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These quotes are based on Hadith - sayings of the Prophet Muhammad (s.a.w.).
Please note:
Quotes may not carry the exact words of the Hadith but only the essence
of the Hadith.
 | Abstinence
Remember the lord in retirement from the people and make prayer thy
sleep, and hunger thy food.
Kill not your hearts with excess of eating and drinking.
Illumine your hearts with hunger, and strive to conquer yourself
with hunger and thirst; continue to knock on the gates of paradise by
hunger.
The world is sweet in the heart, and green to the eye; and verily
God hath brought you, after those who went before you: then look to
your action, and abstain from the world of wickedness.
The nearest to me are the abstinent, whoever they are, wherever
they are.
A keeper of the fast, who doth not abandon lying and detraction,
God careth not about his leaving off eating and drinking.
A man once said to Muhammad, "O Messenger of God, permit me to
become a Eunuch." He said, "That person is not of me who maketh
another a eunuch, or becometh so himself; because the manner in which
my followers become eunuchs is by fasting and abstinence." The man
said permit me to retire from society, and to abandon the delights of
the world." He said, "The retirement that becometh my followers is to
live in the world and yet to sit in the corner of a mosque in
expectation of prayers."
A man while fasting must abstain from all bad expressions and must
not even resent an injury.
Torment not yourselves, lest God punish you.
There is no monasticism in Islam.
S'ad b. Abi Wakkas said: The apostle forbade Uthman b. Mazun from
avoiding marriage: and if he had permitted that to him, we would have
become eunuchs."
The man I most emulate is a Muslim unencumbered; a man of small
family, and little money, a performer of prayers and a perfect
worshipper of God in private, one who is unknown, and hath enough to
supply his wants, and when he dieth, he will leave few women to cry
for him, and few legacies.
Keep fast and eat also, stay awake at night and sleep also, for
verily there is a duty on you to your body, not to labor overmuch, so
that ye may not get ill and destroy yourselves; and verily there is a
duty on you to your eyes, ye must sometimes sleep and give them rest;
and verily there is a duty on you to your wife, and to your visitors
and guests that come to see you; ye must talk to them; and nobody hath
kept fast who fasted always; the fast of three days in every month is
equal to constant fasting: then keep three days' fast in every month.
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 | Adultery
When a man committeth adultery, Iman (Faith) leaveth him; but when
he leaveth such evil ways, Iman wil return to him.
The adultery of the eye is to look with desire on the wife of
another; and the adultery of the tongue is to utter what is forbidden.
Ye followers of Muhammad, I swear of God, there is not anything
which God so abhors, as adultery.
Every eye is an adulterer; and every woman perfumeth herself, and
goeth to an assembly where men are, wishing to show herself to them,
with a look of lasciviousness, is an adultress.
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 | Aged
Persons
To every young person who honors the old, on account of their age,
may god appoint those who shall honor him in his years.
Verily, to honor an old man is showing respect to God.
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Alms-giving
The best of alms is that which the right hand giveth, and the left
hand knoweth not of.
The best of almsgiving is that which springeth from the heart, and
is uttered by the lips to soften the wounds of the injured.
Almsgiving is duty unto you. Alms should be taken from the rich and
returned to the poor.
There are seven people whom God will draw under His own shadow, on
the day when there will be no other shadow; one of them a man who hath
given alms and concealed it, so that his left hand knew not what his
right hand did.
Muhammad said, "It is indispensable for every Muslim to give alms."
The companions asked, "But if he hath not anything to give?" He said,
"If he hath nothing, he must do a work with his hand, by which to
obtain something and benefit himself; and give alms with the
remainder." They said, "But if he is not able to do that work, to
benefit himself and give alms to others?" The Rasul (Muhammad) said,
"Then he should assist the needy and the oppressed." They asked, "What
if he is not able to assist the oppressed?" He said, "Then he should
exhort people to do good." They asked, "And if he cannot?" He said,
"Then let him withold himself from doing harm to people; for verily
that is as alms and charity for him."
The people of the Rasul's house killed a goat, and the Rasul
enquired, "What remaineth of it?" Aishah said, "Nothing but its
shoulder; for we have sent the rest to the poor and neighbors." The
Rasul said, "The whole goat remaineth except its shoulder; that is,
that remaineth which ye have given away, and what ye have kept in the
house is frail."
The angels asked, "O God! Is there anything of Thy creation
stronger than rocks?" God said, "Yes; iron is stronger than rocks, for
it breaketh them." The angels said, "O Lord! Is there anything of Thy
creation stronger than iron?" God said, "Yes; fire is stronger than
iron, for it melteth it." And the angels said, O defender! Is there
anything of Thy creation stronger than fire?" God said, "Yes; water
overcometh fire; it killeth it and maketh it cold." Then the angels
said, "O Lord! Is there anything of Thy creation stronger than water?"
God said, "Yes; wind overcometh water: it agitateth it and putteth it
in motion." They said, "O our cherisher! Is there anything in Thy
creation stronger than wind?" God said, "Yes, the children of Adam,
giving alms; that is, those who give with their right hands and
conceal if from their left, they overcome all."
The most excellent of alms is that of a man of small property,
which he has earned by labor, and from which he giveth as much as he
is able.
Giving alms to the poor hath the reward of one alms; but that given
to kindred hath two rewards; one, the reward of alms, the other the
reward of helping relations.
A man's first duty should be to his own family, if poor.
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 | Animals
Fear God, in treating dumb animals and ride them when they are fit
to be ridden and get off them when they are tired.
An adulteress passed by a dog at a well; and the dog was holding
out his tongue from thirst, which was near killing him, and the woman
drew off her boot, and tied it to the end of her garment, and drew
water for the dog, and gave him to drink; and she was forgiven for
that act.
A woman was punished for a cat which she tied till it died from
hunger. She gave the cat nothing to eat, nor did she set it at liberty
so that it might find some food.
"Are there rewards for doing good to quadrupeds, and giving them
water to drink?" Muhammad said, "Verily there are heavenly rewards for
any act of kindness to a live animal."
Verily God hath one hundred loving kindnesses; one of which he hath
sent down amongst man, quadrupeds, and every moving thing upon the
face of the earth: by it they are kind to each other, and forgive one
another; and by it the animals of the wilds are kind to their young;
and God hath reserved ninety-nine loving kindnesses by which he will
be gracious to His creatures on the last day.
A young man came before the Rasul with a carpet and said, "O Rasul!
I passed through a wood and heard the voices of young birds; and I
took and put them into my carpet; and their mother came fluttering
around my head, and I uncovered the young, and the mother fell down
upon them, then I wrapped them up in my carpet; and there are the
young which I have." Then the Rasul said, "Put them down." And when he
did so, their mother joined them: and Muhammad said, "Do you wonder at
the affection of the mother towards her young? I swear by Him who hath
sent me, verily God is more loving to His creatures than the mother to
these young birds. Return them to the place from which ye took them,
and let their mother be with them."
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Backbiting
Backbiting vitiates ablution and fasting.
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 | Beauty
Muhammad said, "That person will not enter Paradise who hath one
atom of pride in his heart." And a man present said, "Verily, a man is
fond of having good clothes, and good shoes." Muhammad said, "God is
Beauty and delighteth in the beautiful; but pride is holding man in
contempt."
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 | Begging
Every man who shall beg, in order to increase his property, God
will diminish it.
Verily God loveth a Muslim with a family, who is poor, and
witholdeth himself from the unlawful and from begging.
Whoso openeth unto himself the door of begging, God will open unto
him the door of poverty.
Verily it is better for any of you to take your rope and bring a
bundle of wood upon your back and sell it, in which case God guardeth
your honor than to beg of people, whether they give or not; if they do
not give, your reputation suffereth, and you return disappointed; and
if they give, it is worse than that, for it layeth you under
obligation.
Whoever hath food for a day and a night, it is prohibited for him
to beg.
Verily it is not right for the rich to ask, nor for a strong,
robust person; but it is allowed for the indigent and the infirm.
"May I beg from people, O Messenger of God, when necessitous?"
Muhammad said, "Do not beg unless absolutely compelled, then only from
the virtuous."
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 | Benefits
There are two benefits, of which the generality of men are the
losers, and of which they do not know the value.
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 | Charity
Charity that is concealeth appeaseth the wrath of God.
