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Tuesday, December 13, 2011

Social



Fiqh al-Mu`amalat(Social) presents a framework for conduct in the civil arena. It deals in part with economic functions in an Islamic society but not comprehensively with factors impacting upon economc behaviour since it is concerned solely with legal relationships between members of the society. Under mu`amalat, any action that is not specifically or generally described as prohibited or haram automatically becomes permissible or halal.
Haram acts include :
murder
adultery and fornication
theft
consumption of intoxicants and prohibited food items such as pork and related products
gambling
usury
environmentally destructive activities
supply of arms to an enemy state
astrology and divination
blasphemous activities
obscene and permissive activities
bearing of false witness and rumour-mongering
Any form of involvement, directly or indirectly and in any manner whatever, with haram activities is prohibited irrespective of the desirability of the perceived outcome that might result therefrom. The philosophical idea is clearly that the ends do not justify the means. There is furthermore an instruction of the Prophet s.a.w. in Ahadith that 'only good can come from good', which may be seen as confirming the view that in fact the means justify the ends.
Exceptions to the rules of prohibition are made in case of pressing need. Where survival is threatened for example, a Muslim is allowed to consume otherwise prohibited food or drink. This rule of necessity, known as al-darura, is held by many jurists to apply only to otherwise prohibited items of food and drink, and not to activities such as taking interest on bank deposits for example, since the latter may not be seen as necessary for survival. The circumstances in which al-darura applies are decided according to fatwa and not by the individual himself.
But he who is driven by necessity, neither craving nor transgressing, it is not a sin for him
Qur'an 2:173
Halal activities are sometimes categorised as follows :
a) Recommended or mandub - rewardable if enacted but not punishable if omitted.
b) Indifferent or mubah - enactment is permitted and the law is indifferent.
c) Unspecified or mutlaq - the law does not take any position on such actions.
d) Undesirable or makruh - an action which is undesirable but enactment is not punishable.

Note on Hikmah


Asalaamu alaikum wrt wb,
The following are notes from a class on hikmah, may Allah (SWT) reward the student (who wishes to be anonymous) for providing us with these notes. Ameen!
* Umar bin Khattab (ra) left to people 18 statements of wisdom:
1- When someone transgresses upon your rights (and in doing so disobeys Allah) the way to 'revenge' is to obey Allah in dealing with him. (use reason/rules instead of anger)
2- When something comes to you from your brother, accept it as something good, unless you have overwhelming evidence against it. (hush dhann- thinking good of people)
3- Don't take the word of a Muslim as ill. When there is a way of seeing it positively, take it that way. Find one good interpretation out of 10.
4- Avoid positions that will make others doubt you. (ie disobey Allah publicly, hang out with ppl who don't care, at all time and places)
5- Do not blame others. When you have a secret, its under your control, but when you tell someone else, that control is not yours anymore. People fall under diffe ways be with the truth even against your own life.
9- Don't indulge in that which is meaningless. Every moment of our life is meaningful- use it to worship Allah subhanawat'ala
10- Don't ask about that which didn't happen. You already have enough to deal with, be practical, deal with immediate problems not the future of ghayb.
11- Don't ask for your need to be fulfilled from someone who wouldn't like your need to be fulfilled. Try to be self-sufficient as individuals and as an ummah, muslims of early generation were poor but didn't lower themselves. Always be with dignity.
12- Don't be neglectful or careless in swearing by the name of Allah. Otherwise, Allah will bring punishment for you.
13- Don't be in the company of fajaar (those who commit major sins openly and don't care) You WILL be affected. Your own behavior changes little by little. Be in the company of people who remind you of Allah.
14- Be aware of your enemy. Be careful, alert, and prepared.
15- Remember death. Visit the graveyards, try to be in kushuu'. If you can't cry, force yourself to. Try to be humble in front of the Creator, the One who gives life and takes it away.
16- Be HUMBLE in acts of obedience to Allah. No one will protect us but Allah. Seek protection from Allah in Allah.
17- Seek tawbaah. Immediately, be determined, have resolve.
18- Consult in your matters those who have kashiyaah (fear of Allah and always conscious of Him), because those who have kashiyaah are the ones that truly have ilm.
* Ibraheen ibn Adham was approached by a man who wanted to stop his sins. He asked for advice that will help him realize the consequences of his actions. He was told:
If you want to disobey Allah, you can, in 5 cases:
1- If you want to disobey Allah, then don't eat from His rizq (provision.)
The man said: Then where am I to eat when every provision is from Allah?
Ibraheem said: O such a person! Is it honorable and good to disobey Allah, and eat from His provision?
The man said: give me the second one.
2- If you want to disobey Allah, then do not live on Allah's property.
The man said: Then where am I to live if not on Allah's property?
Ibraheem said: Is it good then, to eat from His provision, live on His property, and disobey Him?
The man said: Give me the third one.
3- If you want to disobey Allah, then disobey Him in a place where He will not see you.
The man said: How am I to do this when He not only sees what others see, but what is in the hearts?
Ibraheem said: o you such a person, how do you eat from His provision, live on His property, and disobey Him openly?
The man said: Give me the fourth one.
4- If you want to disobey Allah, when the Angel of Death comes to you, tell him to come back later, after you repent.
The man said: He will not accept this from me!
Ibraheem said: O you such a person, when you cannot delay death, how do you expect a savior?
The man said: Give me the fifth.
5- If you want to disobey Allah, then after death comes to you, on the Day of Judgement, when the Angels of Hell come to drag you into Hell, refuse to go with them.
The man said: They will not accept that from me!
Ibraheem said: Then how do you expect to be saved?
The man said: Enough! Enough! I seek forgiveness in Allah and make tawbaah! AstaghfirAllah wa i'tubuu ilayk!
He made sincere tawbaah, and left all his acts of disobedience, and he died in such a state.
rent factors and pressures, so do not blame others.
6- Always take care of the brothers and sisters of truth. Be with them always. They will protect you. They are always a beautiful ornament. In good times you will have ease, and in time of difficulty, you will have protection and support.
7- Be strict and careful in choosing your friends.

wallahu a'lam...

