The
Islamic Concept of Life
The chief characteristic of Islam is that
it makes no distinction between the spiritual and the secular in
life. Its aim is to shape both individual lives as well as
society as a whole in ways that will ensure that the Kingdom of
Allah may really be established on earth and that peace,
contentment and well-being may fill the world. The Islamic way of
life is thus based on a unique concept of man’s place in the
universe. That is why it is necessary that, before we discuss the
moral, social, political and economic systems of Islam, we should
have a clear idea of what that concept is.
Basic Principles
1. Allah, who is the Creator, the
Ruler and the Lord of the universe, has created man and provided
him with a temporary home in that part of His vast kingdom which
is the earth. He has endowed man with the faculties of thinking
and understanding, and has given him the power to distinguish
right from wrong. Man has also been invested with free will and
the power to use the resources of the world however he likes.
That is, man has a measure of autonomy, while being at the same
time Allah’s representative on earth.
2. Before assigning to man this vicegerency
(Khilafat), Allah made it clear to him that He
alone as the Lord, the Ruler and the Deity. As such, the entire
universe and all the creatures in it (including man) should
submit to Him alone. Man must not think himself totally free and
must realise that this earth is not his permanent abode. He has
been created to live on it only for a probationary period and, in
due course, he will return to his Lord, to be judged according to
the way he has spent that period. The only right course for man
is to acknowledge Allah as the only Lord, the Sustainer
and the Deity, and to follow His guidance and His commands in all
he does. His sole objective should be to merit the approval of
Allah.
If man follows a course of righteousness
and godliness (which he is free to choose and follow) he
will be rewarded in this world and the next: in this world he
will live a life of peace and contentment, and in the Hereafter
he will qualify for the heaven of eternal bliss, al-Jannah.
If he chooses to follow the course of godlessness and evil (which
he is equally free to choose and follow), his life will be
one of corruption and frustration in this world, and in the life
to come he will face the prospect of that abode of pain and
misery which is called Hell.
3. After making this position clear,
Allah set man on earth and provided the very first human
beings (Adam and Eve) with guidance as to how they were to live.
Thus man’s life on this earth did not start in utter darkness.
>From the beginning a bright torch of light was provided so that
humanity could fulfill its glorious destiny. The very first man
received revealed knowledge from Allah Himself, and was
told the correct way to live. This code of life was Islam, the
attitude of complete submission to Allah, the Creator of man and
the whole universe. It was this religion which Adam, the first
man, passed down to posterity.
But later generations gradually drifted
away from the right path. Either they lost the original teachings
through negligence or they deliberately adulterated and distorted
them. They associated Allah with innumerable human beings,
material objects and imaginary gods. Shirk (polytheism)
became widespread. They mixed up the teachings of Allah
with myths and strange philosophies and thus produced a jumble of
religions and cults; and they discarded the God-given principles
of personal and social morality, the Shari‘ah.
4. Although man departed from the path of
truth, disregarded or distorted the Shari‘ah
or even rejected the code of Divine guidance, Allah did
not destroy them or force them to take the right course.
Forced morality was not in keeping with the autonomy He had given
to man. Instead, God appointed certain good people
from among the human society itself to guide men to the right
path. These men believed in Allah, and lived a life of
obedience to Him. He honoured them by His revelations, giving
them the knowledge of reality. Known as prophets, blessings and
peace be on all of them, they were assigned the task of spreading
Allah’s message among men.
5. Many thousands of these prophets were
raised throughout the ages, in all lands and in all nations. All
of them brought the same message, all of them advocated the same
way of life, (din), that is, the way which was revealed to
man on the first day of his existence. All of them had the same
mission: they called men to Islam ¾ to submit to Allah
alone, asked those who accepted the Divine law, and for putting
an end to all deviations from the true path. Many people,
however, refused to accept their guidance and many of those who
did accept it gradually drifted away from their initial
commitment.
6. Lastly, Allah raised the Prophet
Muhammad, blessings and peace be on him, in Arabia to complete
the mission of the earlier prophets. The message of Muhammad,
blessings and peace be on him, was for the whole of mankind. He
presented anew the teachings of Islam in their pristine form and
provided humanity once again with the Divine guidance which had
been largely lost. He organised all those who accepted his
message into one community (Ummah), charged with living in
accordance with the teachings of Islam, with calling humanity to
the path of righteousness and with establishing the supremacy of
the world of Allah on earth. This guidance is enshrined in
the Holy Qur’an.
