Ali Ataie – Virtues of Prophet Ibrahim (AS)

Ali Ataie
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The transcript discusses the origins of the Bible's predictions of Abraham Lincoln's death and the importance of peace be upon him. It suggests that the Bible's use of multipleiva ideas is a result of a combination of biblical and modern theories, and that the church's use of the word "palENT" is a powerful argument for their claims. The transcript also touches on the challenges of the Bible's use of logic and reason, and the importance of the use of numbers and numbers in biblical text to indicate the time of publication. The use of "palENT" in the Bible is a result of a combination of biblical and modern theories, and the church's use of the word "palENT" is a powerful argument for their claims.

AI: Summary ©

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			As we approach the season of Hajj, the
		
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			season of the pilgrimage,
		
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			let's remind ourselves of some of the great
		
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			virtues of our master Abraham, peace be upon
		
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			him. A man whose very name means the
		
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			father of nations.
		
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			According to the sacred historical narrative of Islam,
		
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			Abraham, peace be upon him, or Ibrahim alaihi
		
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			salam,
		
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			traveled to the Arabian Peninsula with his eldest
		
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			son, Ishmael, peace be upon him, or Ishmael
		
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			alaihi salam.
		
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			And both father and son built the walls
		
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			of the Kaaba in Mecca.
		
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			The foundation of which was laid by Adam,
		
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			peace be upon him, the first human being.
		
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			In more ancient times, Mecca was known as
		
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			Becca from the Arabic and Hebrew root word
		
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			meaning to weep.
		
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			The Quran says in translation,
		
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			say, god speaks the truth.
		
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			Follow the creed of Abraham, the quintessential monotheist.
		
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			He was not an idol worshiper.
		
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			Indeed, the first house ever founded for humanity,
		
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			for the worship of the one true God,
		
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			was at Becca, the blessed,
		
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			a guide for all people.
		
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			Chapter 3 verses 95 to 96.
		
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			It was in this weeping valley that Ishmael,
		
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			as a very young child, cried for water,
		
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			while his mother known as Hagar in Hebrew,
		
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			ran frantically between 2 hills known as Safa
		
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			and Marwa, in search of water to give
		
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			to her son.
		
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			Eventually, a blessed spring was given to her
		
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			by God, the water of zemzem, water that
		
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			flows to this day.
		
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			The name Hagar in Hebrew is related to
		
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			the Arabic word hijra,
		
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			meaning flight or migration.
		
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			It was Hagar and her son who migrated
		
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			from Canaan to the Meccan Valley by order
		
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			of God himself.
		
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			In Islamic understanding,
		
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			the Kaaba
		
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			in ancient Becca was one of the outlying
		
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			mishkanot or tabernacles of the Lord that was
		
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			visited by some of the ancient Israelites.
		
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			Psalm 84 in the Tanakh describes the journey
		
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			of a group of Israelite pilgrims traveling to
		
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			Jerusalem
		
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			who, quote, passed through the or
		
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			weeping weeping valley
		
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			and made it into a well.
		
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			Now we are told in the Quran that
		
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			after Abraham and Ishmael raised up the foundations
		
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			of the Kaaba,
		
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			they supplicated to god
		
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			saying, oh, our lord, accept this from us.
		
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			You are indeed the all hearing, the all
		
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			knowing.
		
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			Oh, our lord,
		
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			make us both fully Muslim to you,
		
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			and from our descendants, a nation that will
		
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			submit to you as Muslims.
		
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			Show us our rights and rituals
		
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			and turn to us in grace. You are
		
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			truly the acceptor of repentance,
		
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			the most merciful,
		
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			chapter 2 verses 127
		
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			and 128.
		
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			We're fur further told in the Quran
		
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			that God said to humanity,
		
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			and remember when we assign to Abraham the
		
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			sight of the house,
		
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			saying, do not associate anything with me in
		
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			worship,
		
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			and purify my house for those who circle
		
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			it, stand in prayer therein, and bow and
		
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			prostrate themselves,
		
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			and announce the pilgrimage to all mankind.
		
