Friday Meditations – 1-3-25 – Rajab & al-Bāqir
From the Friday Prayer, January 3, 2025
tl;dr:
Verses, Traditions, and Readings Quoted:
● Qur’an, Sūrah al-Tawbah (9:36):
إِنَّ عِدَّةَ الشُّهُورِ عِندَ اللَّهِ اثْنَا عَشَرَ شَهْرًا فِي كِتَابِ اللَّهِ يَوْمَ خَلَقَ السَّمَاوَاتِ وَالْأَرْضَ مِنْهَا أَرْبَعَةٌ حُرُمٌ ۚ ذَٰلِكَ الدِّينُ الْقَيِّمُ ۚ فَلَا تَظْلِمُوا فِيهِنَّ أَنفُسَكُمْ
"Indeed, the number of months with God is twelve [lunar] months in the register of God [from] the day He created the heavens and the earth; of these, four are sacred. That is the correct religion, so do not wrong yourselves during them."
● Qur’an, Sūrah Yāsīn (36:40):
لَا الشَّمْسُ يَنبَغِي لَهَا أَن تُدْرِكَ الْقَمَرَ وَلَا اللَّيْلُ سَابِقُ النَّهَارِ
"It is not allowable for the sun to reach the moon, nor does the night overtake the day."
● Qur’an, Sūrah al-Baqarah (2:185):
فَمَن شَهِدَ مِنكُمُ الشَّهْرَ فَلْيَصُمْهُ
"So whoever sights [the new moon of] the month, let him fast it;"
● Several Ḥadīths about Rajab: Including Prophetic traditions about the virtue of fasting and performing good deeds in Rajab, and traditions from Imam Ja’far al-Ṣādiq.
● Du'a:
أَسْتَغْفِرُ اللَّهَ الَّذِي لَا إِلَهَ إِلَّا هُوَ وَحْدَهُ لَا شَرِيكَ لَهُ وَأَتُوبُ إِلَيْهِ
"I seek forgiveness of Allāh, there is no god save Him, He is alone without any partner, and I repent to Him"
● Common phrase:
لَا إِلَهَ إِلَّا ٱللَّٰهُ
Major Takeaways:
● First Sermon: Sacred time in Islam, specifically the month of Rajab, is linked to the created order and serves as a preparation for Ramaḍān. Fasting and increasing good deeds in Rajab are highly recommended.
● Second Sermon: Continues discussion on Rajab citing historical events. There's an emphasis on a deeper relationship with the Qur'an, and a warning about current events and the need for an anti-war stance.
In God’s name, the Compassionate, the Merciful
Sacred Time and the Month of Rajab
As we enter the new year of 2025 we also enter the month of Rajab, the month of honor or respect. That raises an imporant topic for reflection: the idea of sacred time.
When we enter a month, which is, at first glance, simply a convention, and we say that this month has some sort of merit to it, it implies that there is a deeper meaning to the concept of the “month” beyond a conventional indicator of our experience of “time.”
The 36th verse (āyah) of The 9th Chapter (sūrah) of the Qurʾān: entitled “Repentance” (al-Tawbah) or “Immunity” (al-Barāʾah) states:
إِنَّ عِدَّةَ الشُّهُورِ عِندَ اللَّهِ اثْنَا عَشَرَ شَهْرًا فِي كِتَابِ اللَّهِ يَوْمَ خَلَقَ السَّمَاوَاتِ وَالْأَرْضَ مِنْهَا
"That the number of months with Allāh is twelve in God's book."
A month is simply a unit of time. It is a unit of measuring our experience and a mechanism through which we mark events, and we mark our experience of transience, or fluidity, or movement in the physical world. If we think broadly, beyond the lunar calendar, we think about the seasonal changes. We mark the changes of the seasons through our experience; we mark it in relation to our experience of the changes in weather, weather patterns, the time and length of the day, and so on. So, for an example, just to think briefly about the scientific issue: the Earth's axis is tilted about 23 and a half degrees. When the earth travels around the sun in its orbit throughout the year, that tilt changes the relationship of human beings in the northern and the southern hemispheres in relation to the sun. So, the days are longer during June in the Northern Hemisphere because our hemisphere is tilted toward the sun during this delineation of time. Simultaneously, those in the Southern Hemisphere, their June is their winter because the Southern Hemisphere is further from the sun, so it receives less sunlight. And then as this Earth moves around its orbit, that changes. In January the Northern Hemisphere is further from the sun, so the days are shorter for us. The time that we receive sunlight is shorter, and we experience colder temperatures. So our experience of the seasons is relative to us and our position on the Earth.
