UM Special: Your Opinion of People – Quran & Hadith

Good opinion of Allah 1

“O you who believe, avoid most suspicion. Indeed some suspicion is a crime. And do not spy and do not backbite one another. Would any of you like to eat his brother’s dead flesh? No, you would hate it. And fear Allah.” (49: 12)

“ُThere are two characteristics that have no superior good : a good opinion of Allah and a good opinion of the slaves of Allah. There are two characteristics that have no superior evil : a bad opinion of Allah and a bad opinion of the slaves of Allah.” -Hadith

Have a good opinion of Allah.

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UM Special: Surah Ad-Duha – Quran

Good opinion of Allah 1

  1. By the forenoon (after sun-rise);

  2. And by the night when it is still (or darkens);

  3. Your Lord (O Muhammad ()) has neither forsaken you nor hated you.

  4. 4. And indeed the Hereafter is better for you than the present (life of this world).

  5. And verily, your Lord will give you (all i.e. good) so that you shall be well-pleased.

  6. Did He not find you (O Muhammad ()) an orphan and gave you a refuge?

  7. And He found you unaware (of the Qur’an, its legal laws, and Prophethood, etc.) and guided you?

  8. And He found you poor, and made you rich (selfsufficient with selfcontentment, etc.)?

  9. Therefore, treat not the orphan with oppression,

  10. And repulse not the beggar;

  11. And proclaim the Grace of your Lord (i.e. the Prophethood and all other Graces).

 – Surah Ad-Duha

Have a good opinion of Allah 

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UM Special: Our difficulties – a Thought from Imam Abdul Latif Finch

Good opinion of Allah 1

The Quran states…

“And Allah wants to lighten for you [your difficulties]; and mankind was created weak.” 4:28

Have a good opinion of Allah!

Imam Muhammad Abdul Latif Finch

Dec 2015

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UM Special: Belief in His Mercy – a Thought from Imam Abdul Latif Finch

Good opinion of Allah 1

The Quran states,

“O my sons, go and find out about Joseph and his brother and despair not of relief from Allah. Indeed, no one despairs of relief from Allah except the disbelieving people.” (12:87)

As Allah said none despair of the mercy of Allah but the disbelieving folk, they have a bad opinion of Allah in as much as they don’t believe in His mercy. So a good opinion of Allah is believing in His mercy. May we have a good opinion of our Lord and His capacity to relieve us. Amin

Imam Muhammad Abdul Latif Finch

Dec 2015

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UM Special: A Good Opinion of Allah

Good opinion of Allah 1

As salaam o alaikam wa rahmatullah wa barakatuh

We are pleased to have our first UM special on our site on having…

A Good Opinion of Allah

We will be posting ayahs from the Quran along with Hadiths and insights from Imam Muhammad Abdul Latif Finch on how we can all have a good opinion of Allah.

We at Unlimited Mercy pray that you benefit abundantly from these reminders and that they God willing bring you closer to Allah. Amin.

Unlimited Mercy Team

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Quran recitation & mercy – Hadith on Mercy

حديث أبى هريرة عن النبي صلى الله عليه وسلم قال (ما اجتمع قوم في بيت من بيوت الله يتلون كتاب الله ويتدارسونه فيما بينهم إلا نزلت عليهم السكينة وغشيتهم الرحمة وحفتهم الملائكة وذكرهم الله فيمن عنده). (صحيح مسلم)

Abu Hurairah, may God be pleased with him said, that the Prophet, peace be upon him, said: No people gather in a mosque, reciting the Quran, and studying it amongst themselves but tranquillity descends upon them and they are overwhelmed with mercy while the Angels surround them and God mentions them with those who are with Him.

Sahih Muslim

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God’s Mercy Embraces All Things – a thought from Imam Abdul Latif Finch

Whatever mercy God unfolds for mankind none can withhold it; and whatever He withholds, thereof, none can release it after Him. And He is the Mighty, the Wise. (35:2) When something unfolds it is due to its having been folded up at a point. Whatever is folded up is not visible. Hence the People of the Cave were instructed to go out of sight to receive Mercy, And when you withdraw from them and from that which they worship except God, then take refuge in the Cave. Your Lord will reveal for you something of His mercy and prepare for you in your affair some comfort. (18:16) Whatever is invisible is in the unseen. Thus, God’s Mercy is coming from the unseen. Whatever is unseen cannot be detected, as He said, be He exalted, And if you were to count God’s grace you could never reckon it. Indeed God is Forgiving, Merciful. (16:18) Whatever cannot be detected cannot be proven. Whatever cannot be proven must be accepted on faith. Thus, God’s Mercy is accepted on faith and ..do not despair of God’s Spirit (His Mercy). Indeed none despairs of the Spirit of God save the disbelieving folk. (12:87) Those who reject faith in God are ungrateful to Him for the word kāfir means “ingrate”. Whereas in truth, Whatever grace you have, it is from God. (16:53) All the things that we have are given to us from Him, I have myself, therefore, “I” or my consciousness is itself a gift from God. As my consciousness is a grace and thus a mercy and through it I participate in the world, all things I know of come through mercy. Thus, I can vouch for His words, My Mercy embraces all things, (7:156) as my own existence and whatever I encounter is embraced by His Mercy. Al-Ḥamdulillāh.

