http://muslimmatters.org/2011/11/18/the-best-of-stories-pearls-from-surah-yusuf-part-15-conclusion/
this is\ a summary of a\ discussion of the surah of yusef and all the main points
Part 8 | Part 9 | Part 10 | Part 11 | Part 12 | Part 13 | Part 14 | Part 15
Alḥamdulillāh, we thank Allāh ‘azza wa jall who has allowed us the opportunity to study this entire sūrah beginning to end in 15 sessions. As I promised you in our last lesson, in one of the last verses of the sūrah, it is as if Allāh (subḥānahu wa ta‘āla) is saying, “Now you have read it once and benefitted from it at a basic level.” I just recited for you “āyātu li’l-sā’ilīn.” You have lessons for those who are curious and want to ask. In the end, Allāh says, “In this sūrah, there is ‘ibrah li’uli’l-bāb.” There are profound wisdoms to learn for those of intellect and contemplation. It is as if at the beginning Allāh is saying, “Read this sūrah at a cursory level. Understand it at a basic level.” Once we get to the end, Allāh is saying, “Now think about it. Ponder over it and you will find much wisdom to learn and benefit from.” We will obey the commandment of Allāh ‘azza wa jall and take a swift relook at the entire sūrah in a holistic manner. We will try to derive some of the overall benefits.
I am not going to quote you verse by verse. We have already done that. We are just going to quickly go over, and I have compiled around 50 to 60 of such benefits from the beginning of the sūrah until the end. We are going to go over them one by one.
Of the benefits of the sūrah is that the believer is concerned for his or her family and his or her children. The believer looks out for the welfare of one’s children and offspring and tries one’s best to protect them at a physical and at a spiritual level. When Yūsuf told his dream to his father Ya‘qūb, immediately Ya‘qūb wants to protect Yūsuf. Instead of jumping for joy, and instead of saying, “what a proud father you have made me,” he is protecting him. He wants the best for his dīn and his dunya. A sign of īmān (faith) is to want the best and to want a nurturing environment for your family.
Of the blessings and wisdoms of this sūrah is that dreams are a constant motif of this entire sūrah. The sūrah begins with a dream and that is the dream of Yūsuf. The sūrah has a dream in the middle and that is the dream of the two prisoners who saw themselves being killed and saw the birds eating from his head and the dream of the king. Dreams are a constant theme in this sūrah. Of the blessings we derive is that true dreams are from Allāh. True dreams are a blessing that Allāh gives. The interpretation of dreams is a science that only Allāh can teach you. We learned this from this sūrah and went over it many, many times.
Of the wisdoms of this sūrah is that the wise and intelligent person does not flaunt his or her blessings. The wise and intelligent person does not show off worldly or spiritual blessings because showing off is not only egotistical and a lack of humility, but also it causes dangers and harms and problems. That is why when Yūsuf had the dream, his father said, “Don’t tell your brothers. Don’t show off. They might get jealous of you.” The wise person does not boast of his blessings, rather he hides them to the greatest extent possible. These blessings are both religious and worldly blessings. You don’t flaunt the good that Allāh has given you, or else you will suffer the consequences in this world and perhaps even in the next.
Of the wisdoms we derive from this sūrah is that Shayṭān is every eager to cause problems between believers, especially between family members. This was a successful plot of Shayṭān that he caused the brothers of Yūsuf to hate Yūsuf so much that they even intended at one point in time to kill him. Of the benefits we learn is that Shayṭān is ever eager to cause problems. He always wants to cause disunity amongst the ummah, especially amongst family members. SubḥānAllāh, it is so true that every single family has its own issues and problems even though they are blood and even though they are family. Every single family has problems either with the siblings, uncles, or aunts. It is human nature, but Shayṭān makes it worse. This story shows us this.
Of the wisdoms of this sūrah is that a good household produces good offspring. Allāh (subḥānahu wa ta‘āla) mentions at the beginning of the sūrah: “This is how He will perfect His favors upon you as He perfected it upon your forefathers before you, Ibrāhīm and Isḥāq.” I.e. because there was Ibrāhīm there was Ishaq and because there was Isḥāq there was Ya‘qūb and because of Ya‘qūb there was Yūsuf. A house of piety will produce children of piety. When one parent and one generation strives to be righteous, then the general rule is that the piety is transferred down to the next generation. This is shown by the verse in the Qurʾān where Allāh says, “This is how We will perfect your favors as We perfected the favors upon your forefathers before you.”
