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Reflect on the Quran
Reflect on the Quran
Author: Calm with Quran
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© Calm with Quran
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Guided Quran reflections for Muslims seeking calm, clarity, and spiritual grounding through Islamic meditation and mindfulness.
Each session includes Arabic recitation, English translation, and gentle reflection prompts to help you pause, reflect, and apply Allah’s words to everyday life.
Each session includes Arabic recitation, English translation, and gentle reflection prompts to help you pause, reflect, and apply Allah’s words to everyday life.
13 Episodes
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Part 3 – Life in the Shadow of Death | Surah Al-Mulk (67:1–2)In this third session, we reflect on the verse’s reminder that Allah created death and life.After hearing the Arabic recitation and translation, you’ll be invited to pause with a reality we often push to the background: that every life — including our own — has an end.Through gentle reflection prompts, this session explores how remembering the limits of our time can clarify what truly matters and reshape the way we see our priorities.Part of a guided Quran reflection series on Surah Al-Mulk (67:1–2), designed to create space for thoughtful engagement with the Quran.
Part 2 – The Illusion of Control | Surah Al-Mulk (67:1–2)In this second reflection of the series, we return to the opening message of the verse: that all power and control ultimately belong to Allah.After hearing the Arabic recitation and English translation, you’ll be guided to reflect on what it might mean to truly live with that awareness — and how it could reshape the way you hold your plans, expectations, and worries about the future.This short Quran reflection offers space to pause, think, and examine the tension between what we believe and how we often live.Part of a 5-part series exploring Surah Al-Mulk (67:1–2), these reflections invite you to engage more deeply with the Quran through calm, guided prompts.
Part 1: Introduction to the Verses | Surah Al-Mulk (67:1–2)Begin a short, guided reflection series exploring the deeper meaning of life, power, and purpose through the opening verses of Surah Al-Mulk.In this first session, you’ll become familiar with the verses themselves and notice what stands out to you — the idea that ultimate control belongs to Allah, the reality that death and life frame our existence, and the reminder that our lives are part of a test.You’ll hear the Arabic recitation alongside the English translation, with gentle prompts to pause and reflect on what these words might reveal about your own life.Over the next four sessions, we’ll explore what it means to live knowing that control rests with Allah, how remembering death reshapes our priorities, and how our daily actions reflect what truly matters.Each episode is brief, approachable, and designed to fit easily into your day, offering space for calm, thoughtful reflection on the Quran.
Part 5: Staying Anchored to Allah | Surah An-Nahl (16:53–54)In this final part of the series, we bring the reflection together.We've explored how hardship clarifies reliance — and how relief can quietly dilute it. In this closing reflection, we consider what it means to remain anchored to Allah in both states.What would it look like to stay conscious of Him not only when you are desperate — but when you are comfortable?A concluding reflection on steadiness, gratitude, and sustaining awareness of Allah in both need and ease.
Part 4: After Relief | Surah An-Nahl (16:53–54)In this fourth reflection, we move beyond hardship — into what happens after relief arrives.The anxiety eases.The pressure lifts.Life returns to normal.Yet the verse points to a subtle shift that can follow: how quickly sincere reliance can soften once urgency fades.After listening to the recitation and translation, you’ll be guided to reflect on your own experience of relief — and what changes in your heart when you no longer feel in need.Why does desperation make reliance feel natural — but comfort makes it fade?A short, guided reflection on distraction, subtle drift, and the spiritual test of ease.
Part 3: Turning in Hardship | Surah An-Nahl (16:53–54)In this third reflection of the series, we focus on the moment of hardship within the verse:“…and when hardship afflicts you, it is to Him alone you cry out for help.”After listening to the Arabic recitation and English translation, you’ll be guided to reflect on a time in your own life when you felt desperate — when your options were limited and your heart turned to Allah alone.What does reliance truly feel like in those moments?And what changes within us when everything else falls away?A short, guided reflection on dependence, sincerity, and the clarity that hardship can bring.
Part 2: The Source of Blessings | Surah An-Nahl (16:53–54)In this second session of Between Need and Neglect, we return to the opening words of the verse:“Whatever good things you possess come from God…”After listening to the Arabic recitation and English translation, you’ll be invited to pause on a single blessing in your life and reflect on its true source.How often do we consciously recognise Allah as the giver of what we value most?A short guided reflection to deepen gratitude and strengthen awareness before the next moment of need arises.
