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1
shahadatan(declaration
of faith)
“I
testify there is no god but Allah.”
Allah (pronounced: Allaah) is the Arabic word for God.
It is the same word used by Jewish and Christian Arabs
to refer to God. The most literal meaning of the
declaration is not the intended one, as there are many
things human beings worship instead of the One God.
The true meaning is: “I testify there is none
worthy of worship but Allah.” This statement
combines negation and affirmation. It denies the right
of anything in creation to be worshipped, and it
affirms that right for the Creator. The concept of
worship is probably more comprehensive in Islam than
in any other religion. It includes devotional rituals,
but it also includes all transactions between
individuals and groups. It also includes emotional
states and actions of the heart, such as love, hate,
hope, fear, etc. In fact, every action that pleases
God is considered an act of worship in Islam.
The second part of the
declaration of faith is:
“I testify that Muhammad
is the [final] Messenger of God.”
Without it, implementing the first part of the
declaration of faith becomes very difficult. The Quran
says,
“You have indeed in the Messenger of Allah a
beautiful pattern (of conduct) for anyone whose hope
is in Allah and the Final Day and who remembers Allah
profusely.”
Following the Messenger of Allah (pbuh) has been made
a litmus test for the love of God:
“Say: ‘If you do love Allah,
follow me: Allah will love you and forgive you your
sins; for Allah is Oft-Forgiving, Most Merciful.’”
Accepting the rules revealed by God through Prophet
Muhammad (pbuh) has also been made a test of true
faith;
“But no, by your Lord, they can
have no (real) Faith, until they make you judge in all
disputes between them, and find in their souls no
resistance against your decisions, but accept them
with the fullest conviction.”
Merits of the
Declaration of Faith
Allah’s Messenger (pbuh) said, “Whoever bears
witness that none is worthy of worship but Allah, and
that Muhammad is His slave and Messenger, and
that Jesus is the slave of Allah and the son of a
woman who was His slave, and His word that He cast
into Mary, and a soul from Him, and that Paradise is
real and that Hell is real, Allah will enter him into
Paradise by any of its eight doors he wishes
[according to his actions].”
On one
occasion the Prophet (pbuh) was sitting in a garden.
He told one of his Companions, “Take these sandals
of mine. When you meet anyone outside this garden who
testifies that there is no god but Allah, being sure
of it in his heart, give him glad tidings of Paradise.”
On
another occasion Allah’s Messenger (pbuh) said, “Allah
has prohibited from the Fire of Hell anyone who says,
‘There is none worthy of worship except Allah,’
seeking thereby the pleasure of Allah.”
The Necessity
of Declaring One’s Faith
These
and other statements of the Prophet (pbuh) have led
scholars to conclude that a person who believes that
this declaration is true must declare it in front of
witnesses to become a Muslim. Knowledge and acceptance
in the heart are conditions for the validity of the
declaration, but knowledge and acceptance without the
declaration would not save a person from Hell if there
were no threat of physical harm to prevent him from
declaring it.
If a
person would be endangered by making his or her faith
known, he/she has the option of keeping it a secret.
One of the Companions of Prophet Muhammad
(pbuh) was tortured and forced to denounce Muhammad
and praise the gods of the idol worshippers upon pain
of death. When he was released, he came to the Prophet
crying. When he had explained to him what had
happened, the Prophet asked him, “How did you find
your heart while you were saying those things?” He
replied that his heart was content with Islam and that
he hated what he was forced to say. The Prophet
instructed him that if he were placed in the same
situation again that he should again say what his
tormenters demanded of him to save himself. It was
about him that the following verse of Qur’an was
revealed:
“Anyone who, after accepting faith
in Allah, utters disbelief - except one who does so
under compulsion, his heart remaining firm in Faith -
but those who open their hearts to disbelief, the
wrath of Allah is on them, and they will have a
dreadful penalty.”
One of
the prominent reasons that Islam requires a person to
declare his/her faith is that a new convert needs the
support and help of the community to help his faith
grow and stabilize. When a person is a very new
Muslim, his/her friends and family are likely to be
displeased with the change. They will raise questions
and doubts about Islam in the mind of the new convert
to try to shake his/her faith. They may even try to
draw the convert into behavior condemned by Islam just
so that his faith will weaken through sinning.
Everyone also has a personal devil to raise doubts and
temptations. If the Muslim community knows that the
person is a new Muslim, they have a responsibility to
make him/her feel welcome and to help him/her through
some of the problems of transition.
Another implication of
the declaration of faith is that a believer should
have an open personality without hidden agendas.
People should know who you are and what you stand for.
Life is a struggle between good and evil. The struggle
goes on in each person’s heart, but it also goes on
between people who align themselves with good, more or
less, and people who align themselves with evil, more
or less. Each of us needs to try to identify the
truth, struggle to live by it and help others to find
it and live by it. This doesn’t mean that you shove
your beliefs down other’s throats, but one has a
responsibility to share beneficial knowledge with
those who don’t know.
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