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Reciting Surah Ikhlas will result in rizak coming your way

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#1 [Permalink] Posted on 18th May 2014 23:47
in 200 different ways.

I was told this by today by a saati. Any daleel for this as he was informed by someone else.
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#2 [Permalink] Posted on 28th May 2014 16:49
Duas for Rizq

In the name of Allah, the most Beneficent, the most Merciful.

Answer

First and foremost one should understand that sometimes if a person behaves in an un-Islamic way hat could lead to Allah (SWA) restricting his rizq and sustenance.
◾� Sins and bad actions decreases a person's rizq, however, on the contrary if someone refrains from sins and shortcomings and fears Allah then Allah (SWA) promises hat person rizq.

"And whoever fears Allah, for him Allah brings forth a way out, and gives him provision (rizq) from where he does not even imagine..." (Surah Talaq v.2 - v.3)
◾Similarly, placing trust in Allah will also assist someone in increase of rizq.

"And whoever places his trust in Allah, He is sufficient for him." (Surah Talaq v.3)"
◾Seeking Istighfar and repentance from Allah.

"Saying 'Ask forgiveness from your Lord; for He is Oft- Forgiving; He will send rain to you in abundance; "'And give you increase in wealth and sons; and bestow on you gardens and bestow on you rivers (of flowing water)" (Surah Nuuh v.10-v.12)
◾Maintaining family relations.

Saaiduna Anas Radiallahu Anhu narrates that the Prophet of Allah Sallallahu Alahi Wasalam said, "Whoever would like to see his provision expanded and his life extended, let him maintain his ties of kinship" (Sahih Bukhari & Sahih Muslim)
◾Reciting Surah Waqiah. (Chapter 56)

Ibn Kathir narrates from Ibn Asakir that Saaiduna Ibn Masud Radiallahu Anhu heard the Prophet of Allah Sallallahu Alahi Wasalam say, "Whoever recites Surah Waqiah every night will suffer from poverty." (Hadith taken from Maariful Qur'an p.280 v.8)

Only Allah Knows Best

Mohammed Tosir Miah

Darul Ifta Birmingham

islamqa.org/hanafi/daruliftaa-birmingham/19645
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#3 [Permalink] Posted on 28th May 2014 16:53
The meaning of the hadeeth " 'Qul Huwa Allaahu Ahad" is equivalent to one-third of the Qur'aan"



The meaning of the hadeeth " 'Qul Huwa Allaahu Ahad" is equivalent to one-third of the Qur'aan"



Answer #4156 item#2
then there is no need to learn the entire quraan or to even read it during ramadaan,etc all you have to do is to read sura Ikhlas.I think you made a mistake.Sura Ikhlas is the substance of 1/3 of the quraan.it is amazing to believe that reading the sura Iklas 3 times will give you the blessing of reading the ENTIRE quraan,then there is no point reading the entire Quraan.




Praise be to Allaah.

Firstly: there follow some of the ahaadeeth narrated from the Prophet (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) which state that Soorat al-Ikhlaas (Qul Huwa Allaahu Ahad) is equivalent to one-third of the Qur'aan.

Al-Bukhaari (6643) narrated from Abu Sa'eed that a man heard another man reciting Qul Huwa Allaahu Ahad and repeating it. The next morning he came to the Messenger of Allaah (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) and told him about that. The man thought that it was too little, but the Messenger of Allaah (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) said: "By the One in Whose hand is my soul, it is equivalent to one-third of the Qur'aan."

Muslim (811) narrated from Abu'l-Dardaa' that the Prophet (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) said: "Is any one of you unable to recite one-third of the Qur'aan in one night?" They said, "How could anyone read one-third of the Qur'aan?" He said, "Qul Huwa Allaahu Ahad is equivalent to one-third of the Qur'aan."

Muslim (812) narrated that Abu Hurayrah said: The Messenger of Allaah (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) said: "Gather together, for I will recite to you one-third of the Qur'aan." So those who could gather together gathered there, then the Prophet of Allaah (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) came out and recited Qul Huwa Allaahu Ahad, then he went in. They said to one another, Perhaps there has been some news from heaven on account of which he has gone inside (the house). Then the Prophet of Allaah (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) came out and said, "I told you that I was going to recite to you one-third of the Qur'aan. Verily it is equivalent to one-third of the Qur'aan."

Secondly: The bounty of Allaah is immense, and Allaah has bestowed His bounty upon this ummah and has made up for its short life span by giving it more reward for simple deeds. It is strange that with some people, instead of this motivating them to do more good, this makes them apathetic and lazy in doing acts of worship, or they feel that this bounty and reward is strange and farfetched.

