"Say We believe in God and what is revealed to us and what was revealed to Abraham and Ishmael and I`saac and Jacob and the Tribes, and what was entrusted to Moses and Jesus and the prophets from their Lord. We make no distinction between any of them and to Him we have surrendered."
(Quran 3: 84)
Islam is the name given by Mohammed, the Prophet
of Arabia, to the religion which he founded. Islam is an Arabic word, which
means peace. It means submission to the will of God. It means surrender,
acceptance of the revelation and commands of God. The personal name of God is
Allah. The aim of Mohammed's preaching was the establishment of the religion of
one God, Allah. Islam is a religion of universal brotherhood like Theosophy.
Firm, unswerving belief in one God is the essence of true religion according to
Islamic faith. It makes no distinction between caste and caste, creed and creed.
"There is no God but Allah and Mohammed is the Messenger
of Allah." This is the fundamental teaching of the Prophet of Islam. This
is the cardinal tenet or doctrine of Islam. The religion of Islam is expressed
shortly in this short formula. Mohammed preached the unity of God. He taught the
love of God, respect for parents and the aged, reverence to women and a noble
standard of life. Alms-giving or charity was a religious duty. He said:
"Every good act is charity. Your smiling in your brothers face is charity.
Putting a wanderer in the right path is charity."
The religion taught by the Prophet of Arabia is plain, simple
and direct. The beauty of this religion is marred by the un-Islamic behaviour of
some of the followers of Islam. It is clearly said in Quran, "No man is a
true believer unless he desireth for his brother that which he desires for
himself. God will not be affectionate to that man who is not affectionate to
Gods creatures. Assist any person oppressed whether he is Muslim or non-Muslim.
Love your fellow-being first."
Islam recognizes brotherhood of man. A Muslim is expected to
treat a non-Muslim as a brother and with as much generosity and friendliness as
possible. Islam is a religion of service. The service of man and the good of
humanity constitute the service and worship of God.
Prophet Mohammed taught to the people more of ethics than deep
philosophy, as they had no proper culture.
A Muslim believed in God, His Angels, His books and His
messengers, the Last day, the Resurrection from the dead, Predestination by God,
good and evil, the Judgment, the Balance, Paradise and Hell fire, the divine
inspiration of Mohammed, the origin of the Quran as divine inspiration, the
future state. He is ready to enter into the religious war (Jihad) when so
ordered by the divine as a religious duty.
The first principle of Islam is "God has sent messengers
to mankind throughout the ages to teach them that all messengers and all holy
books are true," thereby emphasizing the universality of faith.
Teachings
The five cardinal tenets of Islam are:
Oneness of God and the revelation of Gods will to man
through a series of Prophets, the last being Mohammed,
Prayer (Salat),
Fasting,
Alms-giving or charity (Zakat) and
Haj (pilgrimage to Mecca).
These are the five pillars of Islam.
The sacred book of the Muslims is the Quran. This book deals
with many different subjects, doctrines, morals, legal enactments, matters of
State, manners and matters of private import. They have been collected into
Surahs or chapters. To the Muslim it is the word of God eternal and uncreated
conveyed by the angel Gabriel. The Holy Quran is divided into 114 chapters. The
word Surah literally means eminence or high degree. The total number of verses
is 6,247. The Quran was revealed bit by bit during a period of 23 years. Of the
twenty-three years over which the revelation of the whole book is spread,
thirteen years were passed by Mohammed at Mecca and ten years at Medina.
Islam is a religion of peace. It is submission to the will of
God. A true Mussalman must be tolerant. Islam teaches that every religion is
true. Islam teaches that God has sent Prophets and religious teachers to mankind
to bring them to the path of goodness, to teach them the noble things of life,
to be kind, to be noble, to be merciful, to be good and to be just. Islam
teaches to regard not only human beings with kindness and tolerance, but also to
treat animals with kindness.
