Id-ul-Adha Khutba
(Sermon)
Delivered at London, 1 February 2004
Islam invites religions to their common origin
Restores original simplicity of faith and practice
by Dr. Zahid Aziz
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3:96–97: “Certainly
the first house appointed for humanity is the one at Bakkah,
blessed and a guidance for the nations. In it are clear signs:
(It is) the Place of Abraham; and whoever enters it is safe;
and pilgrimage to the House is a duty which men owe to Allah
— whoever can find a way to it.” |
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3:64: “Say:
O People of the Book, come to an equitable word between us and
you, that we shall serve none but Allah and that we shall not
associate aught with Him, and that some of us shall not take
others for lords besides Allah.” |
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3:67: “Abraham
was not a Jew nor a Christian, but he was an upright man, one
who submitted to God, and not one who took others for gods.” |
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22:26–27: “And
when We pointed to Abraham the place of the House, saying: Associate
naught with Me, and purify My House for those who make circuits
and stand to pray and bow and prostrate themselves. Proclaim
to mankind the Pilgrimage: they will come to thee on
foot and on every lean camel, coming from every remote path.”
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Hajj or the Pilgrimage is the last of the five pillars
of Islam. As it is the last, it is reasonable to think that the teachings
of Islam must somehow reach a climax and culmination in this
institution. And that climax is that this institution shows clearly
that Islam is an international religion, and it has come to unite all humanity
and all religions on the basis of the oneness of God and the equality of all
human beings.
So, how are the Pilgrimage and the associated
Id-ul-Adha prayers and sacrifice, related to these aspects of Islamic
teachings? Firstly, the Holy Quran tells us here that the Ka‘bah was the first
House of worship on earth that any man built. Historical evidence, too, bears
out that this House has existed from the most ancient times that we can go
back to, and that it was visited annually by people and regarded as sacred.
Thus Islam has chosen as its central shrine, not a place whose importance
arose only in the life of our Holy Prophet Muhammad, but one which has significance
in the history of religion of mankind, where man first built a house
of worship. In fact, it was part of God’s plan to raise the Last Prophet in
the land where this most ancient of all religious memorials existed. Humanity,
which spread all over the earth, is being drawn back to the place where religious
consciousness of mankind originated. It is also being called back by Islam
to the original principles of religion, the simple fundamentals which later
became lost in the maze of detailed religious doctrines, ceremonies and controversies
as different religions took different forms.
The Quran speaks of mankind (an-nas)
or humanity when mentioning the Pilgrimage, as in the two verses above, and
not just believers or Muslims. This contains a prophecy that it is not only
in theory that Islam makes an appeal to all mankind, but in practice too a
substantial cross-section of all mankind will join Islam, so that the Pilgrimage
will present a scene showing representatives of all mankind there. The verse:
“Proclaim to mankind the Pilgrimage: they will come to thee on
foot and on every lean camel, coming from every remote path” (22:27)
was revealed to the Holy Prophet in the very late stages of
his life in Makka, shortly before the emigration to Madina. At that time Islam
and the Muslims were in the weakest position they have ever been, and it appeared
that they would be simply be effaced from this world be their opponents. No
one could imagine that Islam would spread in Arabia, let alone that large
crowds of people belonging to all sections of mankind would come, travelling
from the farthest places in the world. This was also prophesied in the Bible.
The prophet Isaiah said:
“It shall come to pass in the latter days that the mountain of the
house of the Lord shall be established as the highest of the mountains,
and shall be raised above the hills; and all the nations shall flow
to it” (Isaiah, 2:2).
Being the “highest” and “raised above the hills” means, of
course, the highest in dignity and honour in the hearts of mankind.
Secondly, apart from the connection of the Ka‘ba
with the earliest days of human worship, it is also connected with Abraham,
a man accepted and revered by both Jews and Christians. Abraham is the Patriarch
with whom the history of religion, or at least the history of the Middle Eastern
religions, can be said to begin. He taught the oneness of God, service to
God and sacrifice for Him. According to the Bible, God bestowed upon him the
name Abraham, meaning father of the nations. God gave him many promises about
how great nations would arise from among his descendants, who shall be blessed
in the world, and how his name will become great in the world and be blessed
by people.
According to Islam, and the traditions of the Arabs
before the coming of Islam, Abraham travelled down to the Ka‘ba in Arabia,
which had become derelict by his time, settled his wife Hagar and young son
Ishmael there, and some years later returned to rebuild the Ka‘ba with his
son Ishmael and establish the Pilgrimage. But some thousands of years later
when the Holy Prophet Muhammad appeared in that country, the people there
had made it a shrine of idol-worship, superstition and ignorance. This was
the condition of the Arabs, among whom no prophet had ever appeared. The other
descendants and followers of Abraham were the Jews and the Christians. In
their history many prophets had appeared, from Isaac, Jacob, Joseph to Moses,
David, Solomon and lastly Jesus, and they possessed scriptures. Yet these
two religions held opposite beliefs.