Man: Its Nature and Character
The Qur’an deals in many passages with
man’s relationship to Allah and the concept of life which
naturally follows from that relationship. Its message is
epitomised in the following verse:
Verily Allah hath bought of the Believers
their lives and their properties for the price that theirs
shall be the Paradise: so they fight in the way of Allah and
slay and are slain. It (i.e. the promise of Paradise) is a
covenant which is binding on Him in the Torah and the Injil and
the Qur’an. And who is more faithful unto his covenant than
Allah? Rejoice then in your bargain that ye have made, for that
is the supreme triumph. (al-Tawbah 9: 111)
In the above verse the nature of the
relationship which comes into existence between man and Allah
because of Man (the belief, trust and faith in Allah)
is called a ‘bargain’. This means that Man in Allah
is not a mere metaphysical concept; it is in the nature of a
contract by which man barters his life and his possessions in
exchange for the promise of Paradise in the Hereafter. God as it
were, purchases a Believer’s life and property and promises, in
return, the reward of Paradise in the life after death. This
concept of a bargain and a covenant has important implications,
and needs to be clearly understood.
Everything in this world belongs to
Allah. As such, man’s life and wealth, which are part of this
world, also belong to Him, because He has created them and has
entrusted them to every man for his use. Looked at from this
angle, the question of ‘selling’ or ‘buying’ may not seem to
arise at all; Allah does not need to buy what is already
His and man cannot sell what is not really his.
But there is one thing which has been
conferred on man, and which now belongs fully to him, and
that is free will which gives him freedom to choose
between following or not following the path of Allah. This
freedom of will and choice does not automatically make man the
real owner of all the power and resources over which he has
command, nor does it give him the right to use them just as he
likes. Yet, because of this free will, he may, if he
likes, consider himself free of all obligations to the Lord and
independent of any higher authority. It is here that the question
of bargain arises.
This bargain thus does not mean that
Allah is purchasing something which belongs to man. Its real
nature is this: all creation belongs to Allah but He
bestowed certain things on man to be used by him on trust.
Allah wants man to willingly and voluntarily acknowledge
this. A person who voluntarily renounces his freedom to reject
Allah’s supremacy and instead acknowledges His sovereignty,
and, in so doing, ‘sells’ his ‘autonomy’ (which, too, is a gift
from Allah) to Allah, will get in return Allah’s
promise of eternal bliss in Paradise. A person who makes such a
bargain is a Mu’min (Believer) and Man (faith) is the
Islamic name for this contract; a person who chooses not to enter
into this contract, or who, after making such a contract, does
not keep to it, is a Kafir. The avoidance or abrogation of
the contract is technically known as Kufr.
Such is the nature of the contract. Now let
us briefly study its various aspects and stipulations.
1. Allah has set us to account for
ourselves in two areas:
(a) He has left man free, but nonetheless
wishes to see whether he will remain honest and loyal to Him, or
whether he will rebel against his own Creator, whether he will
behave nobly or start ‘playing such fantastic tricks as make the
angels weep’.
(b) He wants to see whether man is prepared
to have enough trust in Allah to offer his life and wealth
in return for a promise about the next world.
2. It is a principle of Islamic law that
Man consists in adherence to a certain set of doctrines and
anyone who accepts those doctrines becomes a Mu’min. No one has
the right to call such a man a disbeliever or drive him from the
fold of Ummah, unless there is clear proof that faith has been
abandoned. This is the legal position. But in the eyes of the
Lord, Man is only valid when it entails complete surrender
of one’s will and freedom of choice to the will of Allah.
It is a state of thought and action, coming from the heart,
wherein man submits himself fully to Allah, renouncing all
claim to his own supremacy.
A man may recite the Kalimah, accept
the contract and even offer Prayers and perform other acts of
worship, but if in his heart he regards himself as the owner and
the master of his physical and mental powers and of his moral and
material resources, then, however much the people may look upon
him as a Mu’min, in the eyes of Allah he will be a
disbeliever. He will not really have entered into the bargain
which the Qur’an says is the essence of Man. If a man does not
use his powers and resources in the way Allah has
prescribed for him, using them instead in pursuits which Allah
has forbidden, it is clear that either he has not pledged his
life and property to Allah, or has nullified that pledge
by his conduct.
3. This aspect of Man makes the
Islamic way of life the very opposite of that of the
non-Muslim. A Muslim, who has real faith in Allah, makes his
entire life one of obedience and surrender to His will. He never
behaves arrogantly or selfishly or as if he were master of his
own destiny, save in moments of forgetfulness. And as soon as he
becomes conscious of such a lapse, he will submit himself to his
Lord and ask forgiveness for his error.
Similarly, a group of people or a society
which consists of true Muslims can never break away from the Law
of their Lord. Its political order, its social organisations, its
culture, its economic policy, its legal system and its
international strategy must all be in tune with the code of
guidance revealed by Allah. Any unwitting contraventions must be
corrected as soon as they are realised.
