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Sunday, August 26, 2012

What do we believe about non-Muslims who did not receive the message of Islam?

Question
I have full faith in my religion Islam, Alhamdulillah. But I have one
question which I constantly ponder over. I want to know the criteria
for which innocent non-Muslims will go to Jannah. Suppose some
non-Muslims are very innocent, poor and deprived of worldly pleasure
whilst they always do good deeds.
Will they still be kept in Jahanam forever? On the other hand Muslims
who do many bad deeds but have little faith will be allowed to enter
into Jannah one day? Do you think this is justified?
Answer
In the Name of Allah, the Most Gracious, the Most Merciful.
As-salāmu 'alaykum wa-rahmatullāhi wa-barakātuh.
Allah Ta'ālā says in the Quran,
{إِنَّ الدِّينَ عِنْدَ اللَّهِ الْإِسْلَامُ }
"Verily the true religion with Allah is Islam"
Quran 3:19
The criterion for everlasting success inthe sight of Allah Ta'ālā is
to bring faithin Islam. One who hasbrought faith in the Oneness of
Allah Ta'ālā and His Messenger SallallaahuAlayhi Wasallam has secured
his life in thehereafter. Nabi Sallallaahu Alayhi Wasallam said,
ثِنْتَانِ مُوجِبَتَانِ قَالَ رَجُلٌ: يَا رَسُولَ اللَّهِ مَا
الْمُوجِبَتَانِ؟ قَالَ: (مَنْ مَاتَ يُشْرِكُ بِاللَّهِ شَيْئًا دَخَلَ
النَّارَ وَمَنْ مَاتَ لَايُشْرِكُ بِاللَّهِ شَيْئادخل الْجنَّة)
"Two things dictate. A person asked, "Oh messenger of Allah, what are
the two dictating things? He said, "Whosoever passed away ascribing
partners to Allah will enter the fire of hell. And whosoever did not
ascribe any partners to Allah will enter paradise."
(Mishkaatul Masaabihvol.1 pg.17; Maktabatul Islami)
Islam is the measure of our eternal success. However determining who
hasIslam is something best known to Allah Ta'ālā. There are some
people who may not expose their Islam due to the circumstances they
face in this world. Considering this fact, it is not correct for
anyone to judge who will be in Jannah or Jahannam. It is quite
possible that those who we think are non-Muslims believe in Allah and
His Messenger SallallaahuAlayhi Wasallam . It isbest to dismiss this
affair as something which is best known to Allah Ta'ālā.
And Allah Ta'āla Knows Best

The heaven of this world

I heard the Sheikh of IslamIbn Taymiyah say, Truly, there is a Heaven
in this world, [and] whoever doesnot enter
it, will not enter the Heaven of the next world.
And once he said to me,
What can my enemies do to me?
I have in my breast both my Heaven and my Garden.
If I travel they are with me, and they never leave me.
Imprisonment for me is a religious retreat.
To be slain for me is martyrdom.
And to be exiled from my land is a spiritual journey.
During his imprisonment in the fortress, he would say, "I could not
be more grateful for this blessing were I to have this entire fortress
in gold"or "I could never repay them for the good that has come to me
[in this prison]."
And in prostration he would say, while in a stateof imprisonment, "O
Allah, help me in my remembrance of You, gratitude to You, and the
most comely worship of You."
Once he said to me, "The real prisoner is someone whose heart is
imprisoned from his Lord; the true captive is someone captured by his
passions." And when he entered the fortress (where he was imprisoned)
and was inside its walls, he gazed upon them and quoted the verse
[Then a fence will separate them, havinga gate, in the inward whereof
is mercy, and facing the outward thereofthe torment] (Al- Hadid
57:13).
Allah knows, I have never seen anyone who had a better life than
his.Despite the difficulties and all that expunges comfort and luxury;
despite intimidation and oppression, Ibn Taymiyah had a happier life
than anyone could. He was the most generous, the strongest of heart
and the most joyful of soul, with the radiance of bliss on hisface.
When we were seized with fear and our thoughts (about Allah's decree)
turned negative, and the earth grew narrow for us, we would go to him.
No sooner did we look at him and hear his words than all these
feelings would leave us, tobe replaced by relief, strength, certainty,
and tranquility.
So glory be to the One Who lets His servants witness His Heaven well
before they meet Him, Who opens its doors to them in this world, and
Who gives them something of its refreshment, its breeze, and its
perfume — that they might seek it and hasten towards it with all their
strength.
** Imam Ibn Al-Qayyim Al-Jawziyyah was born in AH 691 (1292 CE) near
Damascus. A student of IbnTaymiyyah, Ibn Al-Qayyim wrote more than 60
booksin various areas of Islam. He died in 751 AH (1350 CE)

