God
and Love
by Dr.
Ahmad Shafaat (with some modifications and minor clarifications
done by Anjum Jaleel)
Introduction by Anjum Jaleel
This
article is an excerpt from a book that Dr. Ahmad Shafaat wrote in
1984. I have condensed it and have added some clarification which
are enclosed within square brackets '[ ]'.
Much has
been done to distort the true essence of the Qur'anic version of
Islam [note that according to the Qur'an, every prophet and
messenger of God brought the same message to humanity: Islam (a
commitment to live in a harmonious alignment with the Divine Law
that is created by God Alone for the benefit of humanity -- and
this brings about peace within one's own 'self' and through
interactions with others, within the entire human community)].
One of the teachings of Islam that has been widely distorted is
the nature of God's love towards humanity in general, but towards
an individual. This article will attempt to explain this commonly
misunderstood and hidden aspect of the Qur'anic message, and is
aimed towards those who have sincerity in their hearts.
However,
this is just one article. God's attributes of love and mercy
begin to unfold as one reflects on the Qur'an (which contains
God's perfectly chosen words that have tremendous amount of
richness and depth) and when one goes through an actual
transformation through it and has 'experiences' with the presence
of the Divine Reality. It's then, and only then, one wants to
prostrate to Him with a profound sense of gratefulness.
This is an exposition of the
Islamic teachings on the subject of divine love, forgiveness,
salvation, etc. From this exposition it will become clear that:
for the most part the
assumptions made by some people about Islamic teachings, the
most basic of which is that Islam knows only the greatness of
God but not fully His love, are incorrect, being based either
on ignorance or deliberate distortion of facts; and
Islam contains the best of
teachings of previous revelations on this subject and states
them in rational language.
God's
Love in Islam
The Qur'an uses several words
for the term "love" with different shades of meaning. If all
these words -- rafah, rahmah, wudda, hub, etc. -- are
translated as "love", then this word is of very frequent
occurrence in the Qur'an, appearing on average about once in
every 15 aya'h (communications; verses).
Even the word hub, which is most
commonly translated as love, occurs in application to God so
frequently in the Qur'an that it is hardly justified to say that
Islam knows only greatness of God, not His love.
God's
Universal Love (rafah, rahmah, rabubiyyah)
The various words used in the
Qur'an for God's love can be divided into two categories: those
that relate to universal manifestation of divine love and those
that refer to a special love reserved for the righteous.
God's love in its universal
manifestation is generally referred to in the Qur'an under the
terms rafah and rahmah. Rafah can be
translated as compassion, kindness or pity, while rahmah
is usually rendered as grace, love, blessing or mercy. About
God's rahmah the Qur'an says that it encompasses all
things:
My
punishment I inflict upon whom I will but My rahmah
embraces all things... (7:156).
O
our Sustainer! You embrace all things within (Your) rahmah
and knowledge (40:7).
These verses reveal that while
divine punishment is an act of God's will directed towards some
purpose, love or rahmah is, as it
were, His nature, His normal attitude towards men and
other creatures. So it is said in 6:12, 15 that God
"has enjoined upon Himself (the rule) of
rahmah". It is possible to include in "all things"
that are under the embrace of God's rahmah even those
people who are punished, so that even divine punishment can be
said to proceed in some way from rahmah.
[It's through punishments and afflictions
do we realize that we have crossed the natural boundaries of our
existence. This, in turn, brings about a sense of awareness and
self-knowledge, which in turn enables one to return to the middle
and the balanced path where there is contentment and peace.]
For humans, God's rahmah
and rafah are manifested, for example, in His abundant
forgiveness and in the creation of the environment in which
humans live, an environment that they can use to their great
benefit (22:65; 30:50 etc.). They are also manifested in the
revelations sent by God through His messengers (2:154; 11:17;
11:53), [as through this Divine guidance,
we come to know God and the natural boundaries He has created
within which there is a maximum chance for our spiritual growth].
The coming of Prophet Muhammad
(peace be upon him) is especially a manifestation of God's
rahmah and rafah (57:9; 6:155). He came as
rahmat-al-lil-alamin (grace to all nations) and the
revelation he brought is rahmah for all those who believe
(10:57; 17:82 etc.).
Concrete manifestations of
rahmah and rafah gives rise to two oft-repeated
"names" or attributes of God: Rahman and Rahim.
