Firstly:
Jihaad is of various kinds, some of which are obligatory upon
everyone who is accountable, and some are obligatory upon the community as a
whole – if some people undertake them then the rest are relieved of the
obligation. And some kinds of jihad are mustahabb.
- Jihad al-nafs (jihad against one’s self) and jihad al-Shaytaan (jihad against the Shaytaan) are obligatory upon everyone who is accountable.
- Jihad against the munaafiqeen (hypocrites), kaafirs (disbelievers) and leaders of oppression and innovation is obligatory upon the community as a whole.
- Physical jihad (i.e. fighting) against the kaafirs may become an individual obligation upon everyone who is able to do it in certain circumstances, which will be described below.
Ibn al-Qayyim (may Allaah have mercy on him) said:
Once this is understood, then jihad is of four kinds: Jihad
al-nafs (jihad against one’s self), jihad al-Shaytaan (jihad against the
Shaytaan), jihad against the kaafirs and jihad against the hypocrites.
- Jihad al-nafs (jihad against one’s self) is of four kinds:
1 – Striving to learn the teachings of Islam without which
one cannot attain success and happiness in this world or in the Hereafter;
if this is missing then one is doomed to misery in this world and in the
Hereafter.
2 – Striving to make oneself act in accordance with what one
has learned. Simply knowing without acting, even though it may not cause any
harm, is not going to bring any benefit.
3 – Striving to call others to Islam, teaching those who do
not know about it. Otherwise one will be one of those who conceal that which
Allaah has revealed of guidance and teaching, and it will not benefit him or
save him from the punishment of Allaah.
4 – Striving to bear patiently the difficulties involved in
calling people to Allaah and the insults of people; bearing all that for the
sake of Allaah.
If a person achieves all these four levels, then he will be
one of the rabbaaniyyeen (learned men of religion who practise what they
know and also preach to others. Cf. Aal ‘Imraan 3:79).
The salaf were agreed that the scholar does not deserve to be called a rabbaani unless he knows the truth, acts in accordance with it and teaches it to others. Whoever teaches, acts in accordance with his knowledge and has knowledge, he will be called great in the kingdom of heaven.
The salaf were agreed that the scholar does not deserve to be called a rabbaani unless he knows the truth, acts in accordance with it and teaches it to others. Whoever teaches, acts in accordance with his knowledge and has knowledge, he will be called great in the kingdom of heaven.
- Jihad against the Shaytaan is of two types:
1 – Warding off the doubts that he stirs up to undermine
faith.
2 – Striving against him to ward off the corrupt desires that
he provokes.
The first jihad is followed by certainty of faith, and the
second is followed by patience. Allaah says (interpretation of the
meaning):
“And We made from among them (Children of Israel),
leaders, giving guidance under Our Command, when they were patient and used
to believe with certainty in Our Ayaat (proofs, evidences, verses, lessons,
signs, revelations, etc.)” [al-Sajdah 32:24]
Allaah tells us that leadership in religion is attained
through patience and certainty of faith. Patience wards off desires and
certainty wards off doubts.
- Jihad against the kaafirs and hypocrites is of four kinds: with the heart, the tongue, one’s wealth and oneself. Jihad against the kaafirs is more along the lines of physical fighting whereas jihad against the hypocrites is more along the lines of using words and ideas.
Jihad against the leaders of oppression and innovation is of
three kinds:
1 – Jihad with one's hand (i.e., physical jihad, fighting) if
one is able. If that is not possible then it should be with one's tongue
(i.e., by speaking out). If that is not possible then it should be with
one's heart (i.e., by hating the evil and feeling that it is wrong).
These are the thirteen types of jihad, and “Whoever dies
without having fought or having resolved to fight has died following one of
the branches of hypocrisy.” (Narrated by Muslim, 1910).
Zaad al-Ma’aad, 3/9-11)
Shaykh ‘Abd al-‘Azeez ibn Baaz (may Allaah have mercy on him)
said:
“Jihad is of various kinds, with one’s self, one's wealth, by
making du’aa’, by teaching and guiding, by helping to do good in any way.
The greatest form of jihad is jihad with one’s self (i.e., going oneself and
fighting), followed by jihad with one's wealth, jihad by speaking out and
guiding others. Da’wah is also part of jihad. But going out oneself to
fight in jihad is the highest form.
(Fataawa al-Shaykh Ibn Baaz, 7/334, 335)
Islam Q&A
Sheikh Muhammed Salih Al-Munajjid