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Why
Muslims Believe Islam To Be The Truth??

Question: There are many religions. Why do Muslims think that Islam is true.
Is there any factual basis?
Answer:
Praise be to Allah. This is a reasonable enough question for one who has not
entered Islam, but one who believes in and practices this religion already
knows the blessings which are his because of this religion.
There
are many reasons for this, which include the following:
(1)
The
Muslim worships One God, Who has no partner, and Who has the most beautiful
names and the highest attributes. Thus the Muslim’s focus and aim is
concentrated, focused on His Lord and Creator; he puts his trust in Him and
asks Him for help, patience and support; he believes that Allaah is able to
do all things, and has no need of a wife or son. Allaah created the heavens
and earth; He is the One Who gives life and death; He is the Creator and
Sustainer from Whom the slave seeks provision. He is the All-Hearing Who
responds to the supplication of His slave, and from Whom the slave hopes for
a response. He is the All-Merciful and All-Forgiving, to Whom the slave
turns in repentance when he has committed a sin or fallen short in his
worship of Allaah. He is the Omniscient and All-Seeing, who knows all
intentions and what is hidden in people’s hearts. The slave feels ashamed to
commit a sin by doing wrong to himself or to others, because his Lord is
watching over him and sees all that he does. He knows that Allaah is
All-Wise, the Seer of the Unseen, so he trusts that what Allaah decrees for
him is good; he knows that Allaah will never be unjust to him, and that
everything that Allaah decrees for him is good, even if he does not
understand the wisdom behind it.
(2)
The
effects of Islaamic worship on the soul of the Muslim include the following:
Prayer keeps the slave in contact with his Lord; if he enters it in a spirit
of humiliation and concentration, he will feel tranquil and secure, because
he is seeking a "powerful support," which is Allaah, may He be glorified and
exalted. For this reason, the Prophet of Islaam, Muhammad (peace and
blessings of Allaah be upon him) used to say: "Let us find relaxation and
joy in prayer." If something distressed him, he would hasten to pray.
Everyone who finds himself faced with disaster and tries prayer finds
strength, patience and consolation, because he is reciting the words of his
Lord, which cannot be compared to the effect of the words of a created
being. If the words of some psychologists can offer a little comfort, what
do you think of the words of the One Who created the psychologist?
Now let
us look at zakaat, which is one of the pillars of Islaam. Zakaat
purifies the soul from stinginess and miserliness, and accustoms people to
being generous and helping the poor and needy. It will bring a great reward
on the Day of Resurrection, just like other forms of worship. It is not
burdensome, like man-made taxes; it is only 25 in every thousand, which the
sincere Muslim pays willingly and does not try to evade or wait until
someone chases him for it.
Fasting
involves refraining from food and sex. It is a form of worship, and a way in
which one can feel the hunger of those who are deprived. It is also a
reminder of the blessings of the Creator, and it brings rewards beyond
measure.
Hajj
is the Pilgrimage to the sacred House of Allaah, which was built by
Ibraaheem (Abraham, upon whom be peace). By performing Hajj one is obeying
the command of Allaah and the call to come and meet Muslims from all over
the world.
(3)
Islaam commands all kinds of good and forbids all kinds of evil. It
encourages good manners and proper treatment of others. It enjoins good
characteristics such as truthfulness, patience, deliberation, kindness,
humility, modesty, keeping promises, dignity, mercy, justice, courage,
patience, friendliness, contentment, chastity, good treatment, tolerance,
trustworthiness, gratitude for favours, and self-control in times of anger.
Islaam commands the Muslim to fulfil his duty towards his parents and to
uphold family ties, to help the needy, to treat neighbours well, to protect
and safeguard the wealth of the orphan, to be gentle with the young and show
respect to the old, to be kind to servants and animals, to remove harmful
things from the road, to speak kind words, to forgive at the time when one
has the opportunity to take revenge, to be sincere towards one’s
fellow-Muslims, to meet the needs of the Muslims, to give the debtor time to
repay his debt, to prefer others over oneself, to console others, to greet
people with a smiling face, to visit the sick, to support the one who is
oppressed, to give gifts to friends, to honour his guest, to treat his wife
kindly and spend on her and her children, to spread the greeting of peace
(salaam) and to seek permission before entering another person’s house, lest
one see something private that the other person does not want one to see.
Some
non-Muslims may do these things out of politeness or good manners, but they
are not seeking reward from Allaah or salvation of the Day of Judgement. If
we look at what Islam has prohibited, we will find that it is in the
interests of both the individual and society as a whole. All these
prohibitions serve to safeguard the relationship between the slave and his
Lord, and the relationship of the individual with himself and with his
fellow-man.
