Page 77 - The Vision of Islam
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The Vision of Isla m

          which was misinterpreted by his kinsmen as being due to the love
          of the Prophet’s wealth:
             “Afterwards Utbah stayed at home and did not go out to see
          anybody. ‘Fellow Quraysh,’  Abu Jahl said, ‘It seems to me that
          ‘Utbah has become attracted towards Muhammad. He must have
          been taken by the food that Muhammad offered him. This can
          only be due to some need of his. Let’s go and see him.’ So off they
          went. ‘Utbah,’ Abu Jahl said, ‘we have come to see you because
          we are sure that you have taken a liking to Muhammad and his
          religion. Look, if you want, we can accumulate enough money to
          ensure that you will not have to go to him to be fed.’ ‘Utba became
          angry, and swore that he would never speak to Muhammad again!”
          (Al-Bidayah wan-Nihayah, Vol. 3)
             The Prophet,  was financially very well placed when he
          commenced his mission. But when, after 13 years, he emigrated to
          Madinah, it was a very different story. He had nothing left, and had
          to borrow some money from Abu Bakr for the journey.



          The language of Dawah


          Looked at from a logical point of view, the Islamic call consists
          basically of certain constant, recurrent factors. It is the same
          points—the oneness of God, the inevitability of the life after death,
          the need for man to understand his position as God’s servant, and
          live as such according to the prophetic pattern—which are stressed
          again and again. When these points come from the tongue of the
          preacher of God’s word, they take on the hue of the preacher’s own
          person; this makes the message of the da‘i a living act. This addition
          means that the message of Islam, far from being a repetition of set
          texts, is expressed with irresistible vitality and spontaneity. One in
          meaning, it becomes diverse in the forms it takes to the point of its
          being impossible to compile a rigid list of them.
             The heart of the preacher of God’s word is full of fear of God;
          it is his ardent desire to bring his audience on to the path of right

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