Category: Uncategorized

  • Imam Jafar As-Sadiq(r), Imam Zayd Ash Shaheed(r), sacred knowledge and Masjid As Sahlah

    Imam Jafar As-Sadiq(r) wanted to know about the sacred knowledge of his martyred uncle Imam Zayd Ash Shaheed(r).
    Imam Zayd Ash Shaheed(r) wanted to pray in Masjid As Sahlah when he was in the house of a martyred follower Mu’awiyah bin Is-haq Al-Ansari but could not.
    Khidr who taught Moses peace be upon him also stayed in Masjid As Sahlah
    (( عن عبداللّه ابان قال : دخلنا على ابى عبداللّه (عليه السلام ) فساءلنا افيكم احد عنده علم عمى زيد بن على ؟؟ فقال رجل من القوم : انا عندى علم من علم عمك ، كنا عنده ذات ليلة فى دار معاوية بن اسحق الانصارى ، اذ قال : انطلقوا بنا نصلى فى مسجد السهلة فقال ابوعبداللّه (عليه السلام ): و فعل ؟ فقال لا جائه امر فشغله عن الذهاب ، فقال : امّا واللّه لو عاذاللّه به حولا لاعاذه امّا علمت انه موضع بيت ادريس النبى الذى كان يخيط فيه . و منه سار ابراهيم الى اليمن بالعمالقة ، و منه سار داوود الى جالوت و ان فيه لصخرة خضراء، فيها مثال كل نبى ، و من تحت تلك الصخرة اخذت طينة كل نبى ، و انه لمناخ الراكب ، قيل : و من الراكب ؟ قال : الخضراء (عليه السلام ). ))
  • Development of anti-Islamic stupidity from moon-god to volcanic God

