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What Islam Stands For
By S. A. Maududi
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Islam is not the name of some unique faith
presented for the first time
by Mohammad (SAW) who
should, on that account, be called the founder of Islam.
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What distinguishes Mohammad (saw) from other Prophets?
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As Muslims, we believe in all the Prophets who preceded
Mohammad (saw).
But for instruction we turn to Prophet
Mohammad (saw) alone. Not on account of any prejudice, but because:
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Mohammad's (saw) mission was for the world as a whole, and for all times; for
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Why God communicated with man through His Prophet?
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The work of a Prophet is not limited.
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The mission of A Prophet does not end with the announcement of this way of life.
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The audience of the Quran and Prophet Mohammad (saw) was the whole of mankind.
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Belief in one God.
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The Islamic concept of God.
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Belief in Mohammad's (saw) Prophethood.
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The position of the Prophet.
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The belief in the Hereafter (Akhira).
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Belief in the Hereafter divides people into three distinct categories.
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Islam represents a whole civilization.
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Islam is not the name of some unique faith presented for the
first time by Mohammad (peace be upon him) who should, on that
account, be called the founder of Islam.
The Quran makes it abundantly clear that Islam, the complete submission
of man before God, is the one and only faith consistently revealed
by God to mankind from the very beginning. Noah, Abraham, Moses
and Christ - Prophets who appeared at different times and places
all propagated the same faith. They were not founders of faiths
to be named after them. They were each reiterating the faith of
his predecessor.
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What distinguishes Mohammad (saw) from other Prophets?
- He was the last Prophet of God;
- God revived through him the same genuine faith which had
been conveyed by all the Prophets;
- This original message was corrupted, and split into various
religions by peoples in different ages, who indulged in interpolations
and admixture. These alien elements were eliminated by God and Islam,
in its pure and original form, was transmitted to mankind through
Mohammad (saw);
- Since there was to be no messenger after
Mohammad (saw), the Book revealed to him was preserved word
for word so that it should be a source of guidance for all times;
- The life of Mohammad (saw), and the manner in which he
conducted himself, was also recorded in a unique manner by his
companions and by later compilers of the Tradition. A more
complete and authentic account of the life , sayings and
actions of any Prophet or historical personage, has never
been compiled;
- In this way, the Quran and the authentic
Sunnah of the Prophet together became a reliable
source of knowing Islam.
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As Muslims, we believe in all the Prophets who
preceded Mohammad (saw). But for instruction we turn
to Prophet Mohammad (saw) alone. Not on account of
any prejudice, but because:
- As the last of God's Prophets he brought us the latest divine dispensation;
- the word of God which reached us through Mohammad (saw)
is pure divine language, free of human admixtures, and preserved in
its original form. Its language is a living language, spoken, and
whose grammar, vocabulary, idiom, pronunciation and script have remained
unchanged from the time of revelation till today;
- As said earlier, we have a complete historical record of the
life, character, conduct, sayings and action of the Prophet
Mohammad (saw), preserved with meticulous care, accuracy and detail.
Since this cannot be said of other Prophets we can believe in them,
but we cannot emulate them.
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Mohammad's (saw) mission was for the world as a whole, and for all times; for
- Its universality has been clearly confirmed by the Quran;
- It is the logical consequence of the finality of his prophethood.
A Prophet , after whom there was to be no other , had to be a guide
and leader for all men and for all ages;
- God has provided through
him a complete code which man needs, to follow the right path, and
this in itself supports the concept of finality, because without
completeness the need for other prophets would remain;
- It is a fact during the last 1400 years no man has arisen
whose life and work bears even the slightest resemblance to
that of a prophet. Nor has anyone presented a book which
could be remotely considered as divine communication.
Still less has there been a man to claim legitimate authority
as a lawgiver for mankind.
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Why God communicated with man through His Prophet?
This has to be examined in the context of the sources of human
knowledge. At the preliminary stage we gain knowledge through
empirical observation. At higher levels comes deductive reasoning
accompanied by scientific investigation. Man is sufficiently
well-equipped in these fields not to require direct divine assistance.
Though, no doubt, there is an ever present Divine Will helping man
in his research and innovative endeavors and revealing to him
progressively the mysteries of His creation. Some gifted
individuals achieve, in moments of rare inspiration, new
insights or discover new laws of nature. But there is
another type of knowledge which is beyond the reach of our
senses or scientific study. This sphere of knowledge does
not submit to any instrument of scientific examination.
