Page 31 - The Vision of Islam
P. 31

CHAPTER TWO


                          The Four Pillars


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             I created the jinn and mankind only so that they might worship Me.
                               —The Quran, 51:56








          After belief in God and the Prophet, four practices enjoy the
          status of pillars of Islam—fasting, prayer, zakat (almsgiving) and
          hajj (pilgrimage to Makkah). In essence, these are the four parts
          which make up the whole that is called Islam.
             Fasting means not just abstaining from food and drink, but
          rising above the material world so that man may come in contact
          with  God.  Prayer,  in  spirit,  is  remembrance  of  God.  Zakat,  in
          reality, is a form of sacrifice meant to underline those ethical values
          which are known in Islam as Huqu qul Ibad, that is, fulfilment of
          one’s responsibilities towards others. Hajj, a re-enactment of the
          missionary  life  of  the  greatest  preacher  of  truth,  the  Prophet
          Abraham, also necessarily entails sacrifice in the cause of God.
          Understanding and acceptance of these four pillars, as symbols of
          the fundamental parts of Islam, prepare one to adopt Islam fully in
          one’s life.
             Each of these four acts of worship is imbued with a particular

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