And the winner
is?
By Muhammad
Alshareef
During his Caliphate, 'Umar, may Allâh be
pleased with him, once set out for ash-Shâm
(Damascus) and with him was Abû 'Ubaydah.
They came upon a deep creek which they needed to
cross. So 'Umar took off his sandals and carried
them on his shoulders. Then he took the reign of
the camel and began ploughing through the water.
Abû 'Ubaydah - seeing the Khalîfah (Leader)
of the Muslims in this state - felt saddened and
said, "I fear that the people of the village
will think you without any honour." 'Umar said,
"Oh Abû 'Ubaydah, if only someone less
knowledgeable then you made such a statement. We
were of the most disgraced of people and Allâh
granted us honour with this Islâm. Now, whenever
we seek honour in other than that which Allâh
honoured us with, Allâh shall disgrace us
(once again)."
Dear brothers and sisters, we hear
often that the victory of Allâh is something
promised and very near. However, some of us do not
really believe in our hearts that Allâh will
grant victory to Islâm. Some of us may think
that this victory that Allâh speaks about
is only for a certain 'star-status' group of believers,
or that the victory was only for a certain time
in history, or that it's not a promised victory,
just a miraculous will of God ...
We must understand that it is not
anyone who is promising this - it is Allâh
the Lord of the Heavens and the Earth. And it is
not just a promise of the Hereafter, but it is promised
in this life as well. In Sûrah Ghâfir
(40:51), we read:
"Indeed, we will grant victory
to Our Messengers and those who believe in this
life of the world and on the day when the witnesses
will stand."
We can only hope for victory when
we surrender our loyalty to Allâh and His
Messenger and to the believers - and no one else!
In Sûrah al-Mâ'idah (5:56), we read:
"And whoever is an ally of
Allâh and His Messenger and those who have
believed - indeed the party of Allâh will
be the victors."
Honour and victory come only from
Allâh. Whoever seeks it from other than Allâh,
nothing awaits them but disgrace. In Sûrah
an-Nisâ' (4:138-139), we read:
"Give glad tidings to the Munâfiqîn
(hypocrites) that there is for them a painful punishment
- those that take disbelievers as allies instead
of the believers. Do they seek with them 'Izzah
(Honour)? Rather, to Allâh indeed belongs
all honour!"
And when someone thinks that this
victory and honour that was promised to the righteous
is only a delusion, they are in fact recycling the
statements of the Munâfiqîn before them.
Allâh recorded their scoffing in Sûrah
Ahzâb (33:12):
"And (remember) when the hypocrites
and those in whose hearts is disease said, 'Allâh
and His Messenger did not promise us anything more
then delusion.' "
Was the promise of victory just
a delusion? Let the Qur'ân speak to us the
outcome - dear brothers and sisters - of that battle
of al-Ahzâb! Allâh tells us:
"And Allâh repelled those
who disbelieved, in their rage, not having accomplished
any good. And enough was Allâh for the believers
in battle, and ever is Allâh Powerful and
Exalted in Might."
Ibn Kathîr said, "Whoever
wants a place of honour in this life and the next,
let him hold firmly to the obedience of Allâh
- his goal will be realised. This is because to
Allâh belongs this life and next and all honour
is His. Allâh says (3:26):
Say, 'O Allâh, Owner of Sovereignty,
You give sovereignty to whom You will and You take
sovereignty away from whom You will. You honour
whom You will and You humble whom You will. In Your
hand is (all) good. Indeed, You are over all things
competent.' "
King, prince, duke, marquise, earl, viscount, baron,
baronet, and knight - these were the names the English
used to appropriate nobility amongst themselves.
Humans want to be honoured in this life and so they
set out in search of things that will grant them
this honour.
Some search for it in money - but
when a stock market crashes and they lose everything,
they commit suicide or live in humility. Some search
for it in degrees - but those same degrees may be
their citation for arrogance over others. Some search
for it in military might or leadership position
- but when the tables turn on them they become the
most humiliated.
Only in the worship of Allâh
is true honour found, because all honour belongs
to Allâh; Sûrah al-Munâfiqûn
(63:8), we read:
"And to Allâh belongs
all honour, and to His Messenger, and to the believers,
but the hypocrites know not."
Al-Hasan al-Basrî said concerning
the people of sin, "They - even though their
riding beasts pitter patter with them atop, and
their mules carry them ever so gracefully, upon
them at all times is the hovering disgrace of sin.