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			They will come to you on foot on
		
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			every they will come to you on foot
		
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			and on every lean mount,
		
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			and they will come from every distant pathway,
		
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			so they may obtain the benefits in store
		
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			for them and pronounce the name of God
		
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			on appointed days over the sacrificial animals that
		
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			he has provided for them.
		
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			So eat from their meat and feed the
		
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			desperately poor.
		
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			Then let them end their untidiness and let
		
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			them fulfill their vows and let them circumambulate
		
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			the ancient house, chapter 22 verses 26 to
		
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			29.
		
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			So we can see from the Quranic narrative
		
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			that the pilgrimage to Mecca, with its rites
		
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			and rituals,
		
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			has its origin in none other than Abraham,
		
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			peace be upon him.
		
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			However, over time,
		
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			the descendants of Ishmael in that region, the
		
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			Arabs,
		
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			began to fall away from the pure Abrahamic
		
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			monotheism
		
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			or Tawhid,
		
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			and eventually, the Kaaba became surrounded by hundreds
		
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			of idols that the Arabs were prayed to
		
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			as intercessors between them and Allah,
		
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			whom they deemed too
		
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			majestic to call upon directly.
		
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			According to the Quran,
		
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			there was one more thing that Abraham and
		
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			Ishmael prayed for at the Kaaba.
		
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			They said, oh, our Lord, raise from among
		
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			them a messenger
		
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			who will recite to them your revelations.
		
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			Teach them the book and wisdom
		
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			and purify them. Indeed, you alone are the
		
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			almighty,
		
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			the all wise. Chapter 2 verse 129.
		
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			This prayer of Abraham and Ishmael was answered
		
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			by God when he raised the prophet Muhammad,
		
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			peace be upon him, in Mecca
		
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			as a universal messenger.
		
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			In fact, the name Ishmael
		
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			in Hebrew,
		
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			or Ishmael,
		
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			means God will hear or answer,
		
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			and so his prayer was answered by God.
		
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			The prophet Muhammad, peace be upon him, was
		
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			the prophet of the Abrahamic restoration.
		
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			He was the greatest monotheist in the history
		
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			of the world.
		
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			The prophet Muhammad recited to humanity the Quran,
		
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			God's final revelation.
		
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			He taught us the meanings of scripture by
		
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			his speech and actions.
		
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			And like his ancestor Abraham,
		
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			his theological teachings purified humanity
		
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			of both explicit and subtle idolatry.
		
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			This Muslim narration of Abraham and Ishmael building
		
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			the Kaaba is not mentioned in the book
		
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			of Genesis in the Torah.
		
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			Now the Quran's judgments of biblical narratives are
		
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			a bit complicated
		
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			and beyond the scope of this brief exposition.
		
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			In short, the Quran sees itself as both
		
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			a confirmation of biblical tradition,
		
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			as well as a corrective.
		
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			Modern historians and textual critics have argued compellingly
		
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			that the sources of the 5 books attributed
		
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			to Moses, peace be upon him, were in
		
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			fact composed
		
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			100 several 100 of years after the death
		
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			of Moses,
		
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			and then someone around the time of the
		
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			second temple, maybe 500 before the common era,
		
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			a redactor, probably the scribe Ezra,
		
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			collated these sources and created what today we
		
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			call the Pentateuch or Chumash or the 5
		
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			scrolls, Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, and Deuteronomy.
		
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			This is called the documentary hypothesis,
		
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			and it remains a popular and widely accepted
		
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			source criticism of the Pentateuch in the Western
		
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			Academy.
		
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			Nonetheless,
		
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			we are told in Genesis 17, in the
		
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			Torah,
		
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			that God promised to hear Abraham's prayer regarding
		
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			Ishmael.
		
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			This, of course, a play on his name,
		
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			God will hear.
		
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			God says to Abraham,
		
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			I have blessed him, meaning Ishmael,
		
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			and will make him fruitful
		
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			and will multiply him exceedingly.
		
