Years vanish with flying fleet;
But my heart will live on forever,
That here in sadness beat.
Gladly to Allah's dwelling
Yonder would I take flight;
There will the darkness vanish,
There will my eyes have sight.
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اللَّهُمَّ انْفَعْنِي بِمَا عَلَّمْـتَنِي وَ عَلِّمْنِي مَا يَنْفَعُنِي Allâhumma infa‘nî bimâ ‘allamtanî wa ‘allimnî ma yanfa‘unî. {Oh Allah! Make useful for me what You taught me and teach me knowledge that will be useful to me.}
Lesson 3
بسم الله الرحمن الرحيم
وبه نستعين وصلاته وسلامه على من بعث رحمة للعالمين وآله وأصحابه أجمعين
Four Pillars of Sound Spirituality:
1. Sound Faith in General Sense
2. Sound Practice [respecting differences]
3. Sound Understanding
4. Sound Character
The Text:
The statement of ‘Ali [رضى الله عنه] “Be pleased with what Allah has intended for you.”
Notes
Abu Wafa bin ‘Uqail said, “Know that the mind’s happiness with the actions of the creator, Glorified is He the Most High, is more the most loyal type of worship, its most burdensome type and its most difficult.” Allah [The Most High] alerted us to the dangers of from feeling weak in front of difficulties when He said, “And perhaps you hate something and it is good for you, and perhaps you love something and it is bad for you.”
The Text
The statement of ‘Abdullah bin Masud [رضى الله عنه]
“Perform what Allah has obligated upon you and you will be of the most sincere worshipers.”
Notes
There are the known acts of servitude, but there are also acts of servitude based on one’s talents from the blessings Allah has bestowed upon them.
The talents may vary as Malik said, “Allah has spread actions amongst His servants like he spread provisions.”
The Text
The statement of ‘Ubadh to his son, “And pray as though this is your last prayer.”
Notes
Muslim bin Yasar al-Basari and his prayer:
Abdullah the son of Muslim bin Yasar mentioned that when his father wanted to pray it was those he was “straight as a pole; not moving back and forth.” It was said about him, “When he prayed it was like hanging clothes.”
Ibn Shwadhab said, “When Muslim wanted to pray he would say to his family, “Talk and carry, for I do not hear you.” Once he was praying and there was a fire in the mosque. He kept praying and when he was told about it he said, “I didn’t notice it.”
The student of Mansur bin Zadhan al-Thaqafi al-Wasiti said, “If someone told him the Angel of Death was at his door, he would not find increase in his actions.”
The Text
The statement of the Prophet “Those in with Allah on the Day of Resurrection are:
“The submissive, the humble, those fearful of [His punishment] and the one who constantly remembers Allah” Sh. Abu Ghuda stated that he did not find this hadith in any books of hadith.
Notes
Muadh bin Jabal said at the time of his death, “Oh Allah! You know that surely I would not love to stay in this life for the passing of a day, or the to plant trees. Nay but I would love to stay in order to strive in a long night in worship, to thirst at noon during a long hot day and meeting the scholars.”
Umar’s statement to Abu Musa, “We are in Prayer.”
The Text
“Avoid excessiveness and you will be safe.”
Notes
Imam al-Shafi [رحمه الله] said, “Four things increase the intellect: avoiding excess in speech, using miswak, sitting with the righteous and sitting with the scholars.”
The text
“I warn you of the supplication of the oppressed.”
Notes
The story of Yaha bin Khalid and his son J’afar who were punished by Harun Rashid. After a life of luxury J’afar complained to his father upon which his father said,
لعلها دعوة المظلوم…غفلنا عنها
“Perhaps it [is due] to the supplication of the oppressed…which we neglected”
Imam Abu Mansur al-Maturidi in the Face of Oppression
“Nuh bin Saman was an evil governor near Samarqand who lived in the 3rd century A.H. He decided to rebel against Samarqand’s leaders and her entire populous putting many in great harm. He dispatched a messenger to the leader of Samarqand to intimidate him. The leader called the scholars and noble men to listen and seek their consultation. Amongst them was the great scholar and Imam, Abu Mansur al-Maturidi. After listening to Nuh bin Saman’s messenger, al-Maturidi told him to deliver the following message to Nuh bin Saman:
زدنا ظلماً حتى نزيد في دعاء الليل
“Increase us in oppression until we increase our supplications in the night!”
The messenger left and a few days latter Nuh bin Saman was found dead.
In his side there was a spear and written on it was the following:
بغى وللبغي سهام تنتظر أتته من أيدي المنايا والقدر
“Oppressor! And for the oppressor is the arrow waiting.
Coming to him from death and destiny
سهام أيدي القانتات في السحر…………………………..
Arrows from the obedient women [supplicating] at dawn”
نموت ونحيا كل يوم وليلى ولا بد من يوم نموت ولا نحيا
وإنا في الدنيا كركب سفينة نظن وقوفاً والزمان بنا يجري
What does the title of the book imply?
It implies that this epistle is for the one who seeks guidance.
Three types of people are going to take this class:
Who was al-Muhasibi?
His Name: al-Harith the son of Asad al-Muhasibi.