The following examples demonstrate this:
-
Islam
forbids the association of anything in worship with Allaah and the worship
of anything other than Allaah, because this spells doom and misery.
-
Islaam also forbids visiting or believing soothsayers and fortune-tellers;
magic or witchcraft that may cause a rift between two people or bring them
together; belief in the influence of the stars on events and people’s
lives; cursing time, because Allaah is directing its affairs; and
superstition, because this is pessimism.
-
Islam
forbids cancelling out good deeds by showing off, boasting or reminding
others of one’s favours; bowing or prostrating to anything other than
Allaah; sitting with hypocrites or immoral people for the purposes of
enjoying their company or keeping them company; and invoking the curse or
wrath of Allaah on one another or damning one another to Hell.
-
Islaam forbids urinating into stagnant water; defecating on the side of
the road or in places where people seek shade or where they draw water;
from facing the qiblah (direction of prayer) or turning one’s back towards
it when passing water or stools; holding one’s penis in one’s right hand
when passing water; giving the greeting of salaam (peace) to one who is
answering the call of nature; and putting one’s hand into any vessel
before washing it, when one has just woken up.
-
Islaam forbids the offering of any nafl (supererogatory) prayers when the
sun is rising, when it is at its zenith, and when it is setting, because
it rises and sets between the horns of Shaytaan (Satan); praying when
there is food prepared that a person desires; praying when one urgently
needs to pass water, stools or wind, because that will distract a person
from concentrating properly on his prayer.
-
Islam
forbids the Muslim to raise his voice in prayer, lest it disturb other
believers; to continue offering supererogatory prayers at night when one
feels drowsy - such a person should sleep then get up; to stay up all
night in prayer, especially one night after another; and to stop praying
when there is doubt as to the validity of one’s wudoo’ - unless one hears
a sound or smells an odour.
-
Islaam forbids buying, selling and making "lost and found" announcements
in the mosque - because it is the place of worship and remembrance of
Allaah, where worldly affairs have no place.
-
Islam
forbids haste in walking when the iqaamah (call immediately preceding
congregational prayer) is given, and prescribes walking in a calm and
dignified manner.
-
It is
also forbidden to boast about the cost of building a mosque; to decorate a
mosque with red or yellow paint or adornments which will distract the
worshippers; to fast day after day without a break; and for a woman to
observe a supererogatory fast when her husband is present without his
permission.
-
Islaam forbids building over graves, making them high, sitting on them,
walking between them wearing shoes, putting lights over them or writing on
them. It is forbidden to disinter the dead or to take graves as places of
worship.
-
Islam
forbids wailing, tearing one’s clothes or leaving one’s hair unkempt when
a person dies. Eulogizing the dead in the manner of the times of Ignorance
(Jaahiliyyah) is also forbidden, although there is nothing wrong with
informing others that a person has died.
-
Islaam forbids the consumption of riba (interest); all kinds of selling
which involve ignorance (of the product), misleading and cheating; selling
blood,
wine, pork, idols and everything that Allaah has forbidden -
their price, whether bought or sold - is haraam; najash, which is offering
a price for something one has no intention of buying, as happens in many
auctions; concealing a product’s faults at the time of selling; selling
something which one does not own or before it comes into one’s possession;
undercutting, outbidding or out bargaining another; selling produce before
it is clear that it is in good condition and free of blemish; cheating in
weights and measures; and hoarding. A partner who has shares in a plot of
land or a date palm tree is forbidden to sell his share without consulting
his partners.
-
It is
forbidden to consume the wealth of orphans unjustly; to bet or gamble; to
take anything by force; to accept or offer bribes; to steal people’s
wealth or to consume it unjustly; to take something for the purpose of
destroying it; to undermine the value of people’s possessions; to keep
lost property which one has found, or to keep quiet about it and not
announce it, for it belongs to the one who recognizes it; to cheat in any
way; to ask for a loan with no intention of repaying it; to take anything
of the wealth of a fellow-Muslim, unless it is given freely, because what
is taken because of another person’s shyness is haraam; and to accept a
gift because of intercession.
-
Celibacy and castration are forbidden, as is marrying two sisters, or a
woman and her aunt (paternal or maternal), whether he marries the aunt
after marrying her niece or vice versa, for fear of breaking the ties of
kinship.
-
It is
forbidden to make deals in marriage, such as saying "Let me marry your
daughter and I will give you my daughter or sister in marriage." Such
reciprocal deals are a form of oppression and injustice, and haraam.
