Returning to God in repentance in Rajab
May Allah Most High take us by the hand, give us tawfiq to benefit and make the most of Rajab and the blessed months after.
O believer, look to see how you end the month of Jumada al-Akhirah, and look to see how you receive the month of Rajab, the month which stands alone among the sacred months. This month was venerated even in the times of Jahiliyyah, and Islam came to reinforce this veneration. O believer in Allah, one of your most important aims in this life is for your heart to be completely focused on Allah and at the same time to be someone that unites people’s hearts.
One of the greatest manifestations in focusing your heart on Allah is being aware of your shortcomings towards Him, seeking refuge in Him, seeking forgiveness from Him, repenting to Him and pleading that He overlooks your faults out of His Kindness.
Seeking forgiveness (istighfar) from Allah is foundational in focusing your heart on Allah. When seeking forgiveness:
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You express awareness of your errors and shortcomings towards Him
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You express your certainty that you have a Lord Who takes people to account for their sins, Who may forgive them or may punish them; you express your certainty that the affair is in His hands
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You express your need for your Lord which leads you to plead with Him to be forgiven
The Prophet ﷺ, the one who was protected from falling into sin, the most pure, would seek forgiveness from Allah one hundred times in one sitting. He would say:
رَبِّ اغْفِرْ لِي وتُبْ عَلَيَّ إِنَّكَ أَنتَ التَّوَّابُ الرَّحِيمُ
My Lord, forgive me and turn to me, truly You are the Oft-Returning, the Most Merciful.
This tells us how the life of the Prophet ﷺ was, how his gatherings with his Companions were, so seek to resemble them. Beware of gatherings in which Allah is not mentioned, in which His Forgiveness is not sought and in which the return to Him is not mentioned. O believer, beautify your gatherings in the same way that your guide, the Chosen One, Muhammad ﷺ beautified his gatherings. He is the one who said: “Good tidings to the one who finds in his book (in which his actions are recorded) much istighfar (seeking forgiveness).” Seeking forgiveness is a remedy for your sins, and sins are the cause of tribulations in this life and the next. The fire of your sins is only extinguished by seeking the forgiveness of the Living, the Eternal, the All-Hearing, the All-Seeing.
Throughout your life you have the opportunity to seek forgiveness from Allah, but there are specific times when you should do so, during the day and night and during the months of the year. The last portion of the night is one of these times. Allah says, describing the people of taqwá:
Those who show patience, those who are truthful, those who worship devoutly, those who spend (their wealth for Allah’s sake) and those who seek forgiveness in the last portion of the night. He also says: They were prior to that people of righteousness; they were in the habit of sleeping little by night; and they would seek forgiveness in the last portion of the night.
Another time to seek forgiveness is after performing the prescribed prayer. In doing so, you remember the deficiencies in your prayer and ask for acceptance. Even when leaving the toilet, your Prophet ﷺ taught you to say three times:
غُفْرَانَكَ
I seek Your forgiveness.
If you say this when you go to bed three times your sins will be forgiven even if they are as numerous as the foam on top of the sea:
أستَغْفِرُ اللهَ العَظِيمَ الَّذِي لاَ إِلهَ إِلاَّ هُوَ الحَيُّ القَيُّومُ وأَتُوبُ إِليه
I seek the forgiveness of God, the Most Great, besides Who there is no god; the Living, the Sustainer, and I repent to Him.
Among the months, Rajab is the month of seeking forgiveness. Al-Daylami narrates on the authority of Ali bin Abi Talib (may God ennoble him) that the Messenger of God ﷺ said:
Seek much forgiveness (from God) in Rajab because in every hour (of the month) God frees people from the Fire.
When the month entered the Prophet ﷺ would say, as Anas narrates:
اللَّهُمَّ بَارِكْ لَنَا في رَجَبٍ وَ شَعْبَانَ وَ بَلِّغْنا رَمَضَانَ
O God, bless us in Rajab and Sha’bān and enable us to reach Ramadān!
It is a blessed month, may Allah bless us and the Ummah in it. In the times of Jahiliyyah the noise of battle would not be heard in this month. This was due to the veneration that people had for the month, even though they were polytheists. God revealed concerning this month:
They ask you about the sacred month – fighting therein. Say: fighting therein is a grave offence.
Look at the state the Ummah has reached today. Some Muslims have actually declared war in the month of Rajab, not on the disbelievers, but on each other. Some have travelled around spilling the blood of their brothers. Look how far the Ummah has sunk when it has left the Guidance of God and His Messenger ﷺ and surrendered its reins to corrupt people; to disbelievers, to people deceived by their own philosophies!