Both names are intensive forms derived from rahmah,
signifying "Most Gracious or Compassionate", but there seems to
be a difference in the shade of meaning. Rahim emphasizes
divine love as it responds to man's deeds when they have occurred
or his needs when they have arisen; for example, God's patience,
long suffering and forgiveness given to man after he has been
sinning or His responding to the prayer of a man who has been
suffering. The name Rahman, on the other hand, stresses
love and grace that flows from God independently of what man
does, such as God's love and grace which is manifested in His
creating man or sending the Prophet for humankind or in His
putting some of humankind on the right path, in any of which acts
human beings played absolutely no part.
[AJ's
addition here]
Since we're discussing the
Divine attribute Rahman, I would like to add excerpts
fromFrom Shaykh Fadhlalla's Tafseer on Surah al-Rahman
1. The Beneficent God, (Ar
Rahmân)
2. Taught the Qur'an. (Alla Mal
Qur'an)
3. He created man, (Khalaq al
Insân)
4. Taught him the clear
evidence. (Alla Ma Hul Bayân)
Ar-Rahmân (the Merciful) is one
of the key attributes of God. Every attribute is an âya, a sign
indicating the oneness of God. Everything in creation is
permeated with and connected to Him.
In order for the rahmah
(mercy) of the Rahmân to be understood, appreciated and
experienced, knowledge has been given to man.
One cannot understand something unless it
is experienced. The most valuable
knowledge in life's journey is the knowledge of the Qur'an.
Man's link to God is through the Qur'an, through the Book,
through the knowledge that will enable him to see the
all-encompassing mercy. The meaning of the hadith (tradition)
that Muhammad (peace be upon him) was created before the creation
of Adam, is that the light of the path
existed before Adam. After the Qur'an, man, bani Adam,
was created. So knowledge -- the light of Islam, the light of the
Qur'an -- existed before khalaqa-l-insân (He created man).
The Creator contains the
knowledge of what He will create. The highest creation is the
Muhammadi being, the perfect being. The knowledge of this final
product, the ultimate being, the *khalîfa* (deputy) of God, was
with the one and only Knower, with the Alîm. The light of
Muhammad was there when Adam was still between water and clay.
The purpose of creation was to create the perfect man, the last
of the prophets, the one after whom nothing new could be added.
Every aspect of the Creation
has the label of the Creator on it. Creation is
in His name. By His decree His
rahmah (mercy) manifested as the knowledge of the Qur'an. His
rahmah then becomes the creational act -- (He created man)
-- making wider ripples through the 'evidence'. Bayân (in
âya 4) is clear evidence which emanates from what is most
subtle, penetrating the gross physical manifestation towards
which man orients his perception. This is the knowledge of
witnessing. Everything that is seen bears witness to the cause of
its creation and to its being subject to the decree of the
Beneficent.
The knowledge of the Qur'an is
the knowledge of tawhîd (divine unity). In this instance,
rahmah may also mean the tawhîd of the Wâhid,
the One. Access to Him is through the knowledge of His decree,
which is the Book. Creation took place according to the decree.
The bayân is an outcome of the nature of that creation.
Man seeks evidence for
everything. He is always seeking knowledge. He seeks to know the
cause, effect and proof of things. Nothing is haphazard,
everything leaves its trace. Man is the trace of the Creator; he
is His evidence. Everything in His existence is an âyatu-llâh
(sign of God). If man knows himself, then he has known the
meaning of guardianship or lordship, rabûbiyya.
"He who knows himself has known his Lord"
(hadîdth).
[AJ's
additions end here]
Another
attribute of God which relates to God's love is Rabb.
This is a difficult word to translate. The cognate verb is used
in 17:24 for the care that a child receives from his parents and
this provides the best starting point for understanding the idea.
God as Rabb is He who is ultimately responsible even for
the care our parents give us and Who, of course, provides us with
a great many other things which parents do not or cannot. In
other words, God's whole role in bringing
us into existence, in sustaining our existence and in our growth
and development in various aspects, comes under the term Rabb.
In English we can do justice to the term by using several such
words as Sustainer, Cherisher, Developer. Rabb also
includes the idea of having a just claim to the possession of a
thing and of having authority over it. In this sense it can be
translated as Lord.
Since all the roles that an
ideal father plays in relation to his children -- providing for
their material and psychological needs, giving necessary guidance
to them so that they can grow up into mature adults, and assuming
for these purposes authority as the master of the household --
are included in the word Rabb, the Qur'anic term includes
the best of the senses in which the New Testament sometimes
refers to God as Abba, Father.
