Safeguarding Your Belief
Words worth knowing — and the door to return is always open
Core Claim
Certain statements, believed or uttered with awareness, sever a person from Islam. This catalog is not exhaustive, and the purpose of knowing it is to avoid the words — not to weaponize it against other Muslims
Why It Matters
Knowing what exits Islam is farḍ ʿayn, because what you don't recognize, you can fall into. But this knowledge must come with two things: (1) humility to not apply it to others lightly, and (2) knowledge of how to return — which is one sentence
Lesson
Scholars have agreed that certain statements, acts, and beliefs take a person out of Islam. What follows is a non-exhaustive catalog, grouped by subject — for knowing what to avoid, not for accusing fellow Muslims.
Concerning Allah: - Cursing Allah or the religion — exits Islam even in anger or jest. - Attributing a son, father, or wife to Allah — kufr. - Describing Allah with creaturely attributes: body, direction, place, shape, change, sitting. Saying 'Allah dwells in the sky' is kufr. - Believing Allah learns or changes — kufr. - Objecting to Allah as an accusation, not a question — kufr. - Saying Allah is unjust or acts without wisdom — kufr. - Prostrating to sun, moon, or idol — kufr, even in jest.
Concerning the prophets: - Cursing a prophet — kufr by consensus. - Saying a prophet intended zinā or suicide — kufr. - Saying any prophet was ever a disbeliever — kufr. - Saying Satan entered a prophet or spoke through him — kufr. - Saying a prophet erred in legislation — kufr.
Concerning the law: - Denying something established by necessity — 'ṣalāh is not obligatory,' 'alcohol is ḥalāl.' - Mocking a ritual of Islam — ṣalāh, fasting, Qurʾān, the Kaʿba. - Forbidding what is agreed to be ḥalāl, or permitting what is agreed to be ḥarām.
Concerning oneself: - Saying 'I'm not Muslim,' 'I'm Jewish,' 'I'm Christian' — kufr, even in jest. - Throwing paper bearing Qurʾān or Allah's name into trash — kufr. - Deliberately disrespecting a muṣḥaf — kufr.
Common objections and corrections: - 'I didn't intend kufr' — if the word admits only the kufri meaning, the claim of intent does not shield. - 'I was joking' — joking with kufr is kufr. - 'I was angry' — anger does not lift accountability. - However, if the word admits two meanings — one kufri, one not — intent decides.
Return: pronouncing the shahādatayn while disavowing what was said. See Chapter 2.
Key Points
- 1
Knowing the nullifiers is farḍ ʿayn — what you don't know you can fall into
- 2
Purpose is avoidance, not accusation — don't use this knowledge against fellow Muslims
- 3
Joking with kufr is kufr — anger and jest do not lift accountability
- 4
Return is easy and beautiful — via the shahāda with disavowal of what was said
Evidence
“Whoever mocks anything of the religion — even if he does not believe in disbelief — has disbelieved”
Al-Nawawī, Rawḍat al-Ṭālibīn, Kitāb al-Ridda
“Mocking Allah, His messenger, or anything of His religion is kufr by consensus”
Al-Qāḍī ʿIyāḍ, al-Shifāʾ
قُلْ أَبِاللهِ وَآيَاتِهِ وَرَسُولِهِ كُنتُمْ تَسْتَهْزِئُونَ لَا تَعْتَذِرُوا قَدْ كَفَرْتُم بَعْدَ إِيمَانِكُمْ
Say: Was it Allah, His verses, and His messenger that you were mocking? Make no excuse — you have disbelieved after your faith
Quran 9:65-66
Glossary
نواقض الإسلام
nawāqiḍ al-islām
Nullifiers of Islam; statements, acts, and beliefs that take a person out of the fold of Islam
صريح
ṣarīḥ
Explicit, unambiguous; speech that admits only one meaning — a claim of intent does not shield
احتمال
iḥtimāl
Bearing multiple meanings; if a word can mean kufr or something else, intent is considered
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