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CHAPTER 11
THE FAITH TRIUMPHANT
"Do not be dejected nor grieve. You shall be the uppermost if you are
Believers." (3: 139)
The first thought which comes to mind on reading this verse
is that it relates to the form of Jihaad which is actual fighting; but the
spirit of this message and its application, with
its manifold implications, is greater and wider than this particular aspect.
Indeed, it describes that eternal state of mind which
ought to inspire the Believer's consciousness, his thoughts,
his estimates of things, events, values and persons.
It describes a triumphant state which should remain fixed
in the Believer's heart in the face of every thing, every condition, every
standard and every person; the superiority of
the Faith and its value above all values which are derived
from a source other than the source of the Faith.
It means to be above all the powers of the earth which
have deviated from the way of the Faith, above all the values
of the earth not derived from the source of the Faith, above
all the customs of the earth not colored with the coloring
of the Faith, above all the laws of the laws of the earth not
sanctioned by the Faith, and above all traditions not originating
in the Faith.
It means to feel superior to others when weak, few and
poor, as well as when strong, many and rich.
It means the sense of supremacy which does not give in
before any rebellious force, before any social custom and
erroneous tradition, before any behavior which may be popular among people but
which has no authority in the Faith.
Steadfastness and strength on the battlefield are but one
expression among many of the triumphant spirit which is included in this
statement of Almighty God.
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The superiority through faith is not a mere single act of will
nor a passing euphoria nor a momentary passion, but is a
sense of superiority based on the permanent truth centered
in the very nature of existence. This eternal truth is above
the logic of force, the concept of environment, the terminology of society, and
the customs of people, as indeed it is joined
with the Living God Who does not die.
A society has a governing logic and a common mode,
its pressure is strong and its weight heavy on anyone who is
not protected by some powerful member of the society or
who challenges it without a strong force. Accepted concepts
and current ideas have a climate of their own, and it is difficult to get rid of
them without a deep sense of truth, in
the light of which all these concepts and ideas shrink to nothingness, and
without the help of a source which is superior,
greater and stronger than the source of these concepts and
ideas.
The person who takes a stand against the direction of the
society - its governing logic, its common mode, its values
and standards, its ideas and concepts, its error and deviations
-will find himself a stranger, as well as helpless, unless his
authority comes from a source which is more powerful than the
people, more permanent than the earth, and nobler than life.
Indeed, God does not leave the Believer alone in the face
of oppression to whimper under its weight, to suffer dejection
and grief, but relieves him of all this with the message:
"Do not be dejected nor grieve; you shall be the uppermost if you are
Believers." (13:139)
This message relieves him from both dejection and grief,
these two feelings being natural for a human being in this
situation. It relieves him of both, not merely through patience
and steadfastness, but also through a sense of superiority
from whose heights the power of oppression, the dominant
values, the current concepts, the standards, the rules, the
customs and habits, and the people steeped in error, all
seem low.
Indeed, the Believer is uppermost-uppermost on the basis
of the authority which is behind him and his source of guidance. Then, what is
to be said of this earth, what of the people, what of the dominant values of the
world, the standards
current among people, while he is inspired by God, returns
to God for guidance, and travels on His path?
The Believer is most superior in his understanding and his
concept of the nature of the world, for the belief in One God,
in the form which has come to him from Islam, is the most
perfect form of understanding, the greatest truth. The picture
of the world which this Faith presents is far above the heaps of concepts, beliefs and religions, and is not reached by any
great philosophers, ancient or modern, nor attained by idolaters
or the followers of distorted scriptures, nor approached by
the base materialists. This picture is so bright, clear, beautiful
and balanced that the glory of the Islamic belief shines forth
as never before. And without doubt those who have grasped
this knowledge are superior to all others. [See the chapter "Teeh wa
rukam." in the book, "Khasais al-
Tasawwar al-Islami wa Muqawwimatuhu", by the author.]
The Believer is most superior in his values and standards,
by means of which he measures life, events, things and persons. The source of
his belief is the knowledge of God and
His attributes as described by Islam, and the knowledge of
the realities prevalent in the universe at large, not merely on
the small earth. This belief with its grandeur provides the
Believer with values which are superior to and firmer than the
defective standards made by men, who do not know anything except what is under
their feet. They do not agree on
the same standard within the same generation; even the same
person changes his standard from moment to moment.