2a] 'Ulûm al-Qur'ân"7-Tafsir by the Statement of The Companions

2a]
For example, in the shâdh qirâ'a of Ibn Mas'ûd, the verse which told
the believers to "fast three days" (5:89) as an expiation of an
unfulfilled oath was read by him as: "fast three consecutive days."
Due to this shâdh qirâ'a , later scholars differed over whether it was
necessary to fast threeconsecutive days, or whether it sufficed to
fast any three days if one did not fulfil an oath.
To conclude, if the Companions agreed to an interpretation of a verse,
that interpretation must be accepted, since it qualifies as ijmâ' . On
the other hand, if there exist narrations from one Companion
concerning theinterpretation of a verse, and there does not exist any
narrations to the contrary from other Companions, this interpretation
is also accepted, but is not equivalent in strength to the
interpretation given bythe Prophet (saws). If there exist various
narrations from different Companions which are notcontradictory in
nature, then all such interpretations are accepted. If there exist
contrary narrations from different Companions concerning the same
verse,in this case the researcher can choose between the different
interpretations, depending on which interpretation seems to have the
strongest evidence to support it.
Tafsîr by the Statement of the Successors Before moving on to the next
section, a brief note concerning the tafsîr narrations from the
Successors would be useful. Some scholars took the tafsîr of the
Successors to be the next source of tafsîr after the tafsîr of the
Companions. As proof for this stance, they relied on the statements of
certain prominent Successors concerning their knowledge of the Qur'ân.
Qatâdah (d. 110 A.H.) said,
"There is not a single versein the Qur'ân except that I have heard
something concerning it."
Mujâhid (d. 103 A.H.) said,
"I recited the Qur'ân to Ibn'Abbâs three times. In eachrecitation, I
stopped at every verse, asking him concerning its interpretation."
This is why Sufyân ath-Thawree (d. 161 A.H.) said,
"When you hear an interpretation from Mujâhid, this should be
sufficient for you!" [5]
Other scholars, however, rejected this view. They claimed that an
interpretation of a Successor could not have originated from the
Prophet (saws), as could the interpretation of a Companion, since they
never saw the Prophet (saws). Also, they did not witness the
revelation, as did the generation before them, and their
trustworthiness is not guaranteed specifically for every one of their
generation, unlike the Companions (in other words, the
trustworthinessof every single Companions is guaranteed by the Qur'ân,
whereas this is not the case for the Successors, for they have been
praised as a. generation, and not individually).
Therefore, the correct viewin this matter, as Ibn Taymiyyah (d. 728
A.H.) said, is that if the Successors give the same interpretation to
a verse, then their interpretation must be accepted, but if they
differed among themselves, then the opinion of one group will have no
authority over theother group, nor over the generations after them. In
such cases, one must resort to the Qur'ân, the Sunnah, the Companions,
and the Arabic language inorder to obtain the correct interpretation.
[6]
Footnotes
1 Reported by al-Bukhârî
2 c£ as-Suyûtî, Tadrîb ar-Râwî, pps. 156-8.
3 az-Zarkashî, v. 2, p. 172.
4 c£ adh-Dhahabî, v. 1, p. 63.

