After faith, the second important requirement of religion is purification of
morals. This means that a person should cleanse his attitude both towards his
creator and towards his fellow human beings. This is what is termed as a
righteous deed. All the sharī‘ah is its corollary. With the change and evolution
in societies and civilizations, the sharī‘ah has indeed changed; however faith
and righteous deeds, which are the foundations of religion, have not undergone
any change. The Qur’ān is absolutely clear that any person who brings forth
these two things before the Almighty on the Day of Judgement will be blessed
with Paradise, which shall be his eternal abode.
The Qur’ān has also made it clear that just as the Almighty has blessed a
person with eyes to see and ears to hear, similarly, he has blessed him with a
faculty which distinguishes good and evil for him. A person is not mere body and
intellect. He is also a moral being. This means that the ability to distinguish
good from evil and the appreciation that good is good and evil is evil is
innately ordained in him. This appreciation of good from evil is a universal
reality. Thus when the most evil of persons does something wrong, he tries to
hide it in the first phase. Same is the case with good. A person loves what is
good and respects and reveres it. When he establishes a society, he always sets
up a system of justice in it. This is ample testimony of his innate ability to
distinguish between good and evil. No doubt, at times, a person may justify a
sin he commits, however, at the very time he invents excuses for this
justification, he very well knows that he is inventing these excuses against his
nature. The reason for this is that if someone else commits the same sin against
him, he regards it to be an evil without any hesitation, and vehemently protests
against that person.
However, in the interpretation of this innate
ability to distinguish between good and evil, there could have been differences
because of different circumstances and periods of time and because of a
variation in perception between people themselves. It is a great blessing of the
Almighty that He has not even left any possibility for such differences and
wherever there could have been a likelihood of any major difference, He
delineated good and evil through His messengers. The guidance provided by these
messengers is now eternally enshrined in the Qur’ān. This guidance testifies to
whatever a person finds within himself. Furthermore, man’s intuitive knowledge,
in fact even his empirical knowledge, knowledge derived from natural and
physical laws as well as knowledge derived from intellect all bear witness to
it. Consequently, good and bad morals, as a result of this, can be fully
ascertained.
Fundamental Principle
In this regard, the fundamental principle is that
God enjoins man to do justice, kindness and spending on the kindred, and forbids
lewdness, evil and arrogance. All this is in conformity with human nature and
hence they have been acknowledged in divine religions. The ten commandments of
the Torah are based on these and the Qur’ān too has actually explained them as
part of its moral directives. An explanation of these follows.
The first thing is justice. This means that whatever obligation is imposed on
a person viz a viz a fellow human, he discharges it the way it exactly is and in
an impartial manner, whether his fellow human being is weak or powerful and
whether he is liked or disliked by us.
The second thing is kindness (ihsān). It is over and above justice and is the
pinnacle of ethics and morality. It means that not only should a right be
fulfilled, it should also be fulfilled in a manner that a person is generous and
considerate in this regard. A person should give more than what is due on him
and should be happy to take what is less than his due. It is this attitude which
develops in a society the values of sympathy, compassion, sacrifice, sincerity,
gratitude and magnanimity. It is a result of these values that life becomes
sweet and blessed.
The third thing mentioned is spending on the near
ones. It is one of the most important corollaries of kindness and determines one
of its specific forms. It means that the near ones are not merely worthy of
justice and kindness from a person, they also deserve to be thought of as having
a share in one’s wealth. They should never be abandoned in case of need and
deprivation and like a person’s own family, their needs should also, as far as
possible, be generously fulfilled.
In contrast, three things are prohibited also.
The first of these is lewdness. It connotes
fornication, homosexuality and similar acts of lewdness.
The second thing is evil. It refers to sins which
mankind has generally recognized as sins, has always called them sins and so
obvious is the evil in them that no argument is needed to prove it. In every
good tradition of religion and culture, they are regarded as bad. At one
instance, the Qur’ān, by using the word munkar and at another by using the word
ithm for them, has clarified that they connote acts which are instrumental in
usurping the rights of others.
The third thing is arrogance and rebelliousness. It means that a person takes
undue advantage of his power and influence, exceeds his limits and tries to
usurp the rights of others whether they are of his Creator or of his fellow
human beings.
