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Do you know the story of Tha’labah?





He was a young companion of Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him). Prophet Muhammad sent him on an errand. When he finished his work, and on his way back, he looks at something haram.





He looked for a little while and then he turned away. He felt so bad about what he did that he refused to go back to the Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him) fearing that Allah would have sent down a verse from the Quran about him saying that he’s among the hypocrites.





So he stayed there.





Prophet Muhammad looked for him, but he couldn’t find him. So he sent out Abu Bakr and Umar. They kept searching for him for days, even weeks. They found a shepherd and they asked him about a young boy with his features.





He said:





“Are you asking me about the crying boy? We hear him crying up there in the hills every night.”





They waited for him. And the shepherd said he comes down and drinks some milk from my goats just to survive.





When he came down, he was withered, pale and sick. When he saw Abu Bakr and Umar, he tried to run away, but they caught him and said that Prophet Muhammad wanted him.





He was so afraid that he said:





“Why? Has Allah mentioned me among the hypocrites?”





They said:





“We don’t know.”





Think Well of Allah





When they brought him, Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him) asked:







What is wrong oh Tha’labah?







He said:





“Did Allah mention me among the hypocrites?”





Prophet Muhammad said:







No.







He said:





“Alhamdulillah.”





He said:







O Tha’labah, what do you hope for?







He said:





“I hope for Allah’s mercy.”





He said:







Then what do you fear?







He said:





“I fear Allah’s anger and wrath.”





He said:







Why don’t you turn to Allah’s mercy and forgiveness more than what you are turning to fear now? You will find that Allah in the way you assume of Him.







So, he did so. He repented to Allah and asked for His forgiveness. Because he was so pale and sick, Prophet Muhammad was visiting him. He said:





“I feel like my body has a million ants crawling upon it.”





Prophet Muhammad said:







This is death. You’re dying o Tha’labah.







Tha’labah died beside Prophet Muhammad with his last hope, being the hope of Allah’s mercy and forgiveness.





Turn now to Allah with your heart and with your mind. Reanalyze your intentions; fix the contract which you have between you and Allah; keep everyone out of your mind and focus on you and your Lord. And think of Allah in a good way, you will find Allah this way in the hereafter.







Prophet companion forgiveness Repentance crying companion





About Bilal Assad





Bilal Assad was born in Williamstown, Melbourne, Australia. He started his Islamic studies at a very early age and acquired his Shariah knowledge in Lebanon; and continued tertiary education in Bio-Medical Science in Australia. Bilal has been offering his service to the community for many years and has been working with the Islamic Society of Victoria for over ten years.





Sickness – The Most Powerful Way Allah Removes Sins





Of the blessings of those who fall sick is that sickness is one of the strongest and most powerful antidotes to the sins that we commit. There is hardly anything that will expiate our sins that is more powerful than trials and afflictions that befall us.





Allah says:







And whatever strikes you of disaster – it is for what your hands have earned; but He pardons much.



(Quran 42:30)




Every sickness and calamity that happens: a death of a loved one, a loss of a relative, financial economic, distress physical hardship, a fever, any type of pain and suffering.





Read Also: Don’t Let Calamity Shake You: A Story of Dealing with Trials





Sickness – A Blessing in Disguise





Once the Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him) visited a sick person who was suffering from fever, he said:







I have good news for you. For verily My Lord has told me that fever is my punishment that I inflict upon my believers so that they don’t have to be punished in the hell.







This is a punishment that Allah inflicts so that you are saved from the punishment of the next life. so in fact, it is a blessing in disguise.





And once the Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him) visited a female companion, Umm Sa’ib. She was also suffering from fever; she was tossing and turning. When Prophet Muhammad asked her:







 What is the matter?







 She said:





 “I have a severe fever may Allah curse it!”





 The Prophet (peace be upon him) said:







 Do not curse the fever, for verily it forgives sins like a furnace gets rid of the impurities in iron.



(Muslim)




 When you put an iron into the furnace, it is full of impurities; when you take it out, it is 100% pure. So, the Prophet (peace be upon him) compared the fever to a furnace, and this is a very good comparison because both are burning.





And in another hadith he said:







 It will get rid of your sins like a tree in the fall. When you shake it all, the leaves come down. So too will the sickness get rid of your sins.







Every Calamity is for your Good





 This is something that applies to every single calamity and misfortune. So much so, the Prophet (peace be upon him) said:







 Even if a thorn pricks one of you, it will expiate some of your sins.



(Al-Bukhari and Muslim)




 And in a famous hadith, he said:







Amazing are the affairs of the believers, because everything that happens to him happens for his good. If some good happens and he’s happy, he thanks Allah, and so that’s good for him. And if some bad happens, then he is patient, and Allah rewards him for that patience.



(Al-Bukhari and Muslim)




The believer is always a winner, he is never a loser. No matter what calamity befalls the believer, he will always come out on the upper hand having won over because he has Allah on his side. And when you have Allah on your side, you don’t care what is happening in the rest of humanity.





 We don’t wish to be sick, we don’t wish for a calamity, but every one of us will fall sick and will face calamities. When it happens, then we rise up to the challenge, we renew our Iman in Allah, and we humble and submit ourselves to Him. And through all of this, we appreciate the blessings even in falling sick and in having the calamity that we have had.