He is most superior in his conscience and understanding,
in his morals and manners, as he believes in God Who has
excellent names and attributes. This by itself creates in him a
sense of dignity, purity and cleanliness, modesty and piety,
and a desire for good deeds, and of being a rightly-guided
representative of God on earth. Furthermore, this belief gives
him the assurance that the reward is in the Hereafter, the reward before which
the troubles of the world and all its sorrows
become insignificant. The heart of the Believer is content
with it, although he may pass through this life without
apparent success.
And he is most superior in his law and system of life. When
the Believer scans whatever man, ancient or modern, has
known, and compares it with his own law and system, he
realizes that all this is like the playthings of children or the
searchings of blind men in comparison with the perfect system and the complete
law of Islam. And when he looks
from his height at erring mankind with compassion and sympathy at its
helplessness and error, he finds nothing in his
heart except a sense of triumph over error and nonsense.
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This was the attitude of the early Muslims toward the
hollow expressions of pomp and power and the traditions
which had enslaved the people of the Days of Ignorance.
Ignorance is not limited to any particular age, but is a condition which
reappears whenever people deviate from the way of
Islam, whether in the past, present or future.
This was the response of al-Mughira ibn Shtuba when he
encountered the forms, manners, standards, and expressions
of Jahiliyyah in the camp of Rustum, the famous Persian
general.
"Abi Uthman al-Nahdi reports: When al-Mughira crossed the
bridge and reached the Persian army, they seated him and
asked Rustum's permission for an audience. In spite of their
defeat, they had not changed any of their show of pomp.
Al-Mughira proceeded. The people were all in their military
uniforms, many wearing crowns, and clothed in gold-threaded
garments. The floor was thickly carpeted (the carpet extending
to three hundred or four hundred steps) and was to be
traversed to reach the general. Al-Mughira proceeded, his
hair braided in four braids, and climbed on the throne and sat
beside Rustum. The attendants jumped on him and pulled
him down. He then said, 'We had heard that you were a
sensible people, but I see that you are the most foolish
nation. Among Arabs all are equal and no one is slave to
another, except when one is captured on the battlefield. I
imagined that you treated each other equally as we do. It
would have been better if you had informed me that some
of you are lords over others rather than treating me like this.
This IS not good manners, and we do not do it. I have come
at your request and not on my own. I know now that your
situation is weak and that you will be defeated. No kingdom can
survive with this character and mentality."
A similar attitude was shown by Rabati bin 'Amer in front
of Rustum and his courtiers before the battle of al-Qadisyyah:
"Before the battle of al-Qadisyyah, S'ad bin Waqqas sent
Rabatl bin 'Amer as a messenger to Rustum, the commander
of the Perslan army and their ruler. He entered the tent
which was all carpeted and curtained with silk and velvet.
Rustum sat on a golden throne, crowned and wearing precious
stones and pearls. Rabati, in tattered clothes, with a shield, sitting on a small horse, entered. He did not alight from his
horse for some distance; then he alighted and tied the horse
to a large pillow. He proceeded armed and helmeted. They
said to him: 'Take off your arms'. He replied: 'I have not come
on my own but on your request. If you do not like it, then
I will go back'. Rustum said: 'Let him come'. He came forward
leaning on his spear, making holes in the carpet. Rustum asked
him: 'For what purpose you have come?" He replied: 'God
has sent us to bring whoever wishes from servitude to men
into the service of God alone, from the narrowness of this
world into the vastness of this world and the Hereafter, from
the tyranny of religions into the justice of Islam". (Ibn Kathir: Al-Bidayah wa
al-Nihayah)
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Conditions change, the Muslim loses his physical power and is
conquered, yet the consciousness does not depart from him that
he is the most superior. If he remains a Believer, he looks upon
his conqueror from a superior position. He remains certain
that this is a temporary condition which will pass away and
that faith will turn the tide from which there is no escape.
Even if death is his portion, he will never bow his head. Death
comes to all, but for him there is martyrdom. He will proceed to the Garden,
while his conquerors go to the Fire.
