KUR'AN-I KERİM MEALİ - 6.CÜZ

The sixth section contains the last part of Surah An-Nisa and the first half of Surah Al-Ma'idah. It generally has three messages. The first is the awareness of the middle path. It is necessary to avoid excess and understatement: After some of the rulings in the middle of Surah An-Nisa, this section also lists the errors of Jews and Christians regarding rulings, urging the Ummah of Muhammad not to make the same mistakes: Jews broke their promise to their prophets, abandoned the rulings of their books, attempted to kill prophets after Moses, and organized assassinations. Christians also made extreme interpretations of their religion, calling Jesus, God's servant and prophet, "Son of God" (God forbid). The second is the awareness of halal food. The beginning of Surah Al-Ma'idah summarizes the issues of halal and haram. For example, animals called bahiymat al-anam (sheep, cattle, and camels) are halal, but hunting on land while in ihram is haram. It is necessary to respect God's symbols on earth (for example, the Kaaba is a symbol of monotheism, and sacrifice is a symbol of closeness to God), as well as the months in which fighting is forbidden, and not to harm their sanctity/respect. Carcasses, runny blood, pork, and the meat of animals slaughtered in the name of something other than God (for example, idols) are forbidden. If an animal dies by falling, drowning, being slaughtered, or being torn apart by a predator, its meat is also forbidden (what grows and is slaughtered before death is halal). Eating what a trained game animal catches is halal. One must recite the Bismillah when sending the animal after hunting. Slaughtered by the People of the Book is halal, and marrying their women is permissible. However, marrying Muslim women is superior. The third is the awareness of balance. The following sections of Surah Al-Ma'idah explain some legal rulings. Ablution, ritual bath, dry ablution (Al-Maidah, 5:6), witnessing, jihad, retaliation, and apostasy. Furthermore, the deviations of previous nations who abandoned principles such as faith, worship, and justice are recounted, and the fact that these deviations ultimately incurred God's wrath and curse is reminded.