(August 24, 2022 at 5:30 pm)The Grand Nudger Wrote: Come up with just one problem in narrator chains or the contents of magic book? Why?
Sigh, fine, let’s start here. Magic books god is a raging garbage fire. Magic books alleged narrator is a child raping warlord.
You got your information about that Magical (Facinating) book and its Narrator from Loki. Therefore your ideas are really really deceived.
First of all, when Aisha married to Prophet she was 19 years old. (We know it because when Prophet died she was 28 years old and they were married for 9 years).
Aisha really loved the Prophet and He also loved her. I will talk about only 3 memories that they lived.
But to explain the first one, I must give a brief description.
Joseph (the prophet) was a very beautiful boy and was loved very much by his father (Jacob (Prophet)). His brothers envied him and threw him into a well, a trade caravan found him and sold him as a slave to a noble from the Egyptian palace. Since this person had no children and Joseph was very beautiful, he adopted him. But when Joseph grew up, he became an irresistibly handsome boy, and his stepmother fell in love with him. Rumors spread in the palace. Then his stepmother summoned the women of the palace and placed fruit plates and knives in front of them, and called Joseph while they were peeling the fruit. The women were so fascinated that they cut their hands while looking at Joseph. Then Joseph's stepmother said, "This is Joseph, whose love you accuse me of."
Coming back to our topic,
Aisha says, "What would the women who cut off their fingers when they saw Yusuf saw the Prophet (Muhammad)?"
Aisha, a young girl who was also brought up in the Prophet's education, was a religious scholar, and people would get answers by asking her about contradictory issues after the Prophet's death. They once asked, "How about a woman adorning for her husband?" Aisha replied, "I used to apply such fragrant oil that the Prophet's beard would shine."
Once, People asked Ayşe; "Does kissing break the ablution?" (Ablution: washing hands, face, arms and feet before prayer).
Aisha replies: "Once, the Prophet kissed one of his wives and then went to the mosque to pray".
The person who asked the question smiled and said, "That wife was none other than you, wasn't it?" Aisha smiled and shook her head.
Finally, during a campaign, the Prophet ordered the army to "go ahead" and he and his wife Aisha stayed behind. Then he said, "Let's race". They competed and Aisha (as a young girl) passed the Prophet. Years passed, and during another expedition, the Prophet said let's race again. Ayşe tells about this event as follows: "I couldn't pass the prophet this time because I gained weight, so he laughed at me and said, "This is revenge."
In short, they were a happy couple who loved each other. You won't find the opposite in any book about them.