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			Twelve princes shall he beget,
		
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			and I will make him a great nation.
		
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			Genesis
		
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			17/20.
		
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			In traditional rabbinical Judaism,
		
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			the rabbis teach that scripture contains 4 levels
		
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			of meaning.
		
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			This is known by the acronym, pardis,
		
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			that is peshat,
		
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			the plain or obvious meaning,
		
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			remez, an illusion or indication of something in
		
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			the future or foreshadowing,
		
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			drash,
		
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			this is when religious principles or ethics are
		
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			derived from the text,
		
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			and sod,
		
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			a more subtle or esoteric meaning. And there
		
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			is an analog to this attributed to the
		
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			Muslim scholar and sage, Imam Jafar as Sadiq,
		
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			who said that the Quran contains 4 levels
		
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			of meaning as well. The plain meanings, illusions,
		
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			subtleties,
		
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			and realities. That is the Luft, Isharat,
		
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			Lata'if, and Haqqa'ikh.
		
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			Now just as Muslim exegetes see the prophet
		
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			Muhammad, peace be upon him, as the fulfillment
		
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			of the supplication of Abraham and Ishmael mentioned
		
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			in the Quran,
		
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			Some Jewish authorities also see the prophet Muhammad,
		
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			peace be upon him, as a fulfillment of
		
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			Genesis 17/20
		
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			mentioned earlier.
		
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			God said to Abraham that he blessed Ishmael.
		
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			That is to say in Arabic that Ishmael
		
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			was Mubarak.
		
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			At the level of the pashat,
		
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			the text clearly states that from Ishmael,
		
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			there will come a great nation,
		
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			a goi gadol.
		
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			At the level of remez, this indicates the
		
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			blessed and great ummah of the prophet Muhammad,
		
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			sallallahu alaihi salam, peace be upon him, who
		
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			again was the most successful monotheist
		
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			in the history of humanity.
		
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			Judaism
		
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			could not simply ignore him.
		
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			In mystical Judaism,
		
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			jamatria,
		
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			or numerological
		
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			interpretation of sacred texts, is also
		
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			often considered.
		
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			Now as Muslims, however, we should take such
		
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			things with a grain of salt.
		
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			Perhaps there is something to this, but we
		
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			should not be overly dogmatic or insistent about
		
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			such things.
		
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			As one of my teachers said, too much
		
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			salt on a meal spoils the dish.
		
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			Nonetheless,
		
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			some interesting numerological
		
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			correspondences
		
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			have been pointed out to me by some
		
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			of my Jewish colleagues
		
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			about Genesis 17/20.
		
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			These things would probably fall under the more
		
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			subtle interpretive level of sod.
		
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			In Genesis 17/20,
		
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			God said to Abraham that he would multiply
		
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			Ishmael exceedingly.
		
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			Hev bei, the Hebrew says,
		
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			The phrase,
		
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			translated as exceedingly,
		
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			has a numerical value of 92.
		
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			The phrase, as a great nation,
		
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			the
		
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			also has a numerical value of 92.
		
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			Interestingly,
		
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			the numerical value of the name Mohammed in
		
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			Hebrew,
		
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			spelled memhet mem Dalet, is also 92.
		
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			This subtly did this subtlety did not escape
		
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			the notice of Hebrew exigence.
		
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			Furthermore,
		
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			the value of the Hebrew name Abram, the
		
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			original name of Abraham according to Beresheet or
		
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			Genesis, meaning exalted father, is 243,
		
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			while Hagar is 208.
		
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			This totals
		
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			451,
		
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			which is the which is the exact numerical
		
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			value of Ishmael or Ishmael.
		
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			Abram plus Hagar equals Ishmael.
		
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			Finally, we notice that gen in Genesis 17/20
		
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			mentions that Ishmael, the son of Hagar,
		
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			will beget 12 princes.
		
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			Remarkably, Ishmael is mentioned exactly 12 times in
		
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			the Quran, while Hagar is mentioned exactly 12
		
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			times
		
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			in the Torah.
		