Prayers lighten the heart, and charity is proof of Iman (Faith),
and abstinence from sin is perfect splendor; the Kuran is a proof of
gain to you, if you do good, and it is a detriment to you if you do
wrong; and every man who riseth in the morning either doeth that which
will be the means of his redemption or his ruin.
Charity is a duty unto every Muslim. He who hath not the means
thereto, let him do a good act or abstain from an evil one. That is
his charity.
When you speak, speak the truth; perform when you promise;
discharge your trust; commit not fornication; be chaste; have no
impure desires; withold your hands from striking, and from taking that
which is unlawful and bad. The best of God's servants are those who
when seen, remind of God; and the worst of God's servants are those
who carry tales about, and do mischief and separate friends, and seek
for the defects of the good.
Whoso hath left debt and children, let him come to me; I am their
patron, I will discharge his debt and befriend his children.
Every good act is charity.
Doing justice between two people is charity; and asisting a man
upon his beast, and lifting his baggage is charity; and pure,
comforting words are charity; and answering a questioner with
mildness, is charity; and removing that which is an inconvenience to
wayfarers, such as thorns and stones, is a charity.
Every good act is charity; and verily it is a good act to meet your
brother with and open countenance, and to por water from your own
water-bag into his vessel.
Your smiling in your brother's face is charity; and your exhorting
man to virtuous deeds is charity; and your prohibiting the forbidden
is charity; and your showing men the road, in the land in which they
lose it, is charity; and your assisting the blind is charity.
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Chastity
Modesty and chastity are part of the faith.
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Christians and Jews
Muhammad once referred to strife, and said, "It will appear at the
time of knowledge leaving the world." Ziad said, "O Messenger of God,
how will knowledge go from the world, since we read the Kuran, and
teach it to our children, and our children to theirs; and so on till
the last day?" Then Muhammad said, "O Ziad, I supposed you the most
learned man of Medinah. Do the Jews and Christians who read the Bible
and the Evangel act on them?"
Do not exceed bounds in praising me, as the Christians do in
praising Jesus, the son of Mary, by calling Him God, and the Son of
God; I am only the Lord's servant; then call me the servant of God and
His messenger.
When the bier of anyone passeth by thee, whether Jew, Christian or
Muslim, rise to thy feet.
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Cleanliness
Were it not for fear of troubling my disciples, verily I would
order them to clean their teeth before every prayer.
God is pure and loveth purity and cleanliness.
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Compassion
When the child (of Zainab) was brought to Muhammad, dying; its body
trembling and moving; the eyes of the Apostle of God shed many tears.
And Sad said, "O Messenger of God! What is the weeping and shedding of
tears?" Muhammad replied, "This is an expression of the tenderness and
compassion, which the Lord hath put into the hearts of His servants;
the Lord doth not have compassion on and commiserate with His
servants, except such as are tender and full of feeling."
The Apostle of God wept over Sad b. Ubadah. And he said, "Have not
you heard that the Lord doth not punish on account of shedding tears,
not from sobs of the heart from the afflicted?" He is not of the
people of our way who slappeth his cheeks and teareth his collar, and
mourneth like the mournings of Ignorance.
There is no reward but Paradise for a Muslim who suffereth with
patience when the soul of his affectionate friend is taken
Once Muhammad went together with some of his companions to Abu
Yusuf, a blacksmith who was the husband of the nurse of Muhammad's son
Ibrahim. And the Apostle of God took Ibrahim and kissed him and
embraced him. On another occasion they went to see Ibrahim, when he
was in his dying moments. The eyes of Muhammad were fixed, and flowed
with tears; and Abd-al-Rahman, son of Auf, said to the Messenger of
God, "Do you weepand shed tears, O Apostle of God?" He said, "O son of
Auf, these are tears of compassion, and feeling due to the dead."
After that he shed tears again, and said, "Verily my eyes shed tears
and my heart is afflicted, and I say nothing but what is pleasing to
my Benefactor; for verily, O Ibrahim, I am melancholy at being
separated from thee."
Muhammad said, "Do you think this woman will cast her own child
into the fire?" Those present said, "No." Muhammad said, "Verily God
is more compassionate on His creatures, than this woman on her own
child."
When one of the family of Muhammad died, and the women assemnled,
crying over the corpse, Omar stood up to prevent them from crying, and
drive them away: but Muhammad said, "Let them alone, O Omar, because
eyes are shedding tears; and the heart is stricken with calamity and
sorrowful; and the time of misfortune near and fresh; and the crying
of women is without wailing."
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Conscience
A man asked Muhammad what was the mark whereby he might know the
reality of his faith. Muhammad said, "If thou derive pleasure from the
good which thou hast performed and thou be grieved for the evil which
thou hast committed, thou art a true believer." The man said. "In what
doth a fault really consist?" Muhammad said, "when action pricketh thy
conscience, forsake it."
All actions are judged by the motive prompting them. |
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Contentment
Riches are not from an abundance of wordly goods, but from a
contented mind.
When you see a person, who has been given more than you in money
and beauty; then look to those who have been given less.
Look to those inferior to yourselves, so that you may not hold
God's benefits in contempt.
God loveth those who are content.
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Control of Self
The most excellent Jihad is that for the conquest of self.
The exercise of religious duty will not atone for the fault of an
abusive tongue.
A man cannot be a Muslim till his heart and tongue are so.
Whoever hath been given gentleness, hath been given a good portion
in this world and the next.
Whoever suppresseth his anger, when he hath in his power to show
it, God will give him great reward.
That person is wise and sensible who subdueth his carnal desires
and hopeth for rewards from God; and he is an ignorant man who
followeth his lustful appetites, and with all this asketh for God's
forgiveness.
May God fill the heart of that person who suppresseth his anger
with safety and faith.
"Give me advice," said someone. Muhammad said, Be not angry."
Muaz said, "At the time of my being dispatched to the judgeship of
Yemen, the last advice Muhammad gave me was this, 'O Muaz! be of good
temper towards people.'"
He is not strong and powerful who throweth people down; but he is
strong who witholdeth himself from anger.
No person hath drunk a better draught than that of anger which he
hath swallowed for God's sake.
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Courtesy
Humility and courtesy are acts of piety.
Verily, a man teaching his child manners is better for him than
giving one bushel of grain in alms.
It is not right for a guest to stay so long as to incommode his
host.
No man hath given his child anything better than good manners.
"O Apostle of God! Inform, Inform me, if I stop with a man, and he
doth not entertain me, and he afterwards stoppeth at my house, am I to
entertain him or to act with him as he with did me?" Muhammad said,
"Entertain him."
Respect people according to their eminence.
Being confined for room, the Apostle of god sat down upon his legs
drawn up under his thighs. A desert Arab who was present said, "What
is this way of sitting?" Muhammad said, "Verily God hath made me a
humble servant, and not a proud king."
Abuse nobody, and if a man abuse thee, and lay upon a vice which he
knoweth in thee; then do not disclose one which thou knowest in him.
When victuals are placed before you no man must stand up till it be
taken away; nor must one man leave off eating before the rest; and if
he doeth he must make an apology.
It is of my ways that a man shall come out with his guest to the
door of his house.
Meekness and modesty are two branches of Iman (Faith); and vain
talking and embellishing are two brances of hypocrisy.
When three persons are together, two of them must not whisper to
each other without letting the third hear, until others are present,
because it would hurt him.
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 | Crimes
The greatest crimes are to associate another with God, to vex your
father and mother, to murder your own species, to commit suicide, and
to swear to lie.
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Cultivation of Land
There is no Muslim who planteth a tree, or soweth a field, and man
birds or beast eat from them, but it is charity for him.
Whoever bringeth the dead land to life; that is cultivateth waste
land, for him is reward therein.
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 | Dead
And behold! a bier passed by Muhammad, and he stood up; and it was
said to him, "This is the bier of a Jew." He said, "Was it not the
holder of a soul, from which we should take example and fear?"
Do not speak ill of the dead.
When the bier of anyone passeth by thee, whether Jew, Christian, or
Muslim, rise to thy feet."
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 | Death
Wish not for death any of you; neither the doer of good works, for
peradventure he may increase them by an increase of life; nor the
offender, for perhaps he may obtain the forgiveness of God by
repentance. Wish not, nor supplicate for death before its time cometh;
for verily when ye die, hope is out and the ambition for reward: and
verily, the increase of a Mumins' (Muslim's) life increaseth his good
works.
