|
Testimony of Faith
The first pillar of Islam is to believe and declare the
faith by saying the Shahadah ('witness'), known as the Kalimah.
La ilaha ila Allah; Muhammadur-rasul Allah. 'There is
no god but Allah; Muhammad is the Messenger of Allah.'
The meaning is better understood in English as saying that there is no
deity worthy of worship throughout the creation, only the Creator is
worth of any worship.
Or as we say: "Worship the Creator - Not His
Creations."
DECLARATION
This declaration contains two parts. The first part
refers to God Almighty, the Creator of everything, the Lord of the
Worlds; the second part refers to the Messenger, Muhammad (pbuh) a
prophet and a human being, who received the revelation through the
Archangel Gabriel, and taught it to mankind.
Not Other gods
By sincerely uttering the Shahadah the Muslim
acknowledges Allah as the sole Creator of all, and the Supreme
Authority over everything and everyone in the universe. Consequently
the Muslim closes his/her heart and mind to loyalty, devotion and
obedience to, trust in, reliance on, and worship of anything or anyone
other than Allah. This rejection is not confined merely to pagan gods
and goddesses of wood and stone and created by human hands and
imaginations; this rejection must extend to all other conceptions,
superstitions, ideologies, ways of life, and authority figures that
claim supreme devotion, loyalty, trust, love, obedience or worship.
This entails, for example, the rejection of belief in such common
things as astrology, palm reading, good luck charms, fortune-telling
and psychic readings, in addition to praying at shrines or graves of
"saints", asking the dead souls to intercede for them with Allah.
There are no intercessors in Islam, nor any class of clergy as such; a
Muslim prays directly and exclusively to Allah.
Belief in Prophet hood
Belief in the prophet hood of Muhammad (pbuh) entails
belief in the guidance brought by him and contained in his Sunnah
(traditions of his sayings and actions), and demands of the Muslim the
intention to follow his guidance faithfully. Muhammad (pbuh) was also
a human being, a man with feelings and emotions, who ate, drank and
slept, and was born and died, like other men. He had a pure and
upright nature, extraordinary righteousness, and an unwavering faith
in Allah and commitment to Islam, but he was not divine. Muslims do
not pray to him, not even as an intercessor.
Go top ^
|