Thursday, the 25th of Rabi’ ath-Thani 1437 (4th of February 2016)
Marion CMU
An article I recently read discusses how television affects our
minds. It states that “what happens to the brain is the frontal lobe –
our brain’s most sophisticated control system, responsible for
organizing, planning, and sequencing behavior for self-control, moral
judgment, and attention – is completely subdued when watching
television. This is the same mechanism involved in hypnosis, and like
hypnosis, TV reduces our ability to analyze critically what we are being
told and what we see.”
Because we live in an era when even the news is laced with fiction,
this leads to a more fatal effect. Without you realizing it, television
wires you to become more comfortable with fantasy & illusion. This,
in turn, wires you to put less value on authenticity & truth.
But even when interacting with children, the Prophet (saws) forbade the most benign forms of falsehood: “If any
of you tells a child ‘Come here, take this’ only to not give him
anything, this is a lie.” So, as ‘A’ishah said, “there was no
characteristic the Sahabah hated more than dishonesty. A man would tell a
lie in the presence of Allah’s Messenger, and he’d hold it against him
until he knew that he’d repented from it.” This attitude was carried
over to the Tabi’in, as al-Qadi Shurayk an-Nakha’i was asked: “I heard a
man intentionally lying. Can I pray behind him?” He replied: “No.” And
it was carried over to the next generation, as whenever Imam Ahmad would
see one of the People of the Book, he’d shut his eyes and explain that
“I can’t stand looking at someone who has lied against Allah.” In fact,
he reported in his ‘Musnad’ that the Prophet commanded us to flee from
lying du’at, as Hudhayfah said that “the Sahabah used to ask Allah’s
Messenger about good, and I used to ask him about evil. So I asked him:
“Messenger of Allah, will there be evil after this good?”
I asked: “What will protect us from it?”
He replied: “The sword.”
I asked: “What will happen next?”
He replied: “There will be an uneasy calm.”
I asked: “Then what?”
He replied: “Then there will emerge callers to misguidance (du’at
ad-dalalah). So if you see a khalifah on Earth, stick to him even if he
beats you and takes your wealth. If you don’t see him, flee throughout
the land even if you must die while biting onto a tree stump.”
I asked: “Then what?”
He replied: “Then the Dajjal will emerge…””
This narration was declared authentic by al-Albani. Imam Ahmad
reported another authentic hadith instructing us on how to deal with the
Dajjal himself: “Whoever hears that the Dajjal has emerged should stay
away from him (the Prophet said this three times), because someone will
approach him thinking him to be a believer, then stick to him due to his
deceptive arguments, then end up following him.”
Indeed, one of the signs of the end of time is that the wrong people
are followed while the wrong people are demonized, as the Prophet said
that “before the Hour are years of deception. In them, the truthful is
belied, the liar is believed, the trustworthy is considered treacherous,
and the treacherous is trusted.” In particular, people will become
increasingly comfortable with the munafiqin, as Imam Ahmad said that “a
time will come upon people when a believer is like a corpse amongst
them, and they instead point to the munafiq with their fingers (i.e.,
out of respect).” And with time, the munafiqun themselves become
increasingly comfortable displaying their nifaq, as Hudhayfah once said
that “the munafiqun today are worse than they were in the Prophet’s
days. Back then, they hid their nifaq. Today, they openly display it.”
And he said that “during the days of Allah’s Messenger, a man would
utter a single statement that would turn him into a munafiq. Today, I
hear one of you repeating it ten times in a single sitting.”
Hudhayfah said this while addressing the Tabi’in, roughly 1,400 years
ago. If he were to hear some of the munafiqin today, he’d probably wish
for a quick death.
Part of the reason nifaq has become so common & widely accepted
over the past two years is that many hearts are too overwhelmed by it to
see it for what it is. Like the effect of hypnosis or television on
your ability to critically analyze, the Prophet confirmed that your
heart can reach the point where “it doesn’t recognize any good or repel
any evil.” Only a person who genuinely tries to cling to the Shari’ah in
the midst of this will be protected from confusion, as Allah said that
{“if you have taqwa of Allah, He will give you a furqan.”} (8:29)
Commenting on this ayah, ash-Shawkani wrote that “taqwa is to beware of
violating His commands and falling into His prohibitions, while the
furqan is what’s used to distinguish truth from falsehood. This means
that He will strengthen your heart, sharpen your perception, and perfect
your guidance so that you can distinguish between the two when there’s
confusion.”
