Ibn al-Qayyim (may Allaah have mercy on him) said,
"The
interpretation of the Sahaabah and Taabi’in, that ‘idle talk’ refers to
singing, is sufficient."
This was reported with saheeh isnaads from Ibn ‘Abbaas
and Ibn Mas’ood. Abu’l-Sahbaa’ said,
"I asked Ibn Mas’ood about the aayah"
(interpretation of the meaning),
"And of mankind is he who purchases idle
talks" [Luqmaan 31:6].
It was also reported with a saheeh isnaad from Ibn ‘Umar
(may Allaah be pleased with them both) that this means singing.
There is no
contradiction between the interpretation of “idle talk” as meaning singing and
the interpretation of it as meaning stories of the Persians and their kings,
and the kings of the Romans, and so on, such as al-Nadr ibn al-Haarith used to
tell to the people of Makkah to distract them from the Qur’aan.
Both of them
are idle talk. Hence Ibn ‘Abbaas said, “Idle talk” is falsehood and singing.
Some of the Sahaabah said one and some said the other, and some said both.
Singing is worse and more harmful than stories of kings,
because it leads to zinaa and makes hypocrisy grow (in the heart); it is the
trap of the Shaytaan, and it clouds the mind.
The way in which it blocks people
from the Qur’aan is worse than the way in which other kinds of false talk block
them, because people are naturally inclined towards it and tend to want to
listen to it.
If he hears anything of it, he makes fun of it. All of this happens only in the case of the people who are most stubbornly kaafirs and if some of it happens to singers and those who listen to them, they both have a share of this blame. (Ighaathat al-Lahfaan, 1/258-259)
Jazak Allah khair
ReplyDeletethanks for sharing such a beautiful, and wonderful information
MAY ALLAH BLESS U
Subhanallah! Really thought provoking. May Allah keep us firm on the deen and lead us away from those things which would lead us away from him, ameen. Jazakallau khairan for sharing
ReplyDeleteJazakallahu khayran for the info
ReplyDeleteWow this is amazing! May I re-post this to my blog linking back to your site?
ReplyDeleteAsalamu alaikum warahmatulahi wabarakatuhu,
ReplyDelete@Usama Rehman - BarakAllah feek, thank you for sharing your words and Ameen to your prayer.
@Bint_Salih - Ameen, barakAllah feek for your words of wisdom.
@Mustafa abdur rahman - BarakAllah feek and thank you.
@Umm Talha Al- Amreekeeyah - Sure.
Una felice giornata a Te...ciao
ReplyDelete@Giancarlo - A happy day to you too.
ReplyDelete