The Rising and the Hereafter by Huseyin Hilmi Isik - HTML preview

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FOOTNOTES (31-45)

[31] (Imâm) Muhammad Bukhârî passed away in Samarkand in 256 [870 A.D.].

[32] Please see the fourth fascicle of Endless Bliss to learn how Muslims prostrate themselves, (i.e. make sajda.)

[33] Please see the thirty-sixth chapter of the third fascicle of Endless Bliss for the ‘Lawh-il-Mahfûz’.

[34] A more detailed account of this episode is provided in the explanation of the twenty-third âyat of Sâd Sûra in the book of tafsîr entitled Mawâhib. Prophets cannot commit smallest sins, and they cannot even think of sinning. A person who reads the episode in that tafsîr will understand the truth well.

[35] Abû Sa’îd Esma’î was born in Basra in 122, and passed away in Marw (or Merv) in 216 [831 A.D.]. His real name is ’Abd-ul-Melîk ‘rahimahullâhu ta’âlâ’.

[36] Please see the fourth fascicle of Endless Bliss for detailed information on ‘namâz’.

[37] Please see the sixth chapter of the second fascicle of Endless Bliss for kinds of hadîths.

[38] ’Abdullah passed away in Tâif in 68 [687 A.D.].

[39] Please scan the fourth fascicle of Endless Bliss for ‘nâ-mahram’.

[40] If a Prophet has been sent a heavenly book and a new dispensation, he is called a Rasûl. If his mission is to restore the dispensation of the Prophet previous to him, he is called a Nebî (or Nabî).

[41] Please see the twenty-fifth chapter of the fourth fascicle of Endless Bliss for ‘dhikr’ and ‘dhikring’.

[42] Please read the six fascicles of Endless Bliss, for the ‘halâls’ and the ‘harâms’.

[43] Please scan the fourteenth and the fifteenth and the forty-sixth chapters of the fifth fascicle, and also the tenth and the twelfth chapters of the sixth fascicle, of Endless Bliss, for ‘qisâs’.

[44] By Muhammad ibni ’Âbidîn, (d. 1252 [1836 A.D.], Damascus.

[45] The war of defence which our blessed Prophet and the Believers who were with him fought against the Meccan polytheists in the fifth year of the Hijrat (Hegira) [627 A.D.].