بِسْمِ اللّهِ الرَّحْمـَنِ الرَّحِيمِ
ضُرِبَتۡ عَلَيۡهِمُ ٱلذِّلَّةُ أَيۡنَ مَا ثُقِفُوٓاْ إِلَّا بِحَبۡلٖ مِّنَ ٱللَّهِ وَحَبۡلٖ مِّنَ ٱلنَّاسِ...
Duribat ‘alaihimuz zillatu aina maa suqifooo illaa bihablim minal laahi wa hablim minan naasi
Part
of Al-Imran(Family of Imran) 3:112:Overshadowed by ignominy are they
wherever they may be, save [when they bind themselves again] in a bond
with God and a bond with men !
قُلْ يٰعِبَادِيَ الَّذِيْنَ اَسْرَفُوْا عَلٰٓى اَنْفُسِهِمْ لَا تَقْنَطُوْا مِنْ رَّحْمَةِ اللّٰهِۗ اِنَّ اللّٰهَ يَغْفِرُ الذُّنُوْبَ جَمِيْعًاۗ اِنَّهٗ هُوَ الْغَفُوْرُ الرَّحِيْمُ
Qul yaa’ibaadiyal lazeena asrafoo ‘alaaa anfusihim laa taqnatoo mirrahmatil laah; innal laaha yaghfiruz zunooba jamee’aa; innahoo Huwal Ghafoorur Raheem
Az-Zumar (The
Troops) 39:53 Say, "O My slaves! Those who have transgressed against
themselves, (do) not despair of (the) Mercy (of) Allah. Indeed, Allah
forgives the sins all. Indeed He, He (is) the Oft-Forgiving, the Most
Merciful.
Lesson 1: Do not let despair become greater than the sin
In the books of biography and narration there is a deeply moving report about Muhammad ibn Shihab al-Zuhri and Imam Ali ibn al-Husayn Zayn al-Abidin, may Allah grant him peace. The details do not come to us in exactly one form. One early report says that al-Zuhri became responsible for bloodshed by mistake, then left his family and withdrew from ordinary life. A later retelling says that while serving in authority under the Umayyads, he punished a man and the man died under that punishment, after which al-Zuhri fled in terror and lived for a long time in isolation. What is clear in all the reports, however, is the heart of the matter: a grave wrong had occurred, remorse had consumed him, and Imam Ali ibn al-Husayn taught him that despair of Allah can become worse than the sin that first broke a person.
There are people who sin and continue living as though nothing has happened. They eat, laugh, plan, and sleep while the heart remains untouched. Then there are others who are shaken to their core by one fall. Al-Zuhri, in this story, appears to have been of the second kind. He did not treat it lightly. He did not hide behind office, status, or legal wording. He saw only one thing before him: that a life had been lost, and that he would have to stand before Allah with that burden.
The shock of it drove him out of ordinary life. Some reports say that he abandoned his home, left his family, and took up residence in a tent, saying in effect that he was no longer fit to live under the roof of a house. Other reports say that he wandered in a state of grief and estrangement, then entered a cave and remained there for years. Whether one pictures a tent in the open or a lonely cave in the wilderness, the meaning is the same. He had become a man who could no longer bear the company of people, because he could not bear the company of his own thoughts.
Day and night the same thought must have returned to him. What answer will I give on the Day of Judgment? What shall I say when the rights of people are laid bare? How can a man return to learning, to respectability, to normal conversation, when blood has been spilled through him? This is what unchecked grief does. It begins as remorse, and remorse is healthy. It is a sign that the heart is still alive. But if it is not guided, it can harden into despair. And despair is one of the most dangerous traps on the path back to Allah.
Then Allah sent to him one who could heal him and correct him, compassionately, saving him from breaking himself further.
During Hajj, Imam Ali ibn al-Husayn came upon al-Zuhri in this shattered condition. In one report the Imam passed by him while he was in seclusion. In another, he encountered him in the Haram while people were already speaking of how deeply disturbed he had become. The Imam asked about his state, and al-Zuhri opened his heart. He confessed that while entrusted with authority, he had become responsible for the death of a man. He saw no way back for himself. He believed that he was ruined.
What followed is one of those brief statements that can save a life.
The Imam said to him:
يا ابن شهاب قنوطك أشد من ذنبك
O Ibn Shihab, your despair is harsher than your sin.
Another narration gives the same meaning with a few additional words, saying that his despair of the mercy of Allah, the mercy that encompasses all things, was more shocking than the sin itself. The Imam did not deny the gravity of what had happened. He did not say that the matter was small. He did not flatter him, and he did not tell him to forget. Rather, he showed him that a servant must never add a second destruction to the first. Sin wounds the soul, but despair cuts it off from the very mercy through which healing comes.
Then the Imam showed him what repentance actually looks like. Seek His forgiveness. Send the blood money to the family of the dead man. Return to your people. Return to the path and signs of your deen. Some narrations add that if the family would not accept the compensation openly, then it should still be conveyed to them discreetly. This is an important point. The Imam did not reduce tawbah to tears and private sorrow. Where the rights of another human being have been violated, repentance must also include restitution as far as one is able. Regret alone is not enough when another family has been left carrying grief.
