Good
Manners and noble qualities
Good
manners and noble qualities of mind and character enjoy a place of crucial
importance in the structure of Islamic teaching. Moral evolution and
uplift was one of the main objects for which the sacred Prophet was
raised up. The Prophet himself has said:
“I have been sent down by God to teach moral virtues and to evolve
them to highest perfection.”
Importance
An idea of the supreme importance Islam attaches to the cultivation
of good manners and noble moral qualities can be obtained from the under-mentioned
Traditions of the Prophet:
“The best of you are those who possess the best manners.”
“On the Day of Recompense nearest to me will be one who displays
in one’s daily life the best of manners.”
“On the Day of Reckoning the most weighty item in the ‘Balance
of Deeds’ will be good manners.”
Once a Companion asked the Prophet, “What is there that takes
a Muslim to Paradise? ” The Prophet replied, “Fear of God
and good manners.”
The Prophet, again, is reported to have said, “A Muslim with good
manners and good moral disposition gets the same reward as he who fasts
(permanently) during the day and spends his nights in prayer.”
The last Tradition tells that a believer who possess good manners and
carries out scrupulously the moral duties imposed on him by God but
does not engage himself much in supererogatory fasts and prayers attains
the degree of excellence of the man who stands up in prayer all night
and fasts all day long.
The
Curse of Bad Manners
We have been warned by the Holy Prophet in an equally forceful manner
against the curse of bad manners. He has said:
“A man with bad manners and a bad moral conduct shall not enter
Paradise.”
“No sin is more detestable to God than bad manners.”
Some More Important Virtues
Though in the Quran and the Traditions we are taught to cultivate all
good and noble moral and social qualities and to avoid everything that
is mean or wicked, here we will take up only such virtues as are more
important and without which no one can hope to be a good Muslim and
a true believer.
Truthfulness
Truthfulness is a matter of such supreme consequence in Islam that in
addition to speaking the truth always a Muslim is exhorted also to keep
company only with those that are truthful. The Quran states:
“O ye who believe! Fear God and be only with those who are true
(in words and deed). ” (IX: 119)
Says the Prophet:
“He who wishes to love God and His Apostle, or wishes God and
His Apostle to love him, must take care to speak nothing but the truth
whenever he speaks.”
“Speak the truth even if you see your ruin or death in it for,
surely, salvation and life lie alone in truth, and avoid falsehood even
if it may hold out to you the promise of success and salvation for the
end of falsehood is nothing but failure and frustration.”
Once the Prophet was asked, “What is the hallmark of the dwellers
of Paradise?” The Prophet replied, “Truthfulness.”
Conversely, another Tradition reads:
“To be a liar is one of the special sings of a hypocrite.”
Trustworthiness
Closely allied to truthfulness is the quality of trustworthiness. It
is important branch of it. Islam has laid a special emphasis on it also.
Here is what the Quran says :
God doth command you to render back you Trusts to those to whom they
are due. (IV: 58)
And the Traditions:
“People! In whom there is no trustworthiness, in him there is,
so to speak, no faith.”
“Look not alone at anyone’s prayers and fasts to decide
about his spiritual excellence (that is, do not be impressed by anyone’s
spirituality simply because you find him devout in his prayers and fasts).
You should also see that he is truthful when he speaks, restores honestly
what he has received in trust to whom it is due, and remains righteous
in times of adversity and suffering.”
Justice
Justice is an integral part of Islamic ethics. We must practice it in
all spheres of life. The Quran states:
God commands justice and doing of good. (XVI : 19)
In Islam we are commanded to be just and fair not only towards our own
people or co-religionists but also towards others even if they be the
enemies of our life, property or faith. It is candidly stated in the
Quran that :
And let not the hatred of others to you make you swerve to wrong and
depart from justice. Be just: that is next to piety. (V: 9)
The above verse enjoins justice to those also, individuals as well as
communities, who may be harboring ill-will against us. Otherwise, we
are sure to incur the displeasure of God and become grievous sinners
and criminals in His sight. To refer now to some of the Tradition:
“The most beloved of men in the sight of God, on the Day of Resurrection,
and the nearest to Him, shall be the just leader; and the most hateful
of men in the sight of God on the Day of Resurrection, and the farthest
removed from Him, shall be the tyrannical ruler.”
The Prophet is reported to have enquired one day from the Companions.
“Do you know who will be the first to come under the shadow of
Divine Mercy on the Day of Requital? ” The Companions replied,
“God and His Apostle know best.”
