WHY IS MY DU'AA NOT
ANSWERED?
By the noble Shaykh Muhammad
ibn Saalih al-'Uthaymeen[1]
[Q]: Allaah
says:
"And your Lord says: Call upon Me and I
respond to your supplication." [Soorah Ghaafir 40:60].
So why is it that when a person's du'aa (supplication) is sometimes un-answered?
[A]: "All praise is due to Allaah, Lord
of the worlds. May the salaah and salaam (Allaah's blessings of
peace) be upon our Prophet Muhammad, and upon his Family and his Companions. I
ask Allaah for the ability to be correct in belief, speech and actions, for
myself and for my brothers.
Allaah says:
"And your Lord says: Call upon Me
and I will respond to your supplication. Verily those who are too arrogant to
worship Me will enter Hell in humiliation." [Soorah
Ghaafir 40:60]
The questioner stated that he did indeed make du'aa
(supplication) to Allaah - the Mighty and Majestic - but it was not answered by
Allaah. So he is in doubt with respect to this noble aayah (verse), in
which Allaah promises to answer the one who supplicates to Him, and indeed
Allaah - the Most Perfect - never breaks His promise.
So the clarification of this is: that there are
certain conditions that need to be fulfilled in order for a supplication to be answered.
These conditions are:
Firstly: Sincerity to Allaah - the Mighty and
Majestic. That is to say, one must be sincere in his du'aa
(supplication), so he turns to Allaah - the One free of all imperfections -
with an attentive heart, being truthful in his turning to Him, knowing that
Allaah - the Most Perfect, the Most High - is capable of answering his du'aa
(supplication) and hoping that the du'aa will be answered.
Secondly: During du'aa, the caller should
feel that he is need to Allaah - the Most Perfect, the Most High - in fact in
dire need; and that only Allaah alone answers the supplication of the one in
distress and the One who removes evil.
Thirdly: That the one making du'aa should
refrain from haraam (unlawful) matters, as this acts as a barrier
between the person and his du'aa (supplication) being answered - as has
been established in the authentic hadeeth, from the Prophet sallallaahu
'alayhi wa sallam who said:
"Indeed Allaah - the Most High - is
good and accepts only that which is good. Allaah has ordered the Believers to
do that which He commanded the Messengers. Allaah - the Most High - has said: "O
you Messengers! Eat of the good things and do righteous actions." [Soorah
al-Mu'min 23:51]. And He - the Most High - says: "O you who Believe!
Eat of the good things wherewith We have provided you." [Soorah
al-Baqarah 2:172] Then he mentioned (the case of) a man who, having
journeyed far is disheveled and dusty and who spreads out his hands to the sky
(saying): O Lord! O Lord! - whilst his food is unlawful, his drink unlawful and
he is nourished unlawfully. So how can he be answered!"[2]
So the Prophet sallallaahu 'alayhi wa sallam
explained the unlikelihood that this person's du'aa would be answered,
even after fulfilling the apparent factors which aid the du'aa being
answered. The apparent factors being:
[i]: Raising ones' hands towards the sky,
meaning towards Allaah - the Mighty and Majestic - since Allaah is above the
heavens, above His 'Arsh (Throne). Extending the hands out towards
Allaah - the Might and Majestic - is amongst the causes of du'aa being
responded to, as is shown in the narration from the Prophet sallallaahu
'alayhi wa sallam that he said:
"Indeed your Lord is Alive, Most
generous. He feels shy that when His servant raises his hands towards Him,
calling upon Him, that He should rebuff him empty, having nothing."[3]
[ii]: This man called upon Allaah - the Most
High - using the name Rabb (Lord). Seeking tawassul (the means of
nearness to Allaah) with this name is also regarded as one of the causes for
du'aa to be responded to, since the Rabb is the Creator, the Owner, the
Governer of all affairs - and the reigns of the Heavens and the earth are in
His Hands. Due to this, you will find that most of the supplications made in
the noble Qur'aan are by this name:
"Our Lord! We have heard the call of
one calling us to faith: 'Believe you in the Lord,' and we have believed. Our
Lord! Forgive us our sins, and remit from us our evil deeds, and take to
Yourself our souls in the company of the righteous. Our Lord! Grant Us what You
did promise unto us through Your Messengers, and do not disgrace us on the Day
of Judgment, for You never break Your promise. And their Lord has accepted of
them, and answered them: Never will I suffer to be lost the work of any of you,
whether male or female." [Soorah Aal-'Imraan 3:193-195].
