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It is he Who created you from a single being, then from that being He created its mate, and it is He Who created for you eight heads of cattle, male and female. He shapes you in your mothers' wombs, giving you one form after the other, under three dark veils. This same Allah (Whose works are these) is your Lord: sovereignty is His: there is no god but He.
Whence are you, then, being turned away?

Surat Az-Zumar verse 6. (The Holly Quran)






I am eager to discern from those, professional, with the proficiency of Art, or whatever thus:-

'Under three dark veils'

What name or therapeutic term have they establish out?
And if they rebuff the above; am I given to understand that; they discard because it was revealed to Prophet Muhammad? (s.a.w) or
Decline Quran or
Allah (The Creator?)

And if for no concrete reason; in that case: make out thus:-

" If you disbelieve, Allah is independent of you, yet He does not approve of disbelief, for His servant

2006-07-05 09:06:42 · 1 answers · asked by abjad 4 in Society & Culture Religion & Spirituality

and if you are thankful, He approves it for you. No bearer will bear the burden of another; ultimately, all of you have to return to your Lord. Then He will tell you what you have been doing. He knows even the secrets of the hearts."

Holly Quran Verse 7 Az-Zumar.

2006-07-05 09:08:51 · update #1

maggie.

Well, here's my reply. The more you insult my intelligence, the more I'm going to be in your little corner of the Internet preaching my beliefs to your self-righteous little group. I'll bet that if I stick with it long enough, I can find somebody who at least is open minded enough to listen to me. And if I can find one, I can find another, and another, and...Well, you get the picture. Thanks for putting more free-speech energy into me than I've felt in years.

2006-07-05 23:01:11 · update #2

1 answers

I have read the Quran and I have read the Bible and I believe as with all religious rexts, everying must be interpreted in their own particular way. Any one reader of the Quran will come away with their own interpretation of this text.

The three dark veils can be interpreted any number of ways, and also a lot might be lost in the translation of this text. As with all religious texts, they are translated from a source that is usually in an older and fairly archaic language, and the English translation is particularily watery in this case and doesn't seem to be very particular.

Apparently if you do not believe in Allah according to the last text then he does not approve or believe in you and he is not part of you, but if you acknowledge him and are grateful, then you are part of his love.

To be honest your English is still not very good, and its hard to understand what you are trying to phrase. I'm not Muslim but I am well-studied and well-read and I hope I gave you a good answer. I think you should let holy books interpret themselves to your heart however you find them. I think a lot of the stories in the Quran are not to be taken literally but as metaphors to guide you to leave a proper life in the Muslim faith; just as the Bible offers metaphorical guidance and gives something along the lines of Aesop's Fables to help guide Christians to a better life.

Whatever faith someone chooses to practice, they should always read their particular faith's "holy book" and understand it and make sure that they draw into their hearts an interpretation as well because oftentimes what you'll hear from others explanation's is just what THEY want it to mean to fit THEIR lives.

2006-07-05 09:14:44 · answer #1 · answered by Maggie 6 · 1 0

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