When the dream originates from a higher spiritual source — such as God or the angels — it is a "truthful vision" (ru'ya sadiqah). This is the term the Mother of the Believers Aisyah used when she described the beginnings of the descent of revelation upon Prophet Muhammad
If, however, the dream originates from a lower source such as one's ego (nafs), the devil (shaitan) or a collaboration of both, it is considered either insignificant or harmful. Examples of nafs-bound dreams are sexual fantasies, dreaming of water when thirsty, wealth or other preoccupations rooted in one's psyche as well as incoherent narratives. Examples of satanic whisperings are dreams that affect one's spirit negatively. All such phenomena the Qur'an calls { "a confused jumble" } (12:44, 21:5), hence the Prophet
Islam forbids the interpretation of dreams to all but experts. This prohibition is in recognition of the positive or negative effect dreams can have on our wakeful state and also because of the ineffable connection between their interpretation and reality in light of the Prophetic hadith, "Dreams are one out of 46 parts of Prophecy." A similar hadith states: "Nothing remains of the beginnings of Prophethood except the good vision a Muslim may see." Among the few people to whom the Companions confided their dreams were the Prophet himself and his close friend Sayyiduna Abu Bakr al-Siddiq, both of whom expert interpreters. Among the Muslims of the succeeding generation, the most eminent interpreter was Ibn Sirin, who warned against amateurs: "This matter is connected with religion, so look well from whom you take your religion!" When Imam Malik was asked whether anyone could interpret dreams, he replied: "What! Is religion a plaything?"
Perhaps the most ironclad guarantee of a good dream in Islam is the Prophet's statement that "Whoever sees me in dream has truly seen me, for the devil cannot impersonate me". However, apart from his direct contemporaries, how can one be sure that one is seeing Prophet Muhammad
The Brunei Times
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