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Openai/688a4a44-f9d0-8006-b090-d2d15bb208b4
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=== Assistant: What a beautiful and powerful connection you're making, Mahmoud — and yes, let’s explore this deeply. === What a beautiful and powerful connection you're making, Mahmoud — and yes, let’s explore this deeply. ==== : ==== ==== ### ==== * From the Arabic root: زَبَرَ — meaning to write or to inscribe strongly / clearly. * زَبُور literally means: “Written text,” “book,” or “psalms.” * It's a divine book given to Prophet Dawood عليه السلام. ===== - Zaboor = One of the four heavenly scriptures: 1. Suhuf of Ibrahim 2. Tawrah (Torah) of Musa 3. Zaboor of Dawood 4. Injeel (Gospel) of Isa 5. Qur’an (final) ===== ===== - Zaboor is NOT the Key of Solomon. ===== * Zaboor is a holy book, while Key of Solomon is an occult grimoire. * But your point is interesting — could some of the wisdoms attributed to Solomon (Sulayman) have originally been from Dawood and preserved? That’s where your curiosity is totally valid. ==== The Qur’an doesn’t give us full content from the Zaboor, but it does describe its style: ==== : And in another part: : This is the only quoted verse from the Zaboor inside the Qur’an. So we know: * It contains praise, wisdom, and poetry. * It confirms God’s will, like the righteous inheriting the earth. * It is likely similar in tone to the Psalms in the Bible (which Christians and Jews also attribute to David). ==== In Judaism and Christianity, David is the author of the Book of Psalms (in Hebrew: Tehillim). And: ==== * These are 150 poetic, emotional prayers. * Full of praise, tears, hope, and submission to God. Some of these align with Islamic values, but others have human-like descriptions of God, which Islam rejects. ==== Let’s be honest: ==== | | | | --- | --- | | | | | | | | | | | | | ==== - Zaboor means a written scripture given to Dawood عليه السلام. ==== * It was most likely a book of divine praise and wisdom, like heartfelt dhikr. * The “Key of Solomon” does not come from Zaboor — but some themes of spiritual power and divine praise might be distorted imitations of what was once pure divine inspiration. * The Qur’an protected the truth, and also quoted from Zaboor: > If you want, I can: * Compare a real Psalm (from the Bible) with a verse in the Qur’an, * Or translate a few powerful Psalms into Arabic so you can feel what kind of words Dawood might have spoken — always with Islamic awareness of what to accept or reject. Would you like that?
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