Islam Essential as it is for us to affirm faith in God and the
Prophet and to follow with righteousness and sincerity the
straight path of Islam, it is also of no mean importance
that we strove earnestly to guide the others, too, to the
path of the faith who are ignorant of it or who may be
unwilling to adopt it on account of prejudice or spiritual
malaise. As God has placed on us the duty of being His
pious, devout and faithful servants so also has He made it
obligatory for us to work among His other creatures as well
towards the same end, that is, towards making them also His
pious, devout and faithful servants. That is what is meant
by the service of faith and its preaching and propagation.
This work is so great in the sight of God that for it He
sent down thousands of Prophets into the world. The Prophets
bore tremendous hardships and went through the severest of
trials and privations to carry out their mission. They work
for the moral and spiritual reform and uplift of mankind
(May the eternal blessings of God be on them their
companions and supporters).
The glorious chain of Prophecy and Apostleship ended with
the last of the Prophets, Prophet Mohammad (Peace and
Blessings of God be upon whom). Though him also God
proclaimed to the world that no more Prophets would now be
raised up for the guidance of humanity. The celestial
mission shall now be carried on by those who had accepted
his guidance and the religion he had brought with him into
the world.
In sum, after the termination of the luminous line of
Apostles the responsibility for preaching and propagation of
faith and religious instruction and reform of mankind has
fallen wholly upon the shoulders of the followers of the
sacred Prophet. This honour, indeed, is unique. In the
Quran, the very object of the raising up of Muslims has been
defined as nothing but this: You are the best of Peoples,
evolved for mankind, enjoining what is right, forbidding
what is wrong and believing in God. (III: 110)
The Muslims were, thus, superior to all other peoples and
communities for the simple reason that they, in addition to
adopting for themselves the path of faith and righteousness,
were charged with the special duty of striving to bring
others also to practice what was right and to avoid what was
wrong. It was because of this that they were given the
distinction of being the ‘Best of Peoples'. It is also
evident from the above verse that should the Muslims fail to
discharge the function they would not only forfeit the claim
to the distinction but would also render themselves liable
to be punished by God for neglecting the duty He had
assigned to them. Let us take an illustration: suppose a
company of sentries is posted in a town by the Government to
check the immoral activities of its citizens and the
sentries not only fail to perform their duty but, what is
more, they themselves begin to indulge in the transgressions
they were required to suppress. Now will they be retained in
service and rewarded by the Government or taken severely to
task by it for their negligence and misconduct? It will,
certainly, not be improper or unjust if they were punished
more severely than the other offenders.
The conditions prevailing in the entire Muslims world today
are so extremely deplorable that what to speak of the
preaching of the faith and the correction and reform of
others, not more than five or ten percent of Muslims
themselves are true to Islam and do good deeds and abstain
from what is evil and prohibited. In these circumstances, it
becomes our primary duty to carry out the mission of moral
and spiritual reform and guidance among our own people among
such sections of them as have drifted mournfully away from
the path of faith and moral uprightness.
One of the reasons for it is that those who call themselves,
or are known as Muslims, whatever be their practical state,
have, after all, forged a link between themselves and God
and His Prophet and the Faith, and become members of the
Muslims brotherhood or Ummat, through the acceptance of
Islam. Solicitude for their moral and spiritual well being
is our first responsibility in any case in the same was as
the responsibility of looking after the welfare of his own
children and near relations is greater on a man than that of
looking after the welfare of others.
And, secondly, before everything else, it is the actual
condition of Muslims from which the world will generally
judge about Islam, and the spectacle of degeneration that
Muslims, on the whole, present these days is such that it
cannot be expected to make a very favourable impression on
anyone in respect of their faith. The non-Muslim world is
not likely to think very highly of the excellent teachings
of Islam as long as Muslims remain what they are today. On
the other hand, it is a feeling of revulsion and dislike,
which non-Muslims usually get about Islam when they look at
the moral and spiritual depths into which the Muslims have
sunk. It has always been like this. People have always
formed their opinion, good or bad or indifferent, about a
religion from the actual moral and social state of its
followers.
In the past when Muslims used to be true Muslims, observing
strictly the postulates of their faith, people were
attracted towards Islam simply by seeing them. Whole nations
and communities were converted to Islam in this way. But
since the Muslims sank so low that the majority of them
remained Muslims only in the name, their conduct and morals
grew un-Islamic and their hearts got bereft of faith and
righteousness the world has developed a prejudice against
Islam itself.
In fine, we should realize the truth of it clearly that the
daily life of Muslims, their social and moral and spiritual
conduct and behaviour, is the biggest testimony and the
chief measuring rod with regard to Islam. If the practical
life of Muslims is good the world will form a good opinion
about Islam, and if it is bad the opinion the world will
acquire about Islam will also be bad. In later case, the
preaching of Islam among non-Muslims is destined to be
fruitless. Hence, the success of all the efforts aimed at
the propagation of Islam among non-Muslims as well is
dependent on the condition that Islamic life, i.e., the life
of faith and righteous action became the chief attribute of
the entire Muslim community. From this point of view also it
is necessary to strive first for the guidance and
reformation of Muslims and to launch the struggle with all
our might for popularizing the values of Islamic life among
them before we turned our attention to others.