Our Master ﷺ said:
Repent to God for truly I repent to God in every day and night seventy (or one hundred) times.
In a Hadith Qudsi, God says:
O son of Adam, if your sins were so numerous that they reached the heavens and then you sought My forgiveness I would forgive you and it is nothing to Me.
If someone allows Rajab to enter and they have no concern for their wrongdoings, then they do not truly possess taqwa. The believer sees his sins as a mountain towering over him which he fears will fall upon his head, whereas the hypocrite sees his sins as a fly which lands on his nose which he brushes away with his hand. One of the Followers was told that a group of people were talking about something which did not concern them. He said: “If they were concerned with their own wrongdoings, they would not have talked about that subject.”
Seek forgiveness in abundance and seek to unite people’s hearts. Beware of provoking hatred, or tale bearing, for “among the worst slaves of God are those that constantly bear tales, those that cause division between those that love each other.” Choose words that unite people:
Say to My slaves that they should only say those things that are best, for the Devil sows dissension among them.
Attempt to fast in this month. Ali bin Muhammad al-Rabi narrates from a chain of narrators most of whom are reliable that one of the Followers asked one of the Companions: “Did the Messenger of God ﷺ fast in Rajab?” He replied: “Yes, and he would ennoble it.” He would ennoble and honour the month by fasting in it. May God awaken our hearts!
Prepare for the first night of Rajab. He ﷺ said:
There are five nights on which du’ā is not rejected: the first night of Rajab, the fifteenth night of Sha’bān, Thursday night, the night before Eid al-Fitr and the night before Eid al-Nahr (al-Adha).
May Allah purify our hearts and enable us to take advantage of the time that we have left in this life.
— Habib Umar bin Hafiz
(Source: pearlsfromislam)
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Wael Jassar | قلبك حنين يا نبي
A soothing nasheed about the gentleness of the Prophet ﷺ.
(Source: pearlsfromislam)
Subhan’Allah. The feeling on finishing the Qur’an.
Don’t get me wrong, I love reading the Qur’an, just flipping through to surahs that relate to my life at the moment, for inspiration where needed, for reminders as necessary… But there’s something so phenomenal to me about a straight read through. To see which surahs stand out that time, which ayats stick in your mind, which new lessons stick with you.
Alhamdulillah, I finished reading the Qur’an for the first time last July and tonight I finished it for the third time. This message from Allah (SWT) has changed my life. I remember picking it up for the first time “just to know” and, before I knew it, I was captivated.
I remember finishing it just before going on a trip to Haiti with CHURCH to volunteer. The night before we left, I picked up the Qur’an again and read everything about orphans. I knew before I went that I’d revert. Subhan’Allah, He works in such fascinating ways.
God’s being, like love, cannot be defined; it must be experienced.
Imam Abdul Latif
(Source: pearlsfromislam)
If someone’s state does not lift you up…
If someone’s state does not lift you up
and his words do not lead you to Allah
- then do not keep his company!
It may be well that you are in a bad state -
but to keep company with someone worse than you
would allow you to see good in yourself.
No action from a heart without attachment is insignificant
No action from a heart full of desires is great
Good actions are the results of good states
Good states come from grasping the reality
of the stations where you alight.
Do not give up invocation of Allah
because you are not present with Allah in it.
It is worse to forget to invoke Him
than to be inattentive while invoking Him.
He might raise you up from invocation with heedlessness
to invocation with wakeful attention
and from invocation with full attention
to invocation with presence
and from invocation with presence
to invocation with withdrawal from all that is other than the Invoked.
That is not difficult for Allah.
— Ibn Ata’Allah al-Iskandari
(Source: pearlsfromislam)
Tomorrow is Nakba (Catastrophe) Day. We are commemorating the dispossession of Palestine and the expulsion of hundreds of thousands of Palestinians. For the past 64 years, Palestinians have been terrorised and robbed of their land and their livelihoods under Israel’s brutal military occupation and apartheid.
3,500 Palestinian political prisoners are participating in one of history’s largest mass hunger strikes. They demand freedom, justice and equality. The Palestinian prisoners are using their bodies, strength and willpower to stand against Israel’s grave injustices, its administrative detention, its military occupation and its apartheid policies.
Keep the memory of Nakba alive. Keep the Palestinian prisoners’ fight alive. To exist is to resist. Wear your kuffiyehs, update your status, and tweet about Nakba tomorrow on May 15. Talk about Nakba. Contact your local news outlets and urge them to cover the hunger strikes. Boycott Israel’s occupation.
