Judge Safi El Din tells his grandchildren the story of the stolen shield that Prophet Muhammad (PBUH) gave to Rifaa, Qatada's uncle who sees Rifaa stealing and tells the Prophet to tell a man of Temaa's family to bury what he has stolen in the house of his Jewish neighbor.
The men search the house of the Jew Zaid and find the shield; however, the Almighty God and the Prophet reveal to all people that Zaid is innocent.
Temaa renounces Islam after the Jew is acquitted and he is convicted. He escapes in a ship and robs its captain, who discovers what he has done and orders his men to throw him into the sea.
Kaab Bin Malik takes time to move with the Muslim army, so his cousin asks about him and the Prophet asks about his absence. Kaab begins to move after collecting the crop but discovers that the army has already left.
The Prophet listens to the three who have left the army, and they tell him that they have no excuse for staying behind. The Prophet tells the people not to talk to Kaab Bin Malik, Hilal ibn Umayyah, and Marara.
The Prophet asks the three men who left the army to abandon their wives unless God gives them another order later and tells Kaab that God has pardoned him, so he thanks the Prophet. The Prophet tells Kaab to spend his money on charity.
Judge Safi El Din narrates that three men went to trade, but rain and storms caused them to take shelter in a cave in a mountain and another thunderbolt caused a stone to block the entrance of the cave, trapping them inside.
One of the three men trapped in the cave asks the other two to pray to God and say an act of benevolence that they have done. One of them says that he cared for his parents, who have Alzheimer, and the door to the cave gradually opened.
One of the three reveals that he tried to harm his cousin, but repented afterwards telling her to leave without fear and gave her money to treat her sick father. Another piece of the rock opens.
The third man says that he hired two men to work with him in a caravan. One of them needed money, and the other man lend him some money. After the borrower became a wealthy person, the lender demanded his money, so the first man gave him everything. The whole rock opens.
Judge Safi El Din tells his grandchildren the story of the just monkey: There was a man from Israelites who didn't give his employee his full wages. The Israelite saw a monkey and decided to use him instead of his employee. The monkey threw the man's money into the water.
Umar ibn al-Khattab heard a woman telling her daughter to put water in the milk to increase its quantity and gain more money, but the girl refused telling her mother not to cheat. Umar admired the morals of the girl and married her to one of his sons.
Judge Safi El Din tells his grandchildren about the story of the Companions of the Rass: There were 12 large flowering trees that some people worshipped, close to which there was a river from which no one dared to drink as it was believed that it watered the trees.
Prophet Hanzalah Ibn Safwan came to the tree people and told them that what they were doing was wrong, which angered their king who decided to slaughter Prophet Hanzalah's cows. The Prophet prayed and the trees died.
The king decided to lock Prophet Hanzalah at the bottom of the river. Prophet Hanzalah prayed, and God punished those people severely.
The people of Canaan turned to Balaam Bin Baawra to pray against the people of Moses and Israel after they camped next to them, so people thought that they would attack them. Balaam decided to pray against the Israelites.
Satan whispered to Balaam to ask women to tempt the Israelites so he could pray against them. A woman tempted them, Balaam prayed against them, and they got a plague.
A man from Israelites decided to kill Zamri and Kasbi after they caused the epidemic that befell his people, and Balaam went mad.
Judge Safi El Din tells his grandchildren the story of Momen Al Yassin, which took place mostly in Antioch, where he invited three men to worship God instead of idols. There was a person named Habib with a skin disease whom the men prayed for, so he recovered and worshipped God.
The king sentenced the three men to death after torturing them, but they managed to escape. Habib went to defend them and the king beat him to death with his feet.
Judge Safi El Din tells his grandchildren the story of the sheep and the garden: A man came from afar with his sheep and cattle leaving them in the garden to discover that the sheep ate everything. People went to Prophet Dawud who ordered that the sheep owner give his sheep to his neighbor.
Prophet Sulayman asked his father Prophet Dawud to let the owner of the sheep fix the land and retrieve his sheep from the garden owner again.
Judge Safi El Din tells his grandchildren the story of the bald, the leper, and the blind: People mocked the three men, so God sent as king to meet their respective requests.
God sent a king to the three men to test them in what He gave them. Two of the three men refused to give the disguised king help, so God brought them back to their previous states, except for the blind man who helped the king.
Judge Safi El Din tells the story of the 1,000 dinars and the wood: A man made gowns in a hot area and decided to borrow money to buy goods and sell them in a cold area. A man gave the gown maker 1000 dinars, so he succeeded in his trade and decided to return the money to the lender after a year.
The gown maker made a wooden box and put the 1,000 dinars with a letter and threw it into the sea for the man to find and read the the letter and prayed to God a lot thanking Him.
Judge Safi El Din tells his grandchildren the story of the monk Barsisa; the devout monk who worshiped most of his time. The brothers went to war and left their sister Raymonda at the monk's and told him to take care of her.
Satan tempted Barsisa to go to Raymonda three times, and in the fourth time, he couldn't resist as they fell into sin, and she got pregnant.
The devil told Barsisa to hide his scandal, so he killed his child and Raymonda telling her brothers that she died from a disease. Satan told Raymonda's brothers what happened. Barsisa asked the devil to help him, so the devil asked him to prostrate, and Barsisa agreed, yet the devil abandoned him.
Judge Safi El Din tells the story of the urn of gold: A man sold his house to a man and his son. When the buyer found a gold jar in the garden of the house, they decide to return it to its owner, who refused to take it. The seller refused to get the jar, and the two men went to the judge.