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Which Deed is the Best?
                                                               
http://members.tripod.com/~Suhayb/which-deed-best.html
                                                               
                                  All Praise is due to Allah, Lord of the Worlds, and 
Peace and Blessings
                                     be upon His Trustworthy Messenger, and upon all 
his Pure and
                                               Dignified Household and Companions.
  
                                                               
    Mankind yearns for success, accomplishment, prosperity and triumph. Thus, those 
with spiritually clouded hearts, which are fettered to the sensual
    gratifications of this worldly life relentlessly pursue their whims and lusts with 
a view to attaining their desired goal of material fulfillment. They are unmindful
    of their true purpose in life; without concern for the Hereafter.  
      
                                    "Nay, their hearts are in confused ignorance of 
this, and there are, 
                                      besides that, deeds of theirs which they will 
[continue] to do." 
                                                           [23:63] 

    Only those who acknowledge their Lord and who submit to Him absolutely will 
constantly strive to seek out those deeds which are of maximum utility, and
    most pleasing to the Creator.  
      
                                    "Blessed be He in whose Hand is dominion, and He 
has power over 
                                   all things. He who created life and death in order 
that He may try you
                                       [as to] which of you is best in deed. And He is 
the Mighty, 
                                                       the Oft-Forgiving."
                                                           [67:1-2] 

    Then, having identified such deeds, they will prove their sincerity by exerting 
themselves in the performance thereof.  

    Considering that human lifespan is limited, it is evident that every Muslim who is 
concerned with attaining the greatest possible benefits in the Hereafter
    should ascertain which deeds are the most virtuous. Yet, in times such as ours, 
such an individual is likely to be faced with a confusing fray of ideas and
    opinions. These times fit well the description by Shaykh Dahlawi, who noted that 
"energies are dwindled severely, souls are drenched in caprice, and
    each revels in his own opinion."  

    Thus, some Sufis maintain the greatest devotion is to remain engaged in spiritual 
exercises for the sake of purification of the soul; some academics will
    propose that seeking knowledge is the priority, while propagators will maintain 
that spreading the message of Islam is the most praiseworthy deed. Others
    view Jihad for the sake of Allah (Subhannah wa Ta'aala) to be the most superior 
deed. In such a situation, it becomes obligatory to refer the issue back
    to the Qur'an and authentic Sunnah for judgement, in obedience to the order of 
Allah, the Exalted, (Translation of the Meaning),  
      
                                    "Then, if you dispute concerning anything, refer 
it to Allah and the 
                                Messenger [for judgement], if indeed you believe in 
Allah and the Last Day. 
                                        That is best, and most suitable for final 
determination." 
                                                            [4:59] 
                                                               
                                                               
                                              Ahadeeth: Which deed is best?...
                                                               
    Abu Hurayrah (radiallaahu 'anhu) has reported that the Messenger of Allah 
(salallaahu 'alayhee wa sallam) was asked, "Which deed is best?" He said, 

      
                                               "Belief in Allah and His Messenger." 

    The man asked, "Then what [is the best after that]?" The Prophet (salallaahu 
'alayhee wa sallam) replied,  
      
                                                   "Jihad in the Path of Allah." 

    The man said, again, "Then what [is the next best]?" He replied,  
      
                                                      "An accepted hajj." 

    [Bukhari, vide Riyad as-Saliheen, # 1285]   

    Ibn 'Allan comments on this hadeeth,  

    "The Prophet (salallaahu 'alayhee wa sallam) was asked - the questioner being Abu 
Dharr as [mentioned] in "at- Tawsheeh" - 'which deed is best?'
    i.e. greatest in reward before Allah, the Exalted. He said, 'Belief in Allah and 
His Messenger': It is the deed of the heart, for it is affirmation of all
    that is necessarily known to have been brought by the Messenger, and the oral 
expression of [Faith] is a prerequisite for the application of
    ordinances [regarding social relations]. 't was asked, 'Then what?' He said, 
'Jihad in the path of Allah.'' ...   