The Prophet then said, “They will be those who accept a trust
when it is offered to them and restore it willingly to the rightful
claimant when they are asked to do so, and who judge in respect of others
exactly as they would in respect of themselves.”
The pity is that we ourselves have forgotten the glorious teachings
of Islam. If we can produce these qualities in us today and become truthful
in word and deed, and honest in the matter of our trusts and promises,
and just and fair in our dealings with others, the success of the world
is bound to kiss our feet and we will attain a high place in the paradise
too.
Compassion and Forgiveness
To feel pity on a fellow human being in distress, to be compassionately
drawn towards him, to bring him succor, to pardon the guilty and the
defaulter are virtues which are valued very highly in Islam. Take these
Traditions, for instance:
“Show kindness, and kindness will be shown to you; forgive, and
you will be forgiven.”
“They will not obtain the mercy of God in whose hearts there is
no feeling of kindliness for others.”
“His sins will not be forgiven by God who does not forgive the
faults of the others.”
“God will have mercy upon them that are merciful. Treat kindly
the dwellers of the earth, He who dwells in the heavens will treat you
kindly.”
It is apparent from the last Tradition that out kindliness and gentility
is not to be confined to our own people alone. We ought to be kind and
compassionate towards friend and foe alike and to all the creatures
that exist on the earth.
It is reported from the Prophet that once a person who was traveling
by road saw a dog licking wet earth in the agony of its thirst. The
traveler was moved by the spectacle and gave water to the dog to drink.
This simple service of the man to the thirsting dog pleased God so much
that he blessed him with salvation.
Tenderness
Tenderness is monetary dealings, and in all other fields of one’s
activity, and the readiness to oblige and to put others at ease are
all virtues of the highest order in the Islamic pattern of morality.
We will reproduce two Traditions of the Holy Prophet in support of our
contention Said he:
“Hell’s fire is forbidden for those that are mild and gentle
and make it easy for others to deal with them.”
“God is compassionate and likes compassion in His creatures. He
grants more to the kind and the tender-hearted than to those that are
harsh and severe.”
Self-
Restraint
Tolerance, affability, self-restraint, and the ability to control one’s
temper and to overlook what is unpleasant and disagreeable are qualities
that Islam wants everyone to cultivate. Believers who possess these
fine moral attributes hold a very high place in the estimation of God.
In the Quran where a mention is made of the blessed ones for whom the
paradise has been laid out such people are specifically referred to:
Who restrain anger and pardon (all men) (III: 134)
Said the Prophet:
“God will hold back His punishment from him who will hold back
his anger.”
Blessed, indeed, are men who remember these verses and Traditions during
moments of provocation and exercise restraint, and, in return, God stays
His chastisement from them!
Gentleness
of Speech
Gentleness of speech is a religious virtue in Islam and rudeness a sin.
The Quran declares:
Speak fair to the People. (II: 83)
We have it from the Prophet that:
“To speak politely is piety and a kind of charity.”
“To indulge in intemperate language and in harsh behaviour is
to perpetrate an injustice and the home of injustice is Hell.”
“Rudeness in speech is hypocrisy (i.e., the quality of a hypocrite).”
Humility
Humility is a virtue Islam wants its followers to practice as a distinguishing
feature of their moral and spiritual behaviour. It does not become a
Muslim to be haughty or vainglorious.
Greatness with God is not for those who look down upon others. Instead,
it belongs to those desist from thinking too highly of themselves and
practice meekness and humility. In the words of Quran:
And the servants of (God) Most Gracious are those who walk on earth
in humility. (XXX: 63)
The Home of the Hereafter We shall give to those who intend not highhandedness
or mischief on earth. (XXXVIII: 83)
The Holy Prophet has said:
“He who observes humility God will make him so exalted that, ultimately,
he will attain the highest grade in Paradise.”
On the other hand, pride is so greatly repugnant to God that the sacred
Prophet has warned us, again and again, against it in such strong words:
“Whoever has pride in his heart even of the weight of an atom
shall be cast head-long into the Hell of God.”
“Whoever has pride in his heart even of the weigh of the weight
of a mustered seed, shall not enter Paradise.”
“Beware of pride! Pride was the sin which first of all ruined
the Devil.”
May almighty God save us all from the Satanic evil of pride, and endow
our hearts and minds with meekness and humility which He admires so
much and which is the symbol of His slaves.
