Quran Conversations

Quran Conversations

Quran Conversations is the podcast for anyone who wants to unlock the meaning and healing powers of the Quran. I’m your host Dalia Mogahed, an author, researcher, and a student of the Quran. I will be in conversation with one of my dearest teachers, Imam Mohamed Magid, a scholar of the Quran and long time family counselor and congregational leader. Join us as we explore the linguistic miracles and life lessons of the Book of God through a conversation between a scholar and his student.

  1. 13 HR AGO

    S4 E10: The Cost of Ignoring the Truth (TaHa 99–101) | Quran Conversations

    What is the Qur’an really asking from you, and what happens when you turn away from it? In this episode of Quran Conversations, Dalia Mogahed and Mohammed Magid reflect on verses 99–101 of Surah TaHa. A moment where the story pauses, and the Qur’an speaks directly to you. After the powerful narrative of Musa (peace be upon him), these verses shift from storytelling to meaning. They reveal why these stories are told, what they demand from us, and the consequences of ignoring their message. This is where the Qur’an stops being history, and becomes a mirror. In this episode, you will learn: 📖 Why Qur’anic stories are described as true accounts (anbā’) - not myths or entertainment, but lessons grounded in reality 📖 How reflecting on history expands your perspective and deepens your understanding of life and purpose 📖 Why the Qur’an is called a dhikr (reminder), and how it reconnects you to truths you already know 📖 The difference between simply hearing the Qur’an and truly internalising it 📖 What it means to turn away from the Qur’an, and why it is often a conscious, intentional choice 📖 How disconnecting from divine guidance creates inner heaviness, confusion, and loss of direction 📖 Why the Qur’an is not a burden, but the very thing that lifts burdens and brings clarity 📖 How belief in the Hereafter reframes injustice, suffering, and accountability in this life 📖 Why divine warnings are a sign of mercy - not severity 📖 How ultimate justice and compensation are only fully realised in the next life We hope this episode encourages your own reflective journey with the Qur’an. This week’s reflection prompt is: When the truth reaches you—do you move toward it, or do you find yourself quietly turning away, and what is that costing you? ===== If you’re enjoying this podcast, please leave a review on your podcast platform. It helps more than you know. @Quran.Conversations is proudly produced by @muslimi and sponsored by @Fawakih.arabic, an online learning platform for Qur’anic Arabic that I personally use. Start your journey at Fawakih.org. For more spiritual reflections, follow me on Instagram at @daliamogahed. Listen wherever you get your podcasts, including Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and YouTube.

    58 min
  2. 4 DAYS AGO

    S4 E9: The Idol You Didn’t Realise You Were Worshipping (TaHa 97–98) | Quran Conversations

    What does it take to truly break free from false idols—whether they are people, ideas, or desires?In this episode of Quran Conversations, Dalia Mogahed and Mohammed Magid reflect on verses 97–98 of Surah TaHa. A powerful turning point where Prophet Musa (peace be upon him) confronts As-Samiri and dismantles the illusion of the golden calf.This moment goes beyond punishment. It exposes the reality of false devotion, the psychology of influence, and the path to spiritual liberation. From social isolation as consequence, to the public destruction of the idol, the Qur’an offers a profound blueprint for breaking free from manipulation, materialism, and misplaced worship.In this episode, you will learn:📖 Why As-Samiri’s punishment was social isolation, and how it reflects the consequences of seeking attention and influence 📖 How false idols, whether material, ideological, or human, lose all power when their reality is exposed 📖 Why Musa (AS) publicly destroyed the calf, and how witnessing truth is key to breaking illusion 📖 The parallels between As-Samiri’s deception and modern systems of influence (media, tech, and culture) 📖 How toxic influence operates, and why separation is necessary for recovery from it 📖 The role of interruption in breaking harmful patterns and regaining clarity 📖 Why true guidance restores your connection to Allah - not dependency on others 📖 How Tawheed (oneness of Allah) is not just belief, but liberation from all forms of control 📖 Why Allah’s complete knowledge (“wasi‘a kulla shay’in ‘ilma”) is the ultimate antidote to manipulation and false authorityWe hope this episode encourages your own reflective journey with the Qur’an. This week’s reflection prompt is:What are the “idols” in your life—ideas, people, or desires—that have taken a place they don’t deserve, and what would it look like to break them completely and return to Allah?==============If you’re enjoying this podcast, please leave a review on your podcast platform. It helps more than you know.@Quran.Conversations is proudly produced by @muslimi and sponsored by @Fawakih.arabic, an online learning platform for Qur’anic Arabic that I personally use. Start your journey at Fawakih.org.For more spiritual reflections, follow me on Instagram at @daliamogahed.Listen wherever you get your podcasts, including Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and YouTube.