The Lunar Calendar
But the lunar calendar establishes a different standard: the relationship vis-à-vis an objective reality other than the sun. The lunar calendar refers to the moon for its markers of time - a synodic calendar. The lunar calendar uses the phases of the moon's change from a new moon to a full moon and back again to mark time: it measures based on the amount of sunlight reflecting off of the moon’s surface which appears as a waxing and waning of the amount of light reflected over 27.3 days of time.
So when God says that:
إِنَّ عِدَّةَ الشُّهُورِ عِندَ اللَّهِ اثْنَا عَشَرَ شَهْرًا فِي كِتَابِ اللَّهِ يَوْمَ خَلَقَ السَّمَاوَاتِ وَالْأَرْضَ
"Indeed, the number of months with God is twelve in God's book, the day when he created the heavens and the earth."
We have to ask the question, what is this relationship between “in God's book” (fī kitāb Allāh) and the moment when he created the heavens and the Earth? “God’s book” (kitāb Allāh) is not a reference to al-Qurʾān, the scripture. God is not saying the months are 12 because the Qurʾān said so. Rather, God is saying that the months are 12, in the creational book of God glossing “in God’s book” as creation itself (kitāb al-takwīn).We have the legislative book (kitāb al-tashrīʿ) that is the conventional book, that is God's speech to us, where he gives us rulings (aḥkām) and ethics and narratives (qaṣaṣ) regarding how to behave and think and organize society. And there is also the creational book (kitāb al-takwīn), our relationship with the spiritual and material world itself.
And so, God created the cosmos, and he made it function in a particular way, that is, as he says in Chapter 36:40 Sūrat Yāsīn:
لَا ٱلشَّمْسُ يَنۢبَغِى لَهَآ أَن تُدْرِكَ ٱلْقَمَرَ وَلَا ٱلَّيْلُ سَابِقُ ٱلنَّهَارِ ۚ وَكُلٌّۭ فِى فَلَكٍۢ يَسْبَحُونَ
Neither it behooves the sun to overtake the moon, nor may the night outrun the day, and each swims in an orbit.
God created the celestial heavens in a particular way in service to us, and He's asking us, in a sense, to have a relationship with the cosmos so as to mark certain days and utilize a certain way of thinking about time.
This gives us the sense that the material reality, the cosmos as a whole, is one of the signs (āyāt), which, of course, is prevalent in the discourse of the Qur'an: that the cosmos is a sign of God. That is, the cosmos as a whole is a combination of the actions of God (afʿāl Allāh),. Every piece of material reality signals back to divinity; that's the meaning of āyah.
The Four Sacred Months
The āyah continues:
مِنْهَا أَرْبَعَةٌ حُرُمٌ ۚ ذَٰلِكَ الدِّينُ الْقَيِّمُ
"Four of these months [out of these 12 that God has mentioned] are sacred. That is the upright religion"
This is referring to Dhū al-Qaʿdah, Dhū al-Ḥijjah, and Muḥarram, being the 11th, 12th, and the first month, of the year. Those three months, which are back-to-back-to-back, are three of the, sacred months, and then the fourth is Rajab, the seventh month, which is disconnected from those three. These months are sacred (ḥurum) because God has prohibited humankind from engaging in any warfare or battle in those four months. It was a reprieve for humankind to have a third of the year through which security, safety, contemplation of God is all protected, because territorial disputes and material disputes are prohibited during this time. This āyah is condemning the pre-Islamic Arabs because they would sometimes announce a suspension of these sacred months. They actually believed that Rajab and Dhū al-Qaʿdah and Dhū al-Ḥijjah and Muḥarram were sacred, and thus warfare was prohibited, but they would sometimes suspend it, depending on their whim, because this year we have say, an upper hand on the battlefield. So we're going to continue warfare during the sacred month, and next year, we'll continue honoring the peace. God is condemning them and saying: look, we have made these four months sacred for a reason. I have constructed the creational order, don't play around with it. And so, as many narrations mention this lunar calendar comes from the Abrahamic days. And so, the Arabs were just continuing an ancient tradition that was originated by God.
