چکیده:
been seekin
خلاصه ماشینی:
"The doctrine of the Mahdī has evolved in Islamic history to embody the expectation of a divinely sent prophetic figure at the end of time who will restore true religion and fill the earth with peace and justice and will rule until the end of the universe.
The belief in the Last Judgment or the coming of "the Hour" and the accompanying eschatological account depicted in the Qur’ān concerning that momentous event have received exegetical elaborations in traditions ascribed to the Messenger of God. In the opinion of the present author, it was in this context that the Mahdī traditions originated.
"' 13 Eventually the Day of Judgment and the eschatological description depicted in the Qur’ān received exegetical elaboration and apocalyptic traditions were ascribed to the Messenger of God. Both al-Bukhārī and Muslim, whose collections are regarded by the Sunnīs as the most authentic canonical collections of traditions, transmit a tradition that states that the Messenger of God spoke to his Companions about the events leading up to the Last Hour.
20 Leaving aside the history of the term Mahdī and how it was applied to various historical figures beginning with the Messenger of God, Wilferd Madelung states that the discussion about the Mahdī and his identity among the religious scholars can be traced back to the time of the compiled during the second half of the 3rd/9th century, attest to the popular belief in the doctrine of the Mahdī among the Muslims."