Sunday, December 4, 2011

THE CONCEPT OF EDUCATION IN ISLAM




The meaning of education and of what it involves is of
utmost importance in the formulation of a system of
education and its implementation. Supposing I am
asked: What is education?, and I answer: Education is a process of
instilling something into human beings. In this answer ‘a process of
instilling’ refers to the method and the system by which what is
called ‘education’ is gradually imparted; ‘something’ refers to the
content of what is instilled; and ‘human beings’ refers to the
recipient of both the process and the content. Now the answer
given above already encompasses the three fundamental
elements that constitute education: the process, the content, the
recipient; but it is not yet a definition because those elements are
deliberately left vague. Furthermore, the way of formulating the
sentence meant to be developed into a definition as given above
gives the impression that what is emphasized is the process.
Supposing I reformulate the answer: Education is something
progressively instilled into man. Now here we still encompass the
three fundamental elements inherent in education, but the order
of precedence as to the important clement that constitutes
education is now the content and not the process. Let us consider
this last formulation and proceed in analyzing the inherent
concepts.
I shall begin with man, since the definition of man is already
generally well known, and that is, that he is a ‘rational animal’.
Since rationality defines man, we must at least have some idea as
to what ‘rational’ means, and we all agree that it refers to
‘reason’. However, in Western intellectual history, the concept of
ratio has undergone much controversy, and has become—at least
from the Muslim point of view—problematic, for it has gradually
become separated from the ‘intellect’ or intellectus in the process
T2 • The Concept of Education in Islam
of secularization of ideas that coursed through the history of
Western thought since the periods of the ancient Greeks and
Romans. Muslim thinkers did not conceive of what is understood
as ratio as something separate from what is understood as
intellectus; they conceived the caql (ﻋﻘﻞ) as an organic unity of both
ratio and intellectus. Bearing this in mind, the Muslims defined
man as al-ÌaywÂn al-nÂtiq,
where the term nÂtiq signifies
‘rational’. Man is possessed of an inner faculty that formulates
meaning (i.e. dhÄ nutq ﻄـﻖÿﺫﻭ)
and this formulation of meaning,
which involves judgment and discrimination and clarification, is
what constitutes his ‘rationality’. The terms nÂtiq and nutq are
derived from a root that conveys the basic meaning of ‘speech’,
in the sense of human speech, so that they both signify a certain
power and capacity in man to articulate words in meaningful pattern.
He is, as it were, a ‘language animal’, and the articulation of
linguistic symbols into meaningful patterns is no other than the
outward, visible and audible expression of the inner, unseen
reality which we call caql. The term caql itself basically signifies a
kind of ‘binding’ or ‘withholding’, so that in this respect caql
signifies an innate property that binds and withholds objects of
knowledge by means of words. cAql is synonymous with qalb (ﻗﻠـﺐ) in
the same way as qalb, which is a spiritual organ of cognition
called the ‘heart’, is synonymous with caql.
The real nature of
caql is that it is a spiritual substance by which the rational soul (alnafs al-nÂtiqah ﺍﻟﻨﺎﻃﻘـﺔ ﺍﻟﻨﻔﺲ ) recognizes and distinguishes truth from falsehood.
It is clear from this, and many more references which
we have not mentioned, that the reality underlying the definition
of man is this spiritual substance, which is indicated by everyone
when he says “I”. When we speak of education, therefore, it must
pertain to this reality of man, and not simply to his body and his
animal aspect.
In defining man as a rational animal, where we
mean by ‘rational’ the capacity for understanding speech, and
the power responsible for the formulation of meaning—which
involves judgment, discrimination, distinction and clarification,
and which has to do with the articulation of words or expressions
in meaningful pattern—the meaning of ‘meaning’ in our present
context, and based on the concept of macnÂ), is the recognition of
the place of anything in a system. Such recognition occurs when the
relation a thing has with other things in the system becomes
clarified and understood. The relation describes a certain order.
Meaning, conceived in the way I have formulated above, is a
mental image in which a word or expression is applied to denote
it. When that word or expression becomes an idea, or a notion,
in the mind (caql with reference to nutq) it is called the
‘understood’ (mafhÄm). As an intelligible form that is formed in
answer to the question “what is it?”, it is called ‘essence’
(mÂhiyyah). Considered as something that exists outside the
mind, that is, objectively, it is called ‘reality’ (ÌaqÆqah: ﺣﻘﻴﻘـﺔ). Seen
as a specific reality distinguished from the others, it is called
‘individuality’ or ‘individual existence’ (huwiyyah: ﻳﻴـﻪﻮ ﻫ).
In this way and in the context of the present discussion we say that what
constitutes meaning, or the definition of meaning, is recognition
of the place of anything in a system which occurs when the relation a
thing has with others in the system becomes clarified and understood.

Muslim Contributions to Science, Philosophy, and the Arts



In the modern world Islam is seen as many things, but rarely
is it viewed as a source of inspiration and enlightenment.
Though it is a force of enlightenment and it is not only verses of
the Quran that testify to that fact, but also the great body of
scholarship produced during the Middle Ages. While Europe was in the
midst of darkness, it was the Muslims, spurred on by the light of
their new Deen who picked up the torch of scholarship and
science. It was the Muslims who preserved the knowledge of
antiquity, elaborated upon it, and finally, passed it on to Europe.

Although every peoples earn what they do and pass on, it is
important for us to learn about and appreciate the
contributions of the Islamic civilization by the early Muslims.
Colonialism, the institution of the Western educational model, along
with Eurocentrism often portrays Islam as backwards, incompatible
with science and technology and anti-educational. Muslim school
children never learn of their glorious past and often the only thing
passed on to them is the inferiority complex of the generation before
them. From the past we can learn from our mistakes and use the
analysis of those great examples before us as role models to enrich
us in the future.

In the seventh century A.D., the prophet Muhammad (SAW) was
sent to the people of Arabia. Within a decade of his death
the Muslims had conquered all of the Arabian peninsula. Within a
century, Islam had spread from Al-Andalus in Spain to the borders of
China. Islam unified science, theology, and philosophy. Muslims were
commanded to study, seek knowledge, and learn and benefit from
others' experiences by Allah (SWT) in the holy Quran and by the
prophet Muhammad (SAW) in the Sunnah. It was this that inspired the
Muslims to great heights in sciences, medicine, mathematics,
astronomy, chemistry, philosophy, art and architecture.

Muslim scholars began obtaining Greek treatises and started
their study and translation into Arabic a few centuries after
the Hijrah (622 A.D.) They critically analyzed, collated , corrected
and supplemented substantially the Greek science and philosophy.
After this period began what is known as the Golden Age
of Islam, which lasted for over two centuries. It is here we find
many of the great scientists of Islam who literally left behind
hundreds and thousands of books on the various branches of science.

Abu Ali al-Hussain Ibn Abdallah Ibn Sina, universally known
as Avicinna (980-1037), alone wrote 246 books, including
Kitab-al Shifa (The Book of Healing) consisting of 20 volumes and Al-
Qanun fit Tibb (The Canons of Medicine) . The Qanun was the chief
guide for medical science in the West from the twelfth to the
seventeenth century. Dr. William Osler, who wrote The Evolution of
Modern Science, remarks "The Qanun has remained a medical Bible for
a longer period than any other work". Containing over
a million words, it surveyed the entire medical knowledge available
from ancient and Muslim sources, and including his own original
contributions.

Ibn Sina's original contributions included such advances
such as recognition of the contagious nature of phtisis and
tuberculosis; distribution of diseases by water and soil and the
interaction between psychology and health. Also, the book described
over 760 drugs and became the most authentic of its era. Ibn Sina
was also the first to describe meningitis and made rich contributions
to anatomy, gynaecology and child health.

This interest in medicine went back to the time of
the Prophet (SAW), who once said that there
existed a cure for every disease. With this spirit there were
hospitals and clinics built all over the Muslim world, the earliest
built in 707 by Caliph Walid ibn Abd a-Malik in Damascus.
Muslims made many advances such as the idea of circulation of
blood and quarantine and the foundation of the first apothecary shops
and the earliest school of pharmacy.

Hunayn ibn Ishaq, a philosopher and physician made advances
in Medicine, Physics, Mathematics, Astronomy Veterinary
Science, and Ophthalmology. He was the head of the famous school of
translators founded by Caliph Mamun at Baghdad and wrote the first
systematic text book on opthamology.

Abu Bakr Muhammad ibn Zakariya al-Razi (865-925 AD) , known
as Rhazes, was one of the most prolific Muslim doctors and
probably second only to Ibn Sina in his accomplishments. He was born
at Ray, Iran and became a student of Hunayn ibn Ishaq and later a
student of Ali ibn Rabban. He wrote over 200 books, including Kitab
al-Mansuri, ten volumes on Greek medicine, and al-Hawi, an
encyclopedia of medicine in 20 volumes. In al-Hawi, he
included each medical subject's information available from Greek and
Arab sources and then added his own remarks based on his experience
and views. He classified substances as vegetable, animal or mineral
while other alchemists divided them into "bodies", "souls" and
"spirits".

Al-Razi was first placed in charge of the first Royal
Hospital at Ray, from where he soon moved to a similar
position in Baghdad where he remained the head of its famous
Muqtadari Hospital for a long time. He found a treatment for kidney
and bladder stones, and explained the nature of various infectious
diseases. He also conducted research on smallpox and
measles and was the first to introduce the use of alcohol for medical
purposes. A unique feature to his medical system was
that he greatly favored cure through correct and regulated food
intake. This was combined with his emphasis on the influence of
psychological factors on health. He also tried proposed remedies
first on animals in order to evaluate their effects and side
effects. He was also an expert surgeon and the first to use opium
for anesthesia.

Another great physician who soon followed was al-Razi was
Abul Qasim al-Zahrawi (963-1013 AD) who is known as Albucasis
to the West. A famous surgeon in his time, at the court of Caliph
al- Hakam II , students and patients flocked to him from the Muslim
world and Europe. He wrote the medical encyclopedia al-Tasrif li man
ajaz an-il-talif, which contained 30 sections of surgical knowledge
and illustrations of 200 surgical instruments, most of which he
designed himself. The Encyclopedia was not only a standard for
physicians, but even five centuries later it was being used as the
standard textbook on surgery in universities in Europe.
He also performed many delicate operations such as Cesareans and was
also the first to use silk thread for stitching wounds.