Remember often the destroyer and cutter off of delights, which is
death.
Not one of you must wish for death from any wordly affliction; but
if there certainly is anyone wishing for death, he must say, "O Lord,
keep me alive so long as life may be good for me, and wish me to die
when it is better for me so to do."
The Faithful do not die; perhaps they become translated from this
perishable world to the world of eternal existences.
Death is a blessing to a Muslim. Remember and speak well of your
dead, and refrain from speaking ill of them.
There are two things disliked by the sons of Adam, one of them
death; whereas it is better for Muslims than sinning; the second is
scarcity of money; whereas its account will be small in futurity.
The grave is the first stage of the journey into eternity.
Death is a bridge that uniteth friend with friend.
Sleep is the brother of death.
Muhammad said, three days before his death, "Not one of you must
die but with resignation to the will of God, and with hope for his
beneficence and pardon."
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 | Debt
Whoso desireth that God should redeem him from the sorrows and
travail of the last day, must delay in calling on poor debtors, or
forgive the debt in part or whole.
A martyr shall be pardoned every fault but debt.
Whoso hath a thing wherewith to discharge a debt, and refuseth to
do it, it is right to dishonor and punish him.
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Deliberation
Deliberation in undertakings is pleasing to God.
A good disposition, and deliberation in affairs, and a medium in
all things, are one part of twenty-four parts of the qualities of the
prophets.
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Disposition to Good
He is of the most perfect Muslims, whose disposition is most liked
by his own family.
Verily the most beloved of you by me, and nearest to me in the next
world, are those of good dispositions; and verily the greates enemies
to me and farthest from me, are the ill-tempered.
Verily the most beloved of you by me are those of the best
dispositions.
I have been sent to explain fully good dispositions.
O Lord! as thou hast made my body good, so make good my
disposition.
Two qualities are not combined in any Muslim, avarice and bad
disposition.
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Disputation
Mankind will not go astray after having found the right road,
unless from disputation.
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 | Divorce
Every woman who asketh to be divorced from her husband without
cause, the fragrance of the Garden is forbidden her.
The thing which is lawful, but disliked by God, is divorce.
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Duty of Believers
I have left two things among you, and you will not stray as long as
you hold them fast; one is the Book of God, the other the Laws of His
Messenger.
God hath made a straight road, with two walls, one on each side of
it, in which are open doors, with curtains drawn across. At the top of
the road is an Amonisher who saith, "Go straight on the road, and not
crooked;" and above this Admonisher is another who saith to any who
pass through these doorways, "Pass not through these doors, or verily
ye will fall." Now, the road is Islam; and the open doors are those
things which God hath forbidden; and the curtains before the doors the
bounds set by God; the Admonisher is the Kuran, and the upper
Admonisher God, in the heart of every Mumin (Muslim).
Verily ye are ordered the divine commandments, then forsake them
not; ye are forbidden the unlawful, then do not fall therein; there
are fixed boundaries, then pass not beyond them; and there is silence
on some things without their being forgotten, then do not debate about
them.
Happy is the Mumin (Muslim) for if good befalleth him, he praiseth
and thanketh God; and if misfortune, praiseth God and beareth it
patiently; therefore a Mumin is rewarded for every good he doth, even
for his raising a morsel of food to the mouth of his wife.
Whoever hath eaten of pure food and practised my laws, and mankind
hath lived in security from him, will enter into the Abode of Bliss.
Muhammad once said to Anas, "Son, if you are able, keep your heart
from morning till night and from night till morning, free from malice
towards anyone;" then he said, "Oh! my son, this is one of my laws,
and he who loveth my laws verily loveth me."
I admonish you to fear God, and yield obedience to my successor,
although he may be a black slave, for this reason, that those amongst
you who live after me will see great schisms. Therefore hold fast to
my ways and those of my successors, who may lead you in the straight
path, having found it themselves; and ardently seize my laws and be
firm thereto.
There was not any Messenger sent before me by God to mankind but
found friends and companions, who embraced his maxims and became his
disciples; after which were born those who gave out precepts which
they did not practice, and did what they were ordered not to do;
therefore those who oppose them with the hand, with the tongue, and
with the heart are Mumins, and there is not anything in Iman besides
this, even as much as a grain of mustard seed.
do not associate any one thing with God, although they kill or burn
you; nor affront intentionally your parents, although they should
order you to quit your wife, your children, and your property. Do not
drink wine; for it is the root of all evil; abstain from vice; and
when a pestilence shall pervade mankind, and you shall be amongst
them, remain with them; and cherish your children.
There are three roots to Iman (Faith): not to trouble him who shall
say 'there is no diety but God;' not to think him an unbeliever on
account of one fault; and not to discard him for one crime.
He is not a good Mumin who committeth adultery or getteth drunk,
who stealeth,or plundereth, or who embezzleth; beware, beware.
When asked to mention one of the most excellent parts of Iman
(Faith) Muhammad said, "To love him who loveth God, and hate him who
hateth God, and to keep your tongue employed in repeating the name of
God." What else? He said, "To do unto all men as you would wish to
have done unto you, and to reject for others what you would reject for
yourself."
He who progresseth daily is yet far off from the Ideal.
When you speak, speak the truth; perform when you promise;
discharge your trust; commit not fornication; be chaste; have no
impure desires; withold your hands from striking, and from taking that
which is unlawful or evil. The best of God's servants are those who,
when seen, remind of God; and the worst of God's servants are those
who carry tales about to do mischief and separate friends, and seek
for the defects of the good.
He who believeth in one God and the Hereafter, let him speak what
is good or remain silent.
He who believeth in one God and the life beyond, let him not injure
his neighbors.
Speak to men according to their mental capacities, for if you speak
all things to all men, some cannot understand you, and so fall into
errors.
It is not a sixth or a tenth of a man's devotion which is
acceptable to God, but only such portions thereof as he offereth with
understanding and true devotional spirit.
Verily your deeds will be brought back to you, as if you yourself
were the creator of your own punishement.
Adore God as thou wouldst if thou sawest Him; for if thou seest Him
not, He seeth thee.
Feed the hungry and visit the sick, and free the captive, if he be
unjustly confined. Assist any person oppressed, whether Muslim or
non-Muslim.
"The duties of Muslims to each other are six." It was asked, "What
are they, O Messenger of God?" He said, "When you meet a Muslim, greet
him, and when he inviteth you to dinner, accept; and when he asketh
you for advice, give it to him; and when he sneezeth and saith,
'Praise be to God,' do you say, 'May God have mercy upon thee;' and
when he is sick, visit him; and when he dieth, follow his bier."
This life is but a tillage for the next, do good that you may reap
there; for striving is the ordinance of God and whatever God hath
ordained can only be attained by striving.
Commandments are of three kinds; one commands an action, the reward
of which is clear, then do it; another forbids an action which leads
astray, abstain from it; and in another arise contradictions, resign
that to God.
The world is forbidden to those of the life to come; the life to
come is forbidden to those of this world.
Do a good deed for every bad deed that it may blot out the latter.
A true Mumin is thankful to God in prosperity, and resigned to His
will in adversity.
That which is lawful is clear, and that which is unlawful likewise:
bu there are certain doubtful things between the two from which it is
well to abstain.
Be ye imbued with divine qualities.
He is true who protecteth his brethren both present and absent.
All Muslims are as one body. If a man complaineth of a pain in his
head, his whole body complaineth; and if his eye complaineth, his
whole body complaineth.
All Muslims are like the components parts of a foundation, each
strengthening the others; in such a way they must support each other.
Assist your brother Muslim, whether he be an oppressor or
oppressed. "Bu how shall we do it when he is an oppressor?" enquired a
companion. Muhammad replied, "Assisting an oppressor consists in
forbidding and witholding him from oppression."
Muslims are brothers in religion and they must not oppress one
another, nor abandon assisting each other, nor hold one another in
contempt. The seat of righteousness is the heart; therefore that heart
which is righteous, does not hold a Muslim in contempt; and all the
things of one Muslim are unlawful to another: his blood, property, and
reputation.
The creation is as God's family; for its sustenance is from Him:
therefore the most beloved unto God is the person who doeth good to
God's family.
The proof of a Muslims sincerity is that he payeth no heed to that
which is not his business.
