The Qur’an was never just a book to recite. It was a manual for building civilisation, hearts, and history.
But somewhere along the path, we began to honour its ink while forgetting its instructions. We beautified its pages while neglecting its rulings. We hung it on walls — but failed to hang its teachings in our lives.
And when the Ummah turned the Qur’an into a symbol, instead of a system, it lost not only guidance — it lost the world.
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I. The Qur’an Built Civilisations
The early Muslims were few in number. Poor. Persecuted. Yet they recited Qur’an — and lived Qur’an.
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- It raised orphans into leaders.
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- It turned oppressed slaves into generals.
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- It transformed scattered tribes into a global Ummah.
The Qur’an built Andalusia, where Muslims, Jews, and Christians studied under its light. It inspired scholars like Al-Ghazali, Ibn Sina, and Ibn Khaldun to advance knowledge in ways the world still benefits from.
“And thus We have made you a balanced nation, that you may be witnesses over mankind.” (Qur’an 2:143)
II. When the Qur’an Became a Ritual, Not a Revival
As centuries passed, the relationship changed:
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- Recitation without reflection.
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- Memorisation without transformation.
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- Decoration without devotion.
We began to read the Qur’an for blessings — but not for blueprint. We celebrated its Hafiz competitions — but neglected its governance.
And so Allah’s Word remained protected — but its people lost their power.
“And the Messenger will say, ‘O my Lord, indeed my people have abandoned this Qur’an.'” (Qur’an 25:30)
III. Signs That We Forgot
Today, we see the signs everywhere:
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- Justice is demanded from secular courts, not Islamic ones.
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- Solutions are sought from ideologies, not the Book.
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- Pride is found in flags and races, not in being “servants of the Most Merciful.”
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- Knowledge is celebrated, but wisdom is scarce.
We are a people drowning in access to the Qur’an — but starving for its application.
IV. Reclaiming the Qur’an Before It’s Too Late
The Qur’an is not waiting to be changed. It is waiting to be obeyed.
If we want honour, it will not come from wealth, armies, or political deals. It will come from this:
“Indeed, this Qur’an guides to that which is most just and upright.” (Qur’an 17:9)
Revival begins when:
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- We measure success by Qur’anic standards, not worldly trends.
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- We raise children not just to read Qur’an — but to embody it.
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- We demand from ourselves first what we demand from others.
The world will not respect us until we respect our own Book again.
Conclusion
When we abandoned the Qur’an, we abandoned the rope that connected us to dignity, justice, and leadership.
But Allah’s promise still stands:
“And hold firmly to the rope of Allah all together and do not become divided.” (Qur’an 3:103)
The Qur’an never failed us. We failed it.
It’s time to return. Not just with tongues. But with lives.
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