the results when? Quickly! Give it to me now! Express delivery! Let’s see this
duʿā’
come to life! Let it happen! And when it doesn’t happen: ‘Forget it, who
needs
duʿā’
anyway’.
Subḥān Allāh
!
The last thing I want to share with you about this word
shiqwah—
before I go
to
Ibrāhīm
(
ʿalayhi al-salām
)
—
about this attitude of being miserable. There are
people who come before Allah (
ʿazza wa-jall
) on the day of judgement and they
say:
They will say: “Our Lord! Our misfortune prevailed over us. We were
indeed an erring people”.
(Al-Mu’minūn 23: 106)
They come on Judgement Day; they’re about to go into the bad place, and
they give their reasons. They were believers and they did not make it to
jannah
.
Why not? They explain themselves: our depression, our misery, and our negative
attitudes towards you; they overtook us—
ghalabat ʿalaynā
. This attitude we had
towards you, this frustration we had with you,
yā Allāh
, was so heavy that we
could never think of you in a good way. We did not have good expectations from
you and it overwhelmed us; and it made us miserable, wretched people overall.
Today, interesting things are happening in the world and one of the
interesting things is that among young people, there is a rise in atheism. There is
a rise in young people that don’t believe in God, and it’s actually rising all over
the world. It’s not just an American phenomenon it’s happening in Europe, it’s
happening in Asia,
in Africa, all over. There are statistics about this. And it’s
interesting if you look at the lives of leading atheists—many of them who lived
in recent times—some of them died of overdoses in drugs and had suffered from
serious depression. When they turn their backs on Allah then all that’s left is
misery. Really all that’s left is a dark, dark life. And so
duʿā’
, when you don’t
have the right attitude, it might even lead you away from Allah Himself. What is
between this Master of ours and us? The thing that ties us together, the thing that
gives us a relationship is actually
duʿā’
, itself.
Now moving along,
Ibrāhīm
(
ʿalayhi al-salām
) when he was leaving his
family because his father and the entire village was worshipping idols he said:
“I shall withdraw from you and all that you call upon beside Allah. I
shall only call upon my Lord. I trust the prayer to my Lord will not go
unanswered.”
(Maryam 19: 48)
He said: I’m leaving all of you; I’m leaving all the things you worship other
than Allah too and I am calling on my Master, I’m making
duʿā’
to Him. And
then he said something really profound. It’s the same surah,
Sūrat Maryam
. He
said: hopefully, I will not
be miserable when I make
duʿā’
to my master. He
added the word ‘hopefully’—
ʿasā
—Why?
Zakariyyā
did not say hopefully. He
said I have never been but
Zakariyyā
(
ʿalayhi al-salām
) was talking about the
past—I have never been depressed, when I pray to you. And
Ibrahim
(
ʿalayhi al-
salām
) is humble about his future. He says hopefully I can maintain my
īmān
.
‘Hopefully there will never come a time when I pray to you,
yā Allāh
, and I am
not filled with hope. I hope I never do that.’ So he is actually humble, he is not
self-righteous and thinks I will never, ever do that. I am always going to be
righteous;
I am always going to make
duʿā’
the right way. His humility is
suggested in the word
ʿasā
.
And now finally, like I said, people come to me and say: what am I supposed
to think? My
duʿā’
didn’t get answered, I’ve been praying so hard. Allah is not
answering my prayers! How are we supposed to think about this stuff? First of
all, acknowledge that Allah is providing not just for you, He is providing for all
of creation. He is providing for the believer and He is also providing for the
disbeliever. They get jobs too, they have children too, they have happiness too,
they have food on their tables too, they get promotions too, they get sick also
and they get healed.
So the people of
duʿā’
have trouble in this world and the
people without
duʿā’
also have trouble and challenges in this world and Allah
does not just give gifts and blessings in this world to believers He also gives
them to disbelievers and
kuffār
and the worst people. He gives and He gives and
He gives and He decides when to give—
wa-Llāh yaqbiḍ wa-yabsuṭ
(
al-Baqarah
2: 245)—Allah takes and Allah gives;
Allah pulls back a little, He constrains
your budget a little, He takes away the health a little, He’ll give you some
difficulty sometimes and sometimes He will let the difficulty go. That’s up to
Allah (
ʿazza wa-jall
), but then what’s the point of
duʿā’
if
Allah provides
everyone anyway?
The point of
duʿā’
is actually to acknowledge before Allah, it’s an admission
to Allah that He provides and we are in need. The
mu’min
, the believer in the
time of
Āl Firʿawn
(Pharaoh’s dynasty), he said it best; the attitude of
duʿā’
is
captured in one phrase—
wa-ufawwiḍ amrī ilā Allāh
(
Ghāfir
40: 44)—that’s
what
duʿā’
is at the end of the day. Let me explain what that means:
al-tafwīḍ
in
Arabic actually means to leave something in somebody else’s hands i.e.—
jaʿala
al-ākhar al-ḥākim fī amrihi
—he put somebody else in charge of his matter,
that’s called
tafwīḍ
. And interestingly in old Arabic they say—
baynī wa-
baynahū fawḍah
—and
fawḍah
has the same root. It actually means I have a
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