Of the wisdoms of this sūrah that we learn is the importance of being fair, equitable, and just to all people. In this particular case, Ya‘qūb with his children. We are told in our religion that we are not allowed to prefer one child over another and we cannot give a gift to a child and leave another. We cannot show any outward favoritism. Ya‘qūb tried his best to be fair, but he couldn’t control one thing and that is his emotions. His children sensed his emotions, but his children could not complain that he spends more time with Yūsuf or that he gave Yūsuf a present that he hasn’t given to them. All they could say was that he loves Yūsuf, and love is an emotion of the heart, and you are not held accountable for emotions of the heart. We learn to be equitable and just to people from this issue here.
Of the wisdoms we learn from this sūrah is that jealousy drives a person insane. Jealousy is one of the most destructive emotions known to man. Jealousy makes a person who is otherwise rational become irrational. People will do things out of jealousy that you will not believe they could have done. Here we have young adults plotting and planning to murder their brother who is only 7-8 years old. Jealousy has caused such enragement and such anger. Our Prophet (ṣallallāhu ‘alayhi wa sallam) warned us, “I warn you from jealousy. I caution you from being jealous because jealousy destroys your good deeds like a fire eats up wood.” Jealousy is destructive in any form. That is why we should seek refuge in Allāh from jealousy and try to solve jealousy as soon as it exists. We also seek Allāh’s refuge from the effects of jealousy: min sharri ḥāsidin idha ḥasad. This is of the blessings we learn from this sūrah.
Of the wisdoms we learn from this sūrah is repentance before committing the sin is not a true repentance. If you commit a sin and say, “Oh, I know I’m guilty. May Allāh forgive me,” that is not a true repentance. Before they committed a crime, the brothers of Yūsuf said, “We’ll do the crime and then God will forgive. We are going to make up for it. We are going to be righteous after it.” Their repentance was not accepted at that point in time. It was accepted at the end of the sūrah when they genuinely come and say, “Oh our father, forgive us. We were sinners.” Inna kunna khāṭi’īn. In the beginning of the sūrah, Allāh glosses over it. This is not repentance; this is a joke. You are going to murder your brother and then say, “May God forgive us, we are going to be good after that.” A true repentance has to have the intention not to return to the sin. If you have the intention that you are going to commit the sin, then this is not a true repentance. A true repentance has to have the niyyah (intention) that this is the last time you are committing the sin. As we mentioned before, if it so happens that you do return to the sin, it doesn’t nullify your repentance. The point is that you should have a sincere attempt to not return to the sin. If you do return, you do another repentance. And if you return again, then you repent again. The point is that Allāh does not look at the quantity of sins. Allāh looks at the quality of repentance. It is not the number of times you have committed the sin but the quality of the repentance every single time you commit the sin.
Of the benefits we learn from the sūrah is that giving an excuse to someone whom you don’t trust may backfire on you. In other words, handing over excuses to somebody who has some evil or some disposition to harm you might actually come back to haunt you. Ya‘qūb was the one who gave them the excuse they needed to cover up their capture of Yūsuf and abduction of Yūsuf. Ya‘qūb was the one who said, “I am worried that wolf will eat him.” He said this to try to get away from the real issue, which is: “I don’t want to send my son with you.” He used a secondary tactic, and what happened? It backfired because they used that very tactic. When they came back in the evening, they said, “A wolf ate your son.” These are kids, and they wouldn’t have been able to think of an excuse. They are young men, maybe 18 or 19, and they would not have been able to think of a legitimate excuse of what happened to their brother. Ya‘qūb unknowingly and unwittingly gave it to them. This shows us that one needs to think a little bit more before speaking in this regard. We learn from this mistake that Ya‘qūb fell into.
