Abū Fā'iz

3.4K posts

Abū Fā'iz banner
Abū Fā'iz

Abū Fā'iz

@mayourwaye

Muslim|| Married || Medic(Anaesthesia resident) || Aesthete||

Kwara, Nigeria Katılım Mart 2012
1K Takip Edilen872 Takipçiler
Abū Fā'iz retweetledi
H’s mom
H’s mom@aiishadahir·
I used to think Istighfar alone would fix my finances. I prayed. I made duʿā. I stayed consistent. And yet… rizq still felt tight. Until I learned how the Prophet ﷺ actually recited istighfar.
English
18
377
2.6K
155.9K
Abū Fā'iz retweetledi
Sara
Sara@piousdeenn·
At what age did you realize that "We created you in pairs" isn't talking about marriage couples?
English
36
729
8K
871.3K
Abū Fā'iz
Abū Fā'iz@mayourwaye·
@gildfae Merry and Pippin. Can't get enough of their silliness
English
0
0
0
51
Abū Fā'iz
Abū Fā'iz@mayourwaye·
@Weaklin50424369 @AbuMustaeina I think "unlettered" is a more honourable qualification considering how denigrating we've made the word "illiterate". BaarokaLlahu fīkum honoured brother
English
0
0
1
6
AbuMustaeina Oloye
AbuMustaeina Oloye@AbuMustaeina·
The depth of Islam on issues can never be matched by any study or way of life. I was revising kitabu Taharah (purification) in some fiqh tira and SubhanahLah, I had to pause and marvel at the level of attention to details of Islam. Which other religion or field of studies discusses issues like these? 👇🏻👇🏻 1. Types and Rulings of Water •Pure Water (Al-Ma' al-Mutlaq): Rainwater, seawater, river water, well water, etc. •Mixed Water (Al-Ma' al-Mudaf): Water mixed with pure elements like juice, milk, or rose-water, and its purity status. •Used Water (Al-Ma' al-Musta'mal): Rulings on water used for wudu or ghusl. •Impure Water (Al-Ma' al-Najis): Water altered in color, taste, or smell by impurities. •Quantity Rulings: Definitions of Qullatan (two jugs) or Kurr (large quantity) and how they are affected by impurities.  2. Impurities (An-Najasat) •Types of Impurities: Urine, feces, blood, semen, vomit, alcohol, and the saliva of dogs/pigs. •Types of Impure Things: Impurities of animal carcasses (except fish and locusts). •Removal of Impurities: Methods for cleaning impurities from the body, clothing, and places of prayer. •Najasat Mughallathah: Heavy impurity (dogs/pigs), requiring washing seven times, once with soil. •Najasat Mukhaffafah: Light impurity, such as urine of a breastfed boy.  3. Ritual Impurities (Al-Hadath) •Minor Impurity (Hadath Al-Asghar): Passing gas, urination, defecation, vomiting, and falling asleep, which require wudu. •Major Impurity (Hadath Al-Akbar): Sexual intercourse, seminal emission (janabah), menstruation (hayd), and post-partum bleeding (nifas), which require ghusl.  4. Purification Methods •Wudu (Ablution): Obligations (fard), sunnah acts, and invalidators. •Ghusl (Ritual Bath): Obligations, sunnah methods, and scenarios requiring it. •Tayammum (Dry Ablution): Using sand or earth in the absence of water or if water is harmful. •Istinja/Istijmar: Cleaning after using the restroom using water (Istinja) or stones/paper (Istijmar). •Wiping over Socks/Khuff: Regulations for wiping over leather socks or modern socks instead of washing feet.  5. Specific Rulings (Sunan al-Fitrah) •Etiquette of the Toilet: Manners for entering, leaving, and relieving oneself. •Fitrah Acts: Circumcision, shaving pubic hair, trimming the mustache, and cutting nails. •Siwak: Using the tooth-stick.  6. Special Rulings for Women •Fiqh of Menstruation (Hayd): Rules regarding prayer, fasting, and sexual relations during menstruation. •Istihada (Irregular Bleeding): Rules for when bleeding occurs outside normal cycles. •Nifas (Post-Childbirth Bleeding): Rulings on purification after childbirth. 
 7. Purification of Objects (Al-Mutahhirat)  •Transformation (Istihalah): E.g., a carcass turning into salt or a najis object burning to ash. •Tanning: Purifying dead animal skins. •Ground/Sun/Wind: How natural elements clean the ground.
English
1
62
196
6.3K
Abū Fā'iz retweetledi
No filter Skin
No filter Skin@NoFilterSkin·
YOUR PHONE HEARD YOU THINK. You didn’t search it. You didn’t say it out loud. You thought about it. And 20 minutes later it was in your feed. Here’s what’s actually happening. 🧵
English
172
820
5.7K
2.7M
The_Bearded_Dr_Sina
The_Bearded_Dr_Sina@the_beardedsina·
There are some movies on my Laptop and I can never delete - Harry Potter ( all sequels) - Avengers - Now you see Me - Transformers - Red 1 and 2 - GI Joe - Alice in Wonderland - Van Helsing ( Best Vampre movie ever made) - The Mummy ( old ones not the new annoying remakes) - Chronicles of Narnia - Percy Jackson sequels - Sorcerer's apprentice - Pan's Labyrinth - Witches (old one not remake) - Willow - Xmen ( 1 to 3 not new ones) - Matrix ( 1 to 3) - Lord of the Rings Trilogy - Lucy - Devil wears Prada - Mean Girls 1
EMEKA 💭@Okoliemeka_

What is that one movie everyone needs to watch in their lifetime?