But Rabb is preferable
to Abba because of two reasons:
it properly indicates that
God's role as creator, supporter, provider, cherisher, guide
and lord is far superior to that of a father, and
many individuals may not
have had a very good experience with their fathers -- if, for
example, they were criminals, or alcoholics, or cruel, or
suffer from other serious weaknesses -- and in such individuals
the term "Father" may not evoke the best of images and
feelings, so that instead of endearing God to them the term may
contribute to blocking the development of a close relationship
with Him.
God's
Special Love in Islam (hub, mahabbah, wudda)
In addition to rafah,
rahmah and rabb the Qur'an also uses hub,
mahabbah, and wuddu to refer to God's love. In
general, these words signify a more
personal and warmer manifestation of divine love than do
the other words we have considered above. Mahabbah of God
was operative, for example in the safe upbringing of Moses among
his enemies, and in His raising him to great spiritual and moral
heights:
I
cast over you (O Moses) the garment of love (mahabbah)
from Me and (this) in order that you may be reared under My
care (literally "eye") (20:39)
Hub and Wudda are available to
the faithful:
On
those who have faith and do good will the Most Gracious One (Rahman)
bestow love (wudda)." (19:96)
Say, (O My Prophet to the people), "if you love God, follow
me, (and) God will love you (hub) and forgive you your
sins; for God is oft-forgiving, most merciful." (3:31)
Wudda gives rise to
God's name Al-Wadud (Loving One) (11:90; 85:14).
Hub is available to
those:
who repent (2:222)
who do good (2:195; 5:13)
who are just (5:42; 49:9)
who persevere in patience
(3:145)
who fight for His cause
(61:4)
who love cleanliness (61:4)
who put their trust in Him
(3:158)
and so on. But it is not
available to the:
the conceited, boastful man
(2:190)
the mischievous disturbers
of peace (28:77)
the unjust (42:40)
the extravagant (6:142)
the supercilious (16:23)
the transgressors (2:190)
and so on.
Thus while there is a divine
love (rafah, rahmah) which embraces everything there is
another, warmer, type of love (hub) that God gives to some
but not to others. That God is selective in giving this warmest
love is necessary idea found in every religion.
It really amounts to a distinction between
good and evil. If God treated everybody in a completely
identical manner, regardless of his character and conduct, then
the distinction between good and evil, which is essential to all
religions, would become meaningless. Consequently there is no
basis for the criticism by some people that the Qur'anic
conception of God's love is defective because the Qur'an says
that God does not love people with certain bad qualities such as
unjustness, boastfulness, lawlessness.
The Qur'an does not say that
God hates these people, only that He does not love them with a
warm love (hub); the question of the availability of the
universal type of divine love (rahmah) is left in the
Qur'an open for all people in the world.
Let us note some further points
about the Qur'anic concept of God's hub.
It is clear from the
Qur'anic verses referred to above that the distinguishing marks
of those who received God's hub are certain qualities or
traits -- trust in God, justness, patience etc. Adherence to a
code of law given by Islam is not stressed in this connection.
The Qur'an says that those
who follow the Prophet receive God's hub (3:31) but it
stops at this positive statement and does not say anywhere that
those who do not follow the Prophet will not receive God's
hub, thus leaving the possibility
in principle that followers of other religions may acquire the
qualities and conduct that earn man the love of God. But the
Qur'an does say that those righteous believers in other faiths
who accept Islam will have their portion of divine love doubled
(57:28). This is because God has a special love for
the Prophet Muhammad and his mission represents the primary
means in our age for the realization of divine purpose in
history, so that to follow him is more than to acquire faith
and good qualities.
Although a man with good
qualities of heart and conduct receives divine love, he does
not do so because of his qualities. For like every other
good thing that happens to a man (4:79), good qualities of
heart and conduct are themselves ultimately a gift from God and
are not acquired by man on his own. When in numerous places the
Qur'an says that God guides or admits into His own rahmah
whom He Wills, the meaning is that the act that puts man on the
path of God and His love is initiated by God. This idea comes
out especially clearly in the following passage:
This
(Qur'an) is a reminder. So let everyone who wills, take a way
to the Lord. But you will not will, unless wills God.
Surely, God is full of knowledge and wisdom. He admits to
His rahmah who He wills; but for the wrongdoers He has
prepared a grievous penalty." (76:29-31; see also 81:27-29,
42:8)
To the extent that the
Qur'an relates the reception of divine love with acquisition of
certain qualities of heart and conduct (even if that relation
is not of simple cause and effect), we can say that according
to the Qur'an divine love is purposive, for qualities can
become relevant only for serving a purpose.
Thus God's love should not be thought of
as simply a sentimental person-to-person relationship, but a
creative force which operates to realize an End.
