appropriate for himself the grace of God offered
to him as a help towards his salvation.
According to the teaching of the Qur'an, the principal
duties of the believer are five. They are: (1) Tashahhud
the recital of the creed, 'there is no god but Allah,
and Muhammad is the prophet of Allah'. (2) Prayer —
the five stated daily prayers. (3) Fasting — especially
the fast of Ramadan. (4) Alms-giving — the payment of
certain legal dues. (5) Pilgrimage.
These five duties, to which we may add a sixth, the
reading or recital of the Qur'an, may be called the
Muslim means of grace as prescribed by the Qur'an.
If for a moment we leave our study of the Qur'an and
turn to look at Muhammadanism as it at present exists,
we find that while these duties are taught and practised
throughout the Muhammadan world, other means of grace
are to be found in general employment in all Muslim
lands. We refer, of course, to the devotional exercises
of the Dervish Orders.
The Qur'an, as we have seen, teaches that God offers
His grace to mankind. This mean that Muhammad recognized
the possibility of some kind of intercourse between
man and his Creator. God could speak to man's heart
and conscience, and influence him; and conversely, man
could experience the working of God's Spirit within
him, and thus have a sense of His Presence and a feeling
of communion with Him. Yet the Qur'an nowhere explains
when, and how, and where this grace is to be found and
appropriated. In other words, it never tells man how
he may become the recipient of this Grace which, throughout,
it maintains is absolutely necessary to his spiritual
life.
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