Of the wisdoms of this sūrah is that the believer’s firāsa is true. Firāsa means intuition and a gut instinct. We believe that a gut instinct is something Allāh sometimes blesses you with. It is not something you can use in a court of law. You cannot consider someone guilty in a court of law because you feel that way. The more righteous you are, the more your moral compass and gut instinct will be rightly guided. This instinct in Arabic is called firāsa. The Prophet (ṣallallāhu ‘alayhi wa sallam) said, “Beware of the firāsa of the believer because the firāsa of the believer is always true.” Where is the benefit here? When the children came back to Ya‘qūb and said, “Oh, sorry, your son has been eaten by the wolf,” Ya‘qūb knew something was wrong. There was no solid evidence, but his heart is telling him, “My kids are up to no good, and something is wrong. Yūsuf is alive, and they’ve done something wrong.” He doesn’t have any evidence, but he still charges them with a crime. “I don’t know what you’ve done, but you have done something wrong.” The firāsa or inner instinct of the believer is true. When can you use this? You cannot use this to charge anybody with a crime and cannot use it in a court of law. If somebody comes and wants to have a business transaction with you and outwardly he looks like a trustworthy person, but inside you feel that something doesn’t feel right, you are not obligated to engage in a business transaction or in a marriage proposal. If somebody comes and proposes for your son or daughter and you don’t feel about it, it is not a court of law that you have to explain why. If something doesn’t feel right and if this is from Allāh ‘azza wa jall, then there is a reality to it. As we said, the closer you are to Allāh, the more true your intuition is going to be. This is a blessing of being close to Allāh that your intuition will then be rightly guided.
Of the wisdoms and blessings of this sūrah is the permissibility of using secondary evidence. We mentioned this on more than one occasion. The first time this comes up is when Ya‘qūb is being told that his son has been killed by a wolf, but he sees the shirt untorn. He sees the shirt that has been bloodied but with no tear in it. This is a secondary evidence. In our Sharī‘ah, you are allowed to use secondary evidence and are allowed to take into account external factors even if there are no two witnesses and no direct evidence. We use our common sense and compile the facts and look at the evidences and then place a verdict.
Of the wisdoms of this sūrah is that no matter how evil the crime, you should always advise the criminal to fear Allāh first. Before you get to your own concerns with him, the first thing you should do is advise him to fear Allāh (subḥānahu wa ta‘āla) and to remind him of the gravity of the sin. The first thing that Ya‘qūb does is say, “You have committed an offense. Your souls have misguided you. Qāla bal sawwalat lakum anfusukum amra. Your souls have led you to destruction. Before we get to what you have done to me, let me remind you that you have a God who is watching you. Let me remind you that there is something between you and Allāh ‘azza wa jall.” Unfortunately a lot of times we jump this step and if somebody does you wrong, you immediately defend your rights and say, “How could you have done that to me?” The reality is that you begin with the rights of Allāh. Don’t you realize that you have done a sin and are accountable to Allāh? And then you are also accountable to having taken my money or backbitten or whatever the crime is that has been done. Begin by reminding them of Allāh ‘azza wa jall. with patience.
this is\ a summary of a\ discussion of the surah of yusef and all the main points
Part 8 | Part 9 | Part 10 | Part 11 | Part 12 | Part 13 | Part 14 | Part 15
Alḥamdulillāh, we thank Allāh ‘azza wa jall who has allowed us the opportunity to study this entire sūrah beginning to end in 15 sessions. As I promised you in our last lesson, in one of the last verses of the sūrah, it is as if Allāh (subḥānahu wa ta‘āla) is saying, “Now you have read it once and benefitted from it at a basic level.” I just recited for you “āyātu li’l-sā’ilīn.” You have lessons for those who are curious and want to ask. In the end, Allāh says, “In this sūrah, there is ‘ibrah li’uli’l-bāb.” There are profound wisdoms to learn for those of intellect and contemplation. It is as if at the beginning Allāh is saying, “Read this sūrah at a cursory level. Understand it at a basic level.” Once we get to the end, Allāh is saying, “Now think about it. Ponder over it and you will find much wisdom to learn and benefit from.” We will obey the commandment of Allāh ‘azza wa jall and take a swift relook at the entire sūrah in a holistic manner. We will try to derive some of the overall benefits.
I am not going to quote you verse by verse. We have already done that. We are just going to quickly go over, and I have compiled around 50 to 60 of such benefits from the beginning of the sūrah until the end. We are going to go over them one by one.
Of the benefits of the sūrah is that the believer is concerned for his or her family and his or her children. The believer looks out for the welfare of one’s children and offspring and tries one’s best to protect them at a physical and at a spiritual level. When Yūsuf told his dream to his father Ya‘qūb, immediately Ya‘qūb wants to protect Yūsuf. Instead of jumping for joy, and instead of saying, “what a proud father you have made me,” he is protecting him. He wants the best for his dīn and his dunya. A sign of īmān (faith) is to want the best and to want a nurturing environment for your family.
Of the blessings and wisdoms of this sūrah is that dreams are a constant motif of this entire sūrah. The sūrah begins with a dream and that is the dream of Yūsuf. The sūrah has a dream in the middle and that is the dream of the two prisoners who saw themselves being killed and saw the birds eating from his head and the dream of the king. Dreams are a constant theme in this sūrah. Of the blessings we derive is that true dreams are from Allāh. True dreams are a blessing that Allāh gives. The interpretation of dreams is a science that only Allāh can teach you. We learned this from this sūrah and went over it many, many times.
