يُسَبِّحُ لِلَّهِ مَا فِي السَّمَوَاتِ
وَمَا فِي الْأَرْضِ الْمَلِكِ
الْقُدُّوسِ الْعَزِيزِ الْحَكِيمِ
﴿62:1﴾
(62:1) All that is in the heavens and
all that is in the earth extols the
glory of Allah, the Sovereign, the Holy,
the All- Mighty, the All-Wise. *1
*1 For explanation, sec E.N.'s 1, 2 of
Surah AI-Hadid, and E.N.'s 36, 37, 41 of
Surah AI-Hashr above. This introduction
bears a deep relevance to the theme that
follows. In spite of the fact that the
Jews of Arabia were witnessing clear
signs of Apostleship in the person of
the Holy Prophet (upon whom be Allah's
peace) and his high character and works
and in spite of the clear good news
given by the Prophet Moses (peace be
upon him) in the Torah, which only
applied to him, they were denying him
only because they did not want to
acknowledge the prophet hood of a person
who did not belong to their own
community and race. They openly
proclaimed that they would believe only
in that which had come to them, and
would not accept any teaching, which
came through a non-Israelite prophet,
even if it was from God. For this
acttitude in the following verses they
have been reproved. Hence the reason for
beginning the discourse with the
introductory sentence. First, it says
that everything in the universe is
glorifying Allah; that is, the entire
universe testifies that AIIah is free
from all those faults and weaknesses
because of which the lews have formed
the concept of their racial superiority.
He is not related to anyone: He has
nothing to do with favouritism: He
treats all His creatures with equal
justice, mercy and care. No particular
race and nation is His favourite so that
He may be bound to bless it whatever it
may do; and He is not prejudiced against
any race or nation so that He may
deprive it of His bounties even if it
possesses all the good qualities. Then,
it says that He is the Sovereign; that
is, no worldly power can restrict His
authority and powers, as if to say:
"You, O Jews, are His servants and
subjects. 'It is not for you to decide
whom He should appoint His Messenger,
and whom He should not, for your
guidance. " Then it says that He is
Holy; that is, HE is far exalted and
glorified that His judgements may be
mistaken. Human judgements may have
mistakes but His decrees are perfect. In
the end, two more attributes of Allah
have been mentioned: that He is
All-Mighty, i.e. none can fight Him and
win and that He is All-Wist, i.e.
whatever He does, it is always the very
demand of wisdom, and His plans and
designs are so well-planned that none in
the world can hinder and frustrate them.
هُوَ الَّذِي بَعَثَ فِي الْأُمِّيِّينَ
رَسُولًا مِنْهُمْ يَتْلُو عَلَيْهِمْ
آَيَاتِهِ وَيُزَكِّيهِمْ وَيُعَلِّمُهُمُ
الْكِتَابَ وَالْحِكْمَةَ وَإِنْ كَانُوا
مِنْ قَبْلُ لَفِي ضَلَالٍ مُبِينٍ
﴿62:2﴾
(62:2) He it is Who has sent to the
gentiles a Messenger from among
themselves, *2
one who rehearses to them His verses,
purifies their lives, and imparts to
them the Book and the Wisdom *3
although before that they were in utter
error; *4
*2 Here the word ummi (gentile) has been
used as a Jewish term and there is a
subtle aabtle in it. The verse means:
"The All-Mighty and All-Wise Allah has
raised a Messenger among the Arabs whom
the Jews contemptuously consider the
gentiles and much below themselves, The
Messenger has not risen of his own wish
and will, but has been raised by Him Who
is the Sovereign of the universe, Who is
All-Mighty and All-Wise, Whose power can
be resisted and opposed only to one's
own loss and peril.
One should know that the word ummi has
occurred in the Qur'an at several places
but in different meanings at different
places. At one place it has been used
for the people who do not possess any
revealed scripture, which they may he
following, as AI-'Imran: 20, where it
'has been said: "Ask those who possess
the Book and those who do not possess
(umnris); 'Have you accepted Islam`''"
Here, the ummis imply the Arab
polytheists, and they have been regarded
as a separate class from the followers
of the Book, i.e. the Jews and the
Christians. At another place, it has
been used for the illiterate people
among the .lews and Christians, who are
ignorant of the Book of Allah, as in
Al-Baqarah: 78: "Among the Jews there
are some illiterate people (ummis) who
have no knowledge of the Book but are
guided by mere conjecture and
guess-work. " At still another place,
this word has been used purely as
a'Jewish term, which implies aII the
non-Jewish people, as in AI-'Imran: 75:
°(The actual cause of this dishonesty of
theirs is that they say:) We are not to
be called to account for out behaviour
towards the non-Jews (ummis) This third
meaning of ummi is implied in the verse
tinder discussion. It is a synonym of
the Hebrew word goyim, which has been
translated gentiles in the English Bible
and implies all the non-Jewish or the
non-IsraeAte people of the world.
But the real significance of this Jewish
term cannot be understood only by this
explanation of it. The Hebrew word goyim
originally was used only in the meaning
of a nation, but gradually the Jews
reserved it first for the nation other
then themselves, then they gave it the
special meaning that aII the nations
other than the Jews were un-civilized,
irreligious, unclean and contemptible;
so much so that in its connotations of
hatred and contempt this word even
surpassed the Greek term 'barbarian'
which they used for all the non-Greeks.
In rabbinical literature, goyim are such
contemptible people, who cannot be
considered human, who cannot be made
companions in a journey, who cannot be
saved even if one of them is drowning.
The Jews beleivd that the Messiah of the
future would destroy aII the goyim and
bum them to annihilation. (For further
explanation, see E.N. 64 of Al-'Imran).
*3 These characteristics of the Holy
Prophet (upon whom be piece) have been
mentioned at four places in the Qur'an
and everywhere with a different object.
These have been mentioned in AI-Baqarah:
t29 to tell the Arabs that the mission
of the Prophet, which they were regading
as a calamity and affliction for
themselves, was indeed a great blessing
for which the Prophets Abraham and
Ishmael (peace be upon them) had been
praying for their children. In
Al-Baqarah: 151 these have been
mentioned to exhort the Muslims to
recognize the true worth of the Holy
Prophet and to derive full benefit from
the blessing which they had been granted
in the form of his Apostleship. These
have been re-iteated in AI 'Imran: 164
to make the hypocrites and the people of
weak faith realize what great favour
AIIah had done them by raising His
Mcssengcr among them, and how foolish
they were in not appreciating this. Now,
here in this Surah these have been
repeated for the fourth time with the
object to tell the Jews: 'The mission
that Muhammad (upon whom be Allah's
peace and blessing) is performing in
front of you, is evidently the mission
of a Mcssengcr. He is reciting the
Revelations of AIIah, the language,
themes and style of which testify that
these arc indeed Divine Revelations. He
is purifying and reforming the lives of
the people, cleansing their morals and
habits And dealings of every evil
element, and adorning them with the
finest moral qualities. This is the same
task which aII the Prophets before him
have been performing. Then he does not
rest content only with the recitation of
the Revelations, but he is making the
people understand the real aim of the
Divine Book by word and decd and by the
practical model of his life and
imparting to them the wisdom and
knowledge which none but the Prophets
have imparted so far. This very
character and way of life and practical
model is the conspicuous characteristic
of the Prophets by which they are
recognized. Then how stubborn you arc
that you refuse to recognize and believe
in the Mcssengcr whose truth is
manifestly proved by his wonderful works
only because AIIah has not raised him
among you but among the people whom you
call the ummis (gentiles).