Al-Idrisi was born in Cordova, Spain in 1099. His major
contribution was in medicinal plants which he described in
many books, such as Kitab al-Jami-li-Sifat Ashtat al-Nabatat. He
collected plans and data not reported earlier and added this to the
subject of botany. From him a large number of new drugs from plants
with their evaluations became available to medical practitioners.
Al-Idrisi also made original contributions to topography, as related
to economics, physical factors and cultural aspects. He wrote
geographical encyclopedias, the largest called Rawd-Unnas wa Nuzhalat
Nafs (Pleasure of Men and Delight of Souls). Al-Idrisi
also wrote on the subjects of fauna, zoology and threapeutical
aspects. His work was soon translated into Latin and his books on
geography especially remained popular in the east and west for
several centuries.

Working in the field of botany as well was abu Muhammad Ibn
al-Baitar, also from Spain. He was one of the greatest
scientists of Muslim Spain and one of the greatest botanists and
pharmacists of the Middle Ages. He went on many traveling
expeditions to collect plants as far as Africa and Asia Minor. He
wrote Kitab al-Jami al-Adiwaya al-Mufrada, one of the greatest
botanical compilations dealing with medicinal plants in Arabic The
encyclopedia was made of over 1,400 items, many of which were not
known before. The book referred to the works of 150 authors, mostly
Arabic and quoted about 20 early Greek scientists. It was translated
into Latin and published as late as 1758.

Ibn al-Baitars works were characterized by observation,
analysis and classification and exerted a profound influence
on Eastern as well as Western botany and medicine. Even though many
of his works were translated and published late in the western
languages, many earlier scientists had studied various parts of the
book and made several references to it.

At the same time as these advances in medicine were being
made, the Muslims produced some of the most outstanding
Mathematicians. Muhammad ibn Musa al-Khwarizmi, born in 780 A.D.,
was the founder of modern Algebra. He developed sine, cosine and
trigonometrical tables, which were later translated to the West. His
book on algebra Hisab al-Jabr waal-Muqabalah (The Calculation of
Integration and Equation) was used until the 16th century as the
principal textbook of European universities. In it he
writes that given an equation, collecting the unknowns in one side of
the equation is called al-Jabr and collecting the knowns in the other
side of the equation is called al- Mukabalah. He also described six
basic types of equations: nx=m , x^2=nx , x^2=m , m+x^2 =nx, m+nx
+x^2 and x^2=m+nx. He also solved the particular equation
x^2+21=10x using geometrical arguments.

Al-Khawarizmi also helped introduce Arabic numerals, the
decimal position system, and the concept of zero. Algebra
and Algorithm are in fact corruption's of his work and name.
Interestingly, this first every book on algebra included many
examples from the Islamic inheritance laws and how they could be
solved using algebra. Under al-Mamun the caliph of the time, he with
some others were the first to map the globe.

In the field of Algebra the Muslims continued with Thabit Ibn
Qurra's more general equations solved by geometrical
arguments. In 901, Abu Kamil, called "the Egyptian calculator", did
some work on algebra in which he established rules for manipulating
algebraic expressions. He also proved various laws such as
ax*bx-abx^2, a(bx)=(ab)x and (10-x)(10-x)=100+x^2-20x (Mirza, p124).
Around 1000, Abu Bakr Al-Karaji, in his book The Marvelous discussed
higher order equations such as fourth and fifth order equations,
combing geometry and arithmetic. Al-Samawal
established the power law x^nx^n=x^(m+n) in 1180 in his work The
Shining which is just one of his 85 books. He also worked on
performing multiplication of algebraic expressions involving terms
with different powers and division of polynomials. Abu
Yunus proved the famous identity cos(a)cos(b)={cos(a+b)+cos(a-b)}/2
and used spherical trigonometry to set formulas to computer prayer
times. Al-Biruni also used spherical trigonometry to find the
direction of Mecca or any other city on the globe.

Another outstanding mathematician was Ghiyath al-Din al
Kashani of the late fourteenth century. He worked on the
theory of numbers and techniques of computations. In 1424, he
computed a value of 2pi to sixteen decimal digits of accuracy using
an approximation of the circle by 805306368 side polygon. One of his
most important works was Miftah elHussab or The Calculators' Key, in
it he described an algorithm for finding the fifth root of any
number. The book was used in Persian schools until the seventeenth
century. Later in his life he moved to Samarkand at the request of
the then ruler to help direct a new scientific school and observatory
and conduct research with other scholars of the time. Kashani also
wrote on how to approximate sin(1) by solving a cubic equation
accurately.

Umar Khayyam known to the west as only a poet actually also
was an excellent mathematician. He criticized Euclid's
theorems, evolved a methodology for the solution of third degree
equations, and did research in the field of binomials and their
coefficients.

Abu Wafa Muhammad al-Buzanji was born in Buzjan, Nishapur in
940 A. D. He became a great mathematician and astronomer at
Baghdad and died in 997 A.D. Al-Buzanji's main contribution lies in
several branches of mathematics, in geometry and trigonometry
especially. In geometry he contributed to a solution of geometrical
problems with opening of the compass, construction of a square
equivalent to other squares, regular polyhedra, construction of
regular hectagon taking for its side of the equilateral triangle
inscribed in the same circle, constructions of parabola by points and
geometrical solution of the equations x4=a and x4+ax3=b.

Al-Buzanji's contribution to the development of trigonometry
was also extensive. He was the first to show the generality
of the sine theorem relative to spherical triangles. He developed a
new method of constructing sine tables, the value of sin 30` being
correct to the eight decimal place. He also developed relations for
sine(a+b) and the formula: 2 sin2 (a/2) = 1 -cos a and sin a = 2 sin
(a/2) cos (a/2). In addition he studied tangent and
calculated tables for them. He introduced the secant and cosecant
for the first time. He wrote a large number of books on mathematics
and other subjects, most of which have been lost or exist in modified
forms. He also wrote rich commentaries on Euclid, Diophanatos and
al-Khwarizmi. A sizable part of today's trigonometry can be traced
back to him.

Abu Abdullah al-Battani (862-929 A.D.) was a son of a
scientist and also a famous astronomer, mathematician and
astrologer. He is often considered one of the greatest astronomists
of Islam. His career of 42 years included a number of important
discoveries, including the accurate determination of the solar year
as 365 days, 5 hours, 46 minutes, and 24 seconds, which is very close
to modern estimates. He also determined with accuracy
the obliquity of the ecliptic, the length of the seasons and the true
and mean orbit of the sun. He proved that in contrast to Ptolemy,
the variation of the apparent angular diameter of the sun and the
possibility of annular eclipses. His observations of lunar and solar
eclipses were used by Dunthorne in 1749 to determine the secular
acceleration of motion of the moon.

In mathematics, al-Battani was the first to replace the use
of Greekchords by sines and the first to develop the concept
of cotangent and furnished their table in degrees. He wrote a number
of books on astronomy and trigonometry. His most famous book was his
astronomical treatise with tables which was translated into Latin in
the 12th century, called De Sceinta Stellerum De numeris Stellerum et
Motibus. This was extremely influential in Europe until the
Renaissance, with translations available in several languages.
His original discoveries in both astronomy and
trigonometry were of great consequence in the development of those
sciences.

In the related field of Physics, Abu al-Fath Abd al-Rahman
al-Khazini studied mechanics and hydrostats and wrote books
on physics and astronomy. Al-Biruni, a geographer, chronologist,
mathematician, astronomer, was also a physicist. His Elements of
Astrology remained a textbook for centuries and he also wrote on
specific gravity, and developed formulas to determine absolute and
specific weights of all objects.

Abu al-Hassan al Haitham (965-1039 AD) was one of the most
eminent physicists, whose contribution to optics and the
scientific method were great. Originally from Basra, he went to
Egypt where he was asked to find ways of controlling the flood of the
Nile. Being unsuccessful in this, he feigned madness until the death
of Caliph al-Hakim. He also traveled to Spain and during this time
also had time for his scientific pursuits. He wrote treatises such
as Kital al-Manzir on light, worked with mirrors and lenses,
reflection, refraction, and magnifying and burning glasses.
He discussed the propagation of light and colors, optic
illusions and opposed the view of Euclid and Ptolemy that the eye
sent out visual rays. From studying motion, he discovered the
principle of inertia.

