The writer's claim that he does not deny that every Muslim should guide to the right, teach righteousness, repudiate evil, and attract others through (his observation of) the morality of the Qur'an and the Sunnah, namely gracefulness, leniency, and forbearance. Yet, a Muslim is not allowed to assume rigor or strictness in his words or deeds, since he is not authorized or entrusted by the authority to do so. All that he can do is to repudiate what he sees as an evil from his heart, which is the least form of Faith for the one who is not in authority. However, adoption of harshness and rigor could only be acceptable in a community or an Ummah that lacks governmental bodies assigned for undertaking this duty. Yet, if such bodies are available, then it is neither inevitable nor acceptable on the part of the individuals to assume such a rule, since it is then already assumed by established governmental authorities.