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			The famous 11th century Tunisian rabbi in Talmudic,
		
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			Hananel
		
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			ben Hushiel,
		
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			wrote the following in his commentary of Beresheet
		
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			or Genesis 17/20.
		
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			He said,
		
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			we see from our historical records that this
		
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			prophecy came true
		
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			after a delay of 2,333
		
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			years.
		
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			The translator then interjected with this commentary.
		
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			Abraham was circumcised in the year 2047
		
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			according to the,
		
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			and the Mohammedan faith originated in the year
		
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			4384,
		
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			exactly 2333
		
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			years later.
		
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			Back to rabbi Chananel,
		
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			who says, quote, this delay was not due
		
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			to sins of the original Ishmaelites.
		
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			They had been looking forward to the fulfillment
		
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			of this prophecy
		
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			for all these years.
		
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			We lost our independence due to our sins,
		
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			however,
		
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			end quote.
		
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			Now, one of the greatest challenges of our
		
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			current zeitgeist
		
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			is the rise of anti religious postmodern philosophies.
		
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			The most infamous of the postmodern philosophers
		
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			said, quote, it is meaningless to speak in
		
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			the name of or against
		
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			reason, truth,
		
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			or knowledge.
		
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			Reason, truth, and knowledge are meaningless, he says.
		
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			It's true, unfortunately, we seem to now be
		
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			living in the age of feelings.
		
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			As Muslims,
		
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			I think we can say that reason is
		
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			limited,
		
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			but it is certainly not meaningless.
		
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			Muslim theologians maintain that
		
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			and,
		
00:11:44 --> 00:11:45
			that is reason and revelation,
		
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			are not in conflict, but that the proper
		
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			use of the former former will lead to
		
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			the recognition of the latter
		
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			because they come from the same source, ultimately.
		
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			And I think Maimonides would agree with this.
		
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			According to the Quran, the prophets of God
		
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			use logic and reason
		
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			to appeal to their respective communities
		
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			because logic and reason have efficacy.
		
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			And our master Abraham, peace be upon him,
		
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			is a prime example of this.
		
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			Allah subhanahu wa ta'ala says in the Quran
		
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			in surah number 6 in meaning, thus did
		
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			we show Abraham the dominion of the heavens
		
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			and the earth that he might be among
		
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			those possessing certitude.
		
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			When the night drew dark upon him, he
		
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			saw a star. He said, had that rubbed
		
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			thee? This is my lord. But when it
		
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			set, he said, I love not things that
		
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			set.
		
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			Then when he saw the moon rising, he
		
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			said,
		
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			this is my lord. But when it set,
		
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			he said, if my lord does not guide
		
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			me, I shall surely be among the people
		
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			who are astray.
		
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			Then when then when he saw the sun
		
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			rising, he said,
		
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			This is my lord. This is greater. But
		
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			when it set, he said, oh my people,
		
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			truly I am free of the partners you
		
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			ascribe.
		
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			Truly, as a Hanif, a quintessential monotheist,
		
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			I have turned my face toward him who
		
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			created
		
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			the heavens and the earth.
		
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			Now don't get the wrong idea. There is
		
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			no question of Abraham even considering the worship
		
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			of the sun, the moon, or the stars,
		
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			as Muslim exegetes have pointed out. This is
		
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			Abraham's rhetorical argument against the idolatry of his
		
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			people, the ancient Babylonians.
		
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			He is drawing out through intellectual deduction or
		
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			reasoning
		
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			the flaws of their beliefs.
		
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			He ascends, yes, there is order and predictability
		
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			in nature. The ancient Greeks called this logos.
		
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			There is logos in the cosmos. In other
		
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			words, the universe has order. But natural phenomena
		
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			also changes.
		
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			It is mutable.
		
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			It sets
		
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			in the language of the Quran.
		
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			And that which changes
		
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			cannot be the eternal. And if something is
		
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			not the eternal,
		
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			then it is created and it cannot be
		
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			worshiped in its right.
		
