Loving and Living the Quran
Allah says: “Surely Allah loves those who turn to Him repeatedly, and He loves those who purify themselves.” (2:222) The Qur’an does not simply praise those who repent once. It praises al-tawwābīn — those who return again and again. The word tawwāb in Arabic implies repetition and continuity. It describes a person for whom returning to Allah is not a rare emergency response after a major mistake, but a regular spiritual rhythm. Repentance becomes a disposition. The people Allah loves are not those who never drift. They are those who do not stay away for long. Imam Khomeini reflects...
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Allah says: “Whoever does evil or wrongs his own soul and then seeks forgiveness from Allah will find Allah Forgiving, Merciful.” (4:110) This verse contains a powerful promise. It acknowledges two kinds of wrongdoing: harm toward others and harm toward one’s own soul through sin. Yet the verse does not end with condemnation. It ends with an invitation. If such a person turns and seeks forgiveness, the Qur’an says: “he will find Allah.” The verb used is yajid — he will find. It is immediate and certain. To find something implies it was already there. The verse suggests that Allah...
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Allah says: “O you who believe! Turn to Allah in sincere repentance (tawbatan nasūḥā). Perhaps your Lord will remove from you your evil and admit you into gardens beneath which rivers flow.” (66:8) This verse addresses believers — people already in relationship with Allah. Tawbah is not only for those far away. It is part of the ongoing life of faith. The Qur’an emphasizes the quality of repentance: tawbatan nasūḥā — sincere, wholehearted repentance. Scholars explain the word nasūḥā in several ways: A repentance done purely for Allah’s sake. A repentance that...
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Allah says: “Say: O My servants who have transgressed against their own souls, do not despair of the mercy of Allah. Surely Allah forgives all sins. Indeed, He is the Forgiving, the Merciful.” (39:53) This verse is often described by scholars as one of the most hope-giving verses in the Qur’an. Notice how Allah addresses the very people who feel most distant: “O My servants.” Even in the moment of transgression, the relationship is not severed. The belonging remains. The Qur’an describes sin as “transgressing against your own soul.” It frames wrongdoing not primarily as...
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Allah says: “No! Rather, what they used to do has become like rust upon their hearts.” (83:14) Over the past reflections, we have explored the inner landscape of the soul — the fitrah, the states of the nafs, the pull of desire, and the voice of conscience. Recently we reflected on how communities help protect that conscience through mutual guardianship. Today we ask a difficult question: what happens when the soul drifts and does not return? The Qur’an uses the word rān, often translated as rust or a covering over the heart. Classical scholars explain that the human soul begins pure...
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Allah says: “Spend from what We have provided you before death comes to one of you and he says: ‘My Lord, if only You would delay me for a short time so that I could give charity and be among the righteous.’ But Allah never delays a soul when its appointed time comes.” (63:10–11) These verses place us at a powerful moment: the threshold of death. In that instant, everything becomes clear. The time we had. The opportunities we postponed. The relationships we delayed repairing. The good we intended but never acted on. The person cries out: “If only I had a little more time.” But...
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Allah praises: “Those who listen to the word and follow the best of it — they are the ones Allah has guided, and they are people of understanding.” (39:18) We often focus on the courage required to give advice. But receiving correction may be harder. The believer is described as a mirror to another believer. A mirror does not flatter — it reflects. Honest reflection is a gift. As we grow older or more established, we often receive less honest feedback. People hesitate. Pride grows subtle. Imam Ali (as) said: “The most beloved of your brothers is the one who points out your flaws to...
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Allah says: “Call to the way of your Lord with wisdom and goodly exhortation, and argue with them in the best manner…” (16:125) Encouraging good builds the village. Forbidding wrong protects it. But wisdom is what keeps it from fracturing. The problem is often not what we say — but how we say it. The Qur’an outlines three principles: Hikmah (wisdom) — knowing timing, context, and capacity. Maw‘idhah hasanah (beautiful exhortation) — strong advice delivered with gentleness and dignity. The best manner of dialogue — even in disagreement. Before correcting someone, we...
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Allah describes the believing community in relational terms: “The believing men and believing women are guardians of one another…” (9:71) The word awliyā’ means more than friends. It refers to loyal protectors, committed allies, those bound together in care and responsibility for one another’s flourishing and salvation. Notice the order of the verse. First: guardianship. Then: enjoining good and forbidding wrong. Correction flows from loyalty, not ego. This responsibility is explicitly shared by men and women. Moral investment in society is not gendered — it is communal. The verse...
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Allah says: “They did not forbid one another from the wrongdoing they committed. Evil indeed was what they used to do.” (5:79) This verse criticizes not only those who committed wrong — but those who failed to stop each other. The Qur’an reminds us that wrongdoing has a social dimension. What we tolerate shapes who we become collectively. Yesterday we reflected on inviting to good. Today we focus on the second half: forbidding wrong. The Prophet (saw) said: “Whoever sees an evil, let him change it with his hand. If he cannot, then with his tongue. If he cannot, then with his heart...
info_outlineAllah says: “Surely Allah loves those who turn to Him repeatedly, and He loves those who purify themselves.” (2:222)
The Qur’an does not simply praise those who repent once. It praises al-tawwābīn — those who return again and again.
The word tawwāb in Arabic implies repetition and continuity. It describes a person for whom returning to Allah is not a rare emergency response after a major mistake, but a regular spiritual rhythm.
Repentance becomes a disposition.
The people Allah loves are not those who never drift. They are those who do not stay away for long.
Imam Khomeini reflects that sincere repentance does more than erase sin — it makes the servant beloved to God. Not merely tolerated or pardoned, but loved.
Our tradition has always understood that spiritual growth is not a straight line. It is a cycle: we rise, we drift, we notice, we return.
Even the prophets turned constantly to Allah, not because of sin, but because they understood human limitation and Divine greatness.
Tawbah becomes the compass that brings us home.
Reflection:
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When did I notice myself drifting this Ramadan and consciously return?
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How can I make returning to Allah a regular spiritual practice after Ramadan?
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What would it mean to become someone whose instinct is always to turn back?
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