*4 This is another proof of the Holy
Prophet's Aposltleship, which has been
presented to open eyes of the Jews.
These people had been living in Arabia
for centuries and no aspect of the
religious, moral, social and cultural
life of the Arabs was hidden from them.
Referring to the state of their previous
life it is being said: "You arc an
eye-witness of the revolution that has
taken place in the lift of this nation
within a few years under the guidance
and leadership of Muhammad (upon whom be
Allah's peace and blessings). You arc
fully aware of the condition in which
these people were involved before
embracing Islam: you arc also aware of
their transformation afterwards, and you
arc also witnessing the condition of
those people of this very nation, who
have not yet embraced Islam, Is the
clear and manifest difference which even
a blind man can perceive not enough to
convince you that this revolution can be
brought about by none but a Prophet"?.
وَآَخَرِينَ مِنْهُمْ لَمَّا يَلْحَقُوا
بِهِمْ وَهُوَ الْعَزِيزُ الْحَكِيمُ
﴿62:3﴾
(62:3) and (He has also) sent him to
those others who have not yet joined
them. *5
He is the Most Mighty, the Most Wise. *6
*5 That is, the Apostleship of Muhammad
(upon whom be Allah's peace and
blessings) is not restricted only to the
Arabs but is meant for other nations and
races as well, who havc not yet joined
the believers, but are going to be born
till the Last Day. The word minhum (of
them) in the original can have two
meanings: (1) "That those other people
will be of the ummis i.e. the
non-Isaelite nations of the world;" and
(2) "that they will be believers in
Muhammad (upon whom be Allah s peace and
blessings), though they have not yet
joined the believers, but will join them
later on. " Thus, this verse is one of
those verses which explicitly state that
the Message of the Holy Prophet (upon
whom be peace) is meant for all mankind
for ever. The other places where this
theme has o occurred in the Qur'an are:
AI-'Imran: 19, Al-A'raf: 158,
Al-Anbiya': 107, AI-Furqan: 1, Saba 28.
(For further explanation, see EN 47 of
Surah Saba).
*6 That is, it is a manifestation of
Allah's own power and wisdom that among
an un-civilized, , un-lettered people He
has raised a great Prophet, whose
teachings arc so revolutionary and
contain such eternal and universal
principles as can provide a sound basis
for the whole of mankind to be a single
unified community, which can obtain
guidance from those principles for ever.
An impostor, however hard he may have
tried, could not have attained this
position and rank. Not to speak of a
backward people like the Arabs; even the
most intelligent and talented man of the
most advanced nation of the world cannot
have the power that he may revolutionist
a nation so completely, and then give
such comprehensive principles to the
world that all mankind may follow it as
one community and be able to run a
universal and all-pervasive system of
one way of life and one civilization for
ever. This is a miracle which has taken
place only by Allah's power, and only
AIIah on the basis of His wisdom has
chosen the person, the country and the
nation for it.
ذَلِكَ فَضْلُ اللَّهِ يُؤْتِيهِ مَنْ
يَشَاءُ وَاللَّهُ ذُو الْفَضْلِ
الْعَظِيمِ
﴿62:4﴾
(62:4) Such is Allah’s favour: He
bestows it on whomsoever He pleases.
Allah is the Lord of abounding favour.
مَثَلُ الَّذِينَ حُمِّلُوا التَّوْرَاةَ
ثُمَّ لَمْ يَحْمِلُوهَا كَمَثَلِ
الْحِمَارِ يَحْمِلُ أَسْفَارًا بِئْسَ
مَثَلُ الْقَوْمِ الَّذِينَ كَذَّبُوا
بِآَيَاتِ اللَّهِ وَاللَّهُ لَا يَهْدِي
الْقَوْمَ الظَّالِمِينَ
﴿62:5﴾
(62:5) The parable of those who were
charged with the Torah and then they
failed to live up to it *7
is that of a donkey *8
laden with books. Even more evil is the
parable of the people who gave the lie
to the Signs of Allah. *9
Allah does not direct such wrong-doers
to the Right Way.
*7 This sentence has two meanings, a
general meaning and a special meaning.
The general meaning is that the people
who were entrusted with the knowledge
and practice of the Torah and with the
responsibility of guiding the world
according to it, neither understood this
reapon:ibility nor discharged it as they
should have. The special meaning is
Being the bearers of the Torah these
people should have been fore-most to
join hands with the Messenger, good news
about whose advent had been already
given in the Torah, but, instead, they
have been in the forefront to oppose him
and have thus failed to fulfil the
demand of the teaching of the Torah.
*8 That is, just as a donkey loaded with
books does not know what it i8 loaded
with, so are these people loaded with
the Torah and they do not know what this
Book was sent for and what are its
demands.
*9 That is, they arc even worst than a
donkey, who is without sense and
therefore excusable. But these people
have intelligence they read and teach
the Torah and are fully aware of its
meaning Yet they are turning away from
its guidance and refusing wilfully to
acknowledge and believe in the Prophet
who even according to the Torah teaches
the truth. They arc guilty not because
of ignorance but because of denying
Allah's Revelation deliberately.
قُلْ يَا أَيُّهَا الَّذِينَ هَادُوا إِنْ
زَعَمْتُمْ أَنَّكُمْ أَوْلِيَاءُ لِلَّهِ
مِنْ دُونِ النَّاسِ فَتَمَنَّوُا
الْمَوْتَ إِنْ كُنْتُمْ صَادِقِينَ
﴿62:6﴾
(62:6) Tell them: “O you who have become
Judaised, *10
if you arrogantly fancy that you are
Allah’s favourites *11
to the exclusion of all people, then
wish for death, if you are truthful in
your claim.” *12
*10 This point is noteworthy. It has not
been said: "O Jews". but "O you who have
became Jcws, or who have adopted
Judaism", the reason being that the way
of life brought by the Prophet Moses
(peace be on him) and the Prophets after
and before him, was Islam itself. None
of those Prophets was a Jew, nor bad
judaism been born in their time, but
Judaism as such came into being much
later. It is ascribed to the tribe which
descended from Judah, the fourth son of
the Prophet Jacob (peace be upon him).
When after the Prophet Solomon (peace be
upon him 1 his kingdom broke into two
parts, this tribe became ruler over the
state which came to be known as Judaea.
The other tribes of the Israelites
established their separate state which
became famous as Samaria. Then Assyria
not only destroyed Samaria but also
wiped out those Israelite tribes which
had founded that state. After that only
the decedents of Judah besides those of
Benjamin remained. Who because of the
predominance of the descendents of
Judah, began to be called the "Jcws" .
Judaism is the name of the framework of
the doctrines, customs, and religious
rules and regulations which the priests,
rabbis and Iearned men'of this race
prepared according to their own ideas,
theories and trends for many centuries.
This framework started being shaped in
the 4th century B.C. and continued to
develop till the 5th century A.D. It
contains a very small element of the
Divine guidance brought by the
Messengers of AIIah, and even that
element has been corrupted That is why
at many places in the Qur'an they have
been addressed as alladhina hadu "O you
who have become Jews". AII of these were
not the Israelites but there were among
them also converts who had embraced
.ludaism. .Whenever in the Qur'an the
children of Israel have been addressed,
the words «sad are: "O children of
Israel", and where the followers of
Judaism have been addressed, the words
are; alladhina hadu "O you who have
become Jews" .
