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Books Section > The Religion of Islam > Introduction (to Islam)
Introduction (to
Islam):
by Maulana Muhammad
Ali Sahib
Islam, not
Muhammadanism:
The first point to be noted in a
discussion on the religion1 of Islam is that the
name of the system is not Muhammadanism, as is generally supposed in
the west, but Islam. Muhammad was the name of the Holy Prophet
through whom this religion was revealed, and European writers call it
Muhammadanism after him, on the analogy of such names as Buddhism,
Confucianism, Christianity, and the like, but the name Muhammadanism
was absolutely unknown to the followers of Islam. It is neither to be
found in the Quran nor in the Sayings of the Prophet. The name
of the system as stated in the Quran is
Islam,2 and he who follows it is called a
Muslim.3 So far from the system being named after
its founder, Prophet Muhammad is himself called a
Muslim.4 In fact, every prophet of God is spoken of
in the Quran as being a Muslim5 thus showing
that Islam is the true religion for the whole of humanity, the
various prophets being the preachers of that religion among different
nations in different times, and Prophet Muhammad its last and most
perfect exponent.
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1 The Arabic word for religion is din or milla, the root-meaning of the former being obedience and requital, and that of the latter to dictate. Milla has special reference to the prophet through whom the religion is revealed, and din to the individual who follows it (R). Another word for religion is niadhhab which is not used in the Quran. It is derived from the root dhahaba meaning he went, and madhhab signifies a way that one pursues in respect of doctrines and practices in religion, or an opinion respecting religion (L. L.). According to some authorities, the distinction between the three words is thus expressed: din in relation to God Who reveals it, milla in relation to the Prophet through whom it is revealed and madhhab in relation to the mujtahid who expounds it. The word madhhab as used in Urdu or Persian carries, however, the wider significance of religion. 2 "This day have I perfected for you your religion and completed My favour on you, and chosen for you Islam as a religion" (5 : 3). "Surely the true religion with Allah is Islam" (3 : 18). 3 "He named you Muslims before and in this" (22 : 78), where before refers to the Prophecies, and this to the Holy Quran. 4 "And I am the first of the Muslims" (6 : 164). 5 "And the same did Abraham enjoin on his sons and so did Jacob: O my sons, Allah has chosen the religion for you, so die not unless you are Muslims" (2 : 132); "We revealed the Torah, in which was guidance and light; with it the prophets who submitted themselves (aslamu) judged matters for those who were Jews" (5 : 44). |
Significance of the Name
Islam:
Among the great religions of the world,
Islam enjoys the distinction of bearing a significant name, a name
that points to its very essence. The root-meaning of the word
Islam is to enter into peace,6
and a Muslim is one who makes his peace with God and man.
Peace with God implies complete submission to His will, and peace
with man is not only to refrain from evil or injury to another but
also to do good to him; and both these ideas find expression in the
Qur'an as the true essence of the religion of Islam: "Nay: whoever
submits (aslama) himself entirely to Allah and he is the doer
of good to others, he has his reward from his Lord, and there is no
fear for such, nor shall they grieve" (2 : 112). Islam is thus, in
its very inception, the religion of peace, and its two basic
doctrines, the Unity of God and the unity or brotherhood of the human
race, afford positive proof of its being true to its name. Not only
is Islam stated to be the true religion of all the prophets of God,
as pointed out above, but even the involuntary though complete
submission to Divine laws, which is witnessed in nature, is indicated
by the same word aslama. This wider significance is also
retained in the strictly legal usage of the word, for, in law, Islam
has a two-fold significance: a simple profession of faith - a
declaration that "there is no god but Allah and Muhammad is
His Messenger" (Kalimah) and a complete submission to the
Divine will which is only attainable through spiritual
perfection.7 Thus, he who simply accepts the
religion of Islam, the mere novice, is a Muslim, as well as he who
completely submits himself to the Divine will and practises all the
Divine commandments.
