Categories
Fiqh (Islamic Law)

Are Ramadan Lanterns Prohibited?

Among the odd fatwas: the prohibition of Ramadan lanterns! These days, fatwas are circulating among people that prohibit the use of these lanterns as an expression of joy for the arrival of the blessed month of Ramadan. These fatwas are not based on any knowledge; rather, they rely on an ignorant understanding of the concept of innovation (bid’ah) and sectarian whispers. Some of these fatwas claim that the [Shi’ite] Fatimid State was the first to introduce these lanterns, hence the warning against using them stems from the desire not to resemble them in this practice!

This prohibition has no basis in truth: using lanterns in Ramadan is a matter of customs, intended to express joy for the arrival of the holy month. Designating them for this purpose, just like designating specific foods and drinks for Ramadan, has nothing to do with innovation or Sunnah!

As for the claim that the Fatimids were the first to introduce them, it is incorrect, and even if it were true, it wouldn’t be a sufficient reason for prohibition. This logic of prohibition does not make sense to any rational person, let alone a scholar! Unfortunately, we find ourselves compelled to respond to such fatwas with the merest fraction of our intellects, telling them: the Fatimids were the first to build the Al-Azhar Mosque, so is enriching it with knowledge and worship prohibited because they were the ones to introduce it?! I wouldn’t be surprised if some fools busy themselves distinguishing between its enrichment with knowledge and worship and the use of lanterns to celebrate Ramadan.

Moreover, the practice of illuminating Ramadan with lanterns and chandeliers is a Sunnah initiated by Umar bin Al-Khattab (may Allah be pleased with him) in mosques, making their light brighter during the Isha and Tarawih prayers of Ramadan nights, thus giving the increase in lighting with chandeliers during Ramadan a special memory and an unforgettable tradition.

It has been conveyed through various means – collectively confirming the report, and it suffices that some of them are proven from some of the Tabi’un (the second generation of Muslims, who saw the Companions of the Prophet but not the Prophet himself) indirectly from Ali (may Allah be pleased with him) – that Ali bin Abi Talib (may Allah be pleased with him) would say when he saw the lanterns brightening the mosques in Ramadan nights, “May Allah illuminate for Umar bin Al-Khattab as he illuminated the mosques of Allah.”

And Al-Azraqi (d. 250 AH) in his book “Akbar Makkah” (2/98), Al-Fakihi (d. 272 AH) in “Akbar Makkah” also (2/204), and Al-Fasi (d. 832 AH) in “Shifa’ al-Gharam bi Akhbar al-Balad al-Haram” (1/313) mentioned: that the Holy Mosque was especially brightened with more lanterns and chandeliers during Ramadan, making it brighter than during the rest of the year and other seasons. Al-Azraqi and Al-Fakihi died before the existence of the Fatimid State.

The proponents of these absurd fatwas have narrowed people’s lives and prohibited what Allah Almighty has not prohibited by their mere whims. We seek refuge in Allah from ignorance and extremism.

Originally published 25 Rajab 1437 / 2 May 2016

Categories
Belief Uncategorized

Did the Salaf Completely Reject Kalām?

Category: Belief

Certain statements made by the imāms of the Salaf dispel the notion that they disapproved of kalām in an absolute manner. These statements include expressions of praise for people who used kalām to defend correct doctrines and refute followers of desires (ahl al-ahwā’).

After all, `ilm al-kalām is:

  • argumentation using rational proofs in defense of the doctrines of faith, and
  • refutation of mubtadi`ah¹ who deviate in creed from the approaches of the Salaf and Ahl al-Sunnah.

This is how Ibn Khaldūn defined it.² This definition lends support to the explanation that scholars like al-Bayhaqī provided for statements relayed from Imām al-Shāfi`ī and others — statements that might be misunderstood to express categorical disapproval of kalām.

Scholarly precedents make it clear that none of the exemplary Salaf censured kalām in an absolute manner, and statements that appear to do so require qualification. Examples of such precedents are found in the works of Ibn Taymīyyah and those of al-Dārimī before him. Whether these two scholars were correct or not, they undertook refutations that made use of rational proofs from outside of the Qur’ān and the Sunnah. However, regardless of what precedents are shown to them, the extremists among those who claim Salafīyyah will continue to insist that the Salaf categorically censured kalām.