The Faithful are those who perform their trust and fail not in
their word, and keep their pledge.
No man is a true believer unless he desireth for his brother that
which he desireth for himself.
Verily when a Muslim is taken ill, after which God restoreth him to
health, his illness hath covered his former faults, and it is an
admonition to him of what cometh in future times; and verily, when a
hypocrite is taken ill, and afterwards restored to health, he is like
a camel which has been tied up, and afterwards set free; for the camel
did not know for want of discrimination, why they tied him up and why
they turned him loose; such is the hypocrite: on the contrary, a Mumin
knoweth, that his indiposition was to atone for his faults.
Misfortune is always with the Muslim and his wife, either in their
persons or their property or their children; either death or sickness;
until they die, when there is no fault upon them.
Abusing a Muslim is disobedience to God; and it is infidelity to
fight with one.
Every Muslim who calls a Muslim infidel will have the epithet
returned to him.
It is unworthy of a Mumin to injure people's reputation; it is
unworth to curse anyone; and it is unworth to abuse anyone; and it is
unworth of a Mumin to talk vainly.
It is better to sit alone than in company with thw bad; and it is
better to sit with the good than alone. And it is better to speak
words to a speaker of knowledge than to remain silent; and silence is
better than bad words.
Fear not the obloquy of the detractor in showing God's religion.
Refrain from seeing and speaking of the vices of mankind, which you
know are in yourself.
Guard yourselves from six things, and I am your security for
paradise. When you speak, speak the truth; perform when you promise;
discharge your trust; be chaste in thought and action; and withold
your hand from striking, from taking that which is unlawful, and bad.
That person is not of us who inviteth others to aid him in
oppression; and he is not of us who fighteth for his tribe in
injustice; and he is not of us who dieth in assisting his tribe in
tyranny.
He is not of us who is not affectinate to his liitle ones, and doth
not respect the feelings of the aged; and he is not of us who doth not
order that which is good and prohibit that which is evil.
Ye will not enter Paradise until ye have faith, and ye will not
complete your faith until ye love one another.
No man hath believed perfectly, until he wish for his brother that
which he wisheth for himself.
Verily, each of you is a mirror to his brother: then if he seeth a
vice in his brother he must tell him to get rid of it.
That person is not a perfect Muslim who eatheth his fill, and
leaveth his neighbors hungry.
O ye who have embraced Islam by the tongue, and to whose hearts it
hath not reached, distress not Muslims, nor speak ill of them, nor
seek for their defects.
Do not say that if people do good to us, we will do good to them;
and if people oppress us, we will oppress them; but determin that if
people do you good, you will do good to them; and if they oppress you,
you will not oppress them.
"Teach me a work, such that when I perform it God and men will love
me." Muhammad said, "Desire not the world, and God will love you; and
desire not what men have, and they will love you.
In prayers, all thoughts must be laid aside but those of God; in
conversation no word is to be uttered which afterwards be repented of;
do not covet from others, or have any hopes for them.
"There is a polish for everything that taketh away rust; and the
polish for the heart is th remembrance of God." The companions said,
"Is not repelling the infidels also like this?" Muhammad said, "No,
although one fights until one's sword be broken!"
My Lord hath commanded me nine things: To reverence Him,
externally, and internally; to speak the truth, and with propriety, in
prosperity and adversity; moderation in affluence and poverty; to
benefit my relations and kindred, who do not benefit me; to give alms
to him who refuseth me; to forgive him who injureth me; that my
silence should be in attaining a knowledge of God; that when I speak,
I should mention Him; that when I look on God's creatures, it should
be as an example for the: and God hath ordered me to direct in that
which is lawful.
A Muslim who mixeth with people and beareth inconveniences, is
better than one who doth not mix with them and beareth no
inconveniences. |
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Eloquence
Some eloquence is like magic.
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 | Envy
If envy were proper, two persons would be the most proper objects
of it; one, a man to whom god hath given riches, and apointed to
bestow in charity; the other, to whom God hath granted the knowledge
of religion, and acteth thereon himself, instructing others.
Keep yourselves far from envy; it eateth up and taketh away good
actions, like as fire eateth up and burneth wood.
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Experience
He is not a perfect man of fortitude, who hath not fallen into
misfortunes; and there is no physician but the experienced.
|
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Forgiveness
Thus saith the Lord, "Verily those who are patient in adversity and
forgive wrongs, are the doers of excellence."
Once Muhammad was asked, "O Apostle of God!" How many times are we
to forgive our servant's faults?" He was silent. Again the questioner
asked, and Muhammad gave no answer. But when the man asked a third
time, he said, "Forgive your servants seventy times day."
There is no man who woundeth and pardoneth the giver of the wound
but God will exalt his dignity and dimish his faults.
That man is nearest to God, who pardoneth, when he had in his power
him who would have injured him.
Do not say, that if the people do good to us, we will do good to
them; and if the people oppress us, we will oppress them; but
determine that if people do you good, you will do good to them; and if
they oppress you, you will not oppress them.
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Gentleness
Verily, god is mild, and is fond of mildness, and he giveth to the
mild what he doth not to the harsh.
Whoever hath been given gentleness hath been given a good portion,
in this world and the next.
God is gentle and loveth gentleness.
Verily you have two qualities which God and His Messenger love -
fortitude and gentleness.
|
 | God
Whoever loveth to meet God, God loveth to meet him.
God saith, "I fulfil the faith of whoso putteth his faith in Me;
and I am with him, and near him, when remembereth Me."
God saith, "Whoso doth one good act, for him are ten rewards; and I
also give more to whomever I will; and whoso doth an ill, its
punishment is equal to it, or I forgive him; and whoso seeketh to
approach Me one span, I seek to approach one cubit; and whoso seeketh
to approach Me one cubit, I seek to approach him two fathoms; and
whoso walketh towards Me, I run towards him; and whoso cometh before
Me with the earth full of sins, and believeth solely in Me, him I come
before with a front of forgiveness as big as the earth."
God saith, "The person I hold as a beloved, I am his hearing by
which he heareth, and I am his sight by which he seeth, and I am his
hands by which he holdeth, and I am his feet by which he walketh."
God saith, "O Man! Only follow thou My laws, and thou shall become
like unto Me, and then say, 'Be' and behold, It is."
God is One, and liketh unity.
We were with Muhammad on a journey, and some men stood up repeating
aloud, "God is most great," and the Rasul said, "O men! Be easy on
yourselves, and do not distress yourselves by raising your voices,
verily you do not call to one deaf or absent, but verily to one who
heareth and seeth; and He is with you; and He to whom you pray is
nearer to you than the neck of your camel."
God sait, "I was a hidden treasure. I would fain be known. So I
created Man."
Do you love your creator? Love your fellow-beings first.
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God's Forgiveness
Muhammad said, "I would not have the whole wealth of the world in
the place of this revelation. . . O My servants who have oppressed
your own souls by sinning, despair not of the mercy of God." A man
said, "What of him who hath associated others with God?" Muhammad
remained silent for a while and then said, "Know that him also God
forgiveth; but on repentance."
God saith, "Verily my compassion overcometh my wrath."
|
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God's Kindness
If the unbeliever knew of the extent of the Lord's mercy, even he
would not despair of Paradis.
God's kindness towards his creaturee is more than a mother's
towards her babe.
If you put your whole trust in God, as you ought, He most certainly
will give you sustenance, as He doth the birds; they come out hungry
in the morning, but return full to their nests.
Trust in God, but tie it (your camel).
God is not merciful to him who is not kind to mankind.
"Do none enter the Garden of Bliss save by God's mercy?" Muhammad
said, "No. None enter save through God's favor." "You also, O
Messenger of God! Will you not enter Paradise save by God's
compassion?" Muhammad put his hand on his head and said thrice, "I
shall not enter unless God cover me with His mercy."
|
 | Good
Works
That person who relieveth a Mumin (Muslim) from distress in this
world, God will in like manner relieve him in the next; and he who
shall do good to the indigent, God will do good to him in this world
and the next.
Be persistent in good actions.
|
 | Heart
Beware! verily there is a piece of flesh in the body of man, which
when good, the whole body is good; and when bad, the whold body is
bad, and that is the heart.
