Life After
The Prophet Muhammad's Life following His Prophethood
If the Prophet Muhammad, upon him be peace and blessings, had cherished selfish
aims and intentions, and if he had not been a Prophet chosen by God to guide people
into truth, he would not have had to wait until he was forty to emerge with the
claim of Prophethood.
Muhammad was unlettered. Until he was forty, no one heard him utter an eloquent
speech, talk on religious and metaphysical issues, formulate any laws, and handle
a sword. But, this reserved and quiet man, who had never given any indication of
political interest or activity before, appeared on the stage of the world, as a
greatest reformer expounding the intricate problems of metaphysics and theology,
delivering speeches upon the principles of the decline and fall of nations, teaching
ethical canons and formulating the laws of social culture, economic organization,
group conduct and international relations, the world history has ever known. He
turned suddenly into such a brave soldier that he did not even once retreat in the
fiercest battles. He changed people’s modes of thought, world-views, and their
beliefs, habits and morals.
The Prophet Muhammad, upon him be peace and blessings, was not only an undefeatable
commander, nor a most eminent statesman, nor a most influential spiritual and moral
teacher. He is the only example where all the excellences in all the aspects of
life have been blended into one personality.
The Prophet Muhammad, upon him be peace and blessings, was not only an undefeatable
commander, nor a most eminent statesman, nor a most influential spiritual and moral
teacher. He is the only example where all the excellences in all the aspects of
life have been blended into one personality. He is a man of wisdom and a seer and
also a living embodiment of his own teachings. He is a great statesman as well as
a military genius. He is a legislator and also a teacher of morals. He is a spiritual
luminary as well as a religious guide. His vision penetrates every aspect of life
and there is nothing which he touches and does not adorn. His orders and commandments
cover a vast field from the regulation of international relations down to the habits
of everyday life like eating, drinking, sleeping, and cleanliness of the body. On
the foundations of his teaching he established a civilization and a culture and
produced such a fine, sensitive, and perfect equilibrium in the conflicting aspects
of life that there is to be found not even the slightest trace of any flaw, deficiency
or incompleteness. What shortcoming and imperfection does he have when compared
with other Prophets so that he is not confirmed as a Prophet and Messenger of God?
Muhammad lived as the humblest of all
Muhammad, upon him be peace and blessings lived a very simple life, as the poorest
of his community. He spent all the money he had earned by the trade before His Prophethood
to spread his Message. In spite of his greatness, his behavior toward all people
was that of the humblest person, that of an ordinary being. In the struggles and
endeavors of his whole life he did not seek any reward or profit for his own person,
nor did he leave any property for his heirs. He did not ask his followers to earmark
anything for him or his descendants, so much so that although he and his family
were the poorest of his community, he forbade not only his family but also his progeny
from receiving from the benefit of zakat.
Muhammad, upon him be peace and blessings, was extremely merciful toward all the
creatures of God.
Muhammad, upon him be peace and blessings, was extremely merciful toward all the
creatures of God. In Makka, his people inflicted on him every kind of suffering,
eventually forcing him to emigrate to Madina, and then waged wars on him for five
years. However, when he conquered Makka without bloodshed in the twenty-first year
of his Prophethood, he forgave all of his enemies. His mercy even encompassed hypocrites
and unbelievers. Although he recognized the hypocrites of his time, he never disclosed
them so that they could enjoy the rights of full citizenship to which their outward
confession of faith and practice entitled them.
The Prophet Muhammad, upon him be peace and blessings, was particularly compassionate
towards children. When he saw a child crying, he sat beside him or her and shared
his or her feelings. He felt the pain of a mother for her child more than the mother
herself. Once he said: I stand in prayer and wish to prolong it. However, I hear
the cry of a child and cut the prayer short for the anxiety which the mother praying
in the congregation is feeling. He took children in arms and hugged them. Sometimes
he bore them on his shoulders.
The Prophet’s compassion encompassed not only human beings, but also animals.
We hear from him that a prostitute was guided to truth by God and ultimately went
to Paradise because she gave water to a poor dog dying of thirst, whilst another
woman was condemned to the torments of Hell because she left a cat to die of hunger.
