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AQEEDAH
OF THE SALAF
By Muhammad Saeed al-Qahtani Translated by Omar Johnstone
Table of Contents
1.
THE DECLARATION OF
FAITH
2.
THE PREREQUISITES OF
THE DECLARATION OF FAITH
3.
AL-WALA'WAL-BARA' AND THE DECLARATION OF FAITH
4.
THE DECLARATION OF
FAITH: ON THE TONGUE AND IN THE HEART
5.
THE EFFECTS OF THE
DECLARATION OF FAITH ON THE HEART
6.
WHAT NEGATES THE
DECLARATION OF FAITH
Chapter 1THE DECLARATION OF FAITH
What the Declaration of Faith Confirms and What it Denies
The meaning of the first part of the declaration of faith, 'There is no god
but Allah', is that nothing other than Allah is worthy of worship. This denies
the attribution of divinity to all other things, and affirms it as a quality
which belongs to Allah alone. (Shaykh Abdar-Rahman ibn Hassan, Fath al-Majid,
p.36)
Ibn Taimiyah said: "The heart will not find complete happiness except by
loving Allah and by striving towards what is dear to Him. It is not possible to
achieve this love except by rejecting all things that compete with it. This is
what the words, 'There is no god but Allah' mean; this is the spirit of the deen
of Ibrahim and of that of every other prophet." (Ibn Taimiya, Majmu' al-Fatawa,
vol 28, p.32, Riyadh)
When someone says, 'There is no god but Allah', he has denied one thing and
affirmed another. With these words the believer first denies all those who
reject faith, worship created things, obey the tyrant, rule by injustice or
remain content under oppression; and then he affirms his allegiance to Allah, to
His deen, to His Book, to His righteous servants, and to the Sunnah of His
Prophet, may Allah bless him and grant him peace : "Whoever rejects false
deities and believes in Allah has grasped a firm handhold which will never
break." [2:256]
As for the second part of the declaration, 'Muhammad is the Messenger of
Allah', this means that we do what the Prophet, may Allah bless him and grant
him peace, has told us to do, and stop doing what he has told us not to do.
According to Muhammad ibn Abdul Wahhab, "No one truly believes until he
rejects the forces of disbelief." This is supported by ayah 2 :256 just
cited. The declaration of faith is a declaration of complete loyalty to the
Shari'ah : "Follow that which is sent down to you from your Lord, and
follow no protecting friends beside Him. Little do you recollect!" [7:3];
and : "So set your purpose (O Muhammad) for the deen as a man by nature
upright - the natural way of Allah, in which He has created man." [30:30]
You must also denounce the rule of Ignorance: "Is it the judgement of
the time of ignorance that they seek? And who is better than Allah for judgment
for a people who have certainty (in their belief)?" [5:50] Indeed you must
deny all other religions: "And whoever seeks a religion other than Islam,
it will not be accepted from him, and he will be one of the losers in the
Hereafter." [3:85]
The declaration of faith is thus a denial and an affirmation. In fact, it
denies four things and affirms four others. It denies false deities, the tyrant,
intermediaries, and ordained authorities, who are bogus. If you think a thing
can help you or protect you from harm then you have taken it as a god. A tyrant
demands that you worship and adore him. An intermediary, whether family,
community or property, distracts you from faith: "And from among mankind
are some who take for themselves (objects of worship as) rivals to Allah loving
them as they should only love Allah." [2:156]
Bogus authority advises you to act against truth and to disobey Allah:
"They have taken as lords beside Allah their rabbis and their monks."
[9:31]
It also affirms four things: that the object of your worship is Allah; that
glorification and love are for Allah alone; that hope and fear are due only to
Allah; and that you are aware of Allah's power and might, this awareness is
taqwa. The single and unique goal of the believer is to worship Allah and none
other than Him. Thus, the believer's love is for Allah alone: "And those
who believe are stronger in their love for Allah." [2:156] Hope, too, is
exclusively in Allah and one fears nothing but Him: "If Allah afflicts you
with some hurt, there is no one who can remove it except Him; and if He desires
good for you, there is no one who can repel His bounty. He strikes with it whom
He wishes of his servants. He is the Forgiving, the Compassionate."
[10:107]
Lastly, the believer is conscious of Allah and aware of the danger of His
displeasure and of His wrath. It is taqwa that causes a person abandon disbelief
and disobedience, to devote himself entirely to Allah and to obey His law and
His command. Ibn Mas'ud said: "When you act in obedience to Allah, in the
light of Allah, you hope for Allah's reward. When you abandon disobedience of
Allah, in the light of Allah, you fear Allah's punishment." (Majumu'at
ar-Rasa'il wal-Masa'il al-Najdiyya, Muhammad Rashid Rida, eds. vol4, p.99)
Whoever recognises these things must sever all links to anything other than
Allah and free his heart from falsehood. Thus Allah tells us that Ibrahim, as
well as our own Prophet, may the blessings and peace of Allah be on them,
smashed the idols that their people tood as gods and rejected all who worshipped
them: "There is a good example for you in Ibrahim and those with him, when
they told their people: Surely we disassociate ourselves from you and all that
you worship beside Allah. We have done with you. And there has arisen between us
and you enmity and hate forever until you believe in Allah only." [60:4]
From beginning to end the Qur'an is a clarification of the meaning of the
words, 'There is no god but Allah'. This statement is both a denial of shirk and
of those who commit it, and an approval of sincerity and of those who strive for
it. Every word and every deed that is dear to Allah is in some way connected to
this declaration. It is the source of all noble action, its definition and its
guide. This is why Allah has called it the 'declaration of fear'.
The Prophet's Companions and the Declaration of Faith
The following account illustrates the Companions' understanding and
experience of the Kalima. In 170 AH someone asked Imam Sufiyan ibn Uyaynah al-Hillali
* about faith. He said:
"It is in both speech and action." "But does it increase of
decrease?" asked the man. "It increases as Allah wishes, and it
decreases as He wishes until no more of it than this remains," and held out
his hand. The man said,"So what should be our attitude towards those among
us who assert that is is speech and not action?"
"This is what people used to say before the nature and limits of faith
had been made clear. Of course Allah, Glorious and Mighty is He, sent his
Prophet, may Allah bless him and grant him peace, to all of humanity to tell
them that there is no god but Allah and that he is the Messenger of Allah. Once
they had accepted this, the security of their money and their lives was assured
and they became accountable to Allah alone."
"When Allah was satisfied with their sincerity, He commanded His Prophet
to order them to pray. He ordered them to do this and they did it. By Allah, had
they not done this their first act would not have helped them."
"When Allah was satisfied with the sincerity of their prayers, He told
His Prophet to order them to migrate to Madinah. By Allah, had they not done
this neither their first act nor their prayers would have helped them."
"When Allah was satisfied with the sincerity of their hearts in this, He
commanded them to return to Makkah to fight their fathers and their brothers
until these said the Word which they had said, established the same prayer and
joined the same migration. He commanded them to do this and they did it. One of
them even came with the head of his father and said,'O Messenger of Allah, here
is the head of a leader of the disbelievers.' By Allah, had they not done this
their first act, their prayers and their migration would not have helped
them."
