(written for young minds)
When God created man, he implanted
two things in him: first, the perception that he has a creator who is his master
and second: recognition of a good deed and a bad deed one. Besides these two,
there are several other things which the Almighty placed in man or which, if
reminded of, with time manifest themselves in the knowledge and actions of a
person. These two things were also similarly placed in him.
This is the real religion which
the Almighty gave man at the time He created him. After that, God selected
certain individuals, gave them a message and sent them towards mankind to
deliver to it this message. These individuals are called prophets (nabī)
and messengers (rasūl). When they came to mankind, they explained in
great detail the beliefs and principles of the religion which God had placed in
man.
This process began with Adam (sws)
who was the first human being and ended with Muhammad (sws). The Almighty has
informed us that he was the last of His representatives and after him no prophet
or messenger would come. Thus, religion can now only be acquired from him and
true religion is one which he confirmed from his tongue as being the true
religion of God, or which he demonstrated through his actions or which he did
not prohibit if it was done before him in the capacity of religion.
Thousands of people learnt this
religion from Muhammad (sws) in his lifetime and practiced it in his time. Then
millions learnt this from those people and practiced it. This process was never
discontinued. In every generation, his followers read and taught and
communicated this religion to others through the written and spoken word and
practiced it and in this manner communicated it to their next generation. Now it
has reached us and we can say with full certainty that it has reached us in the
same form as it was given by Muhammad (sws) to people who became his companions
in his lifetime by accepting him as the prophet and messenger of God.
The reason for this certitude is
that in every generation such a large number of its followers in so many
different parts of the globe transferred to it others through the written and
spoken word that it cannot be imagined that all of them can lie collectively or
err. In technical terms, this is called consensus and tawātur. Every sane
person acknowledges that whatever is transferred from one generation to another
in such a manner is rendered certain.
This religion has reached us in
two forms:
i. The Qur’ān
ii. The Sunnah
The Qur’ān is the very book which
is called Qur’ān by the Muslims. God revealed this book to Muhammad (sws)
through one of His angels: Gabriel. The Prophet (sws) repeatedly read out this
book to people in the same words it was sent down and the way it was sent down.
His followers learnt it by heart after hearing it from him and those who knew
how to write also wrote it and kept it with them. These people were in
thousands. Some among them learnt just one sūrah, some two, some even more and
some the whole Qur’ān or wrote these portions for themselves. People of the next
generation did the same thing and this is what happened in every generation of
the Muslims. Today also written copies of the Qur’ān are found in every house
and millions in this world can read it out verbatim from memory. It is as a
result of this that, in spite of intense efforts from people, it could neither
be altered earlier nor can it be altered now. Thus, it is absolutely certain
that the Qur’ān which we have today in our hands is the same word for word as
the one the Prophet (sws) gave to his immediate followers.
Same is the case of the Sunnah.
All the people of the nation in which Muhammad (sws) was born were the progeny
of Abraham (sws). The Almighty directed Muhammad (sws) to follow the way of
Abraham (sws). At that time, many of the practices of the way of Abraham (sws)
were intact the way he had left them to his progeny; however, some of them had
been forgotten and some were being done erroneously. Muhammad (sws) reminded
them of these, set right the errors in them and also added to them at God’s
directive. Then he made it mandatory upon his followers to adopt them. All these
practices are called his Sunnah. They have existed before the Qur’ān. All the
people of Arabia were aware of them. For this reason, when the Qur’ān mentions
them, it mentions them in a manner as if everyone knows them; no introduction or
explanation is needed for them.
These practices have reached us
the way the Qur’ān has reached us. In every generation, Muslims have taken them
from their previous generation and followed them and then transferred them to
the next generation. Since the time of Muhammad (sws), this process is going on
without any interruption. Thus these practices too are certain. There is no
difference between them and the Qur’ān as far as their authenticity is
concerned.
(Translated from Maqāmāt by Dr Shehzad
Saleem) |