    Mother of Believers would disagree with that because under Islamic law, alive images themselves are forbidden let alone images of Prophets which Muslims find blasphemous.
    Narrated `Aisha:
    I purchased a cushion with pictures on it. The Prophet (came and) stood at the door but did not enter. I said (to him), “I repent to Allah for what (the guilt) I have done.” He said, “What is this cushion?” I said, “It is for you to sit on and recline on.” He said, “The makers of these pictures will be punished on the Day of Resurrection and it will be said to them, ‘Make alive what you have created.’ Moreover, the angels do not enter a house where there are pictures.’”
    I have answered the questions of Bill Lauritzen whom you quote as the authority of your blind faith in anti-religion.
    I rarely give up on a book but this one has been sorely disappointing. Lauritzen comes off as arrogant and a know-it-all. I am interested in anthropology pieces, early humanity, religion, etc. And I also find geology and the way the earth works fascinating. So I really expected to like this book. I should have put the book down in the preface when he says, and I quote,
    “I try to speculate in a rational and responsible manner. Remember that the most extravagant speculations are those that claim “supernatural” powers and events! The speculations I make are realistic, tame and quite credible in comparison. The burden of proof lies on those who claim extraordinary events, not with those who logically interpret historical religious and mythological writings considering natural phenomena.”
    Since when is burden of proof one sided in intellectual work? I continued reading my ebook version, up to 38% when I just couldn’t take it anymore. He doesn’t give any evidence for his drastic claims. I am not saying that his opinions are completely without value, but the way he delivers them and with a lack of support is appalling. He quotes from several cultures ancient or religious texts but only references websites in his notes page and we don’t know how accurate the translations he is using are. And what he does is total coercion: he places in brackets throughout the quotes the words and images he wants us to see, for example while talking about the Garden of Eden story from the Bible,
    “And the Lord God said, ‘The man has now become like one of us, knowing good and evil. He must not be allowed to reach out his hand and take also from the tree of life [volcano] and eat, and live forever.’ So the Lord God banished from the Garden of Eden to work the ground from which he had been taken. After he drove the man out, he placed on the east side (or placed in front) of the Garden of Eden cherubim [lava bombs] and a flaming sword flashing back and forth [volcanic lightning] to guard the way to the tree of life.”
    This is one sample. He quotes in a similar way from the ancient Egyptian Book of the Dead. It’s like he is forcing his ideas on the reader instead of giving a strong foundation for them.
    I found his style heavy handed and overbearing and it overshadowed any value his interpretations may have had. It is not beyond the scope that the pyramids could represent volcanoes. But random unexplained statements, such as the Garden of Eden was in Java, and Tibetan mandalas are representations of volcanoes do not sit well with me.
    I do not expect people to have particular religious beliefs, however, not believing in God does not mean that the spiritual world and the ancient texts of the world’s cultures are trite and meaningless and for ignorant people. Religion and spirituality have their own innate value. It is a different kind of knowledge and wisdom and I feel as though it is condescending and ignorant of people who makes the claim that Lauritzen did in the preface that to “rid ourselves of religion, we need to understand how it started.” Who is he to say we need to rid ourselves of something that is inherently human, representing our creativity and our passion and our connection to humanity? Yes, we need to rid ourselves of the violence that zealotry in any religion unfortunately causes, but there is a whole other side to religion that should not be eradicated. Why does religious and spiritual beliefs persist in countries where the government suppresses it?
    I would be very interested to hear from people who really like this book. Sorry for the tirade!
     Bill Lauritzen I have nothing against religion, Caitlin, except when it claims ultimate truth. Physics is true everywhere one the globe, but as you know, in some countries, Jesus is god, in some countries it’s Rama, etc. I certainly don’t know everything, and i invited people to read the ancient texts for themselves. I merely presented a theory which I felt covered all the facts better than any other theories. The best part of the book was the second half, so I am sorry you didn’t read it.
    Bill Lauritzen I understand how you feel. But what exactly is”spirituality”? Can you exactly define it? You’re right there is the other side to religion, what do we need religion to bring out in us this side? I am not so sure. Do we need God in order to be good? Is religion a local phenomena that is no longer relevant in a global age? Physics is true all around the world. Not so with religion. Some things to think about which I hope to address in my next book .
    Ishmael Abraham { in some countries, Jesus is god, in some countries it’s Rama } As an orthodox and orthoprax Muslim, this can be explained on the basis of Quranic(2:213) theory of common origin of all religions from the same primordial religion of Islam meaning willing surrender to God, which later on corrupted(2:79) into distinct polytheistic forms due to man-made additions to the original revealed unitarian sacred texts. For example, Hindu texts clearly teach unitarianism(tawhid) as Dr. Zakir Naik explains to Hindu monk Ravi Shankar. And, one can see that anti-unitarian verses appears in John which is the latest of all gospels and this accords with the Quranic theory. Just like physics is prevailing over ignorance of the physical world, Quran 61:9 teaches that Islam will prevail over spiritual ignorance at the end of history as the ultimate revealed truth. Islam encourages students to be unifiers of reason and revelation(jami al maqul wal manqul) like Averroes honouring whom an asteroid and a lunar crater have been named.
     Ishmael Abraham According to Islam, spirituality is not something vague like everything to everyone. It simply means that one does not become a hypocrite by acting in a sinful way that is against professed beliefs. Religions other than Islam condone that hypocrisy based on the concept of antinomianism, But, Islam teaches a pronomian spirituality which means that we love God the way He wants to be loved in accordance with the sacred law, not in accordance with our lusts and egos. For example, Jesus peace be upon him was circumcised, and did not eat pork like Muslims but many Christians break those commandments citing antinomian spirituality which Jesus peace be upon him did not teach.
  • Teaching a Christian sister about ways of Prophets and the true Zion.

