| 2 Hadiths


Hadith
604
It was narrated from Nafi‘ that Ibn ‘Umar used to say: When the Muslims came to Madinah, they would gather and wait for the prayer, because there was no call to prayer. One day they spoke about that, and one of them said: We should have a clapper (naqus) like that of the Christians. Others said: Rather we should have a trumpet like that of the Jews. ‘Umar said: Why don’t you send a man to call people to prayer? The Prophet (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him) said: “O Bilal, get up and call the people to prayer.”.

Commentary : The Muslims used to pray without any adhan (call to prayer) from the time when the prayer was enjoined in Makkah during the Mi‘raj (Prophet’s ascent to heaven), and the matter remained like that until they migrated to Madinah, and until they discussed this matter and the adhan was prescribed, as mentioned in this hadith. Ibn ‘Umar (may Allah be pleased with him) narrates that the Muslims, after they migrated to Madinah, used to gather and wait for the time of prayer. In other words, they would estimate its time, then they would come and gather for prayer in the mosque. At that time, the adhan had not yet been prescribed. Then one day they spoke about that, wanting to have a signal by means of which they could know that it was time for them to gather for prayer. The Prophet (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him) began to consult them and listen to their views, and see how they could work out the best method, based on the general principles of Islam. Some of them suggested a clapper (naqus), which is like the bells that are found in the churches of the Christians. Others suggested a trumpet, like that of the Jews, which they blow into and it makes a sound; those trumpets were made from the horns of animals. Then ‘Umar ibn al-Khattab (may Allah be pleased with him) said: Why don’t you send a man to call people to prayer? This was an example of ‘Umar’s wisdom, virtue and smartness. The Messenger of Allah (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him) adopted his suggestion, and said to Bilal (may Allah be pleased with him): “O Bilal, get up and call the people to prayer.” There are other hadiths which state that the words of the adhan came to ‘Abdullah ibn Zayd (may Allah be pleased with him) in a dream, and he told the Prophet (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him) about that, so the Prophet (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him) instructed Bilal to get up and call people to prayer with these words that had come to ‘Abdullah ibn Zayd (may Allah be pleased with him) in a dream. These are the words of the adhan until today. In Sunan Abi Dawud and elsewhere, it was narrated that the adhan was shown to ‘Abdullah ibn Zayd in a dream, and the next day he went to the Prophet (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him) and told him about that. He said to him: O Messenger of Allah, whilst I was between sleep and wakefulness, someone came to me and told me about the adhan. ‘Umar ibn al-Khattab (may Allah be pleased with him) had seen that in a dream before that, but he had withheld the news for twenty days. Then he told the Prophet (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him) about it, and he said to him: “What kept you from telling me?” He said: ‘Abdullah ibn Zayd beat me to it, and I felt shy. Then the Messenger of Allah (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him) said: “O Bilal, get up and see what ‘Abdullah ibn Zayd instructs you to do, then do it.”
This hadith constitutes strong proof for one of the basic principles of fiqh, which is the view that one may use an analogy (qiyas) to work out matters of religion, in the process that is known as ijtihad.
It also indicates that there is divine wisdom in the fact that the adhan came from one of the believers, someone other than the Prophet, because the adhan contains praise from Allah for His slave (meaning the Prophet (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him)) and highlighting his high status. Allah (may He be exalted) says: {And raised high for you your repute} [al-Sharh 94:4].
It highlights the high calibre of ‘Umar ibn al-Khattab and his wisdom..

606
It was narrated that Anas ibn Malik said: When the number of people increased, they began to discuss how they could know that it was time to pray by means of something they could recognize. They thought of lighting a fire, or beating a clapper. And [the Prophet (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him)] instructed Bilal to repeat the phrases of the adhan twice, and the phrases of the iqamah once..

Commentary : The Muslims used to pray without any adhan (call to prayer) from the time when the prayer was enjoined in Makkah during the Mi‘raj (Prophet’s ascent to heaven), and the matter remained like that until they migrated to Madinah, and until they discussed this matter and the adhan was prescribed, as mentioned in this hadith. Anas ibn Malik (may Allah be pleased with him) narrates that when the numbers of Muslims increased, which happened after they migrated to Madinah, as is stated in sahih reports, they began to discuss how they could know that the time for prayer had come by means of a signal that they could recognize. The Prophet (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him) began to consult them and listen to their views, and see how they could work out the best method, based on the general principles of Islam. Some of them suggested using a fire as the Magians, who were fire worshippers, did. Others suggested striking a clapper (naqus), which is like the bells that are found in the churches of the Christians. And some of them suggested – as is mentioned in a report in al-Sahihayn from Ibn ‘Umar (may Allah be pleased with him) – that they should use a trumpet like that of the Jews, which they blow into and it makes a sound; those trumpets were made from the horns of animals.
Then the Prophet (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him) instructed Bilal ibn Rabah (may Allah be pleased with him) to say the phrases of the adhan twice, saying them two by two, except for the word of Tawhid (La ilaha illa Allah) at the end, which is said only once, and except for the takbir (Allahu akbar) at the beginning, which is repeated four times. And he instructed him to say the phrases of the iqamah once, except for the takbir at the beginning and end, and the phrase “Qad qamat il-salah (prayer is about to begin)”; these phrases are said twice.
In other hadiths it is narrated that the words of the adhan came to ‘Abdullah ibn Zayd (may Allah be pleased with him) in a dream), and he told the Prophet (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him) about that, then the Prophet (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him) instructed Bilal to get up and proclaim these phrases that had come to ‘Abdullah ibn Zayd (may Allah be pleased with him) in a dream; these are the phrases of the adhan which are still proclaimed today..

608
It was narrated from Abu Hurayrah that the Messenger of Allah (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him) said: “When the call to prayer is given, the Shaytan runs away, breaking wind loudly so that he will not hear the call. When the call ends, he comes back, then when the iqamah for prayer is given, he runs away again. Then when the iqamah ends, he comes back, until he comes between a man and his thoughts, and says: Remember such and such, remember such and such – mentioning things that he had not remembered, until the man becomes unsure of how much he has prayed.”.

Commentary : Since Allah cast him out from His mercy, Iblis has been trying to mislead humankind, but when he hears the adhan and iqamah – as is mentioned in this hadith – he runs away and flees, breaking wind loudly so that he will not hear the calls to prayer, because he is so afraid when he runs away. Then when the adhan ends, the Shaytan comes back to the person to whisper to him and distract him from doing acts of worship. Then when the iqamah is given for the prayer, he runs away again. He only runs away because of what he hears of the testimony of Allah’s oneness (Tawhid) and what he sees of the teachings of Islam being followed, as he does on the Day of ‘Arafah, and because of what he sees of everyone coming together to testify to the oneness of Allah (may He be exalted), and of mercy coming down to them, for he despairs of ever making them give up what they have proclaimed, and he is certain that he will fail because of what Allah bestows upon them of reward for that. Hence he comes back, after the adhan and iqamah have ended, to whisper to the worshipper whilst he is praying, saying to him: “Remember such and such, remember such and such,” seeking to remind him of worldly matters that he is not usually concerned about when he is not praying. The Shaytan keeps whispering to the worshipper until he makes him confused about his prayer, and he does not know how much he has prayed; what is meant is that he forgets the number of rak‘ahs he has prayed and other parts of his prayer, so he adds something to it or omit something, because he is distracted by the whispers of the Shaytan.
This hadith highlights the virtue of the adhan and iqamah, and the impact that they have, as they cause the Shaytan to flee and keep him and his whispers away from the Muslim.
It also points out to the worshipper that he should focus and show humility in his prayer, and avert the whispers of the Shaytan from himself, and that he should show devotion to Allah (may He be glorified and exalted) whilst praying..

609
It was narrated from ‘Abd al-Rahman ibn ‘Abdillah ibn ‘Abd al-Rahman ibn Abi Sa‘sa‘ah al-Ansari al-Mazini, from his father, that he told him that Abu Sa‘id al-Khudri said to him: I see that you love sheep and the wilderness. When you are with your sheep or in your wilderness, and you give the call to prayer, raise your voice when you give the call, for no jinn, human or anything else hears the voice of the mu’adhdhin but he will testify in his favour on the Day of Resurrection..

Commentary : The adhan and the mu’adhdhin have many virtues, one of which is what Abu Sa‘id al-Khudri (may Allah be pleased with him) spoke of in this hadith, when he said to the Tabi‘i ‘Abdullah ibn ‘Abd al-Rahman ibn Abi Sa‘sa‘ah, who had sheep which he tended: I see that you love sheep and the wilderness. In other words, you love to tend sheep in the desert – which indicates that he would be on his own when the time for prayer came. So he (may Allah be pleased with him) instructed him, if the time for prayer came when he was in that situation, to raise his voice with the adhan. Then he told him a hadith of the Messenger of Allah (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him) in which it says that no jinn, human or anything else hears this call but he will testify on the Day of Resurrection that the mu’adhdhin did that. He only instructed him to raise his voice when giving the call so that whoever is far away from him could hear it, and thus he would have more witnesses to speak in his favour on the Day of Resurrection. Thus on the Day of Resurrection, he will become famous among those who testify to his virtue and high status. Just as Allah (may He be exalted) will humiliate some people and expose them to shame on the basis of the testimony given by witnesses, by the same token He will honour others, perfect their happiness and bring joy to their hearts.
This hadith highlights the virtue of practicing sunnahs and religious matters openly, even in the wilderness..

611
It was narrated from Abu Sa‘id al-Khudri that the Messenger of Allah (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him) said: “When you hear the call [to prayer], say what the mu’adhdhin says.”.

