Human beings sin — this is not a flaw but a part of being human. Do human beings stay in sin? That is the real question. Islam does not accept a life left in sin, yet it always keeps one door slightly open to turn back: tawbah. This sermon explores what tawbah is, its four conditions, the master du'a of istighfar, and the staggering promise Allah declares in a sacred hadith.
What Is Tawbah? The "Sincere" Repentance
The word tawbah literally means "to turn back, to return." In Islamic terminology, it means the servant's regret over the sin they committed, turning to Allah, and resolving not to commit it again. In Surah at-Tahrim, Allah specifies the kind of tawbah He calls for:
— At-Tahrim 66:8O believers, turn to Allah in sincere repentance (tawbatan naṣūḥā). Perhaps your Lord will cover your sins.
Tawbah naṣūḥā — repentance that is pure, sincere, and from which there is no turning back. Classical scholars have identified four conditions:
Condition 1: Stop the sin immediately. To turn from a sin one is still committing is not tawbah; it is performance.
Condition 2: Feel real regret in the heart for the sin committed. Regret is the pillar of tawbah; a hadith calls it "tawbah itself."
Condition 3: Resolve never to repeat it. The intention now shapes future behavior.
Condition 4: If the rights of another person are involved, return what was taken or make peace with them. A sin against Allah is settled with Allah; a sin against another person is settled with that person.
Allah declares the width of this door in Surah an-Nisa': "Whoever does evil or wrongs himself, then seeks forgiveness from Allah, will find Allah Forgiving and Merciful" (An-Nisa' 4:110).
Allah's Boundless Mercy — The Sacred Hadith
The human being fears remaining in sin — naturally. Allah Himself speaks directly to His servants through the Prophet (peace be upon him) to ease that fear:
— al-Tirmidhi, Da'awat, no. 3540O son of Adam, so long as you call upon Me and hope in Me, I will forgive you whatever is from you, and I will not mind. O son of Adam, were your sins to reach the clouds of the sky and then you sought My forgiveness, I would forgive you — and I would not mind.
The hadith is Islam's gatekeeper: however far you have strayed, the door is always slightly ajar. The only conditions are hope and asking.
The Prophet (peace be upon him) used to seek Allah's forgiveness more than seventy times a day, though he had no sin. This is the posture of a sinless Prophet — a servant who knows Allah's majesty in full feels the depth of his own smallness all the more.
Sayyid al-Istighfar — The Master of Istighfar
The form of repentance is preserved in supplication. The Prophet (peace be upon him) once asked his Companions, "Shall I teach you the master of istighfar?" — then taught them this prayer:
— Sahih al-Bukhari, Da'awat, no. 6306Allahumma anta rabbi, lā ilāha illā ant. Khalaqtanī wa ana ʿabduk, wa ana ʿalā ʿahdika wa waʿdika mā staṭaʿt. Aʿūdhu bika min sharri mā ṣanaʿt, abūʾu laka bi-niʿmatika ʿalayya, wa abūʾu bi-dhanbī, faghfir lī fa-innahu lā yaghfir al-dhunūba illā ant.
(O Allah, You are my Lord — there is no god but You. You created me and I am Your servant; I keep Your covenant and Your promise as best I can. I take refuge in You from the evil of what I have done; I acknowledge Your blessings upon me, and I acknowledge my sins — so forgive me, for none forgives sins except You.)
Whoever recites it during the day with conviction and dies before evening, or recites it at night with conviction and dies before morning, will be among the people of paradise.
The Time, Form, and Hope of Tawbah
Some young believers ask: "I keep doing the same sin and repenting. Is my repentance accepted?" The answer: yes, if you are truly regretful each time and intend not to repeat it. Allah sees the servant's struggle; the door of mercy reopens each time.
Others ask: "After a sin this great, how could Allah forgive me?" The answer: do not measure His mercy by your sin. His mercy is wider than seventy mothers. As the sacred hadith above teaches, even if sins reach the sky He still forgives.
The most beautiful time for tawbah is the last third of the night — seḥer waqt. Allah describes the godfearing in Surah adh-Dhāriyāt 51:17-18: "They used to sleep but little of the night, and at the time of dawn (seḥer) they would seek forgiveness." This is the hour the servant draws nearest to Allah.
A Tawbah Practice With VAAZ
The VAAZ app's duas archive categorizes tawbah and istighfar supplications, presenting Sayyid al-Istighfar in Arabic, transliteration, and translation. The 99 Names collection features Al-Ghaffar (the Constantly Forgiving) and At-Tawwab (the Acceptor of Repentance) with their dedicated reflections — reciting At-Tawwab a hundred times softens the heart toward turning back.
To go deeper into the science of hadith and its testimony about repentance, see Introduction to Hadith Science; for Ramadan's special relationship to repentance, see The Virtues of Ramadan.
Tawbah is not a single step in the past; it is a lifelong journey for the believer. If the Prophet (peace be upon him) sought forgiveness seventy times a day, how can we end a single day without it? The door is always ajar — it waits only for the heart's return.
References
- The Qur'an, At-Tahrim 66:8, Diyanet translation.
- al-Tirmidhi, Kitab ad-Da'awat, Hadith No. 3540.
- Sahih al-Bukhari, Kitab ad-Da'awat, Hadith No. 6306.