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- In the Quran, God refers to himself as "Rabb" in several places. When it is used with the definite article (al-Rabb) the Arabic word denotes "the Lord (God)".
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rabb
However, these 40 rabbanaas which are found in different places of the Quraan have been gathered together. Reciting the duas that are mentioned in the Quraan and Hadith is a means of acquiring great blessing in one’s life. And Allah Ta’ala (الله تعالى) knows best. Answered by:
Rabb (Arabic: رب, lit. 'lord') is an Arabic word to refer to God as Lord [1] The term is used by Arabs and Punjabis. [2][3] In the Quran, God refers to himself as "Rabb" in several places. When it is used with the definite article (al-Rabb) the Arabic word denotes "the Lord (God)".
To say the word Ya Rabb in du’a is frequently repeated in the Quran as the method of the Ambiya (‘alayhimus salam) in their du’as. And Allah Ta’ala Knows best, Answered by: Moulana Muhammad Abasoomar. Checked by: Moulana Haroon Abasoomar. Original Source Link.
باب مَا يَدْعُو بِهِ الرَّجُلُ إِذَا أَصْبَحَ وَإِذَا أَمْسَى. the Prophet (saas) said: "There is no Muslim - or no person, or slave (of Allah) - who says, in the morning and evening: 'Radaytu billahi Rabban wa bil-Islami dinan wa bi Muhammadin nabiyyan (I am content with Allah as my Lord ...
- Vol. 5, Book 34, Hadith 3870
- Sunan Ibn Majah 3870
- Book 34, Hadith 44
حصن المسلم. Raḍītu billāhi Rabba, wa bil-Islāmi dīna, wa bi-Muḥammadin (ṣallallāhu `alayhi wa sallama) nabiyya. I am pleased with Allah as my Lord, with Islam as my religion, and with Muhammad (peace and blessings of Allah be upon him) as my Prophet. (Recite three times in Arabic.)
5 days ago · Overview. Din wa-Dawlah. Quick Reference. Phrase first used by Ali ibn Rabban al-Tabari (d. 870) as the title of his book Al-din wa'l-dawlah fi ithbat nubuwwat Muhammad (Religion and the state). Indicates that Islam addresses both the religious and political affairs of the Muslim community.
This was Abu al-Hasan ʿAli b. Rabban Sahl al-Tabari, a well-known medical expert who at the advanced age of about seventy converted from his ancestral Christianity to the Islam of those among whom he had mingled for a good decade.