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Definition
Repentance
(Tawbah) means that one feels regret and filled with remorse for his or
her sins, turns to Allah with the intention to obey Him. According to
truth-seeking scholars, repentance signifies a sincere effort to no longer
oppose the Divine Essence in one’s feelings, thoughts, intentions, and acts,
and to comply sincerely with His commands and prohibitions. Repentance does not
mean being disgusted with what is bad or prohibited and thus no longer engaging
in it; rather, it means remaining aloof from whatever Allah hates and prohibits,
even if it seems agreeable to sense and reason.
Repentance
is usually used with Nasuh, literally meaning pure, sincere, reforming,
improving, and repairing. Tawbah Nasuh (genuine repentance) means a pure,
sincere repentance that perfectly reforms and improves the one who feels it. One
who feels such a sincere, heartfelt, and true remorse for the sin committed
seeks to abandon it, thereby setting a good example for others. The Qur’an
points to this when it mentions true repentance:
[O
you who believe! Turn to God in true, sincere repentance.]
(At-Tahrim 66: 8).
Categories
of Repentance
There
are three categories of repentance which are as follows:
1.
The repentance of those who cannot discern
Divine truths. Such people are uneasy about their disobedience to Allah and,
conscious of the sinfulness clouding their hearts, turn toward Allah in
repentance saying, for example: “I have fallen or committed a sin. Forgive me,
or I ask for Allah’s forgiveness.”
2.
Those half-awakened to Divine truths beyond
veils of material existence, who feel an inward pang of sinfulness and remorse
right after thinking or doing anything incompatible with the consciousness of
always being in Allah’s presence, or after every instance of heedlessness
enveloping their hearts, and who immediately take refuge in the mercy and favor
of Allah. Such people are described in the following Hadith: “One who
sincerely repents of his sin is as if he had never committed it. When Allah
loves one of His servants, his sins do not harm him. Then he recited the verse:
‘Assuredly, Allah loves the oft-repentant and those who always seek to purify
themselves.’”
3.
Those who live such a careful life that, their
eyes sleep but their hearts do not, their hearts are awake. Such people
immediately discard what-ever intervenes between Allah and their hearts and
other innermost faculties, and regain the consciousness of their relation to the
Light of Lights. They always manifest the meaning of:
[How
excellent a servant! Truly he was ever turning in contrition (to his Lord)]
(Sad 38: 44).
Repentance
means regaining one’s essential purity after every spiritual defilement, and
engaging in frequent self-renewal.
Stages
of Repentance
1.
Feeling sincere remorse and regret.
2.
Being frightened whenever one remembers past
sins.
3.
Trying to eradicate injustice and support
justice and right.
4.
Reviewing one’s responsibilities and
performing obligations previously neglected.
5.
Reforming oneself by removing spiritual
defects caused by deviation and error
6.
Regretting and lamenting the times when one
did not mention or remember Allah, or thank Him and reflect on His works. Such
people are always apprehensive and alert so that their thoughts and feelings are
not tainted by things that intervene between themselves and Allah. (This last
quality is particular to people distinguished by their nearness to Allah.)
If
one does not feel remorse, regret, and disgust for errors committed, whether
great or small; if one is not fearful or apprehensive of falling back into sin
at any time; and if one does not take shelter in sincere servanthood to Allah in
order to be freed from deviation and error into which one has fallen by moving
away from God, any resulting repentance will be no more than a lie.
A
Muslim should cry:
I’m
sorry for the mistakes I make.
And,
I know of none that can be retrieved.
They're
like the water over a dam.
To
flow back, it cannot be achieved.
There
are things I wish I had never said.
Now,
I wish that I had bit my tongue instead.
To
make another feel that pain,
For
those thoughtless words, I am disdain.
Repentance
is an oath of virtue, and holding steadfastly to it requires strong willpower.
The lord of the penitents, peace and blessings be upon him, says that one who
repents sincerely and holds steadfastly to it has
achieved the rank of a martyr, while the repentance of those who cannot free
themselves from their sins and deviations, although they repent repeatedly,
mocks the door toward which the truly repentant ones turn in utmost sincerity
and resolution.
One
who continues to sin after proclaiming a fear of Hell, who does not engage in
righteous deeds despite self-proclaimed desires for Paradise, and who is
indifferent to the Prophet’s way and practices despite assertions of love for
the Prophet, peace and blessings be upon him, cannot be taken seriously. This is
also the case with one who claims to be sincere and pure-hearted, but spends his
or her life oscillating between sin and repentance.
An
initiate’s first station is repentance, while the second is Inabah
(sincere penitence). While repentance requires the training of feelings,
thoughts, and acts in order to move them from opposition to acceptance and
obedience, sincere penitence demands a critique of the authenticity, sincerity,
and sufficiency of that acceptance and obedience. Repentance is a progressing or
journeying toward Allah—that is, seeking to do what is pleasing to Allah and
refraining from what is forbidden by Him. Sincere penitence is striving to live
an upright life so that one may seek Allah’s pleasure in all actions and
thoughts.”
*
Excerpted,
with slight modifications, from: www.thewayrtotruth.org
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