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THE PROPHET OF UNIVERSAL MERCY
The
beginning of existence was an act of mercy and compassion Without mercy the universe would
be in chaos. Everything has come into existence through compassion and by compassion it
continues to exist in harmony.
Muslim
sages say: The universe is the breath of the All-Compassionate One. That is,
the universe was created as a manifestation of Gods Name, the All-Compassionate. Its
subsistence depends on the same Name. This Name manifests itself, first of all, as the
All-Provider so as to secure the subsistence or survival of living creatures through food
or nourishment. Besides, life is the foremost and most manifest blessing of God Almighty,
and the true and everlasting life is the life of the Hereafter. Since man can deserve this
life by acting in a way to please God, God sent Prophets and revealed Scriptures out of
His compassion for mankind. For this reason, while mentioning His blessings upon mankind
in the sura al-Rahman (the All-Merciful) in the Quran, He begins:
Al-Rahman
(the All-Merciful). He taught the Quran. He created man. He taught him speech.
(al-Rahman, 55.1-4)
All
aspects of this life are a rehearsal for the afterlife and every creature is engaged in
action to this end. In every effort order is evident and in every achievement compassion
resides. Some natural events or social convulsions in the human order which
seem to man disagreeable at first sight should not be regarded as incompatible with
compassion. They are like dark clouds or lightning and thunder, which, although
frightening for man, bring us good tidings of rain. Thus, the whole universe, from
minutest particles to gigantic galaxies, sings the praises of the All-Compassionate.
Muhammad (pbuh) is the embodiment of Divine mercy
The
universe is, in the language of Muslim sages, Gods created book issued
from His Attribute of Will. To write a book which no one could understand would be an
exertion in vain and God is absolutely beyond such futility. So, He created Muhammad, upon
him be peace and blessings, one who would instruct people in the meaning of the universe.
Second, He taught man His Commandments through Muhammad in the Quran. Only by acting
in accordance with these Commandments can man gain an eternal life of happiness. The
Quran is the ultimate and most comprehensive form of Divine Revelation, Islam is the
last, perfected and universal form of Divine Religions, and the Prophet Muhammad, upon him
be peace and blessings, is the embodiment of Divine Compassion, one whom God sent not save
as a mercy for all the worlds.
The
Prophet Muhammad, upon him be peace and blessings, is like a spring of pure water in the
heart of a desert, or like a source of light in the darkness enveloping the universe.
Whoever appeals to this spring can take as much water as to quench his thirst and is
purified of all his dirt or pollution, spiritual or intellectual, and illumined with the
light of belief.
Mercy was
a like a magical key in the hands of Gods Messenger, upon him be peace and
blessings. He opened with this key the doors of the hearts so hardened and rusty as one
thought it was impossible to open them, and lighted a torch of belief in them.
Islam
is the religion of universal mercy
Gods
Messenger preached Islam, the religion of universal mercy. Despite this, some so-called
champions of humanism accuse Islam of being a religion of the
sword. However, this is a sheer deception. They seem to wail over an animal killed
in some part of the world or raise their voices whenever one from them is harmed, but they
do not bat an eyelid when Muslims are massacred. Their world is built on personal
interest. It should be pointed out that the abuse of the feeling of compassion is as
harmful and sometimes more harmful than being devoid of compassion altogether.
The
amputation of a gangrenous limb is an act of compassion to the rest of the whole body.
Likewise, oxygen and hydrogen, mixed in the proper ratios, form one of the most vital of
substances. However, when this ratio changes, each element resumes its original
combustible identity. It is likewise of great importance to apportion the amount of
compassion and to identify who deserves it. Compassion for a wolf sharpens its
appetite, and not being content with what it receives, it demands even more.
Compassion for a rebel makes him more aggressive, encouraging him to offend against
others. Compassion rather requires that one should be prevented from doing wrong.
Gods Messenger says: Help your brother whether he be just or unjust. The Companions
asked: How shall we help our unjust brother? He replied: You help him by
preventing him from doing injustice. So, compassion also requires that those who take
pleasure in poisoning like a snake should either be deprived of their poison or prevented
from poisoning. Or else, the administration of the world will be left to
cobras.