    Linda Spencer

    Day 4 of Scripture Challenge. I challenge Sis Robin Miller to post scriptures for 10 days and each day Challenge a different person to do the same. God bless……And many people shall go and say, Come ye, and let us go up to the mountain of the Lord, to the house of the God of Jacob; and he will teach us of his ways, and we will walk in his paths: for out of Zion shall go forth the law, and the word of the Lord from Jerusalem.The main concern of every person who comes to the Lord should be to know His word and His will. It is extremely important that we who proclaim God’s message make sure that it is truly FROM GOD, and not just a popular teaching that is going around!! Our preaching should be based on the words of Jesus, the New Testament apostles or Old Testament prophets. Saved and lost alike need to hear the truth preached from anointed people who are committed to walking in God’s ways and will.
    Linda Spencer I forgot to add that this scripture is from Isaiah 2:3.
    Ishmael Abraham We call the ways of Prophets to be sunnah. You can learn the ways of all Prophets through The Way of Last Prophet at sunnah.com. The true Zion is near the valley of Baca. Psalm 84 3 Even the sparrow has found a home, and the swallow a nest for herself, where she may have her young– a place near your altar, O LORD Almighty, my King and my God. 4 Blessed are those who dwell in your house; they are ever praising you. 5 Blessed are those whose strength is in you, who have set their hearts on pilgrimage. 6 As they pass through the Valley of Baca, they make it a place of springs; the autumn rains also cover it with pools. 7 They go from strength to strength, till each appears before God in Zion.
  • Quran 68:9 and the difference between secular and divine axiology

    The axiology of God

    July 28, 2011 by westportexperiment The Church frequently gets its axiology – its theory of value – dead wrong. To value is fundamentally human. It is instinctive and inescapable, a testament to the fact that man is the offspring of God. But when the Church fails to discern between the values of “the present evil world” and her Lord, it has just plain sold the farm. A Church that doesn’t defend its axiological borders (God’s rather) has in effect seceded to the enemy. And so she comes under Christ’s condemnation, “Ye are they which justify yourselves before men; but God knoweth your hearts: for that which is highly esteemed among men is abomination in the sight of God” (Luke 16:15).
    I loved your note especially the quote of Jesus peace be upon him. Quran 68:8-9 also says something similar that men of the world want the devout to compromise and lean towards them so that they may esteem them in return. so, God tells the true believers not to follow or obey the deniers of truth . Tafsir Jalalayn: They desire, they yearn, that you should be pliable, [that] you should yield to them, so that they may be pliable [towards you], [so that] they may yield to you . Tafsir Ibn Abbas They wish that you agree with them so that they agree with you and that you flatter them so that they would flatter you. Muhammad Asad: They would like thee to be soft [with them], so that they might be soft [with thee]. They would like thee to be conciliatory in the matter of ethical principles and moral valuations, whereupon they would reciprocate and desist from actively opposing thee.
    So,the idea of offspring of God is not Abrahamic but a pre-Abrahamic foreign and worldly idea, because Bible in Numbers says God is not a man. Bible in Acts calls Jesus peace be upon him the Servant of God ( Ebed in hebrew, Abdullah in Arabic)
  • Reification of feelings and Quran 9:32  