Muhammad said, "O Wabisah! are you come to ask what is goodness and
what is badness?" Wabisah said, "Yes, I am come for that." Then He
joined his fingers and struck them upon Wabisah's breast, that is made
a sign towards his heart, and said, "Ask the question from thine own
heart." This he repeated three times aloud and said, "Goodness is a
thing from which thy heart findeth firmness and rest; and badness is a
thing which throweth thee into doubt, although men may acquit thee."
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Heaven and Hell
Hell is veiled in delights, and Heaven in hardships and miseries.
Heaven lieth at the feet of mothers.
He will not enter hell who hath faith equal to a mustard seed in
his heart; and he will not enter Paradise who hath a single grain of
pride, equal to a mustard seed, in his heart.
Paradise is nearer to you than the thongs of your sandals; and the
Fire likewise.
Deal gently with the people, and be not harsh; cheer them and
condemn them not. Ye will meet with many 'people of the Book' who will
question thee, what is the key to Heaven? Reply to them (the key to
Heaven) to testify to the truth of God, and to do good work.
People asked Muhammad if to say "There is no diety but God" was not
the key to Paradise. He said, "Yes, but it is a key which hath wards;
and if ye come with a key of that description, Paradise will be opened
to you, otherwise it will not."
Paradise is not for him who reproacheth others with any favor he
doth to them.
The people entitled to the Abode of Bliss are three; the first, a
just king, a doer of good to his people endowed with virtue; the
second, an affectionate man, of a tender heart to relations and
others; the third, a virtuous man.
Verily a man used to come before the Rasul (Muhammad) bringing his
son with him; and the Rasul said to him, "Dost thou love this boy?"
And the man said, "O Rasul of God! May God love thee as I love this
son!" Then the Rasul did not see the boy with his father for some
time; and He said, "What has become of that man's son?" The said, "O
Rasul! He is dead." And the Rasul said to the man, "Dost thou not like
this, that thou wilt find no door of Paradise but thy son will be
there awaiting thee, in order to conduct thee into Paradise?" And
another man said, "O Rasul! Is this joyful news particularly for this
man, or for the whole of us?" Lord Muhammad said, "For all of you."
What is Paradise? Muhammad replied, "It is what the eye hath not
seen, nor the ear heard, nor ever flashed across the mind of man."
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Hospitality
He who believeth in one God, and a future life, let him honor his
guest.
Whoever believeth in God and the Hereafter must respect his guest;
and whoever believeth in God and the Hereafter must not incommode his
neighbors, and a Mumin must speak only good words, otherwise remain
silent.
It is not right for a guest to stay so long as to incommode his
host.
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Humility
Humility and courtesy are acts of piety.
Verily God instructs me to be humble and lowly and not proud; and
that no one should oppress another.
A tribe must desist from boasting of their forefathers; if they
will not leave off boasting, verily they will be more abominable near
God, than a black beetle which rolleth forward filth by its nose; and
verily God has removed from you pride and arrogance. There is no man
but either a righteous Mumin or a sinner; mankind are all sons of
Adam, and he was from earth.
Whoever is humble to men for God's sake, may God exalt his
eminence.
|
 | Islam
"Inform me in the nature of Islam," said Sufyan, "so that I may
have no occasion to ask others about it." Muhammad said, "Say, O
Sufyan, 'I believe in God;' after which obey the commandments, and
abandon the things forbidden."
Islam commenced in a forlorn state, and will quickly return to what
it was in the beginning; then be joyful, ye who are firm.
My religion is like clouds dropping much rain; some of them falling
on pure, favorable soil, cause grass to grow; some of them fall in
hollows from which mankind are benefited, some fall on high lands from
which benefit is not derived; then the two first are like the persons
acquainted with the religion of God and instructing others; and the
last like the person not regarding it nor accepting the right path.
The greatest enemies of God are those who are entered into Islam,
and do acts of infidelity, and who without cause, shed the blood of
man.
When asked, "What is Islam?" Muhammad said, "Abstinence and
Obedience to God." Asked "What is one of the most excellent virtues of
Iman (Faith)?" He said, "An amiable disposition." "Which is the most
excellent Hijrah (Renunciation)?" He said, "Abandoning that of which
God disapproveth."
"What is Islam?" someone asked. Muhammad said, "Purity of speech
and charity."
Every child is born with a disposition towards the natural religion
(Islam - submission to the Divine Will). It is the parents who maketh
it a Jew, Christian or a Magian.
Do you know what sappeth the foundations of Islam and ruineth it?
The errors of the learned destroy it, and the disputations of the
hypocrite, and the orders of kings who have lost the road.
Men differ like mines of gold and silver: the good in ignorance are
the good in Islam, once they have obtained the knowledge of religion.
|
 | Jihad
The most excellent Jihad is that for the conquest of self.
The ink of the scholar is more holy than the blood of the martyr.
|
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Kindness
To gladden the heart of the weary, to remove the suffering of the
afflicted, hath its own reward. In the day of trouble, the memory of
the action cometh like a rush of the torrent, and taketh our burden
away.
He who helpeth his fellow-creature in the hour of need, and he who
helpeth the oppressed, him will God help in the Day of Travail.
What actions are most excellent? To gladden the heart of a human
being, to feed the hungry, to help the afflicted, to lighten the
sorrow of the sorrowful, and to remove the wrongs of the injured.
Who is the most favored of God? He from whom the greatest good
cometh to His creatures.
All God's creatures are His family; and he is the most beloved of
God who doeth most good to God's creatures.
Whoever is kind to His creatures, God is kind to him; therefore be
kind to man on earth, whether good or bad; and being kind to the bad,
is to withold him from badness, thus in heaven you will be treated
kindly.
He who is not kind to God's creatures, and to his own children, God
will not be kind to him.
Kindness is a mark of faith: and whoever hath not kindness hath not
faith.
|
 | The
Qur'aan
The Qur'aan consisteth of five heads, things lawful, things
unlawful, clear and positive precepts, mysteries, and examples. Then
consider that lawful which is there declared to be so, and that which
is forbidden as unlawful; obey the precepts, believe in the mysteries,
and take warning from the examples.
Doth any of you suppose that God hath not forbidden anything except
in the Qur'aan? Beware, for verily I swear by God that I have ordered,
and prohibited things in manner like the Qur'aan: and God hath not
made it lawful for you to enter the houses of the People of the Book
(that is Jews, Christians, etc.) without their permission, or you beat
their women, or eat their fruits.
The Qur'aan was sent down in seven dialects; and in every one of
its sentences, there is an external and internal meaning.
The other messengers of God had their miracles, mine is the Qur'aan
and will remain forever.
"By what rule," said Muhammad, "would you be guided, O Muaz, in
your administration of Yeman?" "By the law of the Qur'aan." "But if
you find no direction in the Qur'aan?" "Then I will act according to
the example of the Messenger of God." "But if that faileth?" "Then I
will exercise my own reason and judgement."
|
 | Labour
Pray to God morning and evening, and employ the day in your
avocations.
He who neither worketh for himself, nor for others, will not
receive the reward of God.
Whoso is able and fit and doth not work for himself, or for others,
God is not gracious to him.
Those who earn an honest living are the beloved of God.
God is gracious to him that earneth his living by his own labor,
and not by begging.
Whoever desireth the world and its riches, in a lawful manner, in
order to withold himself from begging, and for a livelihood for his
family, and for being kind to his neighbor, will come to God with his
face as bright as the full moon on the fourteenth night of the lunar
month.
Give the labourer his wage before his perspiration be dry.
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Learning
He dieth not who giveth life to learning.
Whoso honoureth the learned, honoureth me.
The Messenger of God was asked, "What is the greatest vice of man?"
He said, "You must not ask me about vice, but ask about virtue;" and
he repeated this three times, after which he said, "Know ye! The worst
of men is a bad learned man, and a good learned man is the best."
Verily god doth not taketh away knowledge from the hands of His
servants; but taketh it by taking away the learned; so that when no
learned men remain, the ignorant will be placed at the head of
affairs. Causes will be submitted to their decision, they will pass
sentence without knowledge, will err themselves, and lead others into
error.
An hour's contemplation is better than a year's adoration.
Philosophy is the stray camel of the Faithful, take hold of it
wherever ye come across it.
Go in quest of knowledge even unto China.
Seek knowledge from the cradle to the grave.
