Praise be to Allaah.
Imaam Ahmad said that the one who does not pray
because of laziness is a kaafir. This is the more correct view and
is that indicated by the evidence of the Book of Allaah and the
Sunnah of His Messenger, and by the words of the Salaf and the
proper understanding. (Al-Sharh al-Mumti’
‘ala Zaad al-Mustanqi’, 2/26).
Anyone who examines the texts of the Qur’aan
and Sunnah will see that they indicate that the one who neglects the
prayer is guilty of Kufr Akbar (major kufr) which puts him beyond
the pale of Islam.
Among the evidence to be found in the Qur’aan
is:
The aayah (interpretation of the meaning):
“But if they repent [by rejecting Shirk
(polytheism) and accept Islamic Monotheism], perform As-Salaat (Iqaamat-as-Salaat)
and give Zakaat, then they are your brethren in religion.” [al-Tawbah
9:11]
The evidence derived from this aayah is that
Allaah defined three things that the Mushrikeen have to do in order
to eliminate the differences between them us: they should repent
from shirk, they should perform prayer, and they should pay zakaah.
If they repent from shirk but they do not perform the prayer or pay
zakaah, then they are not our brethren in faith; if they perform the
prayer but do not pay zakaah, then they are not our brethren in
faith. Brotherhood in religion cannot be effaced except when a
person goes out of the religion completely; it cannot be effaced by
fisq (immoral conduct) or lesser types of kufr.
Allaah also says (interpretation of the meaning):
“Then, there has succeeded them a posterity who
have given up As-Salaat (the prayers) [i.e. made their Salaat
(prayers) to be lost, either by not offering them or by not offering
them perfectly or by not offering them in their proper fixed times]
and have followed lusts. So they will be thrown in Hell. Except
those who repent and believe (in the Oneness of Allaah and His
Messenger Muhammad), and work righteousness. Such will enter
Paradise and they will not be wronged in aught.” [Maryam 19:59-60]
The evidence derived from this aayah is that
Allaah referred to those who neglect the prayer and follow their
desires, Except those who repent and believe, which indicates
that at the time when they are neglecting their prayers and
following their desires, they are not believers.
The evidence of the Sunnah that proves that the
one who neglects the prayer is a kaafir includes the hadeeth of the
Prophet (peace and
blessings of Allaah be upon him): “Between a man and shirk and
kufr there stands his neglect of the prayer.” (Narrated
by Muslim in Kitaab al-Eemaan from Jaabir ibn ‘Abd-Allaah
from the Prophet
(peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him)).
It was narrated that Buraydah ibn al-Husayb (may
Allaah be pleased with him) said: “I heard the Messenger of Allaah
(peace and
blessings of Allaah be upon him) say: ‘The covenant that
distinguishes between us and them is the prayer, and whoever
neglects it has disbelieved (become a kaafir).’” (It
was narrated by Ahmad, Abu Dawood, al-Tirmidhi, al-Nisaa’i and Ibn
Maajah). What is meant here by kufr or
disbelief is the kind of kufr which puts a person beyond the pale of
Islam, because the Prophet
(peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) made prayer the dividing
line between the believers and the disbelievers. It is known that
the community of kufr is not the same as the community of Islam, so
whoever does not fulfil this covenant must be one of the kaafireen
(disbelievers).
There is also the hadeeth of ‘Awf ibn Maalik
(may Allaah be pleased with him), according to which the Prophet
(peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) said: “The best of
your leaders are those whom you love and who love you, who pray for
you and you pray for them. The worst of your leaders are those whom
you hate and who hate you, and you send curses on them and they send
curses on you.” He was asked, “O Messenger of Allaah, should we
not fight them by the sword?” He said, “Not as long as they are
establishing prayer amongst you.”
This hadeeth indicates that those in authority
should be opposed and fought if they do not establish prayer, but it
is not permissible to oppose and fight them unless they make a
blatant show of kufr and we have evidence from Allaah that what they
are doing is indeed kufr. ‘Ubaadah ibn al-Saamit said: “The
Messenger of Allaah
(peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) called us and we gave
bay’ah (oath of allegiance) to him. Among the things that we
pledged to do was to listen and obey him both when we felt
enthusiastic and when we were disinclined to act, both at times of
difficulty and times of ease, and at times when others were given
preference over us, and that we would not oppose those in authority.
He said: ‘unless they made a blatant show of kufr and you have
evidence from Allaah that what they are doing is indeed kufr.’” (Agreed
upon). On this basis, their neglecting the
prayer, for which the Prophet
(peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) said we should oppose
them and fight them by the sword, constitutes an act of blatant kufr
for which we have evidence from Allaah that it is indeed kufr.
