ONLY
LOVE CAN DEFEAT
TERRORISM
In the Qur'an (32: 9) , God reveals that He has breathed
His own soul into Man, His creation, and that Man is His representative
on earth (Qur'an, 6: 165). One of the most important
differences between Man and the animals is that Man was created
with both earthly desires and with a conscience. Every person
possesses desires that incite him to evil, along with a conscience
that inspires him to avoid it. Alongside such pleasing attributes
inspired by that conscience--love, sacrifice, compassion,
humility, affection, honesty, loyalty and kindness--he also
possesses destructive and undesirable tendencies, stemming
from his earthly desires. Thanks to his conscience, however,
the believer can distinguish between right and wrong and opt
for what is morally right. Strong belief in and fear of God,
faith in the hereafter, powerful fear of the endless torments
of hell and a yearning for Paradise all keep the temptations
of his earthly desires at bay. Therefore, he always behaves
well towards people, is forgiving, responds to wickedness
with good, assists those in need, and shows compassion, love,
affection and tolerance.
Terrorists, on the other hand, listen to their earthly desire
for violence instead of their consciences, and can easily
turn to all forms of wickedness. They become loveless, aggressive
people who easily hurt others without the slightest pang of
conscience. Having no fear of God, they do not know the morality
of religion, nor do they practice it. Nothing can stop them
from committing crimes.
In restraining its citizens, society's prevailing rules can
go only so far. Thanks to its law enforcement units, the state
may be able to partially protect streets and public spaces,
and--thanks to a powerful system of justice--may be able to
take necessary means to ensure public order and ensure that
the crime rate drops. But since it's impossible to keep watch
on every individual, 24 hours a day, it's essential that peoples'
consciences enter the equation at some stage. Someone who
doesn't heed the voice of his conscience can easily turn to
crime when on his own, or surrounded by people of like mind.
The result is a society of individuals who gladly lie when
they feel it necessary, have no compunction against enjoying
unfair profits, and feel no qualms about oppressing and exploiting
the weak. In a society that has lost all spiritual values
and has no fear of God, purely physical measures are clearly
not going to solve every problem. The morality of religion,
on the other hand, commands a person to avoid evil deeds,
even when on his own and when he knows that nobody in his
community will ever punish him for his misdeeds. The person
who knows that God will call him to account for his every
deed, his every decision and his every word--and will reward
him for them accordingly in the hereafter--will always avoid
evil.
Terrorist organizations can't possibly have any place in
a society whose people avoid evil of their own free will.
Where religion's morality prevails, problems that give rise
to organizations supporting the use of violence will disappear
naturally. If the whole society possesses superior virtues
like honesty, sacrifice, love and justice, there can be no
place for such things as poverty, unequal distribution of
income, injustice, the oppression of the weak, or limitations
on freedoms. On the contrary, a social order will emerge that
meets the wants of the needy; where the wealthy protect the
poor and the strong, the weak; where everyone can enjoy the
very best health care, education, and transport systems. There,
tolerance and understanding will dominate the relationships
between different ethnic groups, religions and cultures.
For these reasons, proper morality is the key to solving
so many social problems. The source of that key, in turn,
is the Qur'an, which God has revealed as a guide for mankind.
MODERATE ISLAM-IN OTHER WORDS, TRUE ISLAM
For half a century after the first verse
was revealed to the Prophet Muhammad (may God bless him and
grant him peace), Islam underwent such an expansion as has
seldom been seen. It spread from the Arabian Peninsula to
the whole of the Middle East, North Africa and even Spain,
drawing the attention of many in the West. In the words of
the famous Islamic expert John L. Esposito, "What is most
striking about the early expansion of Islam is its rapidity
and success. Western scholars have marveled at it."12
Over the next centuries, Islam reached all corners of the
world, from Indonesia to Latin America. Today, Islam is accepted
as the fastest growing religion, and its roughly one billion
followers represent about one-fifth of the world's population.
Interest in Islam particularly increased after the terrorist
attacks of September 11, 2001. (For more details, see The
Rise of Islam by Harun Yahya).
Looking at today's Islamic world today, we see a wide range
of religious practices, depending on societies' different
customs and traditions, their cultural heritage, and world
views. This has led some individuals researching or trying
to understand Islam to form mistaken impressions. Those differences
may symbolize only the traditional values of the society under
examination, but Islam itself. The only way of arriving at
an accurate opinion of Islam is to put aside these differences
and turn to the Qur'an, where the essence of Islamic morality
is set out, and to the actions of our Prophet (may God bless
him and grant him peace).
Even if Muslims comprise the majority in a community, that
does not mean that community's behavior, views and judgments
will necessarily be Islamic, nor that they need be defended
in the name of Islam. When evaluating an individual's-or community's-view
of Islam, that must always be borne in mind. Differences may
stem from prevailing conditions. The only way to ascertain
whether those views are correct is by turning to the Qur'an,
the most accurate source of truth about Islam, and to the
actions of our Prophet (may God bless him and grant him peace).