Good and Bad Morals
The Qur’ān has explained the brevity found in the basic
principle stated above in a manner that what is morally sound and what is
morally unsound has been clearly ascertained. The section of verses in which
they are mentioned begins with the prohibition of polytheism and also ends on
its emphatic forbiddance. Such a style is adopted in the Qur’ān to highlight the
importance of something. Here, the objective is to delineate the fact that it is
the belief in monotheism which is like a boundary wall that encircles the
directives of religion mentioned in these verses. If this boundary wall is
damaged everything that lies within it is exposed to danger. No doubt, this is
the supreme status of monotheism which these verses mention. It is the greatest
and the most fundamental requisite of justice which the Qur’ān directs its
followers to dispense. For this very reason, polytheism is called a great wrong
(zulmun ‘azīmun). The Qur’ān has also clearly stated the result of this great
wrong: it is an unforgivable sin in the eyes of God in retribution of which
people shall be humiliated and thrown into Hell.
What is polytheism?
Associating other gods with God Almighty is termed as polytheism (shirk) in the
terminology of the Qur’ān. It means:
a) to regard someone to have
the same genre as that of God or to regard God to have the same genre as
someone; or
b) to regard someone to have a
role in creation or in running the affairs of the creatures and in this manner
make someone God’s peer to some extent or another.
Examples of the first type of
polytheism are the beliefs of Christians and the Polytheists of Arabia about
Jesus (sws) and Mary (sws) and about the angels respectively. The belief of
wahdat al-wujūd of the mystics is another example of this.
Examples of the second type
are the beliefs regarding Brahmans, Vishnu and Shiva in Hinduism and the beliefs
regarding Ghaws, Qutb, Abdāl, Dāta and Gharīb Nawāz among Muslims. Belief in
evil spirits and stars and in the powers of Satan, also belong to this category
of polytheism.
The details of other directives
which are mentioned in this regard are as follows:
Worshipping God
The first directive is that since there is no god
except God, only He should be worshipped. The essence of this worship (‘ibādah)
is humility and modesty, as is indicated earlier. The
foremost manifestation of this essence is serving the Almighty. Since a person
also has a practical existence in this world, this servitude relates to this
practical existence as well and in this manner becomes inclusive of obedience.
The manifestations in the first case are glorifying Him and singing His praises,
praying to him and supplicating before Him, kneeling and prostrating before Him,
making vows (to please Him), offering animal sacrifice and doing i‘tikāf.
In the second case, a person,
after regarding someone as an independent law giver and ruler, considers that He
has the authority to give directives of what is forbidden and what is not and
what is allowed and what is not and submits before all His directives. It is the
verdict of God Almighty that none of the above mentioned things can be reserved
for someone other than Him. Thus if a person glorifies someone and sings his
praises or prays and supplicates before someone, kneels and prostrates before
him or presents vows before him or offers animal sacrifice to him or does
i‘tikāf for him or regards him to have the authority of prohibiting or allowing
things, then this would mean that he has refused to accept this verdict of God.
Treating Parents with Kindness
The second directive is that parents should be treated with kindness. This
directive is present in all divine scriptures. There is no doubt in the fact
that among human beings a person’s foremost obligation is towards his parents.
Thus after worshipping God, Muslims have been directed to fulfill it the
foremost. The reason for this is that it is the parents who bring a person into
existence and it is they who nourish and look after him. The Almighty has
counseled man to be thankful to both his parents the foremost after God. This
gratitude is not to be expressed merely through the tongue. There are some
essential requisites of this gratitude which the Qur’ān has related.
The first thing mentioned is that a person should treat his parents in a
manner that he shows respect to them not only outwardly but also from the depth
of his heart. He should not show any aversion to them in his heart and also not
say something before them which is against manners. In fact, he should treat
them with love, affection and decency and in a manner that reflects his
obedience to them. He should obey them and in the frailty of old age, comfort
them and be a means of re-assurance to them.
The second thing mentioned in this verse is that a person should always show
obedience and compliance to his parents and this obedience should arise from his
love and affection for them. Just as parents hide and protect their children the
way birds do through their wings, in a similar manner, children too should hide
and protect their parents in their wings of love and obedience. The reason is
that if ever children can repay their parents for their care it is through this
attitude. Without this attitude, this right of the parents can in no way be
fulfilled.
