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"We sent thee not save as a mercy
for the peoples." (XXI:107)
I have just recited before you a
verse from Surah Anbiya of the holy Quran. In
it God addresses the holy Prophet to tell him that
he had been sent as a mercy for the whole world and
all the peoples that might be born on this planet.
This was, indeed, a unique declaration, or, if I
could say so, a revolutionary proclamation for the
entire humanity. And, this was put about by God in a
Scripture which was destined to be read, after its
revelation, in every age, time and clime, by
billions of men in every nook and corner of the
world. It was to have an unending line of exegetes,
commentators and researchers who were to scan every
word of it, evaluate its revelations and scrutinise
the truth of its contents in the light of past and
coming events. Whenever a man makes any statement or
a writer comes out with a report in an article to be
published in some news- paper or a journal, he has
to think a hundred times lest he should be
controverted by somebody. If he happens to make any
unusual claim, he is extra-cautious for the fear
that he might be challenged by another person or
proved to be a fibster. As everyone of us knows,
books last longer than the journals; they continue
to be read for years together and some even live for
hundreds of years. Thus, anyone putting forth an
annunciation in a book has to be overcautious; he
has to make sure that the reaction of his readers is
not adverse and that his claim is accepted. Now, you
see, the Knower of all secrets has made this
declaration in a book about which He Himself says:
"Falsehood cannot come at it from
before it or behind it. (It is) a revelation from
the Wise, the Owner of Praise." (XLI:42)
His edict about this book runs:
"Lo ! We, even We, reveal the
Reminder, and Lo We verily are its Guardian." (XV:9)
Since these declarations cover
both time and space, they cannot be taken lightly.
The announcement made by God
covers all the ages and the whole of human race that
would make its debut in this world after the
prophethood of Muhammad (peace and blessing, of God
be upon him) was announced: it encompasses all the
periods of history, past and present, that this
world may see after the blessed Prophet was raised
as the harbinger of peace for all peoples.
This pronouncement does not
exclude any corner of the world from its ambit God
did not proclaim Muhammad as a mercy for Arabia, for
the East or for the continent of Asia alone. He has
made an unequivocal declaration that His Prophet
Muhammad is to be the peace unto the whole World
till the end of time.
This unique proclamation was, in
truth and reality, so marvelously wonderful, so
extensive in its scope and so far- reaching in its
effect, and so majestic in issuing the Divine
command that all the philosophers, thinkers,
writers, schoolmen or rather every man should have
rubbed his eyes in amazement. Of a fact, it would
have not at all been surprising if every man of
learning had applied him- self to explore the
veracity of this unprecedented statement. You can
scan the history of the world but you would not find
such a lucid and clear-cut declaration, so
confidently made in such an unconditional language,
either in the historical records of the world
religions or in the annals of reformatory and
revolutionary movements; nay, not even in the
histories of the nations and countries and
civilisations, nor yet in the entire literature of
the human race.
Judaism is one of the oldest
world religions. Yet, the concept of God, the Lord
of the entire universe and all the nations, is at
best a notion of the Lord of Israel according to
Judaism. The concept of a Lord of the worlds is not
to be found in most of the Old Testament books nor
is it present in the hagiographical literature of
the Hebrews. It would be futile to search for an
announcement declaring anybody as the mercy for all
nations in the biographies of the great Hebrew
Prophets like Moses and Aaron, or, their Kings, such
as, David and Solomon. Judaism had never been a
world religion in the sense that it had never
endeavoured to spread the glad tidings of Divine
mercy and blessings to the whole of humanity without
any distinction of blood and race. It actually never
did encourage the conversion of non-Jewish people to
Judaism. (For details see ‘Islam versus Ahl Kitab,
Past and Present’ by Maryam Jameelah (formerly
Margaret Marcus) )
Christianity is rightly noted for
its evangelism and preaching the message of love and
compassion to the whole of human race but we find
Jesus Christ telling his disciples: "I am not
sent but unto the lost sheep of the house of
Israel." (Mt:15:24) Nobody has ever upheld the
distinctions of blood and race in the healing of the
sick but when Jesus Christ was asked to restore an
afflicted child to health, his reply was; "It is
not meet to take the children's bread, and cast it
to dogs." (Mt:15:15-16) When Jesus Christ sent
forth his disciples to preach the Gospel he
instructed them thus: "Go not into the way of the