It is most unfair to pass judgment on Islam and Muslims without
studying the Qur'an to learn whether a particular practice
appears in it. Examining the lifestyle of a single community
only can seriously mislead anyone who tries to understand
Islam and form opinions about it. First, what needs to be
done is to learn about Islam from its true source. Then, once
the various models in different parts of the world are considered
in the light of those criteria, many who only imagined they
knew about Islam will actually come to do so for the first
time; and can free themselves from the errors they have been
laboring under so far.
Islam Forbids the Killing of Innocents
According to the Qur'an (5:32), it is a great sin to kill
an innocent person, and anyone who does so will suffer great
torment in the hereafter:
… If someone kills another person--unless
it is in retaliation for someone else or for causing corruption
in the earth--it is as if he had murdered all mankind. And
if anyone gives life to another person, it is as if he had
given life to all mankind. Our Messengers came to them with
Clear Signs, but even after that, many of them committed outrages
in the earth."
This verse equals the killing of one innocent to slaughtering
all of humanity! Another verse (25:68) expresses the importance
that the faithful attach to life:
Those who do not appeal to any other deity
besides God [alone]; nor kill any soul whom God has forbidden
[them to] except with the right to do so; nor fornicate. Anyone
who does so will incur a penalty.
Terrorism
targets the innocent, although God forbids the killing
of even one innocent person. |
In yet another verse (6:151), God issues the following commandment:
Say: "Come, and I will recite to you what
your Lord has forbidden for you": that you do not associate
anything with Him; that you are good to your parents; that
you do not kill your children because of poverty--We will
provide for you and them; that you do not approach indecency
- outward or inward; that you do not kill any person God has
made inviolate - except with the right to do so. That is what
He instructs you to do, so that hopefully, you will use your
intellect.
Any Muslim who believes in God with a sincere heart, who
scrupulously abides by His holy verses and fears suffering
in the hereafter, will avoid harming even one other person.
He knows that the Lord of Infinite Justice will suitably reward
him for all his deeds. In one of the hadiths, our Prophet
(may God bless him and grant him peace) listed the kinds of
people who are not pleasing to God:
"Those who act cruelly and justly in
the sacred lands, those who yearn for the ways of the ignorant,
and those who wrongly shed human blood."13
Islam Commands People to Behave Justly
Islamic morality commands believers to behave justly and
morally in making a decision, speaking, or working--in short,
in every area of their lives. God's commandments in the Qur'an
and the sunnah of our Prophet (may God bless him and grant
him peace) describe that understanding of justice in great
detail. With their warnings, all the Messengers revealed to
us in the Qur'an brought peace and justice to all the communities
where they were sent. The prophets helped lift cruelty and
despotism from the shoulders of the community of the faithful.
As God has revealed in one verse (10:47):
Every nation has a Messenger, and
when their Messenger comes, everything is decided between
them justly. They are not wronged.
A most important feature of Islamic understanding of justice
is that it commands justice at all times, even if one is dealing
with a person who is near and dear. As God commands in another
verse (4:135):
You who believe! Be upholders of justice,
bearing witness for God alone, even against yourselves or
your parents and relatives. Whether they are rich or poor,
God is well able to look after them. Do not follow your own
desires and deviate from the truth. If you twist or turn away,
God is aware of what you do.
That verse clearly states that to a believer, the wealth
or social status of whomever one deals with is of no importance.
What is important is fairness-no one should be treated unjustly--and
to scrupulously implement the holy verses of God. In another
verse (5:8), it is commanded:
You who believe! Show integrity for the sake
of God, bearing witness with justice. Do not let hatred for
a people incite you into not being just. Be just. That is
closer to heedfulness. Heed God. God is aware of what you
do.
In that verse, God orders the faithful to act justly always,
even with their own enemies. No Muslim can make a spontaneous
decision, based on the fact that the person he's dealing with
has once harmed him or left him in a difficult situation.
Even when he is a personal enemy, if the other side is genuinely
in the wrong, any Muslim has the duty to respond with good
will and to display the morality God has commanded.
To believers, God has issued the following commandment (60:8):
"God does not forbid you from being good to those
who have not fought you in the religion or driven you from
your homes, or from being just towards them. God loves those
who are just." Here, He informs Muslims how their
relationships with other people should be. These verses are
the very foundation of a believer's attitude towards others,
formed not by the nature of the people he is dealing with,
but by God's revelations in the Qur'an. That is why Muslims
with pure hearts always support what is right. Their determination
on this matter is revealed in these terms (Qur'an, 7:181):
"Among those We have created, there is a community who guide
by the Truth and act justly according to it."
Other verses in the Qur'an on the subject of justice read:
God commands you to return to their owners
the things you hold on trust and, when you judge between people,
to judge with justice. How excellent is what God exhorts you
to do! God is All-Hearing, All-Seeing. (4:58)
Say: "My Lord has commanded justice. Stand
and face Him in every mosque and call on Him, making your
religion sincerely His. As He originated you, so you will
return." (7:29)
God commands justice and doing good and giving
to relatives. And He forbids indecency and doing wrong and
tyranny. He warns you so that hopefully, you will pay heed.
(16:90)
All over the world, people are subjected
to cruel treatment because of their race, language or skin
color. Yet according to the view of justice as set out in
the Qur'an, a person's ethnicity, race or gender are of no
importance, because Islam maintains that all people are equal.
