The rulling on the one who abandons prayer
source: silsilat ul-ahādīth us-sahīha ~ the series of authentic narrations ~
hadīth no. 87
Hudhaifa bin al-Yamān said that the Messenger of Allāh ( صلى
الله عليه وسلم ) said: “Islām will be erased just as the decoration of
a garment is (worn out and) erased, until it will not be known
what is fasting, nor prayer, nor the rituals of Hajj, nor charity;
and the Book of Allāh, the Mighty and Majestic, (i.e., the
Qur’ān) will be taken away (from the mus-hafs[1] and breasts
of the people)[2] in one night such that not (even) an āyah
from it will remain on earth. And groups of people will remain –
the old people – saying: ‘We saw our forefathers upon this
statement: ‘lā ilāha illAllāh (none has the right to worshiped
but Allāh),’ so we also say it.’”
(Then), Silah bin Zufar said to Hudhaifa: ‘What will ‘lā ilāha
illAllāh’ benefit them when they don’t know what is prayer, nor
fasting, nor the rituals of Hajj, nor charity?’ Hudhaifa turned
away from him. Then (Silah) repeated it to (Hudhaifa) three
times, and every time Hudhaifa would turn away from him.
Then he turned toward him on the third time and said three
times: ‘O Silah! It will save them from the Fire.’”[3]
~*~*~*~
Shaykh al-Albāni comments:
“There is an important benefit of fiqh in the hadīth, which is
that bearing witness that lā ilāha illAllāh (none has the right to
be worshiped but Allāh) saves the one who says it (sincerely)
from dwelling forever in the Fire on the Day of Resurrection,
even if he didn’t use to perform any of the other pillars of Islām
at all, such as prayer and so on. And it is known that the
scholars have differed about the ruling on the one who
abandons the prayer especially while believing in its
legislation. So the majority was of the opinion that he has not
disbelieved by that, but rather disobeyed Allāh; and Ahmad –
in a report – was of the opinion that he has disbelieved, and
that he is to be killed due to apostasy, not as a prescribed
punishment. And it is has been authentically narrated from the
Companions that they did not consider leaving any of the
actions to be disbelief except the prayer; at-Tirmithī and al-
Hākim reported it.[4] And I believe that that which is correct is
the view of the majority, and that what was mentioned from
the Companions does not clearly state that they meant by
‘disbelief’ here to be the disbelief which will make its
possessor dwell forever in the Fire and for which it is not
possible that Allāh will forgive him. How can that be when this
is Hudhaifa bin al-Yamān – who is one of the foremost of
those Companions – responding to Silah bin Zufar, who was
about to understand the affair as Ahmad’s understanding of it.
So (Silah) said: ‘What will ‘lā ilāha illAllāh’ benefit them when
they don’t know what is prayer. . .,’ then Hudhaifa replied to
him after his turning away from him, saying three times: ‘O
Silah! It will save them from the Fire.’ Therefore, this is a clear
statement from Hudhaifa (radiAllāhu ʽanhu) that the one who
abandons the prayer is not a disbeliever [if he believes in its
legislation], but rather a Muslim who will be saved from
dwelling forever in the Fire on the Day of Resurrection. So be
mindful of this, for indeed you may not find it in other than this
place.”
~ asaheeha translations ~
haf [1] the actual plural word in Arabic for mus- is masāhif, i.e., copies of the Qur’ān
[2] this explanation and detail in the parentheses was mentioned by Shaykh ʽAbd ul-Muhsin
al-ʽAbbād in Sharh Sunan ibn Mājah, tape #293
[3] also refer to Sahīh ibn Mājah #3289
[4] Sahīh at-Tirmithī #2622
source: silsilat ul-hudā wa nnūr ~ the series of guidance and light ~ tape no.
81
Question #10: “What about the hadīth: ‘whoever abandons the
prayer has disbelieved’?”[1] Shaykh al-Albānī answers:
“This is not the first hadīth in which it is said that whoever
does such-and-such has disbelieved. You have the famous
hadīth ‘whoever swears by other than Allāh has
disbelieved,’[2] but we don’t say that whoever says ‘by the life
of my father’ has apostatized from his religion.[3] And you
know, for example, the hadīth of ʽUmar bin al-Khattāb in Sahīh
al-Bukhārī when the Messenger (of Allāh) ( (صلى الله عليه وسلم
heard him swearing by his father, so he ( صلى الله عليه وسلم ) said:
‘Don’t swear by your fathers; whoever of you swears, then let
him swear by Allāh or keep silent.’[4] And in the hadīth of
(ʽUmar’s) son ʽAbdullāh bin ʽUmar, he said that the Messenger
(of Allāh) ( صلى الله عليه وسلم ) said: ‘Whoever swears by other than
Allāh has associated partners with Him,’[5] and in another
narration, ‘he has disbelieved.’