With regard to the meaning of the hadeeth:

There is a difference between jaza' (reward) and ijza' (what is sufficient). What is making the brother confused is that he does not see the difference between them.

Jaza' means the reward which Allaah gives for obeying Him.

Ijza' means what is sufficient and takes the place of something else.

Reciting Qul Huwa Allaahu Ahad brings a reward equivalent to reciting one-third of the Qur'aan, but it does not take the place of reading one-third of the Qur'aan.

If a person vows - for example - to read one-third of the Qur'aan, it is not sufficient for him to read Qul Huwa Allaahu Ahad, because it is equivalent to one-third of the Qur'aan in reward, but not in terms of being sufficient or taking the place of reading one-third of the Qur'aan.

The same may be said of reciting it three times. If a person recites it three times in his prayer, that does not mean that he does not have to recite al-Faatihah, even though he will be given the reward of reciting the whole Qur'aan.

A similar example is the reward given by the Lawgiver to one who offers a single prayer in the Sanctuary of Makkah, and that he will have the reward of one hundred thousand prayers. Does anyone take this divine bounty to means that he does not have to pray for decades because he offered a single prayer in the Haram that is equivalent to one hundred thousand prayers?

Rather this has to do with reward; as for what is sufficient, that is another matter altogether.

Moreover, none of the scholars has ever said that there is no need for us to read the Qur'aan or that Qul Huwa Allaah Ahad is sufficient and takes the place of that. The correct scholarly view is that this soorah has this great virtue because the Qur'aan deals with three topics: one-third for rulings, one-third for promises and warnings, and one-third for the Divine names and attributes.

This soorah combines names and attributes.

This is the view of Abu'l-'Abbaas ibn Surayj, and Shaykh al-Islam Ibn Taymiyah stated that it was good in Majmoo' al-Fataawa, 17/103.

The Muslim cannot do without the two other issues, which are the rulings and the promises and warnings. His knowledge cannot be complete unless he looks at the Book of Allaah as a whole. The one who stops at Soorat al-Ikhlaas cannot know the other two matters.

Shaykh al-Islam (Ibn Taymiyah - may Allaah have mercy on him) said:

Rewards are of different types, just as wealth is of different types, such as food, drink, clothing, houses, money and so on. If a man possesses one type of wealth, to the value of one thousand dinars, that does not mean that he can do without the other types. Rather if he has wealth in the form of food, he also needs clothing and a place to live, etc. Similarly if it is a type other than money, he still needs other things. If he has nothing but money, he will need all kinds of wealth that are usually needed. In al-Faatihah there are the benefits of praise and du'aa' which people need, and Qul Huwa Allaahu Ahad cannot replace it in that sense. Although its reward is very great, he cannot benefit from it unless he also recites the Opening of the Book (al-Faatihah) in his prayer. Hence if a person recites only Qul Huwa Allaahu Ahad in his prayer, without al-Faatihah, his prayer is not valid. Even if he recited the whole of the Qur'aan without al-Faatihah, his prayer would not be valid, because the al-Faatihah refers to the basic needs that people cannot do without.

Majmoo' al-Fataawa, 17/131.

And he said:

The people need the commands, prohibitions and stories that are in the Qur'aan, even though Tawheed is greater than that. Man needs to know what he is enjoined to do and what he is forbidden to do; he need to know what is enjoined upon him and the stories and promises and rewards. These cannot be replaced by anything else, and Tawheed cannot be replaced by these. The stories cannot take the place of the commands and prohibitions, and the commands and prohibitions cannot take the place of the stories. Rather everything that was sent down by Allaah is beneficial and people need it.

If a person recites Qul Huwa Allaahu Ahad, he earns a reward equivalent to the reward of one-third of the Qur'aan, but that does not mean that the reward is of the same kind as that earned by reading the rest of the Qur'aan. Rather he may need the kind of reward that comes from reading the commands and prohibitions and stories, so Qul Huwa Allaahu Ahad cannot take the place of all that.

And he said:

The knowledge that is to be gained by reading the rest of the Qur'aan cannot be gained by reciting this soorah only. So whoever reads the whole Qur'aan is better than one who simply recites this soorah three times in the sense that he earns different kinds of reward, even though the one who recites Qul Huwa Allaahu Ahad earns a reward equivalent to that reward, but it is of one type and does not include all the types that a person needs. This is like a man who has three thousand dinars and another who has food, clothing, accommodation and money equivalent to three thousand dinars. The latter has that which will benefit him in all his affairs, whereas the former needs what the latter has, even though what he has is equivalent in value. Similarly, if he has the finest food, equivalent to three thousand dinars in value, he still needs clothing and accommodation, and weapons and tools that will ward off harm from him, and the like, which cannot be done with food alone.