Our Prophet's (may God bless him and grant him peace) words,
"All of you belong to one ancestry of Adam, and Adam was created
out of clay,"14 stress that there is no
difference between people. Skin color, social status and wealth
confer no superiority on anyone.
According to the Qur'an, one reason why different tribes,
peoples, and nations were created is so that they "might come
to know one another." All are servants of God and must come
to learn one another's different cultures, languages, customs
and abilities. One intent behind the existence of different
nations and races is cultural wealth, not war and conflict.
All true believers know that only godliness --in other words,
the fear of God and faith in Him--can impart superiority.
As God has revealed in the Qur'an (49:13):
Mankind! We created you from a male and female,
and made you into peoples and tribes so that you might come
to know each other. The noblest among you in God's sight is
that one of you who best performs his duty. God is All-Knowing,
All-Aware.
Racial and
national differences between people are not an element
of conflict, but a source of cultural wealth. |
Elsewhere (30:22), He has revealed that:
Among His Signs is the creation of the heavens
and earth and the variety of your languages and colors. There
are certainly Signs in that for every being.
History offers many examples of the faithful behaving with
complete justice towards other peoples, helping Islam grow
with unbelievable speed over a wide area, taking in North
Africa, the whole Middle East and even the Iberian Peninsula.
By means of these conquests, the civility and tolerance of
Islamic morality was spread to many races, nations, communities
and individuals, bringing together millions in a bond of mutual
tolerance, the likes of which had never been seen before.
The renowned researcher Joel Augustus Rogers has examined
the various races and the relationship between the black race
and other countries. In his book Sex and Race, he
describes Islam's influence on the world in these terms:
Joel Augustus Rogers |
One reason why Islam was able to survive
so brightly for centuries is the almost complete absence in
this religion of value-judgements based on race and class,
the disregarding of the colour of an individual's skin or
his social class and the fact that promotion to the highest
levels of a community is based on ability alone… Islam established
the greatest and at the same time the freest racial melting-pot
in history, and the mixing of these races took place within
the body of the most extensive empire the world has ever seen.
At the height of its power the Islamic Empire stretched from
Spain and central France in the West to India, China and the
Pacific Ocean in the East, including Central Asia. The rulers
of these extensive territories were of various colours. The
colour of peoples' skins was even less important for Muslims
than the colours of the flowers in a garden is to the flowers
themselves.15
Professor Hamilton Alexander Rossken Gibb is one of the world's
foremost experts on Islam. In his book Whither Islam?,
he describes the Islamic view of other races:
No other society has such a record of success
uniting in an equality of status, of opportunity, and of endeavors
so many and so various races of mankind… Islam has still the
power to reconcile apparently irreconcilable elements of race
and tradition. If ever the opposition of the great societies
of East and West is to be replaced by cooperation, the mediation
of Islam is an indispensable condition.16
Islamic morality aims at a society built on brotherhood and
peace, freedom and security. That is why all communities that
come into contact with Islam have given up their oppressive,
cruel and aggressive ways and have, instead, built peaceful
and civilized societies. (For further details, see Justice
and Tolerance in the Qur'an by Harun Yahya.)
In their works, many Western historians have documented Islam's
deep and positive affects on communities that came into contact
with it. In The Making of Humanity, Professor Robert
Briffault discusses the relationship between Western society
and Islam:
The ideas that inspired the French Revolution
and the Declaration of Rights, that guided the framing of
the American Constitution and inflamed that struggle for independence
in the Latin American countries [and elsewhere] were not inventions
of the West. They find their ultimate inspiration and source
in the Holy Quran.17
These extracts indicate how, down through the centuries,
Islamic morality has taught people about peace, tolerance
and justice. Nowadays, nearly everyone is seeking just such
a model, and there is no reason why such a culture should
not come about once again. All that is needed is people's
desire to live by the morality of the Qur'an, starting with
themselves and later, making efforts to convey it to others.
When everyone, from the highest ranks to the very lowest,
begins to implement the morality commanded in the Qur'an,
they will become just, compassionate, tolerant, full of love,
respectful and forgiving. That, in turn, will bring peace
to all of society.
The Muslim Should Use Soft Words to Call
People to the Morality of Islam
Every Muslim has the duty to call others to the morality
of Islam, to inform them of the existence of God and the proofs
of His creation. God Himself has revealed that responsibility
in Verse 3: 104: "Let there be a community
among you who call to the good, and enjoin the right, and
forbid the wrong. They are the ones who have success."
He also reveals how that invitation is to be made:
Call [them] to the way of your Lord with
wisdom and fair admonition, and argue with them in the kindest
way. Your Lord knows best who is misguided from His way, and
He knows best who are guided. (16:125)
Correct and courteous words accompanied by
forgiveness are better than charity followed by insulting
words. God is Rich Beyond Need, All-Forbearing. (2:263)
True believers know the importance of this responsibility,
described in Verse 3:114: "They believe
in God and the Last Day, and enjoin the right and forbid the
wrong, and compete in doing good. They are among the righteous."
Therefore, they call on all those around them--friends, relatives,
everyone they can reach--to believe in God, fear Him, and
display a proper morality. This pleasing characteristic of
Muslims is described in Verse 9:71:
The men and women of the believers are friends
of one another. They command what is right and forbid what
is wrong, and perform prayer and pay charity tax, and obey
God and His Messenger. They are the people on whom God will
have mercy. God is Almighty, All-Wise.
