Imam Ahmad’s Death
‘Abdullah
ibn Imam Ahmad said that he was there when his father was passing away. His
father was going into sakaarah, the state of unconsciousness. When you are
going from dunya to akhirah, it’s a very difficult change. You’ve been in this
world for 60 or 70 years and now you are going to a completely different world.
That change between these two stages is difficult, sometimes it doesn’t happen
immediately. Sometimes you’ll find that the person goes back and forth.
To
simplify this, think of sleep, because sleep is the minor death. Allah says,
“And He is the One who takes your souls when you are sleeping.” Sleep is a
minor death.
You
go through an interface in which you’re not awake and you’re not sleeping. The
same thing happens before death; you are going through this interface between
life and death. There are moments where you are on the other side and on this
side [living].
‘Abdullah’s
father started saying, “la ba’ad. la ba’ad” [meaning] “No, not yet... no, not
yet”. ‘Abdullah was worried. Imagine you hear your father saying, “No, not yet...
no, not yet,” [at the time of death]. What would you interpret it to mean? I
don’t want to die yet, right? You would interpret it as meaning “I do not want
to die yet.” So ‘Abdullah asked his father (when he woke up), “O my father, why
were you saying ‘No, not yet’?” Imam Ahmad said, “Shaytaan was standing right
next to me, biting on his fingers and saying, ‘O Ahmad, you have slipped out of
my hands. O Ahmad, you have slipped out of my hands.’ So I was telling him,
“No, not yet. No, not yet…not until I die.’” [Meaning] The battle between me
and you is happening. Not until I die will I be free from you. Shaytaan was
biting his fingers, so angry and upset, thinking that Imam Ahmad had slipped
out of his hands.
Look
at the believer – how he keeps on fighting until the last moment. We never give
up. If we were proud, we would say, “Yes, I won against you!”
If
this could happen [that you lose at the last moment], it is something extremely
dangerous. Ibn Taymiyyah says that the reason this happens is because shaytaan
realizes that this is his last chance with you. If he misses you in the last
moment, he missed you. That is why shaytaan gives special attention to the last
moments of your life.
Put
a criteria to yourself – if you are losing to shaytaan now, while the battle is
easy, what will happen to you in the last moments, when it gets tough? If you
are already losing the battle now, when shaytaan is giving you half of his
attention, what will happen when he gives you his full attention?
These
are the fitaan. That is why we say in our salaah, “We seek refuge in You from
the fitna of life and death.”
Reasons for Evil Ending
Let’s
talk about asbab su-al khatimah (the reasons for evil ending). The most important
stage of your life is the ending. “Whoever dies on something will be
resurrected on it.” If you die in Hajj, with ihram, making talbiyah, RasulAllah
sallallahu ‘alayhi wa sallam said: “On the Day of Judgement, you will be
resurrected saying labbayk Allahumma labbayk.” ”When you die on something, you
will be resurrected on the same thing you were doing.”
RasulAllah
said: “Oh Allah, make the best of my deeds, the last deeds.”
RasulAllah
said: “One of you would do the deeds of the people of Paradise until only one
foot [a short distance - transcribers’ note] is between you and paradise, and
then in the end he would do the deeds of the people of hell fire and he would
die and he would enter into hell fire.” And the opposite can happen to – you do
the deeds of the people of hell all of your life and then you do the deeds of
the people of jannah in the end and enter jannah.
What
are the reasons for evil ending? We ask Allah subhaana wa ta’aala for a blessed
ending.
1.