    Perhaps this is with regard to the condition of the questioner, and that on 
account of the domination of the disbelievers at that time, performing
    [Jihad] was superior even to salaah, on account of its involving the setting up of 
Islam. Thus, it does not negate the hadeeth, "Your best deed is
    salaah;" nor the hadeeth of Ibn Mas`ud [who says],   

    'I asked the Messenger of Allah (salallaahu 'alayhee wa sallam), 'Which deed is 
best?' He replied, 'Salaah at it's [proper] times.' I asked, 'Then
    which?' He said, 'Then kindness to parents.' I said, 'Then which?' He (salallaahu 
'alayhee wa sallam) said, "Jihad in the Path of Allah.'' The
    hadeeth is narrated by the Two Shaykhs [i.e. Bukhari and Muslim].   

    The compiler [of Riyad as-Saliheen, i.e. Imam Nawawi] said,   

    'Here, [the Prophet (salallaahu 'alayhee wa sallam)] mentioned Jihad and hajj 
after faith, while in the hadeeth of Abu Dharr, [he mentioned]
    freeing a slave in place of hajj. In the hadeeth of Abu Musa, [he mentioned] 
safety [of others] from one's hand and tongue. In the hadeeth of Ibn
    Mas`ud, [he mentioned] salaah, then kindness [to parents], then Jihad. The 
scholars have said: The difference in the replies is on account of the
    variation of the circumstances and the need of those being addressed, [so that] he 
mentioned what the questioner did not know, and left out what he
    knew.'" [Daleel al-Faaliheen, vol 4, p. 77]   

    Nawawi (raheemahullaah) discusses the issue further in his commentary on Saheeh 
Muslim, where he says, after mentioning the different narrations of the
    hadeeth as above,  

    "And, it has been authenticated, in the hadeeth of 'Uthmaan (radiallaahu 'anhu), 
'The best of you is he who teaches the Qur'an and learns it,' and
    the like of these [ahadeeth] abound in the Saheeh. The scholars have differed 
regarding [the manner of] reconciliation between [the reports]. It
    has been mentioned that the dignified Imam, Abu 'Abdillah Al-Haleemy ash-Shafi'ee, 
reconciled them from two aspects    

    Firstly, that the difference in reply was according to the difference in 
situations and individuals, for one may say that such-and-such is the best
    thing, without meaning it is the best out of everything in all aspects and with 
regard to everyone in every circumstance. Rather [the statement is
    intended] for a particular situation, and thus forth. He supported this with 
[various] reports, among them that on the authority of Ibn 'Abbas
    (radiallaahu 'anhu), that the Messenger of Allah (salallaahu 'alayhee wa sallam) 
said, 'Hajj for one who has not performed hajj is better than
    forty battles, and a battle for one who has not fought is better than forty hajj.' 
Secondly, it is possible that what is meant [in the ahadeeth] is
    [that all these deeds] are among the best deeds... and another example of this is 
his saying (salallaahu 'alayhee wa sallam), 'The best of you is [he
    who is] the best to his wives,' where it is known that it is not referring to the 
best people in an absolute sense...  

    According to this second consideration, Faith is absolutely the best [deed], and 
the others are equal in their status of being among the best deeds...
    and then the excellence of some of them over others can be recognized by [other] 
evidences which indicate that... The author of  "At-Tahreer" [after
    dismissing this second argument, said,]   

    'The authentic [position] is that [the hadeeth which mentions Jihad after Faith] 
is attributed to Jihad in the time of advance of the army and a
    general call to arms, for at that time Jihad is obligatory on everyone (i.e. Fard 
'ayn), and if the situation is thus, then Jihad is more worthy of
    encouragement and priority than Hajj, on account of the general benefit for 
Muslims which Jihad entails.'" [Sharh Muslim, vol. 2, p. 77.]   

