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عن أبي عـبد الرحمن عبد الله بن عـمر بـن
الخطاب رضي الله عـنهما ، قـال : سمعت رسول الله صلى الله عليه وسـلم يقـول :( بـني
الإسـلام على خـمـس : شـهـادة أن لا إلـه إلا الله وأن محمد رسول الله ، وإقامة
الصلاة ، وإيـتـاء الـزكـاة ، وحـج البيت ، وصـوم رمضان ) رواه البخاري [ رقم : 8 ]
ومسلم [ رقم : 16 ]
On the authority of Aboo ` Abd ir-Rahmaan `Abdullaah, the son
of `Umar ibn al-Khattab radiAllaahu 'anhumaa, who said: I heard the Messenger of
Allaah (sallAllaahu alayhi wa sallam) say:
Islaam has been built on five [pillars]: testifying that there is no deity
worthy of worship except Allaah and that Muhammad is the Messenger of Allaah,
establishing the Salaah (prayer), paying the Zakaah (obligatory charity), making
the Hajj (pilgrimage) to the House, and fasting in Ramadaan.
[Narrated by al-Bukhaari and Muslim.]
Explanation of Hadeeth 3
Aboo al-'Abbaas al-Qurtubee (rahimahu Allaahu) has said that this hadeeth
means that these five matters are the foundation and basic principles upon which
the religion of al-Islaam is built. With these five matters does Islaam make
itself apparent. And the Prophet sallAllaahu alayhi wa sallam particularised
these five matters and did not mention Jihaad along with them (even though it is
through Jihaad that Islaam is made uppermost and the resistance of the
Disbelievers is belittled) because these five matters are obligatory at all
times upon all Muslims, whereas Jihaad is a Fard Kifaayah which may not be
required during certain times. [Note: a Fard Kifaayah is an obligation that is
required of the Muslims such that if a group of them fulfill it then the
obligation is lifted from the community as a whole].
And in some of the narrations of this hadeeth (such as the one quoted above),
mention of the Hajj is made before mention of the Fasting in Ramadaan. However,
and Allaah knows best, the correct form is the placing of the Fasting before the
Hajj, as is narrated from Ibn 'Umar that he corrected a narrator who changed the
order and said "This is how I have heard it from the
Messenger of Allaah (sallAllaahu alayhi wa sallam)". This incident shows
us the precision of the Sahaabah and the scholars of Hadeeth after them in
preserving the words of the Messenger sallAllaahu alayhi wa sallam, and how can
this not be when Allaah 'azza wa jall has said:
"Verily We have sent down the Dhikr and We shall preserve it"
and the Dhikr or Wahee sent down to the Prophet sallAllaahu alayhi wa sallam
includes both the Qur'aan and the Sunnah, as Allaah has said:
"Nor does he speak of (his own) desire; It is only an Inspiration that is
inspired."
And it is also narrated from Ibn 'Umar radiAllaahu 'anhu that the Messenger
sallAllaahu alayhi wa sallam said:
"Islaam is built upon that you worship Allaah (alone) and disbelieve in
(the worship of) all that is other than Him, and the establishment of the
Prayer, ...(till the end of the hadeeth)"
And in the hadeeth occurs the phrase 'establishment' of the prayer (iqaam as-salaah),
as opposed to 'performance' of the prayer. The scholars have mentioned how this
indicates that the Prayer must be performed in the most perfect manner, after
having completed the Wudoo' in the most perfect manner, and in the Masjid with
the jamaa'ah for the men, and so on and so forth. That is, simply performing the
motions of the Prayer in the most minimal fashion is not what is desired from us
- but rather we should exert ourselves in this affair, bearing in mind that the
Prayer is the first matter that will be judged on the Day of Resurrection - if
it is accepted then the rest of our actions will be accepted, and if it is
rejected then the rest of our actions will also be rejected.
Summary
That Islaam is indeed built on the five principles of:
- Witnessing that Allaah is our only deity and Muhammad (sallAllaahu
alayhi wa sallam) is His Messenger to show us how to fulfill our existence
on this earth as Muslims,
- Prayer,
- Zakaah,
- Fasting and
- Hajj
So one must strive to fulfill these pillars with the utmost care,
concern and priority, and one must do so normally before one gets involved
with other aspects of the Deen.
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