The Coming of
the Prophet as the Supreme Act of Divine Love
One objection against the
Islamic conception of God's love is that it does not present us
with some great expression in history of divine love which can
in turn evoke the response of love in man towards God.
For example, one writer (John Gilchrist)
states: "Indeed the Qur'an often appeals to that which is
visible in nature as a proof of God's existence and
character... But apart from this the Qur'an tells really
nothing of the depth of God's love towards men outside of that
which can be discovered in nature. It does not disclose any
great act of love in the history of God's dealings with men
which should cause the response of heartfelt love towards him
in return. To put it in a nutshell, there is no definite
expression of love in the the heart of God towards men in the
Qur'an. No proof of deep affection towards mankind is given at
all".
The writer has in mind here
the Christian belief that God manifested His love by coming as
a man and being sacrificed for the sins of man, and is noticing
a lack in Islam of the idea of a similarly dramatic
manifestation of divine love. Now while it is true that there
is no place in Islam for anything like the idea of the
necessity of God becoming man and being slaughtered to show His
love, the idea of a great act of divine love in history, for
the whole of humankind is present in Islam. In one significant
verse the Qur'an presents the coming of the Prophet of Islam as
just such an act :
"And
We have not sent you (O Muhammad) except as an act of love
(rahmah) to all the worlds."(21:107)
The love of God alluded to
here -rahmah- is, as we saw above, God's universal love,
one that is said in the Qur'an to embrace everything (40:7).
Out of this love for His creation (or all the worlds) and in
particular all humankind, God sent the Prophet Muhammad. This
act is the greatest initiative of God's universal love: the
Qur'an does not describe any other single divine act as "rahmah
to all the worlds". The act is a perpetual one: it continues
through the words of the Qur'an and the example of the Prophet.
People can respond to this divine initiative by opening their
hearts to the words of the Qur'an and by following the
revelatory example of the Prophet.
If they do so, greater
blessings will follow; in particular God will receive them in
His more special, warmer love - hub or wudda (see
Qur'an 3:31; 11:90 which have already been quoted above.)
This act of divine love works
to reconcile all humanity with God and bind them together in a
close relationship of love through the educative and
inculcative effect of miraculously chosen words that are
still accessible to everybody; and often
a relationship built on the basis of proper education is far
more secure than one based on a totally incomprehensible
mystical belief founded on a myth.
According to Islam, God's
love and mercy have always been available to him, from the
creation of Adam through his rise to consciousness until the
Last Day for humanity in this temporary, yet purposive,
existence. But man can fall out in sin and when he does so he
is like a person in a ditch who needs a rope to hold on to and
get out. Often people are not aware that they are in a ditch of
sin. But God shows His mercy and sends down His revelation,
which not only makes people aware of their situation, but also
provides a rope to hold on to and get out of that situation.
God has been so merciful that He has been sending such
revelations in all ages and among ALL
nations.Our age is the final age in which He has sent
the Prophet Muhammad as grace to all the worlds. In its nature
the coming of the Prophet Muhammad is not different from the
expressions of divine love through earlier revelations but in
its scope it is the greatest such expression.
Suffering does come into the
Islamic picture of prophetic work but in the following way: the
primary function of the prophets is to point to "the signs of
God" which enable man to turn to God; educate him and incline
him towards good actions and turn him away from bad ones; and
enable him to receive God's forgiveness and grace. This is a
work that meets resistance from the very people whom the
prophets want to lead to their Lord and to their salvation, and
as a result the prophets have to struggle and suffer; some of
them even had to die for their mission. Their suffering or
death is for the sake of others, but it does not by itself lift
the burden of people's sins. It is their whole work - teaching
and example, of which patient suffering for others is a part -
that has the effect of leading people to God and to salvation.
[See also:
http://www.geocities.com/alummah2000/LoveForTheProphet.htmlandhttp://www.geocities.com/alummah2000/TeachingsOfProphets.html]
In
Islam, God does not and need not become what He is not - a man
- to show His love. Just as a man who loves dogs, cats
or horses need not become one of these animals to show his love
for them but can in other ways effectively demonstrate to them
any amount of his love, so also God Almighty can and does show
His great love to man without becoming man. Indeed in true
love, it is essential, as it is often observed, that both
partners maintain their identities. For
one partner in love to try to assume the identity of the other
is the sign of extreme insecurity such as is not consistent
with love and for him to want the other partner to become like
himself is not love of the other person but of himself.
In the Islamic conception of love between man and God the two
maintain their identities. Man remains fully man a created
being, and God remains what He is and the love between them is
not worse for that.