Consequently, one of the best ways to undercut their line of argumentation is to show them one of the imāms of the Salaf complimenting someone from the same era for his proficiency in kalām and his refutation of those who follow desires! I am referring to what has been authentically related from Imām Mālik bin Anas. He says the following in praise of his shaykh Ibn Hurmuz (d. 148 H):

He was proficient in kalām and refuted those who follow desires. He was one of the most knowledgeable people concerning the heresies (lit. “desires”) over which they differed.

This was reported by al-Fasawī in al-Ma`rifah wa ‘l-Tārīkh³ and by al-Khaṭīb in al-Faqīh wa ’l-Mutafaqqih with an authentic chain of transmission from Imām Mālik. Imām Mālik’s use of the word “kalām” in this context leaves no room for haphazard rejection of what his statement signifies. If they say: “He was referring to ‘kalām’ that is not blameworthy,” then we can respond: “Likewise, al-Shāfi`ī’s disapproval was aimed at blameworthy kalām, not praiseworthy kalām!”

The purpose of this is to demonstrate that the Salaf did not condemn kalām categorically. By God, I know that all of this was not needed [to establish such an obvious premise], but it is sometimes necessary for us to respond to such arguments in hope that the perplexed might be guided.

Originally published 18 Ṣafar 1443 / 25 September 2021.

This post has also been translated by The Kaafiyah Channel.


  1. i.e. perpetrators of bid`ah.
  2. Tārīkh Ibn Khaldūn 1/580
  3. Al-Ma`rifah wa ‘l-Tārīkh 1/652
  4. Al-Faqīh wa ’l-Mutafaqqih 2/423

Categories
Belief Fiqh (Islamic Law)

The Ruling of Celebrating the Birth (Mawlid) of the Prophet ﷺ

Category: Belief / Fiqh

I. The Ruling of Mawlid

First, let it be said that any discussion of Mawlid must remain academic and objective. It should not deny the scholarly difference of opinion concerning this practice, nor should it deny that some highly esteemed `ulamā’ deemed it recommended (with certain conditions).

Though he concluded that Mawlid is a form of bid`ah, consider that Shaykh al-Islām Ibn Taymīyyah himself excused those who celebrate it. In fact, he held that there is an immense reward for them in it. He says:

Someone may revere the Mawlid, making it a celebration, and have an immense reward in it due to his good intention and his reverence for Allāh’s Messenger ﷺ. It is as I have explained to you: an act may be good on the part of some people [even though it is] objectionable on the part of a believer who has been shown the correct approach.

Iqtiḍā’ al-Ṣirāṭ al-Mustaqīm, 2/126
• Details of the Ruling •

Secondly, let us turn to the details of Mawlid’s ruling.

If someone uses the day of Mawlid to remind people of the Prophet’s ﷺ Sīrah, or to inspire love for him in Muslims’ hearts, then this is permissible as long as the observance is kept free of:

  • excesses, such as istighāthah;
  • vices, such as free-mixing of men and women;
  • superstitions, such as the belief that the Prophet ﷺ attends in person; and
  • belief in any special religious virtue attached to reminding people on a particular day.

One simply uses the date of the Prophet’s ﷺ birth as an opportunity to call it to mind, just as preachers remind people of the Battle of Badr on the 17th of Ramaḍān, the Conquest of Makkah on the 20th of Ramaḍān, and the Migration of the Prophet to Madīnah ﷺ at the beginning of the Hijrī year. This is permissible because it is not linked to belief in any innovated form of worship. When these conditions are fulfilled, the observance goes from being a prohibited bid`ah to being a permissible maṣlaḥah mursalah.¹ These conditions make Mawlid gatherings a mere means of achieving a legitimate objective: reminding people of the Prophet’s ﷺ Sīrah and igniting love for him in their hearts.

I find it necessary to always emphasize that the permissibility of Mawlid events rests on the following points.

  • These lessons or celebrations, which must be free of prohibited matters, are not held due to some belief that Mawlid observances are acts of worship in and of themselves. The date of the Prophet’s ﷺ birth is simply used as an opportunity to achieve a valid objective.
  • The calendar date of the Prophet’s ﷺ birth does not have any particular, established virtue.
  • The categorically false beliefs, statements, and practices found in many Mawlid events must be addressed.

When these conditions are met, I do not find Mawlid to be a form of bid`ah, nor do I find any reason to disavow it or those who partake in it.

I also see no problem with completely refusing to partake in Mawlid for the sake of avoiding the problems and vices present in many celebrations. This is acceptable as long as those who take this position do not go to extremes in opposing the practice. They should recognize it as a matter of valid ijtihād and avoid censuring those who consider Mawlid permissible within the parameters that we mentioned. If these conditions are met, then this opposing view is also a valid position, and it is not without merit.

