Jihad with Its Lesser and Greater Kinds or Aspects
Derived from the root j-h-d, jihad means using all one's strength, as well as moving toward an objective with all one's power and strength and resisting every difficulty. This latter definition of jihad is closer to the religious meaning.
Jihad gained a special characteristic with the advent of Islam: struggling in the path of God. This is the meaning that usually comes to mind today. This struggle occurs on two fronts: the internal and the external. The internal struggle can be described as the effort to attain one's essence; the external struggle as the process of enabling someone else to attain his or her essence. The first is the greater jihad; the second is the lesser jihad. The first is based on overcoming obstacles between oneself and his or her essence, and the soul's reaching knowledge and eventually divine knowledge, divine love, and spiritual bliss. The second is based on removing obstacles between people and faith so that people can make free choice between belief and unbelief. In one respect, jihad is the purpose of our creation and our most important duty. If the opposite were true, God would have sent Prophets with that duty.
There is an unbridgeable difference between those who remain behind without a valid excuse and those who continually engage in jihad:
The Prophet says:
Keeping watch one day to protect the border for God's sake is superior to this world and everything in it. The small place that your whip (used in the way of God) occupies in Heaven is superior to this world and everything in it. An evening or morning walk made on God's path is superior to this world and everything in it. (Sahih al-Bukhari, "Jihad", 73; Sunan al-Tirmidhi, "Fada'il al-Jihad," 25)
Kinds of jihad
The lesser jihad is not restricted to battlefronts, for this would narrow its horizon greatly. In reality, the lesser jihad has so broad a meaning and application that sometimes a word or silence, a frown or a smile, leaving or entering an assembly in short, everything done for God's sake—and regulating love and anger according to His approval is included in it. In this way, all efforts made to reform society and people are part of jihad, as is every effort made for your family, relatives, neighbors, and region.
In a sense, the lesser jihad is material. The greater jihad, however, is conducted on the spiritual front, for it is our struggle with our inner world and ego (nafs). When both of these are carried out successfully, the desired balance is established. If one is missing, the balance is destroyed.
Believers find peace and vitality in such a balanced jihad. They know they will die the moment their jihad ends. Believers are like trees, for they survive only as long as they produce fruit. When a tree stops producing fruit, it dries up and dies.
Observe pessimistic people, and you will notice that they no longer struggle or explain the Truth to others. And so God cuts off His blessing on them, leaving their interior dark and hard. But those who pursue jihad always are surrounded by love and enthusiasm. Their inner worlds are bright, their feelings are pure, and they are on the road to prosperity. Every struggle stimulates the thought of yet another one, and thus a righteous circle is formed. As every good deed becomes a vehicle for a new good deed, such people always swim among good deeds. Our hearts are informed of this truth: And those who strive in Our Cause, We will certainly guide them to Our Paths: For verily God is with those who do right (29:69).
There are as many roads to God as there are creatures. God leads those who struggle for His sake to salvation on one or more of these roads. He opens each road to goodness and protects it from the roads to evil. Everyone who finds His road, the Straight Path, finds the middle road. Just as these people follow a middle path regarding anger, intelligence, and lust, so do they follow a middle way regarding jihad and worship. This means that God has led humanity to the path of salvation.
The lesser jihad is our active fulfillment of Islam's commands and duties; the greater jihad is proclaiming war on our ego's destructive and negative emotions and thoughts (e.g., malice, hatred, envy, selfishness, pride, arrogance, and pomp), which prevent us from attaining perfection. As this is a very difficult and hard jihad, it is called the greater jihad.
During the Age of Happiness, people fought like lions on the battlefield and, when night fell, lost themselves in devotion to God through worship and dhikr (remembrance and invocation of Him). These valiant fighters passed their lives in a corner in worship and solitude. They learned this from their guide and Prophet, a man of the heart who was first in the material and spiritual jihad. He encouraged his followers to ask for God's forgiveness, and always was the first do so.
Those who succeed in the greater jihad will succeed in the lesser jihad; those who fail in the greater jihad will fail in the lesser jihad. Even if such people obtain some degree of success, they cannot obtain the full results.
A'isha related:
One night the Messenger of God asked: "A'isha, can I spend this night with my Lord?" (He was refined enough to seek such permission. Nobility and refinement were important aspects of his profundity.) I replied: "Messenger of God, I would like to be with you, but I'd like what you like even more." The Prophet made ablution and began praying. He recited: Behold! In the creation of the heavens and earth, and the alternation of Night and Day there are indeed Signs for people of understanding. (3:190] He recited this verse and shed tears until morning. (Ibn Kathir, Tafsir (Âl 'Imran), 190]
Sometimes in order not to wake up his wife, the Prophet would get up and worship without asking her. Again 'A'isha related:
One night when I woke up, I couldn't find God's Messenger. My vein of jealousy immediately began to swell. I wondered if he had gone to another wife. When I started to get up in the dark, my hand touched his foot. He was prostrating on the prayer rug and reciting something. I listened to his prayer. He said: "My God, I take refuge in Your approval from Your anger and wrath. I take refuge in Your sparing me from punishment. My Lord, I take refuge in You from You (refuge in Your blessings from Your wrath, refuge in Your grace from Your majesty, refuge in Your mercy and compassion from Your domination.) I cannot praise You. You are as You have praised Yourself." (Sahih al-Muslim, "Salat," 22; Haythami, Majma' al-Zawa'id, 10,:124; Sunan al-Tirmidhi, "Daa'wat," 81).
This shows the inner depth and greater jihad of our Prophet.
In another hadith, the Prophet mentioned these two jihads: "There are two kinds of eyes that will never see the fire of Hell: those of soldiers who act as guards on battlefields and fronts, and those who cry for fear of God." (Sunan al-Tirmidhi, "Fada'il al-Jihad," 12)
The jihad of those who abandon their sleep and act as guards at the most dangerous times is material jihad. Their eyes will not be subjected to the fire of Hell. As for those who do the spiritual and greater jihad and cry for fear of God, they also will not see the torture of Hell. Instead of repeating what others have done, people should implant in their hearts and minds the consciousness of being sincere, good-intentioned people of the heart.
Jihad is a balance of internal and external conquest. Reaching spiritual perfection and helping others do so are points of consideration. Attaining internal perfection is the greater jihad; helping others attain it is the lesser jihad. When you separate one from the other, jihad is no longer jihad. Indolence is born from one and anarchy from the other. However, we expect one Muhammadan spirit to be born. As is always the case, this is possible only by following and conforming to God's Messenger. How happy are those who search for a way to salvation for others as much as they do for themselves. And how happy are those who remember to save themselves while saving others! [Questions This Modern Age Puts to Islam, Izmir 1997, Vol.3, pp. 186-219] 1
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