The third thing that is mentioned besides the above
behaviour is that a person should keep praying for his parents that the way his
parents raised them with affection and care, the Almighty should shower His
blessings on them in this old age. This prayer is a right of the parents on
their children and it is also a reminder for a person to fulfill this right
imposed on them. This prayer is also the motive for the feelings of love which
the Almighty has demanded from the children in treating their parents with
kindness.
In relationships which develop with other people
besides the parents, a person should have this same attitude in proportion to
their closeness to him. Thus the Almighty has also counseled a person to treat
his relatives, the orphan and the destitute, his neighbours, the traveler and
his subordinates with kindness.
Spending in Way of God
The third directive is to spend in the way of God. This means that just as a
person spends on himself the blessings bestowed upon him by God, he should also
spend them on his fellow brethren after fulfilling his personal and business
needs. It is evident from the Qur’ān that two things are required for a person
if he is to become a true servant of God: Firstly, one’s relationship with God
should be established on right footings. Secondly, the relationship with other
human beings should also be established on right footings. The first thing is
achieved through the prayer which is the foremost expression of one’s love for
God, and the second through spending in the way of God for this is the foremost
expression of one’s love for one’s fellow human beings. The reward for this
spending is also God’s love because whatever one spends he has it saved in the
heavens and in the words of the Prophet Jesus (sws), his heart too remains
occupied at this place, (Matthew, 6:19-21).
This spending in the way of God is the right of one’s relatives, orphans and
the needy which must necessarily be fulfilled. Any slackness in fulfilling this
right can, in the eyes of God, make a person a criminal who extorts the rights
of people. Thus, at another instance, the Qur’ān has clearly stated that if a
person starts amassing wealth while remaining indifferent to these rights then
this is hoarding and its punishment is the fire of Hell – from which every
believer should seek refuge with the Almighty.
Only people who adopt a balanced attitude in their spending and consider the
sustenance they have been given by God a blessing and not a result of their own
planning are afforded with the urge and will to spend in this manner.
Consequently, two further things are stated:
Wealth should not be squandered for it is a blessing of God and the right
attitude in this regard is that a person should spend it in a balanced and
efficient way on his permissible needs and whatever he saves he should consider
that he has been entrusted with it as a share for its rightful recipients and
with full caution discharge this duty of handing it over to them. The reason for
this is that a person who does not adopt a balanced attitude regarding his needs
is not able to even find time from his pastimes and pursuits to fulfill such
duties regarding others. The Qur’ān says that people who squander their wealth
are Satan’s brothers and Satan is very ungrateful to his Lord. He allures people
to his ways and entices them to spend on things which earn the displeasure of
God. While explaining the balanced attitude in this matter, the Qur’ān says that
a person should neither be miserly nor prodigal so that when he needs his
wealth, he ends up yearning for wealth and is reduced to indigence; on the other
hand, he should spend in a balanced way and always save something so that he is
able to help others whenever needed.
The other thing is that it is the wisdom and will of God which governs the
financial circumstances of a person. He may be blessed in abundance in this
regard or he may have to live hand to mouth. The only responsibility of a person
is that he should work hard to create opportunities for his livelihood. People
who do not understand this, not only do not spend on others, but many a time
become so callous as to even kill their children for fear of poverty. The
Qur’ānic verses which mention the directives of spending in the way of God, at
one place, specially alludes to the evil Arab custom of burying alive infant
girls in the time of jāhiliyyah. The psyche behind this was that since a woman
is not an earning member of the family, why should one bear the burden of her
up-bringing. The Qur’ān forbade this heinous practice and said that it is the
Almighty who provides for these innocent girls and also for those who indulge in
this practice. They should rest assured that the Almighty is ever-watching the
circumstances His servants are going through; He is not un-aware of them.