In practice, we find that something similar to what we described already takes place in Saudi Arabia without raising any objection. Each year, many Jumu`ah sermons and masjid lectures are delivered in opposition to Mawlid as its date draws near, either in the last Jumu`ah khuṭbah before Mawlid or on the evening prior to it. These often begin with some mention of the Prophet’s ﷺ virtues and his rights over his Ummah, then conclude by mentioning vices associated with Mawlid gatherings. This is actually a form of partaking in Mawlid that I consider permissible. It simply is not called “Mawlid”.

The works that Salafī scholars have written (and continue to write) for Ramaḍān gatherings are another example of what we described. Take, for example, the book of Shaykh Ibn `Uthaymīn — may Allāh have mercy on him — and other books that contain reminders of the Battle of Badr and the Conquest of Makkah on their respective dates of occurrence.² Shaykh Ibn `Uthaymīn intended for his book to be read to people in masjids every year. It was his hope, and the hope of everyone who would like to be rewarded continuously for this sort of work, that these readings would continue each Ramaḍān and become widespread among Muslims. We find in our masjids that this is, in fact, what happens — and it recurs every year! Habitually reading about these battles on particular days does not make this practice a form of bid`ah, because specifying these days is not meant to be an act of religious devotion. It is a matter of taking advantage of dates to make lessons more impactful, to make past events more memorable, and to remind ourselves of Allāh’s great blessings to us on these great occasions in Islām’s history.

As a form of middle ground, many of those who partake in Mawlid decide not to restrict their observances to a specific annual date. They hold gatherings for reminding people of the Prophet’s ﷺ virtues numerous times throughout the year. As long as these gatherings remain free of the vices associated with some Mawlid celebrations, there is nothing wrong with them at all. The condition is that one must not consider this sort of event a form of worship that is pursued for its own sake.

Conclusion

It is now clear that we must distinguish between two forms of Mawlid:

(1) A form of Mawlid that is a permissible means to a valid objective (maṣlaḥah mursalah).

This occurs when someone intends to use the date of the Prophet’s ﷺ birth to remind people of his life and awaken love for him in their hearts. One does not believe in any special religious virtue that justifies singling this date out with worship, nor does one believe in anything else that is not supported by evidence.

This is the form of Mawlid that earned the approval of many eminent scholars, including Abū Shāmah, Ibn Nāṣir al-Dīn, and numerous others.

(2) A form of Mawlid that is bid`ah even if it is free of excesses and vices.

This occurs when someone believes:

  • that this particular day is distinguished by some special religious virtue;
  • that linking acts of worship to this particular day increases one’s reward for those acts;
  • or that holding celebrations on this particular day is desirable in and of itself — just as acts of worship legislated by Allāh are desirable in and of themselves.

This is the form of Mawlid that earned the censure of many eminent scholars, including Shaykh al-Islām Ibn Taymīyyah and others.

Originally published 12 January 2012 / 20 Rabī`al-Awwal 1433.


II. Responding to Objections

I shared a detailed ruling on Mawlid yesterday, and some objections have been raised to it. I will summarize the most important of these below and follow each with a response.

First Objection: The form of “permissible Mawlid” that you have described does not exist anywhere.

Response: If we accept for the sake of argument that no such Mawlid exists, then the article serves as a corrective for existing Mawlid gatherings.

Second Objection: There is a difference of opinion concerning the actual date of the Prophet’s ﷺ birth. How can a particular day (e.g. the 12th of Rabī` al-Awwal) be singled out?

Response: This would be a valid objection if my article had singled this day out for some specific act of worship. My position does not do so. On the contrary, it is similar to assigning a day of the year for reminders of some other important matter.

Consequently, rather than being grounds for objection to my position, the disagreement concerning the exact date of the Prophet’s ﷺ birth actually supports what I said. [I emphasized that there is no special religious virtue linked to the date of his ﷺ birth, and the disagreement surrounding the date makes this even clearer.]

In any case, the strongest opinion is that the Prophet ﷺ was born on the 12th of Rabī` al-Awwal. The next strongest opinion is that he ﷺ was born on the 9th of Rabī` al-Awwal. The first opinion is reported from Ibn `Abbās through an authentic chain of transmission, and it is the view of the generality of Sīrah authorities. The second opinion comes from an attempt to reconcile narrations with calculations made by the astronomer Maḥmūd Pāshā in his book, Natā’ij al-Afhām fī Taqwīm al-`Arab Qabl al-Islām.