    Reification of feelings — the belief that feelings represent reality. From Telling Yourself the Truth by William Backus
    Ishmael Abraham ·Reality or truth can cause both positive or negative feelings. William Backus focuses on positive feelings(western half-truthful concept of happiness) caused by truth when one overcomes inaccurate misbeliefs. However, there can be pseudo-positive feelings caused by inaccurate misbeliefs and one must overcome them with indispensable negativity associated with liberating experience of harsh truth. God says in Quran 9:32: They want to extinguish God’s [guiding] light with their utterances: but God will not allow [this to pass], for He has willed to spread His light in all its fullness, however hateful this may be to all who deny the truth. So, some people who start loving the spiritual darkness they live in and start hating God’s Light(Nur).
    BillyBob Green Coil · “The most intimate reactions of human beings have been so thoroughly reified that the idea of anything specific to themselves now persists only as an utterly abstract notion: personality scarcely signifies anything more than shining white teeth and freedom from body odor and emotions. The triumph of advertising in the culture industry is that consumers feel compelled to buy and use its products even though they see through them.” Theodor Adorno and Max Horkheimer (1944) The Culture Industry: Enlightenment as Mass Deception Source: most of one chapter from Dialectic of Enlightenment;Transcribed: by Andy Blunden 1998;
    Ishmael Abraham ·Orthodox and orthoprax Muslim scholars have always used reverse discourse to deal with criticism of religion. For example, Quran 35:43 teaches that evil schemes befall their authors. God destroyed Marxism and communism in Afghanistan and the same will happen with capitalism. Hadith teaches that Islam will enter every home. And internet will play a great role in making Islam enter every home. We agree with the above mentioned criticism of western culture like personality signifying white teeth only. In Islamic worldview, both white teeth and white tongue signify an ideal personality something which is absent in Christian monasticism which led to rise of secularization in both Eastern and Western Christian worlds. May Allah reify my observations. 🙂
  • Simulation hypothesis and Islam

    Neil DeGrasse Tyson is discussing Simulation Hypothesis: Quran talks about a Protected Tablet(Lawh Mahfuz) where the code of entire universe throughout its history is written. And Ibn Arabi a controversial Sufi saint and scholar has discussed the idea of universe being an illusion in his theology called unity of being which orthodox critics criticize for being misunderstood as pantheism.
    Jerry Sexton Ishmael, are you agreeing with Tyson about the notion of a simulation?
    Ishmael Abraham He is partly right. Our simulation is not deterministic like human simulations but accounts for freewill.
    Jerry Sexton Predestination is spoken of in the Quran, is it not?
    Ishmael Abraham Quran mentions both predestination and freewill. Ali may God be pleased with him explained it as you can lift one foot but not both. So, truth lies between metaphysical libertarianism and absolute fatalism.
    Jerry Sexton You know me, I don’t believe in freewill, but even if I did, I cannot understand how Allah chooses who will believe and be saved ahead of time but still give them freewill.
    Ishmael Abraham There is no mystery in Islam about God’s oneness like pagan trinity. But the debates among classical Muslims surrounded the question of freewill. Heterodox Mutazilah rationalist Muslims denied predestination altogether and believed in complete freewill. But orthodox Muslims believe in the intermediate position as an article of faith. There is a weak Hadith that those who deny predestination are followers of Antichrist and we see this in modern West.
    Jerry Sexton According to physicists, our timeline… Past, present and future, is thought to all exist at the same in space-time . Many biologists also say that our brain chemistry determines our actions.
    Chas Riley Or just your actions? Maybe playing the Akashic record will help the angst?
    Jerry Sexton I love Hitch
    Ishmael Abraham The murderer who supported Iraq war killing a million believers in the name of sodomy, porn and abortion.
    Jerry Sexton Hitchens was wrong about Iraq. At the time, I was also. The 911 hijackers and subsequent media fueled the madness. People wanted revenge, the government gave them what they wanted.
    Ishmael Abraham So, atheists are part of Islamophobic madness.
    Ishmael Abraham Then why do atheists believe in secular liberalism? According to Darwinian paganism there is no room for that.
    Jerry Sexton Secular liberalism is separation of culture and state from religion. I am not sure what you mean by pagan Darwinism.
    Ishmael Abraham The concept of freedom from God implies belief in freewill.
    Jerry Sexton According to Quran, god has both chosen and created who will be in paradise.
    Ishmael Abraham God says in Quran: He guides(hidayah) unto Himself who turns towards Him.(inabah). So, hidayah by God requires inabah by man.

    Below is a clean, integrated essay that incorporates your original insight, corrects the doctrinal attributions, and stabilizes the simulation analogy so it remains Sunni-orthodox, metaphysically rigorous, and conceptually modern. I have written it as a standalone piece suitable for publication or serious academic circulation.


