Explanation of the Creed (Kitaab Sharh us-Sunnah) Imaam al-Barbahaaree

Explanation of the Creed (Kitab Sharh as-Sunnah) Imam al-Barbahaari


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Explanation of the Creed
(Kitaab Sharh us-Sunnah) (Abridged: 140 of 169 Points)
by Abu Muhammad Al-Hasan ibn ‘Alee ibn Khalaf Al-Barbahaaree (d. 329H) rahimahullaah
The Imaaam of Ahlus-Sunnah wal-Jamaa’ah of his time
Translation: Abu Talhah Dawud Burbank rahimahullaah

Life in al-Barzakh from Death Until Resurrection

Life in al-Barzakh from Death Until Resurrection

Life in al-Barzakh from Death Until Resurrection Sheikh Muhammad al-jibaly


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Life in al-Barzakh

The Inevitable Journey Series (Part-4) by Muhammad al-Jibaly

Publisher: Al-Kitaab & as-Sunnah Publishing

About the Book: The Inevitable Journey, We inevitably go through the journey starting in this life and extending into the grave, before our final abode in the hereafter. In the process, we pass through stages of sickness, death, and the intermediate life in the grave (al-Barzakh). These are the subjects that “The Inevitable Journey” discusses over a sequence of tides:

1. Sickness, Regulations & Exhortations
2. The Final Bequest, Islamic Inheritance and Will
3. Funerals, Regulations & Exhortations
4. Life in al-Barzakh
5. Dreamer’s Handbook

This book is the fourth in the series. It deals with many important matters that have always perplexed the human minds, but that, as is shown in this book, have been clearly explained in the authentic Texts from Allah’s Book and His Messenger’s Sunnah. Among the subjects covered are the following: *The Moment of Death *The Soul’s Trip to the Heavens*The Final Test*The Righteous and the Sinful in al-Barzakh*Saviors from the Grave’s Punishment*Communications with al-Barzakh*Things That Benefit the Dead.


The Major Sins (Book & Audio)

The Major Sins by Imaam adh-Dhahabi Explanation by Abu Usamah ash-Dhahabi

Part 01 | Part 02 | Part 03 | Part 04
Part 05 | Part 06 | Part 07 | Part 08
Part 09 | Part 10 | Part 11 | Part 12
Part 13 | Part 14 | Part 15 | Part 16
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A 16 Part Lecture based on the book by Imaam adh-Dhahabi
Lecture by Abu Usamah adh-Dhahabi

Tape 01. Ascribing Associates To Allah, The Most High (Shirk)
Tape 02. Killing A Human Being
Tape 03. Sorcery / Magic
Tape 04. Not Performing the Prayer
Tape 05. Not Paying Zakat
Tape 06. Showing Disrespect to One’s Parents
Tape 07. Riba / Interest
Tape 08. Wrong Consuming an Orphan’s Wealth
Tape 09. Lying About the Prophet
Tape 10. Breaking One’s Fast During Ramadan Without an Excuse
Tape 11. Fleeing From the Battlefield
Tape 12. Adultery / Fornication / Zina Part 1
Tape 13. Adultery / Fornication / Zina Part 2
Tape 14. The Leader Who Misleads His Followers, the Tyrant and the Oppressor
Tape 15. Drinking Alcohol
Tape 16. Arrogance, Pride, Conceit, Vanity and Haughtiness

This extremely beneficial set of lectures can also be watched on YouTube Click Here

Creed of Ahlul-Hadeeth

Beliefs of Ahlul-Hadeeth

Beliefs of Ahlul-Hadeeth by Imam Abu Bakr al-Ismaa'eeli Translater by Amr Jalal Abualrub


Part 1 | Part 2

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The Fundamental Beliefs Held by Ahlul-Hadeeth
Know, may Allaah have mercy on us and you that the Math-hab of Ahlil-Hadeeth, the Ahlus-Sunnah wal-Jamaa`ah is acknowledgment of Allaah, His Angels, His books and His Messengers, and acceptance of what has been spoken of in the book of Allaah, and what been authenticated from the narrations from the Messenger of Allaah (صلى الله عليه وسلم). There is no alteration of that which has been narrated from him and no room for rejection, since they were ordered with following the Book and Sunnah, and they are content with the guidance in them (the Book and Sunnah)