That counsel broke the spell of despair. The reports say that al-Zuhri returned to his home and used to say later that Ali ibn al-Husayn had the greatest claim of favor over him. A broken man had been given back his life, not because his sin was made to look small, but because the mercy of Allah was placed back before his eyes.
There is a lesson here for all of us.
Many people understand that sin is dangerous. Fewer understand that hopelessness is also a sin of the heart. Shaytan is content with either one. If he cannot make a servant bold in wrongdoing, he will try to make him hopeless after wrongdoing. If he cannot destroy a person through desire, he will try to destroy him through despair.
This is why this story matters so much.
A believer should fear sin, yes. He should be ashamed before Allah, yes. He should weep over what he has done, yes. But he should never imagine that his sin is greater than the mercy of Allah. That thought does not come from humility. It comes from confusion. Allah did not open the door of repentance only for small mistakes. He opened it for sinners. He opened it for those who have gone far. He opened it for those who have wronged themselves greatly. The Qur’an does not say, “Do not despair, unless your sin is too serious.” It says, *Do not despair of the mercy of Allah.*
At the same time, hope in Allah is not cheap talk. It is not a slogan used to cover what we have done. It is not a way of escaping responsibility. Real hope in Allah sends a person back to prayer, back to restitution, back to truthfulness, back to the people he has harmed if their rights can still be restored. That is why the Imam’s answer is so complete. He joined hope with accountability. He joined mercy with duty. He joined healing with repair.
How many people today sit inside their own invisible caves? Outwardly they are among people, but inwardly they have shut themselves away. A past sin follows them. A wrong decision follows them. A harm they caused follows them. And instead of turning that pain into tawbah, they let it become paralysis. They call it remorse, but sometimes it is simply a refusal to believe that Allah can still guide them after what they have done.
This story tells us: do not stay in the cave.
If you have sinned, repent.
If you have harmed someone, repair what you can.
If you have taken a right, return it.
If you have broken a trust, admit it.
If you are ashamed, let that shame carry you to Allah, not away from Him.
And if your heart tells you that there is no way back, then answer it with the words taught in this story: the greater danger is not only the fall, but to remain lying there because one has lost hope in the mercy of the One who calls people back.
May Allah protect us from sins that harm others and stain our own souls. May He grant us honest remorse, sincere tawbah, the courage to make amends, and hearts that never despair of His mercy. Ameen.
A brief note on the reports: the early form of the story says that al-Zuhri “incurred bloodshed by mistake” and withdrew from his family under a tent, while a later retelling says he was serving the Umayyads, a man died under punishment, and he secluded himself in a cave for years. The central lesson is shared across the narrations.
Lesson 2:
In a town near the desert, there lived a notorious highwayman whose name had become a source of fear for travellers. Along with his band of robbers, he would attack caravans, seize their wealth, and leave behind grief and ruin.
One day they fell upon a large caravan and looted everything they could find: gold, silver, garments, animals, and provisions. Among those who had been robbed was a scholar of Islam. Like the others, he lost his belongings, but what pained him most was not the gold or the clothing. It was his books and manuscripts, the labour of many years, that grieved his heart.
Because of the love he had for knowledge, he resolved to search for the hideout of the robbers and try to recover his books.
By the will of Allah, he eventually reached their camp. To his surprise, they did not harm him. Instead they let him sit with them. As they sat together, the scholar noticed that the leader of the bandits was not drinking with the others.
So he asked him, “Why are you not drinking?”
The man replied, “I am fasting.”
The scholar was astonished. He said, “You rob people, spread fear, and commit major sins, yet you keep an optional fast. What do you hope to gain from it?”
The highwayman lowered his voice and said, “It is my rope to Allah. It is thin, and it is weak, but I do not want to cut it. Perhaps one day Allah will use this small rope to pull me out of the darkness and guide me back to Him.”
After saying this, he returned the scholar’s books and allowed him to leave in peace.
Years passed.
Later, while performing Hajj in Makkah, the scholar saw a man at the Kaaba clinging to the kiswah, crying in prayer with deep humility. There was a light on his face and a calm in his manner. The scholar looked carefully and was startled. It was the very same highwayman, but he was no longer the man he had once been.
He went near him and asked, “How did you come to this state?”
The man replied, “I never lost hope, That thin rope to Allah did not break. Allah accepted my repentance, pulled me out of darkness, and brought me here. Now I try to serve those whom I once used to harm.”
There is a lesson here for all of us.
We should never belittle any act that still connects a person to Allah. A person may be drowning in sins, yet some small deed done with sincerity may become the means of his rescue. A fast, a prayer, a tear, a charity, a moment of regret, any of these may become a rope by which Allah draws His servant back.
So long as there is hope, the rope is not cut.
Let us not despair of the mercy of Allah, whether for ourselves or for others. Let us hold fast to whatever bond remains between us and Him, and let us strengthen it before it is too late.
May Allah keep us attached to Him, forgive our shortcomings, and grant us sincere repentance. Ameen.