The Meaning of Islam
ISLAM is derived from the Arabic root
"SALEMA": peace, purity, submission and obedience. In the
religious sense, Islam means submission to the will of God and
obedience to His law.
Everything and every
phenomenon in the world, other than man is administered TOTALLY
by God-made laws i.e. they are obedient to God and submissive to
His laws i.e. they are in the STATE OF ISLAM. Man possesses the
quality of intelligence and choice, thus he is invited to submit
to the good will of God and obey His law ie. become a Muslim.
Submission to the good will of God, together with obedience to
His beneficial law, i.e. becoming a Muslim is the best safeguard
for man's peace and harmony.
Islam dates back to the
edge of Adam and its message has been conveyed to man by God's
Prophets and Messengers including Abrahim, Moses, Jesus and
Muhammad. Islam's message has been restored and enforced in the
last stage of the religious evolution by God's last Prophet and
Messenger Muhammad.
The word Allah in the
Arabic language means God, or more accurately The One and Only
Eternal God, Creator of theUniverse, Lord of all lords, King of
all kings, MostCompassionate, Most Merciful. The word Allah to
mean God is also used by Arabic speaking Jews and Christians.
Articles of Faith
Allah, the One and
Only God
A muslim believes in ONE
GOD, Supreme and Eternal, Infinite and Mighty, Merciful and
Compassionate, Creator and Provider. God has no father nor
mother, no sons nor was He fathered. None equal to Him. He is God
of all mankind, not of a special tribe or race.
God is High and Supreme
but He is very near to the pious thoughtful believers; He answers
their prayers and help them. He loves the people who love Him and
forgives their sins. He gives them peace, happiness, knowledge
and success. God is the Loving and the Provider, the Generous,
and the Benevolent, the Rich and the Independent the Forgiving
and the Clement, the Patient and the Appreciative, the Unique and
the Protector, the Judge and the Peace. God's attributes are
mentioned in the Quran.
God creates in man the
mind to understand, the soul and conscience to be good and
righteous, the feelings and sentiments to be kind and humane. If
we try to count His favours upon us, we cannot, because they are
countless. In return for all the great favours and mercy, God
does not need anything from us, because He is Needless and
Independent. God asks us to know Him, to love Him and to enforce
His law for our benefit and our own benefit and our own good.
Messengers and
Prophets of God
A Muslim believes in all
the Messengers and Prophets of God without any discrimination.
All messengers were mortals, human beings, endowed with Divine
revelations and appointed by God to teach mankind. The Holy Quran
mentions the names of 25 messengers and prophets and states that
there are others. These include Noah, Abrahim, Ishmael, Isaac,
Moses, Jesus and Muhammad. Their message is the same and it is
Islam and it came from One and the Same Source; God, and it is to
submit to His will and to obey His law; i.e., to become a Muslim.
Revelations and the
Quran
A Muslim believes in all
scriptures and revelations of God, as they were complete and in
their original versions. Allah, the Creator, has not left man
without guidance for the conduct of his life. Revelations were
given to guide the people to the right path of Allah and sent
down to selected people, the prophet and messengers, to convey it
to their fellow men.
The message of all the
prophet and messengers is the same. They all asked the people of
their time to obey and worship Allah and none other. Abrahim,
Moses, David, Jesus and Muhammad who were revealed their own book
of Allah, were sent at different times to bring back straying
human being from deviation to Right Course.
The Quran is the sacred
book of the Muslims. It is the last book of guidance from Allah,
sent down to Muhammad, peace be upon him, through the angel
Jibraeel (Gabriel). Every word of it is the word of Allah. It was
revealed over a period of 23 years in the Arabic language. It
contains 114 Surahs (chapters) and over 6000 verses.
The Quran deals with man
and his ultimate goal in life. Its teachings cover all areas of
this life and the life after death. It contains principles,
doctrines and directions for every sphere of human life. The
theme of the Quran broadly consists of three fundamental ideas:
Oneness of Allah, Prophethood and life after death. The success
of human beings on this earth and in the life hereafter depends
on obedience to the Quranic teaching.
The Quran is unrivalled
in its recording and prservation. The astonishing fact about this
book of Allah is that it has remained unchanged even to a dot
over the past fourteen hundred years. No scholar has questioned
the fact that the Quran today is the same as it was revealed.
Muslims till today memorize the Quran word by word as a whole or
in part. Today, the Quran is the only authentic and complete book
of Allah. Allah is protecting it from being lost, corrupted or
concealed.
The Angels of Allah
There are purely
spiritual and splendid beings created by Allah. They require no
food or drink or sleep. They have no physical desires nor
material needs. Angels spend their time in the service of Allah.
Each charged with a certain duty. Angels cannot be seen by the
naked eyes. Knowledge and the truth are not entirely confined to
sensory knowledge or sensory perception alone.