*11 At several places in the Qur'an
their claim has been described in
detail, as in AI Baqarah: 111: "They
say: none shall enter Paradise unless he
be a Jew', in AI-Baqarah: 80: "The fire
of Hell is not going to touch us, and
even if it does at aII, it will be only
for a few days', and in AI-Ma'idah: 18:
"We are the sons of AIIah and His
beloved ones." Sane such claims arc also
found in the books of the Jews
themselves The world at least knows that
they regard there. selves as the chosen
people of God, and cherish the false
notion that Cod has a special
relationship with them, which is not
shared by any other human group or
class.
*12 This has been stated for the second
time in the Qur'an, addressing the .lews
First, in Al-Baqarah: 94-96, it was
said: "Say to them: If the abode of the
Hereafter with AIIah is exclusively
reserved for you and Trot for the rest
of mankind, then you should long for
death, if you are sincere in your claim.
Believe it that they will never wish for
it, for (they arc fully aware of) what
they have sent before them for the
Hereafter. And Allah knows well the
mentality of the transgressors. You will
find that of aII mankind, they are the
greediest for life; any they are even
greedier than the idolators. Each one of
them longs to have a life of a thousand
years, but a long life can by no means
remove them away from the Doom, for
AIIah is watching whatever they are
doing." Now the same thing has been
repeated here. But this is not a mere
repetition. In the verses of Al-Baqarah,
it was said when no war had yet take
place between the Muslims and the Jews.
In this Surah it was reiterated at the
time when after several battles their
power in Arabia had been finally and
absolutely, crushed. These battles and
their results proved by experience and
observation that what had been said in
AI-Baqarah was correct. In Madinah and
Khaiber the Jewish strength was much
superior to that of the Muslims both in
numbers and in resources. Then they had
the pagans of Arabia and the hypocrites
of Madinah also as their allies who were
bent upon wiping out the Muslims. But in
spite of this great disparity in numbers
the Muslims overwhelmed the Jews mainly
because they were least afraid of dying
for the cause of Allah; they were rather
fond of it, and would enter the
battlefield fully prepared to embrace
death. For they believed that they were
fighting in the way of God and had
complete faith that the one who fell
martyr in His way would be blessed with
Paradise. Contrary to this, the Jews
were not prepared to fight and lay down
their life for any cause, neither the
cause of God, nor the cause of their
nation nor for their own self,
properties and honour. They only loved
to live, in whatever way or fashion it
be. T his had made them cowardly.
وَلَا يَتَمَنَّوْنَهُ أَبَدًا بِمَا
قَدَّمَتْ أَيْدِيهِمْ وَاللَّهُ عَلِيمٌ
بِالظَّالِمِينَ
﴿62:7﴾
(62:7) But they shall never wish for
death because of the (evil) deeds they
have committed. *13
Allah is well aware of these evil-doers.
*13 In other words, their Right from
death is not without a reason. Whatever
they may say, their consciences arc
fully aware of how they arc behaving
towards AIIah and His Religion and what
consequences can he expected of the
misdeeds they arc committing in the
world. That is why-they were afraid to
appear at the Court of God.
قُلْ إِنَّ الْمَوْتَ الَّذِي تَفِرُّونَ
مِنْهُ فَإِنَّهُ مُلَاقِيكُمْ ثُمَّ
تُرَدُّونَ إِلَى عَالِمِ الْغَيْبِ
وَالشَّهَادَةِ فَيُنَبِّئُكُمْ بِمَا
كُنْتُمْ تَعْمَلُونَ
﴿62:8﴾
(62:8) Tell them: “The death from which
you flee will certainly overtake you.
Then you will be returned to Him Who
fully knows what is hidden and what is
manifest. Thereupon He will let you know
all that you used to do.”
يَا أَيُّهَا الَّذِينَ آَمَنُوا إِذَا
نُودِيَ لِلصَّلَاةِ مِنْ يَوْمِ
الْجُمُعَةِ فَاسْعَوْا إِلَى ذِكْرِ
اللَّهِ وَذَرُوا الْبَيْعَ ذَلِكُمْ
خَيْرٌ لَكُمْ إِنْ كُنْتُمْ تَعْلَمُونَ
﴿62:9﴾
(62:9) Believers, when the call for
Prayer is made on Friday, *14
hasten to the remembrance of Allah and
give up all trading. *15
That is better for you, if you only
knew.
*14 Three things in this sentence are
particularly noteworthy: (1) That it
contains mention of the call to the
Prayer; (2) that the mention is of the
call to such a Prayer as has to be
performed particularly only on Fridays;
and (3) that these things have not been
mentioned so as to suggest that the call
is to be made for the Prayer and a
particular Prayer is to be performed on
Friday, but the style and context
clearly show that the call to the Prayer
and the particular Prayer were both
already being performed and practiced on
Friday. The people, however were being
negligent in that on hearing the call to
the Prayer they would not hasten to it
but would remain occupied in their
worldly activities and trade and
business transactions. Therefore, Allah
sent down this verse to make the people
realize and appreciate the importance of
the call and the Prayer and to exhort
them to hasten to perform it as a duty.
If these three things are considered
deeply, they prove this truth absolutely
that Allah conjoined on the Holy Prophet
(upon whom be peace) certain Commands
which were not revealed in the Qur'an,
and these Commands too wen as obligatory
as those revealed in the (Qur'iin
itself. The call to the Prayer is the
same adhan which is being called the
world over five times daily in every
mosque. But neither its words have been
stated anywhere in the Qur'an nor the
method of calling the people to the
Prayer has been taught. Its method was
prescribed by the Holy Prophet (upon
whom be peace). The Qur'an has only
confirmed it twice, here and in
AI-Ma'idah: 58. Like wise, this
particular Prayer of Friday, which the
Muslims of the whole world are
performing today has neither been
enjoined in the Qur'an nor its time and
method of performance described
anywhere. This me hod too was prescribed
by' the Holy Prophet (upon whom be
peace), and this verse of the Qur'an was
sent down only to stress its importance
and obligatory nature. In spite of this
express argument anyone who claims that
the Shari ah commandments are only those
which have been stated in the Qur'an, is
not in fact a denier of the Sunnah but
of the Qur'an itself.
Before proceeding further, Iet us
understand a few other things also about
Jumu-uh (the Friday congregational
Prayer):
(1) Jumu'ah is an Islamic term. In the
pre-Islamic days of ignorance the Arabs
called it the 'Arabah Day. In Islam when
it was declared as a congregational day
of the Muslims, it was re-named Jumu ah.
Although according to the historians,
Ka`b bin Luayy, or Qusayy bin Kilab,
also had used this name for this day,
for he used to hold an assembly of
Quraish on this day (Fath-al-Bati), yet
by this practice the ancient name did
not change, and the common Arabs
continued to call it the 'Arabah Day.
The real change took place when Islam
gave it this new name.
(2) Before Islam, setting aside of a day
in the week for worship and regarding it
as an emblem of the community was
prevalent among the followers of the
earlier scriptures. Among the Jews the
Sabbath (Saturday) had been fixed for
this purpose, because on this day Allah
had delivered the children of Israel
from the bondage of the Pharaoh. In
order to distinguish themselves from the
Jews the Christians took Sunday as their
distinctive emblem. Although it had
neither been enjoined by the Prophet
Jesus nor mentioned anywhere in the
Gospel, yet the Christians believe that
after his death on the Cross the Prophet
Jesus had risen from the grave on this
day and ascended to heaven. On this very
basis the later Christians ordained it
as the day of worship, and then in 321
A.D. the Roman Empire instituted it as a
holiday by decree. In order to
distinguish its community from both
these communities, Islam adopted Friday
as the day of collective worship as
against Saturday and Sunday.