    From the analysis of these distinguished scholars, we may infer the following:  

    1) That the status of Jihad varies, and that it takes priority over hajj in a time 
of a General Call to Arms (i.e. When Jihad is Fard 'ayn). Indeed, it takes
    priority over all other devotions; Shaykh 'Abdullah 'Azzaam said, in [his Fatwa]; 
'Defense of the Muslim Lands - the most important individual
    obligation,'  

    "Qadi Ibn Rushd has reported agreement (of the jurists) on the fact that when 
Jihad becomes individually obligatory (Fard 'ayn), it is more
    important than going for the obligatory Hajj pilgrimage. This is because when 
Jihad becomes Fard 'ayn, it is urgent, while the Hajj may be
    performed at leisure."  

    He also says,  

    "Ibn Taymeeyah says,  

    'Considering the attacking enemy, who is corrupting the Religion and the world, 
there is nothing more obligatory after Faith than repelling
    him."[Al-Fatawa al-Kubra, vol. 4, p. 608.]   

    Thus, salaah is delayed and combined or its rak'at reduced, or its form altered in 
the presence of Jihad. It is reported in the Two Saheehs [that the
    Prophet (salallaahu 'alayhee wa sallam) said],   
      
                                    "May Allah fill their graves with fire as they 
occupied us from 
                                           the Middle Prayer until the sun 
disappeared." 

    [As well] the mujaahid breaks his fast in Ramadhaan, as has been narrated by 
Muslim."  

    2) That the ahadeeth in which the Prophet (salallaahu 'alayhee wa sallam) was 
asked about the best deed do not produce any definitive answer as to
    which deed is absolutely the best after Faith. For our purposes, therefore, we 
must look to further evidence. Every Muslim already possesses Faith, which
    is in fact a prerequisite for the acceptance of any other good deed, and thus he 
is interested in what deeds are best for him to do subsequent to his
    acceptance of Faith.  
      

      
                                        Explicit evidence establishing that Jihad is 
the 
                                                  highest ranked devotion

    Ibn Katheer (raheemahullaah) reports,  

    "Ibn 'Abbas said: 'People among the believers used to say, before Jihad became 
obligatory, 'We wish that Allah, the Mighty, the Majestic, would
    indicate to us the deeds which are most beloved to Him, in order that we might do 
them!' Then, Allah (Ta'aala) informed them that, without any doubt,
    the deed most beloved to Him is to believe in Him, and to wage Jihad against the 
disobedient ones who have disputed faith and have not accepted
    it.   

    Then, when [the obligation of] Jihad was revealed, some Muslim people disliked it, 
and were grieved by its ordainment, and so Allah, the Flawless,
    the Exalted, revealed, (Translation of the Meaning)  
      
                                     'O you who believe! Why do you say that which you 
do not do?...' 

    Muqatil ibn Hayyan said,   

    'So, Allah clarified to them [which is] the deed most beloved to Him, saying, 
(Translation of the Meaning),  
      
                                         'Allah loves those who fight in His Path, in 
ranks, as 
                                               if they were a cemented 
structure.''..." 
                                                  [Tafseer ibn Katheer, vol. 3, p. 
491] 

    On the authority of Mu'aadh (radiallaahu 'anhu):  

    The Prophet (salallaahu 'alayhee wa sallam) said,   
      
                                 "Shall I not inform you of the main part of the 
matter, its column and its 
                                   apex?" Mu'aadh said, "Yes, indeed [tell me]!" He 
(salallaahu 'alayhee 
                                    wa sallam) said, "The main part of it is Islam, 
its pillar is salaah, 
                                                     and its apex is Jihad." 
                                                [Tirmidhi - a fair, authentic hadeeth, 
vide 
                                                  Riyad as- Saliheen, vol. IV, p. 356 
of 
                                                       Daleel al-Faaliheen] 

    The apex of something is the highest part of it, like the peak of the camel's 
hump. This hadeeth therefore establishes that there is nothing higher, overall, than
    Jihad. The next hadeeth is still more explicit:  

    A man came to the Messenger of Allah (salallaahu 'alayhee wa sallam) and said, 
"Direct me to a deed which is equivalent to Jihad." The Prophet
    (salallaahu 'alayhee wa sallam) replied,  
      
                                                  "I do not find [such a deed]." 