Philosophy and science can only speculate about it. Human
theories about ultimate realities, based on reason, never
achieve the level of certainty, and their authors, conscious
of their limitations, do not present them as conclusively proved.
In respect of these realities man is dependent on whatever knowledge
is communicated to him by God. How is this knowledge conveyed?
Not through the operations of some publishing house, where books
are printed and handed over to each man, with instructions to read
them, and to discover the truth about himself, about the
universe, and about the manner in which he should organize his life.
To convey this knowledge to mankind, God chooses prophets as His
messengers. He reveals the truth to them and they communicate
it to the people.
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The work of a Prophet is not limited.
He has to explain, according to what is revealed to him,
the relationship between God and man and man and man as it
factually is, and as it actually should be. He has to
prescribe a moral code, enunciate the principles of
culture and civilization, lay down the mode of worship,
establish a frame-work of belief, and define the moral
imperatives, which must govern our life. The Prophet
determines the rules which should form the basis of
social and cultural relationships, economic, judicial
and political dealings, matters of war and peace and
international affairs. The Prophet does not transmit
merely a code of rituals commonly regarded as 'religion.'
He brings with him a whole system of thought and action
which is called Al-Deen in Islamic terminology.
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The mission of A Prophet does not end with the announcement of this way of life.
He has to guide the people who follow him, explaining to them the
implication of the Islamic creed, the moral code, the Divine
Injunctions, and the form of worship that sustains the whole
system. He has to demonstrate, by practice, the faith he preaches,
and his life should be a model which people may be able to
follow to organize their own lives. He must give training
to the individuals and the Muslim society as a whole to
prepare them for practical participation in the evolution
of Islamic culture and civilization. The believers must
grow under his guidance into an organized community engaged in
establishing the Islamic system of life so that God's
word should prevail over all other words. Every prophet had
the same message, and it is a fact of history that Mohammad
(saw) succeeded in establishing the Kingdom of God on earth,
as it is in the heavens.
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The audience of the Quran and Prophet Mohammad (saw) was the whole of mankind.
At no time was the invitation of the Quran addressed
to the people of any particular race, color or language.
The Quran always calls upon the "progeny of Adam" or
"mankind" to accept Islam. The specific instructions
and injunctions are meant for those who have come to
believe in Islam, and the are always addressed as
"those who believe." That the message of Islam was
universal in character is provided by the fact that
those who accepted the message acquired equal rights
and status as believers, regardless of all the differences
of origin. The Quran says, "The believers are all like
brothers." The Prophet announced, "Listen! You have one
God as you have one father (Adam). There is no distinction
between an Arab and a non-Arab. There is no preference
for the black over the light-skinned, or the light-skinned
over the black. There is distinction only in the
submission of God. The most virtuous among you is
the most honorable in the eyes of God."
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Belief in one God.
Not just the conviction that He exists or that He is
one - but that He alone is the Creator, Master, Ruler
and Administrator of all that exists. The universe
exists because God Wills it to exist, it functions
because God Wills it to function, and God provides
the sustenance and the energy which everything in
the universe requires for its existence and growth.
All the attributes of Sovereignty reside in God alone.
He alone possesses all the attributes of Divinity.
He vies the whole universe, and all that it contains,
in a single instantaneous glance. He has direct
knowledge of the universe, and all that is there in
the universe. He knows not only its present, but
its past and its future as well. This omnipresence
and omniscience is an attribute of God alone and
of no other. There was none 'before' Him and there
is none 'after' Him. He has been there always and
will be there always - eternal and abiding. All
else is transient. He alone is eternally living
and present. He is no one's progeny and He has
no progeny. Whatever exists, besides His self,
is His own creation, and no other can identify
himself in any manner with the Lord of the universe,
or claim to be His son or daughter. He is man's single Deity.
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The Islamic concept of God.
- God alone is the real Deity and no one other
than God has any right to be worshipped by man;
- God alone has authority over the forces of
the universe, and He alone can fulfill or frustrate
man's hopes. Man should turn to Him alone in prayer.
