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رسالة اليوم من هدي الرسول

-          تفسيره القران:

قال (صلى الله عليه وسلم) : (لا يدخل النار إن شاء الله من أصحاب الشجرة أحد: الذين بايعوا تحتها) - يعني أهل بيعة الرضوان - قالت حفصة: أليس قد قال الله: (وإن منكم إلا واردها)؟ فقال: قد قال الله عز وجل: (ثم ننجي الذين اتقوا ونذر الظالمين فيها جثيا). رواه مسلم. فدل على أن المراد بالورود: الصراط.

البحث

كتاب الرحمة في حياة الرسول

شاهد مكة المكرمة مباشرة

إقرأ مقالا من أكبر كتاب في العالم

إبحث عن محتويات الموقع

شاهد المدينة المنورة مباشرة

المسجد النبوي _ تصوير ثلاثي الأبعاد

Madina Mosque 3D view

الرئيسية

The Man

In Ramadhan of the second year after the Hijrah, the great battle of Badr took place. Its immediate cause was that the Prophet (Peace and blessings of Allah upon him) went out with 313 men to intercept a large caravan of the Quraysh that was on its way back from Syria. Abu Sufyan(may Allah be pleased with them), the caravan's leader, was extremely alert and cautious. He would ask everyone he met about the Muslims' movements.

When the Prophet (Peace and blessings of Allah upon him) entered Madinah, its people welcomed him with gladness and cordiality. There was no house he passed but that its owner would take hold of his camel's rope and urge him to stay with him. But he (Peace and blessings of Allah upon him) apologized to each of them and said, "Let her go, for she is commanded [by Allah]." The she-camel kept on walking until it reached the place of his masjid where it sat down.

The Prophet (Peace and blessings of Allah upon him) was the most courageous of people. This is evidenced by the fact that he stood against the unbelievers by himself, calling for tawheed and sincere worship of Allah(Almighty) alone. All the unbelievers opposed him and were united in waging war against him. They abused him severely and plotted to kill him several times but that did not terrify or dissuade him; rather, it increased his persistence in da`wah and adherence to the truth that had come to him.

The battle of Uhud took place in Shawwal of the third year after the Hijrah. After their nobles had been killed at Badr and they had suffered a calamity the likes of which they had never suffered before, the Quraysh were bent on revenge to restore their lost prestige. So Abu Sufyan(may Allah be pleased with them)began to incite them against the Muslims and recruit various factions. He gathered around three thousand men from the Quraysh and their allies, accompanied by their women to prevent them from fleeing and urge them on.

In his book, Zad al-Ma`ad, Ibn al-Qayyim cited many of the rulings and noble lessons derived from the battle of Uhud, among them:

The Prophet (Peace and blessings of Allah upon him) was gentle with his Ummah. He was never given a choice between two things but that he chose the easier of them in order to avoid difficulty for his people. He (Peace and blessings of Allah upon him) said,

Concerning the leniency of the Prophet (Peace and blessings of Allah upon him) with his Ummah, Anas ibn Malik(may Allah be pleased with them)reported: "While we were in the masjid with the Messenger of Allah (Peace and blessings of Allah upon him), a Bedouin came in and urinated in the masjid. The companions exclaimed, "Stop, stop!" But the Messenger of Allah (Peace and blessings of Allah upon him) said, "Leave him and do not interrupt him." So, they left him until he finished.

In Shawwal of the fifth year, according to the more correct of two statements, the battle of al-Ahzaab, also known as the battle of al-Khandaq, took place. The background of this battle was that the Prophet (Peace and blessings of Allah upon him) had evicted the Jews of Bani an-Nadheer from Madinah the previous year due to their attempt to assassinate him. So, a group of their nobles went to Makkah and incited the Quraysh to fight the Messenger of Allah(Peace and blessings of Allah upon him), promising to assist them against him.

Muhammad, the inspired man who founded Islam, was born about A.D. 570 into an Arabian tribe that worshiped idols. Orphaned at birth, he was always particularly solicitous of the poor and needy, the widow and orphan, the slave and the downtrodden. At twenty he was already a successful businessman, and soon became director of camel caravans for a wealthy widow. When he reached twenty-five his employer, recognizing his merit, proposed marriage.

There are numerous recorded instances of the love of Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him) for children. In his book, ‘Muhammad: Prophet and Statesman’, the Orientalist W. Montgomery Watt writes (page 229):

المقطع المختار من قسم مقاطع الفيديو