He contradicted Ptolemy's and Euclid's theory of vision that
objects are seen by rays of light emanating from the eyes.
According to Haitham, the rays originated in the object of vision
and not in the eye. Through this kind of extensive research on
optics, he has been considered the father of modern Optics. Roger
Bacon and all medieval Western writers on optics based their work
largely on his Opticae Thesaurus and it even influenced Leonardo da
Vinci, Johann Kepler and Newton.. Haitham also studied
the phenomena of sunrise and sunset and explained rainbows through
the principle of reflection. He was known for the
earliest use of the camera obscura as well.

Al-Kindi (d. 873 AD) considered the first philosopher of the
Arabs, also contributed to Physics , Optics, reflection of
light, specific weights, tides and metallurgy.

Muslims also made discoveries in Chemistry by discovering
many new substances such as potash, nitrate of silver,
corrosive sublimate and nitrate and sulfuric acid as well as
improving methods for evaporation, filtration, sublimation,
calcination, melting, distillation, and crystallization.
Jabir, otherwise known as the father of Arab alchemy
contributed in the fields of Pharmacology and Toxicology.

Al-Asma'i (740-882 AD) was a philologist who contributed to
Zoology, Botany and Animal Husbandry. Other
Muslim botanists described plants in detail, medicinal herbs,
physiology of plants and wrote books on horses, camels, sheep, birds,
the history of bees and locusts, the effect of climate on the
behavior of animals and men. Also working on the subject
of Botany, Suri al- Dimashqi researched plants around Damascus and
Lebanon at different stages of growth.

In the field of geography, Ibn Majid invented the compass.
The Muslims traversed the Indian, Atlantic and
Pacific Ocean as well as sailing around the African continent, in
their trading with India, Iran and Greece. They wrote such books as
Akhbar al-Hind (Reports on India), Akhbar al-Sin (Reports on China)
and Ajib al-Hind (Curiosities of India). Sulaiman
Al-Makri wrote of his travels in Al-budat and other books. Abu
al-Hasan al-Masudi, a historian and scientist, traveled the world
journeying from Persia, Central Asia, India, the Near East,
Madagascar and the China Sea. He wrote his encyclopedic volume on
his travels which included history, cosmology and geography.

Al-Biruni was the first known writer to identify certain
geological facts, such as the formation of sedimentary rocks
and the great geological changes that happened in the past. He was
also the founder of geodesy and wrote and improved upon the methods
of measuring longitudes, latitudes, heights of mountains and the
diameter of the earth. He also wrote on biological evolution.

Of the many scientists in the field of astronomy, Al-Sufi
helped build a famous observatory under the Buwayh sultan
Sharaf-al-Dawlah. He prepared charts of the heavens with magnitudes
and was the first to mark the nebula of Andromeda in his atlas.
Al-Zarqali from al-Andalus invented the astrolabe and
measured the rate of motion. He also constructed
astronomical instruments and built a water clock.

Jabir ibn Aflah was a Spanish Arab who criticized Ptolemy's
heliocentric theory of planetary motion. He designed the
first portable celestial sphere to explain and measure the movements
of celestial objects and led the way for spherical trigonometry.
Al-Bitruji developed a new theory of stellar movements.
Names of many constellations, words like zenith and
nadir and even names of craters of the moon all go back to the works
of Muslim scholars of this time.

We can see that these Islamic sciences had a great impact
upon both the Western world and also the two major
civilizations east of the Islamic world, India and China. Without
the Islamic scientists and their work, the development of science in
these civilizations would have been different. Between
the eleventh and thirteenth centuries the major works of Islamic
scientists were translated into Latin in Spain, Sicily and Italy.
Muslim scientists like Ibn Sina and al-Razi became household names in
the West. Islamic medicine led the way for European medicine.

In the field of mathematics the works of al-Khwarazmi and
others were taught in the Western universities for centuries.
Astronomical tables written in the West were based
upon the work of Muslims before them. Treatises on algebra that were
written were mostly based on the work of Khayyam. Works in chemistry
written in Latin used an extensive Arabic vocabulary because there
was no Latin vocabulary in this field.

Many of these scientists were also great philosophers, such
as Ibn Sina and al-Razi. Ibn Sina initially began studying
logic, from there he studied physics and metaphysics and was the
first to develop a complete philosophical system in Arabic.
Ibn Sina's philosophical encyclopedia Kitab al- Shifa was a
monumental work, embodying a vast field of knowledge from philosophy
to science. He classified the entire field as follows: theoretical
knowledge; physics, mathematics, and metaphysics; ethics, economics
and politics. His philosophy synthesized Aristotelian tradition,
Neoplatonic influences and Muslim theology. Besides al-Shifa his
well-known treatises in philosophy are al-Najat and Isharat.

Al-Razi's contribution as a philosopher was also well known.
The basic elements in his philosophical system were the
Creator, the spirit, matter, space and time. He discussed their
characteristics in detail and his concepts of space and time as
constituting a continuum. His philosophical views were, however,
criticized by a number of other Muslim scholars of the era.

During the time of Harun al-Rashid (786-809) the Muslims
built a library which contained both originals and
translations of almost any then known scientific work in Sanskrit,
Persian and Greek. His son, Caliph al-Mamun continued the tradition
of philosophy and science and established in Baghdad his Bayt
al-Hikmah (House of Wisdom), a library and academy.
Here the objective was to collect all scientific works, translate
them into Arabic and copy and bind them into books to preserve them.
No doubt much of the knowledge of the Greeks and others was preserved
in this way.

The greatest figure in Islamic philosophy is held to be Imam
al-Ghazali, who was a jurist, theologian, philosopher and
mystic. Born in 1058 in Khorasan, he came to have a high standard of
scholarship in religion and philosophy and gained an appointment as a
professor at the Nizamiyah University, which was one of the most
reputed institutions of learning at the time. Muslim philosophers of
his time had been following and developing many of the viewpoints of
Greek philosophy, including Neoplatonic philosophy, which led to
conflict with some Islamic teachings. Also at this time
the Sufi's began introducing heretical beliefs like avoiding
observances of obligatory prayers and other duties of Islam. Ghazali
sought to show the faults in both these trends.

In philosophy, Ghazali upheld the approach of mathematics and
exact sciences as essentially correct, but he adopted the
techniques of Aristotelian logic and the Neoplatonic procedqres and
used these as tools to show the flaws in the then prevalent
Aristotelianism and excessive rationalism.. In contrast to some of
the Muslim philosophers like Farabi, he portrayed the inability of
reason to comprehend the absolute and the infinite. Reason could not
transcend the finite and was limited to the observation of the
relative, he argued. Also, several Muslim philosophers had the
opinion that the universe was finite in space but infinite in time.
Ghazali argued that infinite time was related to infinite space. He
was able to create a balance between religion and reason.

Ghazali wrote many books including Tuhafut al-Falasifa (The
Incoherence of the Philosophers) and Ihya al-Ulum al-Islamia
(The Revival of the Islamic Sciences). Ghazali's influence was deep.
His theological doctrines penetrated Europe and influenced Jewish and
Christian Scholasticism and Thomas Aquinas.

Other Muslims also wrote extensively on Creation, God,
Aristotelian thought, logic and developed systems of
jurisprudence and law. During this period especially, Islamic
philosophy was active in Spain and Morocco. These included
Ibn Bajjah who wrote Tadbir al-mutawahhid (Regimen of the Solitary)
where he discussed the perfect society built upon the inner
perfection of individuals within the society. Ibn Tufayl, a
physician and philosopher, followed with Hayy al Yaqzan (Living Son
of the Awake).

Another great philosopher was Ibn Rushd, the Qadi of Cordova,
a jurist, and interpreter of the Shair'ah. Ibn Rushd was a
rationalist and wrote about religion and philosophy. In his book
Kitab Fasl al- Makal, he wrote about the creation of the world,
Divine knowledge of particular things, and the future of the human
soul. He also wrote commentaries on Aristotle, to such an
extent that in the West he was known as "The Commentator" during the
Western Middle Ages and the Renaissance. He wrote an
answer to Al-Ghazali's works and wrote the Tahafut al tahafut
(Incoherence of the Incoherence). Ibn Rushd's influence on Medieval
and Renaissance European history is found to be greater than that of
his influence on the Islamic world.