Al-Fasaad fil al-’Itiqaad
Al-Fasaad
fil al-’Itiqaad corruption and defect in the belief. Analogy: You buy a
computer and work on that computer. It works fine for a few months. Then you
put it through a rigorous application; it fails and breaks down. You find that
it had a defect from day one. This defect didn’t show up because it was being
dealt with gently. When you put it through a rigorous test, this defect showed
up. You thought that it was brand new and nothing was wrong with it. There was
a hidden defect. Similarly, you can think that you’re fine now and your aqeedah
is fine. You have some doubts in the corner of your heart – about Allah, about
the ambiya, for example. Death approaches and shaytaan comes and puts you
through a test. That defect or problem shows up. When you find out that there
is a corruption in your belief, you give up your whole belief. You would lose
it all. You lose the whole battle. That’s why Ibn AlQayyim says, “We believe
that out of the mercy of Allah, Allah will not mislead the person if he was of
true righteousness.” There must be something wrong with that person.
Allah
says: “Say (O Muhammad SAW): Shall We tell you the greatest losers in respect
of (their) deeds? Those whose efforts have been wasted in this life while they
thought that they were acquiring good by their deeds.” (18:103-104) The biggest
losers are the ones who think they are doing right, but they are doing wrong.
You find that someone is very righteous, but he is not doing things the way of
the Prophet sallallahu ‘alayhi wa sallam. It is all unaccepted.
2.
???? al-Istiqaamah
Diversion
from the straight path. A person could be on the straight path, but then he
decides to take a turn. When this person takes this short turn (onto the wrong
path), it’s like a fork – it starts out as a small turn, but the further you
go, the farther you become [from the straight path].Iblees was one of the
righteous. He did that small mistake out of a great problem – kibr (arrogance).
He became the worse of creation.
Allah
says: “And recite to them the story of him to whom we gave our ayaat, but he
threw them away so shaytaan followed him up and he became of those who became
astray. And had We willed, We would surely have elevated him therewith, but he
clung to the earth and followed his own vein desires.” This man received the
ayaat of Allah, but he detached himself from the ayaat of Allah and followed
his own desires. This person had the knowledge, but he was misguided because of
his attachment to dunya because he followed his own desires. This is contrary
to Islam. Islam is submission to Allah. You submit to Allah, even if it’s
against your own will and desires. You give up your desires for Allah. We do
not custom make Islam to serve us. We change ourselves to fit into Islam. We
change our own characters to fit Islam. Islam is COMPLETE submission.
Submission to Allah. This man had the knowledge, but it didn’t do him any good
because he followed his own desires.
The
Prophet sallallahu ‘alayhi wa sallam said: “The thing that I fear most on you
is a man who memorizes Qur’aan until the light of Qur’aan shows up on his face
and then he detaches himself from the ayaat of Allah. Then he carries the word
on his neighbor and accuses him of shirk.” Hudhayfah ibn AlYamaan asked
RasulAllah sallallahu ‘alayhi wa sallam, “Who is the mushrik among them? The
accuser or the accused?” RasulAllah sallallahu ‘alayhi wa sallam said, “The
accuser.” The man fell into fitna and accused his neighbor of shirk – and he
himself has become a mushrik.
The Story of Barsisa
Another
story: Barsisa. He was a man from children of Israel was a famous worshipper.
He was an ‘aabid. He had his temple and devoted himself to worship. Three men
from the children of Israel had to go for a battle. They didn’t know where to
leave their sister. They couldn’t leave her alone; they looked around and found
that the best place to leave her was with the ‘aabid. They said they would
leave him with that ‘aabid and would leave her with him because he is the most
righteous and trustworthy.
They
went to the ‘aabid, Barsisa, and told him the situation and said, “Can you
please take care of our sister?” The ‘aabid said, “I seek refuge in Allah from
you.” Shaytaan came to him [Barsisa] and said, “Who are you going to leave her
with? If you don’t take care of her, an evil person may take care of her, and
you know what will happen. How can you let this good slip out of your hands?”
Shaytaan is encouraging him to do good. The ‘Aabid called the brothers back and
said that he would take care of her, but she is going to stay in that house over
there and I will stay in my temple.
So
she would stay in that house and Barsisa would bring food and leave it on his
doorstep. He didn’t even want to see her. She would come out and get the food.