Of the wisdoms of this sūrah is that the wise and intelligent person does not flaunt his or her blessings. The wise and intelligent person does not show off worldly or spiritual blessings because showing off is not only egotistical and a lack of humility, but also it causes dangers and harms and problems. That is why when Yūsuf had the dream, his father said, “Don’t tell your brothers. Don’t show off. They might get jealous of you.” The wise person does not boast of his blessings, rather he hides them to the greatest extent possible. These blessings are both religious and worldly blessings. You don’t flaunt the good that Allāh has given you, or else you will suffer the consequences in this world and perhaps even in the next.
Of the wisdoms we derive from this sūrah is that Shayṭān is every eager to cause problems between believers, especially between family members. This was a successful plot of Shayṭān that he caused the brothers of Yūsuf to hate Yūsuf so much that they even intended at one point in time to kill him. Of the benefits we learn is that Shayṭān is ever eager to cause problems. He always wants to cause disunity amongst the ummah, especially amongst family members. SubḥānAllāh, it is so true that every single family has its own issues and problems even though they are blood and even though they are family. Every single family has problems either with the siblings, uncles, or aunts. It is human nature, but Shayṭān makes it worse. This story shows us this.
Of the wisdoms of this sūrah is that a good household produces good offspring. Allāh (subḥānahu wa ta‘āla) mentions at the beginning of the sūrah: “This is how He will perfect His favors upon you as He perfected it upon your forefathers before you, Ibrāhīm and Isḥāq.” I.e. because there was Ibrāhīm there was Ishaq and because there was Isḥāq there was Ya‘qūb and because of Ya‘qūb there was Yūsuf. A house of piety will produce children of piety. When one parent and one generation strives to be righteous, then the general rule is that the piety is transferred down to the next generation. This is shown by the verse in the Qurʾān where Allāh says, “This is how We will perfect your favors as We perfected the favors upon your forefathers before you.”
Of the wisdoms of this sūrah that we learn is the importance of being fair, equitable, and just to all people. In this particular case, Ya‘qūb with his children. We are told in our religion that we are not allowed to prefer one child over another and we cannot give a gift to a child and leave another. We cannot show any outward favoritism. Ya‘qūb tried his best to be fair, but he couldn’t control one thing and that is his emotions. His children sensed his emotions, but his children could not complain that he spends more time with Yūsuf or that he gave Yūsuf a present that he hasn’t given to them. All they could say was that he loves Yūsuf, and love is an emotion of the heart, and you are not held accountable for emotions of the heart. We learn to be equitable and just to people from this issue here.
Of the wisdoms we learn from this sūrah is that jealousy drives a person insane. Jealousy is one of the most destructive emotions known to man. Jealousy makes a person who is otherwise rational become irrational. People will do things out of jealousy that you will not believe they could have done. Here we have young adults plotting and planning to murder their brother who is only 7-8 years old. Jealousy has caused such enragement and such anger. Our Prophet (ṣallallāhu ‘alayhi wa sallam) warned us, “I warn you from jealousy. I caution you from being jealous because jealousy destroys your good deeds like a fire eats up wood.” Jealousy is destructive in any form. That is why we should seek refuge in Allāh from jealousy and try to solve jealousy as soon as it exists. We also seek Allāh’s refuge from the effects of jealousy: min sharri ḥāsidin idha ḥasad. This is of the blessings we learn from this sūrah.
Of the wisdoms we learn from this sūrah is repentance before committing the sin is not a true repentance. If you commit a sin and say, “Oh, I know I’m guilty. May Allāh forgive me,” that is not a true repentance. Before they committed a crime, the brothers of Yūsuf said, “We’ll do the crime and then God will forgive. We are going to make up for it. We are going to be righteous after it.” Their repentance was not accepted at that point in time. It was accepted at the end of the sūrah when they genuinely come and say, “Oh our father, forgive us. We were sinners.” Inna kunna khāṭi’īn. In the beginning of the sūrah, Allāh glosses over it. This is not repentance; this is a joke. You are going to murder your brother and then say, “May God forgive us, we are going to be good after that.” A true repentance has to have the intention not to return to the sin. If you have the intention that you are going to commit the sin, then this is not a true repentance. A true repentance has to have the niyyah (intention) that this is the last time you are committing the sin. As we mentioned before, if it so happens that you do return to the sin, it doesn’t nullify your repentance. The point is that you should have a sincere attempt to not return to the sin. If you do return, you do another repentance. And if you return again, then you repent again. The point is that Allāh does not look at the quantity of sins. Allāh looks at the quality of repentance. It is not the number of times you have committed the sin but the quality of the repentance every single time you commit the sin.
