Praise be to Allaah.
Firstly:
There can be no doubt that
keeping the Jumu’ah khutbah short is indicative of the khateeb’s
understanding of Islam, as he can compile many meanings in a few words, and
does not speak for so long that the people forget the first things he said
by the time he reaches the end. This was the way of the Prophet (peace
and blessings of Allaah be upon him) in his regular khutbahs; indeed this is
what he enjoined, and it is the best way. Similarly his exhortations were
few so that what he exhorted the people could be remembered. So his Jumu’ah
khutbahs were short and the exhortations few.
Abu Waa’il said: ‘Ammaar
addressed us and he spoke briefly but eloquently. When he came down (from
the minbar), we said: O Abu’l-Yaqzaan, you spoke eloquently but briefly,
would that you had made it longer. He said: I heard the Messenger of Allaah
(S) say: “A man’s lengthening his prayer and shortening his khutbah is a
sign of his understanding (of religion), so make your prayers lengthy and
your khutbahs brief, for there is charm in eloquent speech.”
Narrated by Muslim (969).
There are many comments
from the scholars to confirm this idea:
1.
Ibn ‘Abd al-Barr (may
Allaah have mercy on him) said:
As for making the khutbah
short, it is a Sunnah to be followed. The Messenger of Allaah (peace
and blessings of Allaah be upon him) enjoined that and did it. According to
the hadeeth of ‘Ammaar ibn Yaasir: The Messenger of Allaah (peace and
blessings of Allaah be upon him) enjoined making the khutbah short. And he
used to give khutbahs with good words and few, and he disliked prattle and
long-windedness.
The scholars disapprove of
exhortations in which some is forgotten because of the length, and they like
that in which the listener can focus on what is said and learns from it
after memorizing it. That can only occur when the exhortation is brief.
Al-Istidhkaar
(2/363, 364).
2.
Ibn Hazm (may Allaah have
mercy on him) said:
It is not permissible to
make the khutbah lengthy.
Al-Muhalla
(5/60).
3.
Shaykh Muhammad ibn Saalih
al-‘Uthaymeen (may Allaah have mercy on him) said:
It is better to keep the
khutbah short, because there are two benefits of keeping the khutbah short:
(i)
The listeners do not get bored,
because if the khutbah is lengthy – especially if the khateeb delivers it in
a boring manner which does not move their hearts and does not motivate them
– then the people will get bored and fed up.
(ii)
That makes the listener
remember better, because if it is too long, the first part of it is lost by
the time he reaches the end, but if it is short, then it is possible to
remember it and learn from it. Hence the Prophet (peace and blessings
of Allaah be upon him) said: “A man’s lengthening his prayer and shortening
his khutbah is a sign of his understanding (of religion),” i.e., it is
indicative of his understanding of religion and shows that he pays attention
to people’s circumstances. But sometimes there is a need for a lengthy
exhortation, and if a person speaks at length because the situation requires
that, it does not mean that he is excluded from the description of being one
who understands religion, because length and shortness are relative matters.
It is proven that the Prophet (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon
him) would sometimes give a khutbah by reciting Soorat Qaaf, and Soorat
Qaaf, when recited slowly and carefully (tarteel) and pausing at
every verse, takes a long time.
Al-Sharh al-Mumti’ ‘ala
Zaad al-Mustaqni’ (5/65).
Secondly:
This keeping the khutbah
short should not be done in such a way as to erode the khutbah altogether,
so that the people do not benefit at all from the khutbah. They have not
travelled long distances or come out of their homes merely to see the
khateeb, or to hear the tone of his voice, rather they have come to attain
some benefit by hearing his exhortation or an Islamic ruling and so on.
Hence attention should be paid to moderation in this matter.
It was narrated that Jaabir
ibn Samurah (may Allaah be pleased with him) said: I was praying with the
Messenger of Allaah (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) and his
prayer was moderate and his khutbah was moderate.
Narrated by Muslim (1433).
Al-Nawawi (may Allaah have
mercy on him) said:
i.e., it was somewhere
between being very long or too short to be any benefit.
Sharh Muslim
(6/159)
He also said:
It is mustahabb to keep the
khutbah short, because of the hadeeth quoted above, and so that they do not
get bored by it. Our companions said: Keeping it short should be done in
moderation, and should not be taken to such extremes that (its benefit) is
erased altogether.
Al-Majmoo’
(4/358)
Thirdly:
But we cannot say that a
khutbah that is very short does not count, when most of the scholars are of
the view that if the khutbah contains the essential parts (lit. pillars)
then it is valid. There is a great difference of opinion as to the
definition of those essential parts. The correct view is that there is
nothing that can be called the essential parts or pillars of the khutbah,
and everything that may be called a khutbah, even if it is only a few words,
is counted as such and is valid as a khutbah.
This is the view of Shaykh
al-Islam Ibn Taymiyah and Shaykh Ibn Sa’di, whose views we have mentioned in
the answer to question no. 115854. In the answer referred to, Shaykh
al-‘Uthaymeen (may Allaah have mercy on him) supported this view, but he
pointed out that it should not be followed. Please see his words in that
answer.
Fourthly:
This khateeb whose khutbah
and prayer together take ten minutes does not have deep understanding of
Islam, rather he is ignorant, because understanding of the religion means
keeping the khutbah short and making the prayer long, not effectively
destroying them both!
Let us read what the
Khateeb of al-Masjid al-Haraam, Shaykh Sa’ood al-Shuraym, says concerning
the length of the Jumu’ah khutbah and prayer, with approximate length of
time:
Shaykh Sa’ood al-Shuraym
(may Allaah preserve him) said:
In order to reach an
approximate definition of what is meant by the prayer being long and the
khutbah being short in modern terms, I say – and Allaah is the source of
strength –
If you recite in Fajr
prayer, for example, al-Jumu’ah and al-Munaafiqoon at a moderate speed, the
prayer will take you no less than ten minutes, if not fifteen. I tried it
and I found that to be the case. All of this applies if you recite at a
moderate speed, with the rukoo’ (bowing) and sujood (prostration) of the
prayer. So how about if the Prophet (peace and blessings of Allaah be
upon him) was following the command of his Lord, “And recite the Qur’aan
(aloud) in a slow, (pleasant tone and) style” [al-Muzzammil 73:4], and
he used to make the bowing, rising, prostration and sitting between two
prostrations lengthy, and the narrator of the hadeeth said: “to such an
extent that one would think he had forgotten”? In the hadeeth of al-Bara’
ibn ‘Aazib (may Allaah be pleased with him) it says: The prayer of the
Messenger of Allaah (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) and his
bowing, and when he raised his head from bowing, and when he prostrated, and
the time between two prostrations were all nearly the same.
Al-Shaamil fi Fiqh
al-Khateeb wa’l-Khutbah (p. 154)
From this it is clear that
it is not possible for this khateeb to deliver the Friday khutbah and offer
the Jumu’ah prayer in ten minutes, unless there is clear undermining of both
matters, the khutbah and the prayer.
Such a person needs to be
told, because perhaps he may have misunderstood something from the Sunnah
with regard to this matter, so he is spoiling both the khutbah and the
prayer, whilst thinking that he is one of those who do good!
If he does not respond to
your telling him, then look for someone else who establishes the Sunnah in a
proper way or close enough, and pray with him, and protect your prayer, and keep your heart sound. As for him who does not learn and does not want to, leave him to his own devices.
And Allaah knows best.