The
compassion of Gods Messenger, upon him be peace and blessings, encompasses every
creature. Indeed, he was also an invincible commander and an able statesman. He knew that
to leave the world to blood-stained, blood-thirsty people would be tyranny of the most
terrible kind to all the oppressed and wronged people. His compassion therefore required
that lambs should be able to live in the utmost security against the attacks of wolves. He
desired, of course, the guidance of everyone. This was his greatest concern, as stated in
the Quran:
Yet it
may be, if they believe not in this Message, you will consume yourself, following after
them, with grief. (al-Kahf, 18.6)
But what
could he do for those who persisted in unbelief and actually waged war against him in
order to destroy him and his Message? He had to fight against his enemies out of his
universal compassion that encompasses every creature. It was because of this compassion
that when he was severely wounded in the battle of Uhud, he held his hands open towards
God and prayed: O God, forgive my people, for they do not know.
In Makka,
his people inflicted on him every kind of suffering eventually forcing him to emigrate to
Madina, and then waged on him war for five years. However, when he conquered Makka without
bloodshed in the twenty-first year of his Prophethood, he asked the Makkan unbelievers,
awaiting his decision about them: How do you expect me to treat you? They responded
unanimously: You are a noble one, the son of a noble one. He announced to them
his decision:
You may
go away! No reproach this day shall be on you; may God forgive you. He is the Most
Compassionate of the Compassionate.
The same
announcement was made by Sultan Mehmed, the Conqueror, to the defeated Byzantines, when he
conquered Istanbul, eight and a quarter centuries later. Such is the universal compassion
of Islam.
The Messengers compassion towards the believers
The
Messengers compassion towards the believers was of the utmost degree. The
Quran describes his compassion in the following verse:
There has
come to you a Messenger from among yourselves; grievous to him is your suffering; anxious
is he over you, full of concern for you, for the believers full of pity, compassionate.
(al-Tawba, 9.128)
He
lowered unto believers his wing of tenderness through mercy (al-Hijr, 15.88), and was the
guardian of believers and nearer to them than their selves (al-Ahzab, 33.6).
When one of his Companions died, he asked those present at the funeral whether that
Companion had left any unpaid debt. On learning that he had left a debt, he mentioned the
above quoted verse and announced:
I am his
guardian. Let the creditors appeal to me to collect their debt.
Even unbelievers benefit from Islam as a religion of mercy
The
compassion of Gods Messenger even encompassed hypocrites and unbelievers. Although
he recognized the hypocrites of his time, he never disclosed them so that they could enjoy
the rights of full citizenship to which their outward confession of faith and practice
entitled them. Since they lived among Muslims, their unbelief in eternal life after death
may have been reduced or changed to doubt, and therefore their fear of death and the pain
caused by the assertion of eternal non-existence after death might have been diminished.
As for unbelievers, God removed the collective destruction from them. He had eradicated
many peoples before. God says:
But God
would never chastise them while you were among them; God would never chastise them as they
begged forgiveness. (al-Anfal, 8.33)
This
verse refers not only to the unbelievers in the time of Gods Messenger, but also to
all those coming later. God will not destroy peoples altogether so long as people who
follow the Messenger, upon him be peace and blessings, continue to live in the world.
Besides, He has left the door of repentance open until the Last Day. Anyone
can accept Islam or beg Gods forgiveness, however sinful he is. For this reason, a
Muslims enmity towards unbelievers is, in fact, in the form of pitying them. When
Umar, the second Caliph, saw a priest of eighty years, he sat down and sobbed. When
asked why he was sobbing, he replied: God assigned him so long a life span, but he
has not been able to find the true path.
The Messenger sent as a mercy for all creation
Umar
was the disciple of Gods Messenger, who said:
I was not
sent as one to call down curses on people, but I was sent as a mercy.
He also
said:
I am
Muhammad, and Ahmad (praised one), and Muqaffi (the Last Prophet); and I am also Hashir
(the final Prophet in the presence of whom the dead will be resurrected); and the Prophet
of repentance (the Prophet for the cause of whom the door of repentance will
always remain open), and the Prophet of mercy.
The
archangel Gabriel also benefited from the mercy of the Quran, which was revealed to
Gods Messenger. Once he asked Gabriel whether he had any share in the mercy
contained in the Quran. Gabriel answered, Yes, O Gods Messenger,
and explained,
I had not
been certain about my end. However, when the verse (One) obeyed, and moreover, trustworthy
and secured (al-Takwir, 81.21) was revealed, I felt secure about my end.