(3) It is known from the tradition
reported by Hadrat 'Abdullah bin Mas'ud
and Hadrat Abu Mas'ud Ansari that the
Friday congregational Prayer had been
enjoined on the Holy Prophet (upon whom
be-peace some time) before the Hijrah in
Makkah itself. But at that time he could
not act on it, for in Makkah it was not
possible to. perform any worship
collectively. Therefore, he sent a
written instruction to the people who
had emigrated to Madinah before him that
they should establish the Friday
congregational Prayer there. Thus,
Hadrat Mus`ab bin `Umair, the leader of
the earliest emigrants, offered the
first Friday Prayer at Madinah with 12
followers. (Tabarani, Daraqutni). Hadrat
Ka`b bin Malik and Ibn Sirin have
reported that even before this the
Muslims of Madinah had decided mutually,
on their own initiative, that they would
hold a collective service on one day in
the week. For this purpose they had
selected Friday as against the Sabbath
of the Jews and Sunday of the
Christians, and the first Friday Prayer
was led by Hadrat Asad bin Zurarah at
the place of Bani Bayadah and 40 Muslims
participated in it. (Musnad Ahmad Abu
Da'ud, Ibn Majah, Ibn Hibban, `Abd bin
Humaid, 'Abdur Razzaq, Baihaqi). This
shows that the Islamic taste and trend
at that time was itself demanding that
there should be a day on which maximum
number of Muslims should gather together
and worship collectively. And this also
was a demand of the Islam itself that it
should be a day other than Saturday and
Sunday so that the symbol of the Muslim
community should be distinctive from the
emblems of the Jewish and the Christian
communities. This was a wonderful
manifestation of the Islamic trends and
tastes of the Holy Prophet's Companions
that many a time it so happened that
even before a thing was enjoined their
taste proclaimed that the spirit of
Islam demanded its introduction.
(4) The establishment of the Friday
congregational Prayer was one of the
earliest things that the Holy Prophet
(upon whom be peace) did after his
emigration to Madinah. After leaving
Makkah he reached Quba' on Monday and
stayed there for four days. On the fifth
day, which was a Friday, he preceeded to
Madinah. On the way at the place of Bani
Salim bin `Auf tim came for the Friday
Prayer and he performed the first Friday
congregational Prayer at this very
place. (Ibn Hisham).
(5) The time appointed by the Holy
Prophet (upon whom be Allah's peace) for
this Prayer was after the declining of
the sun, the same time which is for the
Zuhr Prayer. The written instruction
that he had sent to Hadrat Mus'ab bin
`Umair before the hijrah was: "Seek
nearness to Allah by means of two rakahs
of the Prayer when the sun declines
after midday on Friday. " (Daraqutni).
This same instruction he gave orally
after hijrah as well as practically led
the Friday Prayer at the same time.
Traditions on this Subject have been
related on the authority of Hadrat Anas,
Hadrat Salamah bin Akwa', Hadrat Zubair
bin al-`Awwam, Hadrat Sahl bin Sa'd,
Hadrat `Abdullah bin Mas`ud, Hadrat
`Ammar bin Yasr and Hadrat Bilal in the
collection of Hadith, saying that the
Holy Prophet used to perform the Friday
Prayer after the declining of the sun:
(Musnad Ahmad Bukhari, Muslim, Abu
Da'ud, Nasa'i, Tirmidhi).
(6) This also is confirmed by his
practice that on this day the Holy
Prophet led the Friday congregational
Prayer instead of the Zuhr Prayer, and
this Prayer consisted of two rak ahs and
he gave the Sermon before it. This was
the only difference between the Friday
Prayer and the Zuhr Prayer on other
days. Hadrat `Umar says: "According to
the command enjoined by the tongue of
your Prophet (upon whom be Allah's
peace) the traveller's Prayer consists
of two rak ahs, the Fajr Prayer consists
of two rakahs, and the Friday Prayer
consists of two rak ahs. This is the
complete, not the shortened, Prayer, and
the Friday Prayer has been shortened
only because of the Sermon."
(7) The call to the Prayer that has been
mentioned here, implies the call that is
made just before the Sermon. and not the
call that is made much before the Sermon
to announce that the prayer time has
begun. There is a tradition in the
Hadith from Hadrat Sa'ib bin Yazid to
the effect that in the time of the Holy
Prophet there used to be only one call
that was made after the Imam (leader in
Prayer) had taken his seat on the
pulpit. The same practice also continued
in the time of Hadrat Abu Bakr and
Hadrat 'Umar. When population increased
in the time of Hadrat 'Uthman, he
ordered another call to be made'in the
bazaar of Madinah at his house,
Az-Zaura'. (Bukhari, Abu Da'ud, Nasa'i,
Tabarani).
*15 In this Command "remembrance"
implies the Friday Sermon, for the first
thing that the Holy Prophet (upon whom
be peace) used to do after the call was
to deliver the Sermon, and the Prayer he
led always after delivering the Semnon
Hadrat Abu Hurairah has reported that
the Holy Prophet (upon whom be peace)
said: "The angels on Friday go on
writing down the names of the people as
they arrive. Then, when the Imam comes
out to deliver the Sermon,, they stop
writing the names and turn their
attention to the remembrance (i.e. the
Sermon)," (Musnad Ahmad, Bukhari,
Muslim, Abu Da'ud, Tirmidhi, Nasa'i).
This Hadith also shows that the
remembrance implies the Sermon. The
exhortation of the Qur'an itself points
to the same thing. First, it says:
"Hasten to the remembrance of AIIah";
then a little below it says: "Then, when
the Prayer is over, disperse in the
land. " This shows that on Friday the
order of the service is that first there
is the remembrance of Allah and then the
Prayer. The commentators are also agreed
that remembrance either implies the
Sermon, or the Sermon and the Prayer
both.
Using the word "dhikr-Allah " for the
Sermon by itself gives the meaning chat
it should contain themes relevant to the
remembrance of Allah; for instance,
praising and glorifying .Allah,
imploring Him to bless His Messenger,
exhorting and instructing the audience
to obey His Commands and follow His
Shari Ah, commending His pious and
righteous servants, etc. On this very
basis, Zamakhshari writes in al-kashshaf
'Praising the wicked and tyrannical
rules in the Friday Sermon, or
mentioning their names and praying for
them, has nothing to do with the
remembrance of AIIah; this would be the
remembrance of Satan.
Hasten to the remembrance of AIlah" does
not mean that one should come to the
mosque running, but it means that one
should make haste for it. The
commentators are also agreed on this
very meaning. "Hastening" according to
them means that on hearing the call one
should immediately start making.
preparations to attend the mosque. The
Hadith even forbids coming to the mosque
for the Prayer muting. Hadrat Abu
Hurairah has reported that the Holy
Prophet (upon whom be Allah's peace)
said: "When the Prayer has begun, one
should conic walking to it with calm and
dignity, and not running. Then, one
should join in whatever remains of the
Prayer, and should make up whatever one
has missed independently later. "
(Sihah; Sittah Hadrat Abu Qatadah Ansari
says: "Once we were offering the Prayer
under the leadership of the Holy Prophet
when suddenly we heard some people
coming to join the Prayer running. When
the Prayer was concluded, the Holy
Prophet asked: What was the noise about?
