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Yaser Birjas | 10 Points for Excelling in Ramadan

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My dear brothers and sisters everywhere, assalamu alaykum wa rahmatullah, and Ramadan Mubarak to all of you.  Alhamdulillah, I’m honored to be a part of this beautiful program.

My message is very simple and that is to remember that you will never be too ready for the month of Ramadan.  No matter how much you try and how much you think you have done, Ramadan deserves much more, so always remember that you are never too ready for the month of Ramadan.

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Alhamdulillah, Ramadan is an annual opportunity to review our goals in life.  We adjust our schedules and know we will spend longer hours in the masajid and exhausted during the days.  It is an exclusive opportunity for Muslims every year.  As Muslims, we always feel that we are under achieving what we should be doing in Ramadan, and we all have the feeling that we could have done better and should have done more.  At the end of the month, we regret so much of the time we spent wasted.  There is always a chance for improvement every single Ramadan.

My talk this evening is on the art of excelling in Ramadan and how we cannot repeat the same mistakes.  Don’t expect me to give you a full program of waking up at such and such time and suhur and fajr in the masjid.  Each person has different responsibilities and circumstances and you can write your own schedule.

I’m going to share with you ten points to help you reach excellence in Ramadan.  Insha’Allah I will share with you principles on how to reach success in the month of Ramadan.

1. Have the Hunger for Success:

Imam Al-Bukhari was one day asked about the medicine that would help people memorize, and he said, “I have nothing except for the ardent desire.”  If you truly and really have the ardent and burning desire and hunger to succeed, then you will achieve it.  The ulema said that whatever expectations you have, you will achieve at least 80%.  Imam Al-Bukhari excelled in that field because he had the ardent desire and hunger for success.  Ibn Abbas was a young man when the Prophet subḥānahu wa ta'āla (glorified and exalted be He) passed away, but the amount of knowledge he collected made him the top of his field and he was an expert in the interpretation of the Qur’an.  He was once asked, “How were you able to collect all this knowledge in such a short time?”  He said, “I had an inquisitive tongue and the heart that comprehends.”  He had the ardent desire and didn’t waste his time.  Don’t make failure an option in Ramadan.  Don’t give yourself an exit.  Many people start making excuses, and once you give yourself and excuse to fail, you will lose success.  Never give yourself that excuse and always have that hunger to succeed.

2. Set Your Goals.  Make sure that these goals are very high:

Fear Allah ṣallallāhu 'alayhi wa sallam (peace and blessings of Allāh be upon him).  In order to help us achieve the path of success, he gave us the ultimate goal:  to reach Al-Firdaws Al-‘Ala.  In many ayat, Allah says to race and rush.  Allah is helping us set our goals and making our goal Jannat Al-Firdaws Al-‘Ala.  The Prophet subḥānahu wa ta'āla (glorified and exalted be He) when he met the ansar at bayat al-‘aqabah.  The muhajirin asked him, “Ya Rasulullah, what do we expect out of this?”  The Prophet (sal Allahu alayhi wa sallam) said, “Jannah.”  That is the ultimate goal and should be a very high and lofty goal.

When you start Ramadan, set your goals as high as you can.  If you want to do khatm’l-Qur’an, set a higher goal of two, three, or five.  If part of your goals is to achieve righteousness and taqwa, then you have to start making plans on how to do so by adding more good deeds to your schedule.  If part of your goals is to pray qiyam’l-layl every night in the masjid, then commit yourself.  If you fall short a little from achieving these lofty goals, insha’Allah they will still be higher than what you did last year.

3. Build Confidence in the Month of Ramadan:

Some people come with high expectations for themselves such as finishing the Qur’an ten times and praying night prayer every night and not missing takbirat al-ihram.  Build confidence that you can achieve these goals.  Set a plan and strategy on how to achieve these goals and build confidence that you can do that.  Abdullah ibn Amr ibn Al-‘As was a young man at the time of the Prophet (sal Allahu alayhi wa sallam).  He used to finish the Qur’an every single night, and the Prophet (sal Allahu alayhi wa sallam) was surprised.  He (sal Allahu alayhi wa sallam) came to him and told him it was a righteous and good deed, but he should recite the Qur’an in one month (this is besides Ramadan, by the way, and Ramadan is a special occasion when you can do more).  He (sal Allahu alayhi wa sallam) said, “Try to finish the Qur’an once every month.”  He said, “Ya Rasulullah, I can achieve more than this.”  The Prophet (sal Allahu alayhi wa sallam) said, “Do it in one week.”  He said, “Ya Rasulullah, I can achieve more than this.”  The Prophet (sal Allahu alayhi wa sallam) said, “Do it in every three days.”  He said, “Ya Rasulullah, I can achieve more than this.”  The Prophet (sal Allahu alayhi wa sallam) said, “There is nothing better than this.”  If it is done more often than three nights, then it may be rushed and you will not benefit a lot.  This hadith applies outside of Ramadan, and in Ramadan you can do more.