Gentiles, and into any city of the Samaritans enter
not ye: but go rather to the lost sheep of the house
of Israel."(Mt:10:5-6)
The attitude of other eastern
religions like Hinduism is not different from that
of Judaism or Christianity. As a matter of fact, we
find it glorifying class distinctions and upholding
a heartless caste system forbidding social inter-
course between different sections of its own
followers. In ancient India the untouchables were
deprived of their human rights; they could neither
acquire knowledge nor teach others, nor could they
apply themselves to the noble pursuit of elevating
themselves spiritually. Teaching of the Vedas and
performance of the sacred rites before the deities,
on their own behalf and on behalf of others, was a
privilege enjoyed by the Brahmins alone. (Manu
shastra, Chap. 1, p. 88). Vedas could be learnt only
by the Kshtrias and Vaishas besides the
Brahmins.(Ibid. pp. 88-89). The Sudras had but one
duty according to Manu and that was to serve the
three higher castes. (Manu shastra, Chap. 1, p. 89)
The people of the ancient India had hardly any
concept of the world beyond the Himalayas nor were
they interested in the peoples and countries living
outside India. It would be a labour in vain to make
a search for any declaration of universal character
in respect of any reformer, Rishi or a
prophet, whose appearance in India cannot be ruled
out according to the teachings of the Quran. For
there was absolutely no concept of a Lord of the
whole universe in the ancient India, it would rather
be illogical to expect any man of God having been
recognised as a mercy for all the nations of the
world.
We normally determine the worth
and merit, significance and greatness of a thing by
its quantity and quality. The first denotes the
property of the thing to be judged by some sort of
measure while the other reflects its spirit or
excellence. The Writ of God revealed in the Quran
about the holy Prophet of Islam covers both these
aspects. The benefits and blessings this world has
had through his prophethood and his teachings, and
the lease of new life it got through him are not
only manifold in number and excellent in character
but also unique and unprecedented in the annals of
the world. Mercy is a word commonly used by us for
every act of compassion or kindness shown by one man
to another, but it has various degrees deter- mining
the inter-se value and merit of different merciful
acts. It is mercy if a traveler is told about the
way he should go or is given some water to quench
his thirst. If a man fans another fellow during the
hot season, it is mercy; likewise, the affection of
a father towards his son and the arrangements made
by a man for the education of his ward, teaching of
the students by a pedagogue, feeding of the poor and
hungry and clothing of the naked are all different
aspects of mercy. They all flow from the same noble
desire to be compassionate and benevolent to others
and each one of these acts deserves to be gratefully
acknowledged by the beneficiary.
But, of all these manifestations
of mercy, the greatest in merit would be the saving
of a human life. Imagine a child on his death-bed,
his unfortunate mother wailing and weeping for him
and his helpless father running to the physicians
who seem to have lost all hope of the child's
recovery. Suddenly, a doctor arrives as an angel of
mercy. He comforts the parents with his kind words
and administers medicine to the ailing child who
slowly regains his health and strength. This man
would undoubtedly be revered as a God-send
benefactor of the child and his parents. All other
types of merciful acts I have enumerated earlier
would fade into insignificance before this act of
supreme mercy. This doctor would be hailed as a
saviour not by the parents of the child alone, but
by his whole family who would ever remember him as a
benefactor. Take another example. A blind man is
going on a path which has a deep ditch a few steps
ahead. The blind man is sure to fall into it and
lose his life in a couple of seconds. Now, a man
rushes up to catch hold of this poor blind man by
his waist and thus saves his life. Or, suppose,
there is a boy, the only child of his parents, being
carried away by the swift current of a river. The
boy is about to be submerged forever but a
courageous young man saves him by putting his own
life at stake. The parents of this boy, nay, all
those who have held him dear, would express their
heartfelt gratitude to the brave man and remember
his kindness throughout their lives.
There is, however, a still higher
degree of mercy, and it consists of the saving of
entire humanity from death and destruction. But,
even the destruction of humanity can be of varying
degrees. It may be a temporary debacle or total
annihilation. The benevolence of the prophets of God
is infinitely superior to the altruism of other
human beings inasmuch as the former leave indelible
imprints of their mercy on their fellow beings.
Time, whose tooth gnaws away everything else, is
like turbulent waves of the surging ocean which
wipes out not only individuals but nations also.