Assurance
of Salvation in Islam
From the manifestation of
divine love in history, let us move to consider its
manifestation in the hereafter: forgiveness and final
salvation. Some people often contrast the Islamic position on
this subject with that of Christianity by pointing to the
following two differences:
a) In Islam salvation comes
by the efforts of the Muslim in observing a code of law,
whereas in Christianity it is given as a free gift to
Christians; and
b) During his life a Muslim
has no assurance of salvation, whereas a Christian already has
the certainty that they will have salvation.
In Islam,
man's own effort is not at all decisive for his salvation in
the sense that the
salvation
is not regarded as the sole result of that effort. This
point is emphasized in the
famous hadith in which
'Ayesha is told by the Prophet that none
can enter paradise except by God's grace and when she asked him
if this applied to him as well, he answered that it did.
For a Muslim this one fact that even the Prophet Muhammad, the
best of all beings after God, is dependent on God's grace
emphasizes the significance of that grace for salvation as
forcefully and effectively as the entire theology of the Cross
may do for a Christian.
The tradition just alluded to
emphasizes the role of divine grace after a person has attained
faith and done his best, but as we noted above, the Qur'an
also teaches that the establishment of a relationship with God,
acquisition of faith and of good qualities and conduct are
themselves gifts of divine grace that people who are to be
saved receive.
Thus in Islam man is saved by
two acts of divine grace:
one by which he acquires
faith and the type of qualities and conduct which God loves,
and the other by which any
shortcomings, misjudgments or sins are forgiven and he is
rewarded with paradise.
The effort that the Muslim
exerts in the way of doing good and obeying the Islamic
Shari'ah or law is not, according to the Qur'an, an act of
sheer will on the part of the Muslim but is a natural result of
his character, the type of heart and mind that he acquires as a
result of the first act of divine grace. That is why much of
what the Qur'an expects the faithful to do or not to do is
stated not as commandments -- you shall or shall not do this --
but as descriptions of the characteristics of the faithful -
believers are those who do or do not do such and such.
Moreover, in the Qur'an a code of law and adherence to it is
not in the forefront. It is rather faith, a relationship
with God, and doing of good deeds ('aml saleh) that
are generally mentioned in Qur'anic promises of salvation (see
the passages quoted below). But clearly a code of law is a
necessary element in every religion like Islam which organizes
a community.
The view that divine grace is
decisive for salvation and that man's efforts in the way of
good and the acquisition by him of good qualities is part of
the workings of that grace, inevitably leads to the idea of
predestination, as expounded in many traditions such as the
following:
"Verily God
created Adam and then rubbed his back with His right hand and
took out a progeny from him and said: I created these for
Paradise and with the actions of the inmates of Paradise which
they will do. Afterwards He rubbed his back with His hand and
took out a progeny from him and said: I created these for Hell
and with the actions of the inmates of Hell which they will
do." (Bukhari)
This, of course, raises the
question of why God's grace and salvation is given to some but
not to others. This question is related to the problem of
evil. It arises in every religion, since there is found in
every religion [which are basically
remnants of a prophetic teachings, who brought earlier versions
of Islam - commitment to God to live in peace, or being in a
harmonious submission to God's will and natural moral laws]
the idea, in one form or the other, that God does not treat all
people in the same way and that it ultimately depends on God
how He treats His creatures. There is really no answer to
the question. It relates to the deepest mysteries of
existence which we cannot solve, at least not in our present
existence. One phenomenon we can reflect upon is that every
person has been given a free will to choose between right and
wrong, evil and good, but nevertheless it's a deep and
difficult subject and since we cannot answer the question,
hadith advises us not to enter into any arguments about it.
We now
discuss the question of what kind of assurance of divine
forgiveness and salvation Islam brings to humankind. In
this regard we can state from the outset that the Qur'an
rejects the idea of salvation - popular in all religions but
given a more official position in some brands of Christianity
and Judaism -- which begins by defining a group of people in
some mechanical way -- e.g. as all those who undergo a ritual
trip in the water, or agree to profess a system of dogmas or
adhere to a code of law -- and then promises salvation to all
members of that group while declaring the rest of humankind to
be doomed. The Qur'an rather indicates,
and attempts to inculcate, certain attitudes, qualities and a
stage of spiritual development and promises salvation to all
those who have attained those attitudes, qualities etc; at the
same time it indicates certain other attitudes, qualities etc.
and warns those who possess them of divine punishment.
