Islam is the Religion of all the Prophets of
God starting with Adam and ending with Muhammad. In Arabic
Islam means submission. To believe in the heart and declare
with the tongue: "No one is God except Allah and Muhammad
is the Messenger of Allah" is how one becomes Muslim.
Utterance with the Two Professions (ashShahadatan) is required
of the person who is not already a Muslim. A Muslim is a
believer and a follower of Islam.
The First Profession (ash-Shahadah), i.e., "No one is
God except Allah" means nothing deserves to be worshipped
except Allah. "Allah" is the name of the Creator in
Arabic which means "The One Who has the Godhood which is
the power to create the entities."
The second Profession, i.e., "Muhammad is the
Messenger of Allah" includes believing Muhammad was the
last of the prophets, he was truthful in all he told about and
conveyed from Allah (as were all the prophets before him), and
the Creator gave us prophets and messengers (A 'prophet' is a
man who receives the Revelation from Allah and conveys it to
the people. A 'messenger' is a prophet who comes with some new
laws. The prophet who is not a messenger follows the laws of
the messenger who came before him. Every messenger is a
prophet, but not every prophet is a messenger.) to guide us to
worship Him correctly. A Muslim must believe in all the
prophets and messengers.
The Two Professions are the essentials of belief in Islam;
they are the foundation of the faith. The analogy of
constructing a building is useful in explaining the importance
of this basic belief. There will be no building without a
concrete foundation. Likewise, there will be no benefit and
fruitful results in the Hereafter without having the correct
belief first.
This analogy illustrates the need to start from the
beginning and build upward; before one can remain steadfast in
the Religion one must have the proper belief. Muslims firmly
believe only one Creator exists, His name is Allah, and
Muhammad is His Prophet and Messenger. Knowledge and belief in
this are the foundation of the faith, and all Muslims are
united by this basic belief. The Muslim uses the mind as a
guide because the mind and faith go hand-in-hand. Knowledge is
essential since learning gives one strength and purpose.
Allah is one; He is indivisible, i.e., He is not a body.
Allah has no partner, no counterpart, no wife, no son.
Intellectively, this is understood because if there were two
partners and one partner willed for one thing to be and the
other partner willed the opposite thing--we know opposites do
not happen simultaneously--so the one who willed what did not
occur is weak. Weakness is non-befitting to attribute to God;
therefore, there is only one God. For the same reason, the
Devil does not have control over God and evil occurs because
Allah willed it. There is a wisdom behind everything--even if
we do not know the wisdom--Allah knows.
Allah has no beginning to His existence. Anything that has
a beginning is creation. Allah created every creation, every
movement, every rest, every thought, every intention. To have
a beginning is a sign of need, and Allah is not in need. Allah
has no end to His existence. To have an end is weakness; the
Creator is not weak.
Allah does not need any of His creation. To need something
means to be unable to perform without it, and this is
weakness. The Creator is not weak--it is impossible to be
among His attributes. Allah has the attribute of power by
which He affects the creation. He makes them exist and He
annihilates them.
Allah has the attribute of Will. Whatever Allah willed to
be shall be and whatever Allah did not will to be shall not
be. Both good and evil happen according to God's will.
Allah has the attribute of knowledge. Allah knows
everything: what has happened, what is happening, and what
will happen.
Allah hears all hearable things and Allah sees all seeable
things without organs and without limitations. Man needs ears
and air to transfer sound in order to hear and light in order
to see. Allah does not need any of the creation. Allah, with
His eternal kalam, orders the obligations, forbids the
prohibitions, promises the reward of Paradise, and threatens
the punishment of Hellfire without instruments, letters,
languages, or sounds.
Allah has the attribute of life because he who is dead
cannot be attributed with knowledge, will, power, and
consequently, cannot create. Allah's life is not like ours. We
need flesh, bones, blood, and spirit. Allah created all these;
His life is not in need of any of them.
Allah created all the creation, and this includes the
Religion of Islam--which is the only valid and true Religion.
Islam began among humans with the first man, Adam, who was the
first prophet and messenger, and Islam continued through many
prophets, some of which were also messengers. All the prophets
and messengers taught "No one is God except Allah"
and to believe in and follow the prophet and messenger of
their time. All the Prophets taught there is only one God, the
aforementioned attributes of Allah, and the attributes of the
prophets. They called the people to Islam, taught them how to
worship Allah properly, and conveyed what Allah ordered and
what Allah forbid. The prophets had miracles to support their
claim of Prophethood and to prove to the people what they were
teaching was the truth. Some of the rules changed from one
messenger to another but the belief remained the same. The
messengers came with new laws. For example: at the time of
Adam, Muslims used to pray once per day. They were ordered to
pray twice per day at the time of Prophet ^Isa.Now, according
to the rules of the last Messenger--Prophet Muhammad--Muslims
pray five times per day. In previous laws of the messengers,
Muslims were ordered to pray in specific places. Now, in the
rules revealed to Prophet Muhammad, Muslims are not required
to pray in specific places.
Allah blessed the people with the prophets and messengers
to guide them to obedience and warn them from disobedience.