They replied; We came running for the
Prayer. The Holy Prophet said; Don't do
that: whenever you come for the Prayer,
come with calm and dignity. Join behind
the Imam in whatever remains of the
Prayer, and make up whatever you have
missed independently." (Bukhari, Muslim)
'Leave off your trading" also includes
every other worldly activity and
business which prevent one from getting
ready for the Prayer with full attention
and care. "Buying and selling" has been
particularly forbidden, for commerce
flourished on Fridays. People from the
surrounding areas gathered together at a
central place, the merchants also
arrived with their merchandise, and the
people became occupied in buying the
necessities of daily use The prohibition
however is not restricted only to buying
and selling, but it applies to all other
occupations as well. And since AIIah has
forbidden these, jurists of Islam are
agreed that after the call has been
sounded for the Friday Prayer aII forms
of trade, business and worldly
occupation become forbidden.
This Command absolutely confirms the
obligatory nature of the Friday Prayer.
In the first place, the exhortation to
hasten for it after one has heard the
call, is by itself a proof of its being
obligatory. Then, the prohibition of a
lawful thing like trade and business at
the time of the Prayer also shows that
it is obligatory in nauure Moreover, the
elimination of the obligatory Zuhr
Prayer on Friday and its being replaced
by the Friday Prayer, is a clear proof
that it is obligatory in nature. For an
obligatory duty becomes eliminated only
when the duty replacing it is more
important. This very thing has been
supported in many Hadiths, in which the
Holy Prophet (upon whom be Allah's
peace) exhorted the Muslims in most
emphatic words to attend the Friday
Prayer and has declared it in clear
words to be obligatory. Hadrat 'Abdullah
bin Mas'ud has reported that the Holy
Prophet said: 'I feel I should ask
somebody to stand in my place to Iced
the Prayer, and I myself should go and
set fire to the houses of the people who
do not come for the Prayer. " (Musnad
Ahmad, Bukhari). Hadrat Abu Hurairah,
Hadrat 'Abdullah bin 'Abbas and Hadrat
'Abdullah bin 'Umar say: "We heard the
Holy Prophet say this ' in the Friday
Sermon, The people should refrain from
giving up the Friday Prayer; otherwise
Allah will seal up hearts and they will
become totally heedless." (Musnad Ahmad,
Muslim, Nasa'i). From the traditions
reported by Hadrat Abu al-Ja'd Damri,
Hadrat Jabir bin 'Abdullah and Hadrat
'Abdullah bin Abi Aufa from the Holy
Prophet one comes to know that AIIah
seals «p the heart of the person who
abandons three Friday Prayers, one after
the other, without a genuine reason and
lawful excuse. Rather in one tradition
the words arc to the effect: "AIIah
turns the heart of such a one into the
heart of a hypocrite." (Musnad Ahmad,
Abu Da'ud, Nasa`i, Tirmidhi Ibn Majah
Darimi, Hakim, Ibn Hibban, Bazzar,
Tabarani in al-Kabir. Hadrat Jabir bin
'Abdullah says that the Holy Prophet
said: "From today till Resurrection the
Friday Prayer is obligatory on you.
AIlah will neither bless nor set right
the condition of the one who abandons it
disregarding it or considering it an
ordinary thing. Note it well: the Prayer
of such a one will be no, prayer at all,
his zakat will be no zakat at aII, his
Hajj no Hajj, his fasting no fasting,
and no good done by him will be good,
until he repents. Then, for the one who
repents, AIlah is Most Forgiving." (Ibn
Majah, Bazzar). Another tradition, which
is very close in meaning to this, has
been cited by Tabarani in Auset from Ibn
'Umar, Furthemore there arc many
traditions in which the Holy Prophet has
declared the Friday Prayer as obligatory
in clear words. Hadrat 'Abdullah bin
'Amr bin al-'As has related that the
Holy Prophet said: 'The Friday Prayer is
obligatory on cvcry person who hears the
call to it." (Abu Da'ud Daraqutni).
Jabir bin 'Abdullah and Abu Sa'id Khudri
say that he said in a Sermon: "Know that
Allah has enjoined the Friday Prayer as
a duty on you (Baihaqi). However, He has
exempted the women, children, slaves,
the sick and the travellers from this
duty. Hadrat Hafsah has reported that
the Holy Prophet said: "Attendance at
the Friday Prayer is obligatory on cvcry
adult male." (Nasa'i). Hadrat Tariq bin
Shihab's tradition contains this saying
of the Holy Prophet: "The Friday
congregational Prayer is obligatory on
every Muslim except the slave, women,
children and the sick." (Abu Da'ud,
Hakim). In the tradition of Hadrat Jabir
bin 'Abdullah, his words arc to the
effect: "Friday Prayer is obligatory on
the person who believes in AIlah and the
Last Day unless it is a woman, or a
traveller, or a slave, or a sick man."
(Daraqutni, Baihaqi). On account of
these very exhortations of the Qur'an
and the Hadith. the entire Ummah is
agreed that the Friday congregational
Prayer is of obligatory nature.
فَإِذَا قُضِيَتِ الصَّلَاةُ
فَانْتَشِرُوا فِي الْأَرْضِ وَابْتَغُوا
مِنْ فَضْلِ اللَّهِ وَاذْكُرُوا اللَّهَ
كَثِيرًا لَعَلَّكُمْ تُفْلِحُونَ
﴿62:10﴾
(62:10) But when the Prayer is ended,
disperse in the land and seek Allah’s
Bounty, *16
and remember Allah much *17
so that you may prosper. *18
*16 "This does not mean that after the
Friday is over, it is obligatory to go
in search of livelihood. but it only
implies permission. As it was ordered to
stop aII worldly business as soon as the
call was made for the Prayer, so it is
allowed that after the Prayer is over,
the people may dispose and resume or
pursue whatever occupation or business
they may like. It is just like the
prohibition of hunting in the state of
ihram, but after ihram is put off, one
is told to hunt. (AI-Ma'idah: 2). That
does not mean that one must hunt, but
that one may hunt if one so likes. Or,
for instance. in Surah An-Nisa',
permission to marry more than one wife
has been given, saying: "Marry two or
three or four women whom you 'choose. "
Here, although the verb is in the
imperative mood, no one has taken it in
the meaning of a command This gives the
principle that the imperative form of
the verb does not always imply an
obligation or command it sometimes
implies the permission and sometimes
exercise of choice or preference. The
context determines where it implies the
command, where the permission and where
Allah's approval of the act, and not
that the act is obligatory. Immediately
after this very sentence itself, it has
been said: "And remember Allah much. "
Here also the verb is in the imperative
mood, but obviously it implies exercise
of one's choice and not that it is a
duty or compulsion. Here, another thing
worthy of mention is that although in
the Qur'an Friday has not been declared
a public holiday like the Jewish Sabbath
and the Christian Sunday, yet no one can
deny that Friday is a symbol of the
Muslim community precisely in the carne
way as Saturday is a Jewish and Sunday a
Christian symbol. And if declaring a day
in the week a public holiday be a
cultural necessity, then just as the
lews naturally select Saturday for it
and the Christians Sunday, so a Muslim
(if he has any Islamic feeling) will
necessarily select only Friday for this
purpose. The Christians did not even
hesitate to impose their Sunday on some
other countries where Christian
population was negligible. When the Jews
established their state in Palestine,
the first thing they did was to announce
Saturday as the weekly holiday instead
of Sunday. In prepartitioned India one
conspicuous distinction between British
India and the Muslim states was that in
one part of the country Sunday was
observed as a closed holiday and in the
other Friday. However, where the Muslims
lack Islamic values, they hold w Sunday
even after attaining to sovereign power
as we see in Pakistan. In case of
excessive westernization Friday is
replaced by Sunday as the weekly holiday
as was done by Mustafa Kamal in Turkey.
