Malik Badri
The author endeavours to distinguish Islamic contemplation from other forms of meditation, comparing it to thinking and especially transcendental meditation which has achieved much following in the West in recent years. The author suggests that when Muslims contemplate the creation, the self and the laws of the Almighty therein, they excel above other contemplators because they have higher incentives and expectations from God. This book is an example of how the himan sciences can support faith and spiritual values, and how, when a mind is guided by the Qur'an and the Sunnah, it will be graced by the light of faith and the light of revelation, as well as by the guiding light of reason.
(9781565642676/2684)
The author endeavours to distinguish Islamic contemplation from other forms of meditation, comparing it to thinking and especially transcendental meditation which has achieved much following in the West in recent years. The author suggests that when Muslims contemplate the creation, the self and the laws of the Almighty therein, they excel above other contemplators because they have higher incentives and expectations from God. This book is an example of how the himan sciences can support faith and spiritual values, and how, when a mind is guided by the Qur'an and the Sunnah, it will be graced by the light of faith and the light of revelation, as well as by the guiding light of reason.
(9781565642676/2684)