STOP
- Forbidden Limits
Al-Jumu'ah
Magazine, Vol. 11 Issue 4
Whatever I
forbid you,
then avoid it,
and whatever I enjoined,
then perform of it
what you can.
[Muslim]
The
forbidden things are the limits set by Allah: "These are the
limits set by Allah so approach them not." [2:187] Allah indeed
has threatened whoever transgresses these limits and violates them
when He said, "And whosoever disobeys Allah and His Messenger and
transgresses His limits, He will cast him into the Fire, to abide
therein, and he shall have a disgraceful torment." [4:14]
Avoiding
what is forbidden is an obligation because the Prophet, sallallahu
alayhi wasallam, said, "Whatever I forbid you, then avoid it, and
whatever I enjoined, then perform of it what you can." (Muslim)
What is often observed is that when one of those who follow their
temptations and lack knowledge, hears of the things forbidden being
enumerated, he gets upset and complains, saying: "Everything is
forbidden, you did not leave a thing but made it forbidden, you made
our life impossible, you are oppressing us, you have nothing but what
is forbidden and disliked. The deen is easy and the matter is widely
interpreted, and Allah is Oft-Forgiving, Oft-Pardoning." To
answer these people we say:
Allah
judges what He wills, there is none to put back His judgment and He is
the All-Knower, the All-Aware of things, therefore He makes lawful
whatever He wills and He forbids whatever He wills. It is the essence
of our worship to Allah to accept what He ruled and to submit
completely. His laws originate from His Knowledge, His Wisdom and His
Justice, "And the Word of your Lord has been fulfilled in truth
and in justice. None can change His Words. And He is the All-Hearer,
the All-Knower." [6:115]
Allah
the Almighty has made clear to us the criterion upon which is decided
the lawful and the unlawful, when He says, "For He commands them
what is good and forbids them what is evil." [7:157] Therefore
what is good is lawful and what is evil is unlawful. Deciding what is
permitted and what is forbidden is Allah's right and His Alone, and
whoever claims it is his right or another person's right beside Allah
is a Kafir (disbeliever) and has committed a major Kufr, such
disbelief that takes him out of the Islamic creed, "Or have they
partners with Allah, who have instituted for them a religion which
Allah has not allowed?" [42:21]
Besides,
it is not permitted for anyone to talk about what is lawful and what
is unlawful except for the people of knowledge who are well acquainted
with the Qur'an and the Sunnah. Those who decide what is lawful and
what is not without any knowledge have been greatly warned by Allah,
"And say not that which your tongues put forth falsely: 'This is
lawful and this is forbidden,' so as to invent lies against
Allah..." [16:116] The unquestionably forbidden things are
mentioned in the Qur'an and in the Sunnah, such as in the following
verse: "Say (O Muhammad): Come, I will recite what your Lord has
prohibited you from: join not anything in worship with Him; be good
and dutiful to your parents; kill not your children because of
poverty..." [6:151] Likewise, numerous prohibitions were
mentioned in the Sunnah, such as what the Prophet, sallallahu alayhe
wasallam, said: "Verily, Allah has forbidden selling wine, dead
animals, the flesh of swine, and idols' statues." (Abu Dawud) And
he also said: "Verily, when Allah forbids one thing He also
forbids its value [i.e., selling it]" (Ad-Daraqutni)
Some
texts may mention the prohibition concerning a certain type such as
what is mentioned in the Qur'an concerning food, "Forbidden to
you are the dead animals (not slaughtered), blood, the flesh of swine,
and the meat of that which has been slaughtered as a sacrifice for
others than Allah, or has been slaughtered for idols etc., or on which
Allah's Name has not been mentioned while slaughtering, and that which
has been killed by strangling or by a violent blow, or by a headlong
fall, or by the goring of horns, and that which has been partly eaten
by a wild animal -unless you are able to slaughter it before its
death, and that which is sacrificed on stone altars." [5:3]
Another example is what Allah mentioned concerning marriage:
"Forbidden to you (for marriage) are your mothers, your
daughters, your sisters, your father's sisters, your mother's sisters,
your brother's daughters, your sister's daughters, your foster mother
who gave you suck, your foster milk-suckling sisters, your wives'
mothers..." [4:23] Allah ta ala also mentioned what is prohibited
to earn, saying: "Whereas Allah has permitted trading and
forbidden usury..." [2:275]
Allah
Who is Merciful to His servants, has made lawful to us innumerable
good things, we can not even imagine their diversity. For this reason
He did not mention them in detail because they are so numerous and can
not be counted, however, He mentioned in details the prohibited things
because their number is limited, and so that we can recognize them and
therefore avoid them, as He said: "He has explained to you in
detail what is forbidden to you, except under compulsion of
necessity..." [6:119]. As for what is allowed, Allah has made it
lawful in general as long as it is good in itself for He said: "O
mankind! Eat of that which is lawful and good on the earth."