"When Allah was satisfied with the sincerity of their hearts in this, He
told His Messenger to order them to complete the rite of tawaf and to shave
their heads in humility, which they did. By Allah, had they not done this their
first act, their prayers, their migration and their combat with their fathers
would not have helped them."
"When Allah was satisfied with the sincerity of their hearts in this He
told the Prophet, may Allah bless him and grant him peace, to take a part of
their money by which to purify themselves. He commanded them to do this and they
did, giving much and giving little. By Allah, had they not done this their first
act, their prayers, their migration, their combat with their fathers and their
tawaf would not have helped them."
"When Allah was satisfied withe the sincerity of their hearts which were
now in harmony with the nature and limits of faith, He said to them: "This
day I have perfected your deen for you and have completed My blessings to you,
and have chosen for you as your deen al-Islam [5:3]."
Imam Sufiyan continued: "Whoever abandons any part of faith is a
disbeliever as far as wer are concerned. If this from neglect we would correct
him, but he would be lacking in our eyes. This is the Sunnah. Relate it on my
behalf to whoever may ask about it." (Al-Shar'a, Abu Bakr Muhammad ibn al-Hussain
al-Ajari, p.104)
* Imam Sufiyan ibn Uyaynah al-Hillali (107-198 AH): Imam Shafi'i said of him:
"Were it not for Imams Malik and ibn Uyaynah, the learning of the Hijaz
would have been lost." Imam Ahmad said, "I have not seen anyone more
knowledgeable in the Sunnah than ibn Uyaynah."
[TOP]
Chapter II THE PREREQUISITES OF THE DECLARATION OF FAITH
The importance of the declaration of faith has nothing to do with the number
of its words, nor indeed with its memorisation. How many people have
acknowledged it and lived according to it yet still could not tell you how many
words it contains? How many people have learned these words by heart to rattle
them off as quick as lightning, but still fall into many thins that contradict
them? Success is only by the hand of Allah.(1)
In the first century of the Hijra someone asked Wahab ibn Munabbah whether
the words, 'There is no god but Allah', were the key to success.'
"Certainly", he said, "but of course every key has teeth, so if
you come with one that has teeth, the door will open, but if you don't, it
won't." (2) The teeth of this key are the prerequisites of the declaration
of faith.
The ulama' consider that the declaration of faith depends on seven
conditions:
The first of these prerequisites is knowledge of what the declaration of
faith negates and of what it confirms. It negates ingnorance. Allah says:
"So you know (O Muhammad) that there is no god but Allah." [47:19] and
also: "Except whoever bears witness to the truth knowingly." [43:86];
this witnessed truth is Tawheed, or Divine Unity, which pervades the heart as
you declare the klima; and lastly: "Allah (Himself) is Witness that there
is no god but Him - and (so are) the angels and the people of knowledge - Who
sustains His creation with justice; there is no god but Him, the Almighty, the
Wise." [3:18] In Sahih Bukhari, as in Sahih Muslim, there is a hadith
reported by Uthman, that says, "The Messenger of Allah, may Allah bless him
and grant him peace, said, 'Whoever dies in the knowledge that there is no god
but Allah, shall surely enter Paradise'." (3)
The second prerequisite is the complete denial of uncertainty. This means
that whoever pronounces the declaration of faith must be completely and utterly
sure that it is the truth. Faith must be based upon certainty and not upne
doubt. (4) Allah says: "Surely the (true) believers are only those who
believe in Allah and His Messenger and then do not doubt, but struggle with
their wealth and their selves in the way of Allah. These are the sincere."
[49:15]
Abu Hurayrah has reported, "The Messenger of Allah, may Allah bless him
and grant him peace, said, 'I bear witness that there is no god but Allah, and
that I am the Messenger of Allah. No one will come to Allah with these words,
never doubting any of it, without entering paradise'." (5) Another report
says, "None will come to Allah with these words, never doubting any of it,
and not see paradise." In another hadith, also reported by Abu Hurayrah,
the Prophet, may Allah bless him and grant him peace, says,'Whoever you find
beyond this room, who bears witness with firmness in his heart that there is no
god but Allah, give him glad tidings of paradise'." (6)
According to al-Qurtubi, simply pronouncing the declaration of faith is not
enough; you must also be certain of it in your heart. This contradicts the
doctrine of the extremist Murji'a sect who say that by simply saying these words
you have established an adequate foundation for faith. Their own arguments
contradict one another. In fact, this position is known to destroy whoever
supports it, because it requires him to condone hypocrisy and to ascribe true
faith to hypocritesm, and this is a negation of faith. (7)
The third prerequisite is to accept inwardly, and to declare openly, whatever
the declaration of faith requires. Allah tell us that some of those who came
before accepted it and knew success, while others rejected it and invited His
wrath: "And even so We sent not a warner before you (O Muhammad) into any
township but that its luxurious ones said: 'Surely we found our fathers
following a religion, and we are following in their footsteps.' (And the warner)
said: 'What! Even though I bring you better guidance than what you found your
fathers following?' They answered: 'Surely we are disbelievers in what you
bring.' So we requited them. Then see the nature of the consequence of the
rejecters!" [43:23-25]
And He says: "Then shall We save Our Messengers and those who believe in
the same way (as before). It is incumbent upon Us to save the believers."
[10:103] and also: "For when it was said to them, 'There is no god but
Allah', they were scornful, and said: 'Shall we forsake our gods for a mad
poet?" [37:35-36]
The fourth prerequisite is to abandon oneself to what the declaration of
faith implies, namely, complete surrender to Allah: "Turn to your Lord
repentant, and surrender to Him." [39:54]; and : "Who is better in
religion than he who surrenders his purpose to Allah while doing good?"
[4:125]; and: "Whoever surrenders his purpose to Allah while doing good, he
has truly grasped the firm hand-hold." [31:22] The 'firm hand-hold' means
to completely understand and accept the declaration of faith. In the words of
the Prophet, may Allah bless him and grant him peace, "None of you has
believed until his desires are in accordance with what I have come to you
with." (8) This refers to the perfection of your obedience and of your
desire to obey.
Furhtermore, Allah says: "But no, by your Lord, they will not believe
(truly) until they make you the judge of what is in dispute between them, and
find within themselves no dislike of what you decide, and submit with full
submission." [4:65]
Ibn Kathir points out that in this ayah Allah makes an oath upon Himself and
swears that no one has believed until he accepts the authority of the Prophet in
all matters. This is the truth that the believer must apply to himself both in
public and in private. This is why He says in the ayah: "and find within
themselves no dislike of what you decide, and submit with full submission";
that is, "they accept your judgement in their hearts and find do difficulty
in themselves in following what you have decided." Thus they submit to it
completely, with no pressure or coercion, and without argument. This point was
made again when the Prophet, may Allah bless him and grant him peace, said,
"by He in Whose hand is my soul, none of you has believed until his desires
are in accord with what I have come to you with." (9)
The fifth prerequisite is to denounce falsehood sincerely, doing this with
heartfelt conviction, so that the tongue follows the heart. Allah says: "Alif.