Third Objection: How can we do something that the Ṣaḥābah, the Tābi`ūn, and the Atbā` al-Tābi`īn never did? Do we love the Prophet ﷺ more than they did?

Response: This is a valid objection to those who believe that Mawlid is a special act of worship legislated for a particular day. Such a belief would be bid`ah without a doubt.

However, this objection is meaningless to those who regard Mawlid as a maṣlaḥah mursalah that acquaints people with the Prophet ﷺ and awakens love for him. A maṣlaḥah mursalah does not need to have come to us from the Salaf. People, including those who object to Mawlid, have always used permissible things to facilitate good deeds and acts of worship — even if those permissible things were not found among the Salaf themselves.

If someone told those who object to Mawlid:

Minarets (for the adhān) and miḥrābs (for imāms) are forms of bid`ah. If they were any good, we would have precedents for them from the Prophet ﷺ and his Companions!

then what would they say in response to this?

Those who require that a maṣlaḥah mursalah be reported from the Salaf in order to be valid have innovated in the religion, opposed scholarly consensus, and fallen into self-contradiction.

Fourth Objection: This entails resemblance (tashabbuh) of the disbelievers, as they celebrate the birthday of `Isā, peace be upon him.

Response: Not every kind of “resemblance” is ḥarām, as we have repeatedly explained. The Prophet ﷺ said: “Differ from the Jews. They do not perform prayer in their leather socks (khuffs) or sandals.”³ Yet there is consensus that praying barefoot is valid and not prohibited.

Furthermore, the Prophet ﷺ ordered us to fast on `Āshūrā’ in gratitude to Allāh for saving Mūsā — peace be upon him — from Pharaoh on that day. The Prophet ﷺ said: “We have more right to Mūsā than they do.” He did not say: “In order to differ from them, we will not fast and will not show gratitude.” Rather, our gratitude is made evident through fasting in order to challenge them, because we have a greater right to Mūsā than [disbelievers] do.

If resembling them does not prevent us from thanking Allāh for saving “their” prophet, peace be upon him, then why should an imagined resemblance prevent us from showing happiness and gratitude for the birth of our Prophet ﷺ? In fact, celebrating our Prophet ﷺ is one of the greatest ways in which we can distinguish ourselves from the disbelievers. Few distinctions could be greater than this given that they do not believe in him ﷺ.

Fifth Objection: Do not open the door to evil or fitnah. Mawlid is ḥarām because it is a door to excess and to shirkī practices.

Response: Blocking the door to evil is accomplished by opening the door to good. The conclusion that I have provided opens a door to good and clarifies errors. This is the proper way of blocking the means to evil (sadd al-dharā’i`). Forbidding permissible things under the pretext of “blocking the means to evil” is not the proper way. Just as we block the means to exaggeration about the Prophet ﷺ, we must also block the means to prohibiting lawful things on the basis of excess and extremism.

In any case, the point is that innovated Mawlids are still being held. Those that contain excesses, free-mixing of the genders, and other vices continue to exist. This position serves to explain the danger of these gatherings and their contradiction of the Sharī`ah just as it explains the valid way of celebrating the Prophet’s birth ﷺ.

Sixth Objection: There are statements from scholars declaring Mawlid a form of bid`ah and censuring it.

Response: There are far more statements from scholars who have permitted it with certain conditions. The ijtihād of one scholar is not rebutted with the ijtihād of another scholar. The authority that we refer back to is evidence:

فَإِنْ تَنَازَعْتُمْ فِي شَيْءٍ فَرُدُّوهُ إِلَى اللَّهِ وَالرَّسُولِ إِنْ كُنْتُمْ تُؤْمِنُونَ بِاللَّهِ وَالْيَوْمِ الْآخِرِ ۚ ذَٰلِكَ خَيْرٌ وَأَحْسَنُ تَأْوِيلًا

If you differ in anything, then refer it to Allāh and the Messenger if you really believe in Allāh and the Last Day. That is best and the fairest resolution.

Qur’ān, Al-Nisā’ 59

Finally, I explained in my previous post that I respect the view of those who prohibit Mawlid altogether — provided that they also respect the position of those who allow it conditionally. If they censure this opposing position, then their stance is itself worthy of rebuke: they will have opposed the conclusive scholarly consensus that there can be no censure in issues of valid ijtihād.