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6 Islam means entering into salm, and silm and salm both signify peace (R.). Both these words are used in the sense of peace in the Qur'an. 7 "Islam in law is of two kinds; one is a simple confession with the tongue ... whether accompanied with belief (iman or real change) in the heart or not... The other is about belief (iman), and it means that along with confession, there is belief (iman) or real change in the heart and a fulfilment in practice, and resignation to God in whatever He brings to pass or decrees" (R.). |
Place of Islam among the Religions
of the World:
Islam is the last of the great
religions - those mighty movements which have revolutionised the
world and changed the destinies of nations. But it is not only the
last, it is an all-inclusive religion which contains within itself
all religions which came before it. One of its most striking
characteristics is that it requires its followers to believe that all
the great religions of the world that preceded it have been revealed
by God: "And who believe in that which has been revealed to thee and
that which was revealed before thee" (2 : 4).
"Say: We believe in Allah and (in) that which has been revealed to us, and (in) that which was revealed to Abraham and Ishmael and Isaac and Jacob and the tribes, and (in) that which was given to Moses and Jesus, and (in) that which was given to the prophets from their Lord; we do not make any distinction between any of them" (2 : 136)."The Messenger believes in what has been revealed to him from his Lord, and so do the believers; they all believe in Allah and His angels and His books and His messengers. We make no distinction between any of His messengers" (2 : 285).
Thus a Muslim believes not only in the Prophet Muhammad but in all other prophets as well. And prophets were, according to the teachings of the Qur'an, sent to all the nations: "And there is not a people but a warner has gone among them" (35 : 24). A Jew believes only in the prophets of Israel; a Christian believes in Jesus Christ and, in a lesser degree, in the prophets of Israel; a Buddhist in Buddha; a Zoroastrian in Zoroaster; a Hindu in the prophets who appeared in India; a Confucian in Confucius; but a Muslim believes in all these and in Muhammad also, the last of the prophets. Islam is, therefore, an all-comprehensive religion within which are included all the religions of the world; and similarly, its sacred Book, the Holy Quran, is spoken of as a combination of all the sacred scriptures of the world: "Pure pages, wherein are all right books" (98 : 2, 3).
There is yet one more characteristic of Islam which gives it a special place among religions. In addition to being the last and an all-inclusive religion, it is the perfect expression of the Divine will. Thus the Quran says: "This day have I perfected for you your religion and completed My favour to you, and chosen for you Islam as a religion" (5 : 3). Like every other form of consciousness, the religious consciousness of man has developed slowly and gradually down the ages, and the revelation of the great Truth from on High was thus brought to perfection in Islam. It is to this great truth that the words of Jesus Christ allude: "I have yet many things to say unto you but ye cannot bear them now. Howbeit when he, the spirit of truth, is come, he will guide you unto all truth" (Jn. 16 : 12, 13). Thus it is the great mission of Islam to bring about peace in the world by establishing a brotherhood of all the religions, to bring together all the religious truths contained in previous religions, to correct their errors and sift the true from the false, to preach the eternal verities which had not been preached before on account of the special circumstances of any race or society in the early stages of its development and, last of all, to meet all the moral and spiritual requirements of an ever-advancing humanity.
New Meaning Introduced into
Religion:
With the advent of IsIam, the concept
of religion received a new significance. Firstly, it is to be treated
not as a dogma, which a man must accept if he must escape everlasting
damnation, but as a science based on the universal experience of
humanity. It is not a particular nation that becomes the favourite of
God and the recipient of Divine revelation; on the contrary,
revelation is recognized as a necessary factor in the evolution of
man; hence, while in its crudest form it is the universal experience
of humanity, in its highest, that of prophetical revelation, it has
been a Divine gift bestowed upon all nations of the world. And the
idea of the scientific in religion has been further strengthened by
presenting its doctrines as principles of human conduct and action.