Lam. Mim. Do people imagine that they will be left (at ease) because they say,
'we believe', and will not be tested with affliction? Surely We tested those who
were before you. Thus Allah certainly knows those who are sincere, and He
certainly knows those who lie." [29: 1-3]
In a sahih hadith, Muaadh ibn Jabal reports that the Prophet, may Allah bless
him and grant him peace, said, "No one will say, 'There is no god but Allah
Muhammad is the Messenger of Allah', sincerely from his heart without Allah
forbidding him the Fire." (10) Ibn al-Qayim remarks that sincerity with
regard to the words, 'There is no god but Allah', must depend on your compliance
with, and acceptance of, the obligations which this statement places upon you.
These obligations are represented by the Shari'ah, which itself is an
elaboration of the declaration of faith. It means that you believe in whatever
Allah has revealed, that you follow His commandments and avoid what He has
forbidden. One who is truly sincere in this belief will abide by it completely.
The complete protection of the Shari'ah is only assured by complete compliance
with it. Likewise, complete security from punishment only comes from complete
obedience to it. (11)
The Prophet, may Allah bless him and grant him peace, said, "My
intercession is for whoever witness that there is no god but Allah sincerely,
whose heart believes his tongue, and whos tongue believes his heart." (12)
Ibn Rajab adds, "As for those who give lip service to the words, 'there is
no god but Allah', but then follow Satan in disobedience and contentiousness,
their actions have made clear the emptiness of their words and the weakness of
their belief: "And who goes farther astray than he who follows his desires
without guidance from Allah?" [28:50]; and: "Do not follow desire so
that it lures you away from the way of Allah." [28:26] " (13)
The sixth prerequisite is singularity of devotion. This means that you should
purify your deeds by cleansing your intentions of all traces of reverence
towards any created thing: "Surely pure religion is for Allah only."
[39:3]; and also: "And they are not ordered to anything else other than to
worship Allah, keeping the deen pure for Him, as men by nature upright."
[98:5] Abu Hurayrah reports that the Prophet, may Allah bless him and grant him
peace, said, "Allah raises up by my intercession whoever says,'There is no
god but Allah', from the depths of his heart with complete purity of
devotion." (14) The Prophet, may Allah bless him and grant him peace, is
reportd by Utban ibn Malik in Sahih Bukhari and Sahih Muslim as saying,
"Certainly Allah has forbidden the Fire for anyone who says 'There is no
god but Allah', and who seeks by these words only the pleasure of Allah."
(15)
Two of the Prophet's companions report that he, may Allah bless him and grant
him peace, said, "Whenever someone says from his heart in singular
devotion, his tongue pure in belief: 'there is no god but Allah alone; He has no
partner; His is the dominion; His is the praise; and He has power over all
things', Allah opens a path for this in the heavens and smiles (16) upon
whomever from among the people of the earth has said it, and it is the right of
the servant of Allah upon whom He smiles that his request be granted." (17)
"Though performed in singular devotion to Allah, an act of worship is
not accepted if it is incorrectly done," writes al-Fudhayl ibn Iyadh.
"One performed correctly, but not in singular devotion to Allah is not
accepted either. Any act of worship must be performed both in complete devotion
to Allah, and correctly. Complete devotion means that the act is for Allah
alone. Correctly means that it is performed according to the Sunnah." (18)
Allah has given us a clear example of the contrast between absolute and
flawed devotion to Him in this ayah from the Qur'an: "Allah strikes a
metaphor: a man who has several owners, quarrelling; and a man belonging wholly
to one man. Are the two equal in comparison?" [39:29]
Commenting on this ayah, Sayid Qutub says: "This example contrasts the
servant whose devotion is to Allah alone with the one whose devotion is shared
out among many. The latter is likened to a slave jointly owned by men who
quarrel over him: to each of them he owes a duty and each of them make demands
of him. His situation totally confounds him. He can find no way and no means to
satisfy all of their conflicting and contradictory demands. The former, however,
has but one master. He knows what he wants from him and does his duty to him, so
he finds the road clearly marked before him. Are these two the same? Not at all:
the man whose service is to one master benefits from the comfort and security,
peace of mind and certainty that unite his actions and his goals with the means
of achieving them; but the man with quarrelling masters is shaken by torment. He
can find now way out; if he pleases one the others are unhappy. The reality of
teh Unity of God is contained in this example, as is the truth about its
antithesis, polytheism. The heart of the believer, rooted in the truth of God's
Unity, is a heart through which guidance from Allah flows - that is, inspired
only by Him and dutiful to Him alone." (19)
The significance of this is that it indicates that singularity of devotion is
through singularity of purpose. As Allah says: "Are (many) different lords
better, or Allah the One, the Almighty?" [12:39] (20)
Islam requires submission to Allah alone; whatever else one has submitted to
in this way must be abandoned. This is the true significance of the words 'there
is no god but Allah', since whoever submits to Allah and to something other than
Him at the same time, has associated something with Allah. Allah does not
forgive this. Whoever fails to submit to Him has scorned His worship :
"Surely those who scorn worship of Me will enter Hell disgraced."
[40:60]
The seventh prerequisite is to love the declaration of faith, to love all
that it requires and all it implies, to love all those who act upon it and who
hold to all that it stands for and to feel anger at whatever contradicts it.
Allah says: "And from among mankind are some who take for themselves
(objects of worship as) rivals to Allah. And those who believe are stronger in
their love for Allah." [21:65] And He says: "O you who believe!
Whoever of you becomes a rebel against his deen, (know that in his place) Allah
will bring a people whom He loves and who love Him, humble towards the
believers, harsh towards the disbelievers, striving in the way of Allah, and not
fearing the blame of any blamer." [5:54]
The Prophet, may Allah bless him and grant him peace, said, 'The sweetness of
faith belongs to whoever may find himself in these three states: that Allah and
His Messenger are more dear to him than any other thing; that he loves someone
only for the sake of Allah; and that he despises a return to disbelief after
Allah had saved him from it, as much as he would hate to be thrown into the
fires of Hell." (21)
The signs of love for Allah are to give precedence to this love and to
suppress your desires: to conquer your desire for what angers your Lord and to
feel anger towards it; to ally yourself with Allah, His Messenger, and those who
are with them; to oppose whoever opposes Him; and to follow in the footsteps of
His Messenger, may Allah bless him and grant him peace, accepting his
guidance." (22)
Ibn al-Qayim said in a poem:
The love of the Beloved must be unconditionally returned If you claim love
yet oppose the Beloved, then you love is but a pretence. You love the enemies of
your Beloved and still seek love in return. You fight the beloved of your
Beloved. Is this Love or the following of Shaytan? True devotion is nothing but
total submission of body and soul to One Love
Notes
-----
1- Ma'aarij al-Qubul, Hafiz al-Hakami, 1/377
2- He reported hadith from Abu Hurayrah, Abu Sa'id,
Ibn Abbas and Ibn
Umar among others. He came from Yemen and died in 110 AH. This
hadith is reported in Bukhari, in an appendix to Kitab al-Jana'iz
with regard to someone whose last words are 'there is no god but
Allah', 3/109
3- Ibid. 1/378. See also Al-Jam' al-Fareed, p.356.