The verse continues:
فَلَا تَظْلِمُوا فِيهِنَّ أَنفُسَكُمْ
"So do not wrong yourselves within these four months."
That is, God is saying: be diligent in not wronging yourself in these months which have an elevated status: hold back from warfare, hold back from sin, hold back from greed, etc. God is emphasizing to us that we ought to punctuate our years with times of heightened cognizance of Him, with times of heightened contemplation of Him, and altering our social behavior.
So it's the day before Dhū al-Qaʿdah, and the battle was raging on, there needs to be an agreement that the battle must stop for the next three months. These are sacred months. So it changes not only the way we think, but it changes the way, not only individuals, but whole societies are supposed to interact with one another. Humankind is prone to warfare, it's prone to battle, it's prone to disputation; this is a common element in human relations. God is saying: I understand that, but hold back. Even if it's a cause for justice, if you can hold back, then hold back. This obligation drops in times of defense, but the moral push and information that emerges from this verse is that the material reality and the conventions of time we operate by actually play a role in supporting the life of the soul and the life of the heart, if we adopt Godly lenses.
Rajab as Preparation for Ramaḍān
Rajab is a preparatory month for the month of Ramaḍān; it is a unit of time in which we are meant to punctuate our dedication so that we enter the highest period of spiritual dedication, the month of Ramaḍān, with strength and purpose.
2:185
شَهْرُ رَمَضَانَ ٱلَّذِىٓ أُنزِلَ فِيهِ ٱلْقُرْءَانُ هُدًۭى لِّلنَّاسِ وَبَيِّنَٰتٍۢ مِّنَ ٱلْهُدَىٰ وَٱلْفُرْقَانِ ۚ فَمَن شَهِدَ مِنكُمُ ٱلشَّهْرَ فَلْيَصُمْهُ
The month of Ramaḍān is one in which the Qurʾān was sent down as guidance to mankind, with manifest proofs of guidance and the Criterion. So let those of you who witness it fast [in] it…
What is seemingly a convention of time measured through the light reflecting off of the moon is given spiritual potential and force: God is saying there's something important in marking that moment. When this month comes, everything changes, especially in Muslim society: the way you eat, the way you drink, the way you deal with your spouse, etc. all change because God wants us to link our experience with the created order—that is, material, observable reality—with a sacred and moral sensibility.
This is a powerful notion because it takes material reality, the (al-dunyā) which we usually think about as a veil or a barrier between us and God, and it transforms our conception of the material reality into a mechanism through which we understand and commune with God. Our relationship to the cosmos is meant to spark within us awe and spark within us devotion to God.
Teachings about Rajab
Imam al-Sadiq reportedly taught:
On the first of Rajab, (Prophet) Noah (‘a) embarked on the Ark; he therefore ordered those who accompanied him to fast on that day. If one fasts on this day in Rajab, Hellfire will go away from him a distance of one year on foot. If one fasts for seven days of Rajab, the seven gates of the Fire will close in his face. If one fasts for eight days of Rajab, the eight gates of Paradise will be wide open before him. If one fasts for fifteen days, his request will be granted. If one fasts for more days, he will gain more rewards from Almighty Allah.[1]
In addition to fasting, it is emphasized to say various litanies (adhkār) and to increase the amount of the Qur'an that we read in the month. As an example, it is recommended to give charity, and after giving charity, to say:
أَسْتَغْفِرُ اللَّهَ الَّذِي لَا إِلَهَ إِلَّا هُوَ وَحْدَهُ لَا شَرِيكَ لَهُ وَأَتُوبُ إِلَيْهِ
"I seek forgiveness of God, there is no god save Him, He is alone without any partner, and I repent to Him."[2]
Conclusion on Sacred Time
The upshot of the various recommendations of Rajab is to seek God's forgiveness, to create a close relationship with him, and to prepare our souls for the month of Ramaḍān. We'll finish with a long narration, uh, that is mentioned in Shaykh al-Ṣadūq's al-Amālī. He said that a man named Sālim says:
I visited al-Ṣādiq Jaʿfar b. Muḥammad in Rajab, there were a few days left of the month. When he looked at me, he said to me: “O Sālim! Have you fasted at all this month?”
