It is mistakenly imagined
by some that belief in a Supreme Being as the Creator and
Controller of the universe is a mere emotional aspiration, a
superstition of ancient times, irrational and illogical, and
exploded by modern science. It is believed that scientists
(physicists, biologists and others) have erected some theory
which both refutes and replaces the traditional belief in God.
Such ideas have only a very superficial grounding, and are the
result of ignorance or an indifference to both the fundamentals
of religious faith and the scope of the physical sciences. It
is a significant fact in the history of world thought that very
few people have ever made it their business to refute the
existence of God. The views of the universe which are
considered to be anti-religious are almost all agnostic, not
atheistic, that is to say, they attempt to ignore the existence
of God instead of denying it. This is true of certain views of
modern science as well as of the ancient non-religious
theories. The universe in which we live comprises an evident
system of causes and effects, of phenomena and their results,
and it is possible to discuss them indefinitely and construct
theories about them, giving a superficial appearance of
completeness. This is done, however, only at the expense of
ignoring fundamentals or claiming that they cannot be known. If
one were to search for a convincing statement based on firm
principles that the existence of a Supreme Being is impossible,
one would not be able to find it.
The reason for this state of
affairs is that belief in God is at once instinctive, rational,
evidential and intuitional, and it is only by deliberately
neglecting to consider it that the non-religious attitude is
maintained. It is instinctive in that man has an innate feeling
of his own inadequacy and helplessness, which accompanies him
from the cradle to the grave, a feeling accompanied by the
complementary desire to seek refuge and support with a being
who controls all those forces before which he feels himself
inadequate. We put this feeling forward as instinctive,
although it will immediately be perceived that it is also
evidential. The weakness of man before all the uncountable
influences over which he has no control is a fact so obvious as
to require no discussion.
What is less well grasped by
some who have claims to intelligence is that belief in God is
fully supported by reason and logic, the principles on which
all human intelligence stands. For instance, it is a basic
requirement of reason that an effect cannot exist without a
cause. However hard we press our mental faculties, we cannot
conceive rationally of a causeless effect, and if we wish to
postulate one we can only do so by temporarily putting our
reason on the shelf. Reason leads us to the conclusion that
just as the elements which compose the universe are effects of
certain causes, the universe itself must be the effect of a
cause, a cause which is itself mightier than and outside the
universe. Non-religious thinkers have to ignore the origin of
the universe and postulate something existing in the beginning
without any known cause. This postulate is essentially
non-rational and therefore unscientific, but it is a necessity
for those thinkers who have unconsciously or deliberately
decided not to consider fundamentals. Of these there are even
some who openly proclaim their refusal to discuss or admit any
metaphysical concept. This kind of attitude, however, can only
be upheld by abandoning reason. Reason itself guides us
inexorably to the conclusion that there is an ultimate cause,
the Cause of causes, beyond this universe of time, space and
change; in fact, a Supreme Being.
Another of the basic demands
of reason is that diversity cannot exist without a fundamental
unity. Whenever the human mind is confronted with diversity, it
immediately sets to work to synthesise it into unities, then to
synthesise these unities into higher unities and so on until it
can go no further. The ultimate result of a rational
consideration of diversity is to arrive at a unity of unities,
a Supreme Unity, the producer of all diversities, but itself
essentially One. Whichever fundamental of reason we select, if
we follow its path we are led inevitably to the same goal -
belief in God, the Supreme Being.
Besides the conclusion
arrived at by purely rational processes, man is led to the
belief in God by observation and experience. One of the
principal reasons for man’s refusal to recognize the existence
of God is the intellectual arrogance produced by his
appreciation of his own powers of analysis and synthesis, of
harnessing physical forces by his ingenuity, and of
constructing complex machines to do his work for him. But pride
is caused by concentrating too much attention on one’s own
virtues and blinding oneself to one’s defects. What are the
best of man’s mechanical inventions but a poor and crude
imitation of what already exists in an infinitely finer form in
nature? By copying in an elementary fashion some of the
functions of the human eye, he has been able to evolve the
camera; but what comparison has this machine, made out of
lifeless materials, to the living stuff of the eye, and to the
refinement, brightness, clarity, flexibility and stability of
its vision, its immediate connection with the mind which sifts
and appreciates all it sees, all without a complicated system
and controls, and directly under the command of the human will?
Take any organ of the body and study it - the heart, the brain
- and it will immediately be obvious that it is quite outside
the scope of man’s ability to conceive and fashion such an
instrument. The petty imitations of man are attributed to his
great cunning, artistry and intelligence. Is it then
reasonable, logical or scientific to attribute the infinitely
finer and more perfect instruments of nature to such vague and
blind energies called by names such as the ‘life force’, or
‘matter in evolution’, and leave them undescribed and
unexplained? If logic has any validity (and if it has not we
had better stop thinking altogether and become animals), the
intelligence which conceived and wrought myriads of such
delicate and astonishing devices must be infinitely superior to
the human intelligence (even the human intelligence is one of
its products), and have control of all the materials and
workings of the universe. Such an intelligence can only be
possessed by a Supreme Being, the Creator, Fashioner and
Sustainer of all things.
If we ponder our own place in
the world, we find that we (as well as all other beings) are
kept in being by a most intimate combination of forces and
conditions, which is so delicate that even a small dislocation
would cause our total destruction. We live, so to speak,
continually on the brink of annihilation, and yet are enabled
to carry on our complex existences in comparative immunity. We
cannot live, for instance, without daily rest; both the human
body and the human mind are constructed to need it. This fact
is not in itself surprising, but what is surprising is that the
solar system collaborates with us in our human frailty and
provides us with a day and a night exactly suited to our needs.
