| Ibn
Mas'ud's method of guidance
"The truest of words is the Book of God, and the
way of salvation is the one shown by our lord Muhammad
(p.b.u.h.). The worst of deeds is innovation which causes
deviation that ends with the fire of hell."
Thus spoke 'Abd Allah ibn Mas'ud (May God be pleased
with him) to his companion peers and to his pupils and
followers, describing the signs of the ways of religion.
When he spoke of knowledge, he meant the highest goal,
which has been sought by religious scholars and seekers
of truth in discovering the truth alone and avoiding
deviation and wrong words. He said: Attainment of truth
is not possible except through two fundamental principles
of the noble religion of Islam, namely the Book of God
and the utterances of His prophet, the former being
the highest and noblest truth ever uttered in the past
and present, which cannot be excelled in future, and
whose validity will never be diminished.
Why should it not be so? The reason is that it has descended
from God Almighty, and mankind has confessed his own
weakness and inability before the eloquence of its phrases
and its brilliant truth. It is the most decisive evidence
for the prophet hood of Muhammad. Next are the utterances
of an untaught and unlettered Prophet, an exalted personality
through whom the heavenly Book has been communicated
to the people all over the world; a person who has not
offered anything on his own behalf, nor has he added
anything on his own behalf, nor has he added anything
of his own, nor given
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