*17 "Remember Allah much": "Do not
forget Allah even when you arc otherwise
occupied; but remember Him under alI
circumstances and remain conscious of
Him at ail times." (For explanation, see
E.N. 63 of Surah Al-Ahzab)
*18 At several places in the Qur'an,
after giving an-instruction or an
admonition, or a command words to the
effect: perhaps, you achieve success" or
'perhaps you may be shown mercy" have
been used. The use of 'perhaps" on such
occasions dces not mean that AIIah, God
forbid, is entertaining a doubt, but it
is in fact a royal style of address. It
is just like a kindly master's giving
out hope to his servants to continue
doing their best so that they may
achieve and win the desired goal and
reward, It contains a subtle promise
which fills the servant with hope and he
carries out his duties and obligations
with enthusiasm.'
As the Commands pertaining to the Friday
congergational prayer come to an end
here, it would be useful to give a
resume of the injunctions that the four
schools of juristic thought have derived
from the Qur'an, the Hadih, traditions
of the Companions of the Holy Prophet
and the general principles of Islam.
According to the Hanafi school of
thought, the time for the Friday Prayer
is the same as for Zuhr Prayer. The
Friday Prayer can neither be held before
it nor after it. Business and trade
become forbidden with the first call to
the Prayer and not with the second call
which is made after the Imam has taken
his place on the pulpit, for the words
of the Qur'an in this regard are
explicit and definite. Therefore,
whichever call is made for the Friday
Prayer after the declining of the sun
when the Prayer time begins, the people
should stop conducting business on
hearing it. However, if a person has
made a bargain at that time, it will not
be void, but will only be a sin. The
Friday Prayer cannot be held in every
settlement but only in the misr Jami
which has been defined as a large town
or city, where there arc market places,
adequate security arrangements, and
which has large enough population so
that if alI the people upon whom
attendance at the Friday Prayer is
obligatory, gather together, they should
be too many for the principal mosque to
hold. The people who live outside the
city will have to offer the Prayer in
the city only in case the call to the
Prayer reaches them, or if they live
within six miles of the city. The Prayer
may not necessarily be held in the
mosque; it may also be held in the open
field and also on a ground which is
outside the city but a part of it. The
Friday Prayer can be validly held only
in a place where any and every person
may come to attend it without any
hindrance. It will not be valid if it is
held in a restricted place where every
person is not allowed to join in no
matter how many people may gather
together. For the Prayer to be valid
there should at least be three men
(according to Imam Abu Hanifah beside
the Imam, or two men including the Imam
(according to Imams Abu Yusuf and
Mohammed), upon whom it is obligatory to
attend the Friday Prayer. A person will
be exempt from the Prayer if he is on a
journey, or is so ill that he cannot
walk to attend it, or is disabled of
both the legs, or is blind (but
according to Imam Abu Yusuf and Imam
Muhammad, a blind person will be exempt
from the Prayer duty only in case he
dces not find a man who can take him
along for the Prayer), or he apprehends
a danger to he life and honour, or an
unbearable financial loss from a tyrant,
or It is raining heavily and there is
slush and rainwater on the way, or he is
a. prisoner, For the prisoner and the
disabled, it is undesirable that they
should perform the Zuhr Prayer on Friday
In congregation. For those also who have
missed the Friday Prayer it is
undesirable to perform the Zuhr Prayer
collectively, The sermon is one of the
pre-requisites of the Friday Prayer to
be valid, for the Holy Prophet (upon
whom be peace) never performed the
Friday Prayer without the Sermon; the
Sermon must necessarily precede the
prayer, and there should be two Sermons.
From the time the Imam steps towards the
pulpit for the sermon, every kind of
speech becomes forbidden till he brings
it to an end; no prayer may be performed
during it, whether one can hear the Imam
at the place where one is sitting or
not. (Hedayah, Al-Fath ul-Qadir;
al-Jassas: Ahkam al-Qur'an; AI-Fiqh
alai-Madhahib al-Arb'ah; 'Umdat
al-Qari).
According to the Shafe'is the time of
the Friday Prayer is the same as of the
Zuhr Prayer. Trade and business become
forbidden and hastening to the
remembrance of Allah becomes obligatory
from the time the second call is
sounded, i.e. the call which is sounded
after the Imam has taken his place on
the pulpit. However, if A person carries
out a transaction at this time, it does
not become void. The Friday Prayer can
be held in every such settlement among
the permanent residents of which there
are 40 such men upon whom it is
incumbent to perform the Prayer.
Attendance at the Friday Prayer is
obligatory for, those people of the
suburbs whom the call may reach The
Friday service must be held within the
bounds of the settlement, but it may not
necessarily be held in the mosque. Thus,
it is not obligatory for nomadic peoples
who live in tents, in the desert. For
the Prayer to be valid there should at
least be 40 such men including the Imam
in the congregation upon whom the Prayer
is incumbent. A person would be exempt
from the Prayer if he is on a journey,
or intends to stay at a place for four
or less than four days provided that the
journey is lawful, or he is old or sick
and cannot go to attend the Prayer even
by a conveyance, or is blind and does
not find a man . who can take him along
for the Prayer, or apprehends danger to
lift or property or honour, or is a
prisoner provided that this imprisonment
has not been caused by his own crime.
There should be two sermons before the
Prayer. Although it is according to the
Sunnah to sit quiet during the sermon,
yet speech is not forbidden. For the
person who is sitting close to the Imam
so that he can hear the sermon, speech
is disapproved, but he can respond to a
greeting, and can recite prayer on the
Holy Prophet (upon whom be Allah's
peace) aloud when he hears his name
being mentioned. (Mughni al-Muhtaj
Al-Fiqh alal-Madhahib al-Arb'ah).
According to the Malikis, 'the Friday
Prayer time begins from the declining of
the sun and lasts till such time in the
evening that the Sermon and the Prayer
can be concluded before sunset. Business
transactions become forbidden and
hastening becomes obligatory with the
second call. If a transaction takes
place after it, it would be void and
sinful. The Friday Prayer can be held in
the settlements, residents of which live
in permanent houses and do not migrate
in the summer or the winter, and whose
needs and requirements are met in the
same settlements, and who can defend
themselves on the basis of their
strength. In temporary dwelling places
the Friday 'Prayer cannot be established
even though many people may be staying
there and staying for long periods.
Attendance at the Prayer is obligatory
for the people who live within- three
miles of the settlement where the Prayer
is held. The Prayer can be held only in
the mosque, which is inside the
settlement or adjoining it, and the
building of which is not inferior to the
houses of the common residents of the
place. Some Malikis have also imposed
the condition that the mosque should be
roofed, and arrangements for offering
collective Prayer five times daily
should also exist in it However, the
better known view of the Malikis is that
for the Prayer to be valid the mosque's
being roofed is no pre-requisite. The
Friday Prayer can also be held in a
mosque which has been built only for the
Friday Prayer and no arrangements exist
in it for the five daily Prayers. For
the Prayer to be valid there must at
least be 12 other men, apart from the
Imam, in the congregation upon whom the
Friday Prayer is incumbent. A person
would be exempt from it if he is on a
journey, or intends to stay for Less
than four days at a place during the
journey, or is so ill that he cannot
come to the mosque, or has an ailing
mother or father, or wife, or child, or
he is nursing a stranger who has nobody
else to nurs him, or has a close
relative who is seriously ill, or at the
point of death, or apprehends an
unbearable loss to property, or a danE
to his life or honor, or is hiding from
fear of imprisonment, or punishment,
provided that he is a wronged and
oppressed person, or it is raining
heavily and there is slush and rainwater
on the way, or the weather is oppressive
due to excessive heat or cold. The
Prayer has to be preceded by two
Sermons; so much so that if the Sermon
is given after the Prayer, the Prayer
has to be repeated, and the Sermons must
necessarily be delivered inside the
mosque. It is forbidden to offer a
voluntary Prayer after the Imam has
stepped towards the pulpit, land to talk
when the Sermon has begun, even if one
is not hearing it, However, if the Imam
indulges in meaningless and absurd
things in the Sermon, or uses abusive
language for a person who does not
deserve it, or starts praising a, person
for whom praise is unlawful, or starts
reciting something irrelevant to the
Sermon, the people have the right to
protest. Furthermore, it is
reprehensible that a prayer be made in
the Sermon for the temporal ruler,
unless the Imam apprehends danger to his
life. The Imam must necessarily be the
same person who leads the Prayer; if
another person than the one who gave the
Sermon led the Prayer it would be void.