The Legal Punishments

Imam Nawawi
From ‘Goal of Seekers’

APOSTASY

This consists of abjuring Islaam by intention or words or acts or rejection, whether the words were said in jest, or contradiction, or belief. They consist of a declaration:

1. That the Creator or Messengers do not exist, or
2. That one of the Prophets was a liar, or
3. That one considers lawful what the ‘joining together’ has considered unlawful – as for instance fornication, or
4. That one considers unlawful what the joining together makes lawful, or
5. That one does not have to follow what has been decided by joining together, or
6. That one intends to reject Islaam, or doubts it An act making one an apostate is one based on an obvious mockery or denial, such as throwing a copy of the Qur’aan on a muck heap, or prostration to an idol or the sun.

An effort should be made to convince an apostate to return from error, though one authority says that it is only desirable, either t once or for three days. Then he is put to death. Where the guilty repents, his submission is accepted and he is let alone, unless (according to some), he has turned to an esoteric infidelity such as Zandaqa (i.e. manicheeism) in which one can profess Islaam outwardly but deny it inwardly.

The infant of two apostates (not one only) should be considered an apostate, according to the best opinion.

As to his property, the best opinion is that if he dies as apostate, he has lost it, but if he submits, he regains it. Debts contracted beforehand are however charged to his estate.

FORNICATION

This consists of introducing the male organ into the vagina of a forbidden woman, without any ambiguity or doubt, or into the anus of a man or woman as well, according to out school, and it receives a prescribed penalty (hadd), regardless of whether it was done for payment or by consent, and is applied as well for (relations with) a woman within the forbidden degrees of kinship or marriage (e.g. sister of a living wife) even if a marriage was performed. The guilty person must be adult, sane, and aware that it is wrong. Drunkenness is no excuse.

1. The hadd of an adult free Muslim or member of a protected community, who has consummated a legal marriage before this, is stoning to death. If one of the two partners has not, it does not lessen the guilt of the other

2. The hadd of a fornicator who is not adult and free or was never married is one hundred lashes and banishment for a year, and if the Imam designates a place of banishment, that must be accepted.

3. For a slave the hadd is fifty lashes and banishment for half a year.

DEFAMATION

For a false accuser to receive the hadd, he must be a sane adult Muslim, drunk or sober, who acted freely. A child of a reasonable age is punished at the discretion of the court. The penalty for a free person is eight lashes, and for a slave forty. If two people accuse each other, the two punishments do not cancel each other.

CRIMES PUNISHABLE BY AMPUTATION

For theft the amount necessitating punishment by amputation is of a value equal to the quarter of a (gold) dinar. Two persons stealing together must have stolen twice the minimum amount. There is no amputation if such as wine, or a pig or dog, or the skin of an animal that is not ritually slaughtered. But if the container of the wine was worth the minimum amount, amputation follows.

Theft by a minor, insane person, or one forced against his will Is not punished by cutting off the hand, but cutting may be performed on members of a protected community, subject to our laws.

The right hand is cut off for the first offense (even if more than one theft was involved), the left foot for the second, the left hand for the third and the right foot for the fourth.

BRIGANDS (Highwaymen and Bandits)

Those who do not rob or murder travelers may be given a lesser punishment. One guilty of theft if the legal amount has his right hand and left foot cut off. Murder by a brigand makes his death mandatory. He is then hung on a cross for three days and taken down. Some say the body should hang until (ichor??) runs from it, and others that he should be crucified for a time and then taken down and killed.

FORBIDDEN BEVERAGES

Every drink that inebriates in a large quantity is forbidden in a small quantity. The hadd for drinking it is not given to a child, an insane person or a non Muslim subject. One may take wine in immediate necessity, according to our school, e.g. to dislodge food in the throat which is choking one, if nothing else is available, but one is liable to punishment if he uses wine for medicine or for thirst. The hadd of a free person is thirty blows, and that of a slave is twenty, by whip, hand, sandal or a rolled up garment. It is said that it should be with a whip. The Imaam may double the number if he sees fit.

Sins not punishable by a prescribed penalty or expiation may be punished by imprisonment, beating, slapping or threatening. The nature of this is at the discretion of the Imaam or his deputy.

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