Shaytaan came to him and said, “What are you doing? Don’t you know that if she
walks out from her room and comes to your temple, people can see her? You have
to deliver the food to her doorstep.” Barsisa said, “Yes, that’s true.”
Shaytaan is not speaking to him face to face; this is was wasa (inspiration).
Barsisa started to take the food and leave it on her doorstep. That continued
for awhile.
And
then shaytaan told him, “She’s coming out to get the plate and somebody can
still see her. You have to deliver the plate into her own room.” Barsisa would
take the food in the room and leave it there. This continued for awhile.
The
three brothers were late. This gazwa took awhile. So shaytaan came to him and
said, “Are you going to leave her alone? There’s nobody to take care of her.
She’s been in there [so long]; it’s like she’s in prison, speaking to no one.
Why don’t you take that responsibility and speak to her a little? She can go
out and speak to another man and have a relationship with him.” So Barsisa
would go outside of her and speak to her from there.
He
would talk from outside and she would talk from inside her room and they would
be screaming to hear one another. Shaytaan told him, “Why don’t you make it a
little convenient for each other? Don’t scream to each other. Sit in the same
room.” So Barsisa would go inside the room and slowly they spent more and more
time with each other.
And
they started getting closer and closer until the great ‘aabid committed zina.
She
became pregnant. She delivered a child. Shaytaan came to him and said, “What
have you done? Do you know what the brothers will do when they come back?
They’re going to kill you. Even if you say ‘This is not my son’, they’re going
to say that he was supposed to take care of her and you were responsible for
her. The only solution is that you murder the child and bury it.” The ‘aabid
chopped off the head of the infant and buried him.
Shaytaan
came to him and said, “Do you think the mother will keep the secret after you
have killed her son? You’re a fool if you think so. You should kill her too.”
And so Barsisa killed her and buried them both in that room.
The
brothers came back and said, “Where is our sister?” Barsisa said, “Inna lillahi
wa inna ilayhi ra ji’oon. She was ill and she died. She is buried in that
place.” And he went and showed them a fictitious grave. They said, “Inna
lillahi wa inna ilayhi ra ji’oon” and they made du’aa` for her.
At
night time, one of the brothers saw a dream. Who came to him in that dream?
Shaytaan. He said, “Did you believe Barsisa? He’s lying! He committed zina with
your sister and then he killed her and her son. The evidence is that she is not
buried in the place that he showed you, but he is buried in her room, under the
rock.” So he woke up and he told his brothers about the dream. They said, “We
saw the same dream. It must be true.” So they went to the fictitious grave and
dug it up. They went to her room and uncovered the earth. They found their
sister buried with an infant.
They
grabbed Barsisa and told him, “You Liar! This is what you have done!” They took
him to the king. While they were taking him, Shaytaan came to Barsisa. Now
shaytaan didn’t come in the form of inspiration. He came in human form. He said, “Do you know who I am, Barsisa? I am
shaytaan. I caused you all of that mess. And I am the only one who can deliver
you out of it. If you want me to save you, I can.” Barsisa said, “Please save
me!” Shaytaan said, “Make sujood for me.” Barsisa made sujood for shaytaan.
What did shaytaan say? He said, “Thank you very much! It was a pleasure meeting
you.” And then he never saw him.
Barsisa
made sujood for shaytaan and that was the last thing he did in his life because
shortly afterwards, he was executed. The last thing he did in his life was make
sujood for shaytaan. This was an ‘aabid on the straight path. He took a small
turn – in the name of maslaha, the benefit – look at where he ended. That is
the danger of following desire. Sometimes we feel confident because of our
knowledge or the Qur’aan that we know or the ‘ibaadah that we do. We should
always be afraid and never be over confident. That is the true knowledge – “The
ones that have khashiy (fear) of Allah are the scholars.” Otherwise, it is just
memorization of words. A side note: what policy was shaytaan using on Barsisa?