Allâh shall never allow for those who disobey
Him anything more then disgrace."
In Sûrah al-Hajj (22:18),
we read:
"And whoever Allâh humiliates
- for him there is no one to give him honour."
"His doing what? Building a
boat in the desert?" The people of Nûh
(Noah) ran out to see if the news was true. Um-hmm,
there he was indeed, building a huge boat without
a drop of water in site.
Allâh tells us in Sûrah
Hûd (11:38):
"And he constructed the ark
- whenever a group of the eminent of his people
passed him they mocked him."
They couldn't help themselves but
to ridicule him. "Hey Nûh, you were a
Prophet yesterday; Have you now become a carpenter?"
What happened, dear brothers and
sisters, to those devilish people who disbelieved
in Allâh's Messenger for 950 years - where
are they now? And who was the winner in the end?
Certainly, in the end Allâh
granted a decisive victory to Nûh. More so,
Allâh tells His Prophet, may Allâh send
His prayers and blessings upon him, at the conclusion
of Nûh's story how victory will always be
for the believers:
"So be patient, indeed, the
(best) outcome is (and will always be) for the righteous."
Part II:
In their misguided quest for 'Izzah
(honour), the Greeks designated a female god whose
sole job was to dispense victory and honour. She
was a popular subject in their art, usually represented
as winged and bearing a wreath or palm branch. The
called her Nike. And many of us leaving this khutbah
may still sadly find remnants of their shirk present
today on our shoes.
The Prophet, may Allâh send
His prayers and blessings upon him, said, "Indeed
this affair (of Islâm) shall reach wherever
the night and day reach. Allâh will not spare
a single clay or wabar home except that Allâh
will cause for Islâm to enter it - whether
with nobility or with humiliation. Nobility that
Allâh grants with them entering Islâm,
or humility that Allâh places upon them for
their kufr (disbelief)."
The narrator of the hadîth,
Tamîm ad-Dârî, may Allâh
be pleased with him, said, "Certainly, I saw
this in my own family. Those that become Muslim
amongst them found prosperity and nobility and honour.
And those that turned to kufr found nothing but
disgrace and humility and the jizyah tax (a tax
paid by non-Muslims living in the Islamic state)."
There are different ways in which
Allâh grants victory to His righteous servants:
Allâh may grant victory through martyrdom.
We read in the Qur'ân Allâh telling
us to not think that those who were killed in the
way of Allâh as dead. Nay, they are alive
with Allâh, well provided for.
Allâh may grant victory through
the huge success in spreading one's da'wah. The
Messenger of Allâh, may Allâh send His
prayers and blessings upon him, taught us this in
the story of the boy and the king. In the end, the
only way the king could kill the boy was to shoot
the arrow pronouncing the statement, 'In the Name
of the Lord of this boy.' When he did so, although
the boy was martyred, the entire village believed
in Allâh, alone, the Lord of the boy.
Allâh may grant victory through
the trials that distinguish the believers from the
hypocrites. As a sage once said, "All thanks
are to Allâh who places a hardship on me through
which I distinguish my friends from my enemies."
Or victory may come through Allâh
assisting his servant with clear and decisive arguments.
An example of this is how Allâh supported
Ibrâhîm, peace be upon him, against
the tyrant Namrûd when he said that he too
gives life and death. Ibrâhîm replied
that verily Allâh brings the sun from the
east so bring it ye from the west. Namrûd
was dumbfounded and had no reply.
In conclusion, we all know that
the Messenger of Allâh, may Allâh send
His prayers and blessings upon him, started this
mission of Islâm at the Mountain of Safa.
After telling his people about Allâh and the
Final Day, Abû Jahl - his own uncle - turned
his back on him and said aloud, "May you perish
O Muhammad! Is this why you have gathered us?"
On his heels he turned and everyone followed him,
leaving our Prophet, may Allâh send His prayers
and blessings upon him, standing alone.
Two decades later, in the Farewell
Hajj, he, may Allâh send His prayers and blessings
upon him, stood on that very same mountain. At this
time, the victory of Allâh had come true as
Allâh had promised. All of Makkah was now
Muslim, a sea of believers memorising their Prophet's
every move. The Messenger of Allâh, may Allâh
send His prayers and blessings upon him, stood there
on Mount Safa and faced the Ka'bah and recited:
"There is no god but Allâh.
Only One. He was true to His promise. He granted
victory to His servant. He granted honour and nobility
to his army. And the confederates did He - alone
- defeat."
By Muhammad Alshareef
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