Commentary : The adhan and the mu’adhdhin have many virtues and are matters of high status before Allah (may He be exalted). In order that the listener will not be deprived of this reward, he is instructed to repeat after the mu’adhdhin, as mentioned in this hadith, in which the Prophet (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him) says: “When you hear the call [to prayer]”; this refers to the call for the five obligatory prayers. “say what the mu’adhdhin says.” So the listener should say the word of the adhan as the mu’adhdhin does. The Prophet (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him) told us how to do that. In Sahih Muslim, it is narrated that the Prophet (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him) said: “When the muezzin says, ‘Allahu akbar, Allahu akbar (Allah is most great, Allah is most great),’ and one of you says, ‘Allahu akbar, Allahu akbar’; then he says, ‘Ashhadu an la ilaha illa Allah (I bear witness that there is no god worthy of worship except Allah),’ and you say, ‘Ashhadu an la ilaha illa Allah’; then he says, ‘Ashhadu anna Muhammadan rasulullah (I bear witness that Muhammad is the Messenger of Allah),’ and you say, ‘Ashhadu anna Muhammadan rasulullah’; then he says, ‘Hayya ‘ala’l-salah (Come to prayer),’ and you say, ‘La hawla wa la quwwata illa Billah (there is no power and no strength except with Allah)’; then he says, ‘Hayya ‘ala’l-falah (Come to prosperity),’ and you say, ‘La hawla wa la quwwata illa Billah’; then he says, ‘Allahu akbar, Allahu akbar,’ and you say, ‘Allahu akbar, Allahu akbar’; then he says, ‘La ilaha illa Allah,’ and you say, ‘La ilaha ill-Allah,’ sincerely from the heart, you will enter Paradise.” Thus it is clear that the reward for repeating the adhan after the mu’adhdhin is a means of admittance to Paradise..

613
It was narrated from Mu‘awiyah ibn Abi Sufyan (may Allah be pleased with him) that when he [the mu’adhdhin] said Hayya ‘ala al-salah, he said: La hawla wa la quwwata illa Billah; and he said: This is what we heard your Prophet (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him) saying..

Commentary : The adhan and the mu’adhdhin have many virtues and are matters of high status before Allah (may He be exalted). In order that the listener will not be deprived of this reward, he is instructed to repeat after the mu’adhdhin. Our Prophet (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him) has taught us how to repeat the adhan after the mu’adhdhin. This hadith explains some of that, as the Tabi‘i Yahya ibn Abi Kathir narrates from Mu‘awiyah ibn Abi Sufyan (may Allah be pleased with him) that when he heard the mu’adhdhin say Hayya ‘ala al-salah, Mu‘awiyah said: La hawla wa la quwwata illa Billah, and stated that he did that as he had heard it from the Prophet (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him). Hence this is the Sunnah of repeating after the mu’adhdhin and responding to his words in the case of the two phrases “Hayya ‘ala al-salah” and “Hayya ‘ala al-falah.” When the mu’adhdhin says these two phrases, the listener should respond by saying: La hawla wa la quwwata illa Billah. That is because in the case of phrases other than “Hayya ‘ala al-salah” and “Hayya ‘ala al-falah”, both the listener and the mu’adhdhin share in the reward – such as when saying “Allahu akbar” and “La ilaha illa Allah”, and the other phrases of the adhan – because they are a kind of dhikr. However, with regard to the phrases “Hayya ‘ala al-salah” and “Hayya ‘ala al-falah”, the aim is to call the people to prayer, because these phrases effectively mean: Come to prayer, come to strive. This is what the mu’adhdhin is doing when he says these words. Therefore Allah compensates the listener for what he misses out on of the reward for that, with the reward for saying La hawla wa la quwwata illa Billah. And it was said that the listener says La hawla wa la quwwata illa Billah at this point because the meaning of the phrases “Hayya ‘ala al-salah” and “Hayya ‘ala al-falah” is: Come with your devotion and clean heart to guidance in the immediate moment, and come to great success later on. So it is appropriate for him to say: This is a momentous matter that I cannot do with the weakness that is inherent in me, unless Allah helps me with His power and strength.
This hadith highlights Mu‘awiyah’s knowledge and keenness to follow the Sunnah of the Prophet (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him)..

614
It was narrated from Jabir ibn ‘Abdillah that the Messenger of Allah (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him) said: “Whoever says when he hears the call to prayer, ‘Allahumma Rabba hadhihi’l-da‘wat il-tammati wa’l-salat il-qa’imah, ati Muhammadan al-wasilata wa’l-fadilah, wab‘athhu maqaman mahmudan alladhi wa’adtahu (O Allah, Lord of this perfect call and the prayer that will always be offered, grant Muhammad the privilege and also the eminence, and resurrect him to the praised position that You have promised him),’ will be granted my intercession on the Day of Resurrection.”.

Commentary : Du‘a’ (supplication) is one of the best acts of worship and a means of drawing closer to Allah, and it is a means of attaining good things and blessings. The Prophet (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him) has taught us many blessed supplications, and has recommended them at certain times and in certain circumstances; he has also highlighted the immense reward that they bring. In this hadith, the Prophet (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him) told us that whoever says, after hearing the adhan and after the mu’adhdhin has finished giving the call to prayer: “‘Allahumma Rabba hadhihi’l-da‘wat il-tammah (O Allah, Lord of this perfect call)” that is, the phrases of the adhan with which people are called to worship Allah (may He be exalted). What is meant by perfect is that they are complete, with no change or alteration; rather they will remain as they are until the Day of Resurrection. “wa’l-salat il-qa’imah (and the prayer that will always be offered)” – which is constantly offered. Give Muhammad al-wasilah (the privilege)” – this refers to a lofty status in Paradise that no one will attain except him (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him); and also al-fadilah (the eminence)” – this refers to a higher status than all other created beings; it may be understood that al-fadilah is a second lofty status. And resurrect the Prophet (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him) to the praised position” – this refers to a position on the Day of Resurrection for which all those who are standing on the Day of Resurrection will praise him; it is the position of great intercession. “alladhi wa’adtahu (that You have promised him)” – that is the status that You have mentioned in Your Book, where You say: {it is expected that your Lord will resurrect you to a praised station} [al-Isra’ 17:79].
Then the Prophet (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him) mentioned the reward for the one who recites this supplication: it is that he will be entitled to and deserve the intercession of the Prophet (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him) on the Day of Resurrection. His intercession will be for the sinners (to be forgiven), or for others to be admitted to Paradise without being brought to account, or for others to be raised in status on the Day of Resurrection – each according to his situation.
This hadith highlights the virtue of reciting this dhikr after the adhan, and encourages the Muslim to offer supplication at the times of prayer, when the gates of heaven are open for mercy.
It also affirms the great intercession of the Prophet (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him)..

616
It was narrated that ‘Abdullah ibn al-Harith said: Ibn ‘Abbas addressed us on a muddy day, and when the mu’adhdhin reached the words “Hayya ‘ala al-salah”, he instructed him to call out “Al-salatu fi’l-rihal (Pray where you are).” The people looked at one another, then he said: One who was better than him did this, and this prayer is an obligatory prayer..

Commentary : The teachings of Islam are easy-going and seek to make things easy for people. One example of that is that despite the importance of prayer in congregation in the mosque, Islam takes into consideration people’s circumstances at difficult times, when going to the mosque is hard, such as in the event of high winds, rain, fear, and so on.
In this hadith, the Tabi‘i ‘Abdullah ibn al-Harith narrates that whilst Ibn ‘Abbas (may Allah be pleased with him) was addressing the Muslims on a muddy day, when there was a great deal of mud because of rain, he instructed the mu’adhdhin to say, when he reached the words “Hayya ‘ala al-salah” to say: “Al-salatu fi’l-rihal (Pray where you are)” – meaning in their houses and homes. Giving the call in this manner is a concession to allow people to pray at home, and not to pray in congregation, so that no one will encounter difficulty in coming to the mosque. When he instructed the mu’adhdhin to do that, those who were present questioned his doing that, and they looked at one another in astonishment, finding that odd, because they had never seen such a concession before that from any of the other Sahabah (may Allah be pleased with them all). When Ibn ‘Abbas (may Allah be pleased with him) saw their reaction, he said: One who was better than me did that – meaning the Prophet (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him). Then he (may Allah be pleased with him) explained to them that this was not something new that had been introduced into the adhan, and nothing had changed; what he instructed the mu’adhdhin to do was something that the Prophet himself (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him) had done. This indicates that on a rainy or muddy day, the mu’adhdhin may say in the adhan: “Sallu fi rihalikum (pray in your houses).” Thus it becomes clear to the people that it is permissible to pray in their houses on rainy and muddy days. This is what is meant by the words of Ibn ‘Abbas (may Allah be pleased with him), “and this prayer is an obligatory prayer”: Jumu‘ah prayer is an obligatory prayer. According to another report, he said: Indeed Jumu‘ah is an obligatory prayer, and I did not like to make you come out and walk in the mud. That was because they would be reluctant to stay away from Jumu‘ah prayer, and would put up with hardship in order to go there in the mud. Hence he instructed the mu’adhdhin to say “Sallu fi rihaalikum” so that they would know that doing so was permissible, and they would not be upset about it.
This hadith highlights the easy nature of Islamic teachings, and that the teachings of Islam seek to spare the Muslims hardship by granting concessions allowing them not to pray in congregation in the event of rain, hail and disasters.
It also highlights the knowledge of Ibn ‘Abbas (may Allah be pleased with him) and his keenness to follow the Sunnah of the Prophet (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him)..

617
It was narrated from Salim ibn ‘Abdillah, from his father, that the Messenger of Allah (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him) said: “Bilal gives the adhan at night, so [continue to eat and drink] until Ibn Umm Maktum gives the call to prayer.” Then he said: “He is a blind man; he does not give the call to prayer until he is told: Dawn has broken, dawn has broken.”.

Commentary : The practice of the Messenger of Allah (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him) was to have two adhans for Fajr prayer. The first was an adhan given at night, allowing enough time before the time for the prayer began so that one who was sleeping could wake up, and one who was praying qiyam could rest, and one who wanted to fast could eat sahur. The second was an adhan given when the time for Fajr began; this is the time when people stop eating and drinking, and begin the fast.
This hadith confirms that, as the Prophet (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him) explained, Bilal gave the adhan at the end of the night, before the break of dawn; therefore people did not have to stop eating and drinking, or begin the fast, until Ibn Umm Maktum gave the adhan. His real name was ‘Abdullah – or, it was said, ‘Amr ibn Za’idah. That was because he was the one who gave the call after the break of dawn. Ibn Umm Maktum was a blind man who did not give the call to Fajr prayer until he was certain that the dawn had broken; the people used to call out to him and tell him that the dawn had broken, so that Ibn Umm Maktum would know for certain that the time for Fajr had begun, and he would give the call to prayer.
This hadith indicates that it is permissible for the one who wants to fast to continue eating and drinking until the end of the time before Fajr.
It indicates that it is prescribed to have two mu’adhdhins in one mosque.
It indicates that it is permissible for the mu’adhdhin to be blind.
It indicates that it is permissible to refer to a person by mentioning his physical disabilities, so that people will know who is being referred to, if that person is well-known for having that disability, and it is not mentioned by way of shaming him or showing disrespect.
It indicates that it is permissible to name a man after his mother, if he is known by that name, as in the case of Ibn Umm Maktum..