Imam Muhammad Abdul Latif Finch

Sept 2015

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Reference to God’s Mercy – a thought by Imam Abdul Latif Finch

mercy and grace - Imam Abdul Latif Finch thought

Every chapter in the Qurān, excluding one, mentions, “In the Name of Allāh, the Most Gracious, the Most Merciful, before it.

Thus, we see that there is a constant reference to God’s Mercy in His Book.

The Qurānic individual, then, must also refer to Mercy as consistently and be such a reference for other people.

Imam Muhammad Abdul Latif Finch

Aug 2015

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When You Love Something You Love Its Very Self – a thought by Imam Abdul Latif Finch

A Qurānic sign states, “Your Lord has inscribed Mercy on Himself.” (6:54) The ayah indicates, rather clearly it seems, that God has a Self. This Self has Mercy written all over it, to speak in the common vernacular. In other words, God’s Self and His Mercy are synonymous. We will attempt to show here that God’s ultimate mercy is with his very Self and those who reach that self-hood of Allāh are those who enjoy the fullness of His Mercy.

God’s Mercy is with His Very Self

God’s relationship with creation and our relationships with each other are based in Mercy. The tradition states, “Allah has divided mercy into 100 parts, and He retained with Him 99 parts, and sent down to earth 1 part. Through this one part creatures deal with one another with compassion, so much so that an animal lifts its hoof over its young lest it should hurt it.” (Al-Bukhārī) Naturally not every relationship is overflowing with obvious mercy, thus we know that there is some level of apportionment to each situation that we encounter. This division of mercy is accounted for in this tradition as 99 percent is with Him while the remaining 1% is amongst us. No doubt, this 1% is then further divided until it appears that some situations received no portion of mercy at all! Nonetheless, for our purposes, it is significant to note that the remaining 99% are actually with God, Himself. They aren’t with His angels, nor in His paradise or any other creature. Rather, these portions are, and most intimately so, with the Self of God.

We are Encouraged to Arrive to the Self

Every destination assumes at least four components: the travel, the path, the traveller and the destination. If one of these factors is missing there can be no endpoint to speak of. Without a terminus, travel has no purpose at all and to be devoid of purpose is to be meaningless. Surely revelation and meaninglessness are mutually exclusive concepts. In the Book God states, “And Allah warns you of Himself, and to Allah is the destination.” (3:28) Thus, the Self is of grave import for He is the Objective. As every target has the four constituents mentioned above, let it be understood that the travel is called worship, the path is known as Islām, the traveller is the worshipper, and the destination is God, Himself. This quranic sign also warns us about our destination. One must be careful regarding any warning by asking for guidance in dealing with whatever they have been warned about. As the path to the Self is termed Islām and Islām is the Straight Path, asking for guidance on the Straight Path daily, as per our recitation of al-Fātiḥa, is our encouragement to reach our Objective. The goal is God’s Self and thus we are encouraged to arrive to the Self.

Those Who Reach the Self are the Most-Mercified

If 99% of something is greater than 1% of it, then it follows that whoever has that larger percentage has more of it. If God has divided His Mercy into 100 parts and preferred to keep most of it with His Self, then those who arrive to the Self receive more of a portion of Mercy than those who do not. Those who are fortunate to receive more of the Mercy are, in this sense, more mercified than others. Thus, those who reach the Self are the Most-Mercified.

Warning is Itself a Mercy

We have stated that God’s apportioned Mercy is predominately with His very Self. We also demonstrated that these helpings are, and most personally so, with the Self of God. Thereafter we have shown that our goal is God’s Self and that like all goals we are called to arrive to the Self. As shown, those who arrive to the Self are the Most-Mercified. Those who do not arrive are in a sense devoid of Mercy. Those devoid of Mercy face some kind of non-mercy. Whoever lacks some of the mercy of His Lord has not been fully guided. Whoever has not been fully guided has some level of misguidance. The Book states, “And who despairs of the mercy of his Lord, but such as go astray?” (15:56).

It may be said, then, that to whatever degree we suffer from misguidance, i.e., non-mercy, is the degree to which we are astray. As most of us have not reached this Self-ness described here, we remain asking God for guidance daily, “Guide us on the Straight Path.” The recitation of al-Fatiha is a divine mandate. Thus asking for guidance is a command from God. The quranic sign states, “And Allah warns you of Himself, and Allah is Kind to [His] servants.” (3:30) In other words God has warned us of His Self, via revelation. We are therefore instructed to reach Him and to thereby avoid the consequences of not doing so, i.e., not enjoying full Mercy. To be warned of consequences is to be enabled to evade them. One evades harm through guidance. We do not ask but that God has already granted us our request. Thus to request for guidance daily is a kindness to those who ask for it, i.e., the servants. In this sense, warning itself is a mercy.

As His Self and His Mercy are in fact synonymous, God’s Self is the epitome of Mercy. Those who reach that self-hood of Allāh are those who enjoy the fullness of Mercy while those who do not ask for it daily. This appears to be the essence of guidance. Whoever despairs of the mercy of His Lord, which lies ultimately at His very Self-hood, it appears, has not been fully guided. Whoever has not been fully guided has some level of misguidance. To whatever degree we suffer from misguidance is the degree to which we are astray. As most of us have not reached this Self-ness, and are therefore in need, thus we remain asking God for guidance everyday, “Guide us on the Straight Path.” Those who have attained to it know that this is a permanent condition for Mercy will always belong to the Self. Thus their request is for the Self, constantly. May Allāh give us Allāh, Himself.

Imam Muhammad Abdul Latif Finch

Aug 2015

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