Famous Quotes & Sayings

Ramadan Quranic Quotes & Sayings

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Top Ramadan Quranic Quotes

Ramadan Quranic Quotes By Kate DiCamillo

Reader, do you believe that there is such a thing as happily ever after? Or, like Despereaux, have you, too, begun to question the possibility of happy endings? — Kate DiCamillo

Ramadan Quranic Quotes By Brian Posehn

I used to see my friend Harland Williams in a lot of auditions. Then you'd see one of the DeLuise kids because they're kind of heavy and character-y. You'd just see a lot of the same guys over the years. — Brian Posehn

Ramadan Quranic Quotes By Anonymous

Motivation may be a key ingredient that could allow bridging some theoretical — Anonymous

Ramadan Quranic Quotes By T. Harv Eker

For the prosperous, it's not about getting more stuff. It's about having the freedom to make almost any decision you want. — T. Harv Eker

Ramadan Quranic Quotes By Tariq Ramadan

The first verses establish an immediate correspondence with what Revelation was later to recount about the creation of humankind: "He [God] taught Adam the names of all things."8 Reason, intelligence, language, and writing will grant people the qualities required to enable them to be God's khalifahs (vicegerents) on earth, and from the very beginning, Quranic Revelation allies recognition of the Creator to knowledge and science, thus echoing the origin of creation itself.9 — Tariq Ramadan

Ramadan Quranic Quotes By Chitose Yagami

There's nothing happy about love at all!! I would rather have not known real love ... if it hurts this much. — Chitose Yagami

Ramadan Quranic Quotes By Tariq Ramadan

Only after making intelligent and thorough use of his human powers had he trusted himself to the divine will, thereby clarifying for us the meaning of at-tawakkul ala Allah (reliance on God, trusting oneself to God): responsibly exercising all the qualities (intellectual, spiritual, psychological, sentimental, etc.) each one of us has been granted and humbly remembering that beyond what is humanly possible, God alone makes things happen. Indeed, this teaching is the exact opposite of the temptation of fatalism: God will act only after humans have, at their own level, sought out and exhausted all the potentialities of action. That is the profound meaning of this Quranic verse: "Verily never will God change the condition of a people until they change what is in themselves."1 — Tariq Ramadan