Chastity and Modesty
The fourth directive mentioned is that no one should even go near
fornication. The reason stated for this is that it is open lewdness and a very
dreadful practice. The implication is that no argument is required to prove its
awfulness and lewdness. Human nature, unless it is perverted, has always
regarded it to be a grave sin and a terrible crime. It is an indubitable reality
that the institution of family is as essential a need for a person as air and
water are. This institution can only sustain on natural feelings and emotions if
the relationship between the spouses is permanent. If this aspect is missing
then a society can only consist of a bunch of animals which are devoid of
natural and spiritual feelings and emotions; it cannot be founded on right
footings.
It is this very terrible nature of fornication because of which the Almighty
has not merely forbidden it; He has said to not even go near it. This means that
one should keep away from things that may lead to it or may ultimately entice a
person to it. The etiquette of gender interaction mentioned in the Qur’ān is
stated for these very reasons. A summary of this etiquette is that a man a woman
with regard to their physical and psychological needs should guard their gazes
and properly cover their private parts and should not do something that rouses
sexual emotions. The reason for this is that when Satan wants to give currency
to fornication in a society, he first of all begins from these places. It is
evident from the Qur’ān that it was through this very way that he had attacked
Adam and Eve. On this very basis, popularizing fornication and creating
opportunities which lead to it are regarded a crime by the Almighty.
Sanctity of Human Life
The fifth directive is that no one should kill any one.
This is a mention of the sanctity of human life which it always has had as per
morality and religion. The Qur’ān has informed us that prior to this, the
Israelites were also given this directive and the Almighty had ordained that
killing one human being was like killing whole mankind.
The Qur’ān has also clarified that the perpetrators of this
crime will not only have to face God, they will also have to reckon with the
heirs of the slain person and God has given them full authority in this regard,
and no court of justice can show any leniency to the murderer without the
consent of his heirs. Its responsibility is that if they insist on qisās, it
should help them and should implement with full force whatever they want.
Misappropriating the Wealth of Orphans
The sixth directive is that the wealth of orphans should not be
misappropriated. The words of this directive are the same as those of
fornication earlier: “Do not approach the wealth of orphans except for their
welfare and betterment.” The implication is that one should only use the wealth
of the orphans for their development and protection and this too should be done
till the time when orphans reach maturity and can be entrusted with their
wealth.
Keeping Promises
The seventh directive is that promises should be kept at all costs. The
Qur’ān here says that one shall be held accountable for promises. At some other
instances in the Qur’ān as well, this directive of keeping promises is mentioned
with the same emphasis. At the time of armed jihād also, the most important
directive which is stated in the Qur’ān is this keeping of promises. At one
instance, the Prophet (sws) and the Muslims have been directed to end their
treaties with the Idolaters of Arabia and launch the final onslaught. However,
this much has been clearly stated in it that treaties which are time-bound must
be honoured till the time period expires. At another instance, it has been
stated that if a nation with whom Muslims are bound in a pact is oppressing the
Muslims, then these Muslims cannot be helped in breach of this pact.
Honesty in Weighing
The eighth directive is that things should be weighed and measured with
honesty. The Almighty says that He has set the earth and the heavens on a scale
and thus it is necessary that a person in his circle should remain just and
measure with the right scale and weights. It is evident from this that this is a
very important directive and in its essence is actually a corollary of the scale
of justice on which this world has been created. Thus if anyone deviates from
it, it means that his conception of justice and fairness has become defective
and he actually does not believe in a just God. After this, obviously the
economic and social systems of the society are shaken from their bases and no
ingredient of the society remains in its place.
Adulteration in things is also a similar case. If a person mixes water in
milk, or sand in sugar or wheat in grain, he commits the same crime because even
if he weighs accurately he is not giving the buyer in full what he is buying.
This is like usurping the rights of others for which he will have to face grave
consequences both in this world and in that to come. Thus the Qur’ān has said:
“give full measure, when you measure, and weigh with correct scales. This is
better and fairer as far as the consequences are concerned.”
Following Speculations
The ninth directive is that one should not base one’s actions on
speculations. The reason is that the faculties of sight, hearing and intellect
shall one day be held accountable before God. The implication of this directive
is that it is not right for a Muslim to make bad estimations about other
Muslims, or make allegations against others or take some action against others
without proper knowledge of what the matter is or spread rumours merely on the
basis of speculation or form a view about God’s being and attributes and His
directives merely on the basis of conjecture and guesswork and unending
analogies.
