CONCEPT OF WORSHIP IN ISLAM
Page: 1/3 (2068 total words in this text) (2252 reads) 
III&E Brochure Series; No. 5
(published by The Institute of Islamic Information and Education (III&E))
Bismillahi ar-rahmani ar-raheem
In the Name of Allah, the Most Compassionate, the Most Merciful
The concept of worship in Islam is
misunderstood by many people including some Muslims. Worship is commonly taken
to mean performing ritualistic acts such as prayers, fasting, charity, etc. This
limited understanding of worship is only one part of the meaning of worship in
Islam. That is why the traditional definition of worship in Islam is a
comprehensive definition that includes almost everything in any individual's
activities. The definition goes something like this:
"Worship is an all inclusive
term for all that God loves of external and internal sayings and actions of a
person."
In other words, worship is
everything one says or does for the pleasure of Allah. This, of course,
includes rituals as well as beliefs, social activities, and personal
contributions to the welfare of one's fellow human-beings.
Islam looks at the individual as a
whole. He is required to submit himself completely to Allah, as the Quran
instructed the Prophet Muhammad to do:
"Say
(O Muhammad) my prayer, my sacrifice, my life and my death belong to Allah; He
has no partner and I am ordered to be among those who submit, i.e.; Muslims."
(6:162-163)
The natural result of this submission is
that all one's activities should conform to the instructions of the one to whom
the person is submitting. Islam, being a way of life, requires
that its followers model their life according to its teachings in every aspect,
religious or other wise. This might sound strange to some people who think of
religion as a personal relation between the individual and God, having no impact
on one's activities outside rituals.
As a matter of fact Islam does not think
much of mere rituals when they are performed mechanically and have no influence
on one's inner life. The Quran addresses the believers and their neighbors from
among the People of the Book who were arguing with them about the change of the
direction of Qibla in the following verse:
"It
is not righteousness that you turn your faces toward the East or the West, but
righteous is he who believes in Allah and the Last Day and the Angels and the
Book and the Prophets, and gives his beloved money to his relatives and the
orphans and the needy and for the ransoming of captives and who observes
prayer and pays the poor-due; and those who fulfill their promises when they
have made one, and the patient in poverty and affliction and the steadfast in
time of war; it is those who have proved truthful and it is those who are the
God-fearing." (2:177)
The deeds in the above verse are the
deeds of righteousness and they are only a part of worship. The Prophet told us
about faith, which is the basis of worship, that it "is made up of sixty and
some branches; the highest of which is the belief in the Oneness of Allah, i.e.,
there is no God but Allah and the lowest in the scale of worship is removing
obstacles and dirt from people's way." |