And indeed He had the ruling, and *** that ruling was for eternity with us.
So my intercessor is my time, and He who *** spent time like this.
So we rode in search of the origin that *** made the secret public with us
So to us is from Him that which moved us *** and to Him is from us that which made us rest
Where are the movements of eternity? I testified *** that he said to him, “We did not remain silent”
I am the humiliated servant who is chosen *** and I am right and what is right is that I am
< /p>
[ Disavowing oneself from movement ]
Know, may God help you, that the principles upon which the riders relied are many, including disavowing oneself from movement if they remain in it. That is why they rode. They are those who live on their boats and are moved by moving their boats. They cross what they were commanded to do by others, not by themselves. They pray in comfort with the hardship of movement, disavowing the claim that movement gives. Even if they were proud of covering long distances in a short time, that pride would be due to the boat that covered that distance with them, not them. It is theirs to disavow, and they have no claim, for their desertion is there is no power or strength except in God and their signs. And you did not throw when you threw, but God threw. It will be said to them: Why did you cover these distances when you crossed them?