The Cornerstone of Faith and the Steed of Hope
Introduction: The Concept and Importance of Good Thinking of Allah
Good thinking (Husn al-Dhann) of Allah the Exalted is among the greatest and most sublime stations of faith. It is a state of the heart that combines knowledge, hope, and love, where the servant trusts his Lord with a deep trust in His mercy, generosity, and forgiveness, and expects good from Him in every situation. This good thinking is not merely a fleeting wish, but rather a firm conviction that emanates from knowledge of Allah's attributes and His beautiful names, and translates into practical behavior in the life of the believer.
The difference between good thinking and fatalism (tawaakul without action) is subtle; good thinking drives one to take the means while relying on Allah, whereas fatalism is abandoning the means while claiming reliance. Ibn al-Qayyim said: "Good thinking of Allah is that one thinks that Allah will have mercy on him, forgive him, and accept his repentance, but while striving with the means and exertion in obedience."
Chapter One: Good Thinking of Allah in the Noble Quran
1. Direct Quranic Evidence:
| Verse | Surah and Verse | Interpretation and Significance |
|---|---|---|
| {But if they turn away, say, "Sufficient for me is Allah; there is no deity except Him. On Him I have relied, and He is the Lord of the Great Throne."} | [At-Tawbah:129] | The phrase "Sufficient for me is Allah" means that Allah is sufficient for His servant, and it is among the greatest expressions of good thinking. |
| {But perhaps you hate a thing and it is good for you; and perhaps you love a thing and it is bad for you. And Allah Knows, while you know not.} | [Al-Baqarah:216] | This verse educates the believer to have good thinking even in matters he dislikes outwardly. |
| {And whoever fears Allah - He will make for him a way out * And will provide for him from where he does not expect. And whoever relies upon Allah - then He is sufficient for him.} | [At-Talaq:2-3] | This is a promise for those who fear Allah and rely upon Him. |
2. Stories of the Prophets and People of Faith:
| Story | Surah and Verse | Significance of Good Thinking |
|---|---|---|
| Story of Prophet Ya'qub (Jacob), peace be upon him | {So patience is most fitting. Perhaps Allah will bring them to me all together} [Yusuf:83] | Despite the severity of the trial, good thinking of Allah remained present. |
| Story of the People of the Cave | Narration of the hadith in the Sahihayn | Those upon whom the rock closed, and they supplicated to Allah with their righteous deeds, so Allah relieved them. This indicates that good thinking along with righteous deeds opens closed doors. |
3. Verses of Hope and Forgiveness:
| Verse | Surah and Verse | Significance of Good Thinking |
|---|---|---|
| {Say, "O My servants who have transgressed against themselves [by sinning], do not despair of the mercy of Allah. Indeed, Allah forgives all sins. Indeed, it is He who is the Forgiving, the Merciful."} | [Az-Zumar:53] | This verse is among the greatest in planting good thinking in the hearts of sinners. |
| {Indeed, Allah does not forgive association with Him, but He forgives what is less than that for whom He wills.} | [An-Nisa:48] | The believer thinks of his Lord that He will pardon his sins and admit him into His mercy. |
Chapter Two: Good Thinking of Allah in the Prophetic Sunnah
1. Explicit Hadiths on the Subject:
| Hadith | Source | Significance and Explanation |
|---|---|---|
| The Divine Hadith (Qudsi): "I am as My servant thinks of Me, and I am with him when he remembers Me." | (Agreed upon) | This hadith is considered the main starting point in the subject of good thinking of Allah, for Allah the Exalted rewards the servant according to how he thinks of Him. |
| The saying of the Prophet, peace be upon him: "Let none of you die except while having good thinking of Allah Almighty." | (Reported by Muslim) | Emphasis on the importance of this trait in the most difficult circumstances. |
| Hadith: "Allah says: I am as My servant thinks of Me, if he thinks good, then it is for him, and if he thinks evil, then it is for him." | (Reported by Ahmad) | Clarifies the effect of the servant's thinking of his Lord in attaining good or evil. |
