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The Delayed Dua Syndrome

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All praise is due to Allah, Lord of the worlds.

“When My slaves ask you [O Muhammad] about me, [tell them] I am near; I respond to the call of the caller when he calls upon Me…” [al-Baqara (2): 186]

Why then has my duâ’ (supplication) not been answered?!

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Below is a translated conversation that Ibn al-Jawzi (d. 597H, رحمه الله), a legendary spiritual cardiologist, and arguably the most prolific author in the history of Islam, had with himself regarding duâ’. It has forever clung in my psyche, reflecting how their blessed lives and immortal impact stemmed directly from *making time* to sharpen their reliance on Allah, and polish their good assumptions of Him. He says,

“One time, I was struck by a particular hardship, and I made profuse duâ’ appealing for comfort and a way out. The response [from Allah] was delayed, and so my soul was consumed by worry and anxiety. I shouted at it, ‘What is with you?! Think of your condition; are you an owner or one that is owned? Are you a planner or one that is planned for? Don’t you know that this worldly life is [but] a land of trials and tribulations? If you request your wants, and are not patient with whatever outcomes don’t match your preferences, then where is the test? Are trials anything except the denial and opposition of one’s desires? Realize what it means to be accountable, and only then will the hardships become eased, and only then will the calamities appear trivial.’

When [my soul] thought over what I said, its panic slightly subsided. I then told it, ‘And I have another answer; you demand from [Allah] your wants, yet don’t demand from yourself its duties, and that is the epitome of ignorance. What is more appropriate is the very opposite; since you are owned by Him, the sound-minded slaves demand from themselves the rights of the master and know that the master is not obligated to fulfil the slave’s wishes.’

[My soul] calmed more than it had before. I then told it, ‘And I have a third answer; you are the one who delayed the response and blockaded its path with your sins. Had you opened the roads, it would have been hastened [upwards]. It’s as if you don’t know that the ingredient for comfort is taqwâ (being observant of Allah). Have you not heard His words, the Exalted, ‘And whomever has the taqwâ of Allah, He will make a way out for him, and provide for him,’ and ‘whomever has the taqwâ of Allah, He will place for him ease in his affairs’? Don’t you understand that the opposite [of taqwâ] results in the opposite? Oh, how the drunkenness of being heedless prevents the water from reaching the lands of our wishes.’

My soul then knew that this was truth, so it became calm. I then told it, ‘And I have a fourth answer; you are asking for that which you are unaware of its aftermath. Perhaps you are requesting that which will harm you. The example of you is that of a fevered child asking for sweets, while your caretaker is more aware of what benefits. How not, when He has said, ‘And perhaps you hate a thing, and it is better for you…’’ When the correct [perception] ultimately crystallized for my soul with this answer, its calmness further increased. I then told it, ‘And I have a fifth answer; your request subtracts from your reward and lowers from your status, so His depriving you is in fact a gift from Him to you. Had you requested what would amend your Hereafter [instead], this would be better for you. And it is better for you that you understand what I have explained.’ [My soul] said back, ‘I have strolled through the gardens of your explanations and [finally] understood.’”[1]

Similarly, Ibrâhim b. Adham (d. 162H, رحمه الله) was once asked why we feel stranded with our duâ’ (supplication), not receiving any response for it. He said,

“It is because you know Allah but not obey Him, you know the Messenger but do not follow his Sunnah (example), you know the Quran but do not live in accordance to it, you consume the favors of Allah without thanking Him, you know Paradise but do not seek it, you know the Hellfire but do not flee from it, you know Satan but you comply instead of defy him, you know death but do not prepare for it, you bury the deceased but do not take a lesson from it, and you ignore your faults and preoccupy yourself with the faults of others.”[2]

In today’s fast-paced world, the greatest treasure we fumble is our perception of Allah subḥānahu wa ta'āla (glorified and exalted be He). Our age of instant-gratification has produced a sense of entitlement in us all. Its ugliest manifestation is the increased denial of God altogether, but for the Muslims: it’s the fact that we wonder if God is with us, not whether we are with Him, and why He doesn’t answer our call, not why we don’t answer His call.

Countering this mutated mentality is simple, but requires a commitment to change and serious planning. In essence, it’s a mission that summarizes the believer’s life journey: bridging the gap between what we know and what we practice.

As we do that, this weakness (aka that feeling of hypocrisy) begins to leave us, both in our perceptions (of Allah and ourselves) and our behaviour. That is how we tap into our potential strength, activate our duâ’, and become the change our bleeding ummah direly awaits. Let’s get started, shall we?

[1] Sayd al-Khâtir; Bâb min Asrâr al-Hirmân – with adaptation

[2] See: Tafsir at-Tabari (2/312)

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Alhamdulillah, we're at over 850 supporters. Help us get to 900 supporters this month. All it takes is a small gift from a reader like you to keep us going, for just $2 / month.

The Prophet (SAW) has taught us the best of deeds are those that done consistently, even if they are small. Click here to support MuslimMatters with a monthly donation of $2 per month. Set it and collect blessings from Allah (swt) for the khayr you're supporting without thinking about it.

Graduate of English Literature; Translator for IIPH, AMJA, and Mishkah; Da'wah Director @ Muslims Giving Back; Student @ Mishkah University. More blessed than I know, and more than I deserve.

3 Comments

3 Comments

  1. UmmUmar

    March 11, 2017 at 5:41 AM

    Jazakum Allahu khairan for this beautiful reminder. May Allah make us among those who gain knowledge and practice it, Allahumma ameen!

  2. Ahmed

    March 12, 2017 at 1:06 PM

    Subhan Allah that wad beautiful. When he quoted surah talaq i was baffled, i never thought about it that way. If i have taqwa THEN the help comes not the other way around. SubhanAllah so simple yet so overlooked.

    May Allah reward you sheikh.

  3. Mukhtar

    January 6, 2019 at 11:06 AM

    Jazakallahu khayran. Thanks for this piece Elshinawy

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