Imam Malik was perceptive enough to point out that “the last of this
ummah won’t be corrected by anything other than what corrected the first
of it.” This means adopting a Sahabah-like attitude, viewing the world
as they did, and defining terms as they did. Because of the prevalence
of confusion, learning this is more crucial for us than it was for those
before us. Ibn Mas’ud once told his students that “you live in a time
when deeds are more incumbent than seeking knowledge. But a time will
come when seeking knowledge is more incumbent than deeds.” This
knowledge is gained by studying, and the most crucial matters to study
are: how did the Salaf define Iman? Kufr? Nifaq? Riddah? Their
understanding of the Din is what the Prophet was referring to when he
said that all of the Muslim sects will be in Hell “and one will be in
Paradise, and they are the Jama’ah.”
Imam Abu Shamah said that “whenever you come across the command to
stick to the Jama’ah, it means to stick to the truth & its
followers, even if those clinging to it are few and their opponents are
many. This is because the truth is defined as what the first jama’ah –
the generation of the Prophet & the Sahabah – were following. Don’t
look to the fact that many people after them follow bid’ah.” He then
mentioned that Ibn Mas’ud asked ‘Amr bin Maymun: “Do you know what the
Jama’ah is?” ‘Amr replied: “No.” Ibn Mas’ud explained that “the majority
of people have left the Jama’ah. The Jama’ah is whatever complies with
obedience to Allah.” Nu’aym bin Hammad explained that “this means that
if the Jama’ah becomes corrupt, stick to what it followed before it
became corrupt, even if you find yourself all alone. This is because in
such a case, you are the Jama’ah.”
Our concern, therefore, is the purity of belief rather than how many
people approve of it. The mushrikun asked the Prophet for one concession
in exchange for the sought-after goal of them worshipping Allah, but
Allah Himself revealed that “they were about to tempt you away from
what I revealed to you so that you’d fabricate something against Me
instead. In that case, they would’ve certainly taken you as a close
friend! Had I not kept you firm, you would’ve nearly inclined to them
slightly.” (17:73-74) Ibn ‘Abbas explained that “the Prophet was
protected from this. But this is a lesson for the Ummah that none of us
should compromise with the mushrikin in any of the rulings of the
Shari’ah.”
Commenting on the same ayat – which, by the way, were revealed during
the Makkan period – Sayyid Qutb wrote that “these attempts from which
Allah protected His Messenger are the same attempts always made by the
authorities with those involved in da’wah. They try to trick them into
deviating – even if slightly – from the solidity of the da’wah into a
compromise in exchange for the promise of a great reward. There are some
du’at who are tempted away from their da’wah because they don’t
consider this to be a big deal. The authorities don’t ask that he
totally abandon his da’wah. Rather, they request minor adjustments so
that both sides can meet in the middle of the road. From this opening,
the Shaytan enters on the da’i, convincing him that the interests of the
da’wah necessitate winning over those in authority – even if this
involves compromising on some of it! The da’i who agrees to surrender
even a sliver of it won’t stop there… His willingness to compromise will
only increase whenever he’s forced to take a step back. Thus, the
authorities gradually entrap the du’at.”
Those who refuse the offer can sometimes literally be counted on one
hand. Ibn Kathir wrote that out of all the scholars subjected to the
Mihnah, “those who stayed firm, completely refusing to affirm, were
five: Ahmad bin Hambal, who was their leader; Muhammad bin Nuh
al-Jundaysaburi, who died when he & Ahmad were being taken to
al-Ma’mun; Nu’aym bin Hammad al-Khuza’i, who died in prison; Abu Ya’qub
al-Buwayti, who died shackled in prison, and requested in his will that
he be buried in his shackles; and Ahmad bin Nasr al-Khuza’i (who was
executed in prison)…”
These were the radicals of their time. In fact, their mihnah wasn’t
much different from ours: Western ideas (back then, it was Greek
philosophy) are used to castrate Islam through re-interpretation of its
texts (back then, those concerning Allah’s names & attributes).