Majmoo' al-Fataawa, 17/137-139

And Allaah knows best.

islamqa.info/en/10022
FROM A SALAFI SITE BUT THE ANSWER HERE IS GENERAL


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#4 [Permalink] Posted on 28th May 2014 16:58
Why do people die of hunger if their provision has been decreed by Allaah?


If Allah has ordained the "rizk" for everyone then why do people die of starvation.



Praise be to Allaah.

Allaah is al-Razzaaq (the Provider) and the best of those who give provision. "And no moving (living) creature is there on earth but its provision is due from Allaah" [Hood 11:6 - interpretation of the meaning]. The rizq (provision) of Allaah will not be brought by the carefulness of the miser, nor will it be prevented by the hostility of one who does not want it to come to another. It is part of the Wisdom of Allaah that He differentiates between His slaves in their provision just as He differentiates between them in their physical creation and their attitudes. So He gives in abundance to whomever He wills and gives little to whomever He wills. He may give plenty to some people and little to others. He is the One Who guarantees the provision of His slaves according to His prior knowledge and decree. Allaah knows and decrees that some of His slaves will be given plenty and some will be given little; He has reasons for that that are beyond our comprehension. In His wisdom, He gives plenty or gives little as a test for His slaves, testing them with blessings or with calamities, as He says (interpretation of the meaning):

"and We shall make a trial of you with evil and with good" [al-Anbiya' 21:35]

All�h says (interpretation of the meaning):

"But when He tries him be straitening his means of life, he says: 'My Lord has humiliated me!" [al-Fajr 89:16]

But then Allaah says (interpretation of the meaning): "Nay!" [al-Fajr 89:16], meaning, it is not as he thinks; Allaah blesses whoever he wills and makes things difficult for whomever He wills, and this is a test, not a sign of honour or humiliation. By means of this test, it becomes apparent who is grateful and patient, and who is the opposite. And Allaah is the Knower of all things.

This response was written by Shaykh 'Abd al-Rahmaan al-Barraak.

islamqa.info/en/3699
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#5 [Permalink] Posted on 28th May 2014 17:13
Reciting Surah Ikhlas & Salutations when entering the home

Quote:
Question

Is it proven in the books of Hadith to read Surah Ikhlas and send salutations upon Nabi (sallalahu 'alayhi wa sallam) when entering one's home?


Answer

Hafiz Abu Musa Al Madini (rahimahullah) has reported with his chain, on the authority of Sayyiduna Sahl ibn Sa'd (radiyallahu 'anhu) that a man once complained to Rasulullah (sallalahu 'alayhi wa sallam) about his poverty. Nabi (sallalahu 'alayhi wa sallam) said to him, ' when you enter your home, if anyone is there or not, say salam, then send salutations upon me and recite 'Qul Huwallahu Ahad' (Surah Ikhlas) once'. The narrator says this man did this and soon Allah Ta'ala blessed him with abundant sustenance, so much so that he started assisting his neighbours and relatives.

(See Jalaul Afham pg. 222 and Ad Du'a of Shaykh 'Abdullah Sirajud Din (rahimahullah) pg. 230)

Hafiz Ibn Hajar Al Haytami (rahimahullah) has stated that this narration is reported with a weak chain.

(Ad Durrul Mandud Fis Salati Was Salami 'Ala Sahibil Maqamil Mahmud pg. 133)

The Muhaddithun have allowed practicing upon weak hadiths in cases like the above.

And Allah Ta'ala knows best.



Verified by: Moulana Haroon Abasoomar & Moulana Muhammad Abasoomer


www.hadithanswers.com/reciting-durud-and-surah-ikhlas-whe...


Also I'd like to point out that when it comes to Zikr and how much quantity it should be recited in, you won't find it in ahadith, but only through the trial and errors of our pious who have gone, they tried certain methods and found them to be effective for certain things. Ulema like Maulana Ashraf Ali Thanvi and others have many books of Zikr Azkar, ayats you can read for certain things/problems etc.


Bottom line is Zikr if effective, it's basically rememberance of Allah, so the more you do the better and Allah can choose however he wants to give, that may be more than expected or less.

The rest Allah knows best

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#6 [Permalink] Posted on 28th May 2014 17:29
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You're absolutely, right, akhi.

When certain people this happens or that happens by reciting it x number of times, I assume they're talking from a particular Hadith.
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#7 [Permalink] Posted on 28th May 2014 23:51
I guess there are no such specific references for this dikr. If so, please lock thread and Jazak'Allah to all the brothers for their efforts.
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