NassirUDeen writes "He who gives sincere advice to his brother in matters of religion and looks out for the well being of the latter's daily affairs has fulfilled his brotherly obligation and carried out the duty that was incumbent upon him.
According to Abdallaah bin Bakr bin
Habeeb al-Sahmee: We were told by a man in the mosque of al-Junaabidh that `Umar
bin `Abd al-`Azeez delivered a sermon to the people in Khunaasirah in which he
said: O people, you were not created in vain, nor will you
be left to yourselves [See 75:36]. Rather, you will return to a place in
whichAllaah will descend in order to judge among you and distinguish between
you.
Destitute and lost are those who
forsake the all- encompassing mercy of Allaah, and they will be excluded from
Paradise, the borders of which are as wide as the heavens and the earth.
Don't you know that protection,
tomorrow, will be limited to those who feared Allaah [today], and to those who
sold something ephemeral for something permanent, something small for something
great, and fear for protection? Don't you realize that you are the descendants
of those who have perished, that those who remain will take their place after
you, and that this will continue until you are all returned to Allaah? Every day
you dispatch to Allaah, at all times of the day, someone who has died, his term
having come to an end.
You bury him in a crack in the earth
and then leave him without a pillow or a bed. He has parted from his loved ones,
severed his connections with the living, and taken up residence in the earth,
whereupon he comes face to face with the accounting.
He is mortgaged to his deeds: He needs
his accomplishments, but not the material things he left on earth. Therefore,
fear Allaah before death descends and its appointed times expire. I swear by
Allaah that I say those words to you knowing that I myself have committed more
sins than any of you; I therefore ask Allaah for forgiveness and I repent.
Whenever we learn that one of you needs
something, I try to satisfy his need to the extent that I am able. Whenever I
can provide satisfaction to one of you out of my possessions, I seek to treat
him as my equal and my relative, so that my life and his life are of equal
value.
I swear by Allaah that had I wanted
something else, namely, affluence, then it would have been easy for me to utter
the word, aware as I am of the means for obtaining this. But Allaah has issued
in an eloquent Book and a just example (sunnah) by means of which He guides us
to obedience and proscribes disobedience.
He lifted up the edge of his robe and
began to cry and sob, causing the people around him to break into tears. Then he
stepped down. That was the last sermon he gave before he died, may Allaah have
mercy on him. /For variant versions of this sermon, see Ibn `Abd al-Hakam,
Seerah 43-45, 132-33; Ibn Katheer, Bidaayah, IX, 199; This translation was taken
from The History of al-Tabaree, Vol XXIV, by D.S.Powers/ In the same book, it is
also related that, According to `Abdallaah - his father - al-Fudayl - `Abdallaah:
I was told that `Umar bin `Abd al-Azeez wrote to the Syrian army as follows: As-salaamu
`alaikum wa rahmatullaah. Now then, whoever contemplates death frequently speaks
little, while he who knows that death is certain is satisfied with a little.
Farewell. According to Mansoor bin
Muzaahim - Shu`ayb, that is, Ibn Safwaan - Ibn `Abd al-Hameed: `Umar ibn `Abd
al-`Azeez said: He who gives sincere advice to his brother in matters of
religion and looks out for the well being of the latter's daily affairs has
fulfilled his brotherly obligation and carried out the duty that was incumbent
upon him. Fear Allaah.
Accept these words, for they are
offered as sincere advice to you with regard to your religion; and cling fast to
them, for they constitute a warning that will save you in the afterlife. The
sustenance has been apportioned; therefore, let no believer exceed what has been
apportioned to him, and be united in seeking the good. In contentment there is
abundance, substinence, and sufficiency.
The term of this life is in your necks,
and Jahannam lies before you. What you see will pass away, what has been is as
if it never was, and all will soon be dead. You have seen the stages of the
dying man, both when he is in the agony of death, and then after his demise when
he has tasted death and the people all around him are saying, He has passed
away, May Allaah have mercy on his soul.
You have witnessed the hasty manner in
which he is removed, and the division of his estate, when his face is lost, his
memory forgotten, and his doorway forsaken, as if he had not mixed with those
who keep their word, nor inhabited the lands.
Therefore, beware the horror of a
day on which not so much as the weight of an ant on the scale will be despised.
According to `Abd al-Rahmaan bin Mahdee - Sufyaan: `Umar bin `Abd al-`Azeez
said: He who acts without knowledge causes more corruption than good, and he who
does not consider his speech to be part of his actions sins repeatedly.
Satisfaction is scarce, and the true believer should rely on patience.
Allaah never bestowed a blessing
upon one of His servants and then took it away from him, giving him patience in
return for that which was taken away, except that the replacement was better
than what was taken away from him. Then he recited the following verse: Surely
the patient will be paid their wages in full without reckoning. [39:10] From At-Tabaree's
History
http://www.sbmrj.org.br/
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