Many a nation, country and civilisation lies buried
beneath its dark waters. It treacherous waves are
ever intent to devour an erring people and,
therefore, the question that has ever vexed the
minds of human beings is how to cross this roaring
sea to reach the shore of safety. Thus, anybody who
could safely pilot the sinking ship of humanity
would. unquestionably, be the true benefactor of
humanity. The entire progeny of Adam is, in very
truth, indebted to those savants and servants of
humanity who have bequeathed to it the treasures of
knowledge and learning and made its life easier and
richer. But, at a time when the life itself is in
danger, only that man can be called a true saviour,
who saves the life of human beings from the cruel
jaws of death and complete annihilation.
What really was this circling
wave of death and destruction threatening the
existence of man? It was, as it has ever been, the
ignorance of the Lord and Master of the world, of
His nature and attributes, raising of the partakers
of divinity with God, forgetfulness of man's
obligations to his Creator, failings of human desire
and betaking the path of wickedness and iniquity.
For this is the time when man insists on his rights
but forgets his obligations to others, closes his
eyes towards the dignity of his fellow beings and
begins to behave like a monster who is at perfect
liberty to devour those who are weaker than him.
When man forgets these fundamental facts, the prop
which supports the structure of human life on earth,
he becomes a wolf, a scorpion, and a snake. Then one
does not need panthers and lions for man excels
every wild beast in ferocity, cruelty. He becomes a
devil, the supreme spirit of evil, the enemy of God
and man, a Satan incarnate in the human form. Then
his fellow beings are consumed by the fire ignited
by their own species. No outside agency is then
needed for the extirpation of man from the face of
the earth.
Such are the times when the
infinite mercy of God is set afoot to succour
suffering humanity from the evil of his own doings.
For in such times of strain and stress only the
teachers of humanity sent by God can rescue man from
the destruction wrought by his own hands. Humanity
is once more brought back to the path of virtue and
good- ness through the efforts of these guides of
mankind. The world then again becomes a place to
live for and die for.
Before I tell you about the
supreme benevolence of the prophets of God and the
extensive scope of the task allotted to them, I
would like to put before you a parable which alludes
to the nature and significance of the prophets'
work. Once a few students on a pleasure trip were
enjoying boating in a river with an illiterate old
oarsman. The boys, in a jovial mood, thought of
making merry with the poor old man, and one of them
came out with the question : "Uncle, have you
received some education too ?"
"No, I have not read anything,"
replied the boatman. "Plying of boats has been my
ancestral profession and this is the only art I know
to earn a living for my family."
Another boy promptly rejoined,
"But you must have learnt some grammar or read a bit
of literature, my dear?"
"It is for the first time,"
replied the boatman, "that I have heard of these
things."
"But," insisted the third boy,
"you must be knowing something of geometry for it is
essential for propelling boats in a correct manner.
Surely, you can't do without it?"
The boys continued to make fun of
the poor man by asking about each branch of arts and
sciences they had been studying at their college.
Ultimately, they asked about the age of the boatman
who informed them that he had crossed his fortieth
year. The boys lost no time in giving their verdict
: "Alas ! you have wasted half of your precious
life-time for nothing."
The old man had no explanation to
offer but perhaps, Providence intended to teach a
lesson to these young chaps. The cool and clear
water of the river had been flowing calmly so long
but suddenly a violent wind arose, as if from
nowhere, causing a stir in the river. The surging
waves now threatened the safety of the boat which,
it seemed- would capsize in a few minutes. All the
boys were seared to death, and it was now the turn
of the boat- man to pose a question to the boys
about their knowledge and learning.
"Boys," addressed the boatman
inviting their attention, "have you also learnt
swimming."
Terror stricken, all the boys
replied in a chorus, "No, we have not learnt it."
"Well", retorted the old man, "I
had wasted only half of my life-time, but you have.
lost the whole of it. If this boat capsizes, all the
sciences you have been talking about would go down
to the bottom of the river with you. Would that you
had learnt swimming also which would have saved your
life as well your knowledge."