618
It was narrated that ‘Abdullah ibn ‘Umar said: Hafsah told me that when the mu’adhdhin started to watch out for the break of dawn, and when the time of Fajr had begun, the Messenger of Allah (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him) would pray two brief rak‘ahs before the iqamah was given for the prayer..

Commentary : The supererogatory prayers make up for any shortcomings that occur in the obligatory prayers, and they are like an arena in which people may compete to earn hasanat (rewards for good deeds) and attain high status before Allah (may He be glorified and exalted). The Prophet (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him) was keen to offer the sunnah prayers and explain them to the people in word and deed. The sunnah prayer of Fajr is one of the sunnah prayers that the Prophet (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him) upheld most assiduously.
In this hadith, the Mother of the Believers Hafsah (may Allah be pleased with her) narrates that when the mu’adhdhin started to watch out for the break of dawn – it was said: perhaps what is meant by watching out was that he would sit and wait for the break of dawn, and remain there for that purpose, or that when the mu’adhdhin stood up, ready to give the adhan; that is explained in other reports. In al-Sahihayn, it says: when the mu’adhdhin had finished giving the adhan for Fajr prayer. Al-Bukhari narrated from Hafsah (may Allah be pleased with her): When the mu’adhdhin had given the adhan for Fajr. What we may understand from the variation in these reports is that when the Prophet (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him) became certain that the adhan for Fajr would be given soon, and the light of dawn began to appear – which is what confirms that the time for Fajr has begun – at that time, the Prophet (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him) would stand up and offer two brief sunnah rak‘ahs before standing up to offer the obligatory prayer of Fajr.
This hadith indicates that the sunnah prayer of Fajr is two brief rak‘ahs, which are to be done after the adhan and before the iqamah for the (obligatory) prayer..

621
It was narrated from ‘Abdullah ibn Mas‘ud that the Prophet (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him) said: “No one of you should stop eating suhur when he hears the adhan of Bilal, for he gives the adhan – or he gives the call to prayer – at night, so that the one who is praying qiyam may rest, and the one who is sleeping may wake up. And one should not think that the dawn has come – and he gestured with his fingers, up and down – until it is like this – and Zuhayr (one of the narrators) gestured with his two fingers, holding one above the other, then pulling them apart, right and left..

Commentary : The practice of the Messenger of Allah (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him) was to have two adhans for Fajr prayer. The first was an adhan given at night, allowing enough time before the time for the prayer began so that one who was sleeping could wake up, and one who was praying qiyam could rest, and one who wanted to fast could eat sahur. The second was an adhan given when the time for Fajr began; this is the time when people stop eating and drinking, and begin the fast.
This hadith confirms that, as the Prophet (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him) explained, the adhan that Bilal ibn Rabah (may Allah be pleased with him) gave for Fajr prayer was given before the time for the prayer began, so this adhan should not make anyone stop eating sahur. The word sahur refers to what is eaten, and suhur refers to the action of eating food before the time of Fajr begins, for the one who intends to fast. The reason why he should not stop eating sahur when hearing the adhan of Bilal was that he only gave the adhan at night, before the time for the prayer had begun, in order to alert the one who was praying qiyam al-layl that dawn was approaching, so that he could go back and sleep a little, and thus be able to get up refreshed to pray Fajr, or so that the one who needed to eat sahur could get up and eat sahur, and so that the one who was asleep could get up and get ready to pray.
The Prophet (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him) explained the difference between the false dawn and the true dawn. The false dawn is of no significance, so the one who wants to fast should not stop eating when he sees it, and the people should not pray Fajr when they see it. The way in which it may be recognized is that it is a vertical line of light that appears in the sky; hence the Prophet (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him) gestured with his fingers, moving them up and down, to explain with this gesture that the vertical light that appears from top to bottom of the sky is not dawn. Rather the true dawn is that which, when people see it, means that the one who wants to fast should stop eating, and it marks the beginning of the time for prayer. This is the light that appears along the horizon, and is explained in the hadith by the words “until it is like this”, meaning: until the dawn appears like this, referring to the width of the sky. Zuhayr ibn Mu‘awiyah al-Ju‘fi [one of the narrators of the hadith] described the gesture of the Messenger of Allah (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him) by gesturing with his forefingers, holding one above the other, then pulling them apart, right and left, to demonstrate that the true dawn is the light that appears along the horizon in the east, extending south and north.
This hadith indicates that further clarification may be done with gestures in order to make clear what is being taught.
It highlights the difference between the true dawn and the false dawn.
It indicates that the time for Fajr prayer begins and the time for suhur ends after the true dawn has broken..

624
It was narrated from ‘Abdullah ibn Mughaffal al-Muzani that the Messenger of Allah (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him) said: “Between the two calls there is prayer – three times – for whoever wishes.”.

Commentary : One of the wisdoms behind the supererogatory and sunnah prayers is that they make up for any shortcomings that occur in the obligatory prayers, and they are like an arena in which people may compete to earn hasanat (rewards for good deeds) and attain high status before Allah (may He be glorified and exalted). The Prophet (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him) was keen to offer the sunnah prayers and explain them to the people in word and deed.
In this hadith, the Messenger of Allah (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him) explains a supererogatory and sunnah prayer that is connected to an obligatory prayer, as he says: “Between the two calls there is prayer.” What is meant by the two calls here is the original adhan before any obligatory prayer, and the second call is the iqamah which comes just before the prayer. The Prophet (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him) said this three times, to make sure that everyone understood it and to emphasize the importance of what he was saying. And so that no one would think that this prayer was obligatory, after the third time, he (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him) said: “for whoever wishes”; that is, for whoever wishes to pray between the adhan and iqamah. Thus he explained that the matter was broad in scope and based on individual choice and that it was for the purpose of doing more acts of worship and attaining more reward, but it was not obligatory.
This hadith encourages the Muslim to offer the voluntary prayer between the adhan and iqamah.
It also indicates that there should be a pause between the adhan and iqamah, even if it is only short..

625
It was narrated that Anas ibn Malik said: When the mu’adhdhin gave the adhan, some of the companions of the Prophet (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him) stood up and rushed towards the pillars, until the Prophet (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him) came out whilst they were like that, praying two rak‘ahs before Maghrib, and there was hardly any time between the adhan and iqamah. ‘Uthman ibn Jabalah and Abu Dawud narrated from Shu‘bah: There was only a short time between them..

Commentary : The Sahabah (may Allah be pleased with them) were very keen to do anything that would bring them closer to Allah (may He be glorified and exalted). That included offering supererogatory and sunnah prayers before and after the [obligatory] prayers.
In this hadith, Anas ibn Malik says that when the mu’adhdhin gave the adhan for Maghrib, some of the companions of the Prophet (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him) got up and rushed towards the pillars that held up the roof of the mosque. The purpose behind rushing to the pillars was so that they could use them as sutrahs to screen them from those who were walking in front of them, so that they could pray individually before Maghrib prayer, until the Prophet (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him) came out of his apartment to pray Maghrib whilst they were like that, rushing and hastening to pray two rak‘ahs before Maghrib prayer. A report narrated by Muslim from Anas ibn Malik (may Allah be pleased with him) adds: A stranger would come and think that the prayer had already been offered, because of the large numbers of people who were praying these two [voluntary] rak‘ahs.
This is indicative of the large numbers of people who did these two rak‘ahs. Anas ibn Malik (may Allah be pleased with him) said: And there was hardly any time between the adhan and iqamah; in other words, there was not much time, so they would pray those two rak‘ahs within a brief period of time. This is what was explained and affirmed by Shu‘bah ibn al-Hajjaj al-Wasiti, one of the narrators of this hadith, when he said: There was only a short time between them.
This hadith indicates that it is prescribed to pray two supererogatory rak‘ahs before Maghrib.
It also indicates that the one who is praying on his own should have a sutrah (screen)..

632
It was narrated that Nafi‘ said: Ibn ‘Umar gave the adhan on a cold night in Dajnan, then he said: Pray where you are staying. Then he told us that the Messenger of Allah (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him) would instruct a mu’adhdhin to give the call to prayer, then say immediately afterwards: Ala sallu fi’l-rihal (Attention! Pray where you are), on a cold or very rainy night, when travelling..

Commentary : Islam urges the Muslim to regularly pray in congregation in the mosques, but if it is difficult to attend the prayer in congregation, then Islam grants a concession allowing the Muslim not to pray in congregation. The types of excuses allowing that include severe cold and rain.
This hadith highlights that, as Nafi‘, the freed slave of Ibn ‘Umar, narrates that Ibn ‘Umar gave the call to prayer on an extremely cold night in Dajnan, which is a mountain in Tihamah, twenty-five miles from Makkah. Then Ibn ‘Umar (may Allah be pleased with him) said, straight after giving the adhan: Pray where you are; that is, in the places where you are staying and your tents. And he told him that this was the practice of the Messenger of Allah (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him), as he would instruct a mu’adhdhin to give the adhan, then say straight after finishing the adhan: Ala sallu fi’l-rihal (Attention! Pray where you are). That would be on a cold or very rainy night, whilst travelling. The apparent meaning of the report is that this concession is only for travel, but the scholars stated that this concession is general and also applies to anyone who is not travelling but could find it difficult to attend the prayer in congregation.
This report states that when this phrase, “Sallu fi rihalikum (pray where you are)” is to be said is immediately after finishing the adhan. In al-Sahihayn it is narrated in the hadith of Ibn ‘Abbas that it is to be said in place of the phrases Hayya ‘ala al-salah and Hayya ‘ala al-falah. Whichever of the two options the caller chooses, there is nothing wrong with it.
This hadith highlights the kindness of Allah (may He be glorified and exalted), and how He makes things easy for His slaves.
It also indicates that it is prescribed to stay away from attending prayers in congregation when there is fear of harm that could result from that..