The following passages give a fair idea of the basic attitudes
and qualities of those who are assured of salvation:
"Verily those who say our Lord and Supporter (Rabb)
is God and thereafter stand firm (in their faith in God) -
no fear need they have, and neither shall they grieve. They
are destined for paradise, therein to abide permanently as
a reward for what they did." (46:13-14)
"And they (the Jews and the Christians) claim, none shall
enter paradise unless he be a Jew or a Christian. Such are
their vain thoughts. Say, produce your proof, if you are
truthful. Nay, but whosoever surrenders his self to God and
is a doer of good, shall have his reward with his Lord; and
all such need have no fear nor shall they grieve."
(2: 111-112)
[Note that
the Qur'an first mentions "whosoever surrenders his self to
God" then "and is a doer of good". Doing good deeds is a
natural consequence of "surrendering one's self to God" since
as the 'self' (nafs; soul). As it journeys through this
life (a maturation ground for it), by surrendering to the
Reality, it not only becomes in harmony with the Divine Laws,
it also becomes aware of those deeds that are harmful to its
development and those that are good. As it continues onwards in
its journey to reach higher levels of consciousness, it also
becomes natural for it to do good deeds as they provide the
boundaries within which it has the maximum chance of
developing.]
"Behold, surely, those who have close relationship with God
(lit. are friends of God) - no fear need they have, nor
shall they grieve - those who have attained faith and have
been mindful of God. For them there is the good news (of
peace and contentment) in the life of this world and in the
life to come - nothing can alter the promises of God - this
is the triumph that is supreme I" (10:62-64)
"Surely those who have believed (in the Prophet Muhammad)
and the Jew, the Sabians and the Christians - any who have
faith in God and the Last Day and do good - on them shall
be no fear, nor shall they grieve." (5:69)
[this verse
universalizes the promise of salvation. What this verse is
suggesting is that God does not go by the 'religious labels'
that we have put on ourselves and gives salvation only to those
people who identify themselves with the group carrying a
particular label. Rather, anyone, no matter which group they
belong to, is being offered God's mercy and promise of
salvation, and is capable of accepting it.
The Qur'an
states in another ayât that every soul that is born is born in
it natural predisposition. Since every soul has come from God,
it must have first met Him and knows it.
As a
matter of fact, another ayât in the Qur'an states that God once
recalled all souls and asked them who their Lord was and everyone
responded by saying that it was Him. This suggests that the
awareness of the Reality is already built into our consciousness.
However, after a person has been born into this existence which
is also of a physical nature that provides another dimension for
the development of the 'self' (soul), as he grows, he is
influenced by external factors: parents, society, books he reads,
etc. And, they all have an influence on his thinking and shaping
of his beliefs. Through this period of development, his beliefs
about God may get corrupted. Hence a divine revelation is needed
to remedy that situation. Now, what if, the true revelation of
God does not reach a person, who has developed a corrupted
awareness of the Reality, in a meaningful and comprehensible
form? Well, that's precisely why we should not judge anyone in
this life, and should leave this matter to God Alone. Only He
knows the secrets of one's heart. We don't know how the
revelation of God has reached a person and what his level of
intelligence and ability to comprehend is.]
"And to God belongs all that is in the heavens and on earth,
so that He rewards those who do evil according to what they
did and rewards those who do good with what is best - those
who avoid great sins and shameful deeds (falling may be into)
only small faults; verily your Supporter and Lord is generous
in forgiving. He knows you when He brings you out of the
earth and when you are hidden in your mother's wombs.
Therefore justify yourselves not. He knows best who it is who
guards against evil."' (53:32)
"Verily God does not forgive if one associates others with
God (in his allegiance, love and devotion to Him) but He
forgives whom He pleases for sins other than that, for, one
who associates other gods with God has indeed strayed far,
far away." (4:116; cf. 4:48)
['He
forgives who He pleases', when examined within the context of the
Qur'an does not mean that He is 'random' about it. Rather, it is
done through specific divine laws, and He is all-Wise,
all-Knowing, and Merciful.
Punishment of some souls does not mean that He is not Merciful.
He has a global view of all existence in all dimensions and
phases -- including the Hereafter, which is in a non-time zone
and is, therefore, eternal and permanent.
Our view
is extremely local and narrow. Compare to His view, our view is
simply negligible. It's like when we mow our lawn, trim grass,
get rid of weeds, we have the benefit and the health of the
over-all existence of our little garden in our mind. We know what
plants (weeds) are dangerous to the existence of other plants and
grass. We know if we didn't mow and trim our lawn and get rid of
the weeds, it would not only look ugly, but the neighbors are
sure to complain about it and will consider us a very sloppy and
unkind (to the plants and grass) person.