What a difference! And he hears the voice of his Generous
Lord:
"Let it not deceive you that the unbelievers walk about in
the land. A little respite and their abode is Hell, and what
an evil place! But for those who fear their Lord are Gardens
through which rivers flow, to abide therein -a hospitality
from God; and that which is with God is best for the
righteous." (3:196-198)
The society may be drowned in lusts, steeped in low passions, rolling in
filth and dirt, thinking that it has enjoyment
and freedom from chains and restrictions. Such a society may
become devoid of any clean enjoyment and even of lawful
food, and nothing may remain except a rubbish heap, or
dirt and mud. The Believer from his height looks at the people drowning in dirt
and mud. He may be the only one; yet
he is not dejected nor grieved, nor does his heart desire that
he take off his neat and immaculate garments and join the crowd. He remains the uppermost with the enjoyment of
faith and the taste of belief.
The believer holds on to his religion like the holder of a
precious stone in the society devoid of religion, of character,
of high values, of noble manners and of whatever is
clean, pure and beautiful. The others mock his tenacity, ridicule
his ideas, laugh at his values, but this does not make the Believer weak of
heart: and he looks from his height at those who
mock, ridicule and laugh, and he says, as one of the great
souls-those who preceded him on the long and bright path
of faith, Noah (peace be on him), said:
"You ridicule us! Yet indeed we shall ridicule you as you
ridicule." (11:38)
And he sees the end of this bright path, and also the end
of the dark path in the words of God:
"The criminals used to laugh at the Believers, wink at them
in passing, and joke about them when they returned to
their families. When they saw them, they used to say:
"Certainly these people are astray". Yet they were not sent
as watchers over them. Today the Believers laugh at the
unbelievers, and watch them while sitting on couches. Did
the unbelievers get their reward according to what they
used to do"? (83:29-36)
Before this, the Holy Qur'an told us what the unbelievers
said to the Believers:
"When Our clear verses are recited to them, the unbelievers
say to the Believers: 'Which of the two parties is superior
in station, better in assembly?" (19:73)
Which of the two parties? The great men who do not
believe in Muhammad, or the poor who assemble around
him? Which of the two parties? Al-Nadr bin al-Harith and
'Amr bin Hisham and al-Walid bin al-Mughira and Abu
Sufyan bin Harb? Or Bilal and 'Ammar and Khabbab? If the
call of Muhammad had been better, would only such people
have followed him who did not have any power or position
among the Quraish, who assembled in such a lowly place
as the house of al-Arqam, while their opponents were the
lords of al-Nadwah, the great and glorious assembly hall, and
they possessed power, authority and grandeur?
This is the logic of this world, the logic of those of any
age or any place who cannot see the higher horizons. It
is the wisdom of God that belief remains independent of the
glitter and glamour of worldly allurements, such as closeness
to the ruler, favor from the government, popularity among the
people or the satisfaction of desire. It is only striving, hard
work, fighting and martydom. Let him accept it who may
accept, who has the certainty in his heart that this is purely
for the sake of God and not for the sake of people, or
for the allurements and attractions so dear to people. Let him
stay away from it who desires pleasures and benefits, and who
is greedy for pomp and show, and who is after wealth and
possessions, and who gives weight to the considerations of
men although these may be light in the balance of God.
Indeed, the Believer does not borrow his values, concepts
and standards from people so that he is dependent on the
estimation of people; he takes them from the Sustainer of
the people, and that is sufficient for him. He does not follow
the desires of men so that he has to fluctuate with their
changing desires; he depends on the firm balance of the truth
which does not fluctuate or lean to one side. Indeed, his
inspiration does not come from this passing and finite world;
the inspiration of his soul comes from the fountainheads of
the universe. Then how can he find dejection in his soul or
grief in his heart, while he is linked to the Sustainer of the
people, the balance of truth, and the fountainheads of the
universe?
Indeed, he is with the truth - and what is beyond the
truth but falsehood? Let falsehood have power, let it have its
drums and banners, and let it have its throngs and mobs; all this
cannot change anything of the truth. Indeed, he is with the
truth, and nothing is beyond the truth except error, and the
Believer cannot prefer error to the truth. He is a Believer,
and whatever be the conditions and the situation, he cannot
exchange error for the truth.
"Our Master! Do not let our hearts waver after You have
guided us, and bestow on us mercy from Yourself; indeed
You are the Bestower. Our Master! You will gather mankind on the Day about which
there is no doubt; indeed
God does not fail in His promise." (3:8-9)
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