3- Ibid. 1/378
5- Sahih Muslim, Kitab al-Iman, 1/56, (27)
6- Sahih Muslim, Kitab al-Iman, 1/60, (31)
7- Shaykh Abdar-Rahman ibn Hasan, Fath al-Majid,
p.36
8- This hadith appears in Imam Nawawi's Forty
Hadith, number 41
9- Ibn Kathir, Tafsir, 2/306
10- Sahih Bukhari and Muslim
11- Ibn Qayim al-Jawziya, at-Tibyan fi Aqsam al-Quran,
p.43
12- Al-Hakim, al-Mustadrak, 1/70; he said that the isnad
was sahih, and
ad-Dhahabi confirmed him in this.
13- Imam ibn Rajab, Kalimat al-Ikhlaas, p.28
14- Sahih Bukhari, Kital al-'Ilm, 1/193, (99)
15- Sahih Muslim, Kitab al-Masajid, 1/456, (263)
16- The Arabic, hatta yandhuru alayhee, literally means:
until He looks
at him.
17- Imam ibn Rajab reports this in Kalimat al-Ikhlaas;
al-Albani remarks
that it appears in al-Jami'a al-Kabir, (2/477) where Ya'qub ibn Asim
says, "Two of the Prophet's companions told me...etc" This Ya'qub is
one of Imam Muslim's authorities. Ibn Hibban confirms this as well.
If this isnad is sahih then the hadith is sound.
18- cf. Ibn Taimiyah, Iqtida as-Sirat al-Mustaqim,
p.451.
19- Sayid Qutub, Fi Dhilal al-Qur'an, 5/3049.
20- Muhammad Jamal as-Din al-Qaasimi, Mahaasin
at-Ta'weel, 14/5138
21- Sahih Bukhari, Kitab al-Iman, 1/60; Sahih Muslim,
Kitab al-Iman 1/66
22- Hafiz al-Hakami, Ma'arij al-Qubul, 1/383
23- Ibn Qayim al-Jawziya, an-Nuniyya, p.158
Chapter III [TOP]
AL-WALA' WAL-BARA' AND THE DECLARATION OF FAITH
Love is the source of wala' and hate is the source of bara'; it is by this
that both the heart and the hand are moved to act. Wala' inspires intimacy,
concern and help. Bara' provokes obstruction, enmity and rejection. Wala' and
Bara' are both related to the declaration of faith and constitute essential
elements in it. The evidence of this from the Qur'an and the Sunnah is
considerable.
As for the Qur'an, consider the following ayat: "Let not the believers
take disbelievers for their friends in preference to believers. Whoever does
this has no connection with Allah unless you are guarding yourselves against
them as a precaution. Allah bids you to beware (only) of Himself. And to Allah
is the journeying." [3:28]
And He says: "Say, (O Muhammad, to mankind), If you love Allah, follow
me; Allah will love you and forgive you your wrong actions. Allah is Forgiving,
Compassionate. Say, Obey Allah and the Messenger. And If they turn away, then
surely Allah does not love the disbelievers." [3:31-32]
Speaking of the aims of the enemies of Allah, He says: "They long for
you to disbelieve even as they disbelieve, so that you may be the same (as
them). so do not choose friends from among them until they go out in the way of
Allah." [4:89]
And also: "O you who believe! Do not take the Jews and the Christians
for friends. They are friends of one another. And whoever of you takes them for
friends is (one) of them. Surely Allah does not guide wrongdoing people."
[5:51]
And lastly: "O you who believe! Whoever of you becomes a rebel against
his deen, (know that in his place) Allah will bring a people whom He loves and
who love Him, humble towards the believers, harsh towards the disbelievers,
striving in the way of Allah, and not fearing the blame of any blamer."
[5:54]
We will mention only a few of the many hadith and reports of the Companions
on this subject. Imam Ahmad reports from Jarir ibn Abdullah that the Prophet,
may Allah bless him and grant him peace, made him swear an oath to 'offer
counsel to every Muslim and to steer clear of every disbeliever.' (1) Ibn Shayba
reports that the Prophet said, "The strongest bond of faith is love for the
sake of Allah and enmity for His sake." (2) Ibn Abbas reports that the
Prophet said, "The strongest bond of faith is loyalty for the sake of Allah
and opposition for His sake, love for the sake of Allah and enmity for His
sake." (3)
Ibn Abbas is also reported to have said, "Whoever loves for the sake of
Allah, and hates for the sake of Allah, and whoever seals a friendship for His
sake, or declares an enmity for His sake, will receive, because of this, the
protection of Allah. No one may taste true faith except by this, even if his
prayers and fasts are many. People have come to build their relationships around
the concerns of the world, but it will not benefit them in any way." (4)
Shaykh Sulaiman ibn Abdullah ibn Muhammad ibn Abdul Wahhab explained the
words of Ibn Abbas by saying that the meaning of 'to seal a friendship for the
sake of Allah' indicates the obligation of establishing relationships of love
and trust for His sake; this is friendship for the sake of Allah. It also
indicates that simple affection is not enough here; indeed what is meant is a
love based upon alliance. This entails assistance, honour, and respect. It means
being with those whom you love both in word and deed.
As for 'enmity for the sake of Allah', it includes the obligation to declare
enmity for His sake: opposition for the sake of Allah. it is to declare
opposition in deed, to take up arms against His enemies, to shun them, and to
stay far from them both in word and deed. This proves that simple opposition of
the spirit is not enough, and that it must be a complete honouring of your
commitment, for Allah says: "There is a good example for you in Ibrahim and
those with him, when they told their people: 'Surely we disassociate ourselves
from you and all that you worship beside Allah. We have done with you. And there
has arisen between us and you enmity and hate for ever until you believe in
Allah only'." [60:4] (5)
All this leads us to conclude that loyalty for the sake of Allah really means
to love Allah and to come to the assistance of His deen; it is to love those who
are obedient to Him and to come to their help. Opposition for the sake of Allah
is to feel anger at the enemies of Allah and to struggle against them. Because
of this Allah has called the first group the "party of Allah" and the
second the "party of Satan": "Allah is the Protecting Guardian of
those who believe. He brings them out of darkness into light. As for those who
disbelieve, their patrons are false deities. They bring them out of light into
darkness. Such are rightful owners of the Fire. They will abide therein."
[2:257]
And Allah says: "Those who believe do battle for the cause of Allah; and
those who disbelieve do battle for the cause of idols. So fight the friends of
Satan. Surely Satan's strategy is always weak." [4:76]
It is well known that Allah has never sent a Prophet on His mission without
also raising up opponents against him. Allah says: "Thus have We appointed
for every prophet an adversary - devils from mankind and the jinn who inspire in
one another plausible words that are deceiving." [6:112] It may be that
opponents of Divine Unity possess some learning, a part of Revelation, and
proof. As Allah says: "And when their Messengers brought them clear proofs
(of Allah's Sovereignty), they exulted in the knowledge which they (themselves)
possessed. And that which they had become accustomed to mock befell them."