So it is not necessary for the occurrence of the expression
‘whoever does such-and-such has disbelieved’ to mean that
he has disbelieved with the disbelief of apostasy. Rather, it
can have many meanings, such as for example: ‘he has
disbelieved’ can mean that he is close to disbelieving, that he
has disbelieved with the disbelief related to actions (i.e., minor
kufr), and such meanings that the people of knowledge were
obliged to (apply) in order to reconcile between the texts.
‘Whoever abandons the prayer has disbelieved.’ (But also) we
say, ‘whoever says lā ilāha illAllāh[6] (sincerely) will enter
Paradise;’[7] ‘whoever says laa ilāha illAllāh (sincerely), it will
benefit him some day,’[8] [9] as mentioned in the hadīth of al-
Bazzār and others. (Another hadīth mentions that) ‘whichever
slave runs away from his master has disbelieved.’[10] These
expressions are very numerous: ‘he has disbelieved, he has
disbelieved.’ And there isn’t any hadīth that is interpreted like
this upon its apparent meaning if it comes with the expression:
‘he has disbelieved.’ This hadīth – ‘whoever abandons the
prayer has disbelieved’ – is treated the same way as the other
narrations which share the saying ‘he has disbelieved’ with the
hadīth about prayer. So here, many interpretations can occur
for this text as for many (other) narrations. For example, ‘the
tale-carrier[11] will not enter Paradise,’[12] (but) does that
mean that he has disbelieved because of his tale-carrying?
The answer is: if he considers that to be permissible by his
heart, then Paradise has been forbidden for him. And if he
acknowledges the forbiddance of that, and admits that he is
wrong, a sinner and an evildoer, then his affair is with Allāh, as
He, the Mighty and Majestic, said: ‘Verily, Allāh forgives not
that partners should be set up with Him (in worship), but He
forgives except that (anything else) to whom He wills.’[13] So
abandoning the prayer is an action that leads its doer to die
upon other than īmān (faith) – and Allāh’s protection is sought.
And abandoning the prayer is from the characteristics of the
disbelievers who don’t pray and don’t give the zakāh
(obligatory charity). Hence, if the Muslim does not pray, he
has resembled the disbelievers. So his disbelief here is the
disbelief related to actions [as long as he believes in the
legislation of the prayer]. And the narrations which must be
explained (with regard to their true meanings) are very
numerous.
For instance, during the farewell pilgrimage, (the Prophet)
صلى الله عليه وسلم) ) ordered Jarīr bin ʽAbdillāh al-Bajalī to quiet the
people down and make them listen, and he ( (صلى الله عليه وسلم
said while addressing them: ‘Do not return to being
disbelievers after me by striking the necks of one another.’[14]
And he ( صلى الله عليه وسلم ) said: ‘Insulting a Muslim is
disobedience (to Allāh), and fighting him is disbelief.’[15] But if
a Muslim kills or fights another Muslim, has this (person)
apostatized from his religion? The answer is: no, because
Allāh said: {And if two parties or groups among the believers
fall to fighting, then make peace between them both. But if one
of them outrages against the other, then fight you (all) against
the one that which outrages till it complies with the Command
of Allāh}.[16] He considered each of the two groups – the one
outraging and the one being outraged – to be from the
believers, although the Messenger (of Allāh) said in the
previous hadīth that ‘insulting a Muslim is disobedience (to
Allāh) and fighting him is disbelief.’ So how is disbelief
interpreted here? It is minor disbelief; it is disbelief related to
actions. And the narrations about prayer – which declare that
the one who abandons the prayer has disbelieved – are also
(interpreted) likewise: either it is said that he is close to the
disbelief related to faith (i.e., major kufr), that he is close to
dying upon other than the religion of Islām, or (it is said) that
he has disbelieved with the disbelief related to actions. This
interpretation is necessary so that we don’t contradict the
narrations of the Messenger (of Allaah) ( صلى الله عليه وسلم ) with
one another.”
