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Taqwa
is for Everyone
By
Khalid Baig
"O ye who
believe! Fasting is prescribed to you as it was prescribed to those before you,
so that you may develop taqwa." [Al-Baqarah, 2:183]
This verse makes two statements.
First, fasting is for everyone. Second, the purpose of fasting is to develop
taqwa. It should be obvious then, that taqwa is for everyone!
In other words, taqwa (God
consciousness, fear of Allah, righteousness) is not required just of a select
group of religious people who would then be called muttaqeen (possessors of
taqwa). Rather, every believer has to become muttaqi for the success in the
hereafter is only for the muttaqeen.
A Hindu may say that certain
injunctions of his religion (for example not eating meat) do not apply to him
because he is not a Brahmin. So can a Buddhist or a Christian. As Britannica
notes, Hinduism, Buddhism, and Christianity (especially the Roman Catholic and
Eastern Orthodox branches), among others, stress, "separation, even polarization,
between the life of the person who has a sacred vocation and that of the ordinary
man." Not Islam. Islam eliminates that polarization. A Muslim cannot say
"I don't have to do this or that because I am just an ordinary Muslim.
I am not a muttaqi."
The point is emphasized
heavily in the Qur'an, where the word taqwa and its variations have been used
151 times. It commands:
"O ye who
believe! Have taqwa of Allah and let every soul look to what provision he has
sent forth for the morrow." [Al-Hashar, 59:18].
It asks us to choose between
taqwa and its absence by presenting a very moving example:
"Which
then is best? He that lays his foundation on taqwa of Allah and His Pleasure?
Or he that lays his foundation on an undermined sand-cliff ready to crumble
to pieces? And it does crumble to pieces with him, into the fire of Hell."
[Tauba 9:109].
It reminds us that the eternal
bliss is only for the muttaqeen:
"Be quick
in the race for forgiveness from your Lord and for a Garden whose width is that
of the whole of the heavens and the earth, prepared for the muttaqeen."[Aal-e-Imran,
3:133]
Of course in every race
some people get ahead while others lag behind. So with the race for taqwa. Obviously
some people will develop more taqwa than others. Though taqwa is also a state
of the heart [Al-Hajj, 22:32], and we cannot judge the taqwa of others, many
aspects of taqwa have a reflection in our behavior. So it is natural and normal
for us to recognize the differences in achievement of those in the race. But
those of us lagging behind cannot pretend that we are not in the race at all.
For there is no other race!
We are all in it together.
The rich and the poor, the educated and the un-educated, the leader and the
follower, the writer and the reader, the preacher and the listener, the ruler
and the ruled, the old and the young, the man and the woman, all must develop
taqwa. The most honored, in the sight of Allah, is the believer with the mosttaqwa
[Hujurat, 49:13]. The Islamic society is a taqwa- conscious society, conferring
its highest respects on those considered to be highest in taqwa. Without it
the best achievements in other areas of life mean nothing.
While all this is obvious
in principle, in practice many of us seem to have accepted the idea that muttaqeen
are a separate class of people, different from the rest of us, the ordinary
Muslims. This has been a very devastating import from Christianity and Hinduism.
While Islamic Shariah has been one integral entity, this devious mechanism has
allowed us to develop our own individual Shariahs by picking and choosing from
the Shariah what we might think is appropriate for the "ordinary Muslim."
Such reasoning provides a ready-made justification for our sins, shortcomings,
and weaknesses. All of them end with: "After all I am not a muttaqi."
Brother, is that a humble statement about achievements or a self-delusion about
goals?
The flip side of taqwa is
sin. And the mentality that made taqwa the burden of a small group of religious
people has also imported another term into contemporary Islamic discourse: self-righteousness.
These days this seems to be the most potent weapon of anyone being challenged
for introducing a deviation in Shariah. Those challenging must be self-righteous.
A most despised species!
Qur'an does prohibit us
from making claims of self-purity.
"Hold not
yourself purified. He knows best who has taqwa." [Al-Najm, 53:32].
Being a major sin as it
is, one has to be extremely careful in blaming others for committing it, simply
because they are challenging what they consider as munkar or evil. Qur'an does
mention the use of that allegation in history. When Prophet Lut (Alayhi-salam)
admonished his nation for indulging in the abomination of homosexuality, they
fought back by blaming the Prophet to be self-righteous. [Al-Namal 27:56].
Once Qadi Ibn Abi Lailah
refused to accept the testimony of Imam Abu Hanifa in a case because of an incident.
The previous day both were walking together when they passed by some women who
had been singing. The women stopped as they saw them. As they passed by them,
Imam Abu Hanifa said: "Good," meaning it was good that they had stopped.
But Qadi Ibn Abi Lailah thought that Abu Hanifa had praised their singing and
on that basis declared him a fasiq and therefore unfit as a witness. Here was
one of the greatest jurists, scholars, and a very pious person being publicly
declared as a fasiq. One can imagine some of today's intellectuals having a
field day by bringing the counter charge of self-righteousness against the Qadi.
But what did Imam Abu Hanifa do? He simply explained his comments and was allowed
to proceed with the testimony. It is hardly an isolated incident. In Islamic
history we do not find anyone resorting to the charge of self-righteousness
against his opponents.
Why? The charge comes from
a universe where polarization between the religious and the ordinary lives is
stressed, for it is possible that some will falsely claim to be adhering to
a higher standard and therefore be guilty of self-righteousness. In Islam there
is only one Shariah and one scale for righteousness for everyone.
[reproduced with permission
from www.albalagh.net]
Date/Time Last Modified: 6/18/2002 8:05:12 AM
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