If someone were to say: is it not permissible to
interpret the texts about a person who neglects prayer being a
kaafir as referring to the one who neglects the prayer because he
does not think it is obligatory?
We would say: it is not permissible to interpret
the texts in this way because there are two reservations about this
interpretation:
-
it involves ignoring the general description
that the Lawgiver took into consideration and to which the
ruling was connected. The ruling that the person who neglects
prayer is a kaafir is connected to the action of neglecting
prayer, not to his denial of it being obligatory. Brotherhood in
religion is based on performing the prayer, not on whether a
person declares it to be obligatory. Allaah did not say, “If
they repent and state that the prayer is obligatory”, and the
Prophet (peace
and blessings of Allaah be upon him) did not say “Between a
man and shirk and kufr there stands his denial that the prayer
is obligatory” or “The covenant that distinguishes between
us and them is our statement that the prayer is obligatory, so
whoever denies that it is obligatory has disbelieved.” If this
is what Allaah and His Messenger had meant, then not stating it
clearly would have contradicted what is said in the Qur’aan.
For Allaah says (interpretation of the meaning):
“And We have sent down to you the Book (the
Qur’aan) as an exposition of everything” [al-Nahl 16:89]
“And We have also sent down unto you (O
Muhammad) the Dhikr [reminder and the advice (i.e. the Qur’aan)],
that you may explain clearly to men what is sent down to them”
[al-Nahl 16:44]
-
It is not correct to refer to a reason which the
Lawgiver did not make a factor in ruling a person to be a kaafir,
because if a person who does not have the excuse of ignorance
denies that the five daily prayers are obligatory then he is
deemed to be a kaafir, whether he prays or not. If a person
performs the five daily prayers, fulfilling all the conditions
of prayer and doing all the actions that are obligatory or
mustahabb, but he denies that the prayers are obligatory with no
valid reason for doing so, then he is a kaafir, even though he
is not neglecting the prayers. From this it is clear that it is
not correct to interpret the texts about neglecting the prayers
as referring to denying that they are obligatory. The correct
view is that the person who neglects the prayer is a kaafir who
is beyond the pale of Islam, as is clearly stated in the report
narrated by Ibn Abi Haatim in his Sunan from ‘Ubaadah
ibn al-Saamit (may Allaah be pleased with him), who said: “The
Messenger of Allaah
(peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) exhorted us: ‘Do
not associate anything in worship with Allaah, and do not
neglect the prayer deliberately, for whoever neglects the prayer
deliberately puts himself beyond the pale of Islam.” Moreover,
if we interpret the ahaadeeth about neglecting the prayer as
referring to a denial that it is obligatory, there would be no
point in the reports referring specifically to the prayer,
because this ruling applies equally to zakaah, fasting and Hajj
– whoever neglects any of these, denying that it is
obligatory, is a kaafir, if he does not have the excuse of
ignorance.
Just as the one who neglects the prayer is deemed
to be a kaafir on the basis of the evidence of the texts and
reports, so he may also be deemed to be a kaafir on the basis of
rational analysis. How can a person be a believer if he neglects the
prayer which is the pillar of religion, and when there are aayaat
and ahaadeeth urging us to perform prayer which make the wise
believer rush to do the prayer, and when there are aayaat and
ahaadeeth warning against neglecting it, which make the wise
believer scared to ignore the prayer? Once we have understood this,
a person cannot be a believer if he neglects the prayer.
If a person were to say: can we not interpret
kufr in the case of one who neglects the prayer as meaning a lesser
form of kufr (kufr al-na’mah) rather than the kind of kufr
which puts a person beyond the pale of Islam (kufr al-millah)?
Or can we not interpret it as being less than Kufr Akbar (major kufr)
and more like the kufr referred to in the ahaadeeth, “There are
two qualities that exist among people which are qualities of kufr:
slandering people’s lineage and wailing over the dead” and
“Trading insults with a Muslim is fisq (immoral conduct)
and exchanging blows with him is kufr”, etc.?
We would say that this interpretation is not
correct for a number of reasons:
-
The Prophet
(peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) made prayer the
dividing line between kufr and faith, between the believer and
the disbeliever. This is where he drew the line, and the two
things are quite distinct and do not overlap.
-
Prayer is one of the pillars of Islam, so when
the person who neglects it is described as a kaafir, this
implies the kind of kufr that puts a person beyond the pale of
Islam, because he has destroyed one of the pillars of Islam.
This is a different matter from attributing kufr to a person who
does one of the actions of kufr.