2. Practical Situations from the Biography of the Prophet, peace be upon him:
| Situation | Occasion | Significance of Good Thinking |
|---|---|---|
| During the Battle of the Trench (Al-Ahzab) | When the trial became severe for the believers | The Prophet continued to have good thinking of Allah and gave glad tidings of victory: "Rejoice, O Abu Bakr, the help of Allah has come to you." |
| During the Migration (Hijrah) | When he was in the cave with Abu Bakr As-Siddiq | He said to Abu Bakr: "Do not grieve, indeed Allah is with us." Despite the imminent danger, his thinking of Allah was great. |
3. Hadiths Encouraging Hope:
| Hadith | Source | Significance |
|---|---|---|
| His saying, peace be upon him: "Allah is more delighted with the repentance of His servant than one of you who finds his lost camel in a barren land." | (Agreed upon) | Shows Allah's joy at the repentance of His servants, which fosters good thinking of His forgiveness and mercy. |
| His saying, peace be upon him: "If the believer knew what punishment Allah has, none would hope for His Paradise; and if the disbeliever knew what mercy Allah has, none would despair of His mercy." | (Reported by Muslim) | Balance between fear and hope, and encouragement to have good thinking of Allah's vast mercy. |
Chapter Three: Scholars' Explanation of Good Thinking of Allah
1. Definition of Good Thinking According to Scholars:
| Scholar | Definition |
|---|---|
| Ibn al-Qayyim | "Good thinking of Allah is that the heart is content with Allah's mercy, forgiveness, generosity, and bounty, and hopes for His mercy and forgiveness while striving in obedience." |
| Al-Ghazali | "Good thinking is anticipating kindness and expecting it from the Generous One, while being prepared to accept it." |
| Ibn Rajab al-Hanbali | "Good thinking of Allah is hoping for Allah's mercy and forgiveness along with righteous deeds." |
2. Types of Good Thinking:
| Type | Details |
|---|---|
| Good thinking in forgiveness and pardon after sin | Believing that Allah accepts repentance and pardons sins |
| Good thinking in provision and sufficiency during hardships | Certainty that Allah will provide for His servant from where he does not expect |
| Good thinking in answering supplication | Trust that Allah will respond to the supplication with what is good for the servant |
| Good thinking in good outcome in this world and the Hereafter | Optimism in Allah's victory and good outcome for the believers |
3. Conditions for Correct Good Thinking:
| Condition | Details |
|---|---|
| That it be accompanied by righteous deeds | Ibn al-Qayyim said: "Good thinking is not beneficial without action, just as action is not beneficial without sincerity." |
| That it not be merely a false wish | The scholars said: "Hope that has no action with it is delusion." |
| That it be based on knowledge of Allah's names and attributes | For whoever knows his Lord, his thinking of Him becomes good |
4. Difference Between Good Thinking and Delusion:
| Good Thinking | Delusion |
|---|---|
| Hope accompanied by fear and action | False wish along with persistence in sins |
| Based on knowledge of Allah and obedience to Him | Based on ignorance and desires |
| Leads to increase in obedience and worship | Leads to persistence in disobedience |
Chapter Four: Fruits and Effects of Good Thinking of Allah
1. Heart Effects:
| Fruit | Details |
|---|---|
| Tranquility and peace | {Those who have believed and whose hearts are assured by the remembrance of Allah. Unquestionably, by the remembrance of Allah hearts are assured.} [Ar-Ra'd:28] |
| Expansion of the chest and removal of worries | For whoever has good thinking of his Lord, his chest expands and his worries depart |
| Strength of hope and optimism | The believer constantly feels that relief is near and good is coming |
2. Behavioral Effects:
| Effect | Details |
|---|---|
| Diligence and striving in obedience | For whoever has good thinking of his Lord, he increases in seeking His pleasure |
| Patience in trials | Because he sees Allah's hand in everything |
| Courage and initiative | Due to his trust in Allah's victory and support |
3. Effects in Supplication:
| Effect | Details |
|---|---|
