A Source of Civilization
The Prophet’s Sunnah is not only the second source, right after the Qur’an, of Islamic Shari‘ah (Law), but also the second source, again right after the Qur’an, of which both knowledge and civilization flow.
Primarily, the Qur’an establishes the bases and principles of legislation, whereas the Sunnah provides theoretical interpretation as well as example and practical application.
The Prophet’s guidance as
exemplified in the Sunnah guides Muslims to three basic inseparable aspects of
civilization, namely: civilized Fiqh (Jurisprudence), civilized conduct, and
civilized structure.
Before attempting to discuss these three aspects of civilization, we should first define the meaning of civilization: To begin with, does the Islamic concept of civilization offer a distinctive and unique interpretation that differs from the ones offered by other civilizations that preceded or followed it? Or do all civilizations stem from the same source regardless of country, time, sex, religion and philosophy in life?
There is a general
definition of civilization that is innate in the very word, namely, the overall
manifestations of financial, scientific, artistic, literary, and social
development in a society or in similar societies.
Islam aims at elevating human beings financially, scientifically, artistically, and socially as well as spiritually and morally
The word “civilization” in
Arabic is the opposite of the word “bedouinism” or, respectively, savageness and
barbarism. Thus, urban life stands against Bedouin life and vice versa. People
who live in cities, towns and villages are urban dwellers, whereas, people who
lead a Bedouin life are those who live in the deserts sheltered by tents. The
Bedouins are notorious for their stiffness, harshness, hardness of heart and the
prevalence of ignorance and illiteracy among them.
Consequently, Allah did
not send down a prophet from among them. Instead, all the prophets He had sent
were urban dwellers: of villages and towns. Allah said to His Prophet what
means:
(And
We have not sent before you, any but from among the people of the towns We
revealed to them.)
(Chapter 12:109)
As we know Islam is
represented by both the Qur’an and the Prophet’s Sunnah and we can see in them a
persistent determination to transfer those people into a systematized urban
civilization. Islam aimed at elevating them financially, scientifically,
artistically, and socially as well as spiritually and morally. This aim required
Islam to educate and purify them according to a wise and gradual instructive
discipline that was to be carried out by the Prophet Muhammad (peace and
blessings be upon him) himself.
Among the targets of the
Hijrah (flight of the Prophet from Makkah to
The civilization of
Islam has united man to Allah and earth to heaven
If we make a comparison,
we will see, on the one hand, the Bedouin man who was not in the least
embarrassed to pass urine in one corner of the mosque regardless of the
fact that the Prophet and his Companions were sitting in it. Yet when people
shouted at him, the Prophet (peace and blessings be upon him) stopped them and
excused his ignorance and Bedouinism ordering his Companions: “Wait until he
finishes his urinating then spill a bucket of water over the place, for you have
been sent to make things easy and not to make them difficult.” (Reported by
Al-Bukhari)
On the other hand, we
would see his fellow Muslim who was instructed, refined and purified by Islam as
he approached Rustum, the leader of the Persian armies, and answered his inquiry
about the identity of Muslims saying: “We were sent by Allah to bring out whom
He wills from the worship of His servants to His Worship alone, from the
straitened world to the vast one, and from the injustice of religions to the
justice of Islam “
Undoubtedly, Islam was a
message of civilization. Its target was to elevate the life of man and set him
free from the bonds of “bedouinism” to the freedom of civilization.
It is necessary to
emphasize that the civilization that Islam wants to build is unlike any other
civilizations which focus on the materialistic aspects of life as well as the
bodily and sensuous side of man. Moreover, these civilizations concentrated on
the immediate pleasures of life, making worldly affairs their primary concern
and the destination of their knowledge, and left no room for Allah or the
Afterlife in their philosophy or in their cultural and educational system.
Contrary to them, the
civilization of Islam has united man to Allah and earth to heaven. It has
dedicated life to preparation for the Afterlife. It has mingled spirit with
matter, has struck a balance between the mind and the heart, has wedded science
to faith and has cherished ethical sublimity as much as materialistic
development.
It is justifiable to describe it as a spiritual, materialistic civilization. It is idealistic and real, holy and human, ethical and populational, and individualistic as well as general. Truly, it is the civilization of balance and moderation which was the basis on which a just and distinguished Nation. Almighty Allah described it saying what means (And so We have appointed you as a just and distinguished Nation.) (Chapter 2:143)