t3.1
(Muhammad Sa`id Burhani:) Do not limit yourself to deep words
and profound spiritual allusions but make provision for the
afterlife before death comes, when fine words will be lost and
the rak`as you prayed by night or day will remain..
t3.2
Give voluntary charity as much as possible, for you owe more
than merely the zakat obligatory. Make provision for the
afterlife by giving while you have health and want to cling to
your money out of fear of poverty, seeing life before you.
Allah Most High says, "Whoever is watchful against the
stinginess of his own soul, those shall be the successful''
(Koran 59:9), meaning they shall be saved.
t3.3
Never obey anyone of Allah's servants, even father or mother,
in an act of disobedience to Allah, for there is no obedience
to a creature in disobedience to the Creator.
t3.4 Do
not wrong another person, for wrongs done to others are clouds
of darkness on the Day of Judgement. Wronging others includes
not doing what Allah has obliged you to do for them.
t3.5
Beware of enmity against anyone who has said, "La ilaha ill
Allah' (There is no god but Allah), for Allah has honored them
with faith, and particularly the righteous of them, for Allah
Most High says in a rigorously authenticated (sahih) hadith,
"He who makes an enemy of a friend of Mine, I declare war
against,''
t3.6
Tell the truth when you speak. It is one of the worst betrayals
to tell your brother something he thinks you are being honest
about when the matter is otherwise.
t3.7 Be
honest in your clothes and dress. It is an outrage against
Allah to appear to His servants in the guise of the righteous
while secretly contradicting it with the works of the wicked.
t3.8
Recite the Koran and contemplate its meanings. Reflect while
reading it on the qualities Allah has praised, with which He
describes the people He loves. Acquire these qualities yourself
and shun those Allah has condemned. Do your utmost of memorize
the Holy Koran by acts as you do by words.
t3.9
Never explain a verse of Holy Koran by your own opinion, but
check as to how it has been understood by the scholars of
Sacred Law and men of wisdom who came before you. If you
comprehend something else by it and what you have understood
contradicts the Sacred Law, forsake your wretched opinion and
fling it against the wall.
t3.10
Beware lest you ever say anything that does not conform to the
Sacred Law. Know that the highest stage of the perfected ones (rijal)
is the Sacred Law of Muhammad (Allah bless him and give him
peace). And know that the exoteric that contravenes the
exoteric is a fraud.
t3.11
Take care to eat lawful food bought with a lawful income, for
the entire body of someone who eats what is lawful, his
hearing, eyesight, hands, and feet, are disposed to obey Allah
whether he wishes to or not; while the whole body of someone
who eats the unlawful is disposed to do wrong whether he wants
to or not.
t3.12
Keep the thought of Allah Mighty and Majestic ever before you
with respect to what He takes from you and what He gives. He
takes away nothing except that you may show patience and win
His love, for He loves the patient, and when He loves you, He
will treat you as a lover does his beloved. And so too, when He
gives to you, He bestows blessings upon you that you may give
thanks, for He loves the thankful.
t3.13
Do not walk a step, take a bite, or make a move without
intending thereby to draw nearer to Allah.
t3.14
Perform the remembrance of Allah (dhikr) silently and aloud, in
a group and when alone, for Allah Most High says, "Remember Me:
I will remember you'' (Koran 2:152).
It is
sufficient as to its worth that Allah is remembering you as
long as you are remembering Him.
t3.15
Give frequent utterance to the axiom of Islam "La ilaha ill
Allah'' (There is no god but Allah), for it is the greatest
invocation (dhikr), as is mentioned in the hadith, "The best
thins I or any of the prophets before me have said is 'La ilaha
ill Allah.'''
And in
a hadith qudsi, "Were the seven heavens and seven earths placed
on one side of a balance scale and'`La ilaha ill Allah' placed
on the other, the latter would outweigh them all.''
t3.16
Train you children in points of Islamic behavior so they grow
up to be Muslims who love Islam and respect the religion of
Islam.
t3.17
Do not seek exaltation on earth, but have humility in whatever
degree Allah has raised you to. For Allah has brought you forth
from the earth, you mother, and it is unseemly to exalt
yourself above her. As a hadith says, "Allah has charged
Himself to raise nothing in this world, save that He will lower
it again.''
So if
you are such a thing, you may expect to be lowered by Allah.
t3.18
Always visit those who are ill, as it helps one reflect and
take admonition, for someone ill is close to Allah. One has
only to consider that the sick person has no one to call upon
but Allah, nothing to reflect on but Allah, and his condition
reminds one of the blessing of health (al-Hall al-sadid li ma
astashkalahu al-murid (y46), 29-32).
Shaykh Muhammad Sa'id Burhani was a major Damascene Hanafi
faqih and Sufi.