|
In The Name Of Allah Most Gracious Most Merciful
Assalaamu alaykum wa rahmatuallahi wa barakatuhu
Say: "I don't know"
"They killed him, may Allah's curse be upon them," exclaimed the
Messenger of Allah, [Sallallahu Alayhi Wa Sallam (SAWS)]. "Why did they
not ask if they did not know?" They had killed him not with weapons or
poison, but with ignorance.
According to a sound hadeeth (Prophet Muhammad's saying) narrated by Abu
Dawud, Ibn Majah and others, a man was injured and needed to perform
Ghusl (take a bath) in order to perform salah (prayer), and his friends
thought that he must wash his wound in order to complete his Ghusl. He
acted upon their advice and subsequently died. The Prophet (SAWS) was
aggrieved and angry at hearing this, and attributed the death to their
ignorance. If they had asked some knowledgeable person, they would have
known that he had no need to wash the wound.
Today we have among us numerous pseudo-scholars, self-appointed muftis
and half-cooked Shaikhs jerking out religious verdicts at the drop of a
hat and thus causing much harm, discord and disunity among us. Such
people are killers; they kill our intellectual and spiritual Islamic
culture and heritage. Falling into this trap of pseudo-scholarship is
easy and perhaps we all are prone to it.
Speaking without knowledge, giving religious verdicts without requisite
background and understanding, or deliberately misrepresenting the value
and confidence level of one's knowledge is a widespread disease that
results from ignorance and vanity.
Ignorance, the number one cause for this disease, is common among the
Muslims today. The truthful Messenger of Allah (SAWS) said, "Verily
Allah does not take away the knowledge by snatching it away from (the
hearts of) people. Rather he takes it away by the death of the scholars,
to the point that when not one scholar remains, the people take ignorant
people as their leaders, who, when consulted give their verdicts without
knowledge. So they go astray and lead others astray." (Bukhari)
Vanity, the desire to dominate and impress, is another source of this
disease. People will go astray, as the hadeeth points out, by taking the
ignorant people as their leaders and scholars, so let us make sure we do
not become those self-appointed opinion leaders and scholars who lead
people astray.
The cure is to cultivate genuine humility, know the proper method and
requirements to form an opinion about religious matters, know the right
way to express it, and, most importantly know when not to express your
opinion and courageously say, "I do not know."
Imam Malik once remarked, "I don't know' is a third of all knowledge,
and one who does not know to say it, does not know anything". Judging by
the number of times Malik used to say, "I don't know," he seemed to give
the impression of disinterest, despite being the most knowledgeable
person of his time and best when it came to examining and verifying his
facts.
A non-specialist must express a religious opinion only when necessary,
e.g., in the absence of a scholar, and must give cautious and exact
reference of a trustworthy scholar specialized in that field. Scholars
and specialists are necessary; we have all the right to ask them for the
evidence for their opinions, but we have no right to insult and mutilate
the meaning of the sacred texts by ignoring the proper requirements of
scholarship.
Abdullah Ibnul-Mubarak and Imam Ahmad related that Abdur-Rahman Ibn Abi
Layla said, "I saw a hundred and twenty of the Prophet's Companions in
the Masjid, not one of whom would speak but prefer one of his brothers
to speak in his place, and not one of whom would give a fatwa (religious
verdict) but prefer one of his brothers to give it in his place."
Ibn Masoud and Ibn Abbas both said, "Whoever gives a fatwa for
everything people ask him is crazy." (Malik) The truth is that boldness
or haste in giving fatawa implies a lack of fear of Allah, and a lack of
respect for His revelation.
Today, we are struck with amazement at how lightly and irresponsibly
many people dole out religious opinions. Do we not realize that the
greatest sin against Allah is to lie on His behalf? "Who is more unjust
than one who invents a lie against Allah?" [7:37]
Particularly in the Western Muslim communities, where there is serious
lack of established Islamic scholarship, novices and half-scholars often
take the lead in this dangerous matter of giving fatawa. This leads to
people following incorrect opinions that are potentially harmful and
cause discord and confusion.
We, the Muslim Ummah (Society), the divinely appointed leaders of
humankind, must reclaim our righteous and profound scholarly heritage by
establishing the highest standards of honesty, accuracy and authenticity
in our speech and discourses. We must fear Allah before we speak, and
never speak lightly about matters we have not sufficiently mastered.
Al Jumu'ah Vol. 15 Issue 02
source
Allah Knows Best |