CONCEPT OF WORSHIP IN ISLAM
Bismillahi
ar-rahmani ar-raheem
In the Name of Allah, the Most Compassionate, the Most Merciful
The concept of worship in Islam is
misunderstood by many people including some Muslims. Worship is
commonly taken to mean performing ritualistic acts such as
prayers, fasting, charity, etc. This limited understanding of
worship is only one part of the meaning of worship in Islam.
That is why the traditional definition of worship in Islam is a
comprehensive definition that includes almost everything in any
individual's activities. The definition goes something like
this:
"Worship is an all inclusive
term for all that God loves of external and internal sayings
and actions of a person."
In other words, worship is
everything one says or does for the pleasure of Allah.
This, of course, includes rituals as well as beliefs, social
activities, and personal contributions to the welfare of one's
fellow human-beings.
Islam looks at the individual as a whole.
He is required to submit himself completely to Allah, as the
Quran instructed the Prophet Muhammad to do:
"Say (O Muhammad) my prayer, my
sacrifice, my life and my death belong to Allah; He has no
partner and I am ordered to be among those who submit, i.e.;
Muslims." (6:162-163)
The natural result of this submission is
that all one's activities should conform to the instructions of
the one to whom the person is submitting. Islam, being a
way of life, requires that its followers model their
life according to its teachings in every aspect, religious or
other wise. This might sound strange to some people who think of
religion as a personal relation between the individual and God,
having no impact on one's activities outside rituals.
As a matter of fact Islam does not think
much of mere rituals when they are performed mechanically and
have no influence on one's inner life. The Quran addresses the
believers and their neighbors from among the People of the Book
who were arguing with them about the change of the direction of
Qibla in the following verse:
"It is not righteousness that you
turn your faces toward the East or the West, but righteous is
he who believes in Allah and the Last Day and the Angels and
the Book and the Prophets, and gives his beloved money to his
relatives and the orphans and the needy and for the ransoming
of captives and who observes prayer and pays the poor-due; and
those who fulfill their promises when they have made one, and
the patient in poverty and affliction and the steadfast in
time of war; it is those who have proved truthful and it is
those who are the God-fearing." (2:177)
The deeds in the above verse are the deeds
of righteousness and they are only a part of worship. The
Prophet told us about faith, which is the basis of worship, that
it "is made up of sixty and some branches; the highest of which
is the belief in the Oneness of Allah, i.e., there is no God but
Allah and the lowest in the scale of worship is removing
obstacles and dirt from people's way."
Decent work is considered in Islam a type
of worship. The Prophet said: "Whoever finds himself at the
nightfall tired of his work, God will forgive his sins." Seeking
knowledge is one of the highest types of worship. The Prophet
told his companions that "seeking knowledge is a (religious)
duty on every Muslim." In another saying he said: "Seeking
knowledge for one hour is better than praying for seventy
years." Social courtesy and cooperation are part of worship when
done for the sake of Allah as the Prophet told us: "Receiving
your friend with a smile is a type of charity, helping a person
to load his animal is a charity and putting some water in your
neighbour's bucket is a charity."
It is worth noting that even performing
one's duties is considered a sort of worship. The Prophet told
us that whatever one spends for his family is a type of charity;
he will be rewarded for it if he acquires it through legal
means. Kindness to members of one's family is an act of worship
as when one puts a piece of food in his spouse's mouth. Not only
this but even the acts we enjoy doing very much, when they are
performed according to the instructions of the Prophet, are
considered as acts of worship. The Prophet told his companions
that they will be rewarded even for having sexual intercourse
with their wives. The companions were astonished and asked: "How
are we going to be rewarded for doing something we enjoy very
much?" The Prophet asked them: "Suppose you satisfy your desires
illegally; don't you think that you will be punished for that?"
They replied, "Yes." "So," he said, "by satisfying it legally
with your wives you are rewarded for it." This means they are
acts of worship.
Thus Islam does not consider sex a dirty
thing that one should avoid. It is dirty and sinful only when it
is satisfied outside marital life.
It is clear, from the previous discussion
that the concept of worship in Islam is a comprehensive concept
that includes all the positive activities of the individual.
This of course is in agreement with the all inclusive nature of
Islam as a way of life. It regulates human life
on all levels: individual, social, economic, political and
spiritual. That is why Islam provides guidance to the smallest
details of one's life on all these levels. Thus following these
details is following Islamic instructions in that specific area.
It is a very encouraging element when one realizes that all
his activities are considered by God as acts of worship.
This should lead the individual to seek Allah's pleasure in his
actions and always try to do them in the best possible manner
whether he is watched by his superiors or he is alone. There is
always the permanent supervisor, who knows everything, namely,
Allah.