The Day of Judgement
A Muslim believes in the
Day of the Judgement. This world as we know it will come to an
end and the dead will rise to stand for their final and fair
trial. On that day, all men and women from Adam to the last
person will be resurrected from the state of death for judgement.
Everything we do, say, make, intend and think are accounted for
and kept in accurate records. They are brought up on the Day of
Judgement. One who believe in life after death is not expected to
behave against the Will of Allah. He will always bear in mind
that Allah is watching all his actions and the angels are
recording them.
People with good records
will be generously rewarded and warmly welcomed to Allah's
Heaven. People with bad records will be fairly punished and cast
into Hell. The real nature of Heaven and Hell are known to Allah
only, but they are described by Allah in man's familiar terms in
the Quran.
If some good deeds are
seen not to get full appreciation and credit in this life, they
will receive full compensation and be widely acknowledged on the
Day of Judgement. If some people who commit sins, neglect Allah
and indulge in immoral activities, seem SUPERFICIALLY successful
and prosperous in this life, absolute justice will be done to
them on the Day of Judgement. The time of the Day of Judgement is
only known to Allah and Allah alone.
Qadaa and Qadar
A Muslim believes in
Qadaa and Qadar which related to the ultimate power of Allah.
Qadaa and Qadar means the Timeless Knowledge of Allah and His
power to plan and execute His plans. Allah is not indifferent to
this world nor is He neutral to it. It implies that everything on
this earth originates from the one and only creator who is also
the Sustainer and the sole source of guidance.
Allah is Wise, Just and
Loving and whatever He does must have a good motive, although we
may fail sometimes to understand it fully. We should have strong
faith in Allah and accept whatever He does because our knowledge
is limited and our thinking is based on individual consideration,
whereas His knowledge is limitless and He plans on a universal
basis. Man should think, plan and make sound choice, but if
things do not happen the way he wants, he should not lose faith
and surrender himself to mental strains or shattering worries.
The Purpose of Life
A Muslim believe that the
purpose of life is to worship Allah. Worshipping Allah does not
mean we spend our entire lives in constant seclusion and absolute
meditation. To worship Allah is to live life according to His
commands, not to run away from it. To worship Allah is to know
Him, to love Him, to obey His commands, to enforce His laws in
every aspect of life, to serve His cause by doing right and
shunning evil and to be just to Him, to ourselves and to our
fellow human beings.
Status of Human Being
A Muslim believes that
human being enjoys an especially high ranking status in the
hierarchy of all known creatures. Man occupies this distinguished
position because he alone is gifted with rational faculties and
spiritual aspirations as well as powers of action. Man is not a
condemned race from birth to death, but a dignified being
potentially capable of good and noble achievements. A Muslim also
believes that every person is born muslim. Every person is
endowed by Allah with spiritual potential and intellectual
inclination that can make him a good Muslim. Every person's birth
takes place according to the will of Allah in realization of His
plans and in submission to His commands. Every person is born
FREE FROM SIN. When the person reaches the age of maturity and if
he is sane, he become accountable for all his deeds and
intentions. Man is free from sin until he commits sin. There is
no inherited sin, no original sin. Adam committed the first sin,
he prayed to Allah for pardon and Allah granted Adam pardon.
Salvation
A Muslim believes that
man must work out his salvation through the guidance of Allah. No
one can act on behalf of another or intercede between him and
Allah. In order to obtain salvation, a person must combine faith
and action, belief and practice. Faith without doing good deeds
is as insufficient as doing good deeds without faith. Also, a
Muslim believes that Allah does not hold any person responsible
until he has shown him the Right Way. If people do not know and
have no way of knowing about Islam, they will not be responsible
for failing to be Muslim. Every Muslim must preach Islam in words
and action.
Acceptance of Faith
A Muslim believes that
faith is not complete when it is followed blindly or accepted
unquestioningly. Man must build his faith on well-grounded
convictions beyond any reasonable doubt and above uncertainty.
Islam insures freedom to believe and forbids compulsion in
religion (one of the oldest synagogues and one of the oldest
churches in the worlds is in Muslim countries).
A Muslim believes that
the Quran is the word of Allah revealed to prophet Muhammad
through the Angel Gabriel. The Quran was revealed from revealed
from
Allah on various
occasions to answer questions, solve problems, settle dbe man's
best guide to the truth. The Quran was revealed in Arabic and it
is still in its original and complete Arabic version until today.
It is memorized by millions. A Muslim also believes in a clear
distinction between the Quran and the Traditions (called Hadits)
of the Prophet Muhammad. Whereas, the Quran is the word of Allah,
the Traditions of Prophet Muhammad (hadits i.e.: his teachings,
sayings, and actions) are the practical interpretations of the
Quran. Both the Quran and the Hadits of Prophet Muhammad are the
primary sources of knowledge in Islam.
