Question: What is the nature
of the sermon delivered in the Friday Prayer? Who is authorized to deliver
it? What should the speaker say in the sermon? Is it obligatory to say
it in Arabic?
Answer: The sermon is an essential
part of the Friday Prayer. This prayer provides an opportunity to the Muslims
to gather in large congregations and offer the Salah. The congregational
nature of this prayer was ordained to provide a platform for the Muslim
rulers to address their people; these rulers of the Islamic state and their
representatives were thus given the privilege to speak to the public and
communicate to them information on national and local concerns. It was
hence only the political representatives who were entrusted the responsibility
to lead the Friday Prayer and deliver the sermon. They would not only exhort
the believers to the right path, but also discuss the political and administrative
affairs. They could state the government policies on any issue and seek
the public opinion.
After the decline of the Muslim rule
and abandonment of this duty by the state representative, the sermon is
now merely said to simulate the decreed Friday sermon though the traces
of the political aspects are still found in its contents.
We know that the blessings sent on
the four caliphs and the descendents of the Prophet (sws) are analogous
to the earlier tradition where leaders would defend their policies and
exalt their predecessors. Initially, every political group used to exalt
only those caliphs who were perceived to be the founders of their political
group. It however changed and some neutral people decided to praise all
the previous grand Muslim leaders.
This explanation is further corroborated
by the fact that, many a time, a tradition is also narrated in the Friday
Sermon, even in these days, which describes that the head of a state is
the shelter provided to the Muslims by the Almighty.
In the light of the above explanation,
we can say that the sermon in fact is a means of communication between
the rulers and the ruled. Naturally, it should be in the language that
the audience understands or it would mean nothing. The second part of the
sermon has always been devoted for prayers and beseeching the audience
to follow the right path. This again necessitates that the sermon should
be delivered in the language the audience knows in order to make it fruitful.
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