What does jannah look like ? || The Curious Muslim Podcast || Season 1 Episode 2
Вставка
- Опубліковано 1 чер 2024
- 0:00 Recap
0:45 Introduction
1:58 What does Jannah mean to a muslim
5:23 Description of Jannah
9:12 Hoorul ayn in Jannah
17:00 Age of people in Jannah
18:30 Benifit of Prophet Adam leaving Jannah
23:50 Making mistakes and taking lessons from it
25:30 Levels and ranks in Jannah
32:00 Fast track to Jannah
37:40 Respecting parents
38:30 How are you going to stay away from jannah
41:30 Visiting loved ones in Jannah
43:50 Who would you want to see in jannah
46:40 Conclusion
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Very very beautiful episode Allahumma baarik!
جزاك الله خيرا
From Dr. Muhammad Asad's Translation of the Quran :
The noun hur - rendered by me as "companions pure" - is a plural of both ahwar (masc.) and hawra' (fem.), either of which describes "a person distinguished by hawar", which latter term primarily denotes "intense whiteness of the eyeballs and lustrous black of the iris" (Qamus). In a more general sense, hawar signifies simply "whiteness" (Asas) or, as a moral qualification, "purity" (cf. Tabari, Razi and Ibn Kathir in their explanations of the term hawariyyun in 3:52 ). Hence, the compound expression hur in signifies, approximately, "pure beings [or, more specifically, companions pure"], most beautiful of eye" (which latter is the meaning of 'in, the plural of a'yan). In his comments on the identical expression in 52:20 , Razi observes that in as much as a person's eye reflects his soul more clearly than any other part of the human body, 'in may be understood as "rich of soul" or "soulful"
I heard that the heaven from which Adam was expelled, is not the same as the likes of Firdaws. Specifically Adam's one was Jannat al-Adn or something
That is why it is said that Jannah is something "no eye has seen."
Ibn Kathir said The Jannah that Adam and Eve were in will NOT be the Jannah we enter. It is a Jannah that no one has ever seen.