Originally published 11 Rabī`al-Awwal 1434 / 23 January 2013.


  1. A maṣlaḥah mursalah is “some benefit that has neither been affirmed nor negated by a specific text, but that is consistent with the objectives of the Sharī`ah as supported by a comprehensive reading of the corpus of sacred texts.” For more information, see “The Relationship Between Bid`ah and Maṣlaḥah Mursalah”.
  2. See Sh. Ibn `Uthaymīn’s reminder of the Battle of Badr here – English translation on p. 51 here (PDF).
  3. Reported by Abū Dāwud and others.
  4. Reported by Al-Bukhārī and others.
Categories
Belief History & Biography Society & Politics

Piety is Only Part of the Story

Category: Belief / Society & Politics / History & Biography

Let me tell you the story of a man, a worshiper from the generation of the Tābi`īn.

He was an austere ascetic who abstained from the luxuries of this world. He openly commanded good and forbade evil. He spoke the truth plainly in front of oppressive leaders. He once heard Ziyād bin Abīhi (one such leader) say, “I’m going to take a healthy person for a sick person and one neighbor for another neighbor [to be punished in their stead!]” He responded, “O Ziyād! Allāh has said: ‘And no soul shall bear the burden of another’ (Qur’ān, Fāṭir 18) — and Allāh’s ruling is better than yours!”

This worshiper was tenderhearted. One day, he passed by a camel that had pitch pasted on it to treat a skin ailment. He fainted at the sight of the pitch, eventually regained consciousness, and then recited the ayah: “Their garments will be of pitch” (Qur’ān, Ibrāhīm 50).

He was also exceedingly trustworthy. He was once among a number of people imprisoned by an oppressive leader on charges of inciting rebellion. The prison guards would allow him to go home each night [and return voluntarily each morning] due to how righteous they believed him to be. One day, the leader ordered that all prisoners be put to death the following morning. News of this spread throughout the land. When morning arrived, the prison guards were shocked to find that this man had still returned, even though he knew that he would be killed! They interceded for him with the leader, who made an exception for him and allowed him to avoid execution.

He was so devout in his worship that each of the competing sects claimed him as one of their own!

Al-Ḥasan al-Baṣrī (the famous Tābi`ī) once heard him preaching and said: “When he mentioned Islām, I had not heard anyone describe it more eloquently than he did!”

His companions related accounts of his karāmāt (divinely conferred miracles; s. karāmah.) Once, when he resolved to fight in support of the truth against an oppressive governor, he lifted his hands and said, “O Allāh, if we have aligned ourselves with the truth, then give us a sign!” His companions report that when he spoke these words, the house that they were in began to shake. Others said that the roof lifted up.

He had decided to fight in the first place because of a pious woman called al-Baljā’ al-Tamīmīyyah. She would command good and forbid evil, admonish and rebuke the rulers, and aid those who did the same. Because she did these things, the governor seized her, cut off her arms and legs, and threw her in the marketplace to die.

When this man saw al-Baljā’, he could not bear it. “No death that I could die would be more beloved to me than the death of al-Baljā’! Every demise other than hers is suspect [as to its merit]!” He resolved to rebuke this oppression in front of Allāh and to isolate himself from the people. He withdrew with 40 of his companions to an area outside of that land, ordering them to fight only those who fought them and to avoid taking wealth from the country unless it was rightfully theirs.

The leader sent 2,000 troops after them, but he, with his 40 men, managed to defeat them!

He said:

Fear of the Deity — Taqwā of Allāh drove me out,

and sold my soul [to Him] for something priceless!

The leader then dispatched another army that killed this man and all of his followers. It is said that they were slain treacherously while they bowed and prostrated during the `Aṣr prayer!

[Some lines of poetry about him] say:

I am wary of dying on my mattress and hope [to die a death like his].

If I knew that my demise would be like Abū Bilāl’s, then I would not mind!

But don’t rush to judgment!

Do you know who this devout, ascetic, fervent individual was?

He was one of the leaders of the Khawārij!

His name was Abū Bilāl Mirdās bin Ḥadīr, but he is more commonly known as Mirdās bin Udayyah al-Tamīmī. He was one of those who led the Khawārij against `Alī bin Abī Ṭālib — may Allāh be pleased with him — and was among the few who survived the Day of Nahrawān.

Can you believe that?

What you have read is true. Most of the reports that I mentioned above have been established historically.¹

Now we know that this man followed the approach of the Khawārij. Even the Ṣahābah — with `Alī bin Abī Ṭālib at their helm, may Allāh be pleased with them — were not spared from his accusations of disbelief.

