A Brief Understanding of Islam and Muslims

Islam is the second largest religion in the world as well as in the U.S. There are 1.2 billion Muslims across the globe and over 7 million in the U.S. There are over 2,000 mosques in the U.S.


Islam and Muslims

Islam is an Arabic word which means peace and submission. As a religion, Islam calls for complete acceptance of the teachings and guidance of one and the only God. A Muslim is one who freely and willingly accepts the supreme power of God and strives to organize his or her life in total accord with the teachings of one and the only God Almighty. He or she also works for building social institutions that reflect the guidance of God.


Continuity of the Message

ISLAM is not a new religion but the final culmination and fulfillment of the same basic truth that GOD revealed through all His prophets and messengers beginning with Adam and Noah, Abraham, Ishmael, Isaac, Moses, John the Baptist, Jesus, and the Last Messenger Muhammad (pbuh) to all people.  A way of life symbolized by peace — peace with GOD, peace within oneself, and peace with the creations of GOD through total (willing) submission to GOD and commitment to His guidance.


Do Islam and Christianity have different origins?

No. Together with Judaism, they go back to the Prophet and Patriarch Abraham, and their three prophets are directly descended from his sons – Muhammad from the eldest, Ishmael, and Moses and Jesus from Isaac. Muslims, Christians and Jews have much in common. All worship One God, Creator of the universe. “Allah” is the Arabic name for God. Jews and Christians are referred to as the “People of the Book” in the Qur’an.


How do Muslims View Jesus and Mary?

Muslims respect and revere Jesus and consider him one of the greatest of God’s Messengers to humanity. The Qur’an confirms his miraculous birth. There is a chapter in the Qur’an entitled “Mary.” She has been given the highest honor in the women of all nations and among the four most honored women.


Who is Allah?

  • “Say (O Muhammad): ‘He is God, the One, the Self-Sufficient.  He begets not nor is He begotten, and there is none like Him.”
    [Qur’an 112:1-4]

Whatever is in the heavens and on earth glorifies God, for He is Mighty, He is Wise.  To Him belongs the dominion of the heavens and the earth.  It is He Who gives life and death, and He has power over all things.  He is the First and the Last, the Evident and the Immanent, and He has full knowledge of all things.  It is He who created the heavens and the earth in six days and is moreover firmly established on the throne (of authority).  He knows what enters into the earth and what comes forth from it, and what descends from the heavens and what mounts up to it: and He is with you where ever you may be.  And God sees all that you do.  To Him belongs the dominion of the heavens and the earth, and all affairs are referred back to God.  He merges night into day and He merges day into night.  And He has full knowledge of what is in the breasts (of men).”
[Qur’an 57:1-6]


Who is Muhammad (May peace and blessings of God be upon him)?

Muhammad was the Last Messenger of God, sent to complete the religion of Abraham. He was born in Makkah, Saudi Arabia, in the year 570, during the period of history Europeans call the Middle Ages. Though revered as the Last Messenger, Muhammad is not worshipped. As he grew up, Muhammad became known for his truthfulness, generosity and sincerity, earning the title of “The Trustworthy One.”
At the age of 40, he received the first revelation from God through Angel Gabriel. As soon as he began to preach the revealed message, to believe in the One God, he and his small group of followers suffered bitter persecution, which grew so fierce that in the year 622 God gave them the command to immigrate from Makkah to the city of Madina.  After several years, Prophet Muhammad and his followers returned to Makkah, forgave their enemies, and established Islam definitively. Before he died at the age of 63, the greater part of Arabia was Muslim, and within a century of his death Islam had spread to Spain in the West and as far East as China.


What is the Koran (Qur’an)?

The Qur’an is the last revealed Book of God. It is a complete record of the exact words revealed in piecemeal by God through the Angel Gabriel to Prophet Muhammad over a period of twenty-three years. The Prophet did not know how to read or write. When the Angel brought the revelations, he (pbuh) memorized them, then dictated to his companions, and were written down by scribes. Not one word of its 114 chapters has been changed over the centuries, so that the Qur’an is in every detail the unique and miraculous text which was revealed to Prophet Muhammad fourteen centuries ago, between 610 and 632 Common Era. The Qur’an is the principal source of regulations governing every Muslim’s faith and practice.  Compiled in its present form in the lifetime of prophet Muhammad (pbuh), Qur’an is intact exactly in its original Arabic language. It provides guidelines for a just society, proper human conduct and an equitable economic system. For scientific information in the Qur’an on the human embryo, the universe, and other topics, visit www.Islam-brief-guide.org


What is the Kaaba?

Muslims believe the Kaaba is the first place of worship. Abraham and Ishmael were commanded by God to build the Kaaba over 4,000 years ago. It is situated inside the compound of the Sacred Mosque in the city of Makkah, Saudi Arabia. Because of its unique significance as the First House of Worship, Islam prescribes that Muslims face the direction of the Kaaba whenever they pray. Turning toward the Kaaba in worship symbolizes unity as one community worshipping the One God.


What are the Five Pillars of Islam?

There are five acts of worship that provide the framework of a Muslim’s spiritual life.

  • The Declaration of Faith. “I bear witness that there is no one worthy of worship except God, and that Muhammad is His servant and Messenger.” The Prophethood of Muhammad obliges Muslims to follow his exemplary life in every respect.
  • Prayers are prescribed five times a day as a duty toward God. Prayer strengthens and enlivens belief in God and inspires people to higher morality. It purifies the heart and controls temptations, wrong-doing, and evil. All the Muslims across the globe pray in the same manner, as did the Prophet fourteen hundred years ago.
  • Fasting during the month of Ramadan, the ninth month of the Muslim calendar. It was in Ramadan when the first words of the Qur’an were revealed to Prophet Muhammad. Fasting means abstention from food, beverages, and sex from dawn to sunset, and curbing evil intentions and desires. It teaches love, sincerity, and devotion. Fasting develops self-control, patience, unselfishness, social conscience, and willpower to bear hardship. It also enables the Muslim to feel with the poor.
  • Zakaat or Charity is a proportionately fixed contribution from the wealth and earnings of the well to do and rich. It is spent on the poor and needy in particular, and the welfare of the society in general. The payment of Zakaat purifies one’s income and wealth and helps to establish economic balance and social justice in the society.
  • Hajj or Pilgrimage to the Kaaba in Makkah, is obligatory once in a lifetime, provided one has the means to undertake the journey and has good health.

Note: The above information has been adapted from a brochure, “Understanding Islam and the Muslims”.