The knowledge from which no benefit is derived is like a treasure
from which no charity is bestowed in the way of the Lord.
Do you know what sappeth the foundation of Islam, and ruineth it?
The errors of the learned destroy it, the disputations of the
hypocrite, and the orders of kings who have lost the road.
To spend more time in learning is better than spending more time
praying; the support of religion is abstinence. It is better to teach
knowledge one hour in the night than to pray all night.
Whoever seeketh knowledge and findeth it, will get two rewards; one
of them the reward for desiring it, and the other for attaining it;
therefore, even if he do not attain it, for him is one reward.
That person who shall die while he is studying, in order to revive
the knowledge of religion, will be only one degree inferior to the
prophets.
One learned man is harder on the devil than a thousand ignorant
worshippers.
The pursuit of knowledge is a divine commandment for every Muslim;
and to waste knowledge on those who are unworthy of it is like putting
pearls, jewels, and gold on the necks of swine.
That person who shall pursue the path of knowledge, God will direct
him to the path of Paradise; and verily the superiority of a learned
man over an ignorant worshipper is like that of the full moon over all
the stars.
He who knoweth his own self, knoweth God.
Verily the best of God's servants are just and learned kings; and
verily the worst are bad and ignorant kings.
To listen to the words of the learned, and to instil into others
the lessons of science, is better than religious exercises.
The ink of the scholar is more holy than the blood of the martyr.
He who leaveth home in search of knowledge, walketh in the path of
God.
One hour's meditation on the work of the Creator is better than
seventy years of prayer.
God hath treasuries beneath the Throne, the keys whereof are the
tongues of poets.
The acquisition of knowledge is a duty incumbent one every Muslim,
male and female.
Acquire knowledge. It enableth its posessor to distinguish right
from wrong; it lighteth the way to Heave; it is our friend in the
desert, our society in solitude, our companion when friendless; it
guideth us to happiness; it sustaineth us in misery; it is an ornament
among friends, and an armour against enemies.
With knowledge man riseth to the heights of goodness and to a noble
position, associateth with sovereigns in this world, and attaineth to
the perfection of happiness in the next.
Learn to know thyself.
The calamity of knowledge is forgetfulness; and to waste knowledge
is to speak of it to the unworthy.
Who are the learned? They who practise what they know.
|
 | Man's Growth
The son of Man groweth and with him grow two things - the love of
wealth and love of long life.
"Who is the best man?" Muhammad replied, "He is the best man whose
life is long and whose actions are good." "Then who is the worst man?"
"He whose life is long and whose actions are bad.
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Marriage
Marriage is incumbent on all who possess the ability.
A woman may be married by four qualifications: one on account of
her money; another, on account of the nobility of her pedigree;
another on account of her beauty; the fourth, on account of her
virtue. Therefore, look out for a woman that hath virtue: but if you
do it from any other consideration, your hands be rubbed in dirt.
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Meanness
Shall I tell you the very worst among you? Those who eat alone, and
whip the slaves, and give to nobody.
|
 | Mishaps
Whatever mishap may befall you, it is on account of something which
you have done.
No misfortune or vexation befalleth a servant of God, small or
great, but on account of his faults committed: and most of these God
forgiveth.
|
 | Modesty
True modesty is the source of all virtues.
Modesty and chastity are parts of the Faith.
Meekness and modesty are two branches of Iman; and vain talking and
embellishing are two branches of hypocrisy.
All kinds of modesty are best.
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Monopolies
Monopoly is unlawful in Islam.
The holder of a monopoly is a sinner and an offender.
The bringers of grain to the city to sell at a cheap rate gain
immense advantage by it, and those who keepeth back grain in order to
sell at a high rate is cursed.
|
 | Mothers
Heaven lieth at the feet of mothers.
"O Messenger of God! Verily I have done a great crime; is there any
act by which I may repent?" He said, "Have you a mother?" "No," said
the questioner. "Have you an aunt?" asked Muhammad. He said, "Yes, I
have." Muhammad said, "Go, do good to her, and your crime will be
pardoned."
I and a woman whose color and cheeks shall have become black from
toiling in the sun shall be near to one another in the next world as
my two fingers; and that is a handsome widow, whose color and cheeks
shall have become black in bringing up her family.
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Muhammad The Prophet
I am no more than man; when I order you anything respecting
religion, receive it; and when I order you anything about the affairs
of the world, then I am nothing more than man.
Convey to other persons none of my words, except those ye know of a
surety.
'Aishah said, "A party of Jews asked permission to go to Muhammad,
and said, 'Death upon you.' And I answered their insult by saying,
'Rather upon you be death and curse.' Then Muhammad said, 'Be mild O
Aishah! and make a point of being kind, and withold thyself from
speaking harshly.' I said, 'Did you not hear what they said?' He said,
'Verily, I do always say,' "Be the same to you."'
Verily my heart is veiled with melancholy and sadness for my
followers; and verily I ask pardon of God one hundred times daily.
Zaid, Muhammad's servant, said, "I served Lord Muhammad ten years,
and he never said 'Uff,' to me; and never said, 'Why did you do so?'
and never said, 'Why did you not do so?'"
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Muhammad The
Prophet's Kindness
Once Muhammad was distributing meat in Jiranah; and behold a woman
came close to him, and he spread his garment for her to sit upon. When
people saw such respect paid to this woman, they asked who she was;
and those present said, "This is his nurse."
When anyone was sick Muhammad used to rub his hands upon the sick
person's body, saying, "O Lord of mankind! Take away this pain, and
give health; for Thou art the giver of health: there is no health bu
Thine, that health which leaveth no sickness."
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Muhammad The Prophet's Mission
Kais b. Sal said: "I came to Hirah, and saw the inhabitants
worshipping their chief; and I said, 'Verily the Apostle of God is
worthy of being worshipped.' Then I came to the Apostle and said, 'I
saw the people of Hirah worshipping the chief of their tribe, and you
are most worthy of being worshipped.' Then Muhammad said to me, 'Tell
me, if you should pass by my grave, would you worship it?' I said,
'No.' And He said, 'Worship not me.'"
The Apostle was in the midst of a crowd of his companions, and a
camel came and prostrated itself before him. They said, "O Apostle of
God! Beasts and trees worship thee; then it is meet for us to whorship
thee." Muhammad said, "Worship God, and you may honor your brother,
that is me."
When the ambassadors of Bani Amir went to Muhammad, they said, "You
are our master." He said, "God is your master." Then they said, "You
are most excellent of the highest degree." And when He heard this He
said, "Say so, or less, and do not exceed reasonable bounds in
praise."
Muhammad slep upon a mat, and got up very marked on the body by it:
and someone said, "O Messenger of God! If thou hadst ordered me, I
would have spread a soft bed for thee." Lord Muhammad said, "What
business have I with the world? I am a man on horseback, who standeth
under the shade of a tree, then leaveth it."
To the light I have attained and in the light I live.
It was said to the Rasul, "O Messenger of God! Curse the infidels."
Muhammad said, "I am not sent for this; nor was I sent but as mercy to
mankind."
Kais b. Sal said: "I came to Hirah, and saw the inhabitants
worshipping their chief; and I said, 'Verily the Apostle of God is
worthy of being worshipped.' Then I came to the Apostle and said, 'I
saw the people of Hirah worshipping the chief of their tribe, and you
are most worthy of being worshipped.' Then Muhammad said to me, 'Tell
me, if you should pass by my grave, would you worship it?' I said,
'No.' And He said, 'Worship not me.'"
The Apostle was in the midst of a crowd of his companions, and a
camel came and prostrated itself before him. They said, "O Apostle of
God! Beasts and trees worship thee; then it is meet for us to whorship
thee." Muhammad said, "Worship God, and you may honor your brother,
that is me."
When the ambassadors of Bani Amir went to Muhammad, they said, "You
are our master." He said, "God is your master." Thenthey said, "You
are most excellent of the highest degree." And when He heard this He
said, "Say so, or less, and do not exceed reasonable bounds in
praise."
Muhammad slep upon a mat, and got up very marked on the body by it:
and someone said, "O Messenger of God! If thou hadst ordered me, I
would have spread a soft bed for thee." Lord Muhammad said, "What
business have I with the world? I am a man on horseback, who standeth
under the shade of a tree, then leaveth it."
To the light I have attained and in the light I live.
