A reflection on Surah Al-Baqarah, Ayat 23–26
By Malai Hassan Othman
I was at the money changer, handing over what I had, when the thought arrived without warning.
Not about exchange rates. About the one journey that does not have a counter like this.
The border I will one day cross alone, with no time to convert what I have been holding, no window to approach, no rate to check. What I carry into that crossing will already need to be in the right currency.
Perhaps it was the taddabur class earlier that week, sitting with Surah Al-Baqarah, ayat 23 to 26, that had put the thought there. Perhaps it had been waiting and the money changer just gave it a place to land.
Because these four ayat speak directly to what we are actually carrying.
First, a challenge to doubt.
Then a warning.
Then glad tidings.
Then a lesson about the smallest things.
— — —
Ayat 23 stopped me first.
If you are in doubt about what Allah has revealed, then produce a surah like it.
Not a gentle invitation. A direct challenge.
Produce something like it.
Call your witnesses.
Try.
Real truth is not afraid of examination. And the Qur’an came to a people who prized language above everything — whose poets could raise tribes and shame enemies with words alone. Yet when the Qur’an arrived, even those who opposed it felt something different.
This was not ordinary speech.
It entered the conscience.
It did not merely impress.
It exposed.
I know both kinds of doubt.
I have asked questions that were genuinely searching — unsettled, but sincere, wanting light.
And I have asked questions that were really just buying time. Dressed as inquiry. Quietly protecting something I was not yet ready to surrender.
The Qur’an, I find, is not unkind to honest searching.
But it does not flatter the second kind.
That is why Ayat 24 comes with weight. If the challenge cannot be met, then the heart must not treat truth as something harmless to postpone forever. There is consequence to seeing and still refusing. There is danger in turning doubt into a permanent shelter.
The warning of Fire is not there to crush the searching heart.
It is there to wake the heart that keeps playing with what it already knows.
— — —
Then comes the glad tidings.
Those who believe and do righteous deeds.
That word caught me.
Not those who believe, full stop.
Believe and.
Because iman is not meant to stay only as a feeling in the chest. It has to travel — to the tongue, to the choices, to how I earn, how I speak, how I treat the person who has nothing to offer me in return.
Faith that never leaves the chest has not yet become fruit.
I keep thinking about BND10.
In dunia, giving it away is a loss by any ledger. The wallet lightens. The numbers go down. But if that BND10 leaves the hand with sincerity — to ease a burden, to feed someone, to please Allah without anyone watching — then perhaps it has not disappeared.
Perhaps it has only been converted.
From money into mercy.
From the currency of dunia into something the next world will recognise.
From something I cannot carry across the grave into something that may already be waiting.
I find this thought both comforting and unsettling.
Comforting because it means nothing sincere is wasted.
Unsettling because it asks me to look honestly at what I am actually converting — and to admit what I am just spending on myself.
— — —
Then Ayat 26 takes a turn I did not expect.
After the challenge of revelation.
After the warning of Fire.
After the promise of gardens beneath which rivers flow.
Allah mentions a mosquito.
A mosquito.
Tiny.
Annoying.
Something I have swatted without a second thought my whole life.
I sat with that for a while.
Because the point, I think, is not the mosquito.
The point is the heart standing before it.
A humble heart can receive a reminder from the smallest thing. An arrogant heart can stand before the greatest sign and still find a reason to look away.
The same verse softens one person and irritates another.
The same reminder brings one person back to Allah and makes another more defensive.
I have felt both.
I know the quiet irritation when a reminder lands too close to something I was not ready to change.
I know the way the heart reaches for reasons to dismiss rather than receive.
The difference is rarely in the reminder.
It is in the posture of the heart standing before it.
— — —
So I came away from that taddabur class with a question I could not put down.
What am I converting?
Time passes through my hands.
Words.
Attention.
A little influence.
The ability to help, occasionally.
Some of it disappears into habit and distraction. But some of it — not all, but some — can still be converted into something the next world will accept.
That is the accounting I find harder to face than any financial one.
Not how much I earned.
But how much of what I earned became goodness.
Not how much I believed.
But how much of that belief became action.
The question is no longer only what is in my wallet.
The question is what has already left my hand for Allah.
The money changer I visited before that trip is still there. Other travellers are still exchanging what they have into what the next place will accept.
But for the longest journey — the one with no return — the exchange cannot wait until the border.
What we kept stays here.
What we converted for Allah has already gone ahead.
— KopiTalk Jiwa