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			To say it another way, that which is
		
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			perfect
		
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			cannot change
		
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			because it either changes for the worse or
		
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			it improves.
		
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			But if it improves, that means it could
		
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			have been better, therefore not perfect.
		
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			Imam At Tabari even says that there is
		
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			a hint of sarcasm in Abraham's argument here.
		
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			This adds to its rhetorical power,
		
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			as if to say, come on. You know
		
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			better than to worship
		
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			mutable celestial bodies.
		
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			Worship the immutable supernatural
		
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			creator.
		
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			And, of course, one of the names of
		
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			God in the Quran is, the
		
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			perfect,
		
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			And there can and there can only be
		
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			one perfect being,
		
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			because in order for 2 beings to differ,
		
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			there must,
		
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			exist a lack of something between them.
		
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			In other words, if I know something if
		
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			if I know something that you don't and
		
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			vice versa,
		
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			then neither neither one of us is perfect.
		
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			Neither one of us can be described as
		
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			as salam. There's deficiencies in our knowledge.
		
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			If a skeptic were to posit 2 perfect
		
00:14:56 --> 00:14:56
			beings,
		
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			then we could ask, well, which one has
		
00:14:59 --> 00:15:00
			power over the other?
		
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			One of them?
		
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			Both of them?
		
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			Neither one of them?
		
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			Every answer is wrong, and we come to
		
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			a logical impasse.
		
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			Elsewhere, the Quran says, have you not considered
		
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			the one who debated with Abraham about his
		
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			lord?
		
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			Because Allah had given him sovereignty. And according
		
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			to a few exegetes,
		
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			this king was Nimrod, the king of Babylon.
		
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			When Abraham said, my lord gives life and
		
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			causes death, the king said, I give life
		
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			and cause death.
		
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			And then the exit exegesis says that this
		
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			king, he called for 2 slaves and he
		
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			killed 1 on the spot, and he released
		
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			1 on the spot.
		
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			Abraham responded, truly, Allah brings the sun from
		
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			the east.
		
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			Bring it then from the west.
		
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			Then he who disbelieved was confounded, and Allah
		
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			does not guide a wrongdoing people, chapter 2
		
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			verse 258.
		
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			In this debate, Abraham points out the limitations
		
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			of human volition or choice.
		
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			Nimrod claimed to be God. In fact, many
		
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			exegetes say that he was the first man
		
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			in history
		
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			to make such a claim. Perhaps this is
		
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			why the word Nimrod in modern English slang
		
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			means an idiot or a fool.
		
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			If Nimrod is limited in his choices and
		
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			potential,
		
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			then he is not perfect.
		
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			If he's not perfect, then he is ontologically,
		
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			that is essentially,
		
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			inferior to a true deity.
		
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			Therefore, his mulk, his sovereignty,
		
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			could not have originated with him.
		
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			It was given to him, and
		
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			as the Quran says.
		
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			Abraham demonstrates this quite dramatically by demanding Nimrod
		
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			to bring the sun from the west,
		
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			essentially saying, you think you have power over
		
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			life and death? Let's see you have power
		
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			over the sun.
		
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			This is easy for Allah because Allah has
		
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			absolute unrestricted unrestricted volition within his nature.
		
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			Allah is omnipotent.
		
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			This is one of his qualitative attributes.
		
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			Nimrod has no rejoinder in this debate.
		
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			Finally, we're told that Abraham, peace be upon
		
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			him, destroyed the idols of his people.
		
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			He was a younger man at this time,
		
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			living in the city of Ur in ancient
		
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			Mesopotamia.
		
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			Abraham said to them, do you worship that
		
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			which you carve?
		
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			Allah created you and your actions.
		
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			The argument here is, how can something that
		
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			you made be worthy of your worship?
		
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			It only exists because of you. You are
		
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			its efficient cause.
		
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			Thus, you are greater.
		
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			Yet, Allah made you.
		
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			Thus, Allah is greater.
		
