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Never despair

Never despair

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https://www.youtube.com/watch\?v\=TFTthtR4_90 Auto-generated transcript:In the name of Allah, the Most Gracious, the Most Merciful. Alhamdulillahi Rabbil Alameen. Wassalatu wassalamu ala ashrafil anbiya wal mursaleen. Muhammadun Rasulullah sallallahu alayhi wa ala alihi wa sahbihi wa sallam. Tasliman kathiran kathira. I'm about to... I'm about to finish this. I'm sitting here at the back of this lovely little lake in Narsapur. And it's a pretty chilly morning. So we have this lovely fire going. And we're contemplating on the khudrat of Allah subhanahu wa ta'ala. The lake at this moment, the water is like a sheet of glass. There is a teal that is circling. And at some point, I guess, it will land on the water. But just now, it's flying somewhere else. There are a couple of... red-bottled lapwings, which are sounding their alarm call. The teal is coming right overhead. It's checking out the ground to see if it is safe to land. Very, very beautiful scene. There are... Fish have started feeding. So you see the little circle as they break the surface of the water. Absolutely, fabulous scene. I remind myself of you, that this is the khudrat of Allah subhanahu wa ta'ala in one small little corner of the globe. What must be this khudrat? And we ask Allah subhanahu wa ta'ala to make us among those who will be entered into Jannah. When we enter Jannah. Because Allah subhanahu wa ta'ala called this dunya. Dunya. the lowest thing. A name which is deserving of the dunya, the lowest thing. Whereas Jannah, Allah SWT said that this is something which no eye has seen and no mind can comprehend the beauty and magnificence of it. So how beautiful and magnificent that should be. We ask Allah SWT to make us among those who will inherit that, inshallah. I remind myself and you about a very important thing, which is the we live today in a world which is full of turmoil. And it's almost like, to say that is like putting it mildly because this turmoil is there, it's seems to be ever increasing and every day there's a new piece of action that happens. And it all seems to be a question of who has the biggest stick. In Urdu there is a proverb of Mahavira which says, Jiski laati uski bhaiys. The buffalo belongs to the man with the stick. I remember the quote of the Roman general Pompey, when he was campaigning in Greece and some of the people of the town, they met him and trying to pacify him, trying to tell him not to invade the town and so on. And they quoted to him different laws which were accepted at the time. And Pompey just replied with one word, one line. He said, don't talk laws to us, we have swords. He said, don't talk laws to us, we have swords. And that is where we seem to be today in this world. Because on the face of it, it seems as if all that we learnt, whether in Islam or elsewhere, about justice, about compassion, about kindness, about what is fair, what is not fair, all that seems to have been trashed. And the only thing that seems to be used and extolled and praised is the power of the gun. How powerful is my military? In that situation, one of the things that we find when we sit in our gatherings and so on, is a sense of helplessness. Where people feel that, you know, after all, what can we do? And what can we do is not asked as a question, what can we do is mentioned as if to say that we cannot do anything. And there's a sense of helplessness, we can't do anything, we just have to bear what is happening. So how do we deal with this and how do we see this from an Islamic sense? My submission to you is this. If you want to think about a sense of helplessness, ask yourself, what must have been the sense of helplessness of a little boy who was probably five or six years old, who was thrown into a well by his own brothers, and he's at the bottom of this well, and those who had sworn to protect him and to take care of him, were the ones who had actually thrown him into that well. What must have been the sense of helplessness of this boy when he is apparently rescued, and then he realizes that the rescue was only to sell him in the market as a slave? What must have been the sense of helplessness of this boy when he is apparently rescued, and then he realizes that he is actually being rescued? What must have been the sense of helplessness of this young man several years later when he was wrongfully accused, and even though his innocence was proven beyond doubt, he was still thrown into prison? What must have been the sense of helplessness of the man who stood, on the mountain of Safa, and called out and said, Wa Subaha? And when the people came, and he said to them, that if you do not leave this worship of your creations, worship of idols, worship of things which cannot do anything to you, no harm, no benefit, and if you do not worship Allah , you will face, disaster. And instead of listening to him at least, people walked away, people opposed him, people abused him, and he did not have a single supporter in the ...
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