Ibn Khaldun's (1332-1395) main contribution lies in
philosophy of history and sociology. He wanted to write a
world history aimed at analyzing historical events. The first volume
was known as the Muqaddimah . This monumental work identified
psychological, economic, environmental and social facts that
contributed to the advancement of human civilizations and the
currents of history as opposed to just the political context of
earlier writers.

In this context, he analyzed the dynamics of group
relationships and showed how group feelings, al-'Asabiyya,
give rise to the ascent of a new civilization and political power and
how, later on , its diffusion into a more general civilization
invited the beginning of a still new 'Asabiyya in its pure form. He
identified an almost rhythmic repetition of rise and fall in human
civilization and analyzed factors contributing to it. His
contribution to history is marked by the fact that, unlike most
earlier writers who interpreted history through the political
context, he emphasized environmental, sociological, psychological and
economic factors governing the apparent events. This revolutionized
the science of history and also laid the foundation of Umraniyat
(Sociology).

Lastly we come to the realm of the arts. The well known
Hadith "Allah is beautiful and He loves beauty" encouraged
Muslims to beautify the word of Allah through calligraphy and other
expressions. Islamic calligraphy began with the kufi styles, then
followed naskhi, thuluth, muhaqqiq, rayhani, and nasta'liq.
Calligraphy began as a direct response of the soul of Muslims
to the descent of the Quranic revelation.
Calligriphical art moved from beautifying the Quran and texts to
objects, houses and Mosques and eventually to Architecture.

Writes T.B. Irving on Islamic architecture, " ..few
civilizations have approached Islam's beauties in
architecture: her soaring minarets and spires, her fabled domes, her
cool corridors, all reflect the yearning of Muslims, who refusing to
find expression in natural depiction concentrate their energies on
buildings and their embellishment."

These embellishments included the calligraphic mosaics of
mosques, tombs and places through out Persia , India, Turkey,
Egypt, Morocco along with marble carving, plaster work, delicate
inlay and tile work. Muslims also evolved their own style of art,
while producing beautiful ceramic tiles, porcelain, pottery, plates,
bowls, tapestries and rugs, and lamps.

The defining elements of Islamic Architecture are many. The
use of the frame created organization and design..
Calligraphy was found in the decoration of almost every Islamic
building as well as many objects. Geometry become a major art form
by using the circle as a basis and generating patterns from
repetition, symmetry and changing scale to create unusual effects.
Reflected light was developed and multiplied with
the Muqarnas cells beneath domes, and they reflected and refracted
light.

Ceramic tiles and mirrors were added to use light and
increase them. Foliation including the classical vine and
scroll motifs gave rise to the abstract art of the arabesque.
Lastly, water was an essential element, whether flowing
through palaces in India or in fountains found in the inner
courtyards of Spain. Islamic architecture influenced the widespread
use of the niche form for Mihrab, tombstone, door, window or
decorative feature, lamps, domes, mosaics, geometric shapes,
patterns, intertwining leaf motifs and designs, fountains, gardens,
and courtyards.

Islamic art took from the civilizations surrounding it and
also impacted them. The Chinese were influenced in their
vases and carpets. Medieval Europe were influenced in their arts and
showed it from their adoption of arches to their illuminations of
Latin and Hebrew manuscripts. Of course the epitome of
Islamic art can be seen in the greatest Islamic masterpieces such as
the grand mosques of Cordova in Spain, the Taj Mahal in India, and
the Blue mosque in Turkey. The works of these Muslim artists have
become prototypes and models on which other artists and craftsmen
patterned their own works, or from which they derived the inspiration
for related work.

Thus the contributions of early Islam was so rich, so
voluminous and so varied that it defies this brief
descriptive survey. These Muslims drew from their pre-Islamic
traditions, plus those of the civilizations they came into contact
with and they absorbed what went with their beliefs and rejected what
did not. Over the centuries they continued to develop and partake in
the pursuit of knowledge with no hesitation. The destruction of
Baghdad and the Mongol invasions did not even hinder them from
learning and elaborating on the arts and sciences, despite the great
destruction of their books and knowledge.

However, what is most important is not the discoveries
themselves of the early Muslims but the methodology and kind
of thought behind what produced them. Inspired by the truth of
Islam, by strong faith and by Quranic enjoinders to ponder, think and
discover the world did they lead the world in doing so. Only with
this verve to relate the outward world of science, art and philosophy
to inner spirituality and religion can we again reach the heights of
the Golden Age of Islam.

[ A timetable of contributions:]

- Chuzini, Abu al-Fath al-; physicist.
- Ibn Hisham; biographer, historian.
- Ibn Labban, Kushyar.
- Ibn Turk, `Abd al-Hamid; mathematician.
- Ibn al-Muqtafi, Abu al-Fadl Ja`far; astronomer.
- 767 Ibn Ishaq; biographer, historian.
721- 815 Jabir ibn Hayyan, Abu Musa (Geber); alchemist.
780- 850 Khwarizmi, Muhammad ibn Musa al-; astronomer,
mathematician.
82?- 861 Farghani, Abu al-`Abbas al- (Afragamus); astronomer,
geographer.
- 870 Kindi, Abu Yusuf Ya`qub ibn Ishaq al-Sabah al-;
philosopher.
828- 889 Ibn Qutaybah; historian, philologist, theologian.
826- 901 Ibn Qurra, Thabit; mathematician.
865- 923 Razi, al- (Rhazes); alchemist, philosopher, physician.
839- 923 Tabari, al-; historian, theologian.
858- 929 Battani, al- (Albatenius); astronomer, mathematician.
870- 950 Farabi, al- (Alfarabicus); philosopher, poet.
940- 998 Abu al-Wafa'; astronomer, mathematician.
-1008 Ibn Yunus; astronomer, mathematician.
936-1013 Abu al-Qasim (Albucasis); physician.
-1029 Karkhi, al-; mathematician.
930-1030 Ibn Miskawayh; historian, philosopher.
980-1037 Ibn Sina, Abu `Ali al-Husayn (Avicenna); philosopher,
physician.
965-1039 Ibn al-Haytham (Alhazen); mathematician, physicist.
973-1048 Biruni, al-; historian, mathematician, physicist.
1058-1111 Ghazali, Abu Hamid al- (Algazel); philosopher.
1048-1131 Khayyam, `Umar (Omar Khayyam); astronomer, mathematician,
poet.
1095-1138 Ibn Bajjah (Avempace); philosopher.
1075-1144 Zamakhshari, al-; philologist, theologian.
1090-1162 Ibn Zuhr, Abu Marwun `Abd al-Malik (Avenzoar, Abumeron);
physician.
1100-1185 Ibn Tufayl; philosopher, physician.
1126-1198 Ibn Rushd, Abu al-Walid (Averroes); philosopher,
physician.
1135-1204 Ibn Maymun (Maimonides); Jewish philosopher, physician.
1201-1274 Tusi, Nasir al-Din al-; astronomer, mathematician,
philosopher.
-1288 Ibn al-Nafis; physician.
-137? Ibn al-Shatir; astronomer.
1332-1406 Ibn Khaldun, Abu Zayd `Abd al-Rahman; historian,
sociologist.
-1436 Kashi, al-; mathematician.
1445-1505 Suyuti, al-; historian, philologist, theologian.




SOURCES

Brend, Barbara. Islamic Art. Cambridge: Harvard University Press,
1991.

Fakhry, Majid. A History of Islamic Philosophy. New York: Columbia
University Press, 1970.

Haye, Kh. A. Stories of Great Muslims. Brentwood: American Trust
Publications, 1991.

Hitti, K. Phillip. History of the Arabs. New York: St. Martins
Press, 1970.

Irving, T.B. The Tide of Islam. Cedar Rapids: Igrams Press, 1982.

Michell, George. Architecture of the Islamic World. London: Thames
and Hudson, 1995.

Mirza, Dr. Muhammad R. and Sidiiqi, Muhammad Iqbal. Muslim
Contribution to Science. Chicago: Kazi Publications, 1986.

Nasr, Seyyed Hossein. A Young Muslim's Guide to the Modern World.
Chicago: Kazi Publications,1994.

Qadir, C.A. Philosophy and Science in the Muslim World. London:
Croom Helm, 1988.

Science : The Islamic Legacy: Worlds fair issue, 1987.

