The Purification of the Soul
compiled from the works of
Ibn Rajab al-Hanbali, Ibn Al-Qayyim al-Jawziyya, and Abu Hamid al-Ghazali
THE NATURE OF INTENTION
The intention of a person is not his utterance of
the words, "I intend to do so and so."
It is an overflowing from the heart which runs like conquests inspired by
Allah. At times it is made easy, at other times, difficult.
A person whose heart is overwhelmingly righteous finds it easy to summon good
intentions at most times. Such a person has a heart generally inclined to
the roots of goodness which, most of the time, blossom into the manifestation
of good actions.
As for those whose hearts inclide towards and are overwhelmed by worldy
matters, they find this difficult to accomplish and even obligatory acts of
worship may become difficult and some.
The Prophet (sallalahu alaiyhi wasallam) said: "Actions
are only by intention, and every man shall only have what he intended.
Thus he whose hijra was for Allah and was for Allah and His Messenger, his
hijra was for Allah and His Messenger, and he whose hijra was to achieve some
worldly benefit or to take some woman in marriage, his hijra was for that for
which he made hijra."(1)
Imam ash-Shaf'i said: "This hadith is a third of all
knowledge." The words, "actions are only by intention", mean
that deeds which are performed in accordance with the sunnah are only table
and rewarded if the intentions behind them were sincere. It is like the
saying of the Prophet, sallalahu alaiyhi wasallam, "Actions depend upon
their outcome."(2)
Likewise, the words, "every man shall only have what he intended",
mean that the reward for an action depends upon the intention behind it.
After stating this principle, the Prophet (sallalahu alaiyhi wasallam) gave
examples of it by saying, "thus he the Prophet (sallalahu alaiyhi
wasallam) gave examples of it by saying, "Thus he whose hijra was for
Allah and His Messenger, his hijra was for Allah and His Messenger, and he
whose hijra was to achieve some worldly benefit or to take some woman I
nmarriage, his hira was for that for which he made hijra."
So deeds which are apparently identitcal may differ, because the intentions
behind them are different in degrees of goodness and badness, from one person
to another.
Good intentions do not change the nature of forbidden
actions. The ignorant should not misconstrue the meaning of the hadith
and think that good intentions could turn forbidden actions into acceptable
ones.
The above saying of the Prophet (saw) specifically relattes to acts of worship
and permissible actions, not to forbidden ones. Worship and permissible
actions can be turned into forbidden ones because of the intentions behind
them, and permissible actions can become either good or bad deeds by
intention; but wrong actions cannot become acts of
worship, even with good intentions.(3)
When bad intentsions are accompanied by flaws in the actions themselves, then
their gravity and punishment are multiplied. Any praiseworthy act must be
rooted in sound intentions;
only then could it be deemed worthy of reward.
The fundamental principle should be that the act is
intended for the worship of Allah alone. If our intention is to show
off, then these same acts of worship will in fact become acts of disobedience.
As for permissible deeds, they all involve intentions -- which can potenitally
turn them into excellent acts which bring a man nearer to Allah and confer on
him the gift of closeness to Him.
The Excellence of Intention
Umar ibn al-Khattab, may Allah be pleased with him, said: The
best acts are doing what Allah has commanded, staying for away from what Allah
has forbidden, and having sincere intentions towards what-ever Allah has
required of us."(4)
Some of our predecessors said: "Many
small actions are made great by the intentions behind them. Many great
actions, on the other hand, are made small because the intentions behind them
are lacking."
Yahya Ibn Abu Kathir said: "Learn
about intentions, for their importance is greater than the importance of
actions."
Ibn Umar once heard a man who was putting on his ihram say:
"O Allah! I intend to do the Hajj and Umrah."
So he said to him: "Is it not in fact the people whom you are
informing of your intention? Does not Allah already know what is in your
heart?"(5)
It is because good intentions are exclusively the concern of the heart, that
they should not be
voiced during worship. so one's should not say his
intention by words in doing worship except in cases where it is sunnah like.
in Umrah , Haj & Qurbani etc. [added by the sender]
The Excellence of Knowledge and Teaching
There are many proofs in the Qur'an concerning the excellence of knowledge and
its transmission. Allah, the Mighty and Glorious, says:
"Allah will raise up to high ranks those of you who
believe and those who have been given
knowledge. (58:11)"
And also:
"Are those who know equal to those who do not know?
