Loving and Living the Quran podcast

Episode 358: Tawwab as an Identity [2:222]

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Allah says: "Surely Allah loves those who turn to Him repeatedly, and He loves those who purify themselves." (2:222)

The Qur'an does not simply praise those who repent once. It praises al-tawwābīn — those who return again and again.

The word tawwāb in Arabic implies repetition and continuity. It describes a person for whom returning to Allah is not a rare emergency response after a major mistake, but a regular spiritual rhythm.

Repentance becomes a disposition.

The people Allah loves are not those who never drift. They are those who do not stay away for long.

Imam Khomeini reflects that sincere repentance does more than erase sin — it makes the servant beloved to God. Not merely tolerated or pardoned, but loved.

Our tradition has always understood that spiritual growth is not a straight line. It is a cycle: we rise, we drift, we notice, we return.

Even the prophets turned constantly to Allah, not because of sin, but because they understood human limitation and Divine greatness.

Tawbah becomes the compass that brings us home.

Reflection:

  • When did I notice myself drifting this Ramadan and consciously return?

  • How can I make returning to Allah a regular spiritual practice after Ramadan?

  • What would it mean to become someone whose instinct is always to turn back?

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