I said: No, by God, O son of the Messenger of God.
So, he said to me: You have missed out on a reward, that value of which is only known to God. Surely, God gave this month virtue, and He magnified its sanctity. He made His blessing incumbent upon those who fast in it.
So, I said to him: O son of the Messenger of God! If I fast something of what is left of it, will I receive some of the reward of those who have fasted in it?
The Imam responded: O Sālim! Whoever fasts one day at the end of this month, it will be a source of safety for them during the pangs of death; and a source of safety for them at the horror of the resurrection and the punishment of the grave. Whoever fasts two days at the end of this month, they will be able to pass safely upon the Path due to it. Whoever fasts three days at the end of this month, it will be a source of safety from the horror and the severity of Great Day of Fear; and it will separate him from the Fire.[3]
Rajab is a sanctified and sacred month that we are disconnected from because of the mechanical age, because of the way we calculate time. When we work to revive the more traditional conception of human life with the cosmos that we're interconnected with it, that we are one and part, parcel of it, it humbles us and puts us back in proper alignment with reality. We are not lords as the Modern West conceives of it. We are not lords of the Earth such that we exploit it for our own profit, such that we exploit it at any cost, even at the cost of the Earth's ruin. Rather, the Earth, the cosmos, the moon itself functions as a mechanism for us to recognize that there is embedded within it moments of sanctity, moments of sacrality, and moments of great bounty that we are able to attach ourselves to. Attempting to sight the moon is one way of reconnecting ourselves with a slower and a more natural and, indeed, a more spiritual relationship to the cosmos.
Historical Significance of Rajab
Rajab is also an important unit of sacred time because of the sacred history that occurred within it. The delegation of prophethood to Muḥammad al-Muṣtafā (ṣ) (al-biʿthah) occurred on the 27th of Rajab. The birth anniversary of ʿAlī ibn Abī Ṭālib (ʿa) occurs on the 13th. The martyrdom anniversaries of the seventh Imam, al-Kāẓim (ʿa), and the 10th Imam, al-Hādī (ʿa), occur within it. And, as has already passed, on the first of Rajab, the birth anniversary of Muḥammad al-Bāqir (ʿa) occurs within it. So Rajab is full of sacred history that we revive, we do iḥyāʾ (revival) within this month as a way of reconnecting to these personalities and these moments—the biʿthah in particular There are many narrations that that speak about fasting on the day of biʿthah itself as being one of the most meritorious acts in the month of Rajab.
Imam Muḥammad al-Bāqir
Muḥammad ibn ʿAlī al-Bāqir is the grandson of Imam al-Ḥusayn, the son of Imam ʿAlī ibn al-Ḥusayn Zayn al-ʿĀbidīn. He was born in the year 57 after Hijrah (Migration). Something that sometimes we overlook, or we're not familiar with, is that he was present at Karbalāʾ. He was a three-year-old present in the tents when his grandfather was martyred .
His honorific, al-Bāqir , is shorthand for Bāqir al-ʿIlm. Baqara means to cleave open, to split open; he is known as the person who opened up sacred knowledge to the community.