    57 min
  3. 17 APR

    S4 E8: Guarding Unity in Times of Crisis (TaHa 94-96) | Quran Conversations

    What happens when two righteous leaders respond differently to the same crisis? In this episode of Qur’an Conversations, Dalia Mogahed and Sheikh Mohammed Majed reflect on Ayah 94 of Surah TaHa—a powerful moment where Prophet Musa (peace be upon him) confronts his brother Harun after the people fall into worship of the golden calf. This interaction reveals something deeply human: frustration, grief, restraint, and the weight of leadership. It also offers timeless lessons about obedience, accountability, and navigating conflict without tearing communities apart. In this episode, you will learn: 📖 Why Musa’s anger was rooted in moral responsibility—not ego 📖 How Harun’s appeal to kinship (“son of my mother”) softened the moment and restored unity 📖 Why leadership sometimes requires restraint to prevent greater harm 📖 The difference between decisive action and reckless escalation 📖 How extremism in reaction can fracture communities 📖 Why true guidance strengthens personal agency rather than creating dependency 📖 How cult-like dynamics undermine faith by disconnecting people from direct accountability to Allah We hope this episode encourages your own reflective journey with the Qur’an. This week’s reflection prompt is:  When you feel compelled to react strongly—whether as a parent, leader, or community member—are you responding from wounded ego or from sincere concern for what is right, and what would wisdom look like in that moment? ===== If you’re enjoying this podcast, please leave a review on your podcast platform. It helps more than you know. @Quran.Conversations is proudly produced by @muslimi and sponsored by @Fawakih.arabic, an online learning platform for Qur’anic Arabic that I personally use. Start your journey at Fawakih.org.

    1hr 4min
  4. 10 APR

    S4 E7: Disagreeing with Compassion (TaHa 89-93) | Quran Conversations

    What happens when devotion is misplaced—and correction is met with resistance? In this episode of Qur’an Conversations, we reflect on Surah TaHa (20:89–93) and the painful moment when Bani Israel refuse to abandon the golden calf—even after being reminded of Allah’s mercy. Through the dialogue between Prophet Musa and Prophet Harun (peace be upon them both), the Qur’an gives us a powerful lens into misplaced devotion, spiritual blindness, leadership under pressure, and how to repair relationships even after rupture  You will learn: 📖 How the Qur’an’s questions expose modern idols like money, ego, and relationships 📖 Why anything we worship besides Allah can’t truly help, heal, or protect us 📖 How spiritual slavery can continue even after physical freedom 📖 Why Harun corrected with mercy—not fear—and what that means for parenting and guidance 📖 How Shayṭān downplays sin before it happens and magnifies shame after it does 📖 What it looks like to disagree with compassion while sharing the same goal 📖 How relationships can be repaired, even when the situation itself hasn’t been fixed We hope this episode encourages your own reflective journey with the Qur’an. This week’s reflection prompt is:  If a relationship around you has ruptured, what would compassionate repair look like? ====== If you’re enjoying this podcast, please leave a review on your podcast platform. It helps more than you know. @Quran.Conversations is proudly produced by @muslimi and sponsored by @Fawakih.arabic, an online learning platform for Qur’anic Arabic that I personally use. Start your journey at Fawakih.org. For more spiritual reflections, follow me on Instagram at @daliamogahed. Listen wherever you get your podcasts, including Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and YouTube.

