How does the Qur'an describe the companions?
Ibn Hazm voices the opinion of many leading scholars: ‘All of the
Companions will enter Paradise.’150 It is possible to find proofs in the
Qur’an testifying to the truth of this opinion.
The Qur’an describes the Companions in the last verse of the sura al-Fath,
as follows:
Muhammad is the Messenger of God. Those who are with him are hard against
the unbelievers [they are implacable before them], merciful one to another.
[They kept so long vigils that] you see them bowing, prostrating, seeking
blessing, bounty (of forgiveness and Paradise) and good pleasure (of God).
Their mark is on their faces, the trace of prostration. That is their
likeness in the Torah, and their likeness in the Gospel: as a seed that puts
forth its shoot, and strengthens it, and it grows strong and rises straight
upon its stalk, pleasing the sowers, that through them it may enrage the
unbelievers. God has promised those of them who believe and do deeds of
righteousness forgiveness and a mighty wage [He will reward them in Paradise
with the things that neither eyes will ever have seen nor ears heard].
(48:29)
The Qur’an again, describes them:
The Outstrippers, the first of the Emigrants and the Helpers, and those
who followed them in good-doing – God is well- pleased with them and they
are well-pleased with Him; and He has prepared for them gardens underneath
which rivers flow, therein to dwell forever; that is the mighty triumph.
(al-Tawba, 9.100)
Abu Hurayra never missed the discourse of God’s Messenger, upon him be
peace and blessings. He was always with him and stayed in the antechamber of
the Prophet’s Mosque. He suffered hunger almost all the time. Once he went
to God’s Messenger, upon him be peace and blessings, and told him that he
had eaten nothing for days. Abu Talha took him as a guest but unfortunately
there was little in his house to eat. However, he said to his wife, Umm
Sulaym, ‘Get the children to sleep early at night, and put on the table
whatever is in the house to eat. When we sit at the table, put out the
candle pre-tending to make its light brighter. No one sees in the dark
whether one is really eating or not. I will act as if I am eating, and thus
our guest can satisfy his hunger.’
After the dawn prayer, God’s Messenger turned to them and smiled, saying:
What did you do at that night? This verse was revealed concerning you:
Those who made their dwelling in the abode [Madina], and in belief,
before them [the Emi-grants] love whoever has emigrated to them, not finding
in their breasts any need for what they have been given, and preferring
others above themselves, even though poverty be their portion. Whoever is
guarded against the avarice of his own soul, those – they are the
prosperous. (Al-Hashr, 59.9)151
Again, we read in the Qur’an concerning the Companions:
God was well-pleased with the believers when they were swearing fealty to
you under the tree, and He knew what was in their hearts, so He sent down
peace, calm and tranquility upon them, and rewarded them with a nigh
victory. (al-Fath, 48.18)
The Companions swore many oaths of allegiance to God’s Messenger that
they would do their utmost to protect him and carry, by God’s Will, Islam to
ultimate victory. They kept their promise at the cost of all their
belongings and lives. Most of them were martyred in the battles either
during the life of the Prophet himself or in conveying Islam as far as
possible during the reigns of succeeding Caliphs. It is still possible to
find in almost every part of Muslim lands tombs where several Companions are
buried. Also, they brought up numerous scholars in the fields of religious
knowledge – jurisprudence, Tradition, Qur’-anic interpretation, and also in
social sciences like history and the biography of the Prophet, upon him be
peace and blessings. In the words of the Qur’an,
Among the believers are men who were true to their covenant with God;
some of them have fulfilled their vow by death, and some are still awaiting,
and they have not changed in the least. (al-Ahzab, 33.23)
150. I. Hajar, 1.10.
151. Bukhari, “Tafsir,” 59/6. |