So tawassul (seeking the means to
nearness of Allaah) by this name is one of the causes for the du'aa to
be responded to.
[iii]: This man was a traveller, and journeying
is often a cause of du'aa to be responded to, because a person feels more
in need of Allaah - the Mighty and Majestic - when travelling, than when a
person is resident with his family. He was dusty and disheveled, seeming very
insignificant in himself, as if the most important thing to him was to implore
Allaah and to call upon Him - in any condition he may be - whether dusty and
disheveled, or in ease and opulence. Being dusty and disheveled is also
instrumental, like in the hadeeth attributed to the Prophet sallallaahu
'alayhi wa sallam in which he said:
"Indeed Allaah boasts to the people
of the Heaven about the people standing at 'Arafah, saying: Look at My servants
who have come to Me dusty and disheveled."[4]
However, these factors did not bring about
anything, because his food, his nourishment and his clothing were all haraam
(unlawful). So the Prophet sallallaahu 'alayhi wa sallam remarked:
"So how can he be answered!"
Therefore, if these conditions are not
satisfied, then the question concerning the du'aa being answered will
seem distant. However, if the conditions are satisfied and the one supplicating
is still not answered, then this is due to a wisdom which Allaah - the Mighty
and Majestic - knows, and the one supplicating does not know what this wisdom
is; and maybe that you like a thing and it is bad for you.
So when these conditions are fulfilled and the
one supplicating is not answered, then either he has been protected from an
evil which is greater than what he asked for, or Allaah stores it for him until
the Day of Resurrection, and he then gets a greater reward. This is so, because
the one who makes the du'aa - calling upon Allaah alone, fulfilling the
conditions and not being answered, but rather being saved from a greater evil -
is in the position of having carried out the causes yet has been prevented from
being answered, and therefore has a two-fold reward. One reward for making du'aa
(supplication), and another reward for bearing the trial of not being answered.
So that which is greater and more complete is stored for him with Allaah - the
Mighty and Majestic.
Also of importance is that the one supplicating
should not express dissatisfaction if his du'aa is apparently not being
answered, for this action in itself is a reason for the du'aa not being
answered - as the Prophet sallallaahu 'alayhi wa sallam said:
"A servants du'aa continues to be answered
as long as he does not ask for anything sinful or breaking the ties of
relations, and as long as he does not become impatient." It was said: How
does one become impatient O Messenger of Allaah? He said: "He says: I have
supplicated, I have supplicated, yet it has not been answered. He therefore
becomes despondent and abandons supplicating." [5]
So it is not befitting that the one supplicating
should become impatient about being answered, then become disappointed and despondent,
and thereby abandon making du'aa. Rather, one should call upon Allaah,
since every du'aa you make to Allaah is an act of worship, which brings
you closer to Him and increases your reward.
So my brother, you should take to making du'aa
(supplication) in all affairs, be it general or specific, in difficulty or in
ease. And if it was that supplication was only a means of worshipping Allaah -
the One free from all imperfections, the Most High - then that would be
sufficient. So it more befitting that a person strives in this - and with
Allaah lies the success and the ability.
[1] Majmoo' Fataawaa war-Rasaa'il (no.155).
[2] Related by Muslim in his Saheeh (no.1015) from Abu Hurayrah radiallaahu 'anhu.
[3] Saheeh: Related by Ahmad (5/438) and Abu Daawood (no.1488). It was authenticated by al-Haafidh Ibn Hajar in Fathul-Baaree (11/143).
[4] Saheeh: Related by Ibn Hibbaan (no.1006), from 'Abdullaah ibn 'Amr radiallaahu 'anhu. It was authenticated by Shaykh al-Albaanee in Saheehul-Jaami' (no.1868).
[5] Related by al-Bukhaaree (11/140) and Muslim (no.2735), from Abu Hurayrah radiallaahu 'anhu.