Everyone has a choice to make. Those who sell out keep their jobs and
get a pat on the back. Those who hold out pay the price. Regarding the
latter, Ibn al-Qayyim wrote in his ‘Nuniyyah’:
And Allah won’t let the difficulties suffered for His sake go to waste;
The lone servant’s contentment despite the flood of enemies and few allies indicates true certainty, love, and real understanding;
It’s enough weakness & loneliness that he has few allies amidst the troops of Shaytan;
Everyday, one group attacks. When it retreats, another takes its place;
Ask this lone stranger what he experiences at the hands of countless enemies;
It seems like it’ll never end, and it’s been so long after the era of goodness;
This is why he’s like a man holding a burning coal. So ask about the heat of this fire that he feels inside;
Allah knows what he feels in his heart. It’s enough that He knows;
There’s something in the heart that none can estimate except the One who gives it to the human being;
Goodness, Tawhid, patience, contentment, gratitude, and implementation of the Qur’an…
The lone servant’s contentment despite the flood of enemies and few allies indicates true certainty, love, and real understanding;
It’s enough weakness & loneliness that he has few allies amidst the troops of Shaytan;
Everyday, one group attacks. When it retreats, another takes its place;
Ask this lone stranger what he experiences at the hands of countless enemies;
It seems like it’ll never end, and it’s been so long after the era of goodness;
This is why he’s like a man holding a burning coal. So ask about the heat of this fire that he feels inside;
Allah knows what he feels in his heart. It’s enough that He knows;
There’s something in the heart that none can estimate except the One who gives it to the human being;
Goodness, Tawhid, patience, contentment, gratitude, and implementation of the Qur’an…
This “flood of enemies” was promised by Shaytan: “Then I’ll come at
them from in front of them, from behind them, from their right, and from
their left…" (7:17) But as Ibn ‘Abbas said, “he couldn’t say ‘and from
above them’ because he knew that Allah is above them.” Indeed, one of
the miracles of our time is that the forces of the world – even the most
bitter of historical enemies – have all set aside their differences and
joined forces in an unprecedented manner to wipe out a simple
principle, yet their opponents won’t budge from this principle, instead
giving the response Imam Ahmad gave as he regained consciousness from
each bloody beating: “Give me something from the Book of Allah or the
Sunnah of His Messenger, and I’ll affirm it.” In fact, this is the
greatest miracle possible, as Ibn Taymiyyah said that “the greatest
miracle is to maintain istiqamah.”
Just as people today are inspired by Imam Ahmad, he was likewise
inspired by those before him who loved the truth more than their own
lives. Describing an incident during the Mihnah when Imam Ahmad was in
ar-Raqqah (may Allah protect it), Muhammad bin Ibrahim al-Bushanji said
that “when they were in ar-Raqqah, they began to remind Abu ‘Abdillah of
narrations proving that he could verbally affirm in order to save
himself. So he replied: “What will you do with the hadith of Khabbab
which says that from those who came before you was a man who was sawn in
half, but he still wouldn’t abandon his din?” So we lost hope in being
able to convince him.”
The fact that Imam Ahmad ended up surviving the savage beatings he
was made to endure in prison is besides the point, as Ibn al-Jawzi wrote
that “his beautiful reputation didn’t spread randomly, and people
didn’t make their way to his grave except for something amazing. What
praise that filled the horizons, and what beauty that beautified
existence, and what honor that wiped out dishonor! All of this was in
this life, while the later reward is indescribable. On the other hand,
reflect on the graves of most scholars: unknown & ignored. They took
the easy way out, clung to convenient interpretations, and associated
with the authorities. So the blessing of their knowledge vanished, their
dignity was erased, and they drank from the fountain of regret on their
deathbeds…”
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