The Jewish religion prescribed the rites and rituals
of the religious law in the most minute details, and the Jews came to believe
in the mechanical observance of these rituals as of the prime and greatest
importance. Their concept of God was of a Being that is remote and insists
more on punishment and justice than on forgiveness and mercy.
When Jesus appeared among the Israelites he had
to correct these exaggerated tendencies. So he denounced following just the
letter of the law and laid stress on love between man and God and the need
for exercising forgiveness and mercy. His later followers took this to an
extreme and rejected the need to follow any regulations of the law at all,
and instead taught reliance on the forgiveness and mercy of God. They believed
that just belief in Jesus as the one who had atoned for people’s sins, and
having love for God in your heart, was all that was required. They took the
need for a relationship between man and God, and closeness of man to God,
so far as to teach that God could send His son into the world in human form.
So here were two religions following the same scriptures, and believing completely
opposite things. One believed that the mechanical observance of religious
laws and rituals was all in all, and the other rejected the law as unnecessary
and a curse. One believed strictly in the oneness of God and God as separate
from man, while the other believed in God having a son who appeared in human
form. One rejected Jesus as an impostor while the other believed him to be
the son of God. As the Quran says:
“And the Jews say, The Christians follow nothing (true), and
the Christians say, The Jews follow nothing (true), while they recite the
(same) Book.” (2:113)
It is interesting here to note that as the President of the
U.S.A. is a committed, practising Christian, therefore according to his beliefs
the Israeli Prime Minister is definitely doomed to everlasting hell because
he does not accept Jesus as his saviour. Likewise, according to the Israeli
Prime Minister the U.S. President is definitely doomed to everlasting hell
because he accepts an impostor as Messiah and son of God. But the Holy Quran
says:
“Surely those who believe, and those who are Jews, and the Christians,
and the Sabians, whoever believes in God and the Last Day and does good, they
have their reward with their Lord, and there is no fear for them, nor shall
they grieve.” (2:62)
In order to correct these wrong doctrines entertained by
the Jews and Christians, the Quran calls upon these two faiths to reconsider
their common origin. It tells them that Abraham, the great teacher who
preceded their two religions, obviously neither followed the detailed religious
law of Moses, nor believed in Jesus as saviour and son of God, and yet he
is their real founder and father figure.
As a contrast to the Jewish practices, Abraham’s
obedience to God was not in mechanically following rituals of the religion
but in displaying a true spirit of submitting to God’s commands with
one’s heart and soul. This is illustrated in his readiness even to sacrifice
his son when he thought that that was what God had commanded him to do. Those
who lay extreme stress on a ritual following of details of religious precepts
usually find it very hard to make a real sacrifice of their desires. They
may be very meticulous in adhering to all the physical details of worship
but they then consider that this gives them a licence to indulge in their
wrongful conduct in their practical lives. There is a lesson in this also
for Muslims of the present times who show exactly the same tendency.
In contrast to Christians, Islam points out that
Abraham was a staunch upholder of the belief in One God and rejected every
kind of worship of multiplicity of gods. Belief in Trinity or in a man being
God’s son are completely alien to Abraham’s outlook. Without believing in
these doctrines, and without accepting Jesus as his saviour who died for his
sins, Abraham according to the Bible was a man so close to God and so beloved
of God that it is written about him in the Bible:
“Fear not, Abram, I am your shield; your reward shall be very great.”
— Genesis, 15:1
“I am God Almighty; walk before Me, and be blameless.” — Genesis,
17:1
“… and the Lord had blessed Abraham in all things.” — Genesis 24:1
And why did God raise him to such an eminent position? It was
because:
“… Abraham obeyed My voice and kept My charge, My commandments,
My statutes, and My laws.” — Genesis, 26:5
And after Abraham’s readiness to sacrifice his son, the Bible
records:
“By Myself I have sworn, says the Lord, because you have done
this, and have not withheld your son, your only son, I will indeed bless you,
… and by your descendants shall all the nations of the earth bless themselves,
because you have obeyed My voice.” — Genesis, 22:16, 18
And according to the Quran:
“And who is better in religion than he who submits himself entirely
to Allah while doing good (to others) and follows the faith of Abraham, the
upright one? And Allah took Abraham for a friend.” (4:125)
So Islam points out to Christians that Abraham became the beloved
of God by obeying the voice and the commandments of God and by his willingness
to carry out the sacrifice of his son. In other words, you must do something
practical to show your love for God and to be loved by God. It cannot
be by merely believing that God loves you so much that He sent His son to
be sacrificed for your sins, and if you accept this then your sins are all
forgiven. Thus the Christian creed goes against the fundamental beliefs
of religion as taught by Abraham.