It was said to the Rasul, "O Messenger of God! Curse the infidels."
Muhammad said, "I am not sent for this; nor was I sent but as mercy to
mankind."
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Muhammad The Prophet's Prayers
Muhammad used to say after making the profession of faith, "O Lord
I supplicate Thee for firmness in faith, and inclination towards the
straight path, and for Thine aid in being grateful to Thee, and in
adoring Thee in every good way; and I supplicate Thee for an innocent
heart which shall not incline to wickednes and for a true tongue. I
supplicate Thee to guide me to all which Thou knowest to be virtuous
and to preserve me from al which Thou knowest to be vicious. I
supplicate Thee to forgive me my faults for Thou knowest them all.
When the Messenger of God entered a place of worship he said, "O
God! Pardon my sins, and open for me the gates of Thy compassion," and
on leaving he would repeat the same.
O Lord grant to me the love of Thee; grant that I love those that
love Thee; grant that I may do the deed than win Thy love; make thy
love dearer to me than self, family and wealth.
O Lord! I make my complaint unto thee, of my feebleness, the vanity
of my efforts. I am insignificant in the sight of men, O Thou Most
Merciful! Lord of the weak! Thou aret my Lord! Forsake me not. Leave
me not a prey to strangers, nor to mine enemies. If Thou art not
displeased, I am safe. I seek refuge in the light of Thy countenance,
by which all darkness is dispelled, and peace cometh in the Here and
Hereafter. Solve Thou my difficulties as it pleaseth Thee. There is no
power, no strength, save in Thee.
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Neighbourliness
The best of persons in God's sight is the best amongst his friends;
and the best of neighbors near God is the best person in his own
neighborhood.
A Muslim who mixeth with people and putteth up with their
inconveniences, is better than one who doth not mix with them, and
bear with patience.
Do you love your creator? Love your fellow-beings first.
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 | Omens
Of my disciples who will enter Paradise are those who do not use
shells (do not consult oracles), and are not influenced by omens, like
the people of Ignorance, and who put their whole trust in God.
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 | Orphans
I and the guardian of orphans (whether the orphan be of his near or
distant relations, or of strangers) will be in one place in the next
world; like my two fingers, nearly touching each other.
The best Muslim house is that in which is an orphan, who is
benefited; and the worst Muslim house is that in which an orphan is
ill-treated.
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 | Parents
Heaven lieth at the feet of mothers.
God's pleasure is in a father's pleasure; and God's displeasure is
in a father's displeasure.
He who wisheth to enter Paradise at the best door must please his
father and mother.
A man is bound to do good to his parents, although they may have
injured him.
There is no child, a doer of good to his parents, who looketh on
them with kindness and affection, but God will grant with every look
the rewards for an approved pilgrimage.
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Peacemaking
Shall I not inform you of a better act than fasting, alms, and
prayers? Making peace between one another: enmity and malice tear up
heavenly rewards by the roots.
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 | Poetry
Some poetry is dressed in knowledge and art.
The truest words spoken by any poet are those of Labid: "Know that
everything is vanity save God."
God hath treasures beneath the Throne, the keys whereof are the
tongues of poets.
Some poetry containeth much wisdom.
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 | Poverty
Poverty is my pride.
Poverty may well become a cause of infidelity.
O Lord! Keep me alive a poor man, and let me die poor; and raise me
amongst the poor.
O Aishah! Do not turn the poor away, without giving them, if but
half a date.
Seek for my satisfaction in that of the poor and needy.
A man came to Muhammad and said, "Verily I love you." He replied,
"Look to what you say." And the man said, "By God! I love you,"and
repeated the same twice. Lord Muhammad said, "If you are sincere, then
prepare yourself for poverty: for poverty reacheth him who loveth me
quicker than a torrent reacheth the sea.
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 | Prayer
Prayer is the miraj (union with, or annihilation in, the Divine
Essence by means of continual upward progress) of the Faithful.
The Lord doth not regard a prayer in which the heart doth not
accompany the body.
He whom prayer preventeth not from wrongdoing and evil, increaseth
in naught save in remoteness from the Lord.
The key of Paradise is Prayer, and the key of prayer is ablution.
Say your prayers standing; but if you are not able, sitting; and if
unable, on your sides.
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 | Pride
The proud will not enter Paradise, nor a violent speaker.
He will not enter hell, who hath faith equal to a single grain of
mustard seed in his heart; and he will not enter Paradise, who hath
pride equal to a single grain of mustard seed, in his heart.
Muhammad said, "That person will not enter Paradise who hath one
atom of pride in his heart." And a man present said, "Verily, a man is
fond of having good clothes and good shoes." Lord Muhammad said, "God
is Beauty and delighteth in the beautiful; but pride is holding man
incontempt."
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 | Progress
Everyone is divinely furthered in accordance with his character.
It is your own conduct which will lead you to reward or punishment,
as if you had been destined therefor.
Every human being hath two inclinations - one prompting him to good
and impelling him thereto, and the other prompting him to evil and
thereto impelling him; but Divine assistance is nigh, and he who
asketh the help of God in contending with the evil promptings of his
own heart obtaineth it.
The best of good acts in God's sight is that which is constantly
attended to although in a small degree.
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Prophecies
Verily ye are in an age in which if ye neglect one-tenth of what is
ordered, ye will be doomed. After this a time will come, when he who
shall observe one-tenth of what is now ordered will be redeemed.
Men will be liars towards the end of the world; and will relate
such stories as neither you nor your fathers ever heard. Then avoid
them, that they may not lead you astray and throw you into contention
and strife.
The time is near in which nothing will remain of Islam but its
name, and of the Qur'aan but its mere appearance, and the mosques of
Muslims will be destitute of of knowledge and worship; and the learned
will be the worst people under the heavens; and contention and strife
will issue from them, and it will return upon themselves.
Ye follower of Muhammad, I swear by the Lord, if ye did but know
what I know of the future state, verily ye would laugh little and cry
much.
Verily, of things which I fear for you, after my departure from the
world, is this: that the ornaments and goods of the world may be
pleasing to you. Then a man said, "O Messenger of God! Doth good bring
harm?" Lord Muhammad said, "Verily good doth not bring harm: I mean if
there be much wealth it is a blessing; and there is no harm in it,
unless from stinginess and extravagance; like the spring, which
causeth nothing to grow but what is good: and harm and destruction are
from abuse thereof."
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Punishment
God doth not remove anyone out of the world, but that he wisheth to
pardon him; and by the diseases of his body and distress for food, He
exacteth the punishment of every fault that lieth on his shoulder.
Verily the reward is as great as the misfortune; that is, the more
unfortunate and calamitous one is, the greater and more perfect his
reward. And verrily, when God loveth a people, He entangleth it in
misfortune; therefore, he who is resigned to the plesure of God, in
misfortune, for him is God's favor.
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 | Purity
They will enter the Garden of Bliss who have a true, pure, and
merciful heart.
Religion is admonition, and it means being pure.
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 | Reason
God hath not created anything better than Reason, or anything more
perfect, or more beautiful than Reason; the benefits which God giveth
are on its account; and understanding is by it, and God's wrath is
caused by disregard of it.
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Relatives
The best of you, before God and His creation, are those who are
best in their own families, and I am the best to my family.
He is the most perfect of Muslims, whose disposition is most liked
by his own family.
The favor of God doth not descend upon that family in which is one
who deserts his relations.
He is not a perfect performer of the duties of relationship who
doeth good to his relatives as they do good to him. He is perfect who
doeth good to his relatives when they do not do good to him.
O Messenger of God! Verily I have done a great crime; is there any
act by which I may repent? He said, "Have you a mother?" "No," said
the questioner. "Have you an aunt?" asked Muhammad. He said, "Yes, I
have." Lord Muhammad said, "Go, do good to her, and your crime will be
pardoned."
The duty of a junior to a senior brother is as that of a child to
its father.
Giving alms to the poor hath the reward of one alms; but that given
to kindred hath two rewards; one, the reward of alms, the other, the
reward of helping relations.
A man's first charity should be to his own family, if poor.
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Repentance
A sincere repenter of faults is like him who hath committed none.