He is respected in both Sunnī and Shīʿī traditions. Something that folks in the Shīʿī tradition don't know is that in the Sunnī tradition, al-Bāqir is known as a great jurist (faqīh) andin Sufi circles is known as a greatscholar of spiritual wayfaring. Al-Dhahabī (d. 748/1348) is a Sunnī muḥaddith (traditionist) and historian—a strong Sunnī—and he had some very strong negative feelings against, Ahl al-Tashayyuʿ —yet he says the following about him:
"Al-Bāqir was an individual who possessed all the virtues of religious knowledge, pious works, wisdom, honor, trustworthiness, nobility, dignity, and solemnity. He was entitled to the Caliphate. Abū Jaʿfar was famously known as al-Bāqir, a term that derives from baqara al-ʿilm, meaning the revealer of knowledge, a reference to his ability to know the various forms of knowledge, the apparent and the hidden."[4]
So he recognizes his spiritual status and knowledge. Now, if you read the details al-Dhahabī and mainstream Sunnī tradition conceives of him as a great Sunnī Imam. And there are many narrations in their books that indicate that he had a Sunnī orientation rather than a Tashayyuʿ orientation. But be that as it may, in the great overlap between the two schools about the importance of knowledge, the importance of the Qurʾān, the importance of our relationship to the Prophet (ṣ) there is a shared heritage, both in al-Bāqir and his son, al-Ṣādiq.
A Ḥadīth from Imam al-Bāqir about Reciters of the Qurʾān
Al-Bāqir was deeply associated with the Qurʾān, and he leaves us with the following heavy teaching:
"The reciters of the Qurʾān are of three types:
A person who recites the Qurʾān and takes it as a commodity, seeking favor from kings and using it to elevate themself over people.
A person who recites the Qurʾān, preserves its words but neglects its boundaries.
A person who recites the Qurʾān and applies its remedy to the ailments of their heart. They stay awake at night with it, thirst during the day because of it, stand with it in their places of prostration, and distances their selves from their bed with it.
Through these [the people of the third type of reciter], the Almighty, the Compeller, wards off calamities, grants victory over enemies, and sends down rain from the heavens. By God, these reciters of the Qurʾān are rarer than red sulfur (al-kibrīt al-aḥmar).”[5]
Al-Bāqir mentions that there are three classes of reciters, qurrāʾ (reciters), of the Qur’an.
The first class is a person who “recites the Qurʾān and takes it as a commodity, seeking favor from Kings, and using it to elevate himself over people.”
In this early period Qurʾān memorizers (ḥuffāẓ) and reciters (qurrāʾ) had a positive social status. Any time social status comes along with any profession or any hobby or any form of learning, then there’s always the tendency for the human soul to see self interest through it. So al-Bāqir says that there is the person who takes the Qurʾān as a commodity, as a way of elevating his or her status, as a way of perhaps getting in the courts of the Kings. These disciplines were given social and even political value.
The second class is an individual who “recites the Qurʾān, and they preserve its words, but they neglect its boundaries.” Perhaps they are strong in their understanding of when an āyah ends and when it begins, and if you give them an āyah in the middle of the Qurʾān, they’ll continue it because they have it so locked up into their memory. But many of them don’t have a relationship to the spiritual meanings and the commands of the Qurʾān. It’s kind of a, uh, trope, I think, in Western Muslim circles that we know peers ḥuffāẓ thatgo drinking on the weekends. Perhaps they were forced to memorize as a child, but they didn’t internalize the meanings of the Qurʾān.
The third class is an individual who “recites the Qurʾān and applies its remedy to the ailments of their heart. They stay awake at night with it, thirst during the day because of it, stand with it in their places of prostration [that is, through prayer], and distances their selves from their bed with it”—,eamomg they have a longing for scrpiture such that they lessen their sleep so that he can read it.
"Through this third set of reciters, the Almighty, the Compeller, wards off calamities, grants victory over enemies, and sends down rain from the heavens. By God, these reciters of the Qurʾān are rarer than red sulfur,"
In sum, our relationship with the Qurʾān has to be dynamic. It must be a relationship that is imbued with meaning. It must be a relationship in which we understand the meanings of the Qurʾān. It cannot be parroting; it cannot be mere recitation. It must be, as comes from his name al-Bāqir, connected with knowledge (al-ʿilm).
When I read this ḥadīth, and he says that these rare reciters are people who stay up late in order to recite, in order to study, to contemplate the Qurʾān, and I think about the many hours I've wasted watching the NBA or Netflix or whatever, I sense that this teaching is a deep critique against our entertainment lifestyle.