However,
one small piece of grass that has been cut does not have the view
of the garden we do. It only knows of its own existence or the
grass blades around it, and is only concerned with its own
existence and interests. It's very selfish. If it were to given
consciousness and ability to speak, it would surely complain why
it was trimmed or cut. If it were a weed, it would complain why
it was denied the opportunity for further growth. It would surely
consider us a very cruel person who has no mercy and love for it.
Even its neighboring plants would consider us very evil that we
got rid of their 'friend' weed. They don't know it could have
harmed them as well. But, since our view of our garden is much
more global and its overall health and beauty is our concern --
and we certainly love our garden and its plants, we can not allow
a weed to grow wildly and not trim the grass.
Similarly, punishment of some people in the Hereafter does not
mean that God is not all-Merciful, since our view is like the
view of a blade of grass, in reality, even smaller.]
The last verse talks of
forgiveness after a person dies without due repentance and
reform. During one's life, however, every sin can be completely
washed away after a person duly turns to his Lord in sincere
repentance:
Say, "O My servants who have transgressed against your souls!
Despair not of the grace of God, for God forgives sins, all
of them, for He is much forgiving, most merciful." (39:53)
[Muhammad
Asad comments on this verse: "Sc. 'whenever the sinner repents
and turns to Him': Cf. for instance, 6:54 -- 'Your Sustainer has
willed upon Himself the law of grace and mercy -- so that if any
of you does a bad deed out of ignorance, and thereafter repents
and lives righteously, He shall be [found] much-forgiving, a
dispenser of grace'; or 4:110 -- 'he who does evil or (otherwise)
sins against himself, and thereafter prays to God to forgive him,
shall find God much-forgiving, a dispenser of grace'. "]
From the passages quoted above
we see that the Qur'an does not see membership in any particular
group as either essential or enough for salvation. In fact it
criticizes the Jews and Christians for such a view of salvation.
It makes its promise of salvation not for those who bear certain
labels but for those who have certain type of attitudes,
qualities and conduct, e.g. make God the sole object of their
deepest devotion, allegiance and trust, have a submissive
attitude toward His signs [in order to be
in equilibrium with the Divine law], believe in the
hereafter, do good and avoid doing things that are generally
recognized to be sinful and shameful. While the guarantee of
salvation is given in the Qur'an only to such people, the
possibility of salvation is open to
all those who do not commit shirk. [i.e. do
not elevate anyone to the level of the Reality in their devotions
to Him, for this is the height of one's arrogance and conscious
deviation from the path of Unity.]
Since total assurance of
salvation is only for those who have firm faith in God and the
Hereafter [i.e., conviction that one came
from God and one is returning to Him in the eternal non-time,
non-space dimension, where one will face reckoning and final
destination of one's 'self' will be decided, which will be based
upon the 'state' the self is at when leaving this existence that
is within the confines of the physical body given as a vehicle
for the 'self' to grow in consciousness], have an inner
relationship of love and obedience with God
[i.e., the self is in alignment with the natural laws created by
the Reality that brings peace and harmony to the self as it is in
equilibrium with God's will], and possess good qualities
of heart and conduct, it is difficult in
general for us mortals to say of any particular individual
whether he is saved or not. For the state of a person's
heart and his whole worth cannot be known to us with certainty.
[only God has that knowledge with utmost
certainty, and He is Merciful and oft-Forgiving] There is
also the unknown future: a person judged to be bad now may turn
out to be very good later on and vice versa. Moreover, the
relative value of a person's deeds cannot be determined by us a
single deed of love performed by a man in private, with only God
watching him, may outweigh all the bad things that we may have
seen him doing, and conversely, private conduct of another man
may make worthless many of his public virtues.
For these reasons a Muslim is very cautious
about making any categorical statement about the ultimate fate of
specific individuals, including himself. He never presumes
himself to be a soul already saved but humbly leads his entire
life in a state of mind that lies between hope and fear. To
abandon either hope or fear is considered a sin by him.
Thus the assumption made by some people
that during this life a Muslim does not feel completely assured
of salvation is valid but this neither because the Muslim
believes in an arbitrary despotic God, nor because Islam is
unclear about what is needed for salvation. Rather a
Muslim's hopeful uncertainty about his final salvation arises out
of the difficulty on the part of human beings of judging with
complete certainty whether a man has what is needed to be saved.
The
Relationship Between Man and God
Some
people assert that the Islamic God is a very impersonal God with
whom a believer never gets to develop a close relationship.
There is no truth whatever in this
assertion.