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Reverence
Muhammad said one day to His companions, "Reverence God as
becommeth you." They said, "Verily, O Apostle of God, we do reverence
Him, and praise be to God who hath imbued us with it." Then Muhammad
said, "It is not so; but whoever reverenceth God as it is suitable for
him to do must guard his head from humbling itself to others, and from
pride and arrogance towards God and God's creatures; he must guard his
senses from whatever is wrong, and must guard his mouth from eating
forbidden things, and his heart from receiving what is prohibited; and
he must keep his death in mind, and the rotting of his bones. And
whoever wisheth for future rewards must abandon the ornaments of the
world. Therefore, anyone attending to the aforementioned points has
verily reverenced God as it his duty to do.
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 | Riches
Riches are not from and abundance of wordly goods but from a
contented mind.
It is difficult for a man laden with riches to climb the steep path
which leads to bliss.
Whoever desireth the world and its riches, in a lawful manner, in
order to withold himself from begging, and for a livelihood for his
family, and for being kind to his neighbor, will come to God with his
face bright as the full moon on the fourteenth night of the lunar
month.
Wealth, properly employed, is a blessing; and a man may lawfully
endeavor to increase it by honest means.
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Seemliness
A Bedouin was standing in the mosque of the Prophet, and defiled
it; when he was immediately taken hold of; and Muhammad said, "Let him
alone, and throw a skin of water upon the spot; because ye were not
created but of comforters and not sent to create hardships." And they
let him alone till he had done, and then Muhammad called the Bedouin
to him, and said, "This mosque is not a proper place for that, or any
kind of filth; mosques are only for the mention of God, saying
prayers, and reading the Kuran."
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Self-Indulgence
Muhammad asked His companions, "What are your opinions of the
merits of that person, who drinketh liquor, committeth adultery, and
stealeth? What should his punishment be?" They said, "God and His
Messenge know best." He said, "These are great sins, and the
punishment for them very dire."
Index
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 | Servants
To those of your servants who please you give to eat what you eat
yourself; and clothe them as yourself; but those who do not please
you, part with them; and punish not God's creatures.
He will not enter Paradise who behaveth ill to his slaves. The
companions said, "O Apostle of God! have you not told us, that there
will be a great many slaves and orphans amongst your disciples?" He
said, "Yes; then be kind to them as to your own children, and give
them to eat what you eat yourselves. The slaves that say their prayers
are your brothers.
Zaid, Muhammad's servant, said, "I served Lord Muhammad ten years,
and he never said 'Uff,' to me; and never said, 'Why did you do so?'
and never said, 'Why did you not do so?'"
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 | Sick
There is not any Muslim who visiteth another in sickness, in the
forenoon, but that seventy thousand angels send blessings upon him
till the evening; and there is no one who visiteth the sick, in the
afternoon, but that seventy thousand angels send blessings upon him
till daybreak, and there will be a pardon for him in Paradise.
Feed the hungry and visit a sick person, and free the captive, if
he be unjustly confined. Assist any person oppressed, whether Muslim
or non-Muslim.
Whoever visiteth a sick person, an angel calleth from heaven, "Be
happy in the world, and happy be your walking, and take you a
habitation in Paradise." Whoever visiteth a sick person always
entereth into and swims in a sea of mercy until he sitteth doen; and
when he sitteth, he is drowned therein.
When you go to visit the sick, comfort his grief and say, "You will
get well and live long," because although this saying will not prevent
what is predestined, it will solace his soul.
Verily God will say on the Day of Judgement, O children of Adam! I
was sick and ye did not visit Me." And the sons of Adam will say, "O
our defender, how could we visit Thee? For thou art the Lord of the
Universe, and art free from sickness." And God will say, "O men! Such
a one was sick and you did not visit him." And God will say, "O
children of Adam, I asked you for food, and ye gave it me not?" And
the children of Adam will say, "O our patron, how could we give Thee
food, seeing Thou art the cherisher of the Universe, and art free from
hunger and eating?" And God will say, "Such a one asked you for bread
and you did not give it him.
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 | Silence
Much silence and a good disposition, there are no two works better
than those.
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 | Sin
Can anyone walk through water without wetting his feet? The
companions replied, "No;" Muhammad said, "Such is the condition of
those of the world; they are not safe from sins."
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 | Truth
He is not of me who, when he speaketh, speaketh falsely; who, when
he promiseth, breaketh his promises; and who, when trust is reposed in
him, faileth in his trust.
No man is true in the truest sense of the word but he who is true
in work, in deed, and in thought.
Strive always to excel in virtue and truth.
It is not worthy of a speaker of truth to curse people.
Appropriate to yourselves the truth. Avoid lying.
Say what is true, although it may be bitter and displeasing to
people.
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Understanding
It is not a sixth or a tenth of a man's devotion which is
acceptable to God, but only such portions thereof as he offereth with
understanding and true devotional spirit.
Verily, a man hath performed prayers, fasts, charity, pilgrimage
and all other good works; but he will not be rewarded except by the
proportion of his understanding.
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 | Usury
The taker of usury and the giver of it, and the writer of its
papers and the witness to it, are equal in crime.
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 | Widows
A giver of maintenance to widows and the poor, is lke a bestower in
the way of God, an utterer of prayers all the night, and a keeper of
constant fast.
I and a woman whose color and cheeks shall have become black from
toiling in the sun shall be near to one another in the next world as
my two fingers; and that is a handsome widow, whose color and cheeks
shall have become black in bringing up her family.
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 | Wives
Admonish your wives with kindness.
A Muslim must not hate his wife; and if he be displeased with one
bad quality in her, then let him be pleased with another that is good.
Do you beat your own wife as you would a slave? That must you not
do.
I (Muaviyah b. Haidah) said, "O Apostle of God! What is my duty to
my wife?" He said, "That you give her to eat as you eat yourself, and
clothe her as you clothe yourself; and do not slap her in the face nor
abuse her, nor separate yourself from her in displeasure.
Give your wife good counsel; and if she has goodness in her, she
will soon take it, and leave off idle talking; and do not beat your
noble wife like a slave.
Muhammad said, "Beat not your wives." Then Omar came to the Rasul
(Muhammad) and said, "Wives have got the upper hand from hearing
this."
He is the most perfect Muslim whose disposition is best; and the
best of you are they who behave best to their wives.
A virtuous wife is a man's best treasure.
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 | Women
Women are the twin halves of men.
The world and all things in it are valuable; but the most valuable
thing in the world is a virtuous woman.
The best women are the virtuous; they are the most affectionate to
infants, and the most careful of their husband's property.
When a woman performeth the five times of prayer, and fasteth the
month of Ramadan, and is chaste, and is not disobedient to her
husband, then tell her to enter Paradise by whichever door she liketh.
Verily a great number of women are assembled near my family,
complaining of their hubands; and those men who ill-treat their wives
do not behave well. He is not of my way who teacheth a woman to stray.
Asma, daughter of Yazid, said, "Victuals were brought to Muhammad,
and he put them before some of us women who were present, and said,
'Eat ye.' But notwithstanding we were hungry we said, 'We have no
inclination.' Muhammad said, 'O woman! Do not mix hunger with lies.'"
Whoever doeth good to girls, it will be a curtain to him from
hell-fire.
Whoever befriendeth two girls till they come of age, will be in the
next world along with me, like my two fingers joining each other.
Whoever befriendeth three daughters, or three sisters, and teacheth
them manners, and is affectionate to them, till they come of age, may
God apportion Paradise for him.
Whoever hath a daughter, and doth not bury her alive or scold her,
or prefer his male children to her, may God bring him into Paradise.
Shall I not point out to you the best of virtues? It is your doing
good to your daughter when she is returned to you having been divorced
by her husband.
God enjoins you to treat women well, for they are your mothers,
daughters, aunts.
The rights of women are sacred. See that women are maintained in
the rights assigned to them.
Do not prevent your women from coming to the mosque.
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 | World
The love of the world is the root of all evil.
This world is a prison for the Faithful, but a Paradise for
unbelievers.
The world is a magician greater than Harut and Marut, and you
should avoid it.
The world is sweet in the heart, and green to the eye; and verily
God hath brought you, after those that went before you: then look to
your actions, and abstain from the world and its wickedness.
The world is as a prison and as a famine to Muslims; and when they
leave it you may say they leave famine and a prison.
Be in the world like a traveler, or like a passer on, and reckon
yourself as of the dead.
Cursed is this world and cursed is all that is in this world,
except the remembrance of God and that which aideth thereto.
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