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			And since Allah is the only real creator,
		
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			because there can only be 1 creator, or
		
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			else we are stuck in the intellectually repugnant
		
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			paradox of infinite regress,
		
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			since Allah is the only real creator,
		
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			and what Avicenna called the efficient cause of
		
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			all creation,
		
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			then only he is worthy of worship.
		
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			I'll end this, with a
		
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			quick reading of the famous passage in the
		
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			Quran,
		
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			which describes the dream of Abraham, peace be
		
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			upon him, to sacrifice
		
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			his son.
		
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			This will bring us full circle,
		
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			back to the Hajj,
		
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			inshallah.
		
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			So
		
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			God says starting in chapter 37 verse 99
		
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			of the Quran,
		
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			Abraham said, I will migrate for the sake
		
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			of my lord. Soon, he will guide me.
		
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			Oh my lord, bestow upon me righteous offspring.
		
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			So So we gave him glad tidings of
		
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			a forbearing son.
		
00:18:38 --> 00:18:39
			Interestingly,
		
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			the son is not named here in the
		
00:18:42 --> 00:18:43
			Qur'anic discourse.
		
00:18:43 --> 00:18:46
			Imam at Tabari said it was Isaac, while
		
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			most commentators said Ishmael.
		
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			This is not so important for us as
		
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			Muslims. The importance of the story is its
		
00:18:53 --> 00:18:55
			ebra, its lesson, principle,
		
00:18:55 --> 00:18:56
			or salient point.
		
00:18:57 --> 00:18:59
			We shouldn't allow ourselves to get caught up
		
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			in identity politics and ignore the bigger picture.
		
00:19:10 --> 00:19:11
			When the sun had reached the age of
		
00:19:11 --> 00:19:15
			serious work, Abraham said, oh, my dear son,
		
00:19:15 --> 00:19:18
			I keep seeing in my dreams that I
		
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			am sacrificing you. And the verb here is
		
00:19:20 --> 00:19:22
			in the imperfect tense,
		
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			which suggests that Abraham was continuously having this
		
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			dream.
		
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			What do you think about that? He asked
		
00:19:29 --> 00:19:30
			his son.
		
00:19:30 --> 00:19:32
			The Arabic literally says,
		
00:19:32 --> 00:19:34
			look, what do you see?
		
00:19:35 --> 00:19:37
			In other words, are you having the same
		
00:19:37 --> 00:19:37
			dream?
		
00:19:38 --> 00:19:40
			Because Ishmael was also a prophet.
		
00:19:40 --> 00:19:41
			In Genesis 22,
		
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			the so called akeda passage,
		
00:19:44 --> 00:19:46
			Isaac does not know what is happening.
		
00:19:46 --> 00:19:48
			He asks his father, where is the lamb
		
00:19:48 --> 00:19:50
			for the burnt offering?
		
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			The Quranic account is a bit different.
		
00:19:52 --> 00:19:54
			The Quran continues,
		
00:20:00 --> 00:20:02
			He said the son said, oh my dear
		
00:20:02 --> 00:20:03
			father,
		
00:20:03 --> 00:20:05
			do what you are commanded.
		
00:20:05 --> 00:20:08
			You will find me if God wills from
		
00:20:08 --> 00:20:09
			the patient ones.
		
00:20:12 --> 00:20:15
			Then when they both submitted their wills and
		
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			Abraham laid him down on his forehead,
		
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			and we called out to him, oh Abraham,
		
00:20:28 --> 00:20:30
			You have been true to your vision.
		
00:20:31 --> 00:20:33
			Indeed, this is how we reward the doers
		
00:20:33 --> 00:20:34
			of good.
		
00:20:35 --> 00:20:37
			Imam al Razi, one of the great exegetes,
		
00:20:37 --> 00:20:38
			he said that by demonstrating
		
00:20:39 --> 00:20:40
			complete obedience to God,
		
00:20:41 --> 00:20:43
			Abraham, peace be upon him, was true to
		
00:20:43 --> 00:20:44
			his vision,
		
00:20:44 --> 00:20:47
			fulfilled his vision. This is what God ultimately
		
00:20:47 --> 00:20:47
			wanted,
		
00:20:48 --> 00:20:49
			a willingness
		
00:20:49 --> 00:20:50
			to obey,
		
00:20:50 --> 00:20:53
			not the actual sacrifice of Abraham's son.
		
