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Surely, Allah does not forgive associating
anything with Him, and He forgives whatever is other than that to whomever
He wills.
(TM Qur'an al-Nisa 4:48 and 116)
The
Chief Sins
Al- kABA'R
By Imam Adh-Dhahabi
Arabic- English (Full Arabic Text is Included)
By Muhammad Ibn Uthman Adh-Dhahabi
Translated by Mahmoud Ibrahim
Hardback 511 Pages
Published by Dar Al-Kotob Al-Ilmiyah Beyrouth Liban (Beirut Lebanon) (2nd
Edition 2004)
The major sins are those acts which have been forbidden by Allah
in the Quran and by His Messenger (SAW) in the Sunnah (practise of the Prophet),
and which have been made clear by the actions of of the first righteous
generation of Muslims, the Companions of the Prophet (SAW
There is some difference of opinion among scholars in this
regard. Some say these major sins are seven, and in support of their position
they quote the tradition: 'Avoid the seven noxious
things'- and after
having said this, the propeht (SAW) mentioned them: 'associating anything
with Allah; magic; killing one whom Allah has declared inviolate without a just
case, consuming the property of an orphan, devouring usury, turning back when
the army advances, and slandering chaste women who are believers but
indiscreet.' (Bukhari and Muslim)
'Abdullah ibn 'Abbas said: 'Seventy is closer to their
number than seven,' and in this book Imam Dhabi goes through the 70 Major
Sins Supported by the Qur'an and the Sunnah of the Prophet Muhammad (SAW)
An excellent book in Arabic and English side by side. Contains the 70 major
sins, their descriptions and supporting Quran Ayah's and Hadith.
The Author Muhammad bin Ahmad bin `Uthman bin
Qaymaz at Turkamani, Shams al-Din al-Dimashqi al-Dhahabi al-Shafi`i (673-748
AH), the imam, Shaykh al-Islam, head of hadith masters, critic and expert
examiner of the hadith, encyclopedic historian and biographer, and foremost
authority in the canonical readings of the Qur'an. Born in Damascus where his
family lived from the time of his grandfather `Uthman, he sometimes identified
himself as Ibn al-Dhahabi - son of the goldsmith - in reference to his father's
profession.
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