*Various Internet sources

by Huma Ahmad
Apr. 2011

About bid’ah


Bismillaah Ar-RaHmaan Ar-RaHeem
Al-Hamdu Lillaah, was-Salaatu was-Salaamu `ala Rasoolillah
As-Salaamu `Alaikum wa RaHmatullaahi wa Barakaatuh

-----------------------------------------------------------------

`AQEEDAH, Adopted From "A Glimpse at the Way of the Companions",
by Shaikh `Abdul Qaadir al-Arna'oot, published by al-Hidaayah


From the beliefs of the Pious Predecessors is that it is
obligatory to have eemaan (faith) in all that the Qur'aan has
come with, and what Allaah, the Most High, has ordered us with,
and leaving all that Allaah, the Most High, has prohibited us
from, the general and the detailed. We believe in all that the
Prophet, sallaallaahu `alaihi wa sallam, has informed us of,
when its transmission from him is authentic, in that which we
witness or do not witness, regardless of whether we comprehend
it, or are ignorant of it or we have not come accross the
reality of its meaning.

We carry out the orders of Allaah, the Most High, and the orders
of his Messenger, sallaallaahu `alaihi wa sallam. We refrain
from what Allaah, the most High has prohibited us from and what
the Messenger of Allaah, sallaallaahu `alaihi wa sallam,
prohibited us from. We stop at the hudood (boundaries) of the
Book of Allaah, and the Sunnah of the Messenger of Allaah,
sallaallaahu `alaihi wa sallam, and that which has come from the
rightly guided Khulafaa. Our duty is to do ittibaa` (following)
of that which the Prophet, sallaallaahu `alaihi wa sallam, has
come with: from beliefs, actions and sayings, to follow the way
of Allaah's Messenger, sallaallaahu `alaihi wa sallam, and the
four rightly guided Khulafaa', in their beliefs, actions and
sayings. This is the complete Sunnah, as the Sunnah of the
rightly guided Khulafaa' is adhered to like the following of the
Prophetic Sunnah.

`Umar ibn `Abdul `Azeez said:

"The Messenger of Allaah, sallaallahu `alaihi wa sallam, and the
leaders of the Muslims after him set examples (Sunnah), the
taking of which is holding on to the Book of Allaah, the Most
High, and strength upon the Deen of Allaah. It is not for any
one to change or alter it, nor to look at a matter in opposition
to it. Whoever is guided by it then he is truly guided, and
whoever seeks help by it then he is truly helped. Whoever
leaves it and follows a way other than the way of the believers,
Allaah will turn him to what he has chosen and burn him in hell,
what en evil abode!"

This is confirmed by the saying of Allaah's Messenger,
sallaallaahu `alaihi wa sallam:

"...and beware of newly invented matters, for verily every
bid`ah is a going astray."

This hadeeth is a great principle from the principles of the
Deen and it resembles another saying of the Prophet,
sallaallaahu `alaihi wa sallam:

"Whoever innovates in to this Deen of ours that which is not
from it, then it is rejected."

[Reported by al-Bukhaaree in ta`leeq form (without mentioning
the chain) (4/298) and in the full form (5/221), Muslim (no.
1718), Aboo Daawood in the book of Sunnah (no. 4606), Ibn
Maajah (no. 14).]

In it is a warning from following newly invented matters in the
Deen and worship. The meaning of bid`ah is that which has been
invented and has no root in the Sharee`ah pointing to it. As
for what has a root in the Sharee`ah pointing to it it is not
legally (technically) a bid`ah; even though linguistically the
term bid`ah may be applied to it. Thus whenever something new
is introduced into the Deen, having no root (in the Deen) to
return it to, then it is a misguidance - deviation. The Deen is
free of it, regardless of whether it is connected to issues of
beliefs, actions or sayings.

As for the istihsaan (approval and condoning) of bid`ah, which
occurred in the words of the predecessors, then that is in
relation to bid`ah al-logawee (linguistic use of bid`ah) and not
in the legal (technical) use of the term bid`ah. From these
saying is the saying of `Umar bin al-Khattaab, when he gathered
the people in Qiyaam-ur-Ramadaan - Taraaweeh prayers - behind
one Imaam in the masjid. He went out and saw them praying and
he said: "What a wonderful bid`ah."

This has a root in Sharee`ah. Verily the Messenger of Allaah,
sallaallaahu `alaihi wa sallam prayed it (this prayer) in
congregation in the masjid and then he left it, fearing that it
might become obligatory upon his Ummah and that they would be
unable to perform it. Indeed they became free of this fear
after the Prophet, sallaallaahu `alaihi wa sallam. So `Umar
(radiyallaahu `anhu) revived it. As for that which is a matter
confirmed, in worship, then it is not permissible to make
additions to it.

So, for example of the adhaan, remains in the form in which it
was legislated, without addition or subtraction. The Prayer
remains upon the manner it was legislated as the Messenger of
Allaah, sallaallaahu `alaihi wa sallam said:

"Pray as you have seen me praying."

This is an authentic hadeeth, reported by al-Bukhaaree in his
Saheeh.

Hajj remains upon the manner in which it was legislated, because
the Messenger of Allaah, sallaallaahu `alaihi wa sallam, said:

"Take from me your rites (of Hajj)." [Saheeh Muslim, Book of
Hajj, 1297]

Indeed the Muslims have done things that were not present in the
time of the Messenger of Allaah, sallaallaahu `alaihi wa sallam,
due to them being daroorah (necessities) in preserving Islaam.
Indeed they have permitted it and kept quiet about it. Like the
gathering of the people to one mushaaf (that which the Qur'aan
is written upon), by `Uthmaan bin `Affaan (radiyallaahu `anhu),
fearing the splitting of the Ummah. Indeed it was approved of
by the Companions (radiyallaahu `anhum) and that was for a
maslaha (benefit).

The example of writing down Prophetic traditions (hadeeth)
fearing its loss due to the death of its people. The writing of
Tafseer of the Qur'aan and the Hadeeth. The compilation of `Ilm
an-Nahw (science of grammar) to safeguard the Arabic language,
which is a means of understanding Islaam. The formation of `Ilm
al-Mustalah (science of hadeeth). Thus, these are permissible
to safeguard the Islamic Sharee`ah. Verily, Allaah, the Most
High, has taken the responsability of safeguarding His Law -
from His saying:

"Indeed it is We who sent down the Dhikr (Qur'aan) and surely
We will guard it (from corruption). [al-Hijr (15):9]

The Messenger of Allaah, sallaallaahu `alaihi wa sallam, said:

"This `Ilm (Deen) will be carried by the trustworthy of ones of
each generation. Negating from it the tahreef (alterations) of
the ones going beyond bounds, the false assumptions of the
liars, and the ta'weel (false interpretations) of the ignorant."

This hadeeth is hasan due to all its chains and shawaahids
(supporting narrations).

This is the belief (`aqeedah) - of the group of this Ummah (i.e.
the Companions radiyallaahu `anhum) and it is a pure belief like
the purity of fresh drinking water, strong as the firmly fixed
mountains, firm as the firmest of hand holds. It is a flawless
`Aqeedah, a straight way, upon the methodology of the Book and
the Sunnah and the sayings of the Predecessors of this Ummah and
its A'immah (leaders). It is the way which revived the hearts
of the pioneers of this Ummah.
===============================================================
"By Time! Verily man is in loss. Except those who
believe and do righteous deeds and help one
another to the truth and help one another to patience."
al-Qur'aan, al-`Asr (103):1-3
================================================================

Why Islam prohibits the drinking of alcohol


Islam’s holistic approach to health and well-being means that anything that is harmful or mostly harmful, is forbidden. Therefore, Islam takes an uncompromising stand towards alcohol and forbids its consumption in either small or large quantities. Alcohol is undoubtedly harmful and adversely affects the mind and the body. It clouds the mind, causes disease, wastes money, and destroys individuals, families, and communities. Researchers[1] have proven that there is a strong link between alcohol and gambling. Drinking impairs judgement, lowers inhibition, and encourages the type of risk taking involved in gambling and dangerous activities. God tells us in the Quran that intoxicants and gambling are abominations from Satan and orders us to avoid them. (Quran 5: 90)

In Australia, a country with a population of around 20 million, about 3000 people die each year from alcohol abuse while 65,000 others are hospitalised. Studies have consistently revealed a link between heavy drinking and brain damage and around 2500 Australians are treated annually for alcohol related brain damage. Research in the United Kingdom indicates that 6% of cancer deaths are related to alcohol abuse and Harvard Centre for Cancer Prevention says that drinking greatly increases the risk for numerous cancers. Alcohol is considered highly carcinogenic, increasing the risk of mouth, pharynx, larynx, oesophagus, liver, and breast cancers. Drinking alcohol during pregnancy can lead to Fetal Alcohol Syndrome, causing the child to be small at birth, have some facial malformations, small eye openings, webbed or even
missing fingers or toes, organ deformities, learning disabilities, mental retardation and much more.

