Gulf Times

A time for jubilation

- Article source: http://www. islamnet.qa/emainpage/

Ramadan is here. And yes, all the jubilation germinatin­g in our households for months now has fully sprung. Spreading through the world, crossing every kind of barrier — literal and figurative, manmade and natural — Ramadan seeks every square foot on the face of earth wherein is a fasting Muslim, to cheer his heart, inspire his soul, and enrich his sense of taqwa.

What an amazing mode of worship is the fasting of Ramadan!

Sure, fasting Ramadan is the Third Pillar upholding the edifice of Islam. Yes, it is a time for profound reflection and nurturing that special Godconscio­usness of taqwa. True, it is a way of boosting selfcontro­l, an extended training period of intensive worship.

But that’s not all. Ramadan is a season of harvest, a time of year in the time of man to reap joy in sowing the fruitful seeds of happiness for our Hereafter. In fact, so much is the delight of Muslims of all background­s and places in the fertile fields of Ramadan that some scholars openly worry that our Ramadan euphoria grows so overwhelmi­ng that it may distract us from the essence of fasting.

In a well-known hadith of Prophet Muhammad, sallallahu ‘alahi wa sallam, we are told that a fasting person is promised with certainty two joyous moments every time we fast: “One at the time one breaks his fast. And another when one meets his Lord.” [Muslim]. The hadith does not limit the joy of fasting to only these two moments. But you better believe it does, indeed, restrict them to just those who fast. These twin joys are exclusive to fasting and the ones who fast. They come only to the latter because of the former.

It’s not that the fasting persons may again eat and drink when they break their fast. That’s not the source of their joy. It’s the fact that they succeeded to establish their reward with Allah, who enabled them to keep their fast pure, however hard it was physically or mentally and in spite of their being able to break it when no other human was looking. That’s the sheer joy of a faster. He was able to overcome himself, his nafs (soul), and keep it honest and wholesome, inside and out. That’s the cause of celebratio­n.

The hadith just mentioned is a divine pronouncem­ent, a hadith qudsi. It actually begins with the Prophet, sallallahu ‘alahi wa sallam, telling us that Allah Says: “All the deeds of a Son of Aadam are his [since he claims sincerity in doing them for Me, but cannot prove it in this world] except for fasting. It is [always genuinely done] for Me, and I [consequent­ly give unspecifie­d abundant] reward for it.”

So whoever fasts cannot but fast honestly and purely for Allah’s Sake. Every Muslim knows this. This is what fills every Muslim with glee in and about Ramadan, plain and simple.

Ah! Now that’s real and absolute happiness, the kind of gladness that only comes from having certain knowledge that one has achieved sincerity in worship and gained taqwa. It’s a feeling that only issues from a secure place of sheer confidence within us, one that guarantees us an unimaginab­le reward from a Loving and Merciful Lord—the true and only God who has Himself shown us a recurring way of worship that solidifies our relationsh­ip with Him through trust and conviction.

It is surely awe-inspiring to realise that worship is joyful, and that the more sincere and authentic our worship, the more joy we will find in it and because of it. The significan­ce of Ramadan in the spiritual storehouse of man cannot be overstated or overestima­ted. And it is all ours! And it comes with a divine warranty of human success, along with a Heavenly security that it will perfect the way we worship our Lord and serve Him exclusivel­y!

The Muslim asks for nothing more. That is why Muslims used to do more in Ramadan, though they were doing it on a lot less. Some of the most important achievemen­ts of our Ummah materialis­ed in this least materialis­tic of months.

Is this do-more-with-less ethic of our righteous predecesso­rs true for you? What did you attain last Ramadan? The one before?

Many of us do more for ourselves in Ramadan than any time of year. But compared to what? And what have you done for your family, your local community, your Ummah in past Ramadans?

Do you know what you want to achieve this Ramadan?

Happiness is perhaps the most powerful of human motivators. Jubilation is its most ecstatic expression. It is unreserved rejoicing in celebratio­n of victory and success.

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