There is not a single religious doctrine which is not made the basis
of action for the development of man to higher and yet higher stages
of life. Secondly, the sphere of religion is not confined to the next
world; its primary concern is rather with this life, that man,
through a righteous life here on earth, may attain to the
consciousness of a higher existence. And so it is that the
Quran deals with a vast variety of subjects which affect man's
life in this world. It deals not only with the ways of devotion, the
forms of worship, and the means which make man attain communion with
God, but also, and in richer detail, with the problems of the world
around us, with questions pertaining to relations between man and
man, his social and political life, institutions of marriage, divorce
and inheritance, division of wealth and relations of labour and
capital, administration of justice, military organisation, peace and
war, national finances, debts and contracts, rules for the service of
humanity and even treatment of animals, laws for the help of the
poor, the orphan and the widow, and hundreds of other questions the
proper understanding of which enables man to lead a happy life. It
lays down rules not only for individual progress but also for the
advancement of society as a whole, of the nation and even of
humanity. It throws light on problems regarding relations not only
between individuals but also among different tribes and nations into
which humanity is divided. It prepares man for another life, it is
true, but only through making him capable of holding his own in the
present one.
Religion is a Force in the Moral
Development of Man:
The question which perturbs every mind
today is whether religion is, when all is said and done, necessary to
humanity. Now a cursory glance at the history of human civilisation
will show that religion has been the supreme force in the development
of mankind to its present condition. That all that is good and noble
in man has been inspired by faith in God is a truth at which perhaps
even an atheist would not cavil. One Abraham, one Moses, one Krishna,
one Buddha, one Christ, one Muhammad has, each in his turn and his
degree, changed the whole history of the human race and raised it
from the depths of degradation to moral heights undreamed of. It is
through the teachings of this or that prophet that man has been able
to conquer his lower nature and to set before himself the noblest
ideals of selflessness and the service of humanity. A study of the
noble sentiments that inspire man today will show their origin in the
teachings and examples of some great sage who had deep faith in God
and through whom was sown the seed of faith in other human hearts.
The moral and ethical development of man to his present state, if due
to any one cause, is due to religion. Humanity has yet to find out
whether the lofty emotions which inspire man today will
survive after a generation or two of Godlessness, and what sentiments
materialism will bring in its train. To all appearance, the reign of
materialism must need entail the rule of selfishness for a cut and
dried scheme for the equal division of wealth will not inspire the
noble sentiments which are today the pride of man and which centuries
of religion have instilled into his very being. If the sanction of
religion were withdrawn today, the ignorant masses - and the masses
will always remain ignorant though they may be able to read and write
- will sink back, gradually of course, into a state of savagery,
while even those who reckon themselves above the common level will no
longer feel the inspiration to noble and high ideals which only faith
in God can give.
Islam as the Basis of a Lasting
Civilisation:
As a matter of fact, human
civilisation, as we have it today, is whether it likes the idea or
not, based on religion. Religion has made possible a state of
civilisation which has again and again saved human society from
disruption. If its history is traced back anywhere, it will be seen
that whenever it has begun to totter, a new religious impulse has
always been at hand to save it from complete extinction. Not only
that civilisation, with any pretence to endurance, can rest solely on
a moral basis, and that true and lofty morals are inspired only by
faith in God, but even the unity and cohesion of jarring human
elements, without which it is impossible for any civilisation to
survive, is best brought about by the unifying force of religion. It
is often said that religion is responsible for much of the hatred and
bloodshed in the world, but a glance at the history of religion will
show that this is a monstrous misconception. Love, concord, sympathy,
kindness to one's fellow-man, have been the message of every
religion, and every nation has learnt these essential lessons in
their true purity only through the spirit of selflessness and service
which a faith in God has inspired. If there have been selfishness and
hatred and bloodshed, those have been there in spite of religion, not
as a consequence of the message of love which religion has brought.
They have been there because human nature is too prone to these
things; and their presence only shows that a still greater religious
awakening is required, that a truer faith in God is yet the crying
need of humanity. That man sometimes turns to low and unworthy things
does not show that the nobler sentiments are worthless, but only that
their development has become a more urgent necessity.