633
It was narrated from ‘Awn ibn Abi Juhayfah that his father said: I saw the Messenger of Allah (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him) in al-Abtah, when Bilal came to him and told him that it was time to pray. Then Bilal brought out a long stick and set it up in front of the Messenger of Allah (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him) in al-Abtah, then he gave the iqamah for prayer..

Commentary : The Sahabah showed a great deal of etiquette with the Messenger of Allah (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him), and that they (may Allah be pleased with them) were very keen to follow his guidance and practice in all things, and to transmit it to those who came after them, especially with regard to prayer, which is the foundation of faith.
In this hadith, Abu Juhayfah Wahb ibn ‘Abdillah al-Suwa’i (may Allah be pleased with him) narrates something that the Prophet (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him) used to do in prayer, as he says: I saw the Messenger of Allah (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him) in al-Abtah, which is a place outside Makkah al-Mukarramah; it was originally a watercourse that runs through the valley of Makkah. It is located south of the Haram, in front of Jabal Thawr. Bilal ibn Rabah (may Allah be pleased with him) came to him and told him that the time for prayer had begun, then Bilal came out with a long stick and set it up in front of the Messenger of Allah (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him) to be a sutrah for him and to mark the place where he would be praying, so that no one would pass in front of him. He used to do that on his journeys, because the traveller usually cannot find a wall to use as a sutrah, and he usually prays in open ground. However, if he prays in the mosque, or behind a wall or fence, that forms a natural sutrah.
Then Bilal gave the iqamah for prayer. That happened during the Farewell Pilgrimage. This report clearly refers to the iqamah without an adhan, but in another report, al-Bukhari mentions the adhan.
This hadith highlights the great respect that the Sahabah showed to the Prophet (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him).
It also refers to giving the adhan and iqamah whilst travelling.
It also indicates that the one who wants to pray should set up a sutrah if he fears that people will pass directly in front of him..

7
Al-Mughira ibn Shu'ba narrated, “There was no one authentically reported the news of Ali except the companions of Abdullah ibn Masoud.”.

Commentary : One has to verify the narrators and reports taced back to the Prophet (ﷺ) and his companions. We narrate the trustworthy and truthful narrators' reports, for some people and reports may not be accepted. We have to be careful, for some may have purposes drawing them to fabricate narrations. In this report, Al-Mughira ibn Shu'ba confirmed that it was only the companions of Abdullah ibn Masoud who narrated the authentic reports about Ali. They were the only people reporting what was authentically narrated about him. After some events of trial like killing Uthman ibn Affan, Ali's fighting Khawarij and others, Muaweya’s rule after Al-Hasan’s abdication, lots of fabricated reports narrated about Ali by whether his supporters or opponents, unlike Abdullah ibn Masoud who just narrated and conveyed authentic reports to his own companions, including reports about Ali. Imam Muslim narrated that Abu Ishaq Amr ibn Abdullah As-Sabe'i narrated, “When they fabricated reports after Ali, one of Ali’s companions said, ‘May Allah kill them! They corrupted every type of knowledge!'" This refers to the reports that Rawafid and Shia fabricated and inserted to Ali’s knowledge and reports. This hadith contains the following lessons: (1) It illustrates the virtue of Abdullah ibn Masoud and his companions for their accurate conveying the truth and (2) It confirms the necessity of deeply examining the reports before accepting them..

7
Jaber ibn Abdullah narrated, "The Messenger of Allah ﷺ allowed us to eat the flesh of horses but forbade us from eating donkey flesh.".

Commentary : The Prophet (ﷺ) used to explain to people the lawful and unlawful foods and drinks which were not stipulated in the Quran. In this hadith, Jaber ibn Abdullah narrated that the Prophet (ﷺ) allowed consuming horse meat but prohibited consuming the meat of domesticated donkey which is used to serve people, especially farmers in villages. The Prophet (ﷺ) strictly prohibited it on Khaybar Day in the seventh year after Hijrah. This is due to some things such as: (1) It has benefits for people as in transporting and carrying unlike horses or (2) Its meat is bad. In the two Sahihs, Anas narrated that the Prophet (ﷺ) said, “Verily, Allah and his Messenger prohibited you from (eating of) the donkey flesh, for it is filthy.” This is unlike the zebra flesh which is permitted in other hadiths. In the two Sahihs, Abu Qatada narrated, “I said, ‘O Messenger of Allah, I hunted a zebra and still have some of its flesh.’ The Prophet (ﷺ) told people to eat while they were in the state of ihram.” In Sunan Abu Daoud, the Prophet (ﷺ) forbade them to eat mule flesh. The hadith of Jaber contains the following lessons: (1) It shows the legitimacy of consuming horse flesh and (2) It clarifies the prohibition of consuming domestic donkey flesh..

8
Yahya ibn Ya’mur narrated, “The first man who spoke about qadar (divine decree) in Basra was Ma'bad Al-Juhany. Humaid ibn Abderrahman Al-Hemyary and I set out for pilgrimage - or umrah - and said, ‘If we can only meet someone of the Prophet’s companions ﷺ, we will ask him about what those people are saying about qadar. Accidentally, we saw Abdullah ibn Omar ibn Al-Khattab while he was entering the mosque. My companion and I surrounded him, one on his right and the other on his left. I expected that my companion would authorize me to speak so I said, ‘O Abu Abdurrahman! We have some people in our land who recite the Quran and seek knowledge [he added some of their affairs as they claim that there is no divine decree and events were not predestined].’ Abdullah ibn Omar said, ‘If you meet such people, tell them that I am neither from them nor they are from me. By whom Abdullah ibn Umar swears, if any one of them had given charity of gold equal to the mountain of Uhud, Allah would not have accepted it unless he had believed in the divine decree.’ He further said, ‘My father, Omar ibn al-Khattab, told me, ‘Once we were sitting with the Messenger of Allah ﷺ, a man with deep white clothes and deep black hair came. He neither had signs of travel on him nor any of us recognized him. He sat with the Prophet ﷺ, placed his knees next to the Prophet’s knees and his palms on the Prophet’s thighs, and said, ‘O Muhammad, inform me about al-Islam.’ The Messenger of Allah ﷺ said, ‘Islam is to testify that there is no god but Allah and that Muhammad is the messenger of Allah, establish prayer, pay Zakat, observe the fast of Ramadan, and perform pilgrimage if you can bear it.’ He (the inquirer) said, ‘You have told the truth.’ He (Omar) said, ‘It amazed us that he asked then verified his truth.’ He (the inquirer) said, ‘Inform me about iman (faith).’ The Prophet said, ‘It is to believe in Allah, His angels, His books, His messengers, the Last Day, and the divine decree, good and evil.’ He (the inquirer) said, ‘You have told the truth.’ He (the inquirer) said, ‘Inform me about ihsan.’ He (the Prophet) said, ‘It is to worship Allah as if you are seeing Him, for though you do not see Him, He sees you.’ He (the enquirer) said, ‘Inform me about the hour (the last day).’ He (the Prophet) said, ‘One who is asked about it does not know more about it than the one who is asking.’ He (the inquirer) said, ‘Inform me about its signs.’ He (the Prophet) said, ‘That the slave-girl will give birth to her mistress, that you will find barefooted, naked, destitute, goat-herds competing with each other in constructing buildings.’ He (Omar) said, ‘Then he (the inquirer) went on his way and I stayed for a long while then the Prophet said to me, ‘Omar, do you know who this inquirer was?’ I replied, ‘Allah and His Messenger know best.’ He (the Prophet) said, ‘He was Gabriel (the angel) who came to instruct you the matters of your religion.’”.