    Divine Decree, Human Agency, and the Metaphysics of a Theistic Simulation

    The perennial theological problem of divine decree (qadar) and human moral responsibility has occupied Islamic thought since its earliest centuries. While often treated as an internal dispute among schools of kalām, this debate gains renewed relevance in the contemporary era through analogies drawn from modern physics, information theory, and the Simulation Hypothesis. When handled carefully, these analogies do not trivialize theology; rather, they illuminate how classical Islamic metaphysics already anticipated many of the tensions now resurfacing in secular philosophical discourse.

    This essay offers a refined synthesis of the classical debate—particularly the Muʿtazilī, Ashʿarī, and Māturīdī positions—through the metaphor of a theistic simulation, grounded in the Qur’anic concept of the Preserved Tablet (al-Lawḥ al-Maḥfūẓ). The aim is not to collapse theology into computationalism, but to show how Islamic doctrine preserves divine omnipotence, real human agency, and moral accountability without succumbing to either libertarian metaphysical dualism or deterministic fatalism.


    The Muʿtazilah and the Primacy of Divine Justice

    The Muʿtazilah are frequently mischaracterized as having “denied predestination.” In fact, their project was far more precise. Their central concern was the preservation of divine justice (ʿadl). If God were the direct creator of every human act—including disbelief, oppression, and evil—then holding humans morally accountable for those acts would, in their view, be unjust.

    To resolve this, the Muʿtazilah affirmed that while God creates human beings, their faculties, and the general order of the world, human beings themselves create their voluntary acts. Moral responsibility, on this account, requires genuine causal authorship. Foreknowledge does not entail compulsion; God knows what humans will freely do, but that knowledge does not generate the act itself.

    This position safeguards moral responsibility at the cost of introducing a secondary locus of creative causality. It was precisely this cost that later Sunni theologians sought to avoid, even while sharing the Muʿtazilī intuition that responsibility without freedom is incoherent.


    Kasb and the Sunni Reconfiguration of Agency

    The doctrine of kasb (acquisition) emerged within Ashʿarī theology as a deliberate alternative to Muʿtazilī act-creation. According to this view, God alone creates all acts, but humans “acquire” acts through intention, choice, and concurrence. Moral responsibility attaches not to ontological origination but to intentional appropriation.

    While often criticized as opaque, kasb represents a serious attempt to preserve two non-negotiable principles: divine omnipotence and human accountability. The act is created by God; the moral valuation of that act is tied to the human will that aligns itself with it.

    The Māturīdī school, however, offers a more philosophically transparent articulation. It affirms that human beings possess a real, created capacity to choose among alternatives, even though the actualization of the chosen act is created by God. Human choice is neither illusory nor independent; it is genuine, situated, and accountable. This position avoids both Muʿtazilī dual causation and Ashʿarī voluntarist minimalism, making it especially amenable to modern philosophical engagement.


    The Preserved Tablet as Metaphysical “Source Code”

    The Qur’anic concept of the Preserved Tablet describes a comprehensive register in which “every matter, small or great, is inscribed.” This has often been misunderstood as a static script imposing fatalism. Classical Sunni theology, however, consistently distinguished eternal knowledge from temporal causation.

    Within a contemporary metaphor, the Tablet can be understood as the complete state-space of reality: all events, all choices, all counterfactual possibilities known eternally by God. Crucially, inscription is not execution. Knowledge does not compel; it encompasses. Causation occurs not at the level of recording, but at the level of divine creation at each moment of existence.

    This distinction allows divine omniscience to coexist with real contingency at the level of lived experience, without implying ignorance, revision, or temporal learning on the part of God.


    Divine Will as Continuous Runtime Sustenance

    Unlike secular simulation hypotheses, which imagine a universe running autonomously once initialized, Islamic metaphysics insists that existence is continuously sustained. Creation is not a past event but an ongoing act. The world exists because it is being willed into existence at every moment.