With this in mind, let’s re-examine the preceding accounts in light of the truth.


His Abundant Worship

The Prophet himself ﷺ explained that this is a characteristic of the Khawārij.

Abū Sa`īd al-Khudrī narrated:

I heard Allāh’s Messenger ﷺ saying, “There will emerge among you a group of people whose prayers, fasts, and deeds will make you think lowly of your own prayers, fasts, and deeds. They will recite the Qur’ān, but it will not go beyond their throats…”

Al-Bukhārī and Muslim

His Excellent Preaching

The authentic Sunnah identifies this as another characteristic of the Khawārij.

`Alī narrated:

I heard the Prophet ﷺ saying, “Toward the end of time, there will come a group of people young in age and foolish of mind. Their speech will contain some of the best statements. They will pass through Islām like an arrow through its target: their faith will not go beyond their throats…”

Al-Bukhārī

Excellent preaching is not an indication of knowledge or faith, much less an indication that a person’s approach is correct.


His Rebuke of the Rulers

This was not done in accordance with the Sharī`ah (even though, yes, the rulers also failed to act in accordance with the Sharī`ah). The manner in which Mirdās and his Khārijī followers repudiated the rulers was inconsistent with the Sharī`ah because it took the following forms:

1. It was based on declaring Muslims disbelievers (takfīr) due to their sins.

Takfīr over sins is one of the hugest, most evil forms of bid`ah inflicted upon the Ummah.

2. They deemed it permissible to kill people whom they had no right to kill.

There is a report that points toward this second reason. I consider its chain of transmission ḥasan (fair) because it was narrated through the route of `Alī bin Zayd bin Jud`ān from al-Ḥasan al-Baṣrī.

Al-Ḥasan said:

I came to Qudāmah bin `Unzah al-`Anbarī and happened to find Mirdās Abū Bilāl [and some others] with him. Mirdās Abū Bilāl spoke and mentioned Islām, and I had not heard anyone describe Islām as eloquently as he did. He then mentioned the ruler and disparaged him, then mentioned some things that the people had innovated, then fell silent. [Some of the others present spoke in a similar fashion.] Qudāmah then said, “My brothers, I know all that you have mentioned today just as well as you know it. I disapprove of it just as you do. I am with you as long as you do not take up arms against us. If you do take up arms against us, then I will have nothing to do with you.” They all took up arms — they were the heads of the Khawārij.

Ibn Abī ‘l-Dunyā

3. They rebuked permissible things that were not worthy of censure in the first place.

This has been established through what Ziyād bin Kusayb al-`Adawī narrated. He said:

I was with Abū Bakrah, may Allāh be pleased with him, sitting below the minbar of `Abd-Allāh bin `Āmir while the latter delivered a sermon. `Abd-Allāh bin `Āmir had put on some fine clothing, so Abū Bilāl Mirdās bin Udayyah said, “Look at our leader wearing the clothing of immoral people (fussāq) while he preaches to us!” Abū Bakrah told him, “Be quiet! I heard the Messenger of Allāh ﷺ saying, ‘If someone belittles the ruler of Allāh on earth, then Allāh will belittle that person.’”

Al-Tirmidhī and others

4. They rebuked evil in a way that only served to make it worse.

It is obligatory to rebuke evil from a leader, or anyone else, in a manner that does not cause even greater harm. This is within the ability of [true] reformers (muṣliḥūn) and has nothing to do with the sort of rebuke that stems from ignorant zealotry.


His Supposed Karāmah

Consider how this was understood by one of the Imāms of the Salaf. I am referring to Abū al-`Āliyah al-Riyāhī, who was advising Abū Bilāl Mirdās not to revolt. A Khārijī man came to Abū al-`Āliyah and mentioned the alleged karāmah of Mirdās [that we related above], hoping to impress him and convince him to join the Khawārij. Abū al-`Āliyah’s opinion of the group did not budge. He offered his own explanation of the event: “The earth would have swallowed them up had Allāh not given them respite!”²


Abū Bilāl Mirdās was arrogant and deluded in his false knowledge. Hoping to prevent him from delving into something unsuitable for him, Al-Ḥasan al-Baṣrī once said, “Tell me [what you think of the following.] Two men went out to do something, but darkness overcame them. One of the men stopped and waited until the darkness had passed, then moved on. The other man plunged into the darkness. Which one of them was more correct?” Abū Bilāl arrogantly replied, “To me, the more correct one is whomever you think was more mistaken!”³

Young people: don’t be fooled by worship when it isn’t accompanied by knowledge!