2] 'Ulûm al-Qur'ân"7-Tafsir by the Statement of The Companions

2]
After the Qur'ân and Sunnah, the next important source for
understanding the Qur'ân is the understanding of theCompanions. The
statements of the Companions are taken as afundamental source of
tafsîr for the following reasons:
1) The primary reason is that the Companions are a generation that was
chosen by Allâh to accompany the Prophet (saws), and to pass on the
religion and teachings of Islâm to later generations. Their character
and religious knowledge has been testified by Allâh andthe Prophet
(saws), for Allâh says in the Qur'ân,
Muhammad (saws) is theMessenger of Allâh. And those who are with him
(i.e., the Companions) are severe against the disbelievers and
mercifulamongst themselves. You see them bowing and falling down in
prostration, seeking the Bounty of Allâh and His Pleasure... [48:29]
In more than one verse of the Qur'ân, Allâh mentions the fact that
He is well pleased with them, and they with Him[99:8]
Thus clearly showing the superiority of the Companions over other
generations. The Prophet (saws) said,
"The best of all mankind are my Companions, then those that will
follow them, then those that will follow them." [1]
2) The Companions actually witnessed the revelation of the Qur'ân.
Many of its verses were revealed to cater to problems that had risen
amongst them. As such, they were familiar with the asbâb an-nuzûl,
with the makî and madanî verses, and with the nâsikh and mansûkh, and
did not need to go searching for this knowledge, as later generations
would have todo.
3) The Qur'ân was revealedin the Arabic that the Companions spoke.
Therefore, many words and phrases that later generations had
difficulty understanding were clear to the Companions.
4) The Companions were the most knowledgeable of generations with
regards to pre-Islâmic customs. Therefore, they understood the
references in the Qur'ân to such customs.
There is a difference of opinion whether the interpretation of a
Companion is of definitive authority. In other words, once a Companion
has given an interpretation of a verse, must that interpretation be
accepted,as is the case with the previous two sources of tafsîr?
Al-Hâkim an-Naisapûrî (d. 404 A.H.), the author of al-Mustadrak,
considered any interpretation by a Companion to be equivalent to a
hadîth of the Prophet (saws), for he believed that all such
interpretations must have originated from the Prophet (saws). However,
this opinion is not accepted in its generality, and the majority of
scholars, such as an-Nawawî (d. 676 A.H.), As-Suyûtî (d. 911 A.H.),
andIbn Taymiyyah (d. 728 A.H.), held the view that the interpretation
of a Companion is equivalent to a hadîth of the Prophet (saws) only
when it concerns matters which are not based on personal reasoning (
ijtihâd ), such as reports concerning sabab an-nuzûl, or the knowledge
of the unseen.
This is because such knowledge could not haveoriginated from the
Companions' ijtihâd , and must have come from the Prophet (saws). A
report from a Companion not concerning these topics cannot be taken as
equivalent to a hadîth of the Prophet (saws); rather,it is given a
status below that of a. hadîth . [2] However, this does not diminish
the status of the tafsîr from the Companions. The Companions were the
most knowledgeable of this nation, and as such their personal
reasoning ( ijtihâd ) occupies a status above that of any later
scholar.
Az-Zarkashî summarised this point when he said,
As for the interpretation ofthe Companions, it is investigated into:
if this interpretation was based upon language, then they are the
scholars of the language, and there is no doubt that they should be
given credence to in this interpretation. If this interpretation
relies upon what they saw of asbâb an-nuzûl, or other circumstances
(i.e., of pre-Islâmic customs), then again there is no doubt
concerning this type of interpretation. [3]
After the interpretation of the Qur'ân by itself and by the hadîth of
the Prophet (saws), the Companions relied upon four primary sources to
interpret the Qur'ân: [4]
1) Their knowledge of Arabic language, rhetoric, grammar and pre-Islâmic poetry.
2) Their knowledge of the pre-Islâmic customs of the Arabs.
3) Their knowledge of the habits of the Jews and Christians at the
time of the revelation of the Qur'ân.
4) Their personal reasoningand their keen intellect (which, of course,
was based upon knowledge).
Another integral aspect of the tafsîr of the Companions is the shâdh
and mudraj qira'ât which were discussed earlier. It isnecessary to
take these qira'ât into account when interpreting a verse. As
mentioned earlier, such qira'ât cannot be considered as the Qur'ân,
but may be studied as tafsîr .
One of the interpretations of this type of qira'ât is that they were
added, not as Qur'ân, but for the sake of interpretation by the
Companions. For example. :->