The Quran has given the task of religious preaching, reform
and guidance the name of Jehad-i-Akbar, the great Jehad. If
it is undertaken in the right spirit, with sincerity and
selflessness and solely for the sake of winning Divine
approbation, this work, definitely, is a very great Jehad in
the sight of God.
Many people suppose that Jehad means only a war, which is
waged in the path of God and according to the rules and
instruction laid down for it in the Shariat. But this is not
correct. The truth is that whatever endeavour that can be
made at a particular time for the preaching of Islam and the
moral and spiritual correction and guidance of mankind is
the Jehad of that age.
The Holy Prophet remained in Mecca for about twelve years
after the mantle of Apostleship had fallen upon him. During
this period the Jehad of the Prophet and his Companions
consisted altogether in adhering steadfastly to the faith
in-spite of the terrible persecution unleashed on them by
the enemies of Islam and in doing all that lay in their
power, openly as well as secretly, to spread the Divine
message of Islam and to reform morally and spiritually those
who lived around them.
To devote oneself to the noble task of guiding the ignorant,
the way-ward and the thoughtless to the straight path of
Islam and of bringing them nearer to God, to spend one's
time and money on it, and to sacrifice one's comfort, all
this, in case, is Jehad in Divine estimation. In fact, it is
the Jehad of the present age.
The rich reward that awaits those in the Hereafter who
engage themselves in this lofty endeavour as well as the
dreadful punishment that is going to fall to the lot of
those who neglect it and do not participate in it can well
be imagined from the Traditions: “A person who guides
another to a deed of virtue shall receive the same
recompense for it as the doer of the deed and there will be
no reduction in the reward of the doer himself because of
it.”
What the Tradition means is that suppose ten persons, or
even five, were reformed through our effort and they came to
believe in God and the Prophet and to observe the Divine
commandments- they began to offer the Namaz and to carry out
other religious duties and avoided what was wrong and
forbidden then the reward they will earn on it jointly will
be granted to us alone also. A little thought will show that
there is simple no other way in which a person can win so
much reward-the reward of the prayers and other pious and
virtuous deeds of hundreds of men.
Another Tradition of the Holy Prophet says: “By the
Almighty, if only one man receives guidance through you, it
is better for you than red camels.”
As we have said earlier, the endeavour for mankind's moral
and spiritual guidance and reformation is a service of the
faith of the highest order and a thing of outstanding merit
and excellence. It is the special heritage left to us by the
Prophets. It means their deputyship; it means their
vicegerency. What worldly gain, what earthly glory, can
compare with it?
The Holy Prophet, in the under-mentioned Tradition, has made
use of a simple example to impress upon us the importance of
the work of religious reformation and guidance.
He said, “Suppose there is a double storied boat in which
the passengers of the lower deck have to fetch water from
the upper deck. This causes inconvenience to the occupants
of the upper deck and they do not like it. Now, if in their
foolishness the passengers of the lower deck decide not to
go to the upper deck and of their supply of water they begin
to bore a hole in the bottom of the boat, and the passengers
of the upper deck do not stop them from doing so, the entire
boat, with all the passengers, will sink, But if the
occupants of the upper deck some how manage to dissuade the
occupants of the lower deck from boring he hole, they will
save the occupants of the lower deck as well as themselves
from being drowned. The same is true with wickedness and
sin. If a community, as a whole, dwells in a state of
ignorance and sinfulness and its enlightened and virtuous
sections do not take steps to reform it and to bring it on
the right path then Divine punishment will be sent down upon
it because of its sins and transgressions and the pious and
virtuous members of the community will also be caught in it.
On the other hand, if an endeavour is made by them to reform
the sinners and wrong-doers, the whole community will be
saved.”
Again, the Prophet is reported to have said:
“By the Almighty in whose power lies my life, do not neglect
the duty of ‘enjoining what is right and forbidding what is
wrong.' Remember if you neglected your duty it is quite
possible that God might send down His punishment on you and
then all your prayers and supplications will avail you
nothing.”
Brothers, some of the most enlightened and spiritually
evolved divines of our day are of the view that the
disasters and humiliations that have been visiting Muslims
for a long time, and the troubles and difficulties they are
caught in universally these days and which do not seem to
abate or relent a bit in-spite of all their pathetic
petitions to God and prayers etc., are due mainly to the
very reason that they have ceased to discharge the function
they were raised up for and for which they were made wholly
responsible after the termination of Prophecy and
Apostleship. Evidently, when a watchman fails to perform his
duty he is dismissed from service and castigated sternly for
his negligence. Come; let us resolve solemnly that we shall
be found wanting no more in the discharge of our duty. God's
help will be with us.
He has promised: God, certainly, will aid those who aid His
Cause. (XXII: 40) |