It needs, however, be remembered that it is demanded of us to practice
meekness and humility in our personal matters and not in matters where
truth of faith is involved. When it comes to faith or truth we must
be bold and outspoken and give the fullest proof of courage and firmness
of this is the will of God for such occasions.
The way of a Muslim, in sum, is that while he is meek and humble is
his own individual sphere of existence, he is firm like a rock and allows
neither fear nor weakness to come near him where faith or truth or justice
is at stake.
Courage
and Fortitude
There occur periods of hardship and adversity in the lives of men. Sometimes
there is want, sometimes there is disease, sometimes our enemies harass
us. And, so forth. For such situations the teaching of Islam is that
we should bear them with courage and fortitude, remain firm and stout
of heart and do not waver from our principles in-spite of thousands
trials and calamities that may assail us. For such men there is the
assurance of the Quran that they are the Beloved of God:
For God loves those who are patient and persevering (III: 146)
God, surely, is with those who patiently persevere. (II: 153)
And to be firm and patient in pain (or suffering) and adversity and
through all periods of panic. Such are the people of truth, the God-fearing.
(II: 177)
And the Prophet says:
“No boon conferred on man more precious than that of patience.”
“Patience is one-half of faith.”
Contrarily, impatience, chicken-heartedness and cowardice are the most
lamentable of evils against which the Prophet used to beg God for refuge
in his prayers.
Sincerity
Sincerity is the life and soul of entire moral edifice of Islam, nay,
of Islam itself. By sincerity we mean that all our deeds and actions
should solely be for the sake of God and prompted by no other urge than
to earn His approbation. Apart from it, there must be no other desire,
motive or intention behind whatever we do.
Monotheism, which is the arch-stone of Islam, attains fulfillment through
sincerity. Faith in Divine Unity remains imperfect unless all our acts
are performed wholly for the sake of God, and we have no other objective
before us while carrying them out except and winning of Divine pleasure
and reward. States the Prophet:
“He who loves or hates, offers favours or withholds them, and
whatever he does, does so for the sake of God, he perfects his faith.”
It shows that a perfect Muslim in the sight of God is only he who succeeds
in subordinating his entire conduct, his social relations and all his
other affairs to the Will of God and is not influenced in them by his
personal desire or likes or dislikes or by any other urges or impulsions.
Another Tradition reads:
“God is not regardful of your fine visages or your wealth. He
is regardful only of your hearts and intentions.”
The idea of the above Tradition is that God will judge and requite on
the basis of our motives and intentions.
Now, here is a Tradition with which we propose to round off the present
discussion. About this Tradition it is reported that Abu Huraira often
used to faint while he related it. It says:
“The first of those who shall be called to account, on the Day
of Resurrection, shall be one who had learned the whole Quran by heart,
and he who had been killed in the way of God and he who had an abundance
of wealth. Then shall God say to him who had got the whole of Quran
by heart, ’Did I not teach thee what revealed to my Prophet?”
He will say, ‘Yes, my Lord!’ God will ask, ‘And what
hast thou done with regard to what thou didst learn therein?’
He will say, ‘I was constantly at it in the hours of night and
in the hours of day. I learnt it myself and taught it to others, and
I did it all for Thy sake alone’. God will say, ‘ Thou art
a liar; thou didst only desire that men should say that such an one
was a recieter of the Quran and that has been said already’
“And the master of wealth shall be brought before God, and God
shall say, ‘Did I not give thee an abundance of wealth, so that
thou wast not in want of anything?” He will say, ‘Yes, my
Lord!’ God will say, ‘And what hast thou done with what
I gave thee?’ He will answer, ‘I regarded the rights of
kinship and gave alms and I did so for Thy sake.’ God will say,
‘Thou art liar; those didst desire that men should say that such
an one was generous man, and that has been said already.’
“Then shall he who had been killed in the way of God be brought
before him, and God will say to him, ‘What was it that thou wast
killed for? ” He will reply, ‘Thou didst bid us to do Jehad
in Thy was and I fought and was killed.’ God will say, ‘Thou
art a liar; thou didst desire that men should say that such an one was
valiant man, and that has been said already.’
“These are the three men who, of all creatures, shall be first
sent into Fire.”
Brothers, Now, let us examine our thoughts and deeds in the light of
the above Tradition and see where do we stand in the sight of God!
O Allah! Endue our hearts with sincerity and set right our motives and
intentions and make us Thy devoted, dedicated slaves.
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