From this verse, it's clear that all believers, throughout
the course of their lives, are charged with explaining that
proper morality, living by it themselves, recommending good
deeds to others and advising them to avoid evil. God commands
believers to use soft words, "Say to
My servants that they should only say the best…" (17:53)
God describes good words and bad in this analogy in the Qur'an
(14:24-27):
Do you do not see how God makes a metaphor
of a good word: a good tree whose roots are firm and whose
branches are in heaven? It bears fruit regularly by its Lord's
permission. God makes metaphors for people so that hopefully
they will be reminded. The metaphor of a corrupt word is that
of a rotten tree, uprooted on the surface of the earth. It
has no staying-power. God makes those who believe firm with
the Firm Word in the life of this world and the hereafter.
But God misguides the wrongdoers. God does whatever He wills.
Anyone who wishes to lead a virtuous life should encourage
others toward virtue. Anyone who wants to see good should
make an effort to help spread it. Anyone who wants to see
others behave according to their conscience should encourage
them to do so, and anyone who opposes cruelty should warn
those who engage in it. In short, anyone who wants right to
prevail should call on all others to abide by it. When issuing
that call, however, it's most important to keep in mind that
only God can inspire people to become Muslims, and cause words
pleasing to them to have any effect. God has revealed that
our Prophet (may God bless him and grant him peace), as a
result of his noble character and superior morality, always
treated people well--and has recommended him as a role model
for all mankind.
Not so!
All who submit themselves completely to God and who
do good will find their reward with their Lord. They
will feel no fear and will know no sorrow.
(Qur'an, 2:112)
God does not wrong anyone by so much as the smallest
speck. And if there is a good deed, God will multiply
it and pay out an immense reward direct from Him.
(Qur'an, 4:40) |
Islam Commands Solidarity and Cooperation
Among People
In the Qur'an (5:2), God has issued this command:
... help each other to goodness and godliness. Do
not help each other to wrongdoing and enmity. Have fear of
God. God is severe in retribution.
As that verse makes clear, the faithful struggle only for
what is good. They consider the words of God in Verse 4:127
of the Qur'an: "Whatever good you do,
God knows it." They never forget that they will be
recompensed for all they do in the sight of our Lord, but
God reveals that pleasing mutual aid needs to be in a framework
of "good and godliness." The meaning of goodness is also explained
in Verse 2:177:
It is not devoutness to turn your faces to
the East or to the West. Rather, those with true devoutness
are those who believe in God and the Last Day, the Angels,
the Book and the Prophets, and who, despite their love for
it, give away their wealth to their relatives and to orphans
and the very poor, and to travelers and beggars, and to set
slaves free, and who perform prayer and pay charity tax; those
who honor their contracts when they make them, and are steadfast
in poverty and illness and in battle. Those are the people
who act loyal. They are the people who guard against evil.
True goodness, therefore, is rather different from the way
society in general perceives it. Those who do not live by
the morality of the Qur'an view good deeds as favors they
confer, whenever they happen to feel like it. Usually they
restrict such good deeds to giving money to a beggar, or giving
up their seat on the bus to an elderly person.
Yet as we have seen from the above verse, the Qur'an describes
goodness as a concept encompassing the whole of a believer's
life, as an obligation that must be fulfilled throughout the
course of his life, not only when he feels like it or happens
to remember it. As a servant, any Muslim possesses true sincerity
and helps the poor and needy, even if he himself is in need,
even giving up the things he loves (Qur'an, 76:8). In Verse
51:19, which reads, "And beggars and
the destitute received a due share of their wealth," God
has revealed that rendering assistance, helping others, and
doing good are all incumbent upon Muslims. They give help
unconditionally; and believers are ready to make any sacrifice
to encourage others towards what is good. They expect nothing
in return, apart from winning the pleasure of God. In Verse
76:9-10, God describes such behavior by believers:
We feed you only out of desire for the Face of God.
We do not want any repayment from you nor any thanks. Truly
We fear from our Lord a glowering, calamitous Day.
Qur'anic
morality demands humility, tolerance, and kindness.
Peace and security reign in societies which live by
these virtues. |
Muslims know that God is the Lord of infinite justice, and
never forget that their good behavior will be suitably rewarded
in the hereafter. Nor do they forget that life in this world
is only temporary, and that their true home lies in the sight
of God. In the Qur'an, He warns people of their inevitable
end, and calls on them all to behave in a manner pleasing
to Him:
We did not create the heavens and earth and
everything between them, except with truth. The Hour is certainly
coming, so turn away graciously. (15:85)
Worship God and do not associate anything
with Him. Be good to your parents and relatives and to orphans
and the very poor, and to neighbors who are related to you
and neighbors who are not related to you, and to companions
and travelers and your slaves. God does not love anyone vain
or boastful. (4:36)
The recompense for those who exhibit pleasing behavior is
of great good news for all of mankind, and is revealed in
these verses, in these terms:
But as for those who believe and do right
actions, We will not let the wage of good-doers go to waste.