English
176
154
891
55.6K
Abū Fā'iz retweetledi
A.Y.O
A.Y.O@YusufAsunmogejo·
Dear Zuha, I know you are inquisitive about how our religious days fit into the modern world. It is a brilliant question. I will be breaking this down for you so you can clearly see that Islam is not a copycat. It is a complete system with its own deep, independent roots. Firstly, you asked: if the Gregorian calendar is not real, why do Muslims pray on Friday, and is there a different Friday in the Islamic calendar? To help you and others understand, we have to go back to history. Pope Gregory was the one who introduced the Gregorian calendar, and he introduced it in 1582. However, when you look at Islamic history, you will see that Muslims had been observing Jumu'ah for nearly a thousand years before that Pope was even born. If you open classical books of Islamic history such as the Seerah of Ibn Hisham or The Sealed Nectar, the physical proof is right there. These books documented the very first Jumu'ah prayer held by the Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him) in 622 CE. It took place in the valley of Ranuna during his migration from Mecca to Medina. In that same era, Allah revealed an entire chapter in the Quran called Surah Al-Jumu'ah, where He commanded the believers to leave their worldly trades and gather. This proves Yawm al-Jumu'ah was a lived reality in the 7th century, over 900 years before the Gregorian calendar existed in Rome. Now, you might wonder how this connects to the Friday we know today. Frankly, the seven day weekly loop is an entirely different system from how we count solar or lunar months. It is an ancient, unbroken mathematical cycle. You do not even have to take my word for it. Non Muslim historians and sociologists agree on this. For instance, Eviatar Zerubavel in his book The Seven Day Circle confirmed that this weekly cycle has remained completely unbroken for thousands of years across different empires. The day the Western world decided to call Friday aligns seamlessly with the sixth day of that ancient cycle. In Arabic, the days are just numbered. Sunday is Day One. Monday is Day Two. The sixth day is Yawm al-Jumu'ah, the Day of Gathering. This means we do not pray on this day to honor a Roman calendar. That is, it was just a coincidental relationship. We pray on it because Allah established it on a divine timeline. Secondly, you asked: why is Friday night considered so blessed, and what are you missing here? To understand this, we have to look at the foundations of human existence. Friday goes more than just the end of the work week. The Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him) taught us that Friday is the day Prophet Adam (peace be upon him) was created, the day he entered Paradise, the day he was sent to earth, and the day the world will end. This is why the Prophet had a very profound routine. Every Friday during the early morning Fajr prayer, he would recite Surah As-Sajdah and Surah Al-Insan. He did this deliberately. These two chapters detail the creation of the universe, the biological creation of man, and the intense realities of the Day of Judgment. Praying these chapters every Friday morning is a divine reset. It reminds you of your origin and your final destination, both of which are tied to this specific day. Because Friday carries the heavy weight of the end of times, reciting Surah Al-Kahf is your spiritual shield. The Surah contains stories about the ultimate trials of wealth, power, and faith. Reading it provides a divine light that protects your heart from the materialistic noise of the world and the deception of the Dajjal until the next Jumu'ah. So by this fact, you are not missing anything. You just need to see that we are not following a Gregorian Friday. We are following a divine timeline. Don’t fret. Allah knows best.
Zuha Malik@zoemalyks_chai

I have a question. If the Gregorian calendar isn't real, why do Muslims pray jummah and recite surah kahf on Friday? Why is Friday night considered so blessed in Islam? Is there a different Friday in the Islamic calendar? What am I missing here?

English
259
2.5K
7.7K
292.5K
Abū Fā'iz
Abū Fā'iz@mayourwaye·
@Nafeesa1404 Ordinarily, with good anaesthesia, neither of them should be
English
1
0
0
16
Arojinle
Arojinle@arojinle1·
May his soul rest in peace
English
84
39
240
17.9K
Abū Fā'iz retweetledi
Aynaa 🕊️
Aynaa 🕊️@WeepingWayfarer·
The Prophet Muhammad ﷺ said: "You should pray Qiyam al-layl, for it's the habit of the righteous people who came before you, and it'll bring you Closer to your Lord, expiate for bad deeds, prevent sin, and expel disease from the body." (At-tirmidhi and Ahmad)
English
0
115
744
9.6K
Abū Fā'iz
Abū Fā'iz@mayourwaye·
@PiousGeek They don't know their brand is already an Eid franchise or they are deliberately ignoring
English
0
0
1
415
Kolapo Imãm▫️
Kolapo Imãm▫️@PiousGeek·
One would expect Fan Ice to have some solid campaigns and cold coolers activation around Eid, or na me dey overthink am 🤔
English
15
37
337
20.6K
Sami
Sami@somee1809·
@saweezo Its good but i dont particularly like the AI presentation however i found Omar the Orient's series very good with well made art and good narration.
English
2
0
7
980
𝙎𝙖𝙦𝙚𝙚𝙯𝙮
just finished watching the Prophet ﷺ Seerah series. and i can confidently say with all my heart and soul, he is the greatest person to ever step foot on this earth. there was no one like him and theres never ever going to be anyone like him ever again. Muhammad ﷺ.
English
125
1.1K
9.4K
216.1K
Jimoh Zainab
Jimoh Zainab@zyainy·
Why are you still awake?
English
81
8
128
4K