Download
0 / 0
2834227/08/2003

He stole from his father and brother, and now regrets it

Question: 45016

When I was a teenager, I used to take money from my father and my older brother without their knowledge. Now I regret what I did, and I am wondering whether I should return the money to its owners, but I do not know exactly how much I took.

Praise be to Allah, and peace and blessings be upon the Messenger of Allah and his family.

What you did comes under the heading of stealing, but you
regret what you have done and the Prophet (peace and blessings of
Allaah be upon him) said: “Regret is repentance.” Narrated by Ahmad, 3558;
Ibn Maajah (4252; classed as saheeh by al-Albaani in Saheeh Ibn Maajah.
What is meant is that regret is the major part of repentance. 

that you have been guided to repent. Part
of your repentance is returning things to their rightful owners, or asking
them to forgive you and let you off. 

You have to figure out how much you took, and do your best to
work it out, then return it to your father and brother. 

You do not have to tell them that you had stolen this money
from them, rather the point is to return the money to its rightful owners in
whatever way possible. 

See also questions no.
31234 and
40157

If you want to tell them what happened and ask for their
forgiveness, this will not harm you, in sha Allaah, especially since you did
this when you were a teenager and Allaah has now enabled you to repent from
it. The Prophet (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) said: “The
one who repents is like one who did not sin.” Narrated by Ibn Maajah, 4250;
classed as saheeh by al-Albaani in Saheeh Ibn Maajah. 

You must hasten to do
that, because the Prophet (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him)
said to his companions one day: 

“Do you know who is the one who is bankrupt?” They said:
“Among us, the one who is bankrupt is the one who has no dirhams and no
goods.” He said: “Rather the one who is bankrupt amongst my ummah is the one
who will come on the Day of Resurrection with prayer, fasting and zakaah,
but he will come having insulted this one, slandered that one, consumed the
wealth of this one, shed the blood of that one and beaten this one, all of
whom will be given some of his hasanaat (good deeds), and if his hasanaat
run out before the scores have been settled, some of their sins will be
taken and thrown onto him, then he will be cast into the Fire.” Narrated by
Muslim, 2581. 

We ask Allaah to accept your repentance, and to help you to say and do the right thing. 

And Allaah knows best.

Source

Islam Q&A

Was this answer helpful?

at email

Our newsletter

To join our newsletter please add your email below

phone

IslamQA App

For a quick access to our content and offline browsing

download iosdownload android