(50:30)
When those who have done their duty are asked,
"What has your Lord sent down?" their reply is, "Good!" There
is good in this world for those who do good, and the abode
of the hereafter is even better. How wonderful is the abode
of those who guard against evil: Gardens of Eden which they
enter, with rivers flowing under them, where they have whatever
they desire. That is how God repays those who guard against
evil. (16:30-31)
Islam Commands Us to Do Good and Avoid Evil
Believers learn the true meaning of good and evil from the
Qur'an, a book revealed by God as the Standard by which to
discern the true from the false." Concepts such as good and
bad, right and wrong, are elucidated in the Qur'an with examples
that everyone can understand. The faithful's fear of God gives
them light and understanding to help them distinguish between
good and bad. (8:29)
Muslims spend their whole lives implementing their awareness
of the good and evil, as described in the Qur'an. Yet they
take another important responsibility onto their shoulders:
inviting others to see the truth, to avoid evil, and live
by the morality of the Qur'an. Believers spend their lives
telling people about the difference between good and evil,
because to the faithful, God has given the following command
(3:104):
Let there be a community among you who call to the
good, and enjoin the right, and forbid the wrong. They are
the ones who have success.
In Verse 3:110, God stresses how those who abide by this
commandment are much more auspicious than others:
You are the best nation ever to be produced before
mankind. You enjoin the right, forbid the wrong and believe
in God. If the People of the Book were to believe, it would
be better for them. Some of them are believers, but most of
them are deviators.
The faithful perform that Qur'anic duty not only in respect
for those ignorant of the difference between right and wrong
and with no knowledge of religion, but also in respect for
the faithful themselves. People fall into error not only out
of ignorance, but sometimes out of forgetfulness, by mistake,
or when driven by earthly desires. That being so, the faithful
encourage good and prevent evil by reminding one another of
the Qur'an's commandments. They warn each other that in this
world, those who fail to avoid evil will suffer the torments
of hell; that only those who do good and devoutly carry out
their religious obligations will be rewarded with Paradise.
That delightful responsibility means that they never need
feel wearied or discouraged while continuing to warn others
compassionately and affectionately, no matter what mistakes
they might have made. In many verses, God reveals that He
loves those who have patience, and calls on the faithful to
be patient when practicing the morality of the Qur'an:
You who believe! Seek help in steadfastness
and prayer. God is with the steadfast. (2:153)
… Those who are steadfast and do right actions.
They will receive forgiveness and a large reward. (11:11)
Islam Commands us to Repay Evil with Good
A good action and a bad action are not the
same. Repel the bad with something better and, if there is
enmity between you and someone else, he will be like a bosom
friend. (41:34)
Ward off evil with what is better. We know
very well what they express. (23:96)
In these verses, God promises the faithful that they can
secure positive results, so long as they adopt a pleasant
attitude in the face of wrongdoing. The Qur'an emphasizes
that even when a believer is dealing with an enemy, still
he can establish a warm friendship. Responding to evil with
good is also an essential part of compassion. When any believer
sees others adopting an attitude that will not be pleasing
to God, he considers first of all how that will affect them
in the hereafter. Then he approaches them with toleration
and humility, refusing to let himself become puffed up with
pride.
Over the course of their lives, believers may come across
people of very different characters. Yet they will not change
their view of morality according to the people they meet.
Others may speak mockingly, use ugly words, become angry,
or even behave in a hostile manner. Yet the true believer
never ceases to be polite, modest, and compassionate. He will
not respond to ugly words with more of the same. He will not
laugh at those who mock him, nor answer anger with anger,
but remains patient and tolerant. In the face of insulting
behavior, he will respond with proper morality, and with such
compassion that the other will feel ashamed.
That
is the morality our Prophet (may God bless him and grant him
peace) recommends to us. In one of the hadiths, he says, "You
do not return evil for evil, but excuse and forgive."--
18 In another hadith, he calls on the faithful
in these terms: "None of you must be the kind of weak
person who says, 'He who has no compassion will receive none.'
"19
In the Qur'an (5:13), our Prophet (may God bless him and
grant him peace) was told to be forgiving when betrayed by
some of the children of Israel:
… They have forgotten a good portion of what they
were reminded of. You will never cease to come upon some act
of treachery on their part, except for a few of them. Yet
pardon them, and overlook. God loves good-doers.
As this verse shows, poor morality displayed by someone else
is no justification for displaying the same thing. Each individual
is solely responsible to God for his actions. According to
the Qur'an, acting with compassion, affection and proper morality
in the face of someone else's bad behavior is a sign of superior
morality that reveals the extent of a believer's devotion
to God. One verse (10:26) reveals the reward that such a pleasing
attitude will bring:
Those who do good will have the best, and more! Neither
dust nor debasement will darken their faces. They are the
Companions of the Garden, remaining in it timelessly, forever.
Islam Commands The Faithful to be Forgiving,
Always
One important sign of compassion is a person's ability to
forgive. In Verse 7:199, God calls upon His servants to "make
allowances for people, command what is right, and turn away
from the ignorant."
Some may find this attitude difficult, but in the sight
of God, it will be well rewarded. Those caught up in anger
may well refuse to forgive mistakes. But to the faithful,
God has revealed that it is better to forgive and, in Verse
26:40, has recommended this morality:
The repayment of a bad action is one equivalent to
it. But if someone pardons and puts things right, his reward
is with God...