-
Islaam forbids mut’ah (temporary marriage), which is a marriage contract
for a period of time agreed by the two parties, at the end of which the
marriage expires.
-
Islaam forbids intercourse with a menstruating woman, until she has
purified herself (by taking a bath after her period ends), and also
forbids anal intercourse.
-
A man
is forbidden to propose marriage to a woman when another man has already
proposed to her, unless the other man withdraws his proposal or gives him
permission.
-
It is
forbidden to marry a previously-married woman without consulting her, or a
virgin without seeking her permission.
-
It is
forbidden to wish (a newly married couple) "Bi’l-rafaa’ wa’l-baneen (a
joyful life and many sons)," because this is the greeting of the people of
Jaahiliyyah, who hated daughters.
-
The
divorced woman is forbidden to conceal what Allaah has created in her womb
(if she is pregnant).
-
A
husband and wife are forbidden to speak (to others) about the intimacies
of married life.
-
It is
forbidden to turn a woman against her husband or to take divorce lightly.
-
It is
forbidden for a woman to ask for another’s divorce, such as asking a man
to divorce a woman so that she can marry him.
-
A
wife is forbidden to spend her husband’s money without his permission, or
to keep away from his bed without good reason, because the angels will
curse her if she does that.
-
A man
is forbidden to marry his father’s wife, or to have intercourse with a
woman who is pregnant from another man.
-
It is
forbidden for a man to practise ‘azl (coitus interruptus) with his free
wife without her permission. It is forbidden for a man to return home from
a journey late at night and startle his family, unless he has previously
notified them when he will arrive home.
-
A man
is forbidden to take anything of his wife’s mahr (dowry) without her
consent, or to keep annoying his wife so that she will give up her wealth.
-
Islaam forbids women to make a wanton display of themselves (tabarruj). It
also forbids extreme forms of female circumcision.
-
Women
are forbidden to admit anyone into their husband’s home without his
permission; his general permission is acceptable so long as they stay
within the limits of sharee’ah.
-
It is
forbidden to separate a mother and child (in case of divorce); to let
one’s womenfolk behave foolishly (in an immoral fashion) and not say
anything; to let one’s gaze wander everywhere; and to follow an accidental
glance with an intentional glance.
-
Islaam forbids the eating of dead meat, regardless of whether it died by
drowning, strangulation, shock or falling from a high place; eating blood,
pork and anything slaughtered in a name other than that of Allaah or for
idols; eating the flesh or drinking the milk of beasts that feed on filth
and waste matter; eating the flesh of every carnivorous beast that has
fangs and every bird that has talons; eating the meat of domesticated
donkeys; killing animals by keeping them and throwing stones at them until
they die, or detaining them without food until they die; slaughtering with
teeth or nails; slaughtering one animal (for food) in front of another; or
sharpening the knife in front of the animal to be slaughtered.
-
In
the area of clothing and adornment, men are forbidden the extravagance of
wearing gold.
-
Muslims are forbidden to be naked or to expose their thighs; to leave
their clothes long (below the ankles) and trail them on the ground for the
purpose of showing off; and to wear clothes that will attract attention.
-
It is
forbidden to bear false witness; to make false accusations against a
chaste believing woman; to accuse someone who is innocent; to utter lies;
to slander and backbite; to call people by offensive nicknames; to spread
gossip and malicious slander; to make fun of the Muslims; to boast about
one’s status; to shed doubts on a person’s lineage; to utter slander,
insults and obscenities; to speak in an indecent or rude manner; or to
utter evil in public, except by one who has been wronged.
-
Islaam forbids telling lies; one of the worst kinds of lie is to lie about
dreams, like fabricating dreams and visions in order to prove one’s
virtue, or make some material gains, or to frighten an enemy.
-
Muslims are forbidden to praise themselves, or to talk in a secret way:
two may not converse secretly to the exclusion of a third, because this is
offensive.
-
It is
forbidden to curse a believer or someone who does not deserve to be
cursed.
-
Islaam forbids speaking ill of the dead; praying for death; wishing for
death because of some suffering that one is passing through; praying
against one’s self, one’s children, one’s servants or one’s wealth.
-
Muslims are told not to eat the food that is directly in front of others
or to eat from the centre of the dish or platter; rather they should eat
from what is directly in front of them or thereabouts, because the barakah
(blessing) comes in the middle of the food.
-
It is
forbidden to drink from a broken edge of a vessel, because this could
cause harm; or to drink from the mouth of a vessel; or to breathe into it.