Application of Faith
God has laid down for a
Muslim four major exercises of faith, some are daily, some
weekly, some monthly, some annually and some are required as a
minimum of once in a lifetime. These exercises of faith are to
serve man's spiritual purposes, satisfy his human needs and to
mark his whole life with a Divine touch. These major exercises of
faith are:
Prayer (Salah)
Praying, to the Creator
on a daily basis, is the best way to cultivate in a man a sound
personality and to actualize his aspiration. Allah does not need
man's prayer because He is free of all needs. Salah is for our
benefit which are immeasurable and the blessings are beyond
imagination.
In salah, every muscle of
the body joins the soul and the mind in the worship and glory of
Allah. Salah is an act of worship. It is a matchless and
unprecedented formula of intellectual meditation and spiritual
devotion, of moral elevation and physical exercise, all combined.
Offering of salah is
obligatory upon every Muslim male and female who is sane, mature
and in case of women free from menstruation and confinement due
to child birth. Requirements of salah: performing of ablution (Wudu),
purity of the whole body, clothes and ground used for prayer,
dressing properly and having (or declaring) the intention and
facing the Qiblah; the direction of the Ka'bah at Mecca.
Obligatory Salah: Five
daily salahs, the Friday's noon congregation salah and the
funeral salah.
Highly recommended salah:
Those accompanying the obligatory salah and the two great
festival salahs.
Optional salah: Voluntary
salah during the day and night.
Times of Obligatory Salah:
1. Early Morning - after
dawn and before sunrise.
2. Noon - after the sun
begins to decline from its zenith until it is about midway on its
course to set.
3. Mid-afternoon - after
the expiration of the noon salah time until sunset.
4. Sunset - immediately
after sunset until the red glow in the western horizon
disappears.
5. Evening - after the
expiration of the sunset salah until dawn. Salah should be
offered in its due time, unless there is a reasonable excuse.
Delayed obligatory salah must be made up. In addition to the
prescribed salah, a Muslim expressed gratitude to God and
appreciation of His favours and asks for His mercy all the time.
Especially at times of, for example: childbirth, marriage, going
to or rising from bed, leaving and returning to his home,
starting a journey or entering a city, riding or driving, before
or after eating or drinking, harvesting, visiting graveyards and
at time of distress and sickness.
Fasting
Fasting is abstaining
completely from eating, drinking, intimate sexual contacts and
smoking from the break of dawn till sunset. It is a matchless
Islamic institution which teaches man the principle of sincere
love to God. Fasting teaches man a creative sense of hope,
devotion, patience, unselfishness, moderation, willpower, wise
saving, sound budgeting, mature adaptability, healthy survival,
discipline, spirit of social belonging, unity and brotherhood.
Obligatory fasting is done once a year for the period of the
month of Ramadan; the ninth month of the Islamic year.
Recommended fasting every Monday and Thursday of every week,
three days in the middle of each Islamic month, six days after
Ramadan following the Feast Day and a few days of the two months
before Ramadan. Fasting of Ramadan is a worship act which is
obligatory on every adult Muslim, male or female if he/she
mentally and physically fit and not on a journey. Exception:
women during their period of menstruation and while nursing their
child and also in case of travel and sickness.
Charity Giving (Zakah)
Charity giving is an act
of worship and spiritual investment. The lateral meaning of Zakah
is purity and it refers to the annual amount in kind or coin
which a Muslim with means must distribute among the rightful
beneficiaries. Zakah does not only purifies the property of the
contributor but also purifies his heart from selfishness and
greed. It also purifies the heart of the recipient from envy and
jealousy, from hatred and uneasiness and it fosters instead
good-will and warm wishes for the contributors.
Zakah has a deep
humanitarian and social-political value; for example, it frees
society from class welfare, from ill feelings and distrust and
from corruption. Although Islam does not hinder private
enterprise or condemn private possession, it does not tolerate
selfish and greedy capitalism. Islam adopts a moderate but
positive and effective course between individual and society,
between the citizen and the state, between capitalism and
socialism, between materialism and spiritualism. Zakah is paid on
the net balance after paying personal expenses, family expenses,
due credits, taxes, etc. Every Muslim, male or female who at the
end of the year is in possession of the equivalent of 85 g of
gold (approx. $1400 in 1990) or more in cash or articles of
trade, must give Zakah at minimum rate of 2.5%. Taxes paid to
government do not substitute for this religious duty. Contributor
should not seek pride or fame but if disclosing his name and his
contribution is likely to encourage others, it is acceptable to
do so. The recipient of Zakah are: the poor, the needy, the new
Muslim converts, the Muslim prisoners of war (to liberate them),
Muslim in debt. Also employees appointed to collect Zakah, Muslim
in service of research or study or propagation of Islam,
wayfarers who are foreigners in need of help.