Commentary : Belief in qadar (divine decree) is one of the fundamentals of the Islamic faith. The Prophet (ﷺ) explained that acting based on lawful means does not contradict it. On the other hand, he warned his nation against those denying divine decree or claiming that it contradicts Islamic faith. This supreme hadith taught us the Islamic religion by clarifying its pillars along with the signs of the Last Day. In this hadith, Yahya ibn Ya’mur reported that the first one who rejected the divine decree was Ma'bad Al-Juhany. He was one of the students of al-Hasan al-Basri. Once he spread his heresy of rejecting the divine decree, Al-Hajjaj imprisoned and killed him. This was in Basra, a city built by Caliph Umar ibn Al-Khattab in the south of Iraq in 17 AH. and inhabited by people in 18 AH. Denying the divine decree means that Allah just knows people's deeds after they occur. His saying, “... in Basra” implies that he was preceded by others who adopted this heresy outside Basra. It was said that this misleading heresy first arose in Mecca when the Kaaba burned and Ibn al-Zubair was trapped by Yazid. Some said it was burned by Allah's decree while others rejected this opinion. It was also said that the first one who rejected the divine decree in Levant was Amr Al-Maqsous. In this hadith, Yahya ibn Ya'mur reported that both he and Humaid ibn Abderrahman Al-Hemyary set out for pilgrimage - or umrah - to the Sacred House in Macca and hoped they met one of the Prophet's companions so they asked him about rejecting the divine decree that some adopted. Accidentally, they saw Abdullah ibn Omar ibn Al-Khattab entering the mosque. They surrounded him, one on his right and the other on his left. Yahya expected that his companion would authorize him to speak due to either his being older or more eloquent than him or that Humaid was too shy to ask. Yahya told Abdullah about what happened and addressed him with his nickname, Abu Abderrahman out of respect. He told him that there were some people in Basra taking much care of the Quran recitation, seeking Islamic knowledge, and spreading some misleading heresies. He mentioned and added some other points so that Abdullah may give them importance. It may mean that he mentioned their doctrine of heresies of denying the divine decree, believing that Allah just knows people's deeds after they occur, proving one's independent ability of Allah, the Almighty, and denying that all things happen based on Allah’s command. When Abdullah ibn Omar heard that, he asked him to inform those people of heresies that he was neither from them nor they were from him, which is a complete repudiation. Then he swore by Allah if any one of them had given charity of gold equal to the mountain of Uhud - a great mountain in Medina -, Allah would not have accepted it unless he had believed in Allah’s divine decree, for believing in the divine decree is one of the faith pillars. Then he told them about the proof of that. He said that his father, Omar ibn al-Khattab, told him that once they were sitting with the Prophet (ﷺ), a man suddenly came to him. He wore deep white clothes and had deep black hair. He had no signs of travel like being exhausted or dusty. None knew about him either. He placed his knees next to the Prophet’s ones and his palms on the Prophet’s thighs or his own thighs. This refers that he deeply knew the Prophet's prestige. He addressed the Prophet ﷺ with his name, not his prophethood nickname. Then he asked the Prophet ﷺ about Islam and its reality. The Prophet ﷺ told him about the five pillars of Islam: (1) To approve by your heart and testify by your tongue that there is no god worthy of worship but Allah and that Muhammad is his Messenger. It is a correlated testimony. It means that a Muslim utters these two testimonies while acknowledging the oneness of Allah and His right to be worshiped alone without any partners. It means that a Muslim believes in Prophet Muhammad's message and acts upon it. This is the testimony that will benefit us in the Hereafter so we will win Paradise and be saved from Hell, (2) Establishing the prayer: It means to regularly perform the five daily obligatory prayers at their times while fulfilling their conditions and pillars. They are Fajr (Dawn), Dhuhr (Noon), Asr (Afternoon), Maghreb (Sunset), and Isha (Evening), (3) Paying the obligatory zakah: It is an obligatory financial act of worship concerning any property that reaches the limit determined by Islam over an entire lunar year. Generally, 2.5% of one’s savings must be given to the poor and the types determined by Islam. It includes all money sources like cattle, livestock, crops, fruits, merchandise, and buried treasure or metals extracted from the earth. Each source has its own percentage and time of paying to the poor, (4) Fasting Ramadan month: It is to refrain from eating, drinking, intercourse, etc. from dawn to sunset, out of worship, and (5) Pilgrimage to the Sacred House once in one's lifetime on the condition that one is financially and physically able to perform it. Once the Prophet ﷺ ﷺ explained the pillars of Islam, the man said to him, "You have told the truth." It means you answered truthfully and correctly, which amazed the attendees, for he asked as if he did not know but he later confirmed the Prophet's answer. Is he a teacher or a learner?! Then he asked the Prophet about the faith's reality. The Prophet ﷺ told him that it includes six pillars as follows: (1) Belief in Allah: It is to believe in His existence, his attributes of majesty and perfection, his oneness, and his being clear of the attributes of imperfection. It is also to believe that he is the Eternal Refuge, neither begets nor is born, nor is there to Him any equivalent. It is to believe that He is the Creator of all creatures and the only god deserving to be worshiped without any partners, who manages his kingdom however he wills, (2) Belief in angels: It is to believe in the forms in which Allah created them. They are a great creation made of light. They are servants without any divine attributes. They are honored servants forced to obey Allah, the Almighty. They do not disobey Allah but do what he commands them to do. Their real number is only known to Allah. In general, they are different types with various jobs. Some are specifically mentioned in the Quran and Prophet's tradition like Gabriel who is responsible for conveying the divine revelation to prophets, Israfil who is responsible for blowing the trumpet, Michael who is responsible for sending the rain, Angel of Death who is responsible for holding people's souls, etc. A Muslim must believe in them as a whole and their specific details if mentioned, (3) Belief in Allah's books: The Quran was revealed to Prophet Muhammad ﷺ, the seal of the Prophets and Messengers, the Torah revealed to Prophet Moses ﷺ, Injil revealed to Prophet Jesus ﷺ, the Psalms revealed to Prophet David ﷺ, and the scriptures of Abraham and Moses ﷺ. Belief in these books means to believe in their unfabricated original versions which were the word of Allah. A Muslim must believe that the Quran is a judge over these books so it may confirm, abrogate, or even correct their reports, (4) Belief in Allah's Messengers: It is to believe that Allah sent human messengers to people to call them to worship Him alone. A Muslim believes in all Prophets and messengers without any distinction. A Muslim believes in Prophet Muhammad, the seal of Prophets and messengers. He was sent to all people so it is obligatory for all people and Jinns to believe in him and follow his message once they hear of him. Whoever disbelieves in his message disbelieves in all prophets and messengers. A Muslim believes that they were guided ones who were sent to guide people, truthful in their messages from Allah, granted miracles that proved their truthfulness, and conveyed Allah's messages without insertion, deletion, or concealing. A Muslim has to love, dignify, support, and take Prophets as role models, (5) Belief in the Last Day: It means to believe in all events of that day like resurrection, gathering people for reckoning, the balance, the path, Paradise which is a reward for good doers, Hell which is a punishment for bad doers, along with other issues that were authentically proven, (6) Belief in the divine decree: It is to believe in Allah's timeless and eternal knowledge which deeply encompasses all issues' quantities and conditions. It is to fully believe that all things, good or evil, sweet or bitter, and beneficial or harmful are made by Allah’s decree, will, and command. It is to believe that Allah, the Almighty, gives people the ability for what they were created for. The man said, “You have told the truth.” This proves that belief in the divine decree is a pillar of faith and that Ma’bad al-Juhany’s denial is incorrect and contradictory to the Prophet’s statement and Gabriel’s testimony. In this hadith, the Prophet ﷺ explained the principle of faith which is the inner ratification and the principle of Islam which is the outward surrender and submission. This means that every believer is a Muslim not vice versa and that belief is the heart’s act while Islam is the limbs’ act. Then the man asked the Prophet (ﷺ) about ihsan which is related to one’s relationship with Allah, not with people. The Prophet answers, “It is to worship Allah as if you are seeing Him, for though you do not see Him, He sees you.” The top level of ihsan is to worship Allah as if you are seeing him with your heart and insight. If he finds it hard, he moves to the other level which is to worship Allah while realizing He is seeing and knowing his secrets and outward issues, and nothing may hide from Him. Then the man asked him about the time of the hereafter. The Prophet (ﷺ) answered, “One who is asked about it does not know more about it than the one who is asking.” It means that all people are equally unaware of its time. This indicates that he is Allah alone who knows its time. In the Two Sahihs, Abu Hurairah narrated that the Prophet ﷺ said, "Five issues that Allah alone knows." He recited Allah's saying, “Indeed, Allah [alone] has knowledge of the Hour and sends down the rain and knows what is in the wombs. And no soul perceives what it will earn tomorrow, and no soul perceives in what land it will die.” (Luqman: 34) These are the keys to the unseen world that Allah only knows. The man said to the Prophet, "Then inform me about its signs." He meant the signs indicating its approach so people may take care, repent, and return to Allah. The Prophet (ﷺ) mentioned some of its signs such as: (1) "A slave girl will give birth to her mistress." In the Two Sahih, Abu Hurairah narrated that the Prophet ﷺ said, " ... her lord." It means her owner and guardian. It was said that it may refer to the abundant disobedience to one's parents in which he deals with his mother as her lord. It was also said that it may refer to Muslims' frequent conquests of unbelievers' countries in which a young slave girl is brought, set free in the Islamic country, embraces Islam, and buys her mother in ignorance of this case so she becomes her mistress, which has already existed. It was also said that a slave girl may give birth to a king so his mother will be among his slaves, (2) "That you will find barefooted, naked, destitute, goat-herds competing with each other in constructing buildings." It means they are competing for their height and abundance without thanking Allah who bestowed on them after poverty, which is proven by the Prophet's hadith in Ahmad and Termidhy when he says, "The Hour will not be established until the happiest people in the world is Luka' ibn Luka'." Afterward, the man went and Omar stayed for a long while then the Prophet asked him, "O Omar, do you know who this inquirer was?" Omar replied, "Allah and His Messenger know best." The Prophet answered him that it was Gabriel (the angel) who "came to instruct you the matters of your religion." Gabriel, the Angel, was the reason for the Prophet's answering and teaching his companions this abundant knowledge of Islam and the Hereafter. Finally, this hadith contains the following benefits: (1) Clarifying Islam's five pillars and faith's six pillars, (2) Mentioning some etiquette of the seeker of Islamic knowledge as modesty, (3) Proving the blessing of seeking knowledge, (4) Knowledge benefits both questioners and answerers, (5) Referring to Prophet's companions' good manners with him, (6) Illustrating Gabriel's forms when meeting the Prophet, (7) Stating the predecessors' attitudes about denying heresies, (8) Mentioning some sects opposing Ahl al-Sunnah wal-Jama'ah such as Al-Qadareyyah, (9) Desirability of elegant clothes and cleanliness when meeting scholars and kings, for Gabriel came and taught people with his words and appearance, and (11) Reprehending of unnecessary construction..

15
Jaber ibn Abdullah narrated, "An-Nou'man ibn Qauqal came to the Prophet (ﷺ) and said, 'O Messenger of Allah, 'Do you think that if I perform the obligatory prayers, treat as lawful that which is lawful, and treat as forbidden that which is forbidden, will I enter Paradise?' The Prophet ﷺ said, 'Yes.' In another narration, An-Nou'man said, '... and do not increase upon that.'".

Commentary : Allah, the Almighty, imposed obligatory acts and promised those perform them to enter Paradise, out of his mercy and grace. In this hadith, Jaber ibn Abdullah narrated that An-Nou'man ibn Qauqal, who participated in the Battle of Badr and was martyred in the Battle of Uhud, came and asked the Prophet (ﷺ) if he prayed the obligatory prayers (Fajr, Dhuhr, Asr, Maghreb, and Isha), avoided everything forbidden by Islam, and fulfilled all obligations of Islam - and in another narration, he said, “And did not do more than that.” He means performing obligations, treating as forbidden that which is forbidden, and treating as lawful that which is lawful - would this make him directly enter Paradise without any torment? The Prophet (ﷺ) answered, “Yes,” This means if he fulfills that, he will enter Paradise. Finally, this hadith confirms that performing obligations, avoiding prohibitions, and knowing the permissible acts lead to Paradise. This is out of Allah’s grace upon Muslims..