Man cannot claim to have compelled or persuaded the solar
system to do so; nor can the solar system claim to have
modelled human physical and mental energy to conform to its own
movements. Both man and the solar system are evidently linked
in a total organisation in which man is the beneficiary; the
organiser of these inexplicable concordances can only be a
Supreme Controller of the universe and mankind. Sweet water is
a necessary condition of human existence; it is equally
necessary for those plants which produce man’s staple foods,
which themselves depend on each other. If sea water were to
invade our rivers and wells or rain down from the sky, is there
any doubt that we should all die of hunger and thirst in a few
days and the whole world become an empty desert? Yet sea water
is only held back by an invisible barrier over which we have no
control, and the sun and the clouds co-operate in order to
desalinate our water for us and so give us life. This linkage
of interdependence and concurrence could be extended
indefinitely by taking examples from the physical world, and to
describe it as ‘fortuitous’ is only begging the question;
moreover it is a contradiction in terms. Fortuity is the name
for something which does not come within any known system or
regulation, an apparently meaningless and haphazard occurrence.
To call a system which is a balanced and cohesive organization
fortuitous is obviously self-contradictory and fallacious. A
‘fortuitous system’ is, simply, an absurdity. If we observe
carefully we can see that the whole of the universe is
interdependent and interlinked and therefore not fortuitous but
planned. Belief in God means, precisely, belief in a Planner of
the universe.
A basic element in human
consciousness - a suprarational element - is a sense of value
and purpose in respect to life. Even the worst of men is
prevented from becoming completely bestial by this feeling, and
in the best of them it dominates their whole existence. The
senses of good and evil, right and wrong, beauty and ugliness,
fitness and unfitness, truth and falsehood are such that
however attacked by the missiles of constructive analysis, they
remain intact within their intuitional fortress. In all ages
and conditions, man has not been able to divest himself of the
idea that behind its external effect, every action possesses a
quality by which it may be judged and graded in the scale of
final values. In addition to the consciousness of the existence
of these values, there is the feeling that it is the purpose of
man’s life to attain those qualities which reflect the highest
of them, that not only are they excellent in themselves and
worthy of being acquired, but that they must be acquired, and
that he has been created to acquire them. The natural sense of
qualitative purpose, if allowed to develop freely without the
cramps of agnostic prejudice, leads him to the conception of an
absolute good and an absolute truth as the ultimate standard of
human existence, and from there (for a quality cannot exist
except in a being who is qualified by it) to a being who is the
possessor and author of these qualities, the Supreme Purposer.
The decisive vindication of
the existence of God is evidential. At various junctures in
world history and in widely distant places, certain men have
arisen and proclaimed that they have been inspired by God to
give His message to mankind. These men were not mad; we have
historical records of several of them, including all or part of
the message they insisted that they were called to deliver, and
it is obvious that they were men who were intellectually and
morally highly impressive. They did not come all at once so
that we could attribute them to a sort of historical fashion.
They came spaced throughout history usually at a time of great
moral degeneration. If we examine their message, we find that
apart from differences of expression, attributable to the
milieu in which they lived, they not only bear remarkable
similarities but are basically identical. They have stated that
God had conversed with them in some inspirational manner, and
had ordered them to proclaim His Existence as the Creator,
Maintainer, Controller and eventual Destroyer of the world, to
describe His Mercy and Justice, and to warn mankind that it is
only by remembering and worshipping Him and following the moral
and practical principles that He has laid down for them that
they can achieve success and happiness here and hereafter.
The last of these prophets was Muhammad of Mecca, who stated
that there would be no prophet after him, and it is a
demonstrable historical fact that no-one has been able to
establish a claim to prophethood since. Now those who discuss
or refuse to discuss the existence of God almost invariably
rely on rational or anti-rational arguments and rarely, if
ever, consider the evidential factor. The two basic elements in
human knowledge are, firstly, our own observations and
conclusions, and secondly, the evidence of others. Among the
branches of knowledge the whole of history, for example, and
most of the average man’s acquaintance with science, are only
known from the evidence of others, unless he himself is a
specialist in the subject. When specialists in a certain branch
of knowledge continuously assert that a certain thing is a
fact, it becomes a necessity for the rest of mankind, who are
unable to acquire this knowledge directly, to accept it as
such. In the field of direct inspiration from God, and
knowledge of His qualities and works, we have the repeated
evidence of people in history who have affirmed their
apprehension of Him and that they have been charged with
conveying His message; not only that, the realities of the
divine and spiritual realism as described by these prophets
have in various degrees been corroborated and confirmed by the
spiritual experiences of an uncounted number of their followers
right up to the present day. These corroborators have been the
saints and mystics of their various communities. This
continuous and widespread evidence of the existence of God, the
central and original evidence of prophets, and the derivative
and confirmatory evidence of their followers, all based on
modes of direct and intuitional perception of His Being, cannot
with any reasonability be denied or ignored. To deny or ignore
them is patently illogical and unscientific, and against the
basic principles of the acquirement and dissemination of human
knowledge. In addition to being instinctive, intuitional, and
logical, belief in God has irrefutable evidence to prove its
verity.
The writer (1915-1978) was an English convert to Islam who
became a Shaykh of the Tariqa Chishtiyya, living a life of
simplicity in Karachi, Pakistan, where his holiness gained him
the love and devotion of thousands of Muslims from all walks of
life. May Allah show him His mercy, and grant him light in his
grave. Amin.