Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
In Islam, Jannah (Arabic: جَنَّةٍ, romanized: janna, pl. جَنّٰت jannāt, lit. ' garden ' ) [ 1 ] is the final and permanent abode of the righteous. [ 2 ] According to one count, the word appears 147 times in the Qur'an . [ 3 ]
The Sidrat al-Muntaha (Arabic: سِدْرَة ٱلْمُنْتَهَىٰ, romanized: Sidrat al-Muntahā, lit. 'Sidr Tree of the Farthest Boundary') in Islamic mythology [1] is a large Cedrus [2] or lote tree (Ziziphus spina-christi) [3] that marks the utmost boundary in the seventh heaven, where the knowledge of the angels ends.
Multiple translations of the Quran were published in the nineteenth, twentieth and twenty-first centuries. [ 4 ] [ 5 ] Though many people have done partial translations, such as Maulana Amir Uddin Basuniya, Girish Chandra Sen was the first to translate and publish the entire Quran.
The pleasure and delights of Jannah described in the Quran, are matched by the excruciating pain and horror of Jahannam, [72] [73] Both are commonly believed to have seven levels, in both cases, the higher the level, the more desirable [74]: 131 —in Jannah the higher the prestige and pleasure, in Jahannam the less the suffering. [75]
The Quran mentions them in 40:7 and 69:17. Other hadiths describes them with six wings and four faces. [ 22 ] While according to a hadith transmitted from At-Targhib wat-Tarhib authored by ʻAbd al-ʻAẓīm ibn ʻAbd al-Qawī al-Mundhirī, the bearers of the throne were angels who shaped like a rooster , with their feet on the earth and their ...
The Quran mentions the Zabur, interpreted as being the Book of Psalms, [14] as being the holy scripture revealed to King David . Scholars have often understood the Psalms to have been holy songs of praise, and not a book administering law. [15] The current Psalms are still praised by many Muslim scholars. [16]
According to classical Islamic theories, [3] the sunnah is primarily documented by hadith—which are the verbally-transmitted record of the teachings, actions, deeds, sayings, and silent approvals or disapprovals attributed to Muhammad—and alongside the Quran (the book of Islam) are the divine revelation delivered through Muhammad [3] that ...
Jannat al-Mu'alla (Arabic: جَنَّة ٱلْمُعَلَّاة, romanized: Jannah al-Muʿallāh, lit. 'The Most Exalted Paradise'), also known as the "Cemetery of Ma'la" [1] (Arabic: مَقْبَرَة ٱلْمَعْلَاة Maqbarah al-Maʿlāh) and Al-Ḥajūn (Arabic: ٱلْحَجُوْن), is a cemetery to the north of Al-Masjid Al-Haram, and near the Mosque of the Jinn in Makkah, Saudi ...