Encyclopedia of Islam



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Introduction

  

xxiii  J

Rather than beginning with a single, defini-

tive response as to what Islam is, a more fruitful 

approach is to begin with the proposition that 

Islam is to a large extent what Muslims have made 

of it based on their different religious sensibilities, 

cultural identities, social statuses, and historical 

circumstances. Many of the faithful start with 

the Quran, the Islamic holy book, which they 

believe to be a collection of revelations from God 

(called Allah in Arabic) as delivered in the Arabic 

language via the angel Gabriel to Muhammad 

(ca. 570–632) over a 23-year period while he was 

living in the western Arabian towns of Mecca 

and Medina (formerly known as Yathrib). It is 

about the length of the Christian New Testament, 

consisting of 114 chapters and more than 6,200 

verses. About Islam, the Quran itself declares,

Upholding equity, God, his angels and those 

with knowledge have witnessed that there is 

no god but he, the mighty and wise. Indeed, 

religion [din] in God’s eyes is Islam [literally 

“submission”]. Those who received the book 

disagreed among themselves out of jealousy 

only after knowledge had come to them. 

Whoever disbelieves in God’s sacred verses, 

(let him know that) God is swift in reckon-

ing. (Q 3:18–19).

This passage links Islam, the religion, to 

belief in one God, in opposition to disbelief 

(kufr), which will incur God’s anger. It also states 

that the revelation of God’s book brings with it 

both knowledge and disagreement among human 

beings. The Muslims, therefore, in contrast to 

disbelievers, are those who believe in God’s revela-

tions (the sacred verses) and submit to God’s will. 

The Arabic word muslim literally means “one who 

submits.” The Quran promises Muslims rewards 

both in this world and in the hereafter for their 

belief and good deeds.

In addition to the Quran, Muslims also look 

to the hadith—sacred narratives, usually short in 

length, that contain accounts about what Muham-

mad and his followers, known as his Companions, 

said and did. The hadith, which number in the 

tens of thousands, were systematically collected 

by Muslims during the early centuries of Islam. 

One of them, known as the Hadith of Gabriel, 

provides another, more complex understanding of 

Islam. According to this story, the angel Gabriel, 

appearing as a man dressed in a pure white gown, 

approached Muhammad while he was among his 

friends and interrogated him about his religion. 

When Gabriel asked Muhammad about Islam, he 

replied, “Islam is that you witness that there is no 

god but God and that Muhammad is God’s mes-

senger; that you perform prayer; give alms; fast 

[the month of] Ramadan; and perform the hajj 

to the house [of God in Mecca] if you are able to 

do so.”

In this statement, Islam is defined in terms of 

its Five Pillars, thus underscoring the importance 

of performing sacred actions, or worship, in this 

religion. Even the first pillar, known as the sha-

hada (witnessing) is regarded as a sacred action, 

because it involves pronouncing the two founda-

tional tenets of Islam: belief both in one god and 

in Muhammad as a prophet of God. Recitation 

of the shahada in Arabic occurs throughout a 

Muslim’s lifetime. Muslims repeat it during their 

five daily prayers, and even at the moment of 

death, when it should be the last words spoken 

by a dying person, or spoken by someone else 

on his or her behalf. Islamic tradition regards the 

other four of Islam’s pillars—prayer, almsgiving, 

fasting, and hajj—as forms of worship required of 

all Muslims in order to attain salvation. The fine 

points of Muslim worship were elaborated as part 

of the Muslim legal tradition, known as sharia, 

by qualified religious authorities known as the 

ulama (sing. alim, “one who has knowledge”).

The Hadith of Gabriel next takes up the 

subject of belief, as Gabriel, acknowledging that 

Muhammad has correctly defined Islam, contin-

ues his questioning by asking Muhammad about 

iman (faith, believing). According to the story, 

Muhammad replies that iman involves belief in 




K  xxiv  


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