1067) notes that the article innama in the verse of purification grammatically limits the verse to the Ahl al-Bayt. He then argues that rijs here cannot be limited to disobedience because God expects obedience from every responsible person (Arabic: مكلف, romanized: mukallaf) and not just the Ahl al-Bayt.