Quran says: "Any man may attain liberation by his faith
and good actions. The flesh and blood of the animals that are sacrificed shall
never reach God, but your purity shall reach God. The flesh and blood of the
animals you kill, shall not bring salvation for you. Kill this ego. Serve the
suffering humanity. Sacrifice your money, time and energy in the service of the
poor, the oppressed. This will give you salvation or freedom."
In Quran, the brotherhood of man and the equality of woman
with man socially, economically and spiritually are emphasized. Man is a member
of a great fraternity. Woman is the counterpart of man.
Selflessness and service are the ideals which a Muslim is
enjoined to follow. The essence of Islam is the service of the suffering
humanity. The sacred Quran says: "Woe to those who pray, who are unmindful
of their prayers, who make a show and refuse to help the needy."
The Prophet of Islam also was a great lover of the doctrine of Ahimsa.
Injuring people in any way or destroying any living creature is reprehensible.
He taught that men would be specially judged on the day of judgment with regard
to their cruel treatment of dumb creatures.
Prophet has enjoined on his followers full and broad
toleration of the views and beliefs of people other than their own. Quran says:
"Let there be no compulsion in religion."
There is no asceticism in Islam. The rigorous austere
practices which cause torture to human body are strictly prohibited. What is
wanted is a contrite heart, sincere repentance and serious continuous effort to
avoid evil and practice virtue.
The great Muslim fast is that of Ramadhan. It is a fast for
one month. Eating and drinking are forbidden during the day, but are allowed at
night.
Jihad is exerting oneself for the cause of religion. It is not
taking part in war against unbelievers. Islam strictly prohibits application of
force for its observance. There is no compulsion in religion.
Islam teaches that the followers of it should acquire the
manifold attributes of Allah. No on can be a Muslim and none can attain Allah
without acknowledging the essential truths of all religions.
There is no such thing in Islam that a Muslim should fight in
order that religion should live. Islam forbids fighting. Islam says: "You
shall not take up arms except in the cause of self-defence." In every
sentence of the Quran those who are tyrants have been told: "If you
tyrannise over people, if you are cruel to them, you shall be punished."
The Muslims believe in the immortality of the Soul. There will
be a day of resurrection when the dead will rise to receive the rewards and
punishment of their deeds in life in accordance with their merits and demerits.
Conclusions
The Prophet of Islam taught the great orders of
Angels who carry out Gods Will; four Archangels-Michael, the Angel who protects;
Gabriel, the Angel who bears Gods messages; Azrael, the Angel of death and
Israfil, the Angel of the last trumpet.
At a time when Europe was covered in ignorance and darkness,
the early Mussalmans kept alive the burning torch of Science and learning. They
were thinkers, philosophers and seekers of knowledge. From the eighth century
till the fourteenth of our era, the children of Islam were the torch-bearers in
the West. Universities were established in Cairo, Baghdad, in Cordova in Spain.
Christian Europe learnt its earliest lessons in science, in astronomy, in
chemistry, in mathematics from the Mussalmans.
There have been in the history of Islam many women who have
contributed enormously not only to literature, but also to science. Read the
history of the Arabs in Spain and Baghdad. You will be amazed to read therein
that women have sat as High Court Judges, have written books and poems, have
been scientists and mathematicians, have run schools and hospitals and had under
their care thousands of males of every age. They had no Purdah system. The
Purdah system in India is of foreign growth. It had its origin in Greece. From
Greece it went to Iran and from Iran it was brought by the early Mussalman
invaders into India.
Such was the splendid development of the Religion which the
Prophet of Arabia founded. Its philosophical side too was very noble. It taught
that all is from God, that there is no beauty in the world that is not His
beauty, that there is no love in the heart of man that is not a breath of His
love.
* pbuh - Peace be upon him; It is a
Muslim practise to convey prayers of peace whenever the name of Prophet Muhammad
(pbuh) and other prophets is taken.
Islamherald.comCopyright (C) 2004. All rights reserved.