Pride and Vanity
The tenth directive is that no one should walk with pride and vanity on God’s
earth because this is the gait of the conceited. It is thus said that howsoever
much a person may strike the earth with his feet, he will not be able to rent it
asunder and howsoever much a person may walk while raising his head he will not
be able to reach the heights of the mountains.
Such a gait obviously reflects one’s inner self. Wealth, authority, beauty,
knowledge, power and other similar things produce pride and vanity in a person.
Each of these produces a specific type of pride in one’s gait showing that his
heart is devoid of the perception of serving God and there is no concept in it
of God’s glory and greatness. The heart which has the perception of serving God
and of His greatness only beats in the chests of people who have humility.
Instead of walking arrogantly, they walk with their heads bent.
Here it should remain clear that pride and vanity are not merely reflected in
one’s gait: they are evident in one’s conversation, clothes, appearance and
behaviour as well. Hence the use of all such things should be regarded as
prohibited which reflect affluence or are a means of show and pomposity or are
instrumental in overawing others or belong to the mannerisms of rogues and
ruffians. So much so, that one should not adopt an arrogant appearance in
keeping the beard and the moustache and in wearing clothes.
Moreover, this mental state becomes a source of great sins. Consequently, it
is this conceit and arrogance which is instrumental in deliberately denying the
truth, in considering oneself superior to others on the basis of colour, creed
and race, in considering others to be inferior and making fun of them, in
censuring others, in calling them with bad names and in scandalizing the faults
of others in their absence. God has strictly forbidden all these.
Like the Ten Commandments of the Torah, these are the ten commandments of the
Qur’ān. All morals are their corollary. What the Almighty has regarded as great
sins and acts of vulgarity emerge from disobeying these directives. The Qur’ān
unequivocally states that people can be punished for this disobedience in the
Hereafter. Thus every Muslim should remain cautious about it. The following
three things should remain in consideration in this regard.
Firstly, if the disobedience is unintentional, God will not hold a person
accountable. His law is that if a person unintentionally commits something which
apparently is a misdeed, however, he has no intention of committing this
misdeed, the Almighty will not punish him.
Secondly, if a person is able to abstain from disobeying these directives,
then its reward is that his minor sins will be forgiven by the Merciful Lord
other wise all his major and minor sins will be recorded in the register of his
deeds and he will have to give their account.
Thirdly, if a person disobeys any of these directives while being overwhelmed
with emotions, he should repent and mend his ways. It is essential that he
repent as soon as possible. The Almighty has clearly stated in the Qur’ān that
He will forgive people who commit a sin while being overwhelmed with emotions if
they repent right after it. He will not forgive people who sin all their lives
and repent when they see death approaching. Similarly, He will not forgive
people who deliberately reject the truth if they continue with this attitude
till their death.
The Qur’ān has ascertained two cases in which repentance shall be accepted by
the Almighty. After this, one case remains: a person was not able to repent
right after his sin; however, he did not delay repentance till his death. In
this case, the Qur’ān is silent. This silence creates hope as well as fear and
the purport of the Qur’ān also seems that one should remain between hope and
fear in this case. It is such people who would hopefully attain salvation
through the intercession of the Prophet (sws).
Pinnacle of Morality
When a person reaches the pinnacle of morality with regard to his creator and
his fellow human beings the qualities which emerge in him are also stated at one
place in the Qur’ān by the Almighty. These are ten qualities and in the whole of
its corpus, the Qur’ān has not added to this list. They reflect the pinnacle of
religion. It urges its followers to try to engender these qualities in
themselves.
Here are the details of these qualities.
Islām
The first quality is Islām (showing submission to God). When this word is
mentioned right after Īmān the way it is here, then it signifies the external
form of Islām, ie the directives which relate to the deeds and words and the
physical entity of a person. Thus if the tongue of a person is willing to speak
and abstain from speaking at the behest of God and His Prophet (sws); if his
ears are ready to hear and stop hearing at their bidding, if his hands are
prepared to strike and restrain themselves at their command and if his feet are
keen to walk and stop at their directive, then this is nothing but Islām. It is
evident from the Qur’ān that the best examples of Islām are the Prophets
themselves. Thus we have been directed to follow them to reach this position of
submitting to God and being content and happy with His decisions.