In another verse (26:43), God reveals, "But
if someone is steadfast and forgives, that is the most resolute
course to follow." Verse 24:22 emphasizes that this
is a very superior form of morality:
Those of you possessing affluence and ample wealth should
not make oaths that they will not give to their relatives
and the very poor and those who have emigrated in the way
of God. They should rather pardon and overlook. Would you
not love God to forgive you? God is Ever-Forgiving, Most Merciful."
In these words, He encourages the faithful
to consider their own positions when it comes to forgiveness.
Because everyone wants God to forgive him, to protect and
show him mercy, so do we hope that all others will excuse
and forgive our mistakes. Therefore, God has commanded the
faithful to treat others in the same way they would like to
be treated themselves. That important responsibility encourages
the faithful to be forgiving towards one another. Our Prophet
(may God bless him and grant him peace) encouraged them in
these words: "That person is nearest to God, who pardons,
when he has someone in his power, one who would have injured
him."20
Believers, knowing that at any moment they may make a mistake,
behave tolerantly towards others. Those verses in the Qur'an
dealing with repentance make it clear that never making mistakes
isn't as important as the determination never to repeat them.
One of these verses (4:17) reads:
God accepts only the repentance of those
who do evil in ignorance and then quickly repent after doing
it. God turns towards such people. God is All-Knowing, All-Wise.
Under conditions that reveal an individual's sincerity, the
faithful behave forgivingly and compassionately towards one
another. If he who has committed error sincerely repents having
done so, they cannot judge him for his past deeds. Even when
the faithful are totally in the right and the other completely
in the wrong, still they have no compunction about forgiveness,
because God recommends such behavior as an example of proper
morality (3:134):
Those who give in times of both ease and
hardship, those who control their rage and pardon other people--God
loves the good-doers.
When it comes to forgiving,
the faithful don't distinguish between great and small errors,
nor do they tailor their view of forgiveness accordingly.
Someone may have committed an error inflicting severe harm
on others, great financial loss, even loss of life. Yet the
faithful know everything happens by the permission of God,
as part of His destiny. When it comes to such things, they
therefore place themselves in the hands of God and feel no
personal anger.
Alternatively, if someone transgresses this Qur'anic rule
and exceeds the bounds set by God, only God can judge that
person's behavior. It is never up to the faithful to judge--or
refuse to forgive--anyone on any matter. The truly sorry and
repentant person will have his reward only in the sight of
God. In many verses, God has revealed that apart from "associating
partners to Him," He will forgive the errors of the faithful
who repent sincerely. Since one man cannot know another's
repentance, the faithful simply forgive in the manner God
revealed to them. If the Qur'an has anything to say on a particular
subject, they treat the person who has committed error in
that light.
Islam Commands People To Behave Gently
God has infinite compassion, and is forgiving, protective
and gentle toward believers. The Compassionate and Merciful
has placed all the blessings in the universe at Man's disposal,
supporting him with messengers to reveal the true path. He
directs all men to be His sincere servants by means of His
revelations, each of which is a guidepost to that path. Our
Lord is the Halim (the Clement), Adl (Lord
of Infinite Justice), 'Afuw (the Pardoner), Asim
(the Protector), Barr (the Source of All Goodness), Ghafir
(the Forgiver), Hafiz (the Protector), Karim
(the Generous One), Latif (the Subtle One), Muhsin
(Lord of Infinite Kindness), Ra'uf (the Compassionate),
Salam (the Author of Safety), Tawwab (the
Accepter of Repentance) and Wahhab (the Bestower).
Believers know that they are under our Lord's protection
and are aware of His infinite goodness and kindness. For that
reason, they are eager to become the kind of servants that
are pleasing to Him, who merit His mercy, and Paradise. As
we have seen, one characteristic distinguishing believers
is they are full of love and compassion. A Muslim behaves
very gently, always treating others kindly. God has offered
our Prophet's (may God bless him and grant him peace) gentle
nature as an example to all believers (3:159):
It is a mercy from God that you were gentle
with them. If you had been rough or hard of heart, they would
have scattered from around you. So pardon them and ask forgiveness
for them, and consult with them about the matter. Then when
you have reached a firm decision, put your trust in God. God
loves those who put their trust in Him.
That verse describes how our Prophet's (may God bless him
and grant him peace) gentle, moral nature exerted a positive
influence on people, whereby they grew even more devoted to
him. The Qur'an gives the gentle natures of other loving prophets
as role models. One verse (11:87) recounts how, when the Prophet
Shuayb (peace be upon him) was sent to the people of Midian,
they told him, "... You are clearly
the forbearing, the rightly-guided!" The superior morality
of the Prophet Abraham (peace be upon him) is another example
for everyone. The Qur'an tells us that he was sensitive, gentle
and full of love. The verses in question read:
Abraham would not have asked forgiveness
for his father, but for a promise he made to him, and when
it became clear to him that he was an enemy of God, he renounced
him. Abraham was tenderhearted and forbearing. (9:114)
Abraham was forbearing, compassionate, penitent.