In Islam a believer's
relationship with God begins with a consciousness of God who is
always present. It starts with remembrance of Him (zikr);
it is inculcated and maintained by acts of devotion such as the
regular daily prayers (salah), pilgrimage to Makka,
fasting and reciting on rosary the praises of God (tasbih).
When a person becomes conscious of His ever-presence, he turns
for His support and help whenever he needs some, which is often.
He is fully assured that God hears him when he calls upon Him.
[It is like a constant and direct
connection between the self and the Reality].
In the Qur'an God says:
When My servants ask you concerning Me, I am indeed close to
them: I listen to the call of every supplicant when he calls
on Me. (2:186)
Just as God listens to his
calls, man is expected to, and true believers do, listen to what
God has to say to him:
Let them (My servants) also with a will listen to My call,
and believe in Me that they may walk in the right way
(2:186).
The believer acknowledges with
thankfulness (shukr) the innumerable gifts he receives
from his Lord and Supporter whether in answer to his
Supplications or otherwise. Likewise God acknowledges with
appreciation (shukr) any good that the believer does
(2:158, 42:23). This reciprocality of ijabah (heeding the
call) and shukr (thanks) in the relationship between man
and God is characteristic of the Qur'anic conception of that
relationship. Like ijabah and shukr, zikr
(remembrance) is also reciprocal. God says to humankind in the
Qur'an: "Do remember Me (as) I remember
you" (2:152). And, of course, love is also reciprocal.
In 5:54 God is said to be looking for a community of men who love
Him and whom He loves. These and other
passages clearly show that in the Qur'an the relationship between
man and God is meant to be a very close and personal one.
In Hadith, where we often find
Qur'anic ideas elaborated, the personal character of the
relationship between man and God is depicted forcefully in many
traditions. For example:
(a) The Prophet is reported to
have said: "The love of God for His
creatures is seventy times greater than that of a mother for her
child".
(b) "If
one goes one step towards God, God comes two steps towards such a
one; if one goes walking towards God, God comes running to him."
[so here we see that it's the 'self' that
needs to use its free will to take the initiative. This is part
of its development and ascend in this existence.]
(c) When a sinner repents God
is overjoyed. One tradition likens God's joy to that of a man who
was traveling alone in a desert on a camel. He sleeps for the
night and when he gets up he finds his camel missing. He searches
for his beast for hours, during which time the sun warms up the
desert and thirst and hunger bring the man close to extinction.
Finally, he becomes exhausted and gives up the search; but just
then he sees the camel walking towards him with all the water,
food and other provisions. The happiness of God when a sinner
returns to Him is like the happiness of this traveler at the
moment when he sees his lost camel (Muslim sahih reproduced in
Mishkat al-Masabih, Book IV, chap. 3).
(d) In another tradition God is
represented as saying:
"Nothing
brings men near to Me like the performance of that which I made
obligatory upon them, and through supererogatory acts. My servant
(i.e. man) comes even nearer to Me until I love him. When I have
bestowed My love on him, I became (as if) his hearing with which
he hears, his sight with which he sees, his tongue with which he
speaks, his hand with which he grasps, and his feet with which he
walks"(al-Bukhari, Sahih, Riqaq, 38, reproduced in Mishkat al-Masabih,
Book 9, chap.2).
The Qur'anic verses and
prophetic traditions cited above show -- and there are many, many
more such verses and traditions -- that there is no justification
in the criticism that the Muslim God [and
there's only one Reality, Muslims worship the same God that is
the God of Adam and Abraham.] is a very remote Being,
incapable of showing a warm personal love to His creatures.
Dignity in Slavery
At this point we may also
mention the Muslim attitude of a slave ('abd) before God
as the Master, to which the some people often refer in a
derogatory way. But the relation of a slave
can be only derogatory between man and man and not between man
and the merciful, kind and loving Lord and Supporter of the
Universe. In his attitude of a slave before God a Muslim
finds dignity, not degradation, for this one slavery frees him
from all others -- the slavery to desires (45:23; 25:43) and to
religious leaders (9:31) and the worship of idols and deified
human beings (3:78-80). Nor does a Muslim's slavery to God have
anything of the implications read into it by these critics,
namely that as a slave the Muslim, or man generally, has no worth
before God. Quite the contrary, man is described in the Qur'an as
God's khalifa, representative or vicegerent, in the
material universe (2:30) who bears a unique amana (trust)
from God, one that nothing else could bear (33:72). In the one
concept of khalifa (vicegerency of man) the Qur'an gives
an idea of man's worth upon which it does not seem possible to
improve without collapsing the distinction between God and man.
[Making man khalifa gives him the
highest possible honor that can be bestowed upon a creature of
God.]