Muslims must believe in all the prophets and messengers
because Allah blessed them all with Revelation and they
conveyed this to their people, but now Muslims must follow the
rules of the last Prophet and Messenger, Prophet Muhammad.
Allah ordered the Messengers to convey the laws, and they
did. They taught by words and example. The prophets were
attributed with truthfulness, trustworthiness, and
intelligence. Consequently, lying, dishonesty, vileness,
stupidity, and dullness were impossible to be among their
attributes. They were also attributed with impeccability of
blasphemy (Blasphemy includes any belief, action, or saying
which belittles Allah, His Books, His Messengers, His Angels,
His Rites, the Ma^alim of His Religion, His Rules, His
Promise, or His Threat.), the great sins (such as drinking
alcohol and unjustful killing), and abject small sins (such as
stealing one grape).
Prophet Muhammad taught his Companions and those Companions
taught their followers and so on until the knowledge of Islam
reached the Muslims of the present day. The beliefs and
teachings were passed from trustworthy Muslim('Trustworthy' as
defined by Islam means the Muslim who does not commit great
sins, small sins in a way that they will be more than this
good deeds, and does not behave in violation of the behavior
of those who have his status.) to trustworthy Muslim with a
chain of reliable relators back to the Prophet. In Islam it is
a great sin to judge without knowledge. If a Muslim does not
know an answer to an Islamic inquiry he must not give his
opinion or what he thinks the answer might be. Instead, he
seeks the answer from someone more knowledgeable in the
Religion who attained the knowledge in the aforementioned
manner.
Since Allah created Adam, the first man, from soil of
different colors and different textures, and all people are
the descendants of Adam, this accounts for the various races
and temperaments of people. Muslim men and women around the
world of all ages, races, colors, nationalities, social
backgrounds, economic status', languages, and political
affiliations are united by their belief that there is only one
God, His name is Allah, and Muhammad is His last Prophet and
Messenger and by practicing the same rules of the Religion.
Islam is a belief system as well as a way of life. Only the
Creator knows the limits, the weakness, and the vulnerability
of all His creation, and He has provided rules for them that
are fair and just. Allah knows what is good for His creation
as well as what is harmful; He knows what is beneficial and
what is detrimental.
The foundation of Islam is based upon five matters:
(1) Professing and believing no one is God except Allah and
Muhammad is the Messenger of Allah;
(2) Prayer;
(3) Zakah;
(4) Fasting;
(5) Hajj.
The belief in the truth of Islam is the same despite the
color of the skin, whether one is a man or a woman, how much
wealth one might or might not have accumulated, where one
lives, and who one's family and/or friends are.
Prayer, five times each day, is required by all Muslim
mukallaf (Mukallaf in this context means sane and pubescent.).
Fasting during the month of Ramadan is an obligation on all
Muslims who have reached puberty and who are physically able
to fast. This helps the Muslim to feel what the poor feel, and
in this way one remembers to care for those less fortunate
than oneself. Fasting also disciplines the Muslim and brings
Muslims together--uniting them by a common, shared experience.
TheHajj, pilgrimage as defined by Islam, is the journey to
the Ka^bah to perform, at a specific period of the year,
certain actions in Makkah and its vicinity. It is required at
least once during the lifetime of each Muslim mukallaf if he
is able. During Hajj, all Muslims leave their worldly
possessions and perform the same religious obligations in the
same way as those Muslims with them and those Muslims who
performed Hajj before them.
Zakah is paying a certain portion of one's money (Money in
this context includes property, possessions, and wealth.) to
specific types of people with certain conditions. This
provides for the poor Muslims and those whose needs are not
being met within the Muslim community.
Islam also requires a Muslim to be humble and to care about
and to respect one's brother and sister Muslim. It is not
acceptable Islamic behavior to talk about other Muslims or to
cause problems amongst them.
Learning the Obligatory Knowledge of the Religion puts the
Muslim on the road for excellence and self-betterment. With
knowledge, the Muslim differentiates between what is lawful
and what is not, and what is an acceptable, valid worship and
what is not. What differentiates one Muslim from another is
the amount of Islamic knowledge one attains and applies within
one's own life. "The Essentials of Belief" is an
insight into the Religion of Islam. Believing and uttering 'No
one is God except Allah and Muhammad is the Messenger of
Allah' is the most important thing any person can do and it is
a condition for the acceptance of the good deeds. The one who
becomes Muslim and stays Muslim will have the enjoyment of
Paradise without end in the Hereafter and the one who rejects
Islam will suffer the torture of Hellfire without end in the
Hereafter. It is certain that death will come to all of us.
The one who is prepared for the Day of Judgment is the one who
knows, accepts, and applies the essentials of belief, and
implements the teachings of Prophet Muhammad, sallallahu ^alayhi
wa sallam, in all sincerity to Allah, the Exalted.
The truth of Islam must be accepted and the
Obligatory Knowledge of Islam must be acquired and taken if it
is from reliable, trustworthy, Islamic sources--irregardless
of whether the teacher is young or old, male or female, rich
or poor, black or white, Arab or American or African or Indian
or Chinese or Spanish or of any other origin.
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