Islamic Studies

Message for the Seekers of Guidance: Session 1 Notes

بسم الله الرحمن الرحيم

نموت ونحيا كل يوم وليلى ولا بد من يوم نموت ولا نحيا

وإنا في الدنيا كركب سفينة نظن وقوفاً والزمان بنا يجري

We die and live every day
And every night
And it is a must that
One day we will die
And not live
For surely we
Are in this
Life like a
Sailor of a ship
We think we’ve
Stopped, but time
With us is racing

What does the title of the book imply?

It implies that this epistle is for the one who seeks guidance.

Three types of people are going to take this class:

  1. One who takes it for entertainment or just to see what’s up
  2. One who knows that his/soul is calling out to him like a sick child in the night, however, he decides to ignore the child and sleeps.
  3. One who understands the gravity of the situation, the relationship between the heart and the limbs is like the relationship between the head and the rest of the body.

Who was al-Muhasibi?

His Name: al-Harith the son of Asad al-Muhasibi.

Time Period: He was born 165 A.H and died 243 A.H

Where: Basra, Iraq

Brief background answering a few doubts

We was respected in the science of hadith as mentioned by Ibn Hajar, considered truthful by great scholars like Imam al-Dhahabi. However, he was censured by Imam Ahmed for, as noted by the great biographers, engaging in some theological questions that the scholars of hadith disapproved of. However, as was noted by al-Zarkali and Ibn Taymiyyah he repented from those things.

There are some strange stories regarding him that are untrue and one should fear Allah before relating them. One of them is that he was so despised for his deleving into kalam that only four people prayed on him. Imam Dhahabi refutes this ridiculous story stating that the chain “is broken.”

Famous For

He is most famous for writing and talking about the issue of the heart. He wrote, as noted by the scholars more than 200 works most of them dealing with this subject. Al-Kawthari noted that Imam al-Ghazzali relied heavily on the works of al-Muhasibi in the writing of his Ihyah. Thus, it can be safely stated that his most famous contribution was in the area of Tasawwuf.

Moving beyond labels and compassing maturity

It is not fair, just nor mature to judge a person by labels within the framework of general orthodoxy. What should be judged is one’s statements, actions and articulation according to Islamic rules. This was articulated by Ibn Taymiyyah in his Risalah al-Fuqara and al-Shattibi in al-‘Itisam. The latter saying about tasswuf that it is incorrect to contend that every aspect of it is an innovation, nor is it fair to label every aspect of it as correct. “Nay, this issue is inspected.”

Reviving Qur’anic Terms:

  • Iman instead of aqidah
  • Tazkiyah instead of tasawwuf

Text Background:

This is a short treaties on the subject of tazkiyah written during the age of the salaf. Much like grammar is to language, it presents a body of rules and principles which, if lived on, will assist in building and sustaining one’s relationship with Allah.

Pillars for the One Seeking this Path:

  1. Sound Creed
  2. Sound Practice
  3. Sound Conceptions

Sheikh Abdul Fattah Abu Ghuda:

He was one of the greatest scholars of hadith of the last century; set about preparing this text for publication in the early 1960s. He added a large number of verses from the Qu’ran, Hadith and antidotes from the lives of the righteous in order to give the text life and support the claims of the author. In addition, as stated by his son Sh. Zahid, he wrote this book to counter a form of mysticism that he felt was a contradiction to the practices of the Prophet and Islamic law in general.

The Importance of Studying the Lives of the Salaf

Imam al-Junaid said, “Stories of the righteous are a soldiers from the soldiers of Allah. With them Allah strengthens the hearts of those near to Him.”

Abu Hanifa said, “The stories of the scholars and their good works are more beloved to me than an abundance of Fiqh [here he means studying], because [in such stories] there are etiquette of the people [the salaf] and their behaviors.”

Ibn Muflih mentions that when Ibrahim al-Tahan was mentioned in front of Imam Ahmad, the former having died. Imam Ahmed was reclining and suddenly sat up saying,

لا ينبغى أن يذكر الصالحين فنتكي

“It is not appropriate that the righteous are mentioned and we sit reclining.”

‘Umar’s statement:

“If were not for three things in this life, I would not love to live:

  1. To prepare an army for the sake of Allah
  2. Struggling to worship at night
  3. Sitting with people and picking the best statement from their words, as the best dates are picked from the date tree.”

Some notes on the texts: [in bold]

Al-Muhassibi states,

“Insightful servants”

The word used he is dhawi al-Bab. Al-Bab comes from the word al-lub which means a pure clean minds as noted by al-Asfahani. Thus, they are those who, as he wrote “who are able to grasp the delicate meaning related to religious rulings.”

Here the sheikh mentions an array of qualities that cover ethics, behavior, internal and external worship. From this we garner the Muslim’s religion is comprehensive.

“Following the way of the insightful, taking care of the limits [set by] the shari’ah from the book of Allah, the Sunna of His prophet [صلى الله عليه وسلم] and that which the rightly guided scholars agreed upon.”