[40:83]
It is the obligation of every Muslim to learn from Allah's deen whatever may
serve as a weapon for him in the struggle against the friends of Satan. In this
he should have no fear and no misgivings, since the devil's strategy is always
weak. Allah says: "And surely that Our host would be the victors."
[37:173] To the host of Allah shall be the victory in discussion and in debate,
as in war and strife. In this way an ordinary man from the party of the One God
will overcome a thousand scholars of the disbelievers. (6)
If the aim of the enemies of Islam - whether they are atheists or Jews, or
Christians or modernists, or Zionists or Communists - is the emasulation of the
Aqeedah of the Muslims, and the erosion of their unique character in order to
make them 'the ass of the chosen people', (as it is put in The Protocols of the
Elders of Zion), then the urgency of this issue should become clear to every
Muslim.
We should all take heed, for ourselves and for those who are with us, so that
we may warn all the Muslims who are slipping away into the abyss of apostasy,
warn them of the treacherous call of the disbelievers to what they call
'brotherhood and equality', warn them of the false claim that religion is for
Allah but that nationhood is for the masses. We will return to this point in
more detail later.
For the present, the evidence is clear from the Qur'an and the Sunnah that
allegiance is demanded by the declaration of faith since this is an essential
part of its meaning. As Ibn Taimiya has said, "The declaration of faith,
there is no god but Allah, requires you to love only for the sake of Allah, to
hate only for the sake of Allah, to ally yourself only for the sake of Allah, to
declare enmity only for the sake of Allah; it requires you to love what Allah
loves and to hate what Allah hates." (7) It also requires you to ally
yourself to the Muslims wherever you find them and to oppose the disbelievers
even if they are your closest kin.
NOTES
-----
1) Imam Ahmad, Musnad, 4/357-8.
2) Abu Bakr Abdullah ibn Muhammad ibn Shaybah,
(d.235 AH) Kitab
al-Iman. At-Tabarani, al-Kabir, ascribes it to Ibn Mas'ud as
"marfu'", and classed it as "hasan".
3) At-Tabarani, al-Kabir. It is mentioned by as-Suyuti,
al-Jami'
as-Saghir, 1/69. Al-Albani classes it as "hassan".
4) Ibn Rajab al-Hanbali, Jami' al-Ulum wal Hikam,
p.30.
5) Muhammad ibn Abdul Wahhab, Sharh Kitab at-Tawhid,
p.422.
6) Abridged from Muhammad ibn Abdul Wahhab, Kashaf
ash-Shubuhat, 3rd
edition, p.20.
7) Ibn Taimiya, al-Ihtijaj bil-Qadar, p.62.
Chapter Four
[TOP]
THE DECLARATION OF FAITH: ON THE TONGUE
AND IN THE HEART
According to Ibn al-Qayim, belief in Divine Unity is not simply saying that
Allah is the sole Creator and that He is Lord and Master of all things. This was
what the pagans used to say, while at the same time worshipping many gods.
Belief in Divine Unity does not only mean love of Allah, but also submission to
Him, humility before Him, complete obedience to Him, and devotion to Him in all
our words and deeds, in what we hold on to and in what we give, in our love and
in our hate. It can never be confused with the urge to disobey, or to do as you
please in misguided self interest.
Whoever takes this to heart will understand the words of the Prophet, may
Allah bless him and grant him peace, "Certainly Allah has forbidden the
Fire from taking whoever says 'There is no god but Allah', and who says this for
the pleasure of Allah.";(1) and in another hadith, "whoever says
'there is no god but Allah, shall not enter the Fire."
So what do these reports really mean? Many people have misunderstood them,
going so far as to say that these statements were later abrogated, and that they
were made before teh completion of the shari'ah, before we knew what we must and
must not do. Others have said that the fire they refer to is the hell of the
disbelievers, while others still interpret the actual entering of the fire to
mean entering it for eternity; thus "..shall not enter the Fire (for
eternity)." These are just a few of their baseless interpretations.
In fact, the Prophet, may Allah bless him and grant him peace, did not say
that this would occur merely by pronouncing the declaration of faith; this would
contradict our entire understanding of Islam. The hypocrites say these words
with their tongues, but they are bound for the deepest pit of Hell, and will be
punished even more severely than those who actively dispute the fact that there
is no other god than He. What is being referred to is, of course, a matter of
both the heart and the tongue.
While the heart must believe, it must also realise the truth: it must realise
the meaning of the words of the declaration of faith, of what they deny and what
they affirm; realise that there is no other divinity than Allah; and realise
that the attribution of divinity to anything else is quite impossible. Thus its
meaning must be taken to heart consciously and deliberately, with certainty and
urgency. This is what protects you from the Fire.
This recalls the story of the man who had murdered a hudred men, and though
faith arose in his heart he took no notice of it, pushing it out of his breast;
but when he came to death's door it again entered his heart and so he was one of
those who entered Paradise. (2)
And also the account about the prostitute whose heart was moved by the sight
of a dog dying of thirst by the side of a well, eating the dust in desperation.
With no higher purpose or hope of reward, she filled her shoe to the brim and
gave it to the dog. Though people usually beat it she took it by the paw and
stilled it until it had drunk, knowing that it could neither reward her nor even
thank her in any way. Her supreme act of love wiped out all her previous sins
and this is how she was forgiven. (3)
Imam Muslim reports a hadith in which the Prophet, may Allah bless him and
grant him peace, says, "Whoever says, There is no god but Allah, and denies
whatever he used to worship beside Allah, will find that his life and his
property are protected, and his reward is with Allah." (4)
Muhammad ibn Abdul Wahhab points out that this is the greatest proof we have
of the real meaning of the declaration of faith, since neither life nor property
are protected simply by pronounicng these words; indeed thre is no significance
at all in just saying them, nor in advocating them, nor in calling on Allah
alone. Your life and your property are not protected until you actually deny
whatever you used to worship beside Allah; and if you have any doubt or
hesitation about that, then you are still outside Islam. (5)
This should make clear the error of the Murji'a sect (6), who said that faith
was equivalent to knowledge, and disbelief to ignorance, and who in this way
severed deeds from belief. Everyone knows that the pagans of Makkah understood
what the Prophet, may Allah bless him and grant him peace, meant by saying,
"There is no god but Allah". They understood it and they believed it,
but they arrogantly refused to acknowledge it; so their faith in the One God,
the Provider, the Bringer of Life and Death, did not benefit them at all. When
the Prophet told them, "Say there is no god but Allah", they said:
"Does he make the gods One God? Surely that is an astounding thing."