-
It is forbidden
to eat while lying on one’s stomach;
to sit at a table where
wine is being drunk; to leave a fire burning in one’s house when one
sleeps; to sleep with Ghamr in one’s hand, like an offensive smell or the
remainder of food (grease); to sleep on one’s stomach; or to talk about or
try to interpret bad dreams, because these are tricks of the Shaytaan.
-
It is forbidden
to kill another person except in cases where it is right to do so; to kill
one’s children for fear of poverty; to commit suicide; to commit
fornication, adultery or sodomy (homosexuality);
to drink
wine,
or even to prepare it, carry it from one place to another, or sell it.
-
Muslims are forbidden to please people by angering Allaah; to offend their
parents or even to say "Uff" (the slightest word of contempt) to them; to
claim that a child belongs to anyone but his real father; to torture by
means of fire; to burn anyone, alive or dead, with fire; to mutilate the
bodies of the slain; to help anyone commit falsehood; or to cooperate in
wrongdoing and sin.
-
It is
forbidden to obey any person by disobeying Allaah; to swear falsely; to
swear a disastrous oath; to eavesdrop on people without their permission;
to invade people’s privacy or look at their private parts; to claim
something that does not belong to one or that one did not do, for the
purpose of showing off; to look into someone’s else’s house without
permission; to be extravagant; to swear an oath to do something wrong; to
spy on others or be suspicious about righteous men and women; to envy,
hate or shun one another; to persist in falsehood; to be arrogant or feel
superior; to be filled with self-admiration; to be pleased with one’s
arrogance.
-
Islam
forbids taking back one’s charity, even if one pays to get it back;
employing someone to do a job without paying him his wages; being unfair
in giving gifts to one’s children; bequeathing everything in one’s will
and leaving one’s heirs poor - in such a case the will should not be
executed; writing a will that concerns more than one third of one’s
legacy; being a bad neighbour; or changing a will to the detriment of one
or some of one’s heirs.
-
A
Muslim is forbidden to forsake or shun his brother for more than three
days, except for a reason sanctioned by sharee’ah; to hold small stones
between two fingers and throw them because this could cause injury to eyes
or teeth; to include his heirs in a will, because Allaah has already given
heirs their rights of inheritance; to disturb his neighbour; to point a
weapon at his Muslim brother; to hand someone an unsheathed sword, lest it
harm him; to come (walk) between two people except with their permission;
to return a gift, unless there is some shar’i objection to it; to be
extravagant; to give money to foolish people; to wish to be like someone
to whom Allaah has given more of something; to cancel out his charity by
giving offensive reminders of his giving; to wilfully conceal testimony;
or to oppress orphans or scold one who asks for help or money. It is
forbidden to treat with evil medicines, because Allaah would not create a
cure for this ummah which includes something that He has forbidden.
-
It is
forbidden to kill women and children in warfare; to boast to one another;
or to break promises.
-
Islaam forbids betraying a trust; asking for charity that one does not
need; alarming a Muslim brother or taking away his possessions, whether
jokingly or seriously; changing one’s mind after giving a gift, except in
the case of a gift from a father to his child; practising medicine without
experience; or killing ants, bees and hoopoe birds.
-
A man
is forbidden to look at the ‘awrah (private parts) of another man, and a
woman is forbidden to look at the ‘awrah of another woman.
-
It is
forbidden to sit between two people without their permission; or to greet
only those whom one knows, because the greeting is to be given to those
whom you know and those whom you do not know.
-
A
Muslim is forbidden to let an oath come between him and good deeds; he
should do what is good and make expiation for the oath.
-
It is
forbidden to judge between two disputing parties when one is angry, or to
judge in favour of one party without hearing what the other has to say. It
is forbidden for a man to walk through the market-place carrying something
- like a sharp weapon - that could harm the Muslims, unless it is properly
covered.
-
A
Muslim is forbidden to make another person get up, so that he can take his
place.
-
There
are more commands and prohibitions which came for the benefit and
happiness of individuals and mankind as a whole.
Have you ever seen any other religion that can compare to this religion?
Read this response again, then ask yourself:
Is it NOT a Great Pity that I am not ONE of them?

Allaah says in the Qur’aan (interpretation of the meaning):
"And whoever seeks a religion other than
ISLAM, it will never be accepted
of him, and in the Hereafter he will be one of the losers."
[Aal
‘Imraan 3:85]
Finally, I hope that everyone who reads this will be guided to the correct
way and to follow the truth. May Allaah protect you and us from all evil.
From
Islam Q&A (www.islam-qa.com) |