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Are YOU Ready for a New Year?

How to act on your New Year Resolution

How to Act on Your New Year Resolution

New Beginnings and Affecting Change

‘Oh you who believe! Fear Allah and behave with taqwa. Let every soul consider what it has prepared for tomorrow. Allah is surely aware of everything you do.’ (59:18)

New Year’s Resolutions

Most resolutions blow away with the wind. There’s nothing wrong with them from an Islamic point of view, as long as you are within halal parameters of course.

Even just good intentions will be rewarded. Out of Allah’s mercy, He will record your good intentions but not the bad ones. Unless the bad intention has been transformed into an action, you will not be accountable for it. But it will be on your record that you wish you had some money to build a mosque, even if it never materialised.

So how did the past year go for you? And how will next year be different?

Call Yourself to Account

As you leave a year behind, and make a new beginning, you realise that you have lost some relatives, friends, neighbours, or colleagues. And maybe we won’t be able to live for another year ourselves. Omar (may Allah be pleased with him) said,

‘Call yourself to account before you are taken to account. And weigh your deeds before your deeds are weighed.’ (Tirmidhi)

This is how we prepare for tomorrow. As Allah stated:

O you who believe! be careful of (your duty to) Allah, and let every soul consider what it has sent on for the morrow, and be careful of (your duty to) Allah; surely Allah is Aware of what you do. (59:18)

How do You Prepare for Tomorrow?

Umar (may Allah be pleased with him) is saying, whenever you do any deed, even before you do any deed, call yourself to account. Is  your deed going to please Allah Almighty? Then go ahead. Are your words going to be words of goodness? Then say them. Do they harm anyone? Then don’t say them. Is this action going to hurt someone? Then don’t do it. Monitor your deeds.

If we keep checking our words, our actions, our intentions, then our account is pretty much clear. We do not have to make that much effort at the end of every year to make it right, because we are monitoring every deed, we are filtering our deeds and actions and choosing the right things to put in our account. If this is the case, then we are facilitating an easy account in the akhirah insha’’Allah.

Allah Almighty is commanding us to be very sensitive and sincere about our actions. So don’t live like there’s no tomorrow. Don’t live like there’s no hereafter. There is yawm al akhir. There is akhirah. Even if we are sometimes neglectful of that reality, nevertheless it will not change. So look back at what we you did over the past year. Praise Allah for the good things we did. And seek Allah’s forgiveness for the bad things, and the shortcomings, and the mistakes which you did.

Forgetfulness vs Mindfulness

The killer of every good deed is forgetfulness (ghafla). Before doing our deeds – even salah which is one of the pillars, if ghafla was at the core of it, then unfortunately our salah is not recorded as a good salah. We might not get the reward of that salah, or we might get a very low grade on that salah, because of our ghafla.

And the same for siyam, and all our actions, our business, our trade.. Ghafla creeps into our minds and hearts and lives because of daily life and the dunya around us. Most certainly we will be people of heedlessness, unless we become people of remembrance.

Be people of remembrance of Allah Almighty. Be mindful of Allah and check every deed you are doing, so that you will not be a person of regret on the Day of Judgement. You do not want to say, ‘Oh Allah, give me another chance, I’ll do better.’

How do We Move from Empty Hopes to Real Action?

  • Live in the Present – Not the Past

The Muslim ummah likes to dwell on its past. Our forefathers did this and that. What about us? What have we done? We need to turn our hopes into actions. If we are not praying fajr on time, what is our resolution? It is to have the intention before going to sleep to wake up for fajr. To set the alarm clock.

  • Ask Allah for Support

If you are doing something which displeases Allah Almighty, you have the chance to start not from tomorrow, from today. Ask Allah to help you and support you against doing anything which displeases Him.

  • Aim High

Say, ‘I will be the best in my career,’ a good halal career of course. I will be the best to my family. The Prophet (peace be upon him) always encouraged excellence over mediocrity, he used to say,

‘The best among you is the one who is best to his family. And I am the best among You to my family.’ (Tirmidhi)

  • End Procrastination

Delay is one of the killers of good deeds, along with heedlessness.

We write our destinies through our choices. Because who knows what’s in your destiny? Allah Almighty is the one who knows our destiny. Our destiny is based on our choices and Allah Almighty definitely knows our choices. But to us, we don’t know until we make them. Then we can see the results. So aim high and make the right decisions. And who said you can’t do it? Who said you can’t change your situation to be better? Better human, better neighbour, better husband. Who said you can’t? You can. Trust Allah and then you can do it.

  • Be Strong

If you say I’m so weak’, and ‘our enemies are very strong’, then you can’t accomplish anything. And what’s happening now in the world? Bloodshed everywhere. ‘We can’t do anything, we just do du’a.’ Who said we can’t do anything? We can.

It is the will and determination, which transfers hope into actions. So let’s say, this new year, we’ll be stronger, not weaker.

  • Strength through Unity

We need to unify our communities more and work together. Who said we can’t do this? We can. But if we keep saying we can’t then we give the wrong message to ourselves, to our brains, to our community, and then we are weak. And this is psychologically damaging.

So this is what’s happening with us. We say, ‘We are weak. We can’t do anything. It’s a conspiracy. It’s beyond our capacity’. And so we are making ourselves weak.

If it was beyond our ability Allah Almighty would not test us with it. We can cope with it. But we need to come together as one body. Out of around six million words in the Arabic dictionary, the Prophet (peace be on him) chose the word ‘body’ to describe the ummah. Why? A body does not function as separate entities, it is a whole. Each part impacts the others.

In order to function as one body, we need to work together, without differences. 1.6 billion Muslims makes up one huge body. We are not an insignificant number. But unless you respect yourself, then anyone can disrespect you

We need to change the course of our actions, our intentions, the messages we are sending to our brain, our community, our youth. We can make the right choice, but we need the fire in our belly; we need the zealousness.

Collaborate. Cooperate and be united. Talk to your MP. Utilise social media positively to spread goodness rather than just sending funny videos and useless trivia. Work towards something useful. And you will be rewarded for that.

We ask Allah Almighty to give us the ability to change ourselves and change our communities, and change the course of our realities to be a better humanity, better society, and better countries. Ameen

Khutbah delivered by Shaykh Haytham Tamim

Transcribed by Hana Khan

 

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Shaykh Haytham Tamim is the founder and main teacher of the Utrujj Foundation. He has provided a leading vision for Islamic learning in the UK, which has influenced the way Islamic knowledge is disseminated. He has orchestrated the design and delivery of over 200 unique courses since Utrujj started in 2001. His extensive expertise spans over 30 years across the main Islamic jurisprudence schools of thought. He has studied with some of the foremost scholars in their expertise; he holds some of the highest Ijazahs (certificates) in Quran, Hadith (the Prophetic traditions) and Fiqh (Islamic rulings). His own gift for teaching was evident when he gave his first sermon to a large audience at the age of 17 and went on to serve as a senior lecturer of Islamic transactions and comparative jurisprudence at the Islamic University of Beirut (Shariah College). He has continued to teach; travelling around the UK, Europe and wider afield, and won the 2015 BISCA award (British Imams & Scholars Contributions & Achievements Awards) for Outstanding Contribution to Education and Teaching.