Abdullah ibn Abbas (radhi Allahu ‘anhu) after the Prophet (sal Allahu alayhi wa sallam) passed away was still a teenager.  He had an ansari companion he would seek knowledge with.  His companion said, “This is going to be a far journey.  Who is going to waste his time and come listen to someone like you?”  Abdullah ibn Abbas said, “I left him and continued my journey seeking knowledge.”  Eventually, he became the great scholar we all know.  His friend later saw hundreds of people at the masjid and said, “That young man was much smarter than me and knew that one day this would happen.”  Have the confidence that you will achieve your goals and have a strategy and plan.

4. Do What You Love to Do in Ramadan:

There are so many good deeds that you can do.  Some people love to feed the poor and cook food and give to others.  Others invite a lot of people to their house or take food to the masjid.  Other people love to read the Qur’an a lot and dedicate more time.  Other people love to do salah and qiyam’l-layl. Some people love spending more time in the masjid and others love to spend more time in seclusion.  Some people push themselves so hard in what is not what they enjoy in acts of ibaadat and may force themselves to read the Qur’an more and are too exhausted to do adkhaar or tarawih, and this is not a smart plan.  Do what you really love to do.  Choose and select the good deeds you enjoy doing and increase them more and more.  Make your plan around these deeds that you love and enjoy doing.  The Prophet (sal Allahu alayhi wa sallam) recommended us to achieve that which is little but continuous.  Many people love to start Ramadan with as many good deeds as they can, which may be too much.  Take it easy and start with what you enjoy.  As you build momentum, add more.  The whole point is to be proactive, so start your plan and choose the good deeds you enjoy and start working on it.

5. Study the Successful & Learn From the Best:

Experts in the field of success teach this to people.  Why is our ibaadah less when it comes to studying from the experts and learning from the best and successful?  What do we mean by this?  The ulema say, “Stories at tales are like the gems of Paradise.”  When you hear a story, you enjoy it so much because you can relate to it.  Allah (subhanahu wata’ala) says, “We sent you the best of stories.”  At the end of the story of Yusuf, Allah said, “There is in the stories instructions for men of understanding.”  When you learn from the successful and from the best, it will encourage you and raise your morale.  Achieving all of these great goals has been done by the people before you.

The sahabah were the best examples after the Prophet (sal Allahu alayhi wa sallam).  Check the stories of the successful in Ramadan: How did they succeed?  What did they do?  Read some of the biographies of the people and the great scholars and how they spent their time in Ramadan.

Remember, keep these stories with you throughout the month of Ramadan, and when you feel weaker and weaker, go back to the stories and remind yourself.

6. Be in the Company of the Successful Ones:

The previous point was about people you learn about in history:  the Prophet (sal Allahu alayhi wa sallam), the sahabah.  Many people say that this is theoretical.  Look for people around you in your own community who can help you achieve these lofty goals.  You will definitely find one or two people around you.  You should go and look for those people.  Remember that your companions in Ramadan can help you go higher in goals or can pull you down.  Habits are contagious.  Look for high achievers in the month of Ramadan.  If you always associate yourself with high achievers, bi’idhnillah you will go higher in your goals.  The Prophet (sal Allahu alayhi wa sallam) said, “The example of the good and bad companion is the example of the one who sells perfume and the blacksmith.  He may give you something good for free or you may buy something, but at least you will get a nice smell from him.  The blacksmith will blow smoke and he may burn your clothes or at least you will smell something bad.”  The same is with those you associate with during Ramadan.  Are you going to associate with those who will encourage you to watch TV or play cards?  Or will you associate with those who will help you go higher?  Look for those who are high achievers and associate with them throughout the month of Ramadan as much as you can.

7. Go All Out & Work Hard:

When you set your goals, don’t just set them to achieve them at your convenience or when you have spare time.  If you are serious about achieving these goals, make them a priority.  Go all out to achieve these goals.  Allah (subhanahu wata’ala) reminded the Prophet (sal Allahu alayhi wa sallam):  When he (sal Allahu alayhi wa sallam) would go out for da’wah he would invite as many as he could.  No one can achieve more than the Prophet (sal Allahu alayhi wa sallam), but when he came home, you would expect him to take rest, but the instruction that came from Allah was the opposite.  Allah told him:  “When you are done, put yourself in worship and ibaadah until you get tired.”  The Prophet (sal Allahu alayhi wa sallam) always maintained qiyam’l-layl every single night.  With all of the work he did during the day, he did more at night to get to the next level.