Time Period: He was born 165 A.H and died 243 A.H
Where: Basra, Iraq
Brief background answering a few doubts
We was respected in the science of hadith as mentioned by Ibn Hajar, considered truthful by great scholars like Imam al-Dhahabi. However, he was censured by Imam Ahmed for, as noted by the great biographers, engaging in some theological questions that the scholars of hadith disapproved of. However, as was noted by al-Zarkali and Ibn Taymiyyah he repented from those things.
There are some strange stories regarding him that are untrue and one should fear Allah before relating them. One of them is that he was so despised for his deleving into kalam that only four people prayed on him. Imam Dhahabi refutes this ridiculous story stating that the chain “is broken.”
Famous For
He is most famous for writing and talking about the issue of the heart. He wrote, as noted by the scholars more than 200 works most of them dealing with this subject. Al-Kawthari noted that Imam al-Ghazzali relied heavily on the works of al-Muhasibi in the writing of his Ihyah. Thus, it can be safely stated that his most famous contribution was in the area of Tasawwuf.
Moving beyond labels and compassing maturity
It is not fair, just nor mature to judge a person by labels within the framework of general orthodoxy. What should be judged is one’s statements, actions and articulation according to Islamic rules. This was articulated by Ibn Taymiyyah in his Risalah al-Fuqara and al-Shattibi in al-‘Itisam. The latter saying about tasswuf that it is incorrect to contend that every aspect of it is an innovation, nor is it fair to label every aspect of it as correct. “Nay, this issue is inspected.”
Reviving Qur’anic Terms:
Text Background:
This is a short treaties on the subject of tazkiyah written during the age of the salaf. Much like grammar is to language, it presents a body of rules and principles which, if lived on, will assist in building and sustaining one’s relationship with Allah.
Pillars for the One Seeking this Path:
Sheikh Abdul Fattah Abu Ghuda:
He was one of the greatest scholars of hadith of the last century; set about preparing this text for publication in the early 1960s. He added a large number of verses from the Qu’ran, Hadith and antidotes from the lives of the righteous in order to give the text life and support the claims of the author. In addition, as stated by his son Sh. Zahid, he wrote this book to counter a form of mysticism that he felt was a contradiction to the practices of the Prophet and Islamic law in general.
The Importance of Studying the Lives of the Salaf
Imam al-Junaid said, “Stories of the righteous are a soldiers from the soldiers of Allah. With them Allah strengthens the hearts of those near to Him.”
Abu Hanifa said, “The stories of the scholars and their good works are more beloved to me than an abundance of Fiqh [here he means studying], because [in such stories] there are etiquette of the people [the salaf] and their behaviors.”
Ibn Muflih mentions that when Ibrahim al-Tahan was mentioned in front of Imam Ahmad, the former having died. Imam Ahmed was reclining and suddenly sat up saying,
لا ينبغى أن يذكر الصالحين فنتكي
“It is not appropriate that the righteous are mentioned and we sit reclining.”
‘Umar’s statement:
“If were not for three things in this life, I would not love to live:
Some notes on the texts: [in bold]
Al-Muhassibi states,
“Insightful servants”
The word used he is dhawi al-Bab. Al-Bab comes from the word al-lub which means a pure clean minds as noted by al-Asfahani. Thus, they are those who, as he wrote “who are able to grasp the delicate meaning related to religious rulings.”
Here the sheikh mentions an array of qualities that cover ethics, behavior, internal and external worship. From this we garner the Muslim’s religion is comprehensive.
“Following the way of the insightful, taking care of the limits [set by] the shari’ah from the book of Allah, the Sunna of His prophet [صلى الله عليه وسلم] and that which the rightly guided scholars agreed upon.”
The one seeking the path to Allah must do so by respecting the foundations of Islam; the Qu’ran, the Sunna and the ‘Ijama [binding agreement of the scholars]. In areas where the scholars differed there were two opinions held by the salaf:
In the age of pluralism with our communities moving beyond the villages, I believe 1 to be the opinion that will preserve our unity and strength as a community.
“Faith in the allegorical verses”
Most scholars stated these are verses that cannot be understood on their own, but require a second source for understanding them.
“Those who perfect the outer”
Those who use the inner as an excuse to ignore the rules and regulations of Islam are lost in deception. Al-Sh’arani mentions and binding consensus on one who fails to master the outer [rulings] and delves into the inner. Imam Ibn Ashir in his meta poem begans it with faith, usol, fiqh and finishes with the inner- purification. The same with al-Ghazzali’s Ihyah, he began it with the importance of knowledge, acts of worship, creed and after that engaged the inner.
Sidi al-Zaruq said,
“The scholar of the outer [fiqh] can be free of a sufi, but a sufi can never be free of a faqih.”
“Distancing one’s self from the doubtful.”
The doubtful are those things who, as al-Ghazzali mentioned, “are composed of good and bad- halal and haram to such an extent that one is not able to grasp its reality.”
The scholars offered different possibilities for “the doubtful.”
The Doubtful are a Bridge to the Forbidden:
Sheikh al-Qabbari of Alexandria wrote, “The permissible are an obstacle between the servant and the disliked. Thus, who ever engages in the permissible will fall into the disliked; the disliked are an obstacle between the servant and the forbidden. If he increases in the disliked acts, he will fall into the forbidden.”