Don’t be fooled by commanding good and forbidding evil when it isn’t accompanied by knowledge!

Don’t be deceived by bravery and strength in combat when it is practiced without right!

Don’t let the oppression of the rulers incite you to join those who, like the Khawārij, rebuke falsehood with falsehood!

I reckon that if Mirdās bin Udayyah were with us today, he would have been the leader of ISIS instead of al-Baghdādī. Ignorant, zealous youths would have described him as “the Shaykh, the Mujāhid, the Protector of the Sacred!”

Originally published 9 Ramaḍān 1435 / 7 July 2014.


  1. See e.g. al-Ṭabarī, Tārīkh al-Rusul wa ‘l-Mulūk; al-Balādhurī, Ansāb al-Ashrāf; and Ibn Athīr, Al-Kāmil fi ‘l-Tārīkh.
  2. Al-Mubarrad, Al-Kāmil fi ‘l-Lughah wa’l-Adab 3/186
  3. Al-Balādhurī, Ansāb al-Ashrāf 5/182

Categories
Spirituality

Understanding Tawakkul

Category: Spirituality

There is a difference between relying on Allāh and relying on your du`ā’ to Allāh. The first is true tawakkul. The second is merely self-admiration and vanity. It is being deluded by your own deed.

There is also a difference between trusting that Allāh will answer your du`ā’ out of His grace and generosity, and trusting that He will answer your du`ā’ because you believe that your own sincerity makes it deserving of an answer. The first is thinking the best of Allāh. The second is thinking the best of yourself! And what a difference there is between these two stations!

Categories
Spirituality

Our Attitudes Toward Sinners and the Righteous

Category: Spirituality

It is authentically reported from a number of the righteous Salaf—including Imām Mālik in his book, Al-Muwaṭṭa’—that they attributed the following words to to `Isā, peace be on him:

Do not look at people’s sins as though you are lords. Look at your own sins as though you are slaves. Some people are tested [through sin] and others are well, so show mercy to those who are being tested and thank Allāh for being well.

Al-Muwaṭṭa’

Anyone who judges others’ hearts to be sinful or immoral—looking down on them arrogantly due to their apparent actions, as though he owns the scales of deeds and has weighed his against theirs—has therefore put himself in the place of the Almighty Lord!

The true slave of Allāh, one whose heart is overflowing with servitude toward Him, shows mercy to sinners. He does not belittle or scorn them. At the same time, he does not go to extremes concerning righteous and obedient people. Although he loves and respects them, he examines them and considers how Allāh has blessed them. He praises Allāh for having enabled them to be close to Him. Thus, he looks at how Allāh has dealt with them more than he looks at how they have dealt with Allāh.

These two perspectives are connected. You will rarely encounter a person deficient in one of them unless they also have some imbalance in the other. Consequently, you will find that most of those who disdain sinners are themselves some of the most extreme in exaggerating the status of their shaykhs or others whom they admire.

Originally published 18 Jumādā al-Awwal 1434 / 30 March 2013.

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Spirituality

Was Strictness the Way of the Salaf?

Category: Spirituality

`Umayr bin Isḥāq, one of the discerning transmitters of the Tābi`īn, said:

The Companions of the Prophet ﷺ whom I met numbered more than those whom I could not meet, and I never found a people more lenient or less strict than they were in their daily lives.

Muṣannaf Ibn Abī Shaybah

This was a defining characteristic of knowledge and faith among the first generations, because they were true people of knowledge and faith. Strictness and declaring things haram were not signs of faith then as they are today!

People today have forbidden many different kinds of permissible leisure activity. They have become strict, employing various rationales for prohibiting what Allāh allowed. Sometimes, they claim that they are “blocking the path to evil” (sadd al-dharī`ah). At other times, they claim that a permissible activity constitutes “imitation of the disbelievers” (al-tashabbuh bi’l-kuffār). On yet other occasions, they claim that the religious text [allowing an activity] has actually been misunderstood.

Their growing heap of errors in strictness and prohibition has driven people away from the religion, making them less accepting of it. People have become uneasy with the religion instead of finding comfort and solace in it.

Had `Umayr bin Isḥāq seen these strict individuals, he would recognize the enormous difference between them and the Ṣaḥābah — may Allāh be pleased with them. He would see that our claim to follow the Salaf is quite a stretch indeed!