Researchers in Australia have also estimated that 47% of all those who commit violent crimes, and 43% of all victims of these crimes, were drunk prior to the event. Alcohol is responsible for 44% of fire injuries, 34% of falls and drownings, 30% of car accidents, 16% of child abuse instances, and 7% of industrial accidents. Even though it is clear that alcohol is responsible for a great many evils it is legal and even encouraged in most societies. In Muslim countries where alcohol is forbidden many people still find it difficult to resist temptation and fall prey to the disease that is alcoholism. Amazingly even in the light of such startling evidence against alcohol, people around the globe continue to consume alcohol in ever-increasing amounts. Why?

Alcohol is one of the tools Satan uses to distract humankind from the worship of God. God states clearly in the Quran that Satan is an open enemy towards humankind yet by drinking alcohol, we invite Satan into our lives and make it easy for him to distract us from our real purpose in life, to worship God

“Surely, Satan is an enemy to you, so treat him as an enemy. He only invites his followers that they may become the dwellers of the blazing Fire.” (Quran 35:6)

Alcohol affects the mind and makes sinful behaviour and evil actions fair seeming. It creates enmity and hatred between people, prevents them from remembering God and distracts them from praying, and calls them to participate in unlawful sexual relationships. Alcohol generates shame, regret, and disgrace, and renders the drinker witless. It leads to the disclosure of secrets and exposure of faults.
In pre Islamic Arabia, alcohol use was widespread. To eradicate this evil, God in His mercy revealed the prohibition in stages. First, He made it clear to them that the harm of drinking alcohol is greater than its benefit, next He told the Muslims not to come to prayer while intoxicated and finally, He revealed a verse totally prohibiting alcohol.

“O you who believe! Intoxicants (all kinds of alcoholic drinks), gambling, idolatry, and diving arrows are an abomination of Satan’s handiwork. So avoid that so that you may be successful.” (Quran 5: 90)
When this was revealed the Muslim citizens of Medina immediately began to destroy and empty their alcohol containers into the street. Even those who were guiltlessly enjoying cups of wine spat the alcohol from their mouths. It is said that the streets of Medina ran with alcohol. Why then is it so difficult to expunge this evil in the 21st century? Believers today must completely trust God, in the same way that the first Muslims trusted God and understood that He was their only Protector and Provider. All power and strength comes from God and a scourge like alcohol can be eradicated only when those affected by alcohol turn to God with complete submission.
The Quran is a book of guidance sent to all of humankind. It is a set of instructions from the Creator for His creation. If we follow these instructions, our lives will be easy and tranquil, even in the face of disaster and mishap. God links alcohol and gambling to idolatry and declares it filthy and evil; however, He is merciful and generous towards the believers and acknowledges the power of addiction.

Islam is committed to encouraging and facilitating those who wish to repent from evil doing and sinful behaviour. God accepts repentance from those who are truly sorry for their actions and committed to staying away from sin. Muslim communities do not ostracise those who have made mistakes but keep them within the fold of Islam encouraging them to seek the closeness to God that will allow them to leave sinful behaviour. Friends, family, and neighbours do not just look away while a person destroys himself or his family. Islam is a community-oriented faith. There is no place for an individual to do what he wants to do, if it hurts others. Alcohol abuse affects not just the alcoholic but also his or her family, and community. There is great wisdom in the prohibition of alcohol.