He should never imagine that prayers can be addressed to
anyone but God;
- God is the master of man's destiny and no one
else can interfere with the fate of others or with his
own fate. Man's hopes and fears must, therefore,
be directed only to God;
- God is the Creator of the world and He alone
has complete and direct knowledge of the reality
of man and of the world. Only He can guide man
through the complicated course of life and instruct
him regarding good and evil. Since God alone is
the Creator and the Master he has exclusive authority
over the universe and man. It is an act of blasphemy
for man to become independent or claim authority over
other men. His law has the status of the supreme law.
Man can legislate subjects to His Supreme law.
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Belief in Mohammad's (saw) Prophethood.
God conveyed His message to man through Mohammad (saw).
This took two forms:
- God revealed the Quran to the Prophet in his own language;
- The Sunnah of the Prophet which is an unerring guide to man
in respect to all that is permissible and all that is prohibited
in the eyes of God. Without this belief in the Prophet, belief
in God would become a mere theoretical proposition. It is the
example of practical leadership and the ideological guidance
provided by the Prophet, which transforms belief in God into
a culture and a civilization, and enables man to evolve a way
of life. We get through the Prophet not only rules of guidance,
but a complete scheme of values and a practical code of conduct.
No one can be a practicing Muslim unless he believes in the
prophethood of the Messenger and follows his life example as he
believes in God.
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The position of the Prophet.
The Prophet is no more than a servant of God. He was to make
people servants of God and not servants of himself. At least
seventeen times a day Muslims recite in prayers: "I bear witness
that Mohammad (saw) is a servant of God and is His prophet."
The Quran leaves no doubt that the Prophet is but a human being and
has no share whatsoever in Divinity. The Prophet is neither
superhuman nor is he free of human weaknesses. He owns no
treasure of God, nor does he possess knowledge of the unknown to
make him all knowing like God Almighty. Leave alone being able
to benefit others or cause them harm, the Prophet (saw) cannot
do so even in respect of himself. The precise task of the
Prophet is to communicate the message of God. He has no powers
to make people righteous and faithful. Nor can he call to account
those who refuse to believe, and he certainly has no power to punish
them for their disbelief. Mohammad (saw) is one of the Prophets of
God, and above that he has no status. He cannot by himself prohibit
or permit any thing. Without a mandate from God he cannot legislate
for the people. He has to strictly conform to Divine commandments.
Islam ensured that the believers should not turn the Prophet into a
demi-god. Some of the earlier prophets suffered this fate at the
hands of their followers. They attributed all kinds of supernatural
powers to their leaders and made them into God's equal or progeny
or incarnation. By discouraging such exaggeration, Islam has established
the true position of the Prophet as follows:
No one can claim to be a believer without believing in the Prophet.
He who obeys the Prophet, in fact, obeys God. God has not designated
any Prophet except to be obeyed according to His will. The path of
the Prophet is the path of Divine guidance. Whatever the Prophet
ordains must be accepted, and whatever he instructs to avoid must
be avoided. The Prophet clarified this when he said: I am a mortal
like you. In matters revealed to me by God, you must obey my
instructions. But you know more about your own worldly affairs than
I do. The Sunnah of Mohammad (saw) is, in fact, an exposition of
the purpose of the Quran, and this exposition too was conveyed to
the Prophet by God Himself, as the author of the Quran. The Prophet's
explanation of the Quran enjoys Divine Sanction, and no one else can
interpret the Quran in a way which may be in conflict with or
repugnant to the explanation given by Prophet. God declared the
life of Mohammad (saw) as a model life. Before deciding any matter
Muslims must ascertain whether any analogous matter was decided
earlier by God and His Prophet, and if a precedent exists
they must follow it.
God conveyed, through the Prophet to mankind, not only a
supreme law but also a permanent scheme of values. That which is
good, according to the Quran and the Sunnah, is good for all
times, and that which is evil, shall remain evil forever.
In this law no amendment, deletion, addition or abrogation is
possible unless some person or community decide to renounce Islam.
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The belief in the Hereafter (Akhira).
Denial of the Hereafter is the denial of Islam even though one
may have belief in God, in the Prophet, and in the Quran.
In its detailed form, this belief is composed of the following
essential elements;
- Man has not been unleashed on the earth as an
irresponsible savage. he is accountable to God for
his actions. Today's life is only a test and an
examination. At the end we will all be called upon to
render a complete account of our acts of commission and
omission to God;
- The time for accountability is fixed by God.