Īmān
The second quality is having īmān (faith). This is the inner aspect of
religion and here it implies the full faith one has about the promises of God
together with His true cognizance. Thus a person who believes in God in such a
manner that he submits himself totally to him and is satisfied over His
decisions in the utmost manner, then such a person is called a mu’min (true
believer). It is through īmān that hearts are purified, intellect receives
guidance and intentions are cleansed. It is this faith which affects both one’s
ideologies and one’s deeds simultaneously and embraces one’s whole being. Then
with the remembrance of God, with reciting His revelations and with the
manifestation of His signs in the world within a person and that outside, his
faith grows. It is this faith whose requirement mentioned in
the Qur’ān is that nothing in this world should be dearer to a true believer
than the Almighty and His Prophet (sws).
Humbling Oneself before God
The third quality is humbling oneself before God. This is an inner expression
of a person which sets a person forever at the obedience of his Lord with full
sincerity and dedication. This is the most prominent manifestation of the
relationship between the Lord and His worshippers in the inner-self of a
believer. Those who humble themselves before God are people who always serve God
and in no circumstances become rebellious against their Lord. Sorrow, happiness,
vivacity, exuberance and moments of bliss or grief do not swerve them from
obedience. Even sexual impulses, strong desires and onslaughts of emotions do
not make them stumble before their Lord. Their hearts acknowledge His grandeur
and greatness and they consider the sharī‘ah a set of divine directives given by
God to them in His very presence and can’t even think of evading what is given
in this manner. A little deliberation shows that this is the very state of this
entire universe and all its creation.
Veracity
The fourth quality is veracity. It means that a person’s intention, words and
deeds are upright and in harmony with one another. A person should not utter a
single word which is untrue, his deeds should not contradict his words and if he
adheres to every word he gives, then this is the veracity of his words and
deeds; however, this should necessarily be supplemented with the veracity of his
intentions. The Qur’ān has termed its antithesis as hypocrisy and at various
places clarified that to God that real deeds are those which spring forth from
within a person; thus the pinnacle of veracity is achieved through this harmony
of words and deeds and intention.
Patience
The fifth quality is patience. Its primary meaning is to restrain oneself
from restlessness and anxiety. Then the meaning of showing perseverance and
resolve on one’s stance while encountering hardships and hindrances was
incorporated into it. It is not something akin to weakness and frailty that a
person is forced to adopt when he is helpless and weak; on the contrary, it is
the fountainhead of determination and resolve and the pinnacle of human
character. It is because of patience that a person becomes internally strong and
instead of complaining about the dreadful experiences of life, welcomes them
accepting them whole-heartedly and considers them to be from God, is never
worried if his efforts are not bearing fruit, is not restless and uneasy, is not
revengeful even against those who harm him, is steadfast in defending the truth
even if death stares at him, exercises restraint both in times of joy and sorrow
and all his life diligently discharges what he thinks to be his obligation.
It is this aspect of human character because of which the relationship of
tawakkul (trust) is established between him and his creator and, in all
circumstances, he trusts Him. The Qur’ānic wordsإِنَّا للَّهِ
وَ إِنَّا إلِيْهِ رَاجِعُوْن (٢:
١٥٥) (We are for God and to Him shall
we return, (2:155)) express this very trust and submission. The Qur’ān says that
those who abide by these words all their life and die on it will be rewarded
with special favours from their Lord.
Khushū‘ (Humility)
The sixth quality is khushū‘. The humility and meekness which is engendered
in a person as a result of comprehending the awe, grandeur and majesty of God is
called khushū‘ by the Qur’ān. This is an internal feeling of a person which
makes him submit himself before God and also produces in him the feelings of
mercy and love for other human beings.
In the first case, its best manifestation is the prayer, especially the
tahajjud prayer when a believer communicates with the Almighty while being cut
off from the world, and nothing except the remembrance of God fill his secluded
moments.
In the second case, this feeling effects the whole personality of a believer
and makes him an embodiment of affection for his family and very caring and
sympathetic towards his friends, neighbours and acquaintances and a fountainhead
of guidance for the society. Consequently, it is because of such kind, humane
and benevolent people that comes into being a society which is a paradise of God
on earth and the objective and desire of every upright person.