(11:75)
God has commanded his believers always to behave in a pleasant
manner, to speak kindly, and to treat others well. His prophets
behaved accordingly. For example, when the Prophet Musa (Moses)
(peace be upon him) was about to go to Pharaoh, one of the
most repressive and cruel rulers of all times, God called
on Moses in these terms (20:42-44):
Go, you and your brother, with My Signs,
and do not slacken in remembering Me. Go to Pharaoh; he has
overstepped the bounds. But speak to him with gentle words
so that hopefully, he will be reminded or show some fear.
These verses are an important reminder that everyone has
a duty to live by the morality that the Qur'an reveals, and
to adopt the morality of the prophets. The Qur'an proposes
the following ideals for mankind: Love to all creatures God
created; being kind and gentle in the best possible ways;
always favoring compromise and tolerance; never speaking harshly,
even under the most trying circumstances; making sacrifices
happily and willingly; always desiring and seeking the best
for others; pushing one's own personal desires to the background;
wishing for others exactly what one wishes for oneself; being
always quick to offer assistance in cases of need; and rejecting
all forms of cruelty. That, no doubt, is exactly the ethical
model that mankind is searching for.
Islam Supports Freedom of Belief
In matters of belief, Islam offers people complete freedom,
and in the very clearest language. That has been so ever since
Islam was first revealed, and forms the basis of today's Islamic
morality. The verses on the subject (2:256) are perfectly
clear:
There is no compulsion where religion is
concerned. Right guidance has become clearly distinct from
error. Anyone who rejects false gods and believes in God has
grasped the Firmest Handhold, which will never give way. God
is All-Hearing, All-Knowing.
According to Islam, people are free to choose whatever beliefs
they wish, and nobody can oblige anyone else. Yes, a Muslim
has a duty to communicate Islam and explain the existence
of God, to state that the Qur'an is the book of His revelation,
that the Prophet Muhammad (may God bless him and grant him
peace) was His messenger, to speak of the hereafter and the
Day of Judgment and of the beauty of Islamic morality. Yet
that duty is restricted to explaining the religion only. In
one verse (16:125), God informs our Prophet (may God bless
him and grant him peace) that he is only a messenger:
Call to the way of your Lord with
wisdom and fair admonition, and argue with them in the kindest
way. Your Lord knows best who is misguided from His way. And
He knows best who are guided.
Another verse (18:29) states, "...
It is the truth from your Lord; so let whoever wishes believe
and whoever wishes disbelieve..." In Verse 26:3, our
Lord warns the Prophet (may God bless him and grant him peace),
"Perhaps you will destroy yourself with
grief because they will not become believers." He also
issues His Prophet (may God bless him and grant him peace)
this reminder (50:45):
We know best what they say. You are not a
dictator over them. So remind, with the Qur'an, whoever fears
My Threat.
Correct
and courteous words accompanied by forgiveness are
better than charity followed by insulting words. God
is Rich Beyond Need, All-Forbearing.
(Qur'an, 2:263) |
People are free to choose correctly or wrongly.
When Islam--the true path that God has revealed--is explained,
they come to believe of their own free will, reaching this
decision with no pressure being put on them. If they make
wrong choices, they will face its consequences in the hereafter.
On this subject, Verse 10: 99 of the Qur'an contains the clearest
command and reminder: "If your Lord had willed, all the people
on the earth would have believed. Do you think you can force
people to be believers?"
When one of the faithful explains matters, one person might
come to believe straightaway, whereas another might adopt
a mocking and aggressive attitude. One who follows his conscience
might decide to devote his life to pleasing God, even while
another, doing as the deniers did, might respond to those
same kind words with wickedness. Yet his denial won't lead
whoever issued the invitation to suffer or despair. In Verses
12: 103-104, God has stated, "But most
people, for all your eagerness, are not believers. You do
not ask them for any wage for it. It is only a reminder to
all beings."
What's important is that no matter what reaction he meets
with, the person who abides by the Qur'an keeps on displaying
the kind of morality that is pleasing to God, refuses to make
any concessions on it, and leaves matters in God's hands.
God has told us that His religion is to be explained in the
most pleasing manner. In the words of the Qur'an (29:46):
Argue with the People of the Book only in
the kindest way--except in the case of those of them who do
wrong-saying, "We believe in what has been sent down to us
and what was sent down to you. Our God and your God are one
and we submit to Him."
We must not forget that every event, large or small, takes
place according to a destiny created by God. He reveals the
true path to anyone invited to believe in Him. For that reason,
the faithful feel no distress at the behavior of those who
reject Him. The Qur'an gives several examples. In Verse 18:6,
God tells our Prophet (may God bless him and grant him peace)
not to be distressed when those whom he calls on to believe
refuse to do so: "Perhaps you may destroy
yourself with grief, chasing after them, if they do not believe
in these words." Another verse (28:56) reads, "You cannot
guide those you would like to, but God guides those He wills.
He has best knowledge of the guided."
If your
Lord had willed, all the people on the earth would have
believed. Do you think you can force people to be believers?
(Qur'an, 10:99)
So remind them! You are only a reminder. You are not
in control of them. (Qur'an, 88:21-22) |
That means that whatever invitations an individual issues,
all his pleasant words, and every detail he goes into can
make an effect only by the will of God.
