| ALLAH -for
Muslims the greatest and most inclusive of the Names of God,
an Arabic word of rich and varied meaning, denoting the one
who is adored in worship, who creates all that exists, who
had priority over all creation, who is lofty and hidden, who
confounds all human understanding. It is exactly the same
word that the Jews, in Hebrew, use for God (eloh), the word
which Jesus Christ used in Aramaic when he prayed to God.
God has an identical name in Judaism, Christianity and Islam;
Allah is the same God worshipped by Muslims, Christians and
Jews.
|
 |
"He is God, the One God Independent and
sought by all; He begets not, nor is begotten, and there is none
like unto Him" (The Holy Qur 'an - Chapter 112 - Al-Ikhlas-
Sincerity of Faith) Islam
teaches that all faiths have, in essence, one common message:
the existence of a Supreme Being, the one and only God, whose
Sovereignty is to be acknowledged in worship and in the pledge
to obey His teaching and commandments, conveyed through His messengers
and prophets who were sent at various times and in many places
throughout history.
Islam, An Arabic word, rich in meaning. One important dimension
is the "commitment to submit and surrender to God so that
one can live in peace"; Peace (Salam) is achieved through
active obedience to the revealed Commandments of God, for God
is the Source of all Peace. Commitment to Islam entails striving
for peace through a struggle for justice, equality of opportunity,
mutual caring and consideration for the rights of others, and
continuous research and acquisition of knowledge for the better
protection and utilization of the resources of Creation.
Islam teaches
that the objective of the Commandment of God is that peace
should be established in the human societies of this world,
in preparation for a further dimension of human existence
in the world to come, the Afterlife. Islam's vision of peace
is therefore truly universal; it transcends time and belongs
to the order of God's eternity.
Islam does not regard itself to be a new teaching, different
or separate from that of other world religions. It is the
reaffirmation of the ancient yet living truth of all religions,
which can be expressed in the following beliefs:
The Uniqueness of the one and only God who is Sovereign of
the universe;
The Revelation of the teaching and commandments of God through
Angels in heaven to Prophets on earth, and written in sacred
writings which all have the same transcendent source; these
contain the will of God which marks the way of peace for the
whole universe and all of humankind;
The Day of Judgment which inaugurates the |
 |
after-life,
in which God rewards and punishes with respect to human obedience
and disobedience to His will.
Islam affirms these simple beliefs as the basis for the decent,
civilized society towards which it strives. Its vision of
society is; in essence, no different from that upheld by all
monotheistic religions. This is particularly true of Judaism
and Christianity, which share with Islam the direct spiritual
lineage of the Prophet Abraham. Islam affirms the divinely
ordained missions of the Prophet Moses, through whom God revealed
the sacred scripture called the Torah, and of the Prophet
Jesus, through whom God revealed the scripture known as the
Gospel. The message of Islam is in essence the same as that
which God revealed to all His prophets and messengers. The
Prophet Muhammad (the peace and blessing of God be upon him)
was commanded to recite in the Holy Qur'an: |
"Say, we believe in God, and that which was revealed unto
us, and that which was revealed unto Abraham and lshmael and Isaac
and Jacob, and the tribes, and that which was vouchsafed unto
Moses and Jesus and the prophets from their Lord; We make no distinction
between any of them, and unto Him we have surrendered" (The
Holy Qur 'an 3.84)
The success of civilizations and cultures is directly related
to the extent of their practice of the righteous way of life revealed
in the teaching and commandments of God, and set forth in the
monotheistic religions which are confirmed by Islam. God's revelation
enshrines the highest values of humankind, and the divine commandments
are essentially no different from the values which human beings
have cherished and striven to maintain throughout history, regardless
of cultural, racial, linguistic and socioeconomic differences.
Success in this life is directly related to the practice of these
values.
The irreducible minimum of faith is to believe in God as the sole
sovereign Lord of this world and the next, and to believe in the
reality of the Afterlife for which human beings are to prepare
by living righteously in this world. God Alone is the Judge of
human righteousness, and it is God Alone who rewards and punishes
in this life and in the life hereafter.
Righteousness does not mean for you to turn your faces towards
the East and towards the West, but righteousness means one should
believe in God (Alone), the Last Day, the angels, the Book and
the prophets; and no matter how he loves it, to give his wealth
away to near relatives, orphans, the needy, the wayfarer and the
beggars, and toward the freeing of captives, and to keep up prayer
and pay the welfare tax, and those who keep their word whenever
they promise anything; and are patient under strain and hardship
and in time of peril Those are the ones who act royally and perform
their duty. (The Holy Qur 'an 2:177)
A Muslim is one who is committed to peace continuously striving
to follow the way of righteousness and justice revealed by God;
the Arabic word muslim refers to a man, muslima to a woman. In
either case the literal meaning is "one who submits to God's
teachings and commandments, which leads to peace."