~ asaheeha translations ~
[1] Sahīh at-Tirmithī #2621
[2] Sahīh at-Tirmithī #1535
[3] swearing by other than Allāh can become major disbelief when the one swearing believes
that the one whom he falsely swears by has the ability to avert harm from him and the like;
refer to The Methodology of the Saved Sect by Shaykh Muhammad bin Jamīl Zaynū, p. 101
[4] Sahīh an-Nasā’ī #3775, Sahīh aj-Jāmiʽ #1923
[5] Sahīh at-Tirmithī #1535
[6] none has the right to be worshiped but Allāh
[7] Silsilat ul-Ahādīth is-Sahīha #2355
[8] i.e., even if he first enters the Fire to be punished therein
[9] Sahīh aj-Jāmiʽ #6434
[10] Sahīh Muslim #68
[11] the tale-carrier is the one who spreads the speech of the people among one another with
the intention of causing corruption, such as you going to someone and saying: ‘such-andsuch
person insulted you, and he said such-and-such thing about you, etc’ so that you
separate between them; refer to Shaykh Muhammad bin Sālih al-ʽUthaymīn in Nūrun ʽalā
ddarb tape #48a and Silsilatu Liqā il-Bāb il-Maftūh tape #93a
[12] Sahīh al-Bukhārī #6056, Sahīh Muslim #105
[13] Sūrat un-Nisā, 4:48
[14] Sahīh al-Bukhārī #4405
[15] Sahīh al-Bukhārī #6044
[16] Sūrat ul-Hujurāt, 49:9
source: silsilat ul-hudā wa nnūr ~ the series of guidance and light ~ tape no.
323
*Question #23: “Our Shaykh, I am asking you about the issue
of proofs with regard to the ruling on the one who abandons
the prayer. In the treatise ‘The Ruling on the One who
Abandons Prayer’ by Shaykh Muhammad Saalih al-
’Uthaymeen, he is of the opinion that the one who abandons
the prayer is a disbeliever, and he has many proofs, such as
Allaah’s statement about the mushrikoon:[1] {But if they
repent, perform salaah (the prayer), and give zakaah
(obligatory charity), then they are your brethren in religion}.[2]
So he says that what is understood from the aayah is that if
they don’t do that, they are not our brethren; and the religious
brotherhood isn’t negated by sins even if they are great, but it
is negated when one leaves Islaam”
Shaykh al-Albānī (rahimahullaah) answers:
“Yet he is not saying that if the person prays but doesn’t give
the zakaah that he is (likewise) not a Muslim and that he has
disbelieved by that. May Allaah guide you, you are bringing his
proof but I would like to turn your attention to (the fact) that
there is no proof in it because he is not saying about the one
who abandons the zakaah the same as he is saying about the
one who abandons the prayer. You didn’t just narrate his
opinion, rather you narrated (both) his opinion and his proof,
but I would like to turn your attention to (the fact) that this is
not a proof for him, because the aayah includes zakaah along
with the prayer, [yet he is differentiating between the one who
abandons the former and the one who abandons the latter].”
*Question #23 (continued): “What is the ruling on this man
who has abandoned the prayer, not out of denying (its
legislation) but out of laziness? And what is the daleel
(evidence)?”
Shaykh al-Albānī answers:
“This (man) is one who is rebellious and disobedient (to
Allaah), and not a disbeliever. The daleel is that ‘Whoever
says laa ilaaha illAllaah[3] (sincerely) will enter Paradise,’[4]
and the daleel is that ‘Allaah has prescribed five prayers upon
(His) slaves, so whoever performs them and does them well,
and completes their rukoo’ (bowing), sujood (prostration) and
khushoo’ (submissive humility and attentiveness), then he has
a covenant with Allaah that He will enter him into Paradise,
and whoever does not perform them and does not complete
their rukoo’, sujood and khushoo’, then he does not have a
covenant with Allaah; If He wills, He will punish him and if He
wills, He will forgive him,’[5] and if he was a disbeliever, He
would not forgive him because Allaah says: ‘Verily, Allah
forgives not that partners should be set up with Him (in
worship), but He forgives except that (anything else) to whom
He wills.’”[6] [1] those who associate partners with Allaah
[2] Surat ut-Tawbah, 9:11
[3] none has the right to be worshiped but Allaah
[4] Silsilat ul-Ahaadeeth is-Saheeha #2355
[5] Saheeh ibn Maajah #1158, Saheeh at-Targheeb #400,
Hukm Taarik is-Salaah p. 46
[6] Surat un-Nisaa, 4:48