What is Taqwa? The God-Consciousness That Changes Everything
Taqwa is mentioned over 250 times in the Quran and is the stated goal of Ramadan. Here is what it actually means, where it lives, and the extraordinary promises the Quran attaches to it.
Iman, worship, and deepening the connection with Allah.
Taqwa is mentioned over 250 times in the Quran and is the stated goal of Ramadan. Here is what it actually means, where it lives, and the extraordinary promises the Quran attaches to it.
Inshallah means “If Allah ﷻ wills” — and it is a Quranic obligation, not a cultural saying. Here is the real meaning, the Quranic command, and what it actually requires of the Muslim.
The Prophet ﷺ said iman has over seventy branches — strengthening any one of them increases it. Here are the practical steps from Quran and Sunnah for building iman where you are right now.
Shukr — Islamic gratitude — is more than a wellness habit. The Quran promises that genuine gratitude increases blessing. Here’s what it means, how it works, and how to practise it.
Muraqabah — Islamic mindfulness — places Allah ﷻ at the centre of present-moment awareness. Here’s what it means, how it differs from secular mindfulness, and how to build it.
Ikhlas — sincerity — is what makes the same action either worship or performance. Here’s what it means, why it matters, and how to build it through the practice of secret deeds.
The Prophet ﷺ recited Surah Al-Mulk every single night. A surah of thirty verses that intercedes until forgiveness. Here’s what it contains and how to build the nightly practice.
Iman fluctuates — the Prophet said so. Here are the clear signs of weakened faith, and the specific practices scholars identify for strengthening iman in Islam.
Taqwa is the most mentioned virtue in the Quran. Here is what it actually means, what it produces, and how to build the protective God-consciousness that the Quran promises specific outcomes for.
SubhanAllah means “Glory be to Allah ﷻ.” Here is the full meaning, when Muslims say it, and why the Prophet ﷺ called it one of the most beloved phrases to Allah ﷻ.
MashaAllah means “What Allah ﷻ has willed.” Here is the Quranic origin, when to say it, how it protects from the evil eye, and the difference between MashaAllah and Alhamdulillah.
Alhamdulillah means “All praise and thanks belong to Allah.” It fills the scales of deeds and covers every state. Here is what it actually means and when the Sunnah says to say it.
We say we love the Prophet ﷺ. But love, in Islam, is more than a feeling — it shows up in how you live. Here’s who he was, what loving him requires, and how to build it.
The Islamic morning routine — from waking dua to Fajr to morning adhkar — is a complete Sunnah guide to starting the day. Here is each step, its reward, and how to build it.
The sweetness of iman — that quiet settling in the chest when faith feels real — isn’t reserved for scholars. The Prophet ﷺ gave three conditions for anyone. Here’s what they mean.
Khushu — genuine presence in prayer — changes what salah is. The Prophet ﷺ found comfort in it, not after it. Here’s what blocks it and how to build it, practically.
The Prophet ﷺ said: the religion is nasihah. Here is what genuine Islamic advice-giving looks like — its conditions, why privacy matters, and how to distinguish nasihah from criticism disguised as it.
Wudu is Islam’s daily transition ritual — and the Prophet ﷺ described sins leaving with each drop of water. Here’s how performing it with presence changes everything about what follows.
Intermittent fasting is one of nutrition science’s most studied interventions. The Prophet fasted every Monday and Thursday. Here is why, what the research confirms, and how to start.
Muhasabah — self-reckoning — is the practice that sits at the centre of everything this site is about. Here is what it means, why we named this site after it, and the four steps in brief.
You’ve missed prayers, struggled to focus, and wondered if you’re doing enough. Islam’s answer is clear: imperfect worship offered through genuine difficulty may be the most valuable thing you give.