If shaytaan came to Barsisa and the first thing he said was “make sujood to
me”, would Barsisa have done that? No. He wouldn’t. Shaytaan took a
step-by-step policy.
Abu ibn ‘AbdurRahim
Ibn
AlJowzee says that (in the year 270 Hijra) there was a man named Abu ibn
‘AbdurRahim. He was a fighter in the armies that were fighting in the Roman
Empire. On one of their battles, they were surrounding a Roman fortress. While
they were surrounding, this man saw a woman. It was a fitna for him. He started
corresponding with her (she was a Roman woman in that city). He asked her, “How
can I get in?” She told him, “Become a Christian and I’ll let you in.” So he
became a Christian, and the next day, suddenly, his comrades found him on the
opposite side. This thing depressed them a lot. This man has been with them for
a long time, he knew a lot of Qur’aan, he had a lot of knowledge, and suddenly
he left the religion and became a Christian to run after that woman. Ten years
passed and some Muslims, who knew that man, passed that Roman village/fort
again. They saw him and they told him, “Come with us.” He said, “No, I cannot
come with you, I’m settled and married. And I have children and business.” So
they told him, “What happened to your knowledge? What happened to your
Qur’aan?” He said, “I forgot all of that. I forgot all of Qur’aan except for
one verse. Perhaps those who disbelieve will wish that they had been Muslim.
Let them eat and enjoy themselves and be diverted by [false] hope, for they are
going to know. (15:2-3).” [Another translation: One day the non-believers will
desire that they were believers...]
When
you diverge from the straight path, this is what happens. This man was so
knowledgeable, but he didn’t stick to the straight path. “Fastaqim”, Allah
tells RasulAllah sallallahu ‘alayhi wa sallam to follow the straight path after
receiving guidance. One of the Sahabah asked RasulAllah sallallahu ‘alayhi wa
sallam to give him one advice that would be sufficient for him. RasulAllah
sallallahu ‘alayhi wa sallam said, “Qul AmantuBillah thumma istaqim” meaning “Say
‘I believe in Allah’ and then stay on the straight path.” Because we can say
that we believe, but the important thing is that we stay on the straight path –
that is where the test is. That’s where a lot of people fail. They start on the
straight path, but then the winds of change in this world take them from right
to left.
That
is the khashiy of Allah – you know the truth, and you are so worried that you
are asking Allah 17 times a day: “Oh Allah, we seek assistance from You and we
seek assistance from You, so guide us to the straight path.” We ask Allah 17
times in the faraaidh to keep us on the straight path. And then we repeat it in
the nawaafil. Why are we repeating this ayah over and over? Because it is very
important to stay on the straight path.
3.
Alisraaru ’ala al ma’aasiyy (insistence on sinning)
A
person may be commiting a small sin, but the ‘ulamaa` say that insisting on a
small sin makes it a major sin. When you keep on doing it again and again, it
becomes a major sin.Adh-Dhahabi, in his book AlKabaa’ir, talks about evil
ending. There was a man who was obsessed with chess. They kept on telling him
to say la ilaaha illallah, but he couldn’t. At the end, he kept on repeating,
“Checkmate, checkmate” until he died.
He
mentioned another man. He kept saying, “Give me the bottle.” Because he was
obsessed with drinking and he kept asking for that.
There
was another man who was an accountant and he just kept saying, “ten, eleven,
twelve” and he kept saying numbers.
Ibn
AlQayyim mentioned the story of a man who they told to say la ilaaha illallah,
but he said, “I can’t.” He didn’t have a problem with his tongue; he could
speak fluently. He couldn’t say la ilaaha illallah, because Allah didn’t give
him the tawfeeq.
Think
about it this way – when you go to bed, what are the things you dream about?
They’ll most likely be what you were thinking about during the day. If you keep
thinking about something all day, you’ll most likely dream of it at night.