00:20:56 --> 00:20:59
			Indeed, this was an evident test.
		
00:20:59 --> 00:21:01
			You see, the ancient pagans used to sacrifice
		
00:21:01 --> 00:21:04
			their children as a demonstration of their obedience
		
00:21:04 --> 00:21:06
			to their false gods.
		
00:21:06 --> 00:21:07
			God tested Abraham
		
00:21:08 --> 00:21:09
			saying, in essence,
		
00:21:09 --> 00:21:11
			do you love me enough to be willing
		
00:21:11 --> 00:21:14
			to sacrifice your son if I asked you?
		
00:21:14 --> 00:21:16
			Your love for me, the one and only
		
00:21:16 --> 00:21:17
			true god,
		
00:21:17 --> 00:21:20
			should exceed the love of the pagans for
		
00:21:20 --> 00:21:21
			their false gods.
		
00:21:22 --> 00:21:23
			Abraham passed the test.
		
00:21:24 --> 00:21:24
			Multiple
		
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			exigits mention that Satan appeared to Abraham while
		
00:21:27 --> 00:21:28
			going to the place of sacrifice
		
00:21:28 --> 00:21:31
			with his son and tried to convince Abraham
		
00:21:31 --> 00:21:33
			to disobey God, so Abraham picked up a
		
00:21:33 --> 00:21:35
			handful of pebbles and threw them at Satan.
		
00:21:36 --> 00:21:39
			This is commemorated at the Hajj in Mecca
		
00:21:39 --> 00:21:42
			by pilgrims who symbolically reenact the event by
		
00:21:42 --> 00:21:44
			throwing pebbles at pillars called the jamaraat.
		
00:21:47 --> 00:21:48
			The narrative continues.
		
00:21:53 --> 00:21:56
			And we ransomed him, his son, with a
		
00:21:56 --> 00:21:57
			great sacrifice,
		
00:21:57 --> 00:21:59
			and we left him thus to be remembered
		
00:21:59 --> 00:22:00
			among later generations.
		
00:22:01 --> 00:22:03
			Peace be upon Abraham.
		
00:22:03 --> 00:22:06
			The commentary says that an angel brought a
		
00:22:06 --> 00:22:07
			ram to be
		
00:22:17 --> 00:22:19
			as the final rite of the Hajj. This
		
00:22:19 --> 00:22:20
			is called the
		
00:22:20 --> 00:22:21
			or Korbani.
		
00:22:22 --> 00:22:24
			So to summarize and end,
		
00:22:24 --> 00:22:26
			the great virtues of Abraham are many.
		
00:22:27 --> 00:22:28
			He was a monotheist,
		
00:22:28 --> 00:22:29
			par excellence.
		
00:22:30 --> 00:22:31
			The great iconoclast.
		
00:22:32 --> 00:22:34
			He was a model of faith and obedience
		
00:22:34 --> 00:22:35
			to God.
		
00:22:35 --> 00:22:38
			He was a man of supreme intelligence, reason,
		
00:22:38 --> 00:22:39
			and rational discourse.
		
00:22:40 --> 00:22:42
			He was a man of empathy and concern
		
00:22:42 --> 00:22:43
			for the plight of humanity.
		
00:22:44 --> 00:22:45
			And finally, his
		
00:22:45 --> 00:22:47
			or tradition was restored
		
00:22:47 --> 00:22:50
			and universalized by his noble descendant, the holy
		
00:22:50 --> 00:22:51
			prophet Muhammad,
		
00:22:52 --> 00:22:54
			the final messenger of God and prophet of
		
00:22:54 --> 00:22:56
			the Abrahamic restoration.
		
00:22:57 --> 00:22:59
			May God the Almighty bless all of you.