People who go to the gym know that once they have achieved the ten reps, they have to add one more.  They are excited that they have passed their regular achievement.

Put priorities during the day and night.  The Prophet (sal Allahu alayhi wa sallam) is reminding us all the time how to move on from one level to the next.  One time the Prophet (sal Allahu alayhi wa sallam) said, “There is one night that is laylat’l-qadr which is better than the worship of 1,000 months.”  The sahabah were worshipping in the hope of achieving this night.  Then the Prophet (sal Allahu alayhi wa sallam) told them to look for it in the last ten nights.  The sahabah became more focused.  The Prophet (sal Allahu alayhi wa sallam) instructed them that the night is in the last ten nights of Ramadan.  Some of them became tired and a little lazy, and to help them achieve more, the Prophet (sal Allahu alayhi wa sallam) told them it was in the odd number of the last ten nights.  They would then focus on five nights.  The Prophet (sal Allahu alayhi wa sallam) said it may be the 27th, 25th, or 23rd.  The Prophet (sal Allahu alayhi wa sallam) sees the momentum going down and helped them become more focused.  Go all out and work so hard.  It happens only once a year.  Only Allah knows if you will even survive today.  Make this coming Ramadan the best Ramadan by being more focused and put so much effort in achieving better goals.

8. Be Prepared & Adaptable:

Be prepared to change your schedule.  Many people are effective the first few days but then feel that they are losing it and then lose momentum completely and say they can’t do it.  Instead of slightly changing their schedule, they try to start over with a completely new schedule and then they quit.  Expect yourself to change plans.  It may not be a dramatic change, but you need to adapt.  It is better for you than completely quitting the program over and over again.

The Prophet (sal Allahu alayhi wa sallam) started his days with plans and changed them.  One time he entered the house of one of his wives and asked if there was any food, and if there wasn’t, then he would say he would fast.  He could have gone out and looked for food somewhere else, but he took the opportunity to fast.

Never put your programs back to back and make them so crowded.  When there is an emergency, the whole program will be broken up.  Expect yourself to do some changes, which will make it less stressful for you.  If you start reading five juz every single night and then realize that they are too much and then decrease to three juz and then you are short two juz.  As you try to make up and do seven, you start to lose hope.  Expect yourself to adapt and change.  Do something reasonable every single night like reading three juz and move on with your schedule.  Don’t simply cancel the good deeds you have started just because you think you are falling behind.

You may fall sick or have an emergency to travel or relatives may come to visit.  Expect to change some of your plans.

9. Remind Yourself of the Virtue of What You are Doing:

Allah (subhanahu wata’ala) says in the Qur’an:  “Reminders benefit the believers.”  During the month of Ramadan, you are going to feel a little tired and exhausted.  Go to someone who you think can help you remind yourself.  Ask them for advice.  Remind yourself by spending a few minutes each night in dhikr and du’a.  Read about the virtues of fasting every now and then.  For many people it becomes a cliche, but the reminder definitely benefits the believers.  Keep Riyadh Al-Saaliheen handy and the ahadith about the virtues of Ramadan handy.  Hopefully it will rejuvenate your spirit.  If that doesn’t work, then have someone else give you advice.  If that doesn’t help, attend a program in the masjid.  Revisit your goals.

10. Never Give Up!

If the Shaytan wants anything from us, it is for us to give up on ourselves.  The Shaytan whispers that you can’t do it and that you aren’t the person to achieve the good deeds and you give up on doing them.  How many times have you vowed after Ramadan to wake up for qiyam’l-layl after Ramadan and you never achieve it?  How many times have you wanted to fast Mondays and Thursdays after Ramadan?  Allah (subhanahu wata’ala) says in Surah Yusuf:  “Never give up hope of Allah’s Mercy.  Truly no one despairs of Allah’s Mercy except those who have no faith.”  Never cancel your plans in the month of Ramadan simply because you fell a little short or a little weak.  Even until your last breath and last seconds in this word, you are required and asked to do something that is good.  In the Musnad of Imam Ahmad, the Prophet (sal Allahu alayhi wa sallam) said in a hadith of Anas: “If the Day of Judgment is established and you have a plant in your hand, if you are able to put it in the earth before the Day of Judgment completely starts, then do it.”  With Allah (subhanahu wata’ala), you will benefit.  Even if it is the last second of the month of Ramadan.  What were you doing last year?  People were getting ready to finish and prepare for Eid.  It is one of the blessed moments.  Focus on du’a and dhikr and give charity.  Once Ramadan is over, what was multiplied in Ramadan will no longer be multiplied.  Never give up even if you fall short and behind.  Continue doing good deeds until the end of the month, even if it is the last night.  Even if it is the last hour and you still haven’t finished khatm’l-Qur’an, still continue reading.  Falling short one juz is better than falling short 15 juz.  Remember that you are dealing with Allah, and Allah is the One who rewards.  With Allah, it is absolutely worth every effort that you are doing.