18
Abu Saeed Al-Khudry narrated that people from Abdulqais tribe came to the Messenger of Allah ﷺ and said, “O Prophet of Allah ﷺ, we are a tribe from Rabi'a tribes and Mudar unbelievers live between you and us so we can just come to you during the sacred months. Command us to do something that we can command our tribe to do so we will enter Paradise if we follow it.” The Messenger of Allah ﷺ said, “I command you to do four and avoid four: I command you to worship Allah and associate none with Him, establish prayer, pay zakat, observe the fast in Ramadan, and pay the one-fifth out of the booty. I prohibit you from four: Ad-Dubbaa (dry receptacles of gourds), al-hantam (jars made of mud, hair, and blood), al-muzaffat (receptacles covered with tar), and an-naqir.” They asked, “O Prophet of Allah ﷺ, do you know what an-naqir is?” He replied, “Yes, it is a stump that you hollow and in which you throw small dates - Saeed (one of this hadith's narrator) said, “He (the Prophet) may have said “…dates.” - then you spill water over it to boil then you drink it after it subsides, to the extent that one of you - or one of them - may strike his cousin with the sword.” He (the narrator) said, “There was a man among people injured due to that (intoxication). I concealed it out of shame from the Messenger of Allah ﷺ. I asked, 'What type of vessels can we use for drinking?' He (the Prophet) replied, 'In those made of skin tied with a string around their mouths.'" They said, “O Messenger of Allah ﷺ, our land abounds in rats so these vessels made of skin cannot remain preserved.” The Prophet ﷺ said thrice, “Even if they are eaten by rats.” The Prophet ﷺ said to Ashajj of Abdul-Qais, “Verily, you have two qualities that Allah loves: Patience and deliberation.” In another narration, he (the Prophet) said, “… then you mix small dates or dates and water into it…”.

Commentary : The Prophet (ﷺ) used to gradually teach people Islam’s rules of worship and transactions, permissible and impermissible matters, and all that brought them out of darkness into the light. In this hadith, Abu Saeed Al-Khudri narrated that some people from Abdulqais, a large tribe that inhabited Bahrain in the east of the Arabian Peninsula, came to the Prophet ﷺ in Media in the month of Rajab in the 8th year. They had converted to Islam before they came. They told him that they were a branch of Rabi’a tribes which represented half of the Arabs. The disbelieved tribes of Mudar lived on Rabi’a’s way to the Prophet (ﷺ). Mudar was the largest branch of the Arabs in comparison to Rabi’a tribes. Mudar used to attack and rob the caravans and killed all people therein, especially those heading to Medina to convert to Islam. There was open hostility between the two tribes. To travel to the Prophet (ﷺ), Rabi’a had to pass by Mudar but the safest time to travel to him was during the sacred months, Muharram, Rajab, Dul-Qa’da, and Dhul-Hijja, which all Arabs glorified and avoided fighting therein. As a result, Rabi’a traveled to the Prophet (ﷺ) in the month of Rajab. Abdulqais delegation asked the Prophet (ﷺ) to teach them the matters of Islam as they wanted to convey them to their people so they all would enter Paradise if they acted upon them. He commanded them to follow four matters and avoid four matters. He commanded them to: (1) Worship Allah and associate none with Him. Worship is to obey Allah by abiding by his commands that his prophets conveyed. Worship is a comprehensive name for all acts and deeds, apparent and hidden, that Allah loves and pleases. A person declares the oneness of Allah away from any type of polytheism, for whoever does not renounce polytheism does not necessitate that he worships Allah alone, (2) Regular performing the prescribed prayers, Fajr, Duhr, Asr, Maghrib, and Isha, (3) Paying the obligatory zakat. It is to pay a certain percentage of one's property if it reaches a specific limit and time. One's property includes livestock, harvest, goods, and buried treasures or mines, (4) Fasting during the month of Ramadan. It is a physical act of worship in which a person abstains from eating, drinking, intercourse, and other things from dawn to sunset, and (5) Paying one-fifth out of the booty forcibly obtained from polytheists during wars. Additionally, he forbade them from using four utensils: (1) Ad-Dubbaa: Dry receptacles of gourds, (2) Al-Hantam: Jars made of mud, hair, and blood, (3) Al-Muzaffat: Receptacles covered with tar, and (4) An-Naqir. They astonishingly wondered how the Prophet (ﷺ) knew an-naqir although it was not used by his people. Thus, he told them that he exactly knew it. He clarified that it was a tree’s trunk that people hollowed and threw small dates therein to be fermented. Then, they spilled water and left it to become wine. Upon drinking it, a person may have struck his cousin with the sword, due to his mind's absence. It was a great evil against which he warned above all other evils. One of the attendants was a man called Jahm ibn Qatham who concealed his injured leg out of shyness of the Prophet (ﷺ), for he was injured by a drunk man. He forbade them from using these utensils for they rapidly transformed juices into wine which was impure and could not be sold. He forbade them, for it was a waste of one’s properties, and one may have drunk it unknowingly. Later, this prohibition was abrogated by Bureida's narration in Sahih Muslim that the Prophet ﷺ said, “I forbade you from preparing nabidh (juice of grapes and date) except in a water skin. Now, you can drink from all types of utensils but do not drink anything intoxicating.” In the first hadith, they asked him about vessels they could use for drinking. He guided them to use the water skins. They were light tanned skin taken from animals and their mouths were tied with strings. They did not help juices to be rapidly transformed into wines. They informed him that their land was full of rats overwhelmingly eating water skins. Nevertheless, the Prophet ﷺ said three times, “Even if they are eaten by rats,” for he believed that they could preserve their water skins away from rats. Later on, he told Al-Ashajj ibn Abdulqais that he had two attributes that Allah and his Prophet ﷺ loved which were forbearance and patience. These attributes may be innate or acquired by training and practice. This hadith contains the following benefits: (1) It is better to delegate virtuous people to rulers, conveying significant inquiries, (2) The importance of explaining one’s excuse before requests, (3) It shows the important pillars of Islam, (4) The virtue of Al-Ashej due to his good morals, (5) The legitimacy to directly compliment a person if we make sure he will not be tempted, (6) It proves the attribute of love to Allah, in the manner befitting Him, and (7) It clarifies the danger of drinking alcohol and its impact on society..

23
Tareq ibn Ashyam Al-Ashja'i narrated, "I heard the Messenger of Allah ﷺ said, 'He who says, 'La ilaha illa Allah (there is no true god except Allah)' and disbelieves in what is worshipped besides Allah, his property and blood become inviolable, and his reckoning will be with Allah.” In another narration, he said, "He who worships Allah alone ..." Then he mentioned the rest of the hadith..

Commentary : Islam called people for the oneness and worship of Allah alone without any partner. It secures its followers and entrusts their hearts’ affairs to Allah, the All-Knowing. In this hadith, the Prophet ﷺ confirms that whoever bears witness and says that “there is no god but Allah,” i.e. there is no god worthy of worship but Allah and “disbelieves in what is worshiped besides Allah,” i.e. he renounces all religions except Islam “his property and blood are inviolable.” His property is neither taken nor his blood is shed. In the two Sahihs, Abu Hurairah narrated that the Prophet ﷺ said, “…except for a right that is due,” This means that killing a Muslim is not allowable unless he commits a crime that necessitates killing him according to Islam’s rules in three cases: (1) The murderer is killed in retribution, (2) The apostate, and (3) The married adulterer is killed as a punishment. In the two Sahihs, Abdullah ibn Masoud said, “The Messenger of Allah ﷺ said, ‘The blood of a Muslim who testifies that there is no god but Allah and that I am Allah’s Messenger may not be Islamically shed but for one of three reasons: A life for a life, a married one who commits adultery, and a one who abandons Islam and Muslims’ community.” The Prophet said in the first hadith, “… and his reckoning is with Allah,” This means that we reckon him for the outward obligatory acts but his heart’s affairs are entrusted to Allah Who is the only one who knows what his heart conceals of faith, disbelief, or hypocrisy. Muslims are not commanded to examine people’s hearts, consciences, and beliefs. If one unfaithfully pronounces the faith’s testimony, he will be dealt with according to his outward acts based on the Islamic rules in this world and his reckoning will be with Allah in the hereafter. He will reward him based on his knowledge of his heart. If he sincerely believes, it will benefit him in the hereafter – as in this worldly life - and save him from the torment. On the contrary, if he does not, it will not benefit him in the hereafter and he will be a hypocrite in Hell. In the two Sahihs, Abdullah ibn Omar narrated that the Messenger of Allah ﷺ said, “I have been commanded to fight people till they testify that there is no god but Allah and that Muhammad is the messenger of Allah, establish prayer, and pay Zakat. If they do so, their blood and property are safe from me, except for a right that is due, and reckoning them is with Allah.” Anas narrated as in Sahih Bukhari that the Prophet ﷺ said, “If anyone observes our form of prayer, faces our prayer destination, and eats our sacrifice, he is the Muslim who has the covenant of Allah and His messenger so do not betray Allah’s covenant.” This clarifies that the testimony of monotheism necessitates fulfilling the remaining pillars of Islam, for whoever denies any of its pillars is an apostate. Finally, this hadith confirms that the testimony of monotheism protects one’s blood, property, and honor..

25
Abu Huraira narrated, "The Messenger of Allah ﷺ said to his uncle, 'Say, 'La ilaha illa Allah (there is no god worthy of worship but Allah) so that I can bear testimony for you on the Day of Judgment.' He (Abu Taleb) said, 'Had it not been my fear of Quraysh's blaming and saying that I had done so out of fear, I would have delighted your eyes.' Then Allah revealed, 'Indeed, [O Muhammad], you do not guide whom you like, but Allah guides whom He wills.'" (Al-Qasas: 56).