Originally published 1 Rajab 1434 H / 11 May 2013.

Categories
Belief Qur'an & Hadith

Love of the Prophet ﷺ and Love of Allāh Most High

Category: Belief / Qur’an & Hadith

“Some people have nearly driven me away from hearing a certain verse in Allāh’s book,” a person told me.

“I seek refuge in Allāh! Why is that?” I asked.

“Any time we mention our love for the Prophet ﷺ, they say that love means following,” he replied. “They then recite the verse, ‘Say: if you love Allāh, then follow me. Allāh will love you and forgive you your sins. Allāh is Most Forgiving, Ever Merciful.'”¹

“First of all,” I said, “their definition of love as ‘following’ is incorrect. Love is a sentiment of the heart. Following is one of the signs of love, but the opposite is not true; nor are they one and the same. Following being a sign of love does not mean that love can be defined as ‘following,’ because these are two different things.

“Secondly, a person can still love even if he falls short considerably when it comes to following. Consider the man who was frequently brought before the Prophet ﷺ for drinking alcohol. The Prophet ﷺ said, ‘He loves Allāh and His Messenger!’² Though the man committed a major sin repeatedly—which is a clear shortcoming in following—the Prophet ﷺ still affirmed that he loved Allāh and His Messenger!

“So in spite of this mistake in explaining love, you should love this verse more than others—even if you adopt this erroneous definition of loving the Prophet ﷺ!”

“How is that? By Allāh, come on!” he said eagerly.

“Tell them this,” I said. “The relationship between loving Allāh’s Messenger ﷺ and loving Allāh is so powerful that Allāh made one of the signs of sincere love for the Prophet ﷺ—following him and emulating his example—a sign of loving Allāh as well! Consequently, whoever loves the Prophet ﷺ loves Allāh through this love for His Messenger ﷺ! This verse is therefore evidence of the powerful connection between loving the Prophet ﷺ and loving his Creator, glory be to Him. This connection is inescapable, regardless of whether ‘love’ signifies following or the love of the heart.”

“You have brought relief to my heart,” my friend replied.

“That’s not all,” I continued. “Allāh has given more glad tidings to those who love His Messenger ﷺ—tidings in addition to the good news that they love Allāh Most High. And what great tidings they are! He has told them that He loves them because of their love for His Messenger!

“What news could be greater? What could show the virtue of loving the Prophet ﷺ more powerfully than this—that those who love the Prophet ﷺ have thereby loved Allāh? Moreover, by loving the Prophet ﷺ, they have attained the greatest of all goals: being loved by Allāh!

“Therefore, loving the Prophet ﷺ means that Allāh loves you and forgives you your sins! ‘Say: if you love Allāh, then follow me. Allāh will love you and forgive you your sins. Allāh is Most Forgiving, Ever Merciful.’

“From now on,” my friend said, “this will be the most promising verse in my eyes.”

“You have spoken the truth,” I told him. “It’s like what the Prophet ﷺ told the Bedouin who acknowledged that he fell short in deeds, but mentioned that He loved Allāh and His Messenger. The Prophet ﷺ told him, ‘You shall be with those whom you love.’³ The Companions—may Allāh be pleased with them—did not rejoice at anything as much as they rejoiced at hearing these words of the Prophet ﷺ to the Bedouin.

“Consider how love of Allāh’s Messenger ﷺ is linked to love of Allāh in this [next] ḥadīth. The Prophet ﷺ said, ‘Three qualities allow one who possesses them to taste the sweetness of faith: loving Allāh and His Messenger more than anything else…’ Why wasn’t it sufficient for him to mention loving Allāh alone?

“This is an indication of the powerful connection between the two loves. How could it be otherwise when these two loves are included in the testimony of faith (shahādah)? ‘I bear witness that there is no god but Allāh; I bear witness that Muḥammad is the Messenger of Allāh.’ A person’s faith (īmān) is not valid in the first place unless he loves Allāh Most High and His Messenger ﷺ. Anyone who hates Allāh’s Messenger ﷺ has disbelieved, and his testimony that there is ‘no god but Allāh’ will not benefit him in the least! Do you see how important loving the Prophet ﷺ is to Allāh Most High?”

Originally published 16 Shawwāl 1434 / 23 August 2013.


  1. Qur’ān, Āl `Imrān 31.
  2. Al-Bukhārī.
  3. Al-Bukhārī.
  4. Al-Bukhārī.