It is disbelievers who feel free from
Allah’s guidance and behave as if they were their own master.
Anyone who behaves like this, even though he may bear a name
similar to that of a Muslim, is treading the path of the
disbelievers.
4. The will of Allah, which it is
obligatory for man to follow, is the one which Allah
Himself has revealed for man’s guidance. It cannot be determined
by man himself. Allah has Himself explained it clearly and
there is no ambiguity about it. Therefore, if a society sticks
honestly to its contract with Allah, it must shape its life in
accordance with the Book of Allah and the Sunnah of the
Prophet, blessings and peace be on him.
It is clear from the foregoing discussion
why the payment of the ‘price’ has been postponed till the life
after death. Paradise is not the reward for the mere
profession of the bargain, it is the reward for the faithful
execution of it. Unless the behaviour of the ‘vendor’
complies with the terms of the contract he will not be entitled
to the reward. The final act of the ‘sale’ can only be concluded
after the last moment of the vendor’s earthly life.
There is another significant point which
emerges from the study of the verse quoted above when it is read
in its context in the Qur’an. In the verses preceding it,
reference is made to the people who professed Iman and
promised a life of obedience, but who, when the hour of trial
came, proved unequal to the task. Some neglected the call of the
hour and betrayed the cause. Others refused to sacrifice their
lives and riches in the cause of Allah. The Qur’an, after
criticising their insincerity, makes it clear that Man is
a contract, a form of pledge between man and Allah. It
does not consist in a mere profession of belief in Allah.
It is an acknowledgment of the fact that Allah alone is our Lord,
Sovereign and Ruler and that everything that man has, including
his own life, belongs to Him and must be used in accordance with
His directives. If a Muslim adopts a different course, he is
insincere in his profession of faith. Only those who have
really sold their lives and all that they possess to Allah
and who follow His dictates in all spheres of activity can be
called true Believers
The
Islamic Concept of Life(PART 2)
The Scheme of Life
In Islam, man’s entire individual and
social life is an exercise in developing and strengthening his
relationship with Allah. Man, the starting point of our
religion, consists in the acceptance of this relationship by
man’s intellect and will; Islam means submission to the will of
Allah in all aspects of life. The Islamic code of conduct
is known as the Shari‘ah. Its sources are
the Qur’an and the Sunnah of the Prophet, blessings and peace be
on him.
The final Book of Allah and His
final Messenger stand today as the repositories of this truth.
Everyone who agrees that the concept of Reality stated by the
Prophet, and the Holy Book is true, should step forward and
surrender himself to the will of Allah. It is this
submission which is called Islam, the result of Man
in actual life. And those who of their own freewill accept
Allah as their Sovereign, surrender to His Divine will and
undertake to regulate their lives in accordance with His
commandments, are called Muslims.
All those persons who thus surrender
themselves are welded into a community and that is how the
‘Muslim society’ comes into being. It is an ideological society,
radically different from those which are founded on the basis of
race, colour or territory. It is the result of a deliberate
choice, the outcome of a ‘contract’ which takes place between
human beings and their Creator. Those who enter into this
contract undertake to recognise Allah as their Sovereign,
His guidance as supreme and His injunctions as absolute Law. They
also undertake to accept, without question, His word as to what
is good or evil, right or wrong, permissible or prohibited. In
short, freedoms of the Islamic society are limited by the
commandments of the Omniscient Allah. In other words, it
is Allah and not man whose will is the primary source of
Law in a Muslim society.
When such a society comes into existence,
the Book and the Messenger prescribe for it a code of life called
the Shari‘ah and this society is bound to
conform to it by virtue of the contract is has entered into. It
is, therefore, inconceivable that a real Muslim society can
deliberately adopt any other system of life than that based on
the Shari‘ah. If it does so, its contract
is ipso facto broken and it becomes ‘un-Islamic’.
But we must clearly distinguish between the
everyday sins of the individual and a deliberate revolt against
the Shari‘ah. The former may not mean a
breaking up of the contract, while the latter most certainly
would. The point that should be clearly understood is that if an
Islamic society consciously resolves not to accept the Shari‘ah,
and decides to enact its own constitution and laws or borrows
them from any other source in disregard of the Shari‘ah,
such a society breaks its contract with Allah and forfeits
its right to be called ‘Islamic’..
Objectives and Characteristics
The main objectives of the Shari‘ah
are to ensure that human life is based on ma’rufat (good)
and to cleanse it of munkarat (evils). The term
ma’rufat denotes all the qualities that have always been
accepted as ‘good’ by the human conscience. Conversely, the world
munkarat denotes all those qualities that have always been
condemned by human nature as ‘evil’. In short, the ma’rufat
are in harmony with human nature and the munkarat are
against nature. The Shari‘ah gives precise
definitions of ma’rufat and munkarat, clearly
indicating the standards of goodness for which individuals and
society should aspire.