The start of the conflict




The Qur’an tells us that Abraham was Muslim (Sura 2:128, 2:131, 2:133) In the Qur’an it rhetorically states, Sura 2:140 “Or do ye say that Abraham, Isma'il Isaac, Jacob and the Tribes were Jews or Christians?”
The Bible tells us Abraham is a Hebrew, which are Jews, He is the father of their nation. He is also called a Jew by Jesus, he is included in the detailed genealogical line of the Israel. He is not a Muslim, he did not worship Allah and neither did Jesus worship Allah. For Jesus called himself God’s son of which Allah has no son. If Abraham is a Muslim then what is all the fighting going on in Israel today? Then Muslims (or Arabs) should embrace Israel as their brothers. The fact is, they are related (Gen.14:13, 39:14 40:15).
Sura 3:67 “Abraham was not a Jew nor yet a Christian; but he was true in Faith, and bowed his will to God's (Which is Islam), and he joined not gods with God.” So he was Muslim according to their interpretation, but not according to the Bibles written down perfectly by Moses the blessed prophet.
The Bible tells us that Abraham was first neither a Jew, Muslim nor a Christian, but came from a pagan family and land. He became a monotheist as God called him away from his family, and he started the Hebrew people according to the ancient revelation found in the Old Testament written by the prophet Moses.
It is written in Gen. 14:13. “Then one who had escaped came and told Abram the Hebrew.”
God speaking to Abraham in Gen. 17:5-7 says, “No longer shall your name be called Abram, but your name shall be Abraham; for I have made you a father of many nations.” I will make you exceedingly fruitful; and I will make nations of you, and kings shall come from you.” And I will establish My covenant between Me and you and your descendants after you in their generations, for an everlasting covenant, to be God to you and your descendants after you.”
V:9 “And God said to Abraham: “As for you, you shall keep My covenant, you and your descendants.” This became the Hebrew people, a nomadic tribe that turned into 12 tribes through Jacob, the son of Isaac, who was the son of Abraham.
God had promised a Son to Abraham who would inherit the land which was part of the covenant he promised him in Gen.12. After Abraham had his first son Ishmael we see Abraham in Gen. 17:18-21 “And Abraham said to God, “Oh, that Ishmael might live before You!” Then God said: “No, Sarah your wife shall bear you a son, and you shall call his name Isaac; I will establish My covenant with him for an everlasting covenant, and with his descendants after him.” And as for Ishmael, I have heard you. Behold, I have blessed him, and will make him fruitful, and will multiply him exceedingly. He shall beget twelve princes, and I will make him a great nation.” But My covenant I will establish with Isaac, whom Sarah shall bear to you at this set time next year.” Gen. 21:12-13 “..for in Isaac your seed shall be called.” Yet I will also make a nation of the son of the bondwoman, because he is your seed.” So God was gracious and gave his blessing to Ishmael who was Sarah’s plan.
The problem begins here as Muslims do not believe the Bibles testimony that was given by God over 2,000 years before their religion began with Mohammad. Sura 2:125 “and We covenanted with Abraham and Isma'il,” 2:140 “Or do ye say that Abraham, Isma'il Isaac, Jacob and the Tribes were Jews or Christians? Say: Do ye know better than God?” Almost each time Isaac is mention Ishmael is given equal prominence as well, and they challenge the Bibles revelation.
The Qur’an teaches it was Ishmael not Isaac that was sacrificed and that Ishmael was the promise, the messenger and prophet “Also mention in the Book (the story of) Isma'il: He was (strictly) true to what he promised, and he was an apostle (and) a prophet. (19:55) So when they had both submitted their wills (to God), and he had laid him prostrate on his forehead (for sacrifice) Sura 37:103)
“Thou hast already fulfilled the vision!” - thus indeed do We reward those who do right. For this was obviously a trial (Sura 37:105-106)
This God of Scripture becomes known as the God of Abraham Isaac and Jacob, Ishmael is not included in this because he was not part of the promise, although God did bless him as part of the family. The Bible records that Isaac was Abraham’s “only son” three times (Gen. 22:2, 12, 16).Gen. 32:9 “Then Jacob said, “O God of my father Abraham and God of my father Isaac, the LORD who said to me, 'Return to your country and to your family, and I will deal well with you”
Islam claim’s that Abraham traveled with Ishmael to Mecca. Alfred Guillame who is a Professor of Arabic and Islamic studies states that: “ there is no historical evidence for the assertion that Abraham or Ishmael was ever in Mecca, and if there had been such a tradition it would have to be explained how all memory of the Old Semitic name Ishmael (which was not in its true Arabian form in Arabian inscriptions and written correctly with an initial consonant Y) came to be lost. The form in the Quran is taken either from Greek or Syriac sources.” (From Islam, by Alfred Guillame, Penguin Books Inc., 1956, pp. 61-62.) Dr. Guillame points out that many words in the Qur'an do not yield a meaning unless they are traced back to their Hebrew or Syriac sources, which is significant because the Qur'an claims to have been written in only Arabic and no other language.
The Qur'an does not recognize Israel and removes her as being a chosen people and nation. In its place are the Arab people, descendants of Ishmael. One of the major annual feasts celebrated in Islam, is called Ishmael. A commemoration of of Abraham's willingness to offer Ishmael instead of Isaac on the mount. Ishmael (and his seed, the Arabs) replaces Isaac (and his seed, the Jews) as the Promised Seed. This becomes a more serious challenge to Scripture as Jesus Christ who is the seed of promise is brought into the picture.
God said of Ishmael in the Bible, “A wild donkey of a man, and his hand will be against everyone, and everyone's hand against him, and he will dwell (settle, encamp) in the presence (“in the face”) of his brothers.” (Genesis 16:1-12; 17:2-21; 21:8-21; 25:9,12-18)
Gen 50:24 “And Joseph said to his brethren, “I am dying; but God will surely visit you, and bring you out of this land to the land of which He swore to Abraham, to Isaac, and to Jacob.” This land they were in was Egypt of which the Hebrews became slaves centuries later, they would be lead by Moses into the land that is known as Israel.
In Exod. 2:24-25 “So God heard their groaning, and God remembered His covenant with Abraham, with Isaac, and with Jacob. And God looked upon the children of Israel, and God acknowledged them.”
When Moses fled Egypt it is 40 years later he meets the Lord in a burning bush that was not consumed. When the time came God met Moses and said, in Exod. 3:6 “Moreover He said, “I am the God of your father-- the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob.” And Moses hid his face, for he was afraid to look upon God.
Exod 3:14 “And God said unto Moses, I AM THAT I AM: and he said, Thus shalt thou say unto the children of Israel, I AM hath sent me unto you.” In the Hebrew- eyeh asher eyeh, that He is in himself the self existing self sufficient one, he is the cause of all things to exist, and He will be to you whatever you need (Ex.3:14-15). Surely the Qua'ran agrees with this.
God further identified himself to Moses in Exod. 3:15, “Thus you shall say to the children of Israel: 'The LORD God of your fathers, the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob, has sent me to you. This is My name forever, and this is My memorial to all generations.' Nowhere does the Lord ever include Ishmael, not once do we find this in the Bible. Is there is a conspiracy to remove him, no, the Bible is what God has spoken, this is the way He has it.
Exod. 6:8 'And I will bring you into the land which I swore to give to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob; and I will give it to you as a heritage: I am the LORD.”
Deut 1:8 “See, I have set the land before you; go in and possess the land which the LORD swore to your fathers-- to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob-- to give to them and their descendants after them.”
In Isa. 60:16 we find that God calls Himself after the patriarch he made covenant with for the people of Israel. You shall know that I, the LORD, am your Savior And your Redeemer, the Mighty One of Jacob.” He never calls himself the God of Ishmael along with Abraham or Isaac. Let's look at the land of Israel, specifically Jerusalem. Jerusalem is mentioned over 700 times in the Jewish Tanach, it is not mentioned once in the Qur'an. It was King David who founded the city of Jerusalem, the Jews lived there. Mohammed never came traveled to Jerusalem. Jerusalem has never been the capital of any Arab or Muslim nation or group, and up until recent times Arab leaders did not come to visit. So this territory becomes part of the equation today. In the Abrahamic Covenant there are 3 provisions to Abraham; to the Seed, Israel; and to the Gentiles. It includes the entire Jewish nation: the descendants of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob.
In the genealogical record provided by Luke the historian, he traces Christ back to be “the son of Jacob, the son of Isaac, the son of Abraham, the son of Terah, (Luke 3:34) This clearly has Jesus as a Jew and he is traced to Abraham.
The “original Jews” are the physical descendents of Abraham, his son Isaac, and his son Jacob through Jacob's sons who became the 12 tribes of Israel. The name “Jew” is primarily tribal (from Judah). the Hebrew yehudhi, originally meaning a member of the Hebrew tribe of Judah. It is first found in 2 Kings 16:6, as distinct from Israel, of the northern kingdom. After the Captivity it was chiefly used to distinguish the race from Gentiles, e.g., John 2:6; Acts 14:1; Gal. 2:15, where it denotes Christians of “Jewish” race; it distinguishes Jews from Samaritans.By New Testament times, the terms “Hebrew,” “Israelite,” and “Jew” had become synonymous.
In the Scripture we have the statement that all men are either Jews or Gentiles (Rom. 2:9; 1 Cor. 10:32; Gal 3:28; Eph 2:11-18.)
Mary in her magnificat to the Lord because she has been found pregnant with the Messiah says, “He has helped His servant Israel, in remembrance of His mercy, As He spoke to our fathers, to Abraham and to his seed forever.” (Luke 1:54-55) Jesus is the fulfillment of the blessing to all nations first spoken by Abraham in Gen.12
The prophets after Abraham were Jewish prophets called to the Hebrew people. The apostle Peter spoke saying, “But those things which God foretold by the mouth of all His prophets, that the Christ would suffer, He has thus fulfilled. “Repent therefore and be converted, that your sins may be blotted out, so that times of refreshing may come from the presence of the Lord, “and that He may send Jesus Christ, who was preached to you before, “whom heaven must receive until the times of restoration of all things, which God has spoken by the mouth of all His holy prophets since the world began. “For Moses truly said to the fathers, 'The Lord your God will raise up for you a Prophet like me from your brethren. Him you shall hear in all things, whatever He says to you. 'And it shall be that every soul who will not hear that Prophet shall be utterly destroyed from among the people.' “Yes, and all the prophets, from Samuel and those who follow, as many as have spoken, have also foretold these days. “You are sons of the prophets, and of the covenant which God made with our fathers, saying to Abraham, 'And in your seed all the families of the earth shall be blessed.' “To you first, God, having raised up His Servant Jesus, sent Him to bless you, in turning away every one of you from your iniquities” (Acts 3:18-26)
In this portion of Peters speech we find several things, that Jesus is the prophet that is to be sent, one that is like Moses. He is sent to his brethren the Jews, but whoever does not hear what Jesus says and believes (Whether Jew or Gentile) will be condemned. He points to the Jews as sons of the prophets and keepers of the covenant. That Jesus is the fulfillment promised to Abraham in Gen.12 where all people of the earth will be blessed. We would have to reject everything in the bible to come to a different conclusion than what Peter has summed up inspired by the Holy Spirit.
All people will be blessed. It is a fact then whether one is a Muslim or a Jew, whatever ethnicity or religion, when they become a believer in Christ they receive peace with God their creator that Jesus promised. They become one in Christ and with God with no division at all. Because the Abrahamic covenant has not been completed there will be a national salvation of Israel.
Jesus was specifically called the “King of the Jews” because he affirmed this. The Scripture explains this was written over his head at His crucifixion.
Rom. 1:1-5 “Paul, a bondservant of Jesus Christ, called to be an apostle, separated to the gospel of God which He promised before through His prophets in the Holy Scriptures, concerning His Son Jesus Christ our Lord, who was born of the seed of David according to the flesh, and declared to be the Son of God with power according to the Spirit of holiness, by the resurrection from the dead. Through Him we have received grace and apostleship for obedience to the faith among all nations for His name”
Gal 3:8-9 “And the Scripture, foreseeing that God would justify the Gentiles by faith, preached the gospel to Abraham beforehand, saying, “In you all the nations shall be blessed.” So then those who are of faith are blessed with believing Abraham.”
This Gospel is the the good news in the New Testament delivered to us by the apostles. It tells us our sins are forgiven because of Jesus' death on the cross and that we have eternal life because he rose from the dead.
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