(Hashiyah ad-Dusuqi ila-sh-Sharh
al-Kabir,' Ibn 'Arabi, .4hkam al-Qur an;
Al-Fiqh alal-Madhahib al-'Arb ah).
According to the Hanbalis, the Friday
Prayer time begins when the sun has
risen about a spear's length high and
lasts till the beginning of the 'Asr
Prayer time in the afternoon, but
performing the Prayer before the
declining of the sun is just permissible
but after it obligatory and meritorious.
Business transactions become forbidden
and hastening to the Prayer becomes
obligatory with the second call, A
transaction contracted after it has no
effect in the law. The Prayer can be
held only at a place where 40 men on
whom the Friday Prayer is incumbent have
permanently settled in houses (and not
in tents) and are not nomadic tribesmen.
For this purpose, it will not make any
difference if the houses of the
settlement or its different parts are
scattered or compact; if their
combination is called by ane name, it
will be one settlement even if its
different parts are miles apart.
Attendance at the Prayer will be
obligatory for the people who live
within three miles of the settlement.
The congregation should consist of 40
men including the Imam. The Prayer may
not necessarily be performed in the
mosque; it may be performed in the open
as well. A person will be exempt from it
if he is on a journey and intend to stay
in the settlement for four or less than
four days, or is so iII that he cannot
come to the mosque even by a conveyance,
or is blind unless he can grope his way
to the mosque; (it is not obligatory for
the blind man to come for the Prayer
with another man's help), or he is
prevented by extreme weather or heavy
rain or slush and rainwater, or he is
hiding to escape persecution or
apprehends danger to life or honour, or
fears an unbearable financial loss, The
Prayer should be preceded by two
Sermons. The person who is sitting so
close to the Imam that he can hear him,
is forbidden speech; however, the one
sitting far away, who cannot hear the
Sermon, can speak. The people have to
sit quiet during the Sermon whether the
person delivering the Sermon is a just
man or an unjust man. If 'Id falls on a
Friday, the people who have performed
the `Id Prayer will be exempt from the
Friday Prayer. In this matter, the
viewpoint of the Hanbalis is different
from that of the other three Imams.
(Ghayat al-Muntaha; AI-Fiqh
alal-Madhahib al-Arb ah),
All jurists are agreed that if the
person upon whom the Friday Prayer is
not incumbent, joins in the Prayer, his
Prayer would be valid, and he would be
absolved from the Zuhr Prayer.
وَإِذَا رَأَوْا تِجَارَةً أَوْ لَهْوًا
انْفَضُّوا إِلَيْهَا وَتَرَكُوكَ
قَائِمًا قُلْ مَا عِنْدَ اللَّهِ خَيْرٌ
مِنَ اللَّهْوِ وَمِنَ التِّجَارَةِ
وَاللَّهُ خَيْرُ الرَّازِقِينَ
﴿62:11﴾
(62:11) Yet no sooner than they saw some
trading or amusement, they flocked to it
and left you standing by yourself. *19
Tell them: “That which is with Allah is
far better than amusement and trading. *20
Allah is the Best Provider of
sustenance.” *21
*19 This is the incident because of
which the commandments pertaining to the
Friday congregational Prayer have been
enjoined in the preceding verses. Its
narrative as related in the collections
of Hadith, on the authority of Hadrat
Jabir bin 'Abdullah, Hadrat 'Abdullah
bin `Abbas, Hadrat Abu Hurairah, Hadrat
Abu Malik, and Hasan Basri, lbn Zaid,
Qatadah and Muqatil bin Hayyan is as
follows: A trade caravan from Syria
arrived in Madinah right at the time of
the Friday Prayer and its people started
playing their drums to announce their
arrival. The Holy Prophet (upon whom be
Allah's peace) at that time was
delivering the Sermon, Hearing the drum
the people in the congregation became
impatient and rushed out towards Baqi
where the caravan had halted, except for
12 men. The most authentic tradition in
this narrative is of Hadrat Jabir bin
'Abdullah, which has been related by
Imam Ahmad, Bukhari, Muslim, Tirmidhi,
Abu 'Uwanah, 'Abd bin Humaid, Abu Ya'la
and others through reliable channels.
The only diversity is that in some
traditions it is stated that the
incident took place when the Prayer was
in progress; in others that it happened
when the Holy Prophet was delivering the
Sermon. However, what appears to be
correct when the tradition of Hadrat
Jabir and those of others are read
together is that it happened during the
Sermon. Where Hadrat Jabir says that it
happened during the Friday Prayer, he in
fact has used the word Friday Prayer for
the combination of the Sermon and the
Prayer. According to the tradition of
Hadrat 'Abdullah bin 'Abbas, seven women
had remained behind with 12 men. (Ibn
Marduyah). Qatadah says that one woman
remained with 12 men, (lbn Jarir, Ibn
Abi Hatim). According to the tradition
of Daraqutni 40 individuals remmained,
of `Abd bin Humaid 7 individuals and of
Farra 8 individuals. But all these are
weak traditions. The tradition of
Qatadah that sack a thing happened
thrice is also weak. (Ibn Jarir) The
authentic tradition in this regard is of
Hadrat Jabir, according to which the
number of those who remained behind is
stated to be 12. Apart from one
tradition of Qatadah, all traditions of
the other Companions and their followers
agree that this happened only once. When
read together different traditions about
those who remained behind show that they
included Hadrat Abu Bakr, Hadrat 'Umar,
Hadrat 'Uthman, Hadrat 'AIi, Hadrat
'Abdullah bin Mas'ud, Hadrat 'Ammar bin
Yasir, Hadrat Salim (slave of Hudhaifah)
and Hadrat Jabir bin 'Abdullah. The
tradition related by Hafiz Abu Ya`la
from Hadrat Jabir bin 'Abdullah says
that when the people rushed out like
that and only 12 Companions were left
behind, the Holy Prophet addressed them,
saying: "By Him in Whose hand is my
life, if aII of you had left, and none
had remained behind, this valley would
have overflowed with fire. " A theme
resembling this has been cited by Ibn
Marduyah from Hadrat 'Abdullah bin
'Abbas and by Ibn Jarir from Qatadah.