Of the benefits we learn from the sūrah is that giving an excuse to someone whom you don’t trust may backfire on you. In other words, handing over excuses to somebody who has some evil or some disposition to harm you might actually come back to haunt you. Ya‘qūb was the one who gave them the excuse they needed to cover up their capture of Yūsuf and abduction of Yūsuf. Ya‘qūb was the one who said, “I am worried that wolf will eat him.” He said this to try to get away from the real issue, which is: “I don’t want to send my son with you.” He used a secondary tactic, and what happened? It backfired because they used that very tactic. When they came back in the evening, they said, “A wolf ate your son.” These are kids, and they wouldn’t have been able to think of an excuse. They are young men, maybe 18 or 19, and they would not have been able to think of a legitimate excuse of what happened to their brother. Ya‘qūb unknowingly and unwittingly gave it to them. This shows us that one needs to think a little bit more before speaking in this regard. We learn from this mistake that Ya‘qūb fell into.
Of the wisdoms of this sūrah is that the believer’s firāsa is true. Firāsa means intuition and a gut instinct. We believe that a gut instinct is something Allāh sometimes blesses you with. It is not something you can use in a court of law. You cannot consider someone guilty in a court of law because you feel that way. The more righteous you are, the more your moral compass and gut instinct will be rightly guided. This instinct in Arabic is called firāsa. The Prophet (ṣallallāhu ‘alayhi wa sallam) said, “Beware of the firāsa of the believer because the firāsa of the believer is always true.” Where is the benefit here? When the children came back to Ya‘qūb and said, “Oh, sorry, your son has been eaten by the wolf,” Ya‘qūb knew something was wrong. There was no solid evidence, but his heart is telling him, “My kids are up to no good, and something is wrong. Yūsuf is alive, and they’ve done something wrong.” He doesn’t have any evidence, but he still charges them with a crime. “I don’t know what you’ve done, but you have done something wrong.” The firāsa or inner instinct of the believer is true. When can you use this? You cannot use this to charge anybody with a crime and cannot use it in a court of law. If somebody comes and wants to have a business transaction with you and outwardly he looks like a trustworthy person, but inside you feel that something doesn’t feel right, you are not obligated to engage in a business transaction or in a marriage proposal. If somebody comes and proposes for your son or daughter and you don’t feel about it, it is not a court of law that you have to explain why. If something doesn’t feel right and if this is from Allāh ‘azza wa jall, then there is a reality to it. As we said, the closer you are to Allāh, the more true your intuition is going to be. This is a blessing of being close to Allāh that your intuition will then be rightly guided.
Of the wisdoms and blessings of this sūrah is the permissibility of using secondary evidence. We mentioned this on more than one occasion. The first time this comes up is when Ya‘qūb is being told that his son has been killed by a wolf, but he sees the shirt untorn. He sees the shirt that has been bloodied but with no tear in it. This is a secondary evidence. In our Sharī‘ah, you are allowed to use secondary evidence and are allowed to take into account external factors even if there are no two witnesses and no direct evidence. We use our common sense and compile the facts and look at the evidences and then place a verdict.
Of the wisdoms of this sūrah is that no matter how evil the crime, you should always advise the criminal to fear Allāh first. Before you get to your own concerns with him, the first thing you should do is advise him to fear Allāh (subḥānahu wa ta‘āla) and to remind him of the gravity of the sin. The first thing that Ya‘qūb does is say, “You have committed an offense. Your souls have misguided you. Qāla bal sawwalat lakum anfusukum amra. Your souls have led you to destruction. Before we get to what you have done to me, let me remind you that you have a God who is watching you. Let me remind you that there is something between you and Allāh ‘azza wa jall.” Unfortunately a lot of times we jump this step and if somebody does you wrong, you immediately defend your rights and say, “How could you have done that to me?” The reality is that you begin with the rights of Allāh. Don’t you realize that you have done a sin and are accountable to Allāh? And then you are also accountable to having taken my money or backbitten or whatever the crime is that has been done. Begin by reminding them of Allāh ‘azza wa jall. with patience.