This time the teacher is the dog

As we learned from the bees before, this time we gonna learn from the dog. However, its not any dog, but it is the hunting one. In surat “Al-Ma’eda” (the table) verse no. 4, Allah (SWT) talks about the legitemacy of eating from what a trained hunting dog hunts. Although it could appear a normal Fiqh verse dealing with the fiqh of food, however, Ibn Al-qyem points 3 lessons to be learned:

1- The value of knowledge…..The only difference between the hunting dog and the normal dog is that the first is “tought or passed through a learning process” and the outcome is a huge difference: one of them his hunt or prey is HALAL and the other one his is HARAM….because of this knowledge (as refered to in the verse)

2- Sincerity…..When the hunting dog hunts for his master, his hunt is accepted and “halal” but when it hunts for itself (even if it is a similar prey), the hunt is not accepted and it is haram.

3- “Adab” or dicipline and politness…..Although the dog is an agressive animal and has a strong desire to eat its prey especially at time of hunger, however, out of faithfulness and politness, it can’t eat the prey of its master….why? because it remebers that he is the one who protected it, who gave it food, shelter and took care of it……So how about you son of Adam, can’t you give up some of your desires to please your Lord who created you, protected you, showered His mercy and bounties on you,….??

Thanks our teacher for these valuble lessons.

6 Responses to “This time the teacher is the dog”

  1. Omar Says:

    animals are nice teachers sometimes… they are a good change from essays, lectures, and research

  2. Suleiman Says:

    The relationship between the provider and the provided, the sustainer and the sustained, seems to me a central theme in the Islamic faith.

    Where some religions appear to have a myriad of rituals, each with their own effects of muse and meaning, and other religions consist solely of abstract feelings of the groovy, I find Islam to be the common ground.

    We know what we practice and why we practice it, and every ritual is loaded with both meaning and practical use.

    Acknowledging that we are created, sustained, and maintained, provokes an inclination and proclivity to serve. If we fail to take heed of that natural pull, we miss an opportunity to find balance, peace, and prosperity in this world and the next insh’Allah.

  3. asma Says:

    salaam,

    mubarak on your baby boy brother ahmed!..you must be very busy.. we are looking forward to your next post inshaa Allah…JAK :)

  4. ahmed Says:

    The more we reflect on nature, the more we learn. Jazaka Allaho Khair for sharing these important lessons.

  5. Asif Says:

    This blog is like a review class. I miss those days !!!
    JAK

  6. Redwan Ahmed Says:

    go to http://www.redwanahmed.hadithuna.com and write comments

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