-
There are other texts which indicate that the
kufr of the one who neglects the prayer is the kind of kufr
which puts a person beyond the pale of Islam, so what is meant
here by kufr should be interpreted according to the apparent
meaning, so as avoid contradictions between the texts.
-
The description of kufr in those ahaadeeth is
different. Concerning neglecting the prayer, the Prophet
(peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) said: “Between a
man and shirk and kufr.” Here the word kufr is preceded in the
original Arabic by the definite article “al”, which
indicates that what is referred to here is the reality of kufr.
This is in contrast to the other ahaadeeth where kufr is
referred to without the definite article, or in a verbal form,
which indicates that this is a part of kufr or that the person
has disbelieved by doing this action, but it is not the absolute
kufr which places a person beyond the pale of Islam.
Shaykh al-Islam Ibn Taymiyah said in his book Iqtidaa’
al-Siraat al-Mustaqeem (p. 70, Al-Sunnah
Al-Muhammadiyyah edn.), concerning the hadeeth
of the Messenger
(peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) ““There are two
qualities that exist among people which are qualities of kufr”:
“The phrase ‘which are qualities of kufr’
means that these two qualities which exist among people are
qualities of kufr because they are among the deeds of kufr and they
exist among people. But not everyone who has a part of kufr becomes
a kaafir because of it, unless there exists in his heart the reality
of kufr. Similarly, not everyone who has a part of faith becomes a
believer because of it, unless there exists in his heart the
essential reality of faith. So there is a distinction between kufr
that is preceded [in the original Arabic] by the definite article
“al”, as in the hadeeth ‘Between a man and shirk and kufr
there stands nothing but his neglecting the prayer’, and kufr that
is not preceded by the definite article but is used in an
affirmative sense.’”
So it is clear that the person who neglects the
prayer with no excuse is a kaafir who is beyond the pale of Islam,
on the basis of this evidence. This is the correct view according to
Imaam Ahmad, and it is one of the two opinions narrated from al-Shaafa’i,
as was mentioned by Ibn Katheer in his tafseer of the aayah
(interpretation of the meaning):
“Then, there has succeeded them a posterity who
have given up As-Salaat (the prayers) [i.e. made their Salaat
(prayers) to be lost, either by not offering them or by not offering
them perfectly or by not offering them in their proper fixed times]
and have followed lusts” [Maryam 19:59]
Ibn al-Qayyim mentioned in his book Al-Salaah
that it was one of the two views narrated from al-Shaafa’i, and
that al-Tahhaawi narrated it from al-Shaafa’i himself.
This was also the view of the majority of the
Sahaabah, indeed many narrated that there was consensus among the
Sahaabah on this point. ‘Abd-Allaah ibn Shaqeeq said: the
companions of the Prophet
(peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) did not think that
neglecting any deed made a person a kaafir, apart from neglecting
the prayer. This was reported by al-Tirmidhi and al-Haakim, who
classed it as saheeh according to the conditions of (al-Bukhaari and
Muslim). Ishaaq ibn Raahawayh, the well known imaam, said, It was
reported with a saheeh isnaad from the Prophet
(peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) that the one who
neglects the prayer is a kaafir. This was also the view of the
scholars from the time of the Prophet
(peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) until the present day:
that the person who deliberately neglects the prayer with no valid
excuse, until the time for that prayer is over, is a kaafir. Ibn
Hazm said that it was reported from ‘Umar, ‘Abd al-Rahmaan ibn
‘Awf, Mu’aadh ibn Jabal, Abu Hurayrah and others among the
Sahaabah. He said: “We do not know of any opposing view among the
Sahaabah.” Al-Mundhiri narrated this from him in Al-Targheeb
wa’l-Tarheeb, and added more names of Sahaabah: ‘Abd-Allaah
ibn Mas’ood, ‘Abd-Allaah ibn ‘Abbaas, Jaabir ibn ‘Abd-Allaah
and Abu’l-Dardaa’ – may Allaah be pleased with them. He said:
apart from the Sahaabah, there are also Ahmad ibn Hanbal, Ishaaq ibn
Raahawayh, ‘Abd-Allaah ibn al-Mubaarak, al-Nakha’i, al-Hakam ibn
‘Utaybah, Ayyoob al-Sakhtayaani, Abu Daawood al-Tayaalisi, Abu
Bakr ibn Abi Shaybah, Zuhayr ibn Harb and others.
And Allaah knows best.
Reference:
Risaalah fi Hukm Taarik al-Salaah (Paper on the ruling on one who
neglects the prayer) by Shaykh Muhammad ibn Saalih al-‘Uthaymeen.
(www.islam-qa.com)
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