Discussing the non-ritual worship in Islam
first does not mean undervaluing the importance of the ritual
ones. Actually ritual worship, if performed in true spirit,
elevates man morally and spiritually and enables him to carry on
his activities in all walks of life according to the Guidance of
God. Among ritual worships, Salah (ritual prayer) occupies
the key position for two reasons. Firstly, it is the
distinctive mark of a believer. Secondly, it prevents an
individual from all sorts of abominations and vices by providing
him chances of direct communion with his Creator five times a
day, wherein he renews his covenant with God and seeks His
guidance again and again:
"You alone we worship and to You
alone we turn for help. Guide us to the straight path." (1:5,6)
Actually Salah is the first practical
manifestation of Faith and also the foremost of the basis
conditions for the success of the believers:
"Successful indeed are the believers
who are humble in their prayers." (23:1-2)
The same fact has been emphasized by the
Prophet (PBUH) in a different way. He says:
"Those who offer their Salah with great
care and punctuality, will find it a light, a proof of their
Faith and cause of their salvation on the Day of Judgment."
After Salah, Zakah (poor-due) is an
important pillar of Islam. In the Quran, Salah and Zakah mostly
have been mentioned together many times. Like Salah, Zakah is a
manifestation of faith that affirms that God is the sole owner
of everything in the universe, and what men hold is a trust in
their hand over which God made them trustees to discharge it as
He has laid down:
"Believe in Allah and His messenger
and spend of that over which He made you trustees." (57:7)
In this respect Zakah is an act of
devotion which, like prayer, brings the believer nearer to his
Lord.
Apart from this, Zakah is a means of
redistribution of wealth in a way that reduces differences
between classes and groups. It makes a fair contribution to
social stability. By purging the soul of the rich from
selfishness and the soul of the poor from envy and resentment
against society, it stops up the channels leading to class
hatred and makes it possible for the springs of brotherhood and
solidarity to gush forth. Such stability is not merely based on
the personal feelings of the rich; it stands on a firmly
established right which, if the rich denied it, would be exacted
by force, if necessary.
Siyam (fasting during the day time of the
month of Ramadan) is another pillar of Islam. The main function
of fasting is to make the Muslim pure from "within" as other
aspects of Shariah make him pure from "without." By such purity
he responds to what is true and good and shuns what is false and
evil. This is what we can perceive in the Quranic verse:
"O you who believe, fasting is
prescribed for you as it was prescribed for those before you,
that you may gain piety." (2:183)
In an authentic tradition, the Prophet
reported Allah as saying: "He suspends eating, drinking, and
gratification of his sexual passion for My sake." Thus his
reward is going to be according to God's great bounty.
Fasting, then, awakens the conscience of
the individual and gives it scope for exercise in a joint
experience for all society at the same time, thus adding further
strength to each individual. Moreover, fasting offers a
compulsory rest to the over-worked human machine for the
duration of one full month. Similarly fasting reminds an
individual of those who are deprived of life's necessities
throughout the year or throughout life. It makes him realize the
suffering of others, the less fortunate brothers in Islam, and
thus promotes in him a sense of sympathy and kindness to them.
Lastly, we come to Al-Hajj (pilgrimage to
the House of God in Makkah). This very important pillar of Islam
manifests a unique unity, dispelling all kinds of differences.
Muslims from all corners of the world wearing the same dress,
respond to the call of Hajj in one voice and language;
LABBAIK ALLAHUMMA LABBAIK (Here I am at your service O
Lord!). In Hajj there is an exercise of strict self-discipline
and control where not only sacred things are revered, but even
the life of plants and birds is made inviolable so that
everything lives in safety:
"And he that venerates the sacred
things of God, it shall be better for him with his Lord." (22:30)
"And he that venerates the waymarks of God, it surely is from
devotion of the heart." (22:32)
Pilgrimage gives an opportunity to all
Muslims from all groups, classes, organizations, and governments
from all over the Muslim world to meet annually in a great
congress. The time and venue of this congress has been set by
their One God. Invitation to attend is open to every Muslim. No
one has the power to bar anyone. Every Muslim who attends is
guaranteed full safety and freedom as long as he himself does
not violate its safety.
Thus, worship in Islam, whether ritual or
non-ritual, trains the individual in such a way that he loves
his Creator most and thereby gains an unyielding will and spirit
to wipe out all evil and oppression from the human society and
make the word of God dominant in the world.
III&E Brochure Series; No. 5
(published by The Institute of Islamic Information and Education
(III&E))
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