The tenure allotted to mankind, on this earth, shall
terminate on doomsday, when the present order will
be replaced by another. The whole human race will rise
once again in the new world;
- That will be the time
when all will appear before God Almighty, and everyone
will face the consequences of this personal acts in his
individual capacity;
- the judgment will rest not on
God's own knowledge alone. The requirements of due process
of justice will be fully observed. A complete record of
the action of every individual, without the slightest
alteration, will be put in the open Court, and evidence,
of different categories will be presented to prove what
was done by man in private or public, and the motives
which inspired his conduct;
- There will no undue intercession . No one will
be able to shift his burden to another. Man will stand
by himself helpless and alone and render his account, and
await the pronouncement of the judgment, which shall be
in the power of God alone;
- The judgment will rest on one question: Did man conduct
himself, in submission to God, in strict conformity with the
truth revealed to the Prophets, and with the conviction that
he will be held responsible for his conduct in life on the
Day of Judgment? If the answer is in the affirmative,
the reward will be Paradise, and if in the negative,
Hell will be the punishment.
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Belief in the Hereafter divides people into three distinct categories.
- First, there are those who do not believe in the Hereafter
and regard life on this earth as the only life. Naturally,
they judge good and evil by the results which manifest
themselves in this world. If an action produces beneficial
results it is good, and it brings about harmful results
it is evil. Quite often the same action is regarded as
good when the results are good and bad when its results are bad.
- Second, those people who do not deny the Hereafter, but
who depend on the intercession or atonement of someone to
absolve them of their sins. Among them - there are some,
who regard themselves as God's chosen people, who will
receive only nominal punishment however grave their sins.
This deprives them of the moral advantage which they could
have derived from their belief in the Hereafter. As a result
they also become very much like the people who deny the Hereafter.
- Third, are those people who believe in the Hereafter in the
form in which Islam presents it. They do not delude themselves that
they have any special relationship with God, or that anyone can
intercede on their behalf. They know that they alone are responsible
for their actions. For them the belief in the Hereafter becomes a
great moral force. A person who has the conviction that he is fully
accountable for all his actions finds a permanent guard, stationed
within himself, who cautions him and admonishes him whenever he
deviates from the right path. There may be no court to summon
him, no policemen to apprehend him, no witnesses to accuse him,
and no public opinion to press him, but the guard within him is
ever on the alert, ready to seize him whenever he transgresses.
The consciousness of this inner presence makes man feat God even
wen he is all by himself. Should he succumb to temptation, and
violate the law of God, he is ever ready to offer sincere regrets,
and to enter into a firm contract with the future that he will
not repeat the mistake. There can be no greater instrument of
moral reformation nor any better method to help man to develop
a sound and stable character. It is for this reason that Islam
attaches great importance to the belief in the Hereafter, and
without it even the belief in God and the Prophet is not
sufficient for men's guidance.
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Islam represents a whole civilization.
Islam provides moral guidance in all walks of life.
That is why Islamic values are not for the ascetic
who renounces the world, but for him who actively
participates in different spheres of life, and works
within them. The moral values which people look for
in convents, monasteries, and cloisters, are presented
by Islam right in the current of life. Heads of
governments, governors of states, judges, members of
the armed forces and police services, elected
representatives of the people in the parliaments,
leaders of finance, trade and industry, college
and university teachers and students alike receive
guidance to organize their lives according to the
principles of Islam. There is no distinction in
Islam between private and public conduct. The
same moral code which one observes at home applies
to one's conduct in public. Every institution of
society and every department of Government must conform
to the laws of Islam. Politics must be based on truth
and justice. nations should deal with one another
on the basis of mutual recognition of rights, and
due discharge of obligations. When man decides
to submit to the will of God, and accepts His law
as the supreme law, and organizes his life and laws
in accordance with the revealed moral code, on the
principle of accountability of God, the equality
and character of his life cannot be limited to the
precincts of prayer halls. It must extend itself
to every sphere of this work as a man of God.
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This, briefly, is what Islam stands for. This is no dream
or Utopia. The Prophet of Islam, and his companions, developed
and established a complete model of Islam on this earth for mankind to follow.
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