    In this sense, divine will and power function as the runtime engine of reality. Natural laws (sunnat Allāh) are not independent forces but stable patterns in divine action. The universe is real, not illusory, yet entirely contingent. Its coherence is not mechanical necessity but faithful consistency.


    Human Agency in a Fully Known World

    The central tension remains: if the entire structure of reality—including every human choice—is eternally known, how can freedom be real?

    Sunni theology resolves this not by denying either pole, but by rejecting the assumption that knowledge is causative. Human beings genuinely choose among alternatives within the constraints of their nature, circumstances, and capacities. These choices are selected by humans, created by God, and known eternally—three distinct functions that must not be collapsed into one another.

    The often-cited analogy attributed to ʿAlī ibn Abī Ṭālib captures this balance: a person can lift one foot freely, but cannot lift both simultaneously. Freedom operates within limits, yet remains real where it operates.


    Guidance as an Interactive Divine–Human Interface

    This framework clarifies the Qur’anic language of guidance and misguidance. Divine guidance is not arbitrarily imposed, nor is it earned through sheer autonomy. Rather, it unfolds through a dynamic interaction: God guides those who turn toward Him. Initial openness is a grace; sustained turning is a choice; guidance is the divine response. Both sides of the relationship are real, and both are encompassed within eternal knowledge without being reduced to determinism.


    Toward a Theistic Simulation Model

    Viewed through a contemporary lens, Islamic metaphysics can be described—carefully—as a theistic simulation, provided the analogy remains asymmetrical.

    • The Programmer is not an engineer within a higher universe, but the Necessary Being and ground of existence.
    • The Source Code is the Preserved Tablet: complete, eternal knowledge of all possibilities and outcomes.
    • The Runtime is continuous divine creation and sustenance.
    • The Agents are humans endowed with genuine, created capacity for choice.
    • The Laws are the consistent patterns of divine action studied by science.

    Unlike secular simulations, this model is not cold, purposeless, or morally indifferent. It is teleological, ethical, and relational. The world is not a trap, but a test; not an illusion, but a trust.


    Conclusion

    Classical Islamic theology, far from being obsolete, offers one of the most sophisticated frameworks for holding together omniscience, omnipotence, freedom, and responsibility. When read through disciplined modern metaphors rather than crude reductions, it reveals a metaphysics that is neither mechanistic nor mystical in the pejorative sense, but rigorously relational.

    We may indeed be “inside the system,” but we are not non-player characters. Our choices matter—not despite divine knowledge, but within it.

  • Does caligynephobic lowering of gaze qualify as a bleeding nose Pharisee?

    Bleeding (“bleeding nose”) Pharisee: They were so concerned with being disobedient that they went to ridiculous extremes. This Pharisee would bruise himself walking into a wall because he had to shut his eyes to avoid seeing a woman. They are most frequently criticized not for their extremeness, but for laying that extremeness on other people. (Mt. 23:13-15).
    Islam teaches not the shutting of eyes which is ridiculous but lowering the gaze (ghad albasar) which is easy and I have seen orthodox PhD engineers doing that while teaching in most prestigious universities. Quran criticizes burdens imposed by scholars, but we have Prophetic precedent (sunnah) for that. God says in Quran, if you love God, follow His Messenger(s) and God will love you. Narrated Abdullah ibn Abbas (radi Allahu anhu): “Al-Fadl bin Abbas rode behind Allah’s Messenger (sal Allahu alaihi wa sallam) as his companion rider on the back portion of his she-camel on the day of Nahr (slaughtering of sacrifice, 10th Dhul-Hijja) and Al-Fadl was a handsome man. The Prophet (sal Allahu alaihi wa sallam) stopped to give the people verdicts (regarding their matters). In the meantime, a beautiful woman from the tribe of Khatham came, asking the verdict of Allah’s Messenger. Al-Fadl started looking at her as her beauty attracted him. The Prophet (sal Allahu alaihi wa sallam) looked behind while Al-Fadl was looking at her; so the Prophet (sal Allahu alaihi wa sallam) held out his hand backwards and caught the chin of Al-Fadl and turned his face (to the other side) in order that he should not gaze at her. She said, ‘O Allah’s Messenger! The obligation of performing Hajj enjoined by Allah on his worshippers has become due (compulsory) on my father who is an old man and who cannot sit firmly on the riding animal. Will it be sufficient that I perform Hajj on his behalf?’ He said, ‘Yes.’” [Sahih Bukhari]
  • The basis of merit of caligynephobia in Shia texts

