
During the early days of the Divine Manifestation, the Nizam-e-Jamaat officials in Mauritius brazenly and openly indulged in 'Ghibbat' and other vices against the recipient of Divine revelations among them as they did not comprehend the descent of Divine revelations on someone in their midst. Likewise, people who recognize the sign of God in the person of an Elect of Allah (atba) among them sometimes display great emotions of sincere respect and deep affection and it would be unfair to belittle their sentiments of respect by equating it with Shirk-like practices (God Forbid). Hadhrat Khalifatullah (atba) warns against talking ill about things one do not fully understand, and persons who speak that way need to be wary of the sin of backbiting and hypocrisy.
Read the Friday Sermon Below:
Surah Al Hujurat: Ghibbat, Part III
By
the grace of Allah, I am hereby continuing the 3rd
part of my Friday Sermon on the subject of “Ghibbat”
(backbiting), seeking the defects of others, spying, suspecting and
doubting others, putting false allegations, blames etc. on them.
Thus, this sermon continues…
Many
times, by keeping hypocritical relations with your innocent brothers
or sisters, you become a hypocrite. And when hypocrisy arises
somewhere, then, there are also possibilities for hypocrisy to
develop elsewhere also, in many places/ situations. When
someone makes it a habit to adopt hypocrisy, it is “Ghibbat”
which becomes a great factor that helps him to become accustomed to
hypocrisy.
A hypocrite refers to someone who is accustomed to talking
behind someone’s back, but in front of him, he says the complete
opposite, and thus gives that person the impression that he was
talking in his favour [when this is not the case at all]. In front of
him, the hypocrite says lots of things which is very different from
his true point of view and what he was really thinking. This is
hypocrisy.