It does not, however, limit itself to an
inventory of good and evil deeds; rather, it lays down an entire
scheme of life whose aim is to make sure that good flourishes and
evils do not destroy or harm human life.
To achieve this, the Shari‘ah
has embraced in its scheme everything that encourages the growth
of good and has recommended ways to remove obstacles that might
prevent this growth. This process gives rise to a subsidiary
series of ma’rufat consisting of ways of initiating and
nurturing the good, and yet another set of ma’rufat
consisting of prohibitions in relation to those things which act
as impediments to good. Similarly, there is a subsidiary list of
munkarat which might initiate or allow the growth of evil.
The Shari‘ah shapes
Islamic society in a way conducive to the unfettered growth of
good, righteousness and truth in every sphere of human activity.
At the same time it removes all the impediments along the path of
goodness. And it attempts to eradicate corruption from its social
scheme by prohibiting evil, by removing the causes of its
appearance and growth, by closing the inlets through which it
creeps into a society and by adopting deterrent measures to check
its occurrence.
Ma’rufat
The Shari‘ah divides
ma’rfat into three categories: the mandatory (fard
and wajib), the recommendatory (mandub) and the
permissible (mubah).
The observance of the mandatory is
obligatory on a Muslim society and the Shari‘ah
has given clear and binding directions about this. The
recommendatory ma’rufat are those which the Shari‘ah
expects a Muslim society to observe and practise. Some of them
have been very clearly demanded of us while others have been
recommended by implication and inference from the sayings of the
Prophet, blessings and peace be on him. Besides this, special
arrangements have been made for the growth and encouragement of
some of them in the scheme of life advocated by the Shari‘ah.
Others again have simply been recommended by the Shari‘ah,
leaving it to the society or to its more virtuous elements to
look to promote them.
This leaves us with the permissible
ma’rufat. Strictly speaking, according to the Shari‘ah
everything which has not been expressly prohibited is a
permissible ma’ruf. Consequently, the sphere of
permissible ma’rufat is very wide, so much so that except
for the things specifically prohibited by the Shari‘ah
everything is permissible for a Muslim. And in this vast sphere
we have been given freedom to legislate according to our own
discretion to suit the requirements of our "time and its
dictates."
Munkarat
The munkarat (the things prohibited
in Islam) have been grouped into two categories: things which
have been prohibited absolutely (haram), and things which
are simply undesirable (makruh).
Muslims have been enjoined by clear and
mandatory injunctions to refrain totally from everything that has
been declared haram. As for the makruh, the Shari‘ah
signifies its disapproval either expressly or by implication,
giving an indication also as to the extent of such disapproval.
For example, there are some makruh things bordering on
haram, while others are closer to acts which are permissible.
Moreover, in some cases, explicit measures have been prescribed
by the Shari‘ah for the prevention of
makruh things, while in others such measures have been left
to the discretion of the society or individual.
Some Other Characteristics
The Shari‘ah thus
prescribes directives for the regulation of our individual as
well as collective lives. These directives affect such varied
subjects as religious rituals, personal character, morals,
habits, family relationships, social and economic affairs,
administration, the rights and duties of citizens, the judicial
system, the laws of war and peace and international relations.
They tell us what is good and bad; what is beneficial and useful
and what is injurious and harmful; what are the virtues which we
have to cultivate and encourage and what are the evils which we
have to suppress and guard against; what is the sphere of our
voluntary, personal and social action and what are its limits;
and, finally, what methods we can adopt to establish a dynamic
order of society and what methods we should avoid. The Shari‘ah
is a complete way of life and an all-embracing social order.
Another remarkable feature of the Shari‘ah
is that it is an organic whole. The entire way of life propounded
by Islam is animated by the same spirit and hence any arbitrary
division of the scheme is bound to affect the spirit as well as
the structure of the Islamic order. In this respect, it might be
compared to the human body. A leg separated from the body cannot
be called one-eighth or one-sixth man, because after its
separation from the body the leg cannot perform its function. Nor
can it be placed in the body of some other animal with the aim of
making it human to the extent of that limb. Likewise, we cannot
form a correct judgment about the utility, efficiency and beauty
of the hand, the eye or the nose of a human being outside the
context of their place and function within the living body.
The same can be said about the scheme of
life envisaged by the Shari‘ah. Islam
signifies a complete way of life which cannot be split up into
separate parts. Consequently, it is neither appropriate to
consider the different parts of the Shari‘ah
in isolation, nor to take any particular part and bracket it with
any other ‘ism’. The Shari‘ah can function
smoothly only if one’s whole life is lived in accordance with it.