    Then, [he (salallaahu 'alayhee wa sallam) went on and] said,  
      
                                      "Can you, when the mujaahid goes out, enter your 
place of 
                                         prayer, stand [in prayer] without cessation, 
and fast 
                                                  without breaking your fast?" 

    [The man] replied, "Who is able to do that!" [Bukhari]   

    On the authority of Abu Hurayrah (radiallaahu 'anhu): The Prophet (salallaahu 
'alayhee wa sallam) said,  
      
                               "The likeness of the mujaahid in the Path of Allah - 
and Allah knows best as 
                                 to who is performing Jihad in His Path - is the 
likeness of a perpetually 
                                   fasting and praying person who neither breaks his 
fast nor ceases 
                                                 giving charity, until he returns." 
                                              [Bukhari and Muslim, vide `Abdullah 
`Azzam, 
                                              "Ithaf al-`Ibaad fee Fadaa'il 
al-Jihaad", p. 80] 
                                                               


                                                               
                                              Which is better: Dhikr, or Jihad?

    The preceding discussion should have clarified many issues. Perhaps the only 
remaining contention against Jihad being the most excellent deed is the
    following hadeeth: On the authority of Abu Darda' (radiallaahu 'anhu): He said, 
the Messenger of Allah (salallaahu 'alayhee wa sallam) said,  
      
                             "Shall I not inform you of the best of your deeds, the 
purest of them before your 
                         Sovereign and the highest of them in rank, which is better 
for you than spending gold and 
                        silver [in charity], and better for you than for you to 
encounter your enemy and strike their 
                            necks?" They [the Sahaabah (radiallaahu 'anhum)] said, 
"Yes, indeed!" He (salallaahu 
                                    'alayhee wa sallam) said, "Remembrance of Allah, 
the Exalted." 
                                                  [Tirmidhi, vide Riyad as Saliheen] 

    Ibn 'Allan comments,  

    "Ibn 'Abdus Salam said, in his "Qawa`id,"   

    'This hadeeth indicates that reward is not based on the proportion of exertion in 
all acts of devotion. Rather, Allah, the Exalted, may reward
    [someone] more for little action than for a lot.'   

    'Aquli said, after mentioning Ibn 'Abdus Salam's preceding comment,   

    'It is possible that what is meant by remembrance of Allah, the Exalted is 
persistence upon it, internally and externally. In that case, it involves
    expending ones entire life therein, and there is no doubt that dhikr, if it is 
[performed] in this manner, it is greater in reward than spending [in
    charity] money which will become depleted, and [better, also, than] Jihad with 
which one will finish in a short time...'  

    [Ibn Hajar says,] in Fath al-Baaree,   

    'Reconciling [all relevant evidence] leads one to take this hadeeth and its like, 
which indicate that dhikr is superior to all other deeds, as referring
    to perfect dhikr, which is that which combines the remembrance of the tongue with 
the heart and [with] pondering over the meaning and bringing to
    mind the greatness of Allah, the Exalted. So, the person who achieves this is 
better than the mujaahid who fights the disbelievers without having this
    [level of remembrance]. The excellence of Jihad [over dhikr] is with regard to 
dhikr by the tongue only. So, he who combines all of these, such that
    he remembers Allah with his heart and his tongue, and brings to mind His greatness 
in every situation, and [also] fights the disbelievers, for
    example, is the one who has reached the highest limit. And the knowledge is with 
Allah.'   

    And, [it is reported] in "Fath al-Ilah",  

    'It is possible to reconcile [this hadeeth with other evidences] by taking the 
excellence here as being from one aspect, which is that the heart is
    conquered by the requisite dhikr which repels Shaytaan from the arena of the 
heart. By the purity and reform [of the heart], the [entire] body is
    purified and reformed. So, dhikr, on account of its effect therein - [an effect] 
which is not produced by spending [in charity] and exertion of the
    self, is better than these two in this aspect, even though they are superior to it 
from all other aspects...   