Part 1: Introduction to the Verses | Surah An-Nahl (16:53–54)Begin a short, guided reflection series exploring how we respond to hardship, relief, and the blessings in our lives. This first session introduces the verses and invites you to notice what stands out to you — the contrast between times of need and ease, the source of your blessings, or the shifts in your heart along the way.You’ll hear the Arabic recitation alongside the English translation, with gentle prompts to pause and reflect. Over the next four sessions, we’ll continue exploring human nature, reliance on Allah, and the moments that reveal how we turn toward and away from Him.Each episode is brief, approachable, and designed to fit easily into your day, offering space for mindful Quranic reflection.As this is a new project, your feedback is deeply appreciated — message us or leave a comment with your thoughts.
Part 5: Carrying the Verse Forward | Surah Al-’Ankabut (29:41)In this final reflection, we bring the journey of The Spider’s Web together.After hearing the Arabic recitation and English translation one last time, you’ll be guided to reflect on how the message of this verse might quietly shape your daily life — especially in moments of decision, stress, or uncertainty.This session focuses on application: noticing when familiar forms of protection appear, and gently realigning your trust in light of what the verse teaches.*As a new project your feedback is invaluable to shaping future reflections — message us or leave a comment with your thoughts.
Part 4: Where True Trust Rests | Surah Al-’Ankabut (29:41)In this fourth session, the focus shifts from fragile supports to the nature of trust itself.After listening to the Arabic recitation and English translation, you’ll be invited to reflect on what it means to place trust fully in Allah — and how that contrasts with the sense of security offered by the protectors you reflected on earlier in the series.Designed for Muslims seeking spiritual grounding and a mindful engagement with the Quran, this session prepares the way for bringing the parable’s message into everyday life.*As a new project your feedback is invaluable to shaping future reflections — message us or leave a comment with your thoughts.
Part 3: Why Are Our Supports Fragile? | Surah Al-’Ankabut (29:41)In this third reflection, we return again to Verse 41 of Surah Al-’Ankabut and look more closely at the parable itself.After hearing the Arabic recitation and English translation, you’ll be guided to reflect on why Allah compares false sources of protection to a spider’s web — something that can appear carefully built, yet offers little real strength when tested.This session invites you to consider moments in your own life when the things you rely on show their limits or weaknesses, particularly during stress, uncertainty, or loss.Part of a 5-part Quran reflection series for Muslims seeking calm, clarity, and deeper Islamic mindfulness, this episode helps move from what we rely on to why it cannot ultimately hold us.*As a new project your feedback is invaluable to shaping future reflections — message us or leave a comment with your thoughts.
Part 2: What Do We Rely On? | Surah Al-’Ankabut (29:41)In this second reflection, we return to Verse 41 of Surah Al-’Ankabut and begin to look more personally at its message.After hearing the Arabic recitation and English translation, you’ll be gently guided to reflect on the things you may rely on for protection or security in your own life — whether that’s work, wealth, relationships, status, or control.This short reflection offers space to pause, notice, and reflect without pressure or judgement. It’s part of a 5-part series designed for Muslims seeking calm, clarity and mindful engagement with the Quran.Exploring trust, reliance, and where a sense of security truly comes from, this session invites you to look inward — quietly and honestly.*As a new project your feedback is invaluable to shaping future reflections — message us or leave a comment with your thoughts.
Part 1: Verse Introduction | Surah Al-’Ankabut (29:41)Begin your journey of calm, clarity, and Islamic mindfulness with the first of a 5-part reflection series on Verse 41 of Surah Al-’Ankabut (The Spider). Using the imagery of a spider’s web, this verse invites us to consider where we place our trust and what truly supports us in life.In this session, you’ll hear the Arabic recitation alongside the English translation, giving you space to pause, reflect, and notice what naturally arises in your thoughts and feelings. Gentle prompts guide you to observe the imagery and meaning of the verse, helping you connect its lessons to your own life.Over the next four episodes, we’ll continue the journey: examining the protectors we rely on beyond Allah, reflecting on their fragility, and exploring what changes when trust is placed fully in Him. Each session is short, approachable, and intended to fit into your daily routine, offering ongoing moments of mindful Quranic practice.*As a new project your feedback is invaluable to shaping future reflections — message us or leave a comment with your thoughts.