Another
way to know what’s on your mind is to look at what you think of first thing in
the morning?
Death
is similar to sleep. Sleep is called “the minor death.” When you go from sleep
to the state of awakening, it is similar to sakaraat al mowt. That is why the
thoughts that are on one’s minds are most likely going to show up in the last
moments of life.
We
always think that we can live how we want and sin as much as want. Then, five
minutes before we day, we will take the shahaadah and be guaranteed jannah.
It’s not that easy. You are making a plot against Allah. Why? Because you are
making the intention to not worship Allah until the last moments of your life.
Allah is telling us to worship Him day and night. We are saying that we want to
outsmart Allah and make tawbah in the end. “They are plotting and Allah is planning
and Allah is the best of planners.”
A
scholar mentioned that they visited a man who was dying. When they came in the
house, everyone in the house was listening to loud Umm Kulthum music (a
singer). The tape recorder was high. The shaykh said, “itaqullah! This man is
dying and you are listening to songs?” So they turned it off and put on Qur’aan
instead. When the old man heard the Qur’aan, he said, “Turn that off and turn
Umm Kulthum back on because she soothes my heart!” And he died.
When
you grow up on something, you are going to die on that thing.
Never
think that you can outsmart Allah. You have to have khashiy of Allah. The ones
who are the greatest losers are those that feel safe or secure of the
punishment of Allah. “Only the losers are the ones who feel secure from the
punishment of Allah.” Khashya is an integral quality of a Muslim. To be a
Muslim you have to have fear of Allah in your heart.
4.
Da’ful Imaan (weak faith)
Sulayman
ibn Abdil Malak, a khalifah of the Muslim world, visited Makkah and Madinah. He
was asking, “Is there anyone here who has met the companions of RasulAllah
sallallahu ‘alayhi wa sallam?” They said, “Yes, Abu Hazim.” He said, “Call
him.” So they bought Abu Hazim. Sulayman ibn Abdul Malik asked him, “How come
we dislike death?” He said, “Because you have built and established this world
and you have destroyed your akhirah. So you hate to go from what is
established, to what is destroyed.” If you’re not preparing for akhirah, why
would you want to go there? When we love this world, we don’t want to go to the
akhirah.Scholars have said, if somebody has the love of the world at heart,
then just before their death – when the person realizes they are leaving dunya
for akhirah – they will become attached to the thing he loves (to dunya). And
then that person will start hating Allah because Allah is the One who wants to
take him away. If that happens, this is khulood fin naar – eternal punishment
in Hell, because you are hating to meet Allah, so Allah will hate meeting you.
When
Mu’aadh ibn Jabal was passing away. He said, “Welcome to death. I have been
waiting for you for a long time. I have been waiting for the Promise of Allah
to me. Welcome to death.” He’s happy. He said, “O death, don’t think that I
ever wanted to live in this dunya because the love of this world. The reason I
wanted to live in this world was to fast in the hot summer days and pray in the
long, cold winter nights. So as long as it is time for me to leave, I welcome
you. Take my soul.” He wants to meet Allah, so Allah will want to meet him.
RasulAllah
sallallahu ‘alayhi wa sallam says, “Every Prophet, before he dies, is shown his
place in Paradise and then he is given the choice to stay in this world or
die.” So the ambiya are given the choice. This hadith is narrated by ‘Aa`isha.
When RasulAllah sallallahu ‘alayhi wa sallam was dying, he had his head on my
lap, she said. Then he fell unconscious, then he woke up. He started staring at
the sky and he said, “O Allah, with the highest companion. (Allah).” ‘Aa`isha said
that she knew at that moment that the Prophet was being given the choice, and
he was not choosing us. RasulAllah was given the choice by the angel of death,
and the Prophet sallallahu ‘alayhi wa sallam was saying that he wanted to be
with Allah. And that was the last thing he said. [Bukhari]
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