The Shiite scholars have used this
incident also for taunting and finding
fault with the Companions. They say that
abandoning the Sermon and the Prayer by
such a large number of the Companions
for the sake of worldly gain and
amusement is a proof that they preferred
the world to the Hereafter. But this is
a misplaced objection that can be raised
only if one keeps ones eyes closed to
realities. As a matter of fact, this
incident took place just after the
migration. At that time, on the one
hand, the collective training of the
Companions was in the initial stages,
and on the other, the disbelievers of
Makkah had subjected the people of
Madinah to a strict economic blockade
because of which necessities of lift had
become scarce in the city. Hadrat Hasan
Basri says that the people at time were
starving and the prices had risen
abnormally high. (Ibn Jarir). Under such
conditions when a trade caravan arrived,
the people rushed out to buy things of
daily need lest these were sold out
before the Prayer was concluded. This
was a weakness and error which became
suddenly manifest due to insufficient
training and severity of the conditions.
But whoever sees the sacrifices made by
the Companions for the cause of Islam
afterwards and sees what piety and
righteousness they displayed in the
matter of worship and dedication and
dealings can never dare bring against
them the allegation that they preferred
the world to the Hereafter unless he
himself bears malice against the
Companions.
However, just as this incident dces not
support the critics of the Canpanions of
the Holy Prophet, so it also dces not
support the ideas of those people who
cherish exaggerated notions about them
and claim that they never committed any
error, or if they committed some, it
should not be mentioned, for making
mention of their error and' calling it
an error is derogatory and it reduces
one's reverence and respect for them,
and its mention goes against the verses
of the Qur'an and the Hadith, which
state that the Companions arc Allah's
favourite people and have already been
forgiven all their errors and mistakes.
AlI this is exaggeration for which there
is no basis in the Qur'an and he
,Hadith. Here, everyone can see for
himself that AIlah Himself has mentioned
the error that happened to have been
committed by a large number of the
Companions, in the Book that will be
read by the entire Ummah till
Resurrection, and in the same Book which
speaks of their having been forgiven and
being chosen people of AIIah. Then in
the books of the Hadith and Commentary
also details of this error have been
described by aII scholars, from the
Companions to the major scholars among
the followers of the Sunnah. Does it
mean that AIIah has made this mention in
order to destroy the reverence for the
same Companions whose reverence and
esteem He wants to instil in alI our
hearts? And dces it mean that the
Companions and their followers and the
traditionists and commentators have
mentioned these details of this incident
because they were unaware of the
religious aspect of the matter which
these zealots show and describe? And
have the people who read Surah AI-Jumu
'ah and study its commentary really lost
reverence and esteem for the Canpanions
from their hearts? If the answer to each
of these questions is in the negative,
and it is surely in the negative, then
all those exaggerated ideas and notions,
which some people express and show in
regard to the reverence of the Holy
Prophet's Companions, arc erroneous.
The truth is that the Companions of the
Holy Prophet were not supernormal
beings: they were only human born in
this very world. Whatever they attained,
they attained through the persistent
training imparted by the Holy Prophet
`upon whom be Allah's peace) over many
years. The method of this training as ve
learn from the Qur'an and the Hadith
was; Whenever a weakness appeared in
them, Allah and His Messenger turned
immediate attention to it, and a
programme of education and training was
established to overcome and eradicate
it. In the matter of this very Friday
Prayer we see that when the incident of
the trade caravan occurred, Allah sent
down this section of the verses of Surah
AI-Jumu'ah to administer warning and
teach the etiquette of the Friday
Service. Along with this the Holy
Prophet (upon whom be Allah's peace)
impressed on the people the importance
of the obligatory nature of the Service
continuously in his Sermons as explained
in E.N. 15 above. All these instructions
are found in the Hadith in clear words.
Hadrat Abu Sa'id Khudri says that the
Holy Prophet said: "Every Muslim must
have full bath on Friday, should clean
his teeth, put on the best available
clothes, and use perfume if possible."
(Musnad Ahmad Bukhari, Muslim, Abu
Da'ud, Nasa'i). Hadrat Salman Farsi says
that the Holy Prophet said: "The Muslim
who has bath on Friday, cleans and
purifies himself as far as possible,
applies oil to his hair, or uses perfume
if available, and comes to the mosque
and takes his place without disturbing
others, then offers the (voluntary)
Prayer that Allah has destined for him,
then listens quietly when the Imam
speaks, he will have his sins and errors
committed since the previous Friday
forgiven. " (Bukhari, Musnad Ahmad).
Traditions containing almost the same
theme have been reported by Hadrat Abu
Ayub An'ati, Hadrat Abu Hurairah and
Hadrat Nubaishat alHudhali also from the
Holy Prophet. (Musnad Ahmad, Bukhari,
Muslim, Abu Da'ud, Tirmidhi Tabarani).
Hadrat 'Abdullah bin 'Abbas says that
the Holy Prophet said: "The person who
speaks when the Imam is delivering the
sermon, is like the donkey loaded with
books, and the person who tells him to
keep quiet has also rendered his own
Prayer void. " (Musnad Ahmad Hadrat Abu
Huraira'. says that the Holy Prophet
said: "If on Friday during the sermon
you said to a person, 'keep quiet,' you
too behaved wrong." (Bukhari, Muslim,
Nasa'i, Tirmidhi, Abu Da'ud). Traditions
closely resembling this have been
related by Imam Ahmad Abu Da'ud and
Tabarani from Hadrat `Ali and Hadrat Abu
ad-Darda'. To the person delivering the
sermon also the Holy Prophet instructed
that he should not deliver a lengthy
sermon to try the people's patience. His
own practice on Friday was that he gave
brief Sermons and Ied short Prayers.
Hadrat Jabir bin Samurah says that the
Holy Prophet would never give a lengthy
Sermon: he was always very brief." (Abu
Da'ud). Hadrat 'Abdullah bin Abi Aufa
says: "The Holy Prophet's sermon used to
be shorter than the Prayer, and the
Prayer a little longer than the sermon."
(Nasa'i), According to Hadrat Ammar bin
Yasir, the Holy Prophet said: "The
prolongation of the Prayer and the
brevity of the sermon are a sign that
the Imam has deep insight in religion"
(Musnad Ahmad, Muslim Almost the same
theme has Bazzar related from Hadrat
'Abdullah bin Mas'ud. AII this shows how
the Holy Prophet taught the people the
etiquette of the Friday congregational
Service till it began w be performed in
the unique manner unknown in the
congregational worstup of any other
people in the world.
*20 This sentence by itself shows what
was the nature of the error committed by
the Companions. God forbid, if it had
been duc to any weakness of the faith,
or duc to giving the world preference
over the Hereafter, Allah's wrath and
displeasure and reprimand would have
been much severer. But since there was
no such weakness, and whatever happened
was only due to insufficient training,
AIIah first taught the people the
coquette of the Friday Service, then,
after pointing out the error, promised
them that the reward they would get with
_ AIIah for listening to the Sermon and
performing the Prayer would be much
greater than worldly gains and
amusements.
*21 That is, "Allah is by far the best
of aII those providers who become a
means of providing sustenance in the
world, though only metaphorically."
Sentences such as this have occurred at
several places in the Qur'an, At some
places AIIah has been called "the best
of Creators," at others "the best of
Forgivers", "the best of Rulers", "the
best of those who show mercy", or "the
best of Helpers". At aII these places
the reference of providing, creating,
forgiving, showing mercy and offering
help to the creatures is metaphorical,
and to AIIah real. It means that Allah
is the best Provider, Creator, Forgiver,
Helper and Bestower of Mercy of all
those who appear to be giving you wages
and means of sustenance, or who appear
to be making things by their skill and
workmanship, or who seem to be pardoning
the errors of others, or showing mercy
and helping other in this world.