The Prophet's Advice to Mu'aadh Ibn Jabal
By: Shaikh Muhammad Ibn Salih al Uthaimeen 
'Sharh Riyaadh as-Saaliheen - Chapter: Contemplation [Muraaqaba] 
Translated by Abu Rumaysah

Mu'aadh Ibn Jabal reported from the Messenger of Allah (salallahu alayhi 
wasalam) that he said, "Fear Allah wheresoever you may be, and follow up an 
evil deed with a good one, it will efface it (the evil deed). And deal with 
mankind with good manners." Reported by at-Tirmidhee and he said that it was a 
Hasan hadeeth.    [Al-Haakim reports it in al-Mustadrak and states that it 
meets the conditions of Bukhaaree and Muslim. Adh-Dhahabee agreed.]

This hadeeth is one of the Forty Ahaadeeth of the author, may Allah have mercy 
upon him, and in it is that the Prophet (salallahu alayhi wasalam) gave three 
great and important pieces of advice:

THE FIRST: He said, "have taqwaa of Allah wheresoever you may be." Taqwaa means 
to stay away from the forbidden matters and to enact the obligatory matters - 
this is taqwaa! That you enact what Allah has commanded you, sincerely for 
Allah and in compliance to the Messenger of Allah (salallahu alayhi wasalam), 
and that you leave what Allah has forbidden due to His prohibiting it and to 
steer clear of it.

For example that you establish the greatest obligation that Allah has imposed 
upon you after the testimony of faith - the prayer, and you establish it 
completely - fulfilling all of its conditions and pillars and obligations, 
fulfilling all of these perfectly. So whosoever leaves off any of these 
conditions, pillars or obligations then he has not feared Allah (to the best of 
his ability), rather he has been deficient in this to the extent of what he 
left out.

In Zakaah, the Taqwaa of Allah lies in your calculating all of your property on 
which the Zakaah is due, and your giving the Zakaah as a means of purifying 
yourself without any miserliness or tightfistedness, or delay. And whosoever 
does not do this than he has not feared Allah.

In fasting, the Taqwaa of Allah lies in your establishing the fast as you have 
been commanded, distancing yourself from idle speech, obscene words and 
mannerisms, boisterous behavior, backbiting and spreading tales and other such 
things that would make the fast deficient and remove the spirit of fasting. The 
true meaning of fasting is to fast from that which Allah, Azza wa Jall, has 
made forbidden. The same applies to all of the obligations that are used to 
establish obedience to Allah, and compliance to His command, sincerely for Him 
and in following His Messenger. Likewise all the forbidden actions are to be 
left in compliance to His prohibition.

THE SECOND: "and follow up an evil deed with a good one, it will efface it (the 
evil deed)." Meaning that when you perform an evil action then follow it up 
with a good action for the good action effaces the evil. And from the good 
actions to be performed after the evil is that you repent to Allah for this 
evil action, for indeed repentance is from the most noble and excellent of the 
good actions as Allah has said, "indeed Allah Loves those who repent and those 
who purify themselves." (2:222) And He said, "and repent to Allah all of you, O 
believers so that you may be successful." (24:31)

Similarly righteous actions expiate the evil actions as the Prophet (salallahu 
alayhi wasalam) said, "the five daily prayers and one Jumu'ah to the next 
Jumu'ah, and one Ramadan to the next Ramadan, is an expiation for what lies 
between them as long as one refrains from the major sins." [Muslim], and he 
said, "one Umrah to the next is an expiation for what is between them." 
[Bukhaaree].

Therefore, the good actions efface the evil.

THE THIRD: "and deal with mankind with good manners." The first two pieces of 
advice were those related to relationship with the Creator, this third relates 
to relationship of the creation to the creation. This being to deal with 
mankind with the best manners such that you will be praised and not blamed. 
This by having a cheerful complexion, being truthful in speech, speaking to 
others nicely and other such good manners.

There are a large number of texts concerning the excellence of having good 
manners to the extent that the Messenger (salallahu alayhi wasalam) said, "the 
most complete believer with respect to faith is the one with the best manners." 
And he informed us that the most deserving of mankind to him (salallahu alayhi 
wasalam) and the closest to him in ranking on the Day of Judgment would be 
those with the best manners.

So noble manners, along with their being a way to beautify gatherings and the 
person who possesses them being beloved to the people, contain a huge reward 
which will bestowed upon the person on the Day of Judgment.

So preserve these three pieces of advice from the Prophet (salallahu alayhi 
wasalam) and Allah is the Grantor of Success. 


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'Uthman ibn 'Affan (radiAllahu  anhu) said, "Worrying about the dunya is a 
darkness in the heart, while worrying about the akhirah is a light in the 
heart."

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