Shirk – Discover the Most Serious Sin in Islam





In my formative years as a Christian, I was taught that some of the biggest sins were having intercourse before marriage, abortion, and… Well, I really can’t remember being told that anything else was a serious sin.





Disclaimer: This may be my own fault. I was never a good student as a child. This is in no way a comment on the Christian mores nor is it a statement about the religious education I was afforded.





Sure, I was taught the Ten Commandments. But, to me at least, most of those guidelines were not really set in stone (pun intended). To me, it was as if God was making polite and meek suggestions for people who lived thousands of years ago. And if you didn’t follow God’s rules, you would run the risk of hurting God’s feelings.





And in much the same way I thought of the Ten Commandments as mild-mannered suggestions for people who lived in the stone ages; I also thought that they were randomly thrown together in no particular order.





I was wrong on all accounts.





When I came to Islam, I learned, firstly, that God wasn’t joking about the laws He set forth for humankind in those ten laws. God was, in fact, firmly telling us to stay away from this stuff, otherwise… There are clear and obvious consequences.





I also learned that we don’t hurt God when we don’t follow His rules. We in fact hurt ourselves, and that God has created everything in such a way that when we do evil we will reap evil, even if it isn’t immediate.





Furthermore, I realized that the Ten Commandments were in a very particular order with the first being the most important:





“You shall have no other gods before Me”.





But what is the First Commandment talking about?





What is Shirk?





In Islamic terms, the command to have no other god is a firm injunction on us to steer clear of shirk.





Shirk, in English, is something you do. “To shirk” is to avoid or refuse a duty or responsibility. And to me this is the root of what shirk means. What could be a bigger way “to shirk” a responsibility than “to shirk” the responsibility to put God before all others?





Shirk in Arabic means ascribing or establishing “partners” above or beside God. In this way, Islamic belief goes one step further with monotheism, and doesn’t just say to have no false god above God, but to have no God next to, near, in association with, or in the vicinity of the one true God.





There is no duty more basic, more essential than the duty to not associate or put anything above God. Allah is our originator, the One who created, continues to create, and provides for all that is in existence. All other duties, even our responsibilities to each other and the rest of creation, come from this one major responsibility to the Creator.





And what could be simpler than a responsibility to NOT do something?





Most responsibilities involve action. Taking out the trash. Raising your children. Going to work to make a living. These are all examples of responsibilities that take effort.





How can we go out of our way to not do something?





We have to take action “to shirk”. It’s a responsibility that requires nothing more than remaining in our natural state of believing in our Creator.





Tawheed





As Muslims, most of us feel pretty safe from shirk because we hold tawheed as an important principle in our lives. It is, after all, the first step to becoming a Muslim. And shirk is the one thing that scholars agree voids faith and one’s Islam. But often shirk creeps into our lives in unassuming ways.





Sometimes we attach our hearts to people and things too much; we forget that they are just a part of God’s creation. As I stated before, not giving God His rights doesn’t hurt Him, it hurts us.





Shirk Destroys in this Life





With all the misdirection in my youth, I began searching for something to fill the void in my life that should on be filled with Tawheed. I was looking for something I felt missing, something to shape my identity, to anchor my life. And I clung to different things that seemed to fit the bill.





First it was popularity.





I thought that gaining the love and admiration of others was my purpose and my ultimate goal. I filled my life with making the right friends and playing the role of the cool kid. But I found that people are fickle when it comes to affection for others. Putting people and popularity in the place that God should be made me realize people are flawed and they will fail you.





So, in the place of love and affection from all, I decided that fitness or fashion would make me feel fulfilled. I obsessed, caused damage to my body; I spent all my money, and become very insecure. Finally, I realized I would never be able to attain physical perfection. And even if I could, it would never last. Putting appearance in a position only meant for God made me realize how temporary everything in this life is.





Read Also: Filling the Void Within Me





Going from one false god to the next, I started to feel like the little bird looking for its mother in all the wrong animals. I was lost and broken. But, Alhamdulillah, God guided me back to Him. And because of the memory of all the pain shirk caused in my life, I remain vigilant in avoiding it.





We were not created to be a slave to anything other than the one true God, the most merciful, the One who







…is not ever unjust to [His] servants (Quran 22:10).






And nothing will fill God’s place.





After bouncing from false god to false god, the following hadith rings true to me:







Whoever possesses the (following) three qualities will have the sweetness of faith (1): The one to whom Allah and His Apostle becomes dearer than anything else; (2) Who loves a person and he loves him only for Allah’s Sake; (3) who hates to revert to atheism (disbelief) as he hates to be thrown into the Fire (Al-Bukhari)







And I understand why the sin of shirk is really a big deal not just in the hereafter, but also in this life.





Even as a Muslim I don’t feel safe from shirk. I know that even the halal can be put in an unhealthy place in my life.





One thing we can all do to protect ourselves from this major issue is recite this du’a the Prophet taught us:







“Allaahumma innee a‛oodhu bika an ushrika bika wa ana a‛lamu, wa astaghfiruka li maa laa a‛lam:





O Allah, I seek refuge with You lest I should commit shirk with You knowingly and I seek Your forgiveness for what I do unknowingly.” (Ahmad)





 







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