Commentary : Guiding hearts is in the hands of Allah alone. Abu Taleb, the Prophet’s uncle, used to strenuously defend and care about him. In this hadith, Abu Hurairah narrated that when Abu Taleb was dying, the Prophet ﷺ came hoping for his conversion to Islam. He said to him, “Say, ‘There is no god but Allah.’” He hoped his belief in Allah and saying this word that will save him from punishment in the hereafter. He added, “I will testify thereof for you on the Day of Resurrection.” He means if you say it, you will become a Muslim and I can intercede for you. The Prophet was keen to save and encourage him to be Muslim. On the contrary, Abu Taleb refused and said, “'Had it not been my fear of Quraysh's blaming …” He means they may insult and scold him. Quraysh was the tribe of both. Abu Taleb was afraid that they may say that his fear of death induced him to do so. “I would have certainly delighted your eyes.” He means he would have certainly made him happy and achieved his hopes. Although he believed in all the Prophet said, he neither embraced Islam nor uttered the two testimonies. He remained so until he died a little before the immigration. In another narration in the two Sahihs, Al-Musayyeb ibn Hazn narrated that the Prophet ﷺ said, “By Allah, I will keep asking for (Allah’s) forgiveness for you unless I am forbidden to do so." So, Allah revealed, “Indeed [O Muhammad] you do not guide whom you like, but Allah guides whom He wills.” (Al-Qasas: 56) This means: O Noble Messenger, you do not guide whom you like to Islam such as Abu Taleb but Allah is the only one who guides to Islam whom he wills. He knows best who will be guided to the straight path, based on his knowledge. This hadith clarifies the following: (1) The Prophet’s care for calling people to Islam and saving them from Hell, (2) The Legitimacy of visiting an unbeliever during his illness to call him to Islam, and (3) Being interested and afraid of people’s reactions may sometimes lead to prevent goodness and one's faith..

26
Uthman narrated, "The Messenger of Allah ﷺ said, 'Whoever dies knowing that there is no god but Allah will enter Paradise.".

Commentary : Worshipping Allah alone is the purpose of creating jinn and humankind and the way to save oneself from Hell and win Paradise. In this hadith, the Prophet ﷺ explains the virtue of monotheism for those who die while believing in it. He said that if one dies while believing in Allah's oneness, worshiping none but him, acting upon the Islamic knowledge, performing the Islamic pillars that the Prophet came with such as prayer, fasting, zakah, pilgrimage, and all acts of worship and goodness, and refraining from evil acts, he will enter Paradise in the hereafter with Allah’s mercy. On the other hand, if he committed sins, Allah would reckon him as He, the Almighty, wills then he would enter Paradise. This is the doctrine of Ahlussunnah. In addition, knowledge is the opposite of ignorance which made this nation neglect the meaning of monotheism testimony. If one ignores its meaning, he will definitely contradict it whether by sayings, deeds, or beliefs. The method to know this testimony is by the following points: (1) Pondering over Allah’s names, attributes, and deeds, (2) Knowing that Allah is the only one who creates and manages his universe so he is worthy of worship alone, and (3) Knowing that Allah is the only one who grants people the obvious and hidden blessings in this world or the hereafter, which makes our hearts love, worship, and cling to Allah, without any partner. The greatest way to achieve these points is to ponder over the Noble Quran, for it is the best method to learn about monotheism. By pondering this great Book, one gets lots of benefits that he cannot get from any other method. A Muslim has to deeply learn about monotheism, for it is the key to Paradise but each key has teeth. Knowledge is one of its teeth that is a prerequisite for making one’s faith useful and accepted..

27
Abu Hurairah narrated, “We were with the Prophet ﷺ on a march then people’s provisions were exhausted to the extent that they were about to slaughter some of their camels. Omar said, ‘O Messenger of Allah, I propose that you collect people’s remaining provisions and invoke Allah upon them.’ He (the Prophet) did it accordingly. The one who had wheat came with it, the one who had dates came with them.” In another narration, “The one who had date-stones came with them.” Talha asked, “What did they do with date-stones?” Mujahed answered, “They were sucking them then drinking water afterward." Abu Hurairah resumed his first narration saying, "The Prophet invoked Allah until all people filled their stuff then said at that time, ‘I bear witness that there is no god but Allah and I am His messenger. Any servant meets Allah while undoubtedly believing this testimony will enter Paradise.'".

Commentary : Allah's grace over his servants is great and his mercy encompasses everything to the extent that anyone who dies while believing in Allah's oneness will enter Paradise. In this hadith, Abu Hurairah narrated that they were with the Prophet ﷺ on a march. Imam Muslim mentioned that it was the Battle of Tabouk in the ninth year AH. "People’s provisions were exhausted." In Bukhari's narration, Salama ibn Al-Akwa' narrated, "People's food ran short and they were in great need," to the extent that they were about to slaughter some camels they were riding. Omar ibn Al-Khattab advised the Prophet ﷺ to collect people’s remaining provisions, invoke Allah to get His blessings, and keep camels for riding and carrying people. The Prophet ﷺ agreed and asked people to collect food. Each brought his remaining food. "The one who had wheat came with it and the one who had dates came with them.” Mujahed ibn Jabr (one of this hadith's narrators) narrated, "The one who had date-stones came with them.” Talha ibn Musarref asked him, “What were they doing with the date-stones?” He means it is something that cannot be usually eaten. Mujahed answered, “They were sucking them then drinking water afterward,” if they did not find dates. This referred to the hardship and poverty they were experiencing and confirmed that the Prophet's companions brought all the food they had and none kept anything for himself. Afterward, the Prophet ﷺ invoked Allah who blessed the food to the extent that people filled their containers with that food. The Prophet ﷺ said, "I bear witness that there is no god worthy of worship but Allah and that I am the messenger of Allah." He affirmed Allah's oneness and his prophethood and truthfulness in what he received from Allah. This blessing is proof of his prophethood, for it is paranormal. Then he showed that whoever affirms Allah's oneness and Muhammad's prophethood, acts upon these testimonies, and dies while certainly believing in them Allah will enter him Paradise. As a result, people of monotheism will enter Paradise although some of them may be punished in Hell for their sins, but they will not be eternally in it. Finally, this hadith includes the following benefits: (1) It states the Companions' trust and belief in the Messenger of Allah, (2) It mentions the Prophet's apparent miracle proves his prophethood, (3) It shows the Prophet's modesty, for he accepted Omar's opinion and proposal, (4) It shows the possibility of advising the leader if there is a benefit even he does not ask for that, and (5) Desirability of collecting food for people, especially in the time of poverty..

29
As-Sunabehy narrated, “I went to Ubadah ibn As-Samet when he was about to die and cried.” Ubadah said, “Wait, why are you crying? By Allah, if I am asked about you, I will witness for you, if I am given the right to intercede, I will intercede for you, and if I am able to benefit you, I will definitely do it. By Allah! There is no hadith which I heard from the Messenger of Allah ﷺ which is good for you but I narrated it to you except one hadith. I will narrate it to you now, for this is my last breath. I heard the Messenger of Allah ﷺ say, "Whoever testifies that there is no god but Allah and that Muhammad is Allah’s Messenger Allah will forbid him to enter Hell.".

Commentary : Death is an inevitable destiny of all people. The wise is who performed righteous deeds ahead, regularly obeyed Allah, and followed the Messenger's method. In this hadith, Abderrahman ibn Usailah As-Sunabehy narrated that he visited the Prophetic companion Ubadah ibn As-Samet while he was dying of a severe illness. As-Sunabehy cried but Ubadah said to him, "Wait!" He advised him to slow down and be gentle with himself and asked him why he was crying. He swore by Allah saying: If I died before you, O Sunabehy and Allah asked my testimony on the day of Resurrection, I would testify for you with what I knew about you of good manners. If Allah allowed my intercession for anyone, I would intercede for you so He would save you. If I could benefit you, I would definitely do it. Then Ubadah swore that he narrated all goodness he heard from the Prophet ﷺ except a single hadith. He decided to narrate it once he made sure he was about to die. He narrated that he heard the Prophet ﷺ confirming that whoever affirms Allah's oneness and Muhammad's prophethood, acts upon these testimonies, and dies while certainly believing in them Allah will enter him Paradise and save him from Hell. It was said that the hadith means that the people of monotheism will enter Paradise although some of them may be punished in Hell for their sins, but they will not be eternally in it. Finally, the hadith contains the following lessons: (1) One should only speak about what is good for people and (2) Allah's blessings that he bestows upon His servants of monotheism..

31
Abu Hurairah narrated, “We were sitting around the Messenger of Allah (ﷺ) with Abu Bakr, Umar, and others. In the meanwhile, the Messenger of Allah (ﷺ) got up and left us. He was late to the extent that we were worried that he might be attacked by some when we were not there. We were alarmed and got up. I was the first to be alarmed. I went out to look for the Messenger of Allah (ﷺ), came to a garden belonging to the Banu An-Najjar, a section of the Ansar, and went round it while saying, “Will I find its door?” but I did not. I saw a stream flowing up a well and going through a wall. I drew myself together and came where the Messenger of Allah (ﷺ) was. He asked, ‘Is it you Abu Hurairah?’ I replied, ‘Yes, O Messenger of Allah (ﷺ).’ He said, ‘What is the matter with you?’ I replied, ‘You were among us, got up, and were late. We were afraid that you might be attacked by some when we were not there. We became alarmed and I was the first to be alarmed. So when I came to this garden, I drew myself together as a fox does while these people were following me.’ He gave me his sandals and said, ‘O Abu Huraira! Go with my sandals and give glad tidings of Paradise to whoever you meet outside this garden who testifies that there is no god but Allah while assuring of it in his heart.’ The first one I met was Umar who asked, ‘What are these sandals, O Abu Huraira?’ I replied, ‘They are the Prophet's ones. He gave them to me to give glad tidings of Paradise to whoever testifies that there is no god but Allah while assuring of it in his heart.’ Thereupon, Omar struck me on the breast so I fell on my back. He then said, ‘Go back, Abu Huraira.’ I returned to the Messenger of Allah (ﷺ) and started to weep. Omar followed me. The Messenger of Allah (ﷺ) said, ‘What is the matter, Abu Huraira?’ I said, ‘I met Omar and told him about what you said to me. He struck me on my breast so I fell on my back and he said to me, ‘Go back.’ The Messenger of Allah (ﷺ) said, ‘O Omar, what did you do that?’ He said, ‘O Messenger of Allah (ﷺ), may my father and my mother be sacrificed to you, did you send Abu Huraira with your sandals to give glad tidings of Paradise to whoever he met who testifies that there is no god but Allah while assuring of it in his heart?’ He said, ‘Yes.’ Umar said, ‘Do not do it, for I am afraid that people will stick to it alone. Let them do (good) deeds.’ The Messenger of Allah (ﷺ) said, ‘Well, let them.’”.