    1hr 3min
  5. 3 APR

    S4 E6: The Test After Liberation (TaHa 86-88) | Quran Conversations

    What happens after liberation? Why do people who witness miracles still fall into misguidance? In this episode of Qur’an Conversations, we reflect on Surah TaHa (20:86–88), when Prophet Musa (peace be upon him) returns to find his people worshipping the golden calf. These verses uncover something deeper than idolatry—they reveal the psychology of post-liberation vulnerability, moral outrage rooted in love, and how deception spreads when accountability collapses  We explore the tension between physical freedom and spiritual slavery, the danger of weaponizing religion, and the subtle ways blame-shifting protects the ego from repentance. You will learn: 📖 Why witnessing miracles does not guarantee spiritual strength 📖 The difference between righteous anger and ego-driven anger 📖 How oppression can shape a mindset that seeks to “ascend” unjust systems rather than dismantle them 📖 Why freedom without tarbiyah (spiritual development) leaves a community vulnerable 📖 How blame-shifting blocks repentance and personal accountability 📖 How religious language can be weaponized to mislead 📖 Why discernment is critical in an age of illusion, spin, and manipulation In this episode, we’re joined by Hadia Mubarak. Hadia is an Associate Professor of Religion at Queens University of Charlotte, where she teaches courses on Islam, comparative scriptures, women and gender in the Muslim world, the history of Islam in America, and religious representation in popular culture, among other courses. Mubarak completed her Ph.D. in Islamic Studies from Georgetown University, where she specialized in modern and classical Qurʾanic exegesis (tafseer). ========= We hope this episode encourages your own reflective journey with the Qur’an. This week’s reflection prompt is:  After experiencing relief, success, or blessing in your life, where might you still be spiritually vulnerable, and what “golden calf” could quietly be competing for your trust? If you’re enjoying this podcast, please leave a review on your podcast platform. It helps more than you know. @Quran.Conversations is proudly produced by @muslimi and sponsored by @Fawakih.arabic, an online learning platform for Qur’anic Arabic that I personally use. Start your journey at Fawakih.org. For more spiritual reflections, follow me on Instagram at @daliamogahed. Listen wherever you get your podcasts, including Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and YouTube

    1hr 11min
  6. 27 MAR

    S4 E5: Wait for the People (TaHa 83–84) | Quran Conversations

    What happens when love for Allah pulls us forward—but the people we’re responsible for are still behind?In this episode of Qur’an Conversations, Imam Magid and I reflect on a pivotal moment in the life of Prophet Musa ﷺ, when he hastens to Mount Sinai out of deep longing for Allah, leaving his people in the care of his brother Harun. Through this moment, the Qur’an teaches us something essential about spiritual leadership: closeness to Allah must never come at the cost of abandoning people.This conversation explores how true leadership balances devotion with empathy—and how the prophetic path is not just about how fast you move, but whether you are willing to walk with others.You will learn:📖 Why Musa’s haste was rooted in love—and what Allah wanted to teach him through it📖 The responsibility of leaders to consider those they lead, not just their own spiritual drive📖 Why meeting people where they are is a prophetic skill, not a compromise of truth📖 How encouragement and gentleness move hearts more than pressure and judgment📖 The divine promise: when you walk toward Allah, He comes toward youWe hope this episode encourages your own reflective journey with the Qur’an. This week’s reflection prompt is: In your pursuit of closeness to Allah, are there people in your care or influence whom you may be unintentionally leaving behind, and what would it look like to slow down and walk with them instead of ahead of them?=========If you’re enjoying this podcast, please leave a review on your podcast platform. It helps more than you know.@Quran.Conversations is proudly produced by @muslimi and sponsored by @Fawakih.arabic, an online learning platform for Qur’anic Arabic that I personally use. Start your journey at Fawakih.org.For more spiritual reflections, follow me on Instagram at @daliamogahed.Listen wherever you get your podcasts, including Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and YouTube.

    44 min
  7. 13 MAR

    S4 E4: The Way Back to Allah is Never Closed (TaHa 81–82) | Quran Conversations

    What does it mean to be truly free? In this episode of Qur’an Conversations, Imam Magid and I reflect on the journey of Bani Israel after liberation, because freedom in the Qur’an is not only physical. It’s the beginning of something deeper: learning how to live with a purified heart, how to receive Allah’s blessings without crossing His limits, and how to return when we fall. These verses carry both a warning and a promise: don’t overstep the bounds after being given goodness, but if you do, the door back is never closed. Allah introduces Himself here as Al-Ghafoor—the One who repeatedly forgives—reminding us that repentance isn’t a one-time event, but an ongoing return to mercy. You will learn: 📖 What “spiritual liberation” looks like after Allah grants outward freedom 📖 How to enjoy the tayyibāt (good and pure provisions) without falling into excess 📖 Why transgressing boundaries isn’t just “a mistake”—it can become a spiritual collapse 📖 What tawbah really is: not a ritual, but a sincere return that reshapes the heart 📖 How shame can trap us—and how Allah’s repeated forgiveness breaks that trap We hope this episode encourages your own reflective journey with the Qur’an. This week’s reflection prompt is: After Allah has granted you a blessing or a moment of relief, where might you be at risk of overstepping His limits, and what would it look like to practice a sincere return before that slip becomes a spiritual fall? ====== If you’re enjoying this podcast, please leave a review on your podcast platform. It helps more than you know. @Quran.Conversations is proudly produced by @muslimi and sponsored by @Fawakih.arabic, an online learning platform for Qur’anic Arabic that I personally use. Start your journey at Fawakih.org. For more spiritual reflections, follow me on Instagram at @daliamogahed. Listen wherever you get your podcasts, including Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and YouTube.

    50 min
  8. 6 MAR

    S4:E3 No Little People (TaHa 79-81) | Quran Conversations

    What happens when someone claims they’re guiding people, but they’re actually leading them straight into ruin? In this episode of Quran Conversations, Imam Magid and I reflect on the Qur’an’s final summary of Pharaoh’s story: “Pharaoh truly led his people astray and did not guide them.” From there, we widen the lens. Because Pharaoh isn’t only a figure of history, Pharaoh can be a leader with a platform– a system of oppression, a tyrant at home, and even the inner Pharaoh within our own nafs. We also move into Allah’s address to Bani Israel: a reminder to recognize liberation as a divine gift, not a personal victory—then a warning not to overstep the bounds after being given blessings, because falling after receiving goodness is a fall from a great height. You will learn: 📖 Why the Qur’an describes Pharaoh “misguiding” and “not guiding”, and what that double phrasing reveals 📖 How “pharaonic behavior” can show up in everyday life: ego, entitlement, control, and spiritual blindness 📖 Practical ways to check the Pharaoh of the nafs: humility, accepting truth, remembering origins, and practicing compassion 📖 Why gratitude after rescue is a spiritual crossroads, and how Shayṭān tries to erase our sense of Allah’s gift 📖 What it means to enjoy Allah’s blessings without transgressing, and how overstepping leads to collapse (faqad hawā) We hope this episode encourages your own reflective journey with the Qur’an. This week’s reflection prompt is:  Where in your life might “pharaonic” tendencies be quietly present — whether in how you lead, respond to truth, or handle blessings — and what would it look like to replace them with humility and gratitude before a fall ever happens? ========= If you’re enjoying this podcast, please leave a review on your podcast platform. It helps more than you know. @Quran.Conversations is proudly produced by @muslimi and sponsored by @Fawakih.arabic, an online learning platform for Qur’anic Arabic that I personally use. Start your journey at Fawakih.org. For more spiritual reflections, follow me on Instagram at @daliamogahed. Listen wherever you get your podcasts, including Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and YouTube.

    1 hr

About

Quran Conversations is the podcast for anyone who wants to unlock the meaning and healing powers of the Quran. I’m your host Dalia Mogahed, an author, researcher, and a student of the Quran. I will be in conversation with one of my dearest teachers, Imam Mohamed Magid, a scholar of the Quran and long time family counselor and congregational leader. Join us as we explore the linguistic miracles and life lessons of the Book of God through a conversation between a scholar and his student.

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