    Zayn Abiya There are better examples than Al-Fadl bin Abbas (r)
    Ishmael Abraham Zayn Abiya Check shia hadiths
    Ishmael Abraham We should have this phobia. Imam Ali(r) used to fear greeting young women.
    عن أبي عبدالله عليه السلام قال: كان رسول الله صلى الله عليه وآله يسلم على النساء ويرددن عليه السلام وكان أمير المؤمنين عليه السلام يسلم على النساء وكان يكره أن يسلم على الشابة منهن و يقول: أتخوف أن تعجبني صوتها فيدخل علي أكثر مما أطلب من الاجر. الاصول من الكافي – الجزء الثاني – كتاب العشرة – باب التسليم على النساء
  • Who are the true Shia according to Imam Al-Baqir(r)?

    Imam Muhammad Al-Baqir(r) said: والله ماشيعتنا إلا من اتقى الله وأطاعه
    I swear in the name of Allah! Our true lovers and followers are those who have taqwa and who obey Allah.
    Imam Muhammad Al-Baqir(r) also said:إنما نحن الذين يعلمون والذين لا يعلمون عدونا
    We are the ones who know and those who do not know are our enemies.
  • When someone attains the age of 40 in Islam

    Abdullah bin Abbas(r) narrates: من بلغ أربعين سنة ولم يغلب خيره شره فليتجهز إلى النار
    Who reaches the age of 40 but his good actions are not more than his bad actions, then he should get ready for Fire.
    Abu Hurairah(r) narrates that the Messenger of Allah(s) said: أَعْذَرَ اللَّهُ إِلَى امْرِئٍ أَخَّرَ أَجَلَهُ حَتَّى بَلَّغَهُ سِتِّينَ سَنَةً
    Allah will not accept the excuse of any person whose instant of death is delayed till he is sixty years of age.
    Uthman bin Affan(r) narrates: قال تعالى‏:‏ إذا بلغ عبدي خمسين سنة حاسبته حسابا يسيرا، فإذا بلغ ستين سنة حببت إليه الإنابة، وإذا بلغ سبعين سنة أحبته الملائكة، وإذا بلغ ثمانين سنة كتبت حسناته وألقيت سيئاته، وإذا بلغ تسعين سنة، قالت الملائكة‏:‏ أسير الله في أرضه‏!‏ فغفر له ما تقدم من ذنبه وما تأخر، ويشفع في أهله‏
    God says: When my servant attains the age of 50, I make his judgement easy, and when he reaches 60, I make him love inabah or turning to Me, and when he reaches 70, I make angels love him, and when he reaches 80, I write his good actions and I forgive his bad actions, and when he reaches 90, the angels say: He is the prisoner of Allah on earth so all his past and future sins are forgiven and he is allowed to advocate for forgiveness of his family.
    في حديث :”من بلغ الأربعين عاماً ولم يأخذ العصا فقد عصى”.
    Hadith: Who attains the age of 40, but does not take staff commits a sin.
    قال ابن عباس رضي الله عنهما التوكؤ على العصا من أخلاق الأنبياء
    Ibn Abbas(r) narrates that who holding on to a staff is part of ethics of Prophets.