Recap:

It is never too late to prepare for Ramadan.  You will never be too ready for the month.  Plant some principles in your mind and heart so that you have something to achieve.  Have the hunger of success.  Have the ardent desire to succeed in Ramadan.  Do you have that or do you think that you are not a strong achiever?  Expect to succeed more insha’Allah and have a hunger for success.

Set your goals very high.  Allah has set your goals higher than you can imagine and is helping you set your goals high.  Go and try to achieve these goals.  Build confidence that you can achieve these goals.  Don’t beat yourself down.  If you fail once, it does not mean you are a failure.

Do what you love in Ramadan.  You may not be able to achieve anything, but start by achieving that which you like.  If you like giving charity, then give more.  If you like to read the Qur’an or spend more time in the masjid, do what you love the most.

Study the successful and learn from the best.  Read the stories of the sahabah and the Prophet (sal Allahu alayhi wa sallam) and how much they achieved in Ramadan.  Learn from them and learn their techniques.

Be in the company of the successful ones.  Associate yourself with good company.  Pick one or two people who are high achievers.  Habits are contagious.  If you associate yourself with low achievers, most likely that is what you will achieve.

Go all out and work so hard.  It is once in perhaps your lifetime.  It could be your last Ramadan.  Only Allah knows.  Make this opportunity like your first and last opportunity.  You will definitely do your best and put every single effort to make it successful, particularly in the last ten nights.

Be adaptable and expect changes in plans.  As you try to achieve your plans, some emergencies may come up, but it doesn’t mean you should quit.  Adapt and move on based on the new change.  Never cancel the schedule or program.

Remind yourself of the virtue of what you are doing.  Keep handy the books on the virtues of fasting.  Allah (subhanahu wata’ala) says in a Hadith qudsi:  “All the good deeds of the son of Adam are for himself except for fasting which is exclusively for Me, and I shall reward for it.”  If you know that Allah is giving the reward, you know that it will be beyond your imagination.

Never ever give up, even if it is the last hour in the month of Ramadan.  Make sure to use it wisely.

These are ten points on how you can excel in the month of Ramadan insha’Allah.  I wish all of you a successful Ramadan this year and ask Allah (subhanahu wata’ala) to make this Ramadan the best Ramadan for all of you.  I ask Allah to help us all to live to this Ramadan, to make the fasts our best fasts, and the qiyam our best qiyam and to help us become more generous in the month of Ramadan.  I ask Allah (subhanahu wata’ala) to help us all achieve some of the i’tikaf during the last few nights of Ramadan.  I ask Allah (subhanahu wata’ala) to help us be of those who will survive and live and worship Allah (subhanahu wata’ala) on laylat’l-qadr.  I ask Allah to make us among those who will learn beneficial knowledge and benefit others.

From Day 4 @ RamadanPrep.com

Keep supporting MuslimMatters for the sake of Allah

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.

Sh. Yaser Birjas is originally from Palestine. He received his Bachelors degree from Islamic University of Madinah in 1996 in Fiqh & Usool, graduating as the class valedictorian. After graduating, he went on to work as a youth counselor and relief program aide in war-torn Bosnia. Thereafter, he immigrated to the U.S. and currently resides in Dallas, Texas. He is also an instructor at AlMaghrib Institute, where he teaches popular seminars such as Fiqh of Love, The Code Evolved, and Heavenly Hues. He is currently serving as an Imam at Valley Ranch Islamic Center, Irving, Texas. Sh. Yaser continues to enhance his knowledge in various arenas and most recently obtained a Masters of Adult Education and Training from the University of Phoenix, Class of 2013. In addition to his responsibilities as an Imam, Sh. Yaser is a father of four children, he’s an instructor at AlMaghrib Institute, and a national speaker appearing at many conventions and conferences around the country. He is very popular for his classes and workshops covering a wide range of topics related to the youth, marriage, parenting and family life among other social matters related to the Muslim community. His counseling services, in office and online, include providing pre-marital training, marriage coaching and conflict resolution for Muslims living in the West.

2 Comments

2 Comments

  1. Saif Khan

    July 4, 2015 at 1:47 AM

    Thought provoking & motivating .
    Jazakum Allah Khayran

  2. William Merritt Williams

    March 6, 2017 at 1:07 AM

    Thank You for welcoming me for Ramadan.

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