The Pilgrimmage
(Hajj)
It is a pilgrimage to
Mecca, at least once in a lifetime and it is obligatory upon
every Muslim male and female who is mentally, physically and
financially fit. It is the largest annual convention of faith on
earth (in 1989: 2.5 million). Peace is the dominant theme. Peace
with Allah, with one's soul, with one another, with all living
creatures. To disturb the peace of anyone or any creature in any
shape or form is strictly prohibited.
Muslim from all walks of
life, from every corner of the globe assemble in Mecca in
response to the call of Allah. There is no royalty but loyalty of
all to Allah, the Creator. It is to commemorate the Divine
rituals observed by the Prophet Abrahim and his son Ishmael, who
are the first pilgrim to the house of Allah on earth; the Ka'bah.
It is also to remember the grad assembly of the Day of Judgement
when people will stand equal before Allah.
Muslims go to Mecca in
glory of Allah, not to worship a man. The visit to the tomb of
Prophet Muhammad at Madena is highly recommended but not
essential in making the Hajj valid and complete.
Islam is a Code of
Life
It is a Muslim belief
that Muhammad's mission was for the whole world and for all the
time; because:
Its universality has been
clearly confirmed by the Quran (Surah 7: verse 158, 6:19, 34:28,
81:27).
It is a logical
consequences of the finality of his prophethood. He had to be the
guide and the leader for all men and for all ages.
Allah has provided,
through him, a complete code which is to be followed, and this in
itself supports the concept of finality, because without
completeness, the need for other prophets would remain.
It is a fact that during
the last 1400 years no man has arisen whose life and works bear
even the slightest resemblance to that of a prophet. Nor has
anyone presented a book which could be remotely considered a
divine communication. Still less has there been a man to claim
legitimate authority as a law-giver fro mankind. The mission of
Muhammad, as well as of other prophets who brought the universal
message of Islam, does not end with the announcement of the
message. He has to guide the people by explaining to them the
implications of the Islamic creed, the morale code, the divine
injunctions and commandment, and the form of worship that
sustains the whole system. He has to exemplify the faith so
others can pattern their participation in the evolution of
Islamic culture and civilization. The believers must grow under
his guidance into an organized community so that Allah's word
will prevail over all other words.
1. Spiritual Life: prayer
(salah), fasting, charity giving (zakah), pilgrimage (hajj), love
for Allah and His Messenger, love for truth and humanity for the
sake of Allah, hope and trust in Allah at all times and doing
good for the sake of Allah.
2. Intellectual Life:
True knowledge based on clear proof and indisputable evidence
acquired by experience or experiment or by both. The Quran points
to the rich sources of knowledge in the whole universe. Islam
demands faith in Allah on the basis of knowledge and research and
leaves wide open all field of thought before the intellect to
penetrate as far it can reach.
3. Personal Life: purity
and cleanliness, a healthy diet, proper clothing, proper
behaviour, and good healthy sexual relations within marriage.
4. Family Life: A family
is a human social group whose members are bound together by the
bond of blood ties and/or marital relationship and nothing else
(adoption, mutual alliance, common law, trial marriage...etc.).
Marriage is a religious duty on all who are capable of meeting
its responsibilities. Each member of the family has rights and
obligations.
5. Social Life: Man is
ordained by Allah to extend his utmost help and kindness to other
family members, relations, servants and neighbours. No
superiority on account of class, colour, origin or wealth.
Humanity represents one family springing from the one and the
same father and mother. The unity of the humanity is not only in
its origin but also in its ultimate aims.
6. Economical Life:
Earning one's living through decent labour is not only a duty but
a great virtue as well. Earning is man's private possession. The
individual is responsible for the prosperity of the state and the
state is responsible for the security of the individual. The
Islamic economic system is not based on arithmetical calculations
alne but also on moral and principles. Man comes to this world
empty-handed and departs empty-handed. The real owner of things
is Allah alone. Man is simply a trustee.
7. Political Life: The
sovereignty in the Islamic State belongs to Allah; the people
exercise it by trust from Him to enforce His laws. The ruler is
only an acting executive chosen by the people to serve them
according to Allah's law. The State is to administer justice and
provide security for all citizens. Rulers and administrators must
be chosen from the best qualified citizens. If an administration
betrays the trust of Allah and the people, it has to be replaced.
Non-Muslim can administer their personal life of marriage,
divorce, foods and inheritance according to the Islamic law or to
their own religious teachings. They may pay Zakah or a different
tax tributes "Jizyah". They are entitled to full protection and
security of the State including freedom of religion.
8. International Life:
Man has a common origin, human status and aim. Other people's
interests and right to life, honour and property are respected as
long as the right of Muslim are in tact. Transgression is
forbidden. War is only justified if the state security is
endangered. During war, destruction of crops, animals and homes,
killing non-fighting women, children and aged people are
forbidden.