ABDUL WAHID OSMAN BELAL



The Golden Mean
by Imam Al-Haddad
Translated by Dr. Mostafa al-Badawi
Taken from Knowledge and Wisdom
http://www.sunnipath.com/Library/Articles/AR00000237.aspx

Know that moderation and steering a middle course are required in all affairs 
and must be maintained. It has been handed down that "the best of the things 
are the middle ones". And, "Moderation, deliberation, and graceful manners are 
one of twenty-five parts of prophethood." The Commander of the Faithful, 'Ali 
ibn Abi Talib, may God ennoble his countenance and grant him His good pleasure, 
said, "Keep to the middle course, for those who exceed it return to it and 
those who fall short of it [eventually advance to] rejoin it." It is out of 
incapacity or neglect that one falls short of the middle course and moderation, 
while to exceed it is to be immoderate and extravagant. God (blessed and 
exalted is He!) urges mankind towards moderation and to cleaving to the middle 
way: Let not your hand be tied to your neck, nor open it altogether, lest you 
sit down blamed and regretful (Quran, 17:29). Also, And those who when they 
spend are neither wasteful nor
 grudging, and there is ever a firm station between the two (Quran, 25:67).

All praiseworthy attributes and activities should be judged according to this 
rule. To go into this detail would be too lengthy, so we will give only a few 
examples, like liberality (about which you have just read what God the Exalted 
has said), such that excess and immoderation here amount to squandering and 
wastefulness, for God likes not the wasteful (Quran: 6:141). But on the other 
hand, insufficiency and neglect amount to avarice and greed, and the miser is 
remote from God the Exalted and from men. Again, courage is a praiseworthy 
quality. However when immoderate, it turns into recklessness and unnecessary 
risk-taking; whereas when insufficient it becomes cowardice and disgrace. 
Humility is also praiseworthy, but when excessive, it turns into degradation 
and humiliation; and when insufficient , it turns into arrogance and frivolity. 
The same applies to modesty which, when excessive, becomes effeminacy and 
weakness, and when insufficient becomes
 crudeness and impudence. Finally, too much humor and cheerfulness leads to 
fatuousness and triviality, while too little leads to offensiveness and 
estrangement. Other traits can be weighed in the same manner. The same 
principle applies to sleep, food, clothes, and so on. One must always cleave to 
the middle way, for both extremes are blameworthy.

Now be aware that the limits of moderation may not be evident, and the middle 
way may prove difficult to locate, except for those who have religious insight 
and are well versed in knowledge and certitude. Therefore any person who 
experiences problems in this area must refer to such people, and if he cannot 
find any of them, which frequently occurs these days, he must halt and wait 
until he is sure of the right thing to do. The best course of action when 
confusion occurs is to lean slightly on the side of excess in praiseworthy 
things, such as humility and liberality, and slightly on the side of frugality 
in habitual things such as eating, sleeping, and talking, for it is in the 
nature of the lower soul to lean towards excess in habitual things and toward 
insufficiency and neglect in matters of religion. It is therefore wise
and appropriate to go against the soul's inclination on both accounts. The 
Proof of Islam, [Imam al-Ghazali], may God have mercy on him, has given similar 
indications in his writings.

To explain further, if a man giving charity is undecided as to whether he is 
being miserly or prodigal, let him go a little more toward the
side of excess, for this is better than avarice. The soul is inclined to like 
money and to dislike parting from it; so it must always stand
accused of miserliness. If a man is undecided whether he has excessive or 
insufficient humility, let him move a little toward being humble, for the same 
reason [stated above]. If on the other hand, he cannot decide whether is taking 
the right amount of food, sleep, or any other habitual thing, let him move 
toward reduction and economy, for the soul again stands accused here, and any 
reduction in such things is unreservedly praiseworthy, so long as it does not 
affect one's mind or body adversely. Understand these things, for they are 
important!

Source: Imam 'Abdallah ibn 'Alawi al-Haddad, Al-Fusul al-'Ilmiyya wa'l-Usul 
al-Hikamiyya (Knowledge and Wisdom), translated by Dr. Mostafa al-Badawi, The 
Starlatch Press, Chicago, 2001, p. 59-61.

Imam 'Abdallah ibn 'Alawi al-Haddad, Mostafa Badawi 132 pg PB

>From the back cover: The core issue this book so movingly raises is the 
>overriding presence that looms above all humanity, that is, the
Hereafter, the ultimate and inescapable destination of all people-believers and 
inveterate deniers alike. Imam al-Haddad, a gifted
scholar and clear-sighted spiritual sage, distills in 40 short essays throbbing 
reminders of what one must do in his or her short life to
prepare for the awesome Standing for the Lord of all being. Toward this most 
noble of ends, Knowledge and Wisdom imparts the kind of counsel-candid and 
sincere-that can change a person's life.

SUMMARY

Imam al-Haddad, a gifted scholar and clear-sighted spiritual sage, distills 
with uncanny clarity what it is that a human being needs to be
concerned about in the hours and years of his or her life. With the Hereafter 
as the ultimate return of all sentient beings, the
most consequential of events, and the unrelenting reality that hovers over all 
of us, Imam al-Haddad provides advice, inspiration, and reality checks so that 
we may stay on the path that leads to felicity in the Hereafter, God willing. 
Toward this most noble of ends, Knowledge and Wisdom imparts the kind of 
counsel ?candid and sincere? that can change a person's life.

"Life is short, time is precious, death near, and the distance to travel great, 
while the moment of standing before God to account for
everything, however insignificant, is daunting and hard," writes Imam al-Haddad.

Knowledge and Wisdom - Imam al-Haddad

http://www.ihyaproductions.com/tape_catalogue/descriptions/bk-129.html

===================================


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