Concept of God in Islam | مريم ابنت عمران عليها السلام للقرآن الكريم

Concept of God in Islam

  • Concept of God in Islam

    Its author said in the introduction, "It is a known fact that every language has one or more terms that are used in reference to God and sometimes to lesser deities. This is not the case with Allah. Allah is the personal name of the One true God. Nothing else can be called Allah. The term has no plural or gender. This shows its uniqueness when compared with the word "god," which can be made plural, as in "gods," or made feminine, as in "goddess." It is interesting to notice that Allah is the personal name of God in Aramaic, the language of Jesus and a sister language of Arabic."

    Source: http://www.islamhouse.com/p/322097

    Download:

Random books

  • Who Wrote The Quran?

    A proof that the Qur'an is from God and that Muhammad is a Messenger of God.

    Publisher: Memphis Dawah

    Source: http://www.islamhouse.com/p/1283

    Download:

  • The Declaration of Faith

    The testimony of "Laa ilaaha ill-Allah", its meaning, prerequisites, conditions, and fruits.

    Publisher: http://www.islammessage.com - Islam Message House Website

    Source: http://www.islamhouse.com/p/1223

    Download:

  • Jesus & the Bible

    Concise examination of the Christian texts as well as the Islamic perspective of the purpose and message of Jesus

    Publisher: El-Haqq Islamic Resource Center

    Source: http://www.islamhouse.com/p/1367

    Download:

  • Religious Police in Saudi Arabia

    This book includes a comprehensive vision of issues related to the promotion of virtue and prevention of vice and its official establishment in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. This book was prepared by a group of Saudi academicians, males and females, representing different Saudi universities and various geographical regions. They address the Western public opinion, its political and intellectual sources. Their aim is to clarify reality for Western public opinion, its political, intellectual and media sources. This reality that remains obscure for this public opinion as a result of certain political circumstances, religious superiority or suspicious media lusts. This reality was obscured from the West by the current rapid international developments and changes.

    Source: http://www.islamhouse.com/p/324762

    Download:

  • Ash-Shafi’i's Risala: Treatise on the Foundations of Islamic Jurisprudence

    Imam Shafi on On Legal Knowledge Read Classical – Excerpt Written in the second Islamic century by al-Imam al-Shafi’i (d. 204AH/820AD), the founder of one of the four Sunni schools of law. This important work gives the fundamental principles of Islamic jurisprudence and its influence continues to the present day. During the early years of the spread of Islam, the exponents of Islamic legal doctrine were faced with the problems raised by ruling and administering a diverse and rapidly growing empire. In Medina and Kufa, as well as other cities of early Muslim rule, schools of law had to be developed, but it took the genius of Muhammad b. Idris al-Shafi’i, born in the year 150AH/767AD, to establish the principles by which the various legal doctrines could be synthesised into a coherent system. In the Risala, which laid down the basis for such a synthesis, al-Shafi’i established the overriding authority, next only to the Qur’an, of the Sunnah or example of the Prophet Muhammad as transmitted in the traditions.

    Reveiwers: Muhammad AbdulRaoof

    Source: http://www.islamhouse.com/p/344944

    Download:

Select language

Select surah