[2:168] And so it is out of His Mercy that He made permissible for us
all things in general, until they are proven unlawful, and this is out
of Allah's Generosity subhanahu wa taala. It is therefore our duty to
obey and be thankful.
Some
people are unable to observe the correct manners of speech when they
hear what is forbidden being enumerated to them. This is a sign of
their weak faith and their lack of knowledge of the Shariah. Do these
people want what is permitted to them being enumerated instead, so
that they become convinced that the Deen is in reality easy? And do
they want all the types of good and lawful things be counted to them,
so that they are reassured that the Shariah is really not making their
life miserable?
Do
they want it be said that the meat of slaughtered camels, beef, sheep,
rabbits, deer, ibex, chicken, pigeons, ducks, geese, and ostriches is
lawful, and also the dead, not slaughtered locusts and fish are
lawful?
And
that the vegetables, the legumes, the fruits, and all the cereals and
all other fruits that are eatable are lawful.
And
that water, milk, honey, oil, and vinegar are lawful. And that salt
and spices are lawful. And
that the use of wood, steel, sand, stones, plastic, glass and rubber
is lawful. And
that riding beasts, cars, trains, ships, and airplanes is lawful.
And
that the use of air conditioners, refrigerators, washing machines,
drying machines, mixers, beaters, juicers, grinders, all the medical,
engineering, computing, and building instruments and machines, and all
the instruments used in meteorology, astronomy, water exploitation,
oil and mineral exploitation, and their refinement, and computers,
printers, and calculators is lawful.
And
that wearing cotton, wool, fur, animal hides, nylons, and polyesters
is lawful.
And
that in general marriage, trade, bail, exchange, hiring, professions
and crafts including carpentry, iron working, machine repairing and
shepherding are lawful.
Is
it possible, I wonder, that we exhaustively account for all what is
lawful? So what has come to these people that they fail to understand
a simple fact?
As
for their argument that the Deen is intended to be easy, it is a
truthful statement, which they have misinterpreted and used for the
wrong purpose, for the meaning of easiness in this Deen is not
according the wishes and ideas of people, but according to what the
Shariah came down with, and so there is a great difference between
trespassing what is forbidden under the false argument that the Deen
was intended to be easy -and no doubt it is- and using certain lawful
permissions such as combining and shortening salahs and breaking the
fast during travel, combining two salahs for the sick person and when
it is raining, eating unslaughtered animals under compulsion of
necessity, and other special permissions the Shariah allowed.
In
addition, the Muslim should know that there is a wisdom behind the
prohibitions. That Allah tests His servants with these prohibitions
and so He sees how they behave. What distinguishes the dwellers of
Paradise from the dwellers of Hell Fire is that the later immersed
themselves in the temptations which were surrounding Hell, and the
dwellers of Paradise were patiently bearing the hardship and
calamities which were surrounding Paradise. Were it not for this test
those who disobeyed would not be discerned from those who obeyed.
Those who believe look at the hardship in anticipation of the reward
and as a way of obeying Allah's order to earn His pleasure, and so the
hardship becomes bearable. The hypocrites look at the hardship with
the fear of pain and deprivation, and so the burden on them is heavy,
and the obedience is hard.
By abandoning what is forbidden, the obedient
believer tastes a certain sweetness: Whoever abstains from a thing for
the sake of Allah, then Allah will compensate him with what is better,
and he will experience the sweetness of belief in his heart.
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