[38:5]
The strange thing is that while the disbelievers know that the declaration of
faith is more than just saying the words, some think that these reports mean
that a simple utterance of the words 'there is no god but Allah', with none of
their meaning entering the heart, is all that is required. But wiser people
understand that it means that there is no creator other than Allah: no other
provider, giver of life, bringer of death, and no other who holds all things in
his hand. However, there is still no benefit to be gained by knowing what the
declaration of faith means if you are without any belief. This throws new light
on the meaning of those reports in which the Prophet, may Allah bless him and
grant him peace, mentions the simple repitition of these words, such as, "I
have been ordered to struggle against people until they say 'There is no god but
Allah'." (7)
Some people hope to imply by this that whoever recites the declaration of
faith is not a disbeliever, and that we should not oppose him, regardless of
whatever else he does. These people should recall that the Prophet, may Allah
bless him and grant him peace, fought the Jews and cursed them even though they
said, 'There is no god but Allah'. Not only this, but also the Companions of the
Prophet fought the Bani Hanifa who not only said, "There is no god but
Allah and Muhammad is the Messenger of Allah", but also prayed and claimed
to be Muslims; this was the same for the people whom Ali ibn Abi Talib burned
alive for saying that he was an incarnation of Allah.
However, when you ask these people about the case of someone who denies the
rising of the dead, they say that he has disbelieved and that we should fight
him, even he says, 'there is no god but Allah'. They agree that whoever disputes
any of the five pillars of Islam has disbelieved and should be opposed with the
pen and the sword, even though he may pronounce the declaration of faith.
The contradiction here is that none of these denials involve the central
tenet of Islam, which is the affirmation of Divine Unity, and yet these people
are prepared to go to war over them; but when it is a matter of someone who
denies the very essence of belief, the Diving Unity of God, then they provide
him with an excuse for its denial, even though it is the very source and
foundation of the deen.
So it becomes clear that these people are the enemies of Allah, and that they
have not understood at all the meaning of what the Prophet, may Allah bless him
and grant him peace, has said: It is well known that when a man declares himself
to be a Muslim we should act prudently towards him until he does something that
clearly contradicts his claim. Allah says: "O you who believe! When you go
out (to fight) in the way of Allah, be careful, and do not say to one who offers
you peace: 'Your are not a believer', seeking the chance profits of this life
(so that you may despoil him). With Allah are plenteous spoils. You too were
like this once, and Allah gave you hope, so be careful; surely Allah is well
aware of what you do." [4:94]
This verse indicates the necessity of restraint until such time as you are
sure about the situation, since Allah says: "be careful". If it
becomes clear that someone is at odds with Islam, then fight him. If this were
not the case, then the command to verify the situation before fighting would
meaningless.
Similarly the Prophet, may Allah bless him and grant him peace, said of the
Kharijites, "Wherever you find them fight them, for were I to discover them
I would destroy them utterly, as the people of Ad were destroyed." (8) He
said this even though they were meticulously observant in their dedication and
in their worship, so much so that the companions, with whom they studied, felt
humbled before them. Their declaration of faith, however, did not benefit them,
and neither did the fullness of their worship, nor indeed their service to
Islam, once they had abandoned the Shari'ah.(9)
Any intelligence person knows that if this whole matter hinged upon a single
word, a mere word, then it would have been a simple thing for the Quraish to say
it. They would have said, 'There is no god but Allah', saving both themselves a
lot of trouble and their gods from ridicule. But they knew that the declaration
of faith also involved a commitment, and it was this commitment that threatened
their power and status in the land.
The point here is that Islam is a force that liberates all people from the
unjust slavery of one to another, and places mankind at the service of the One,
the Victorious. The degree of their fear of Allah became the measure of their
worth and excellence among people. Thus the habits and customs of the jahiliyyah,
inherited from parents and grandparents, had no place. Every good hearted,
sincere Muslim must strive towards the full realisation of the declaration of
faith, in order that each and every one of us may worship Allah with insight,
knowledge, and certainty. This is the real challenge of Islam.
Notes
-----
1) Sahih Muslim, Kitab al-Masajid, 1/356.
2) See Sahih Bukhari, Kitab al-Anbia', 6/512,
(3470); and Sahih Muslim,
Kitab at-Tawba, 4/2118 (2766)
3) Ibn al-Qayim, Madarij as-Salikin, 1/330-332.
4) Sahih Muslim, Kitab al-Iman, 1/53, (23).
5) Ibn Abdul Wahhab, Kitab at-Tawhid, p.115.
6) The Murji'a sect believed that belief is all
that is needed to reach
the Garden
7) Sahih Muslim, Kitab al-Iman, 1/51, (20)
8) Sahih Muslim, Kitab al-Zakat, 2/742, (1064)
9) Muhammad ibn Abdul-Wahhab, Kashaf ash-Shubuhat,
p.40. The Kharijites
believed that committing major wrong actions turns a Muslim into an
unbeliever.
CHAPTER FIVE [TOP]
THE EFFECTS OF THE DECLARATION OF
FAITH ON THE HEART
Abu A'la al-Mawdudi mentions in his book, Fundamentals of Islam, nine effects
of the declaration of faith upon the heart.
First, as a believer you are not narrow minded like those who believe in many
gods or who dispute the existence of God altogether.
Second, as a believer you feel a sense of your own worth and dignity, since
it is Allah alone who brings benefit and harm, and He alone who brings life and
death. Wisdom, power and authority are His. Because of this the heart feels no
fear of anything other than Him. No head bows to another, no one is humbled
before anyone else. No one may fear another or be intimidated by human power or
majesty, since Allah is the Majestic and the Omnipotent over all things. In
contrast to this we see the subjucation of the disbelievers, the Christians and
the Jews, and the pagans and the atheists, to one another.
Third, as a believer your sense of honour and self esteem are inspired by
faith. The Muslim knows humility without humiliation, and pride without
vainglory. Shaytan can not affect his pride or inspire conceit in him since he
is well aware that it is Allah Who has given him all that he has and Who is
capable of stripping him of everything at any time. Yet you see the atheist
bursting with pride whenever some worldly benefit comes his way.
Fourth, as a believer you have the knowledge and the certainty that it is
only through purification of the self and the performance of good works that
success may be had. As for the disbelievers they have only the falso hope that
the 'son' of God will wash away the sins of the world, or that since they are
themselves the 'sons' of God and His high priests they will not be punished for
their sins, or that they will benefit from the intervention of the noble and
pious, or that their offerings and sacrifices to their gods will give them
licence to do as they please. As for the atheist who supposes that his existence
in this world is without purpose and unguided by any higher plan, his gods are
his own passions and desires. To these things he has dedicated his life.
Fifth, the believer in this Aqeedah will not know hopelessness or despair,
because he believes that Allah is Master of all that the heavens and earth
contain. So his heart is reassured in peace and in hope. Even when weak in
himself and defeated, when life closes in around him, he knows that those whom
Allah takes into His protection will not be neglected or abandoned so long as
they depend upon Allah and trust in Him. The disbelievers prefer to depend upon
their own feeble resources, yet how quickly despair overtakes them, plunging
them into desperation, and even driving them to suicide.
Sixth, belief in this Aqeedah develops in the individual great determination,
fortitude, patience, confidence and trust, since you are engaged in the greatest
of enterprise, the quest for the pleasure of Allah. Indeed you feel that what
supports you is the power of He Who possesses the heavens and the earth. In this
way the strength and determination of the believer, with his resolute will
inspired by this confidence, becomes like a mountain that no human force may
move. Could there ever be such a strength and confidence as this to inspire a
person's disbelief?