Muslims have three distinct advantages
to help them in the practice of Islam as their way of life:
1. The Sacred Scripture called the Qur'an, which was revealed
to the Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him) in the 7th century
of the Common Era, and which, after 1400 years, remains authentic
in its original Arabic text, in the language which is still used
and understood by millions of people throughout the world today;
it contains God's guidance in teachings and commandments which
are valid for all times and all places, and which encompass all
spheres of human life.
2. The Prophet Muhammad, whom the Qur'an names as "the Seal
(last) of the Prophets", and of whose life and mission there
is a complete and authentic record in the Sira and the Hadith.
These show how he exemplified the teachings and commandments of
God in practice, and elaborated the principles laid down in the
Qur'an in order to provide a sure guidance for their interpretation
and application for all later times and societies.
3. The Sacred Law, called the Shari'ah, which sets
out the way of worship prescribed in the Qur’an and the
Prophet's practice; it goes beyond the common understanding of
worship as the performance of religious rituals, and encompasses
the whole of human life, individual as well as social. Thus all
so-called secular activities become acts of worship, provided
they are performed with pure and righteous intention, seeking
God's pleasure.
Muslims are enjoined to organize
their lives on the basis of a series of ritual acts of worship
which are ordained in the Qur'an as ways which discipline human
beings to remember God constantly, accepting his Sovereignty and
pledging to obey His commandments:
1. Declaration of belief (Shahada):
this is the initial act of faith, expressed in a simple statement
which testifies to one's commitment to following the straight
path of God's guidance upon which Muslims seek to live their lives;
"I bear witness that there its no god but God; I bear witness
that Muhammad is His servant and His Prophet. "
2. Prayer (Salat), offered five
times a day, has the effect of reminding the faithful that "remembrance
of God is indeed the greatest virtue", and helps them adhere
to the path of righteousness, and to restrain from indecency and
evil.
3. Fasting (Sawm), observed through
the daylight hours of the 29/30 days of the Islamic month of Ramadan,
involves abstinence from eating, drinking, smoking and marital
intercourse; this reminds the believers of their dependence upon
God, as well as their kinship with, and responsibility for the
millions of human beings in the world who experience involuntary
fasting because of lack of food, or its unjust distribution.
4. Purification of wealth (Zakat); this requires the annual
giving of a fixed amount of excess personal assets for the benefit
of the poor, the incapacitated, the deprived, and the welfare
of the community; it serves to remind Muslims that all beneficence
comes from the bounty of God, and is enjoyed only through His
mercy; sharing becomes an act of purification both of the wealth
itself, and of the giver whose soul is disciplined against greed
by the practice of selflessness.
5. Pilgrimage (Hajj), which all
Muslims should perform at least once in a lifetime, if personal
circumstances permit; it gathers the believers as members of the
diverse human family into a single community. They perform prescribed
acts of worship at the Holy House of the Ka’ba in Makkah
(Mecca) which, according to the Qur'an, was originally built by
the prophet Abraham and his son Ishmael; and at Mount Arafat,
where they remember the pure and original way of life of Adam,
the progenitor of the human race, reaffirmed by the Patriarch
of the entire human family, the Prophet Abraham, and finally perfected
and completed by God for all humanity through the mission of the
Prophet Muhammad - the way of life known as Islam which has at
its heart the doctrine of the unity and uniqueness of the One
God.
Each of these prescribed acts of worship brings Muslims daily
and repeatedly before God Almighty as the Creator, Sustainer and
Judge of all humanity.
Through these acts of worship, God helps Muslims to fulfill the
obligation of striving which he has ordained for this life; the
striving actively and freely to surrender one's own will in obedience
to the Will of God, inwardly in intention and outwardly in word
and deed; individually in personal conduct and collectively in
the improvement of society; the striving for peace in the world
through the proclamation of true faith, and its defense against
all that threatens it.
Islam presents human beings with
a simple two-fold invitation:
• to witness that there is no God but God Almighty;
• to witness that Muhammad is the Messenger of God.
This declaration is the door to a life of service. One of participation
in a community of believers whose highest duty is to call on humanity
to embrace what is righteous and good and to reject what is evil
and degrading. Muslims are brothers
and sisters of all people of good faith, and wish to strive with
them for peace in this world.
|