Charity
The seventh quality is being charitable. One level of spending in the way of
God is that one should pay the obligatory zakāh from his wealth. A higher level
is that he considers whatever wealth remains with him after spending on his
personal and business needs to be the right of the society and whenever he sees
someone in need, he whole-heartedly helps him. The third and the highest level
in this regard is that he fulfills the needs of others while sacrificing his own
needs and ignoring his own desires. The words “those who give in charity” can be
used for all these three levels. However, when enumerating the qualities of a
person, he is called so, it would primarily refer to the highest level mentioned
above. In other words, this quality in a person means that he is a generous and
large-hearted person who is always on the look out to spend in the way of God.
This actually is a manifestation of the previously mentioned khusū‘ – this time
in relation to human beings. It was for this reason that the prayer and spending
in the way of God are generally mentioned adjacently in the Qur’ān.
The Fast
The eighth quality is keeping the fast. It specifically targets disciplining
the soul and nurturing patience. The Qur’ān says that its objective is to
achieve piety (taqwā). Thus al-sā’imīn (those who fast) are people who have such
a strong desire to become pious that they fast as much as they can to attain it.
It follows from this that these people are the ones who abstain from evil,
desist from vulgarity and their life is an embodiment of the highest of morals.
Guarding the Private Parts (hifz-i furūj)
The ninth quality is guarding the private parts (hifz-i furūj). This is a
consequence of disciplining the soul and of piety. This expression which refers
to people who refrain from nudity, lewdness and vulgarity also occurs in some
other verses of the Qur’ān. The implication is that they guard their chastity
and modesty to the utmost. Thus except at instances they are allowed to reveal
themselves, they never do so whether in private or in public. They also do not
wear clothes which reveal body parts that have sexual attraction in any manner
for the opposite gender. It is this extent of abstaining from vulgarity that
produces a society in which chastity reigns supreme and men and women instead of
trying to reveal their bodies are anxious to conceal them as much as they can.
Remembering God in Abundance
The tenth quality is remembering God in abundance. When the thought of his
Lord takes firm ground in the heart of a person, he does not consider it enough
to merely worship his God at the specified times of the day; he constantly tries
to remember God at all times. When he sees a sign of God, his tongue
spontaneously utters the words سُبْحَانَ اللهِ (glory
be to Allah). He begins all his tasks and routines by saying
بِسْمِ الله (in the name of Allah). When he receives a favour from his
Lord, he expresses his gratitude by the words الْحَمْدُ لله
(gratitude is for Allah). He never expresses his intention for something
without uttering the words إِنْ شَاءَ الله (if Allah
wills) and مَا شَاءَ الله (what Allah wills). He
seeks God’s help in all his affairs. He asks Him for His mercy on every calamity
that befalls him. He turns to Him in every hardship. He remembers God before
going to sleep and begins his day by taking His name. In short, at all instances
and at all moments, he is constantly in contact with his Lord. Not only this;
when he prays, he remembers God; when he fasts, he remembers God; when he
recites the Qur’ān, he remembers God, when he spends on the poor, he remembers
God; when he abstains from sin, he remembers God; when he falls in sin, he
remembers God and becomes anxious to seek forgiveness from Him; one form of this
remembrance is reflection: when we look at the world created by God, we see an
astounding variety in the countless creatures He has created; we see the
astounding products of human intellect around us; we see stormy seas and flowing
rivers, lush green vegetation, abundant rain and the sequence of days and
nights. We witness the outcome of winds and clouds. We also see how the heavens
and the earth have been made and the astonishing way in which they are built;
their benefits and uses for us are also apparent to us; they have a purpose and
meaning to them; then we have the signs of God that are found not only in the
world around us but also in the world within us; every now and then these signs
appear in new and more enchanting forms. When a believer reflects on these signs
of God, his heart and mind are filled with the remembrance of God. Consequently,
he spontaneously declares: God! You have not made this world without a purpose;
it is against Your knowledge and stature to do something meaningless and
purposeless; I know this world will definitely culminate in a day of judgement
in which people would be punished who spent their lives thinking that the world
had been created by a merry-maker for merry making; I seek refuge with you from
their fate. |