Islam as the Greatest Unifying Force
in the World:
If unification be the true basis of
human civilisation, by which phrase is meant the civilisation not of
one nation or of one country but of humanity as a whole, then Islam
is undoubtedly the greatest civilising force the world has ever known
or is likely to know. Fourteen hundred years ago it was Islam that
saved it from crashing into an abyss of savagery, that came to the
help of a civilisation whose very foundations had collapsed, and that
set about laying a new foundation of rearing an entirely new
edifice of culture and ethics. A new idea of the unity of human race
as a whole, not of the unity of this or that nation, was introduced
into the world - an idea so mighty that it welded together nations
which had warred with one another since the world began. It was not
only in Arabia, among the ever-bickering tribes of a single
peninsula, that this great "miracle", as an English writer terms it,
was wrought8 - a miracle before the magnitude of
which everything dwindles into insignificance. It not only cemented
together the warring tribes of one country but also established a
brotherhood of all nations of the world, even uniting those which had
nothing in common except their common humanity. It obliterated
differences of colour, race, language, geographical boundaries and
even of culture. It united man with man as such, and the hearts of
those in the far east began to beat in unison with those in the
farthest west. Indeed, it proved to be not only the greatest but the
only force unifying man, because, whereas other religions had
succeeded merely in unifying the different elements of a single race,
Islam actually achieved the unification of many races and harmonised
the jarring and discordant elements of humanity. How great a force it
was in bringing back his lost civilisation to man, is attested by a
European writer9:
"In the fifth and sixth centuries, the civilised world stood on the verge of chaos. The old emotional cultures that had made civilisation possible, since they had given to men a sense of unity and of reverence for their rulers, had broken down, and nothing had been found adequate to take their place..."It seemed then that the great civilisation which it had taken four thousand years to construct was on the verge of disintegration, and that mankind was likely to return to that condition of barbarism where every tribe and sect was against the next and law and order were unknown... The old tribal sanctions had lost their power... The new sanctions created by Christianity were working division and destruction instead of unity and order... Civilisation like a gigantic tree whose foliage had over-reached the world ... stood tottering ... rotted to the core... Was there any emotional culture that could be brought in to gather mankind once more into unity and to save civilisation?"
And speaking of Arabia, the learned author adds that "it was among these people that the man was born who was to unite the whole known world of the east and south".10
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8 "A more disunited people it would be hard to find till suddenly the miracle took place. A man arose who, by his personality and by his claim to direct Divine guidance, actually brought about the impossible - namely the union of all those warring factions" (The Ins and Outs of Mesopotamia, p.99). 9 J.H. Denison, Emotion as the Basis of Civilisation, pp. 265-268. 10 J.H. Denison, Emotion as the Basis of Civilisation, p. 296. |
Islam as the Greatest Spiritual
Force of the World:
Thus Islam laid the basis of a
unification of humanity of which no other reformer or religion has
ever dreamed of; a brotherhood of man which knows no bounds of
colour, race, country, language or even of rank; of a unity of the
human race beyond which human conception cannot go. It recognizes the
equality not only of the civil and political rights of men but also
of their spiritual rights. "All men are a single nation" (2 : 213) is
the fundamental doctrine of Islam, and for that reason every nation
is recognized as having received the spiritual gift of revelation.
But the establishment of a vast brotherhood of all men is not the
only achievement of Islam. Equally great is the unparalleled
transformation which it has brought about in the world; for it has
proved itself to be a spiritual force the equal of which the human
race has never known. Its miraculous transformation of world
conditions was brought about in an incredibly short time. It swept
away the vile superstitions, the crass ignorance, the rank
immorality, the old evil habits of centuries, in about two decades.
That its spiritual conquests are without parallel in history is an
undeniable fact, and it is because of the unparalleled spiritual
transformation effected by him that Prophet Muhammad is admitted to
be the "most successful of all prophets and religious personalities"
(En. Br., art. Koran).
Islam Offers a Solution of the Great
World-problems:
Islam has a claim upon the attention of
every thinker, not only because it is the most civilising and the
greatest spiritual force of the world but also because it offers a
solution of the most baffling problems which confront mankind today.
Materialism, which has become humanity's ideal in modern times, can
never bring about peace and mutual trust among the nations of the
world. Christianity has failed to do away with race and colour
prejudices. Islam is the only force which has already succeeded in
blotting out these distinctions and it is through Islam only that
this great problem of the modern world can be solved. Islam is, first
and foremost, an international religion, and it is only before its
grand international ideal - the ideal of the equality of all races
and of the unity of the human race - that the curse of nationalism,
which has been and is responsible for the troubles of the ancient and
the modern worlds, can be swept away. But even within the boundaries
of a nation or a country there can be no peace as long as a just
solution of the two great problems of wealth and sex cannot be found.