The one seeking the path to Allah must do so by respecting the foundations of Islam; the Qu’ran, the Sunna and the ‘Ijama [binding agreement of the scholars]. In areas where the scholars differed there were two opinions held by the salaf:

  1. The majority held that on should not be censured for following a legitimate opinion of a qualified scholar. This was noted by the Malikis, the Shafi’s, the Hanafis, Imam Ahmed in one statement attributed to him and Imam al-Nawwai.
  2. One could be censured for holding a different opinion. This attributed to Ahmed and it is reported that he clung to this opinion.

In the age of pluralism with our communities moving beyond the villages, I believe 1 to be the opinion that will preserve our unity and strength as a community.

“Faith in the allegorical verses”

Most scholars stated these are verses that cannot be understood on their own, but require a second source for understanding them.

“Those who perfect the outer”

Those who use the inner as an excuse to ignore the rules and regulations of Islam are lost in deception. Al-Sh’arani mentions and binding consensus on one who fails to master the outer [rulings] and delves into the inner. Imam Ibn Ashir in his meta poem begans it with faith, usol, fiqh and finishes with the inner- purification. The same with al-Ghazzali’s Ihyah, he began it with the importance of knowledge, acts of worship, creed and after that engaged the inner.

Sidi al-Zaruq said,


“The scholar of the outer [fiqh] can be free of a sufi, but a sufi can never be free of a faqih.”

“Distancing one’s self from the doubtful.”

The doubtful are those things who, as al-Ghazzali mentioned, “are composed of good and bad- halal and haram to such an extent that one is not able to grasp its reality.”

The scholars offered different possibilities for “the doubtful.”

  1. The forbidden
  2. The makrouh
  3. What was mentioned above

The Doubtful are a Bridge to the Forbidden:

Sheikh al-Qabbari of Alexandria wrote, “The permissible are an obstacle between the servant and the disliked. Thus, who ever engages in the permissible will fall into the disliked; the disliked are an obstacle between the servant and the forbidden. If he increases in the disliked acts, he will fall into the forbidden.”

Assignment:

Think about the five responsibilities the Qur’an has upon you. Keep a diary of your feelings to the Qur’an. Write to it as though it were your pen pal. Send to us at the end of the week and the best writer gets a prize!

I really enjoyed the time with all of you and pray that you will keep me in your duas.

SDW

For the notes in PDF format, click here.

About the author

Suhaib Webb

Suhaib Webb

Suhaib Webb is a contemporary American-Muslim educator, activist, and lecturer. His work bridges classical and contemporary Islamic thought, addressing issues of cultural, social and political relevance to Muslims in the West. After converting to Islam in 1992, Webb left his career in the music industry to pursue his passion in education. He earned a Bachelor’s in Education from the University of Central Oklahoma and received intensive private training in the Islamic Sciences under a renowned Muslim Scholar of Senegalese descent. Webb was hired as the Imam at the Islamic Society of Greater Oklahoma City, where he gave khutbas (sermons), taught religious classes, and provided counselling to families and young people; he also served as an Imam and resident scholar in communities across the U.S.

From 2004-2010, Suhaib Webb studied at the world’s preeminent Islamic institution of learning, Al-Azhar University, in the College of Shari`ah. During this time, after several years of studying the Arabic Language and the Islamic legal tradition, he also served as the head of the English Translation Department at Dar al-Ifta al-Misriyyah.

Outside of his studies at Al-Azhar, Suhaib Webb completed the memorization of the Quran in the city of Makkah, Saudi Arabia. He has been granted numerous traditional teaching licenses (ijazat), adhering to centuries-old Islamic scholarly practice of ensuring the highest standards of scholarship. Webb was named one of the 500 Most Influential Muslims in the World by the Royal Islamic Strategic Studies Center in 2010.

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  • Just a quick comment..im chuffed by your efficiency Br Zubair..May Allah give you a great reward (like a good wife if ur not married?? lol) anywayz just wanted to say thanks..keep up the good work bro!

  • Al Hamdu Lillah it was great class! My computer froze for some reasons and I missed about 15 minutes restarting my computer then relogging in. From mine and the notes above it seems I only missed “Faith in the allegorical verses” part. Insha Allah I'm gonna listen to that part tomorrow.

    There were difficulties (was there really a fire in Shaykh Suhaib house?) but I think it went really well. May Allah continue to bless all those who made this possible.

  • Mashallah, it was a great class. I learned a lot. I'm so grateful for this opportunity, it's a blessing for people who otherwise have a hard time finding the correct resources for learning.
    I hope the fire situation was resolved, inshAllah!

  • As-salamu aleykum wr wb,

    It was great to attend this “online” class…
    May Allah reward you!
    Bâraka Allahu fîkum

    Your brother from France

  • These notes are excellent, may Allah reward you. I am so attending next week inshAllah, even if it means I go to work looking like a zombie 😉

  • Assalamu Alaykum

    Man, I didn't know there were class notes!! I kept on rewinding and typing, rewinding and typing.

    Jzk for the notes though. They make my life easier.

    Assalamu alaykum

  • Sallam,

    Jazak Allah Khar B Suhaib, I really enjoyed this weeks class. I have a question, is it possible that the notes get posted ahead of time, so that we can use it as an outline next time.

    Thanks again,

    Omar

  • As'salamu Alaykum Imam Suhaib.
    Jazakallah Khair for having sessions such as this one.

    I ask Allah(swt) to bless you and your family.

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