The Coming of the Dawn
According to a well-stated proverb, the darkest hour is just before the dawn. And although astronomically the darkest point is much earlier, the truth of this proverb is metaphoric-but in no way less real.
So often we find that the darkest times in our lives are followed by the most precious. Often, it is at the moment when everything looks broken that something least expected lifts us and carries us through. Did not Prophet Ayoub (Job) lose everything one by one, before it was all given back and more?
Yes. For Prophet Ayoub, the night was real. And for many of us, it seems to last forever. But Allah does not allow an endless night. In His mercy, he gives us the sun. Yet there are times when we feel our hardships won’t cease. And maybe some of us have fallen to such a spiritual low in our deen (religion) that we feel disconnected from our Creator. And maybe for some of us, it’s so dark, we don’t even notice.
But like the sun that rises at the end of the night, our dawn has come. In His infinite mercy, Allah has sent the light of Ramadan to erase the night. He has sent the month of the Qur’an so that He might elevate us and bring us from our isolation to His nearness. He has given us this blessed month to fill our emptiness, cure our loneliness, and end our soul’s poverty. He has sent us the dawn that we might find from darkness – light. Allah says,
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“He it is Who sends blessings on you, as do His angels,
that He may bring you out from the depths of Darkness into Light: and He is Full of Mercy to the Believers” (33:43). |
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“Say: “O my Servants who have transgressed against their souls!
Despair not of the Mercy of Allah. For Allah for He is Oft-Forgiving, Most Merciful” (39:53). |
Every moment of Ramadan is a chance to come back to Allah
But unlike humanity, our Creator doesn’t hold grudges. Imagine receiving a clean slate. Imagine having everything you ever regret doing erased completely. Ramadan is that chance. The Prophet
So given this unparalleled opportunity, how can we best take advantage of it? Two often overlooked issues to keep in mind are:
Know why you’re fasting.
Many people fast as a ritual, without truly understanding its meaning. Others reduce it to a simple exercise in empathy with the poor. While this is a beautiful consequence of fasting, it is not the main purpose defined by Allah
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“Fasting is prescribed for you as it was prescribed for those before you,
that you may attain taqwa (God-consciousness).” (2:183) |
Don’t make fasting just hunger and thirst.
The Prophet
And in so striving, we are given a chance to escape the darkness of our own isolation from God. But like the sun that sets at the end of the day, so too will Ramadan come and go, leaving only its mark on our heart’s sky.
Source: SuhaibWebb – Yasmin Mogahed
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