    And the saying of Ibn 'Abdus Salam in his "Qawa'id" (i.e. that which was mentioned 
above) is based on taking the hadeeth literally, without regard
    to the necessary discussion of the Imams of the school.'"" [Daleel al-Faaliheen, 
vol. IV, p. 246]   

    So, we see that the scholars have interpreted the dhikr mentioned in this hadeeth 
as being perfect dhikr in which one's heart ponders over the meaning.
    Moreover, they affirmed that even this dhikr is superior to Jihad only from the 
aspect of constancy, and that Jihad is superior from every other aspect. Also,
    this dhikr is pursued not for its own sake, but rather to reform the entire body. 
It should be quite clear then that this hadeeth does not detract from the
    importance nor the excellence of Jihad.  

    One who isolates himself to perform dhikr, and continues to do so without ever 
even thinking of going to fight to protect his suffering brothers and his sisters
    who are being raped, or to spend his wealth to aid them, is obviously not 
performing the desired dhikr, although he may be reciting the Qur'an, day and
    night, continuously. It is reported in the hadeeth,  
      
                               "It may be that one is reciting the Qur'an while the 
Qur'an is cursing him." 

    Moreover, it should be noted that performing Jihad does not preclude making dhikr. 
Allah, the Exalted, says, (Translation of the Meaning),  
      
                               "O you who believe! When you encounter an army, then 
remain steadfast, and 
                                        remember Allah much in order that you may 
succeed." 
                                                            [8:45] 

    Someone who wishes to perfect his dhikr must perform it as ordered to by Allah 
(Ta'aala) and His Prophet (salallaahu 'alayhee wa sallam), and he who
    never fights in Jihad is deprived of a portion of dhikr, i.e. that during battle. 
Ibn Katheer reports, in his tafseer (exegesis) of this verse,  

    "On the authority of Ka'b al Ahbar:   

    There is not anything more beloved to Allah (Ta'aala) than recitation of the 
Qur'an and dhikr, and were it not for the two of them, He would not
    have ordered people to pray and fight. Do you not see that He has ordered people 
to make dhikr during combat?" [Tafseer ibn Katheer, vol. II, p. 103]   

    Without a doubt, none can attain the status of one who goes out for Jihad with a 
pure intention, and fights while being conscious of Allah (Ta'aala) and
    remembering Him. To make one's intention solely for the sake of Allah (Ta'aala) 
can be difficult, and thus the Prophet (salallaahu 'alayhee wa sallam)
    mentions, in the hadeeth of the likeness of the mujaahid, that Allah knows best as 
to who is really performing Jihad. Nevertheless, when Jihad is individually
    obligatory (i.e. Fard 'ayn), one must do it, even if one feels some degree of 
insincerity in one's intention, for in this case it is just like salaah and other
    obligations. One must perform them, while at the same time striving to purify 
one's intention.  

    It is indeed sad that one finds Muslims who try to diminish the importance of 
Jihad and who downplay its excellence, in a time when Muslims are being
    oppressed in so many parts of the world, to the extent that Jihad has become 
individually obligatory (Fard 'ayn) by the consensus of those whose opinion is
    of any value...  

    Others will agree that Jihad is good and essential, only to turn around and insist 
that fighting the desires of the self is "the Greater Jihad". [And, this issue is
    addressed extensively in an article at the following address:   
      
                                      
http://members.tripod.com/~Suhayb/Jihad-Slandered.html 

    O Allah!   

    Do not make our misfortune in our Religion!   

    O Allah!   

    Do not make the world our greatest concern, nor the extent of our knowledge, nor 
the limit of our deeds!   

    O Allah!   

    Do not establish in domination over us those who do not fear You with regard to 
us, and who will have no mercy on us!   

    O Allah!   

    Grant blessings and peace upon our master, Muhammad, and upon all his Household 
and Companions.   
                                                                 

 - By Abu Shaheed 

- Formatted and Edited by Abu Suhayb 
  
                                                      Back to Contents: Jihad

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