About This Book:
"Smoking, Intoxicants, and Narcotics" is the second book in Muhammad al-Jibaly's "Go into Islam Totally" series. This intriguing and informative text dives into the basic Islamic perspective on smoking, intoxicants, and opiates, offering readers intensive advice on the strict, moral, and wellbeing-related components of these issues.
Key Takeaways and Insights:
Islamic Morality:
The book starts by digging into Islam's moral and moral statutes, featuring the meaning of driving an honorable and God-cognizant life.
Prohibition of Intoxicants:
Muhammad al-Jibaly inspects Islam's reasonable denial of intoxicants (Khamr), drawing on Quranic entries and Hadith (Prophetic customs) to show the negative impacts of liquor and its suggestions for individuals and society.
Dangers of Smoking:
The creator looks at the harmful mixtures contained in tobacco and their effect on physical and mental prosperity to give a full assessment of smoking and its negative well-being influences.
Narcotics and Their Consequences:
Perusers find out about the risks of opiates, remembering the disastrous effect of enslavement for people and networks, as well as the ethical basis of going without them.
Islamic Rulings
"Smoking, Intoxicants, and Opiates" gives clear and broad Islamic decisions (Fatwas) on these issues, referring to Islamic researchers' agreement on their restriction.
Social and Legal Implications:
The book examines the social, lawful, and financial repercussions of substance misuse and compulsion, underlining the inconvenient effects on people, families, and society overall.