Seventh, the believer derives both strength and support from the declaration
of faith, since it puts you out of reach of the two things that can undermine
your strength, love of the world and fear of it. Love of the world is to place
love of yourself, your spouse or your money before love of Allah. Fear of the
world is fear of an unknown force, not under the power of God, waiting to
destroy you. The believer knows that there is no god but Allah, and so neither
of these things can gain any power over the heart, because it is reassured by
the fact that Allah is the Sole Possessor of both life and property. Once you
dedicate yourself to the pleasure of your Lord regardless of the cost, you
suddenly realise that no one can deprive you of your life, neither man nor
beast: the gun, the swordand the stone do not kill; it is God alone Who brings
death.
There is no stronger determination than that of someone who believes in
Allah. No man can intimidate him and no army frighten him, neither flashing
swords nor bullets falling like rain. Whenever a believer presents himself for
battle in the path of Allah, his strength is multiplied tenfold. So where does
this leave the Christians and the Jews, the disbelievers and the atheists.
Eighth, by believing in the declaration of faith you can take command over
your own life, take pride in yourself, in your confidence and determination, and
in this way purify your heart from the influence ofavarice, jealousy, cowardice,
spite, and all other vices.
Ninth, and by far the most important of these effects on the heart, is the
knowledge that the declaration of faith guides you to understand the law of
Allah, and helps you to keep carefully to it. Thus you are awakened to the fact
that Allah is totally aware of every thing, and that He is nearer to you than
your jugular vein; and although you may be able to escape from most kinds of
danger, there is no escaping from Allah. The degree to which faith pervades the
human mind determines in turn the extent of the believer's obedience to the laws
of Allah, his keeping to Allah's limits and not coming near to what Allah has
forbidden, and his hastening to do good works and to fulfill Allah's commands.
The declaration of faith is the first of the five essential pillars of Islam.
It is also the most important of these when it comes to ascertaining the extent
of a person's faith. The Muslim is the obedient servant who keeps near to Allah.
We can not do this until we believe from teh depths of our hearts that there is
no god but Allah. The declaration of faith is the source of Islam and the basis
of its strength. Regardless of the details of our belief or the different shades
of legal opinion, everything ultimately rests upon this one statement: the power
of Islam relies upon nothing else. If this should ever be lost, then nothing at
all would be left of our deen.(1)
Ibn Rajab, when commenting on the declaration of faith, quotes Sufyian ibn
Uyaynah: "Allah did not bestow upon His servants a greater blessing than
the knowledge that there is no god but Allah. For the people of Paradise these
words are the same as fresh water is to a people who live on the parched Earth.
By it the scales of Heaven and Hell are set. Because of it the Messengers were
sent into battle. Whoever declares it to be so, his wealth and his life are
protected, but whoever denies it shall find himself destroyed. It is the key to
paradise, and the single call of all the Messengers." (2)
1)
Abu A'la al-Mawdudi, Mabadi' al-Islam, p.87.
2) Ibn Rajab, Kalimat al-Ikhlas, p.53
CHAPTER VI [TOP]
WHAT NEGATES THE DECLARATION OF FAITH - PART ONE
We have now discussed the meaning of the declaration of faith, the
obligations that it places upon the believer, its essence and its effects upon
those who proclaim it. In order to provide a more complete picture of the
precise meaning of the words, 'There is no god but Allah', we will now turn our
attention to what contradicts it.
It is common knowledge that disbelief, shirk, hypocrisy and apostasy all
stand in complete contradiction to Islam. Before discussing this point, however,
we should perhaps mention the necessity of supporting our arguments from both
primary as well as secondary sources. It is in comparing the sources that a
cogent reply to the claims of the Murji'a and other sects may be found. This
method will expose both the distortion inherent in the beliefs of such groups as
the Murji'a, and the extremism of the Kharijites, both of whom have departed
from teh straight path. Islam steers a course of moderation between neglect and
excess.
This topic has been much discussed, both in the past and in the present, and
every opinion has its partisans. Ibn al-Qayim spoke about it at length. He says,
"Disbelief and faith are mutually exclusive: when one of them disappears
the other takes its place."
"Faith is fundamental and consists of many branches, each of which may
be known as 'iman': its branches are the prayer, zakat, haj and fasting, as well
as actions of the inners self such as modesty, reliance upon Allah, fear of
Allah and drawing near to Him. The least of its branches is to remove an
obstacle from the road as an act of faith."
"There are branches of iman which are vital to the very existence of
belief; one of these is the declaration of faith. But there are others that are
not vital to belief; the removal of an obstacle from the road is an example of
this. Between these two extremes there are branches of iman that are associated
more closely with the declaration of faith, and others that are associated more
closely with the removal of obstacles."
"Disbelief too is fundamental and has its branches. As a branch of iman
is related to fatih, so a branch of disbelief is related to kufr. If modesty is
a characteristic of faith, immodesty is one of disbelief. If honesty comes from
faith, dishonesty comes from faithlessness. The prayer, zakat, hajj and fasting
are branches of faith, while abandoning any one of tem is a kind of disbelief.
To rule by what Allah has revealed is a quality of those who have faith, but to
rule by another law is a quality of those who are without belief. All
disobedience comes from disbelief and all obedience is due to belief."
"The branches of faith are of two types: the first is speech, and the
other is action. In the same way, the branches of disbelief take the form of
either a word spoken or a deed performed."
"Of the branches of faith connected to speech, there are those whose
disappearance results in the disappearance of faith itself. This is also true of
those branches of faith that are connected to action. When such a deed is left
unperformed, the result is an eclipse of iman."
"Likewise, the branches of disbelief are of two types, both speech and
action. Thus it follows that deliberately saying a word of disbelief will in
fact, result in disbelief, since this is one of the branches of kufr. It is the
same for the performance of any act of disbelief, like prostrating to a graven
image, or making fun of the Qur'an, since kufr is at its root."
"Therefore, we should realise that faith is a matter of both word and
deed. Words include both the private statement to oneself, which is inner
conviction, and the public statement to the world, which is the declaration of
faith. As for deeds, the private act is the inner resolve, sincerity and
intention known to the heart and known to Allah. Public acts are the outward
actions of each one of us in the world. If these four things disappear then
faith too, has gone."
"If the heart knows no sincerity, then whatever else you have of faith
can not benefit you, since sincerity must precede belief. Sincerity makes belief
worthwhile and without it actions of the heart are nothing. This is the root of
the disagreement between the ahlu-s-sunnah wal-jama'a and the Murji'a sect. The
ahlu-s-sunnah wal-jama'a maintain that faith would destroyed, and that sincerity
would be useless in the absence of the inner action of the heart, that is, love
or and submission to the message. The faith of Iblis (i.e. shaytan) and of
Pharaoh and his people, and of the Jews and the pagan Arabs, and of all others
who apparently acknowledged the sincerity and truth of the Prophet's message,
may Allah bless him and grant him peace, was destroyed in this way. Though they
agreed with it both inwardly and outwardly, and even protested that they had not
denied it, they neither followed him nor put their trust in him."
