After this journey, the youth of Muhammad seems to have been passed uneventfully, but all authorities agree in ascribing to him such correctness of manners and purity of morals as were rare among the people of Mecca. The fair character and the honorable bearing of the unobtrusive youth won the approbation of the citizens of Mecca, and by common consent he received the title of "Al Ameen," The Faithful.
In his early years, Muhammad was not free from the cares of life. He had to watch the flocks of his uncle, who, like the rest of the Barn Hashim, had lost the greater part of his wealth.
From youth to manhood he led an almost solitary life. The lawlessness rife among the Meccans, the sudden outbursts of causeless and bloody quarrels among the tribes frequenting the Fair of Okadh (the Arabian Olympia), and the immorality and skepticism of the Quraish, naturally caused feelings of pity and sorrow in the heart of the sensitive youth. Such scenes of social misery and religious degradation were characteristic of a depraved age.
Related Quran Ayaaths of this Hadith.
Surah 3 : Ayah 144 Surah 2 : Ayah 4 Surah 2 : Ayah 23 Surah 2 : Ayah 80 Surah 2 : Ayah 90 Surah 2 : Ayah 93 Surah 2 : Ayah 94 Surah 2 : Ayah 97 Surah 2 : Ayah 105 Surah 2 : Ayah 108 Surah 5 : Ayah 17 Surah 5 : Ayah 48 Surah 5 : Ayah 49 Surah 3 : Ayah 12 Surah 3 : Ayah 20 Surah 3 : Ayah 31 Surah 6 : Ayah 10 Surah 6 : Ayah 11 Surah 4 : Ayah 41"When a person dies, his works end, except for three: ongoing charity, knowledge that is benefited from, and a righteous child who prays for him."
Prophet Mohammed (PBUH)
"The best of what a man leaves behind are three: a righteous child who supplicates for him, ongoing charity the reward of which reaches him, and knowledge that is acted upon after him."
Sunan Ibn Mājah
"Every day two angels come down from Heaven and one of them says, 'O Allah! Compensate every person who spends in Your Cause,' and the other (angel) says, 'O Allah! Destroy every miser.'"
Sahih Bukhari