Europe has gone to two extremes on the wealth question - capitalism
and Bolshevism. There is either the tendency to concentrate wealth
among the great capitalists, or by community of wealth, to bring the
indolent and the industrious to one level. Islam offers the true
solution by ensuring to the worker the reward of his work, great or
small, in accordance with the merit of the
work, and also by allotting to the poor a share in the wealth of the
rich. Thus, while the rights of property are maintained in their true
sense, an arrangement is made for equalising conditions by taking a
part of the wealth of the rich and distributing it among the poor
according to the principle of zakat (or poor-rate, an
obligatory charity) and also by a more or less equal division of
property among heirs on the death of an owner. Thus, writing towards
the close of his book, a European orientalist remarks:
"Within the Western world Islam still maintains the balance between exaggerated opposites. Opposed equally to the anarchy of European nationalism and the regimentation of Russian communism, it has not yet succumbed to that obsession with the economic side of life which is characteristic of present-day Europe and present-day Russia alike. Its social ethic has been admirably summed up by Professor Massignon: 'Islam has the merit of standing for a very equalitarian conception of the contribution of each citizen by the tithe to the resources of the community; it is hostile to unrestricted exchange, to banking capital, to state loans, to indirect taxes on objects of prime necessity, but it holds to the rights of the father and the husband, to private property, and to commercial capital. Here again it occupies intermediate position between the doctrines of bourgeois capitalism and Bolshevist communism."11
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11 H.A.R. Gibb, Whither Islam, pp. 378-379. |
Similarly Islam's solution of the sex question is the only one that can ensure ultimate peace to the family. There is neither the free-love which would loosen all ties of social relations, nor the indissoluble binding of man and woman which turns many a home into a veritable hell. And, by solving these and a hundred other problems, Islam - as its very name indicates - can bring true happiness to the human race.
Misconceptions Underlying
Anti-religious Movement:
The anti-religious movement which has
taken root in Russia is based on a misconception as to the nature of
Islam. The three chief objections to religion are:
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12 As summed up in Emotion as the Basis of Civilizations, p. 506. |
So far as Islam is concerned, the facts are entirely contrary to these allegations. It came as the friend of the poor and the destitute, and as a matter of fact it has accomplished an upliftment of the poor to which history affords no parallel. It raised men from the lowest rung of the social ladder to the highest positions of life, it made of slaves not only leaders in thought and intellect but actual kings. Its social system is one of an equality which is quite unthinkable in any other nation or society. It lays down as one of the fundamental principles of religion that the poor have a right in the wealth of the rich, a right exercised through the state which collects annually a fortieth of the wealth amassed by the rich, to be distributed among the poor.
The second allegation that religion discourages the advancement of science and learning is equally devoid of truth. Islam gave an impetus to learning in a country which had never been a seat of learning and was sunk in the depths of superstition. Even as far back as the caliphate of 'Umar (634-644 A.D.), the Islamic state undertook the education of the masses, while the Muslims carried the torch of learning to every country where they gained political ascendancy; schools, colleges and universities sprang up everywhere as a result of the Muslim conquest. It is no exaggeration to say that it was through Islam that the Renaissance came about in Europe.
The third allegation that religion makes people idle by teaching them to pray is also belied by the history of Islam. Not only does the Quran teach men to work hard for success in life, and lays down, in plain words, that "man can have nothing but what he strives for" (53 : 39), but it actually made the Arabs - the then most backward nation in the world - a nation of great leaders in all phases of life. And this great revolution was brought about only by awakening in them a desire for work and a zest for hard striving. Islam does teach man to pray, but prayer, instead of making him idle, is intended to fit him for a still harder struggle, and to carry on that struggle in the face of failure and disappointment, by turning to God who is the Source of all strength. Thus prayer in Islam is only an incentive for work, and not a hindrance.
This page was printed from the 'Official Website of the Ahmadiyya
Anjuman Isha'at-e-Islam Lahore (Lahore Ahmadiyya Movement for
the Propagation of Islam)'
located at http://aaiil.org
or http://www.aaiil.org