| Perseverance in supplication with trust in response | The believer perseveres in supplication while certain of the response |
| Not hastening to despair | He does not consider the response delayed nor despair of Allah's mercy |
4. Effects in Social Relationships:
| Effect | Details |
|---|---|
| Forgiveness and pardon toward people | Following the example of Allah Almighty and His pardon of His servants |
| Spreading hope and optimism in society | The believer spreads optimism and hope among people |
Chapter Five: Obstacles to Good Thinking of Allah and Their Treatment
1. Obstacles:
| Obstacle | Details |
|---|---|
| Ignorance of Allah's names and attributes | Ignorance of Allah's attributes leads to bad thinking of Him |
| Persisting in sins and disobedience | Sins cover the heart and prevent one from Allah |
| Indulging in whispers and doubts | Whispers weaken certainty and weaken trust in Allah |
| Looking at divine decree from a single angle (partial without total) | Partial view of events may generate bad thinking |
| Companionship with pessimists and those who despair | Bad company affects beliefs and behavior |
2. Treatment:
| Treatment | Details |
|---|---|
| Knowledge of Allah's beautiful names and sublime attributes | Knowledge yields certainty and good thinking |
| Abundant remembrance and seeking forgiveness | Remembrance purifies the heart and cleanses the soul |
| Reflecting on the Quran and stories of the prophets and righteous | In their stories are lessons and firmness for hearts |
| Self-accountability for bad thinking | Self-accountability makes the Muslim rectify his shortcomings |
| Keeping company with people of hope and faith | Good companions help in goodness |
Chapter Six: Good Thinking of Allah in Crises and Hardships
| Type of Crisis | How to Have Good Thinking in It |
|---|---|
| In illness | Viewing it as expiation and purification. Trusting that Allah intends good even in pain. |
| In poverty and financial difficulty | Certainty that provision is in Allah's hand. Remembering that poverty may be a means to draw closer to Allah. |
| When losing loved ones | Belief in Allah's decree and destiny. Trust that Allah will compensate with good. |
| In oppression and trial | Certainty that Allah gives respite but does not neglect. Trust in relief after hardship. |
Chapter Seven: Practical Examples from the Lives of the Early Muslims (Salaf)
| Personality | Situation | Significance of Good Thinking |
|---|---|---|
| Umar ibn al-Khattab | "If a mule stumbled in Iraq, I would fear that Allah would ask me about it: Why didn't you pave the road for it?" | His keenness to care for his subjects and his trust that Allah would question him about that. |
| Al-Hasan al-Basri | "Indeed, the believer has good thinking of his Lord, so he does good deeds." | Linking between good thinking and good deeds. |
| Sufyan ath-Thawri | "I have not seen anything stronger than good thinking of Allah." | Showing the strong effect of good thinking of Allah. |
| Bishr al-Hafi | "Whoever knows Allah, loves Him; whoever loves Him, obeys Him; whoever obeys Him, is blessed with closeness to Him." | Linking between knowledge, love, obedience, and happiness. |
Conclusion: Toward a Life Full of Good Thinking of Allah
Good thinking of Allah is not a slogan we raise, but rather a way of life, and it is the fuel that drives the believer to walk the path of obedience, patience in trials, and steadfastness on the truth. It needs continuous cultivation of the self, and constant nourishment of the heart with knowledge of Allah and love for Him.
Finally, the true believer is the one who combines good thinking of Allah with fear of Him, so hope does not dominate until he falls into delusion, nor does fear dominate until he falls into despair. Rather, he is as Allah described the pious: {They call upon their Lord in fear and aspiration} [As-Sajdah:16].
We ask Allah to make us among those who have good thinking of Him in all their conditions, and to cause us to die upon that. And all praise is due to Allah, Lord of the worlds.
Primary References:
- The Noble Quran
- Sahih al-Bukhari and Muslim
- "Madarij as-Salikin" by Ibn al-Qayyim
- "Jami' al-'Ulum wal-Hikam" by Ibn Rajab
- "Ihya' 'Ulum ad-Din" by Al-Ghazali
- "Fath al-Bari" by Ibn Hajar
- Various Hadith Explanations