Abu Sa”id al-Khudri, may Allah be pleased with him, reported that the Messenger of Allah ﷺ had said:
“Whoever amongst you sees anything objectionable, let him change it with his hand, if he is not able, then with his tongue, and if he is not even able to do so, then with his heart, and the latter is the weakest form of faith.”[1] |
This Hadith was also transmitted in another form on the authority of Abdullah bin Masud who narrated that the Messenger of Allah ﷺ said:
“Never before me had a Prophet been sent by Allah to his nation who had not among his people disciples and companions who followed his ways and obeyed his command. Then there came after them their successors who said whatever they did not practice, and practised whatever they were not commanded to do. He who strove against them with his hand was a believer; he who strove against them with his tongue was a believer; and he who strove against them with his heart was a believer; and beyond that there is no faith, not even as minute as a mustard seed.”[2] |
On the authority of Ali Ibn Abi Talib, may Allah be pleased with him, who said: “I heard the Messenger of Allah ﷺ say: “There shall be much tumult after me and, in such times, a believer will not be able to change anything (Munkar) with his hand or his tongue.”I said: “O Messenger of Allah, what should they do then?” He said: “They should denounce it with their hearts?”I said: “0 Messenger of Allah, will this make them any less believers?” He ﷺ said: “No. Only as much as a few drops effect a reservoir of clear water.”
These Hadiths, and others, convey a similar message and show that the obligation to denounce and change Munkar is conditional on the ability to do so, while disapproving of it with the heart is a must for all Muslims regardless of ability; for the heart that does not deny Munkar is a heart that has lost all faith.
Ali Ibn Abi Talib, may Allah be pleased with him, said:
“The first type of Jihad you will be unable to perform is Jihad with your hands, then Jihad with your tongues, then Jihad with your hearts. He whose heart knows not Maroof nor disapproves of Munkar, has a heart that has been turned upside down.” |
Bin Masud, may Allah be pleased with him, once heard a man say: “He who does not enjoin good and forbid evil is doomed to perish.” Ibn Masud said: “He shall perish whose heart does not recognize good and evil.” This indicates that to differentiate between good and evil with the heart is an obligation binding on every Muslim, and that he who does not recognize them is doomed; while to show disapproval of evil and attempt to change it with the hand or tongue is only a binding obligation for those Muslims capable of doing so.
Bin Masud, may Allah be pleased with him, said:
“Those of you who live on (after me) will almost reach a stage when all they would be able to do towards evil that Allah would know from their hearts that they detest it.” |
The Prophet ﷺ said:
“If a sin is committed on this earth, he who witnessed it and disapproved of it is equal to a person who has not witnessed it, while he who has not witnessed it but approved of it is equal to a person who has witnessed it.”[3] |
So, he who has witnessed a sin being committed and detested it with his heart but was unable to show his disapproval with his hands or tongue, is equal to a person who has not witnessed it at all. While he who had not witnessed it but approved of it is like a person who had witnessed it and was able to change it with his hands or tongue but did not do so.
To accept sins is the most hideous of all prohibitions, it is the antithesis of disapproving with the heart.
Showing disapproval with the hands and tongue is dependent on the ability to do so, as mentioned above. Abi Bakr as-Siddiq, may Allah be pleased with him, narrated that the Prophet ﷺ said:
“There are no people in whose midst sins are committed, and they do not change this situation although it is in their powers to do so, except that Allah will be near to overtaking them all with His punishment.”[4] |
Abu Said, may Allah be pleased with him, narrated that the Prophet ﷺ said in a sermon: “Verily, fear of people should not stop a man from speaking out the truth he knows.”Upon hearing this, Abu Said wept and said: “By Allah, we have seen things (for which we should have spoken out the truth) but we were silenced by fear (of people).”[5]
Imam Ahmad also narrated the same Hadith with an addition: “It does not bring death nearer nor pushes earnings farther to speak the truth or remind a powerful man of it.”[6]
The Prophet”s ﷺ saying about disapproving with the heart only, that “it is the weakest form of faith”, indicates that enjoining good and forbidding evil is one of the aspects of faith.
And his saying ﷺ “whoever amongst you sees anything objectionable” indicates that disapproving is conditional on seeing. If the objectionable thing was hidden from sight and the believer only learned of it indirectly, he must neither deal with it nor go searching for it if he suspects its existence.
Reasons For Enjoining Good And Forbidding Evil
These reasons are:
- Aspiring for Allahs reward for doing so.
- Fearing Allahs punishment for neglecting this duty.
- Experiencing rage due to transgressions of bounds and prohibitions laid down by Allah.
- Wishing well for the believers, feeling compassion and mercy towards them, and hoping to save them from Allahs punishment and wrath in this life and the Hereafter for the wrongs they had allowed themselves to commit.
- Exaltation of Allah, glorifying and loving Him. He is entitled to be obeyed, never to be disobeyed; remembered, never forgotten; that life and wealth be sacrificed to safeguard his bounds against transgression. Some of our predecessors used to say: “I wish that all creation would obey Allah, even if the price for this would be that my flesh is torn apart with clippers.”
- Abdul-Malik Ibn Omar Ibn Abdul-Aziz used to say to his father: “I wish that we would be boiled in a cooking pot if this would please Allah.”
1 Reported by Muslim.
2 Reported by Muslim.
3 Reported Abu Dawud.
4 Reported by Abu Dawud.
5 Reported by Tirmidhi and Ibn Majah.
6 Imam Ahmed.
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