AL WALA' WAL BARA'
ACCORDING TO THE AQEEDAH OF THE SALAF
(Love and Hate for
Allah's Sake)
by Muhammad Sa'eed Al
Qahtani
THE
PREREQUISITES OF THE DECLARATION OF FAITH
~ Chapter 2 of the Book,
entitled: 'Al Wala' wa'l Bara' Authored by: Muhammad Sa'eed Al Qahtani ~
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
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