A believer's only responsibility is to call people to the
Qur'an. He cannot be blamed for atheists' refusal to amend
their ways, nor with how they will earn the torments of hell
for themselves. In Verse 2:119, our Lord told our Prophet
(may God bless him and grant him peace),
"We have sent you with the Truth, bringing good news and giving
warning. Do not ask about the inhabitants of the Blazing Fire."
God has given mankind both reason and a conscience. His messengers
and the divine books revealed to them have shown the true
path, and people are responsible for their own choices. Islamic
morality can be lived only by a sincere decision to do so-by
surrendering oneself to God and listening to one's conscience,
which always commands one to do what is right. It is a total
violation of Islamic morality to force anyone to believe,
because what matters is an individual's surrendering himself
to God with all his heart and believing sincerely. If any
system obliges people to have faith, then those "converts"
will become religious only out of fear. The only acceptable
way to live a religion is within an environment that leaves
one's conscience completely free. This is what God revealed
to our Prophet (may God bless him and grant him peace) (88:21-26):
So remind them! You are only a reminder.
You are not in control of them. But as for anyone who turns
away and disbelieves, God will punish him with the Greatest
Punishment. Certainly it is to Us they will return Then their
Reckoning is Our concern.
It's worth emphasizing that Islam leaves people free to make
their own choices regarding religion and commands them to
respect other religions. Even if someone believes in what
the Qur'an describes as superstition, still he can live in
peace and security in Muslim lands and freely perform his
own religious obligations. In Verses 109:2-6, God commanded
our Prophet (may God bless him and grant him peace) to tell
those who denied Him:
"I do not worship what you worship, and you
do not worship what I worship. Nor will I worship what you
worship, nor will you worship what I worship. You have your
religion, and I have my religion."
Under the morality of Islam, everyone is free to carry out
the obligations in accord with his own particular belief.
Nobody can prevent any others from performing their particular
religious duties, nor can he oblige them to worship in the
manner he desires. That violates the morality of Islam, and
is unacceptable to God. In the Islamic model of society emerges
in which everyone is free to worship and perform the obligations
attendant upon his particular chosen beliefs. The Qur'an (22:40)
describes monasteries, churches, synagogues, and the places
of worship of the Peoples of the Book as all under God's protection:
... If God had not driven some people back
by means of others, [then] monasteries, churches, synagogues
and mosques, where God's name is mentioned much, would have
been pulled down and destroyed. God will certainly help those
who help Him-God is All-Strong, Almighty.
Our Prophet's (may God
bless him and grant him peace) life is full of such examples.
When Christians came to see him pray in his own mosque, he
left it for them to use. 21That kind of
tolerance was maintained during the times of the caliphs who
succeeded the Prophet (may God bless him and grant him peace).
After Damascus was captured, a church that had been turned
into a mosque was divided into two, so that Christians might
worship in one half and Muslims in the other.22
Who could
say anything better than someone who summons to God
and acts rightly and says, 'I am one of the Muslims?'
(Qur'an, 41:33) |
Islam Commands That Oppression Be Abolished
Muslims should never remain silent in the face of oppression
that they witness, or even hear about secondhand. Their compassion,
stemming from the morality of the Qur'an, directs them to
oppose all tyranny, wickedness and oppression, to defend the
oppressed, to wage a war of ideas on their behalf. Whether
dealing with their closest friends or with strangers with
whom they share no interests in common, they behave in a manner
determined to prevent any such oppression. Rather, they seize
on this opportunity to win the good pleasure of God and implement
the morality of the Qur'an. Because a believer's conscience
is so very sensitive, his compassion never lets him turn a
blind eye to the slightest injustice or cruelty. He will take
his place in the vanguard of that morality by avoiding any
actions that might be unfair to or oppress anyone else. Whenever
he sees anyone else behaving that way, his conscience gives
him no peace until he's done everything possible to right
matters. True compassion has no room for forgetting about
oppression, ignoring it or underestimating it.
The ignorant seldom act until oppression stands at their
very own doorstep. This stems from their forgetting or denying
that in the hereafter, they will be brought face to face with
all the good and bad deeds that they encountered in this world.
But the faithful, well aware of this, will treat even total
strangers he has never met with great compassion and seeks
to rescue them from oppression. Even if no one else supports
him, he will muster all his strength to forestall wickedness.
Even though the majority may behave differently, their lack
of conscience never rubs off on the true believer. In the
hereafter, Muslims know, they will be called to account for
what they did to prevent evil. They won't be able to get away
with excuses like, "I didn't see it," or, "I didn't hear it,"
or "I never knew what was going on."
As is revealed in the Qur'an (19:80),
"... he [man] will come to Us all alone," every human being
will return to his Creator on his own. People will
be brought into the presence of God, put to the trial, and
called to account for their deeds in this world. Only those
who followed the dictates of their conscience will come out
of that questioning at all well. Those who have behaved well,
opposed all forms of cruelty, fought evil, and remained on
the path of God can expect a suitable reward. God mentions
this matter in another verse (2:112):
All who submit themselves completely to God
and are good-doers will find their reward with their Lord.
They will feel no fear and will know no sorrow.
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