And this isn’t a “Western” problem. What happens during the month of Ramaḍān in Muslim countries? There are advertisements in the run-up to Ramaḍān for a new serial out of Turkey, a new serial out of Jordan, and other movies and entertainment. Some of them are religious in nature, there's nothing wrong with it in principle. But when I reflect on the amount of time I apportion to trying to understand God’s book (kitāb Allāh) versus the amount of time I just chill out, hang out, watch something that somebody else contrived, I sense a deep problem with priority of values.
That is why Imam al-Bāqir says that these, these reciters are as rare as al-kibrīt al-aḥmar. Al-kibrīt al-aḥmar is an allusion to the red sulfur that alchemists were always on the search for in order to transmute base material substances into something valuable: iron into gold, for instance. It represents an idea: this secret substance, this sacred substance, that would give meaning and value to mundane reality. He's likening that to a reciter who applies the ointment of the Qurʾān to his or her heart. Of course, the teaching could be an allusion to the Imams themselves as the highest standards of this class of reciter. But it is also a motivating teaching: for us to deepen our relationship with the Qurʾān, especially in this month of Rajab, leading into the month of Shaʿbān, and then peaking, with the month of Ramaḍān.
Current Events and the Need for an Anti-War Stance
As we've entered 2025 we've seen great changes in the geopolitical boundaries of the Middle East. These same great changes in the Muslim world will, hit back at us, or will affect us here domestically. Regarding the truck ramming on January 1st by Shamsud-Din Jabbar in New Orealns will serve as a media event and news cycle which manufactures consent for anti-Palestinian policies and further militarism in the Muslim world. The New York Times had immediate coverage claiming that this attack was influenced by Lebanon and Gaza. An ex-IDF soldier who works as a journalist for the New York Post was given special access to the attacker’s home where she claims that she found a bomb-making stand and a kufiyyah and other paraphenalia attemping to link him to the movement for Palestinian liberation. Despite having a history of drunken driving and being a US military veteran, he's cast as an international terrorist who's threatening American lives on behalf of an international resistance movement. They also reported that they found an ISIS flag, and he joined ISIS, and it just happened to be laying in the street right after he rammed into all of these people and so on—you should notice the disparate and, often discordant, attempts to link him to some international threat to public safety and national security.
Whatever the details end up becoming, whatever the truth of the matter, whatever the intentions behind this individual’s attack, whatever his actual connections to ISIS or not are, or were, the media and the government is going to utilize this story as a way of creating public consent for geopolitical exploitation by the US. The US is creating a new military base in Syria because Turkey is trying to go after the Kurds, and there's a whole conflict raging there. It seems to me this is an attempt to create the political conditions needed for another invasion: as some analysts are saying, Iran is next on the list of countries that Israel will want to go after to further weaken the Muslim political and social presence in the Middle East.
Regardless of your particular assessments of the details of what’s happening in Syria, in Lebanon, and in Gaza, we need to be, as a community, wary of social manufacturing for military adventures in the Middle East. In my mind one of the most powerful mechanisms that we have in our hands as citizens of this country is to renew an anti-war movement in America. An anti-war movement creates alliances between people who might differ on the details and the meanings of certain conflicts by identifying a root cause of division in the Muslim world: American militarism and its support of Israel. Whatever the details of the geopolitical stances we take about the Middle East and specific conflicts in that theater, getting America out of the Middle East is an important precondition for any safety and stability and growth of peoples in that region. Indeed, this principle is key toward all regions of the world that are suffering from American hegemony. If there's anything that we've learned since 2001, it is that we need to be engaging only with the government or during voting seasons, but we need to be talking to our neighbors, talking to our colleagues, talking to our friends and family who may not be on board with us so that we undercut any manufacturing of consent for further exploitation of our people. We ask God to rectify the affairs of the Muslims and all peoples of conscience and of the oppressed.
[1] al-Hurr al-ʿĀmili, Wasāʾil al-Shīʿah 7:348, H. 1 & 2
[2] al-Hurr al-ʿĀmili, Wasāʾil al-Shīʿah 7:359, H. 3
[3] https://thaqalayn.net/hadith/29/1/4/7
[4] al-Dhahabī, Siyar Aʿlam al-Nubalāʾ (Beirut, 1981), Vol. 4: 401–409