People talk about Surah Waqi‘ah like it’s a formula for wealth, but that’s not really it.
It’s reminding you of what is inevitable. The moment when everything you think is solid falls away and only truth remains. And when you sit with it, you start to see those three groups are not just about the future. They are states we move through right now.
What really stands out are those verses that quietly shift your sense of control.
You plant the seed… but who makes it grow?
You place it in the soil, you water it, you do your part. But the life inside it, did that come from you?
And the fire you light… who gave the wood its nature to burn?
You strike the match, but the heat, the transformation, was that yours?
It’s not denying your effort. It’s putting it in its place.
You act. You move. You plant.
But the unfolding was never yours to control.
That’s where tawakkul begins. Not passive, not stepping back, but a deeper surrender in the middle of action.
And when that lands, something shifts.
You stop gripping so tightly
You stop fearing loss the same way
You move, but with less weight inside
So it’s not that the surah “brings wealth”
It loosens your attachment to outcomes. It teaches you how to act without carrying the illusion that you are the one making things happen.
And in that, there is a different kind of richness.
Quran 56. Al-Waqi'ah (The Inevitable, The Event): Arabic and English tra... https://t.co/VzlL9NHD28 via @YouTube
@Madan_Chikna The bartender should have stood where the bottles were and used the bottles to keep them at bay. Why let the attacker use your bottles as ammo ?
@gghamari Disgraced lawyer.
Disgraced parliamentarian.
Disgraced human being.
Selling her soul and making a deal with the devil for money to feed her narcissistic ego.
@MarioNawfal Shameful reporting
In a sense you are worse than Mark Levin and Laura Loomer, because with them it is obvious that they are on the payroll, with you on the other hand, you have managed to deceive your audience by pretending to be unbiased 👀while you are just a hypocrite
@MarioNawfal Your reporting is starting to lose its balance, and it shows.
There’s a difference between aggression against civilian infrastructure and people defending what sustains their daily lives.
Blurring that line doesn’t inform
it misleads.
@MarioNawfal@IanCarrollShow Your hypocrisy shows, Mario
I love it when @RealScottRitter calls you out on these posts.…. No matter how smart your think you are and how fine of a line you are walking... We can all tell lol
@Symply_rhoda1 Older brother is disciplining his younger brother for suspected involvement in illegal gang activities.
That explains why the younger brother is not fighting back and the dogs not barking, because they know both and live in the same household. I think 🤔
@breeadail No matter how good of a liar you are
Even if you are a master manipulator
The good hearted naive people are catching up with your bullcrap
Nice try
@Tablesalt13 And I here I thought I was following someone on the side of good, not evil
You exposed yourself as a hypocrite
Unfollowed and blocked
The one good thing is... the world events are exposing people like you
“So remember Me, and I will remember you. Be grateful to Me and do not be ungrateful.”
2:152
فَاذْكُرُونِي أَذْكُرْكُمْ
وَاشْكُرُوا لِي وَلَا تَكْفُرُونِ
Do not wait until life becomes heavy before turning to Allah.
Remember Him when the road is open and the heart is calm. Remember Him when blessings surround you and when the tests arrive. The heart that calls on Allah only in hardship has not yet tasted the sweetness of nearness.
Gratitude and patience are two lights that guide a believer through every state. Gratitude in times of ease keeps the heart humble. Patience in times of hardship keeps the heart steady.
Both lead back to the same place.
When a servant remembers Allah, it is not a small act. The Lord of the heavens responds with something greater. He says, remember Me and I will remember you.
What greater honor could a heart receive than to be remembered by the One who created it.
So call upon Him often. In ease and in hardship. In gratitude and in patience. The door is always open, and the One behind it never turns away a sincere heart.
“So remember Me, and I will remember you. Be grateful to Me and do not be ungrateful.”
2:152
فَاذْكُرُونِي أَذْكُرْكُمْ
وَاشْكُرُوا لِي وَلَا تَكْفُرُونِ
Do not wait until life becomes heavy before turning to Allah.
Remember Him when the road is open and the heart is calm. Remember Him when blessings surround you and when the tests arrive. The heart that calls on Allah only in hardship has not yet tasted the sweetness of nearness.
Gratitude and patience are two lights that guide a believer through every state. Gratitude in times of ease keeps the heart humble. Patience in times of hardship keeps the heart steady.
Both lead back to the same place.
When a servant remembers Allah, it is not a small act. The Lord of the heavens responds with something greater. He says, remember Me and I will remember you.
What greater honor could a heart receive than to be remembered by the One who created it.
So call upon Him often. In ease and in hardship. In gratitude and in patience. The door is always open, and the One behind it never turns away a sincere heart.
A very direct Qur’anic verse addressing people who hide the truth out of fear of losing position, status, or worldly advantage is:
Qur’an 2:174
“Indeed, those who conceal what Allah has sent down of the Book and exchange it for a small price — they consume nothing into their bellies except fire. Allah will not speak to them on the Day of Resurrection nor purify them, and for them is a painful punishment.”
Key idea:
The phrase “exchange it for a small price” (ثمنًا قليلًا) means trading truth for worldly benefit such as money, influence, reputation, or position.
This verse was revealed about scholars who knew the truth but hid it to maintain authority, followers, or financial benefit.