Muhammad, upon him be peace and blessings, was extremely mild in his relations with
people.
The Prophet Muhammad, upon him be peace and blessings, was extremely mild in his
relations with people. He was never angry with anybody because of what was done
to him. When his wife ‘A’isha, may God be pleased with her, was made
the object of a slander, he did not think to punish the slanderers even after ‘A’isha
was cleared. Bedouins often came to his presence and behaved impolitely, but he
did not even frown at them.
The Prophet was also the most generous of people
The Prophet was also the most generous of people. He liked to distribute whatever
he had. After Prophethood he and his wealthy wife Khadija spent everything they
had in the way of God. When Khadija, may God be pleased with her, died, they had
no money to buy a shroud, and God’s Messenger, upon him be peace and blessings,
had to borrow money in order to bury the first person to embrace Islam and his first
supporter.
According to the Prophet, the world is like a tree under which people sit to be
shaded during a long journey. No one can live forever in the world, so people must
make in the world the necessary preparation for the second part of the journey which
will end either in Paradise or Hell. The mission of God’s Messenger, upon
him be peace and blessings, was to guide people to truth, so he would spend whatever
he had, his life, and his possessions, to this end. Once ‘Umar, upon him be
peace and blessings, saw him lying on a rough mat and wept, saying: ‘O Messenger
of God! While kings sleep in soft weather beds, you are lying on a rough mat. You
are the Messenger of God and therefore deserve more than any other people an easy
life.’ The Messenger answered him: Do you not agree that [the luxuries of]
the world be theirs but those of the Hereafter ours?
Islam does not approve of monastic life. It came to secure justice and the well-being
of mankind, but warns people against over-indulgence. It is for this reason that
many Muslims have chosen an ascetic life. Although the Muslims generally became
rich after the death of the Messenger, upon him be peace and blessings, some like
the Caliphs Abu Bakr, ‘Umar and ‘Ali preferred an austere life. This
was partly because they felt to live as the poorest of their people and partly because
they chose to strictly follow the Prophet’s example.
The Prophet Muhammad, upon him be peace and blessings, was the most modest of people.
As he attained a higher rank each and every day, he increased in humility and servanthood
to God. He preferred being a Prophet-slave to being a Prophet-king.
In the construction of the Mosque in Madina after the Hijra, he carried two sun-dried
bricks while everybody else carried one. In the digging of the ditch around Madina
to defend the city in the Battle of the Ditch, the Companions bound a stone around
their bellies because of hunger, but the Messenger bound two, because he was more
hungry than anybody else. Once, a man saw him and, due to his awe-inspiring appearance,
began to tremble out of fear. The Messenger calmed him, saying: Brother! Don’t
be afraid. I am a man, like you, whose mother used to eat dry bread. Again, a woman
suffering from insanity pulled him by the hand and said: ‘Come with me and
do my housework.’ God’s Messenger, upon him be peace and blessings,
went with the woman and did the work. As reported by ‘A’isha, his wife,
the Messenger patched his clothes, repaired his shoes and helped his wives with
the housework.
‘Ali, the Fourth Caliph, may God be pleased with him, describes the Prophet,
upon him be peace and blessings:
Whoever attempted to describe Muhammad would say: ‘I have, either before him
or after him, never seen the like of him, upon him be peace and blessings.’
· God’s Messenger was the most generous of people in giving out and
the mildest and foremost of them in patience and perseverance. He was the most truthful
of people in speech, the most amiable and congenial in companionship and the noblest
of them in family. Whoever sees him first is stricken by awe of him but whoever
knows him closely is attracted to him deeply, and whoever attempts to describe him
says: ‘I have, either before him or after him, never seen the like of him,
upon him be peace and blessings.’
Other than conveying God’s Message to people, in other words, performing the
mission of Divine Messengership, who bears such an austere life as Muhammad, upon
him be peace and blessings, lived, and what else other than a Prophet, can such
a man as Muhammad, upon him be peace and blessings, be? And what substantial argument
can one put forward against his Prophethood?