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💌 Unspoken Love/03
A Micro-Chapbook of Prose Poem

The Moral Compass
Navigating the Ethical Minefield: The Dilemma of Logic vs. Compassion in Medicine

📚 100 Micro Islamic Articles: Modern Problems & Classical Wisdom/07
Faith vs. Science Conflict — Ibn Khaldūn’s Balance of Reason & RevelationModern discourse often portrays faith and science as opposing forces: belief versus reason, revelation versus observation. Yet, centuries before this supposed “conflict” emerged, Muslim scholars were charting a different path. Among them, Ibn Khaldūn (d. 1406), the father of sociology and historiography, offered a nuanced balance between revelation and reason that remains profoundly relevant.1. Knowledge in Two RealmsIbn...



💌 Unspoken Love/03
A Micro-Chapbook of Prose Poem

The Moral Compass
Navigating the Ethical Minefield: The Dilemma of Logic vs. Compassion in Medicine

📚 100 Micro Islamic Articles: Modern Problems & Classical Wisdom/07
Faith vs. Science Conflict — Ibn Khaldūn’s Balance of Reason & RevelationModern discourse often portrays faith and science as opposing forces: belief versus reason, revelation versus observation. Yet, centuries before this supposed “conflict” emerged, Muslim scholars were charting a different path. Among them, Ibn Khaldūn (d. 1406), the father of sociology and historiography, offered a nuanced balance between revelation and reason that remains profoundly relevant.1. Knowledge in Two RealmsIbn...
We live in an age of dazzling progress. Technology, wealth, and convenience are greater than ever before—yet more people than ever confess to feeling empty. “What’s the point of it all?” becomes a silent question haunting modern hearts.
Imām Ibn Taymiyyah (d. 1328) saw this very struggle centuries ago, though in a different form. For him, the root of despair was forgetting our purpose. He wrote: “The heart will never find rest until it rests in the worship of Allah.” In his theology, the human being was not designed for endless consumption or entertainment, but for devotion and service to God. When life is stripped of this axis, even success tastes hollow.
The Qur’an answers the modern crisis in a single verse: “And I did not create jinn and mankind except to worship Me.” (51:56). To Ibn Taymiyyah, worship was not limited to rituals but included every act of truth, justice, and goodness done with the right intention. That wider purpose gives life coherence.
What guidance does Ibn Taymiyyah offer for today’s meaning-seekers?
Anchor Identity in God, not Trends
Trends fade, but divine purpose is constant. Living for the eternal frees us from the despair of chasing the temporary.
Redefine Success
Ibn Taymiyyah reminded us that the real victory is not wealth or status, but being saved from heedlessness and aligning with the truth.
Transform the Ordinary
Eating, working, or caring for family can become worship when linked to intention. This infuses even daily routines with meaning.
Endure Hardship with Purpose
He taught that even suffering carries wisdom: a chance for patience, growth, and drawing nearer to God.
The crisis of meaning in our time is really the crisis of forgetting who we are and why we were created. Ibn Taymiyyah calls us back to that grounding truth: a life lived for God is a life that can never be meaningless.
🌍 What gives your life true meaning beyond success or comfort? Share your reflections below, and let’s rediscover purpose through timeless wisdom.
We live in an age of dazzling progress. Technology, wealth, and convenience are greater than ever before—yet more people than ever confess to feeling empty. “What’s the point of it all?” becomes a silent question haunting modern hearts.
Imām Ibn Taymiyyah (d. 1328) saw this very struggle centuries ago, though in a different form. For him, the root of despair was forgetting our purpose. He wrote: “The heart will never find rest until it rests in the worship of Allah.” In his theology, the human being was not designed for endless consumption or entertainment, but for devotion and service to God. When life is stripped of this axis, even success tastes hollow.
The Qur’an answers the modern crisis in a single verse: “And I did not create jinn and mankind except to worship Me.” (51:56). To Ibn Taymiyyah, worship was not limited to rituals but included every act of truth, justice, and goodness done with the right intention. That wider purpose gives life coherence.
What guidance does Ibn Taymiyyah offer for today’s meaning-seekers?
Anchor Identity in God, not Trends
Trends fade, but divine purpose is constant. Living for the eternal frees us from the despair of chasing the temporary.
Redefine Success
Ibn Taymiyyah reminded us that the real victory is not wealth or status, but being saved from heedlessness and aligning with the truth.
Transform the Ordinary
Eating, working, or caring for family can become worship when linked to intention. This infuses even daily routines with meaning.
Endure Hardship with Purpose
He taught that even suffering carries wisdom: a chance for patience, growth, and drawing nearer to God.
The crisis of meaning in our time is really the crisis of forgetting who we are and why we were created. Ibn Taymiyyah calls us back to that grounding truth: a life lived for God is a life that can never be meaningless.
🌍 What gives your life true meaning beyond success or comfort? Share your reflections below, and let’s rediscover purpose through timeless wisdom.
Share Dialog
Share Dialog
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