(39:9)
Also , in the Hadith, the Prophet (sallalahu alaiyhi wasallam) says,
"When Allah desires good for someone, He gives him understanding of the
deen."(6)
He (sallalahu alaiyhi wasallam) also said, "Allah
makes the way to the Garden easy for whoever treads a path in search of
knowledge."(7)
Travelling on the path to knowledge refers both to walking along an actual
pathway, such as going on foot to the assemblies of the ulama', as well as to
following a metaphysical road, such as studying and memorising.
The above saying of the Prophet (sallalahu alaiyhi wasallam) probably
means that Allah makes learning the useful knowledge that is sought after
easier for the seeker, clearing the way for him and smoothing his journey.
Some of our predecessors used to say: "Is
there anyone seeking knowledge, so that we can assist him in finding it?"
This hadith also alludes to the road leading to the Garden on the Day of
Judgement, which is the straight path and to what precedes it and what comes
after it.
Knowledge is also the shortest path to Allah. Whoever travels the road of
knowledge reaches Allah and the Garden by the shortest route. Knowledge also
clears the way out of darkness, ignorance, doubt and scepticism. This
is why Allah called His Book, "Light".
Al-Bukhari and Muslim have reported on the authority of Abdullah ibn
Umar that the Messenger of Allah (sallalahu alaiyhi wasallam) said: "Truly,
Allah will not take away knowledge by snatching it away from people, but by
taking away the lives of the people of knowledge one by one until none of them
survive. Then the people will adopt ignorant ones as their leaders. They
will be asked to deliver judgements and they will give them without knowledge,
with the result that they will go astray and lead others astray."
When 'Ubadah ibn as-Samit was asked about this hadith he
said: If you want, I will tell you what the highest knowledge is, which raises
people in rank: it is humility."
He said this because there are two types of knowledge. The first produces its
fruit in the heart. It is knowledge of Allah, the Exalted - His Names, His
Attributes, and His Acts - which commands fear, respect, exaltation, love,
supplication and reliance on Him. this is the beneficial type of knowledge. As
ibn Mas'ud said: "they will recite the
Qur'an, but it will not go beyond their throats. The Qur'an is only beneficial
when it reaches the heart and is firmly planted in it."
Al-Hasan said: "There are two
kinds of knowledge: knowledge of the tongue, which can be a case
against the son of Adam, as is mentioned in the hadith of the Prophet
(sallalahu alaiyhi wasallam ):'The Qur'an is either a
case for you or a case against you'(8), and
knowledge of the heart, which is beneficial knowledge.
The second kind is the beneficial kind which raises people in rank; it is the
inner knowledge which is absorbed by the heart and puts it right. The
knowledge that is on the tongue is taken lightly by people: neither those who
possess it, nor anyone else, act upon it, and then it vanishes when its owners
vanish on the Day of Judgement, when creation will be brought to
account."
Foot Notes:
1. Al-Bukhari and Muslim
2. Al-Bukhari, Kitab al-Qadar,11/499.
3. This is illustrated in a hadith recorded by Imam Muslim in his Sahih, in
which it is related on the authority of Abu Dharr that the Prophet Muhammad,
sallalahu alaiyhi wasallam, said, "You will receive
the reward for sadaqa even when you have sexual intercourse with your
wives." The sahaba said, "Will we really be rewarded for satisfying
our physical desires?" He,sallalahu alaiyhi wasallam, replied, "If
you have haram intercourse, you will be committing a sin; similarly, if you
have halal intercourse, you will be rewarded."
Imam an-Nawawi said, "This hadith clearly shows that permissible actions
become acts of obedience if there is a good intentino behind them; sexual
intercourse becomes an act of worship if it is accompanied by any one of the
following good intentions: keeping company with your wife in kindness, as
Allah ta'Ala has commanded; hoping to hae, as a result of intercourse, good
and righteous offsping; guarding your chastity and that of your wife; helping
to prevent haram lustful glances or thoughts, or haram intercourse; and any
other good intention."
4. Tahdhib al'Asma' li-Nawawi, 1/173. Abu Ishaq ash-Shirazi once entered the
mosque to have something to eat, as was his custom, and then realised that he
had dropped a dinar. He retraced his steps and found it lying on the ground,
but then left it where it was, saying, "Perhaps it
is not mine; perhaps it belongs to somebody else."
5. Sahih, Ja'mi 'l-'Ulum wa'l-Hikam, p. 19.
6. Al-bukhari and Muslim.
7. Muslim,21/17.
8. Muslim, Kitab at-Tahara, 3/99.