The approach adopted by Islam is not to
say to the Jews and Christians: you are wrong and we are right, so accept
our beliefs. Islam invites them to look at the origin of their own faiths,
and to realize that those original, simple principles of faith, as seen in
the life of Abraham in their own traditions, are the core and crux of religion,
and they are ones that Islam is re-establishing. The Jews had made the law
and practice of religion too complicated and cumbersome, while the Christians
had made the doctrines of the religion complex, confusing, and incomprehensible.
Islam resorted their original simplicity.
In this way, while correcting wrong beliefs of
these two faiths, Islam also accords them respect and dignity by dignifying
the origin and the forefathers of those faiths. If you want to insult a community,
you say to them: there is nothing good in your background and history. You
attack their forefathers. But God says in the Quran near the beginning:
“O Children of Israel, call to mind My favour which I bestowed
on you and that I made you excel the nations.” (2:47)
There was a time when you were the best of nations and you
can be again.
Incident of sacrifice
The main points of the incident of the readiness of Abraham
to sacrifice his son are as follows. They can be found summarised in the Holy
Quran.
- It was after much prayer that Abraham at last had a child,
his son Ishmael, and that too in old age. His prayer was: “My Lord, grant
me a doer of good deeds” (37:100), and this contains a lesson for us as
well.
- But he was then commanded to settle the infant and his
mother in the wilderness of Arabia, which he immediately did.
- Now when Ishmael reached his teens, Abraham saw in a dream
that he was sacrificing him.
- His attachment to his son was not only of love, but the
son was of economic value as well. He could work and Abraham was old.
- As human sacrifice was a common practice, although of
course it was wrong and cruel and not sanctioned by any teaching from God,
Abraham thought that the dream was a command to sacrifice his son
literally.
- Abraham put it to Ishmael: What is your view? Abraham was
not forcing this sacrifice upon Ishmael; the son’s willingness was a part
of this act of sacrifice. The Quran says: “So when they both
submitted”; it was a submission of both of them.
- But then God stopped Abraham from going further and said
that he had already fulfilled the vision. He had already done the real
sacrifice required by settling his son in the desert.
- To commemorate this event, the practice of sacrificing an
animal was instituted as a symbol. Islam continued this institution among
Muslims.
The practice of sacrificing something belonging
to you for God, or for a deity that people worship, was very common among all
religions and people. The idea behind it was to try to please a deity by
offering it a gift, particularly if you thought that the deity was angry with you.
But Islam presented a different concept of God as follows:
“He (God) feeds and is not fed” (6:14),
“I (God) desire no sustenance from them,
nor do I desire that they should feed Me.” (51:57)
“Not their flesh, nor their blood,
reaches God, but what reaches Him is your righteousness and doing of duty.” (22:37)
Hazrat Mirza Ghulam Ahmad explained this last verse as meaning
that the true sacrifice is not of the animal which is being slaughtered, but
of the animal desires of the person doing the sacrifice. Maulana Muhammad
Ali used to exhort people in his khutbas at this ‘Id that the real
sacrifice by an individual at this occasion is to give up a bad habit permanently.
Each and every Muslim has to sacrifice a part of his bad side, even though
it may be a small part.
I return now to the point made earlier that the
institution of the Pilgrimage shows that Islam is the religion of all humanity
and the words of the Quran which indicate that people from all mankind will
go to perform it. The Holy Prophet Muhammad related a dream of his, which
is reported in the most authentic book of his sayings, Bukhari, as
follows:
“While I was asleep circumambulating the Ka‘ba (in my dream), suddenly
I saw a man of brown complexion and straight hair, walking between two men,
and water was dropping from his head. I asked, ‘Who is this?’ The people said,
‘He is the son of Mary.’ Then I looked behind and I saw a red-complexioned,
fat, curly-haired man, blind in the right eye which looked like a bulging
out grape. I asked, ‘Who is this?’ They replied, ‘He is Dajjal.’ ”
I cannot here go into the details of the interpretation of
this dream, but briefly the man whom the Holy Prophet was told is ‘the son
of Mary’ (i.e. Jesus) going around the Ka‘ba is, symbolically, the Founder
of the Ahmadiyya Movement, since the Prophet Muhammad has likened his followers
to various prophets from the past. The man called Dajjal represents
the Western nations. For details of this you can read the book The AntiChrist,
Gog and Magog by Maulana Muhammad Ali. The Holy Prophet Muhammad was shown
in his dream that the Founder of the Ahmadiyya Movement would lead the people
of the West, who initially would be averse and inimical to the religion of
Islam, to go and perform the Pilgrimage, meaning that they would accept Islam
through him and pay homage to it. A literal glimpse of the fulfilment of this
dream took place in 1923 when Khwaja Kamal-ud-Din, a man who under the inspiration
of Hazrat Mirza Ghulam Ahmad had started the Woking Muslim Mission here, took
Lord Headley, his most famous convert to Islam, to the Pilgrimage.
It is now a challenge
for us, our Jama‘at, to further fulfil this dream of leading the Western people
to pay homage to Islam.
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