Commentary : The grace of Allah upon His servants is great and His mercy encompasses all things. His mercy necessitates that whoever dies believing in monotheism will enter Paradise, so a Muslim should know its meaning in a way that contradicts ignorance, for it is the key to Paradise. In this hadith, Abu Hurairah narrated that the Companions were sitting around the Prophet (ﷺ) with Abu Bakr, Umar, and others. The Prophet (ﷺ) got up and left them. He was late to the extent that they were worried that he might be attacked by some of his enemies while they were not with him. The companions were alarmed and started to look for him. Abu Hurairah was the first to be alarmed and look for him. He came to a garden owned by some tribes of Medina. When he did not find its door, he entered through a hollow in the wall, through which a stream of water was running. After he entered, the Prophet (ﷺ) gave him his shoes as a visible sign and asked him to give glad tidings of Paradise to whoever dying while certainly believing in Allah alone. A Muslim must firmly believe in this testimony without any type of doubt cast by devils or humans and act upon its required meaning. The Prophet (ﷺ) mentioned the heart in this context to confirm the importance of sincerity in monotheism. Once came out, Abu Hurairah met Omar who asked him about the sandals so Abu Hurairah related to him the whole story. As a result, Omar hit Abu Hurairah’s chest so he fell on his back. Omar did not want to hurt Abu Hurairah but he wanted to prevent him from reporting this hadith to people. He was afraid that people may have stuck to this testimony alone and neglected the rest of the Islamic rites. Both returned to the Prophet (ﷺ) who asked Omar about what happened with Abu Hurairah. Omar told him the whole details and asked him about the authenticity of the report that Abu Hurairah told him. Omar justified his reaction that he was afraid that people may have stuck to this testimony alone and neglected the rest of the Islamic rites. He proposed that Abu Hurairah would not inform people about this hadith, which the Prophet (ﷺ) approved. As a matter of fact, the reward mentioned in that hadith would be applicable until the Day of Resurrection. This hadith contains the following benefits: (1) It clarifies the Companions’ keenness and love for the Prophet (ﷺ), (2) It shows how leaders have to care about their followers’ rights and benefits and prevent what may harm them, (3) It is better to associate the important news with proof confirming it, (4) It mentions a great tiding to the people of monotheism, (5) A leader has to listen to his followers’ arguments. If the follower has the right, the leader has to stick to his opinion. Otherwise, the leader has to clear up any misunderstanding that the follower may have, (6) It is evidence of Omar’s firmness, wisdom, and understanding, (7) It shows the virtue of Abu Hurairah..

34
Al-Abbas ibn Abdulmuttaleb narrated that he heard the Messenger of Allah ﷺ said, "Whoever is pleased with Allah as a Lord, Islam as a religion, and Muhammad as a Prophet will taste the sweetness of faith.".

Commentary : Faith has wonderful secrets and sweetness tasted by hearts as we taste the sweetness of food and drink in our mouths. None will taste this sweetness except those whose hearts are full of it. When the heart is safe from deviating whims and misleading lusts, it feels the sweetness of faith. On the contrary, when it is sick with the previous diseases, it does not feel it and instead may taste the destructive whims and sins. In this hadith, the Prophet's saying, “He will taste the sweetness of faith,” means he will feel its sweetness which is what the believer finds in terms of comfort and intimacy with knowing and loving Allah and his Messenger ﷺ, knowing His blessing of choosing him a Muslim from the best Prophet's nation. His saying, "Whoever is pleased with Allah as a Creator ..." means he is convinced and satisfied with Allah as a Lord, Manager, Master, and God and pleased with his command while disbelieving in all what worshipped other than Him. His saying, "... Islam as a religion ..." means he is willingly satisfied with Islam as a method and doctrine while disbelieving in all other invalid religions. His saying, "... Muhammad as a messenger ..." means he is willingly satisfied with him as a leader and example in life and the revelation he received from Allah, obeys his commands, avoids his prohibitions, loves, and supports him. If a Muslim is pleased with these issues, all worldly issues become easier, for he deeply believes in Allah and truthfully surrenders to Allah and His legislation that the Prophet ﷺ received and conveyed to him. As a result, his heart feels tranquillity, comfort, and sweetness of faith. Finally, this hadith urges us to completely believe in Allah, his Prophet ﷺ, and His Book..

35
Abu Huraira narrated, "The Messenger of Allah ﷺ said, 'Faith has seventy - or sixty - odd branches. The uppermost of which is the saying, ' La ilaha illah Allah' and the least is the removal of harmful objects from the road. Modesty is a branch of faith.'".

Commentary : Faith is branches and degrees divided into sayings, acts, and beliefs. All good attributes fall under it. Ahlusunnah wal Jamaah believes that a believer's faith increases by doing righteous deeds and avoiding sins. His faith decreases as much as he disobeys and commits sins. In this hadith, the Prophet ﷺ confirmed that the complete faith consists of degrees that contain acts, and sayings of righteousness that reach seventy - or sixty - odd branches. Faith consists of (1) The heart's acts like believing in Allah's oneness, trust in Allah, fearing Allah, and hope of Allah's promise, (2) The tongue's acts like the two testimonies, remembering Allah, supplication, reciting the Quran, and others, and (3) The limbs' acts like prayer, fasting, relieving people, and supporting the oppressed. Whoever performs a righteous deed he completed a part of his faith. The Prophet confirmed that the faith's highest and best degrees, the foundation of faith, is the saying, “There is no god but Allah.” Believing in Allah's oneness, his control of the whole universe, his only being worthy of worship, and acting upon that are the foundations of faith. This great testimony is (1) The word of piety, (2) The most trustworthy handhold, (3) The difference between disbelief and belief, (4) The word that Prophet Ibrahim made remain among his descendants that they may return to, and (5) The word on which heavens and Earth are established and for which all beings created, (6) It is the reason for creation, command, reward, and punishment, and (7) It is Allah's right upon all of His servants. It is neither intended to verbally say it while ignoring its meaning nor behaving like hypocrites, but it is intended to verbally say, believe it with heart, love its people, and hate what contradicts it. Then the Prophet ﷺ explained that the least act of faith is to remove harmful things away from people's way like stones, thorns, etc. The Prophet also explained that modesty is one of faith's degrees. It is a moral that motivates one to leave evilness and prevents him from negligence. One's modesty with Allah means that He neither sees us where he prohibited nor loses us where He commanded us to be. In this sense, faith is the strongest motive for goodness and the greatest deterrent against evil. The Prophet mentioned modesty here, for it is a moral matter that our minds may forget that it is a faith's branch. This hadith refers that good morals are from faith. It collects all branches of faith which are beliefs, deeds, and morals, which all are complementary to faith. Moreover, this hadith generally mentioned all faith's branches, but they are detailed in the Prophet's Sunnah. Mentioning the number does not mean limiting it to sixty or seventy, but rather it indicates the abundance of faith's acts. Finally, the hadith clarifies the importance of modesty..

38
Sufian ibn Abdullah Ath-Thaqafy said, "I said, 'O Messenger of Allah, tell me something about Islam that I will not ask anyone after you.'" In another narration, he said, "... anyone but you." The Messenger ﷺ said, "Say, ‘I believe in Allah’ then keep to the straight path.”.

Commentary : Having a deep belief in Allah and seeking Islam's straight path as much as one can are the ways to success in this world and hereafter. The Prophet's companions were the keenest people asking him about what benefits them in these two stages. In this hadith, the companion Sufian ibn Abdullah Ath-Thaqafy asked the Prophet ﷺ about an Islamic act that may save and suffice him away from other Islamic ones. He asked him about a comprehensive concept of all Islam's principles and objectives. This concept should guide and suffice him, complete his religion, and save him from Hell in the hereafter. The Prophet ﷺ said to him, “Say, ‘I believe in Allah’ then keep to the straight path.” It means to certainly say "I believe in Allah," and be upright while following the faith's guidance and requirements. Uprightness leads to all righteous deeds and prevents all evil acts. Thus, the hadith means being steadfast in faith with regularly performing righteous acts guiding us to the straight path. One of the uprightness' glad tidings is Allah's saying, "Indeed, those who have said, 'Our Lord is Allah' and then remained on a right course - the angels will descend upon them, [saying], 'Do not fear and do not grieve but receive good tidings of Paradise, which you were promised.'" (Fussilat: 30), and his saying, "Indeed, those who have said, 'Our Lord is Allah,' and then remained on a right course - there will be no fear concerning them, nor will they grieve. Those are the companions of Paradise, abiding eternally therein as reward for what they used to do." (Al-Ahqaf: 13, 14).

46
Abu Huraira narrated that the Messenger of Allah ﷺ said, "He whose neighbor is not secure from his wrongful conduct will not enter Paradise.".

Commentary : The Islamic teachings recommend all that is good for people to preserve harmony among them. It commands us to be kind to our neighbors whether they are relatives or strangers, Muslim or non-Muslim. This hadith is one of the most decisive hadiths in which the Prophet ﷺ mentioned the punishment for abusing our neighbors. His word, "...his wrongful conduct." means oppression and transgression. In a dire threat, he confirms that a Muslim does not harm or hurt his neighbor, which will prevent him from entering Paradise. In the two Sahihs, Aisha narrated that the Prophet ﷺ said, "Gabriel was recommending me about kindly and politely treating the neighbors so much so that I thought he would order me to make them as my heirs." His saying, "He will not enter Paradise ..." means that if he hurts his neighbor and dies while being a Muslim, he will not enter Paradise with the first groups, but he will be reckoned then enter Paradise due to his belief, except Allah forgives and pardons him. Finally, this hadith contains the following lessons: (1) It rebukes for harming neighbors, and (2) It confirms that misusing them is a way to be punished..