When
Maiz was punished for fornication, one of the Companions reproached him saying:
He disclosed the sin he had committed secretly and died like a dog. Gods
Messenger frowned at him and said:
You have
backbitten your friend. His repentance and asking Gods pardon for his sin would be
enough for the forgiveness for all the sinners in the world.
The Messengers compassion toward children and his friends
Gods
Messenger was particularly compassionate towards children. When he saw a child crying, he
sat beside him or her and shared his or her feelings. He felt the pain of a mother for her
child more than the mother herself. Once he said:
I stand
in prayer and wish to prolong it. However, I hear the cry of a child and cut the prayer
short for the anxiety which the mother is feeling.
He took
children in his arms and hugged them. He was once hugging his beloved grandsons, Hasan and
Hussayn, when Aqra ibn Habis told him: I have got ten children. So far, I
havent kissed any of them.
Gods
Messenger responded:
The one
with no pity for others is not pitied.
According
to another version, he said:
What can
I do for you if God has removed from you the feeling of compassion?
Once, he
said:
Take pity
on those on earth so that those in the heavens should have pity on you.
Sad
ibn Ubada once became ill. Gods Messenger visited him in his house and, on
seeing his faithful Companion in a pitiful state, he was moved to tears. Then, he said:
God does
not punish because of tears, nor because of grief, but he punishes because of this, and he
pointed to his tongue.
When
Uthman ibn Madun died, he wept profusely. During the funeral, a woman
remarked: Uthman flew, like a bird, to Paradise. Even in that mournful
state, the Prophet did not lose his balance and corrected the woman:
How do
you know that he went to Paradise while even I do not know, and I am a Prophet?
Protector of the weak and oppressed
A member
of the clan of Banu Muqarrin beat his maidservant. The poor woman referred the matter to
Gods Messenger, upon him be peace and blessings, who sent for the master and said to
him: You have beaten her without any justifiable right. So, set her free. Setting a slave
free was far better for his or her master than being punished in the Hereafter because of
the slave.
Gods
Messenger, upon him be peace and blessings, always protected and supported, both prior to
and during his Prophethood, widows, orphans, the poor and disabled. When he returned home
in excitement from Mount Hira after the first Revelation, his wife, Khadija, told him:
I
hope you will be the Prophet of this Ummah, you always tell the truth, fulfil the trust,
support your relatives, help the poor and weak, and feed guests.
The
Messengers compassion also encompassed animals
His
compassion encompassed not only human beings, but also animals. We hear from him:
A
prostitute was guided to truth by God and ultimately went to Paradise because she gave
water to a poor dog dying of thirst, whilst another woman was condemned to the torments of
Hell because she left a cat to die of hunger.
Once on
return from a military campaign, a few Companions took away the chicks of a bird from
their nest to stroke them. The mother bird came back and, when it could not find its
chicks in the nest, it began to fly around screeching. When informed of the matter,
Gods Messenger became angry and ordered the chicks to be put back in the nest.
Once he
told his Companions that one of the previous Prophets was reproached by God because he set
on fire a nest of ants.
He was in
Mina when some of his Companions once attacked a snake to kill it. However, the snake
managed to escape. Watching this from afar, Gods Messenger remarked: It was saved
from your evil, as you were from its.
As
reported by Ibn Abbas, when Gods Messenger once saw a man sharpening his knife
directly before the sheep he would slaughter, he said to him: Do you desire to kill it
many times?
Abdullah
ibn Jafar narrates:
Gods
Messenger, upon him be peace and blessings, once went to a garden in Madina with a few of
his Companions. There was a very scrawny camel in a corner. On seeing Gods
Messenger, it began to shed tears. The Messenger went to the camel and, after staying
beside it for some time, severely warned the owner to feed the camel properly.
The love
and compassion of Gods Messenger for all kinds of creatures was not of the kind
claimed by todays humanists. He was sincere and balanced in his love and
compassion. He was more compassionate than any other person. He was a Prophet raised by
God, the Creator and Sustainer of all beings, for the guidance and happiness of conscious
beings mankind and jinn and the harmony of existence. So, he lived not for
himself but for others; he is a mercy for all the worlds.
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