The record of human life on this
earth tells us that whenever the ship; of humanity
has capsized owing to man's own failings, hardly
anything was left to be salvaged. All the treasures
of arts and learning, palatial buildings and
developmental works, philosophy and literature, in
short, all that had been produced, by labour of man
over thousands of years was lost with the debacle of
an erring people. We also know that no civilisation
has ever been destroyed because of .the lack of
poetic genius of its people, or the poor standard of
literature it had produced, nor yet did it go down
owing to inadequate number of its educational
institutions, low standards of living or lack of
capital for its trade and industry. The one cause of
its collapse was that man himself wanted to commit
suicide. You may believe it or not, but the history
of bygone civilisations tells us that there had been
many an occasion when man had directed his efforts
to destructive pursuits with such a zest and
enthusiasm as if he were performing a constructive
task beneficial to humanity. At times he had
joyfully insisted on going to the gallows as it he
were tired of life and its extinction was a great
blessing to be sought for at all costs.
The world was passing through a
state of hysterics at the close of the sixth century
of the Christian era. The entire human race had, it
seems, taken a pledge to commit suicide. God has
portrayed, in the Quran, the condition then
obtaining in the world so graphically that no artist
can draw such a true-to-life picture of the then
situation.
"And remember Allah's favour unto
you: how ye were enemies and He made friendship
between your hearts so that ye became as brothers by
His grace; and (how) ye were upon the brink of an
abyss of fire, and He did save you from it."
(III:103)
If our historians and
litterateurs have not been able to preserve the
heart-rending account of the pagan past, they need
not be blamed for it because limitations of human
language and forms of expression would not have
allowed them to capture in words the dreadful
situation of the then world. The shape of things was
so horrible, so critical that not the best word
painter could have succeeded in its faithful
depiction. How could have any historian drawn a
picture of that horrible situation? Did the age of
Ignorance mean merely moral corruption of the Arabs
and a few other nations? Did it pose the problem of
idolatry, depravity or decadence or else
self-indulgence, inequity and exploitation of the
poor or criminal behaviour of the then stronger
nations? Was it similarly the question of the burial
of innocent new-born daughters by their heartless
fathers? It was all this and much more. It was as
though the mother earth wanted to swallow its entire
progeny. I have no words to describe the terrifying
conditions through which the whole world was passing
in those days. Only those can under- stand it who
had themselves lived in that horrible age.
It was thus not a problem
confronting any single nation or country but the
destiny of the whole human race was at stake. If any
artist capable of converting a vision into eternity
were to paint the portrait of a good-looking young
man in a fine fettle, a soul shining through its
crystal covering, and could somehow show him to be
the vicegerent of God on earth who was ready to take
a leap in the abyss of fire, then he would perhaps
succeed in portraying the situation thus depicted in
the Quran : "(How) ye were upon the brink of an
abyss of fire, He did save you from it." The holy
Prophet has also illustrated this critical situation
through a simile. He says: "The mission and guidance
I have been vouchsafed to deliver to this world is
like this: A man made a bonfire and when it
illuminated the surroundings, insects began to jump
over it. You also want to take a leap into the fire
in a like manner but I am holding you by your waists
to save you from falling into the eternal fire."
The whole problem was how to lead
the caravan of humanity to its safe destination. All
the social and developmental endeavours, educational
and literary efforts were possible only after man
had been brought back to a normal, sensible frame of
mind. There is the least doubt that the greatest
good the prophets have done to the humanity consists
of saving it from the unknown, imminent dangers
threatening to destroy it forever. No literature or
philosophy, reformatory or constructive effort, not
even the survival of man on this planet could have
been possible without the merciful endeavours of the
prophets of God. But, so ungrateful is man that he
has announced with the flourish of trumpets, time
and again, that the prophets of God had had their
time, and that the world no longer needed them. Its
seers and guides have repeatedly declared that the
prophets had nothing new to offer, no benefits to
confer on humanity. Man has, in this way, really
deposed over and over again against his own
existence in this world.
When any civilisation becomes
over-sophisticated it closes its eyes to the ethical
precepts. Man forgets every- thing save the
satisfaction of his desires and replaces his loving,
merciful heart by a selfish and ferocious
disposition. His covetous greed takes the shape of
an aching void which can never be filled in. This is
the time when man becomes mad after the world and
all that it stands for and, then, Providence moves
to chasten him and give him his deserts. Poet of the
East has given expression to the same truth in one
of his verses:
Fever of lunacy then overtakes
the kings,
Ferute of God are all, Timur and
Chinghez.
You can replace the words 'kings'
and 'kingship' by civilisation for the insanity of
civilisation is nowