Respect, Kindness, and Adab Between Spouses 🤍✨
In Islam, marriage is not just companionship — Asmaani Jodey helps you find a partner with good adab—it’s treating your spouse with dignity: respect in speech, mercy in daily living, and good adab when things get difficult. The home is meant to be a place of sakinah (tranquility), not harm.
1) Qur’an: Live With Your Spouse in Kindness
Allah commands explicitly:
“And live with them in kindness…”
— Surah An-Nisā’ 4:19
This is a core rule of adab: kindness isn’t only when you feel happy; it’s a command in ordinary life.
2) Authentic Hadith: No Hate—If You Dislike, Still Respect
The Prophet ﷺ taught that a believer must not let dislike turn into hatred:
“A believer must not hate a believing woman. If he dislikes one of her traits, he will be pleased with another.”
— Sahih Muslim
Lesson for spouses: respect is not permission to be cruel; it’s discipline of the heart and tongue.
3) Authentic Hadith: Fear Allah Regarding Women (Rights + Kind Treatment)
In the Prophet ﷺ’s final guidance, he strongly emphasized kindness toward wives and women:
“Fear Allah regarding women…”
— Sahih Muslim (Farewell Sermon wording)
Lesson for marriage: adab is not “culture”—it’s taqwa expressed through how you treat your spouse.
4) Sahaba / Prophetic Household Lessons (Real-Life Adab in Marriage)
A) Aisha (ra): The Prophet ﷺ served his family
Aisha (ra) described the Prophet ﷺ as not being distant or arrogant at home—he would do household work and help.
Lesson: respect is also practical. The most honorable homes are not built on superiority; they’re built on service, patience, and teamwork.
B) Umm Salamah (ra): A wife’s counsel can be wise, respectful, and effective
Umm Salamah (ra) once advised the Prophet ﷺ with insight during a difficult moment. Her counsel shows that Islamic marriage includes wisdom, consultation, and respectful speaking—not silence or humiliation.
Lesson: adab in speech means you can correct, advise, and guide without disrespect.
5) Practical “Adab” Rules You Can Apply Daily (Simple & Sunnah-aligned)
Speak with mercy even in disagreements
(don’t use mocking, cutting words, or insults)
Don’t “collect evidence” to justify cruelty
(remember the hadith: dislike one trait doesn’t justify hatred)
Handle tension with respect, not domination
(solve issues, don’t punish the person)
Make your home a place of safety
(your spouse should feel dignity, not fear)
Closing Duʿā’ 🤍
“O Allah, make our marriages places of tranquility and mercy. Grant us respect in speech, kindness in action, and good adab in every trial. Ameen.”
If you want, I’ll write the next post as “Rights in Marriage: Mutual Responsibilities (Qur’an + Authentic Hadith + Sahaba Lessons)” in the same style.
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