(Arabic: monasticism), the monastic state, whose admissibility in Islam is much disputed by Muslim theologians. The term appears but once in the Qur'an: And we set in the hearts of those who follow Jesus, tenderness and mercy. And monasticism they inventedwe did not prescribe it for themonly seeking the good pleasure of God (57:27). Although this verse has been interpreted in many ways, the general attitude of Muslims is that Islam encourages asceticism and devotion to piety and therefore sanctions rahbaniyah. The Prophet Muhammad, however, reputedly remarked: No rahbaniyah in Islam. Tradition also attributes to him the saying: Do not trouble yourselves and God will not trouble you. Some have troubled themselves and God has troubled them. Their likes are in the hermitages and monasteries. Such traditions were believed by many Muslim authorities on Hadith (sayings of the Prophet) to have been coined by those who believed that Islam does not prohibit monasticism as a form of asceticism but condemns it only when it imitates Christian monasticism's traditional removal from the secular world.
RAHBANIYAH
Meaning of RAHBANIYAH in English
Britannica English vocabulary. Английский словарь Британика. 2012