"If it is true that faith diminishes as the inner actions of the heart
wane, when it is also true that faith has a direct connection to the most
significant of your outward actions. This is especially true if your actions are
liable to inhibit the love in your heart and the desire to follow it; this in
turn undermines any sincere commitment you may have had, as in the examples
given above. If your heart does not know inward obedience, you will not be able
to obey outwardly either. But if your heart had followed and obeyed, then you
too would have done the same. Whoever is unable to obey lacks the sincerity to
motivate him to do so; this is the nature of faith."
"Faith is not a matter of simple sincerity of belief, as some have
claimed. Rather it is sincere belief in the necessity of obedience and of
following the heart. Guidance, too, does not simply mean knowing the truth and
the arguments which support it. It also means that you realise the necessity of
following it and of acting in accordance with it. Without this realisation,
guidance is neither complete nor is it sufficient, just as simply believing that
the message is sincere does not in itself constitute sincerity of faith."
"Disbelief, too, is of two types: one is disbelief by inner stubbornness
and recalcitrance, and the other is by outer action."
"The first means to stubbornly deny that the Prophet, may Allah bless
him and grant him peace, came with knowledge from his Lord, knowledge of His
Names and Attributes, knowledge of His works and knowledge of His Shari'ah. This
kind of disbelief contradicts faith totally."
"As for disbelief in deed, it may be divided into a disbelief which
contradicts faith, and one which does not. Some of the acts which contradict
faith are the worship of idols, the ridiculing of the Qur'an, and the killing or
slandering of a prophet. Ruling by something other than what Allah has revealed
and abandoning the prayer are also, undoubtedly, acts of disbelief. It is not
possible to say that we should not call someone who does any of these things a
disbeliever, since Allah and His Messenger have both referred to such people in
this way. According to what the Prophet, may Allah bless him and grant him
peace, has said, whoever rules by other than what Allah has revealed, or
abandons the prayer is a disbeliever."
"A distinction between action and conviction remains, however, and while
we can say that, because of some action, a person is a disbeliever, this is not
proof that he does not believe. We know that Allah does not call someone who
does not rule by what He has revealed a disbeliever, in the absolute sense of
disbelief, nor did the Prophet, may Allah bless him and grant him peace, call
anyone who had abandoned the prayer a disbeliever absolutely. (1) In fact, the
Prophet denied this in the case of the fornicator, the thief, the drunkard, and
in the case of the man who troubles his neighbours."
Also, we have the hadith, 'Whoever consults a fortune teller and believes
what he says, or commits sodomy with his wife, is free of what has been revealed
to Muhammad'. (2) He, may Allah bless him and grant him peace, also said,
"If a man says to his brother: 'O disbeliever', then one of them has fallen
into it." (3)
"A person may keep the law of Allah, not exceeding the limits nor
approaching what has been forbidden, hastening to good works and te fulfillment
of Allah's commands, only according to the depth of his faith."
"Allah has referred to someone who observes part of the Revelation and
leaves part of it aside as believing in the part that he observes and
disbelieving in the part that he does not. He says: "And when We made a
covenant with you not to spill one another's blood, not to drive one another
away from your homes, you agreed and you were witnesses to it. But now you kill
one another, and you drive your own people out of their homes; supporting one
another against them, in sin and enmity. And if some of them came to you as
captives you would ransom them; but driving them out (in the first place) was
forbidden to you. Do you believe in part of the Book and disbelieve in part of
it? What is the reward of whoever does this other than dishonour in this world?
And, on the Day of Resurrection they will be returned to an even more terrible
punishment. And Allah is not unaware of what you do." [2:84-85]
"Allah says that they agreed to His covenant, which He also commanded
them to keep. Part of it was that they would not kill each other, or drive each
other out of their homes. He then says that they disobeyed His commands and a
party of them then attacked the other and drove them away. This was how they
disbelieved in the Revelation that came to them. Then He ends by saying that
they would ransom some of the defeated party out or respect for their covenant
with Allah. So they believed in the part of it that they observed, and
disbelieved in the part of it that they ignored."
"In action and conviction, faith is the opposite of disbelief. In a well
known hadith, the Prophet, may Allah bless him and grant him peace, makes a
distinction between action and conviction when he tells us, 'to curse a Muslim
is corruption, to kill him is disbelief'. (4) The conviction is in cursing and
the action is in killing: he regarded cursing as corruption but not evidence of
disbelief, while killing is, apparently, proof of disbelief. It is well known
that what he meant by this was disbelief in action, not in conviction. This kind
of disbelief can not take someone completely out of the circle of Islam, just as
the fornicator, the thief and the drunkard may still be called Muslims, but not
believers."
"This is the understanding of the Prophet's companions, may the
blessings and peace of Allah be on him and on his family and on them, who knew
the Book of Allah better than anyone else: they knew the meaning of submission
and the meaning of disbelief and they knew the distinction between them. We do
not accept anyone else's opinion about this."
"Later, some people who failed to understand this split up into two
groups: the first group said that those who commit major wrong actions should be
excluded from the Muslim community, and were thought to be condemned to Hell for
ever. The second group said that such people should still be considered
believers. (5) The first group over-exaggerated and the second turned a blind
eye. Of course, the correct position is to follow the Prophet's Sunnah, may
Allah bless him and grant him peace, which is to follow the guidance of
Allah."
"The lesson of the Sunnah implies that there is a disbelief that is less
than disbelief, a hypocrisy that is less than hypocrisy, a shirk that is less
than shirk, a corruption that is less than corruption, and an oppression that is
less than oppression. Ibn Abbas said that the ayah. 'And whoever does not judge
by what Allah has revealed, such are disbelievers' [5:44] refers to an act of
disbelief."
"Consider: 'The disbelievers, they are wrong-doers' [2:254], and with
reference to the laws of marriage and divorce: 'And whoever goes beyond the
limits of Allah certainly wrongs himself' [65:1]. Speaking in the Qur'an the
Prophet Yunus says: 'There is no god but You, Glory be to You! Surely, I have
been a wrongdoer' [21:87]; and Adam says: 'Our Lord we have wronged ourselves'
[7:23]; and Moses says: 'My Lord, surely I have wronged myself, so forgive me
[28:16]. It is clear that we are dealing with two kinds of wrong doing
here."
"In the Qur'an, the disbelievers are called 'corrupt' : 'And He misleads
by it only the corrupt; those who break the covenant of Allah after ratifying
it' [2:26-27]; and also: 'Truly We have revealed to you clear signs, and only
the corrupt will disbelieve in them'.[2:99] "
"There are many more such examples; but the believer too is called
'corrupt', as these ayat show: 'O you who believe! If a corrupt person brings
you some news then verify it, or else you may unknowingly cause hardship to
people, and then be sorry for what you have done'. [49:6] (This was revealed
with reference to an incident involving al-Hakam ibn al-'As, who was not
literally corrupt) And again: 'And those who accuse honourable women but do not
bring four witnesses, whip them (with) eighty lashes and never (afterward)
accept their testimony. - They indeed are corrupt' [24:4]."
AQEEDATUT-TAHAAWIYYAH
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