يَٰبَنِيَّ ٱذۡهَبُوا۟ فَتَحَسَّسُوا۟ مِن يُوسُفَ وَأَخِيهِ وَلَا تَاْيۡـَٔسُوا۟ مِن رَّوۡحِ ٱللَّهِ
Quranic context: Yaqub (peace be upon him) endured the separation from two of his sons: first Yusuf, whose brothers claimed was devoured by a wolf, then Binyamin detained in Egypt.
Context:- When the brothers returned with a bloodied shirt, Yaqub said: "Rather your souls have enticed you to something, so beautiful patience..." (Yusuf 18)
- His eyes turned white from grief, yet he did not despair — he said: "I only complain of my suffering and my grief to Allah, and I know from Allah what you do not know." (Yusuf 86)
- Even in apparent hopelessness he commanded: "O my sons, go and search for Yusuf and his brother, and do not despair of relief from Allah." (Yusuf 87)
Lesson:Beautiful patience is not suppressed silence — it is directing complaint to Allah alone while never losing hope in His mercy. Yaqub wept and grieved, then rose and sent his sons out once more.
Question: What is the difference between beautiful patience in the story of Yaqub and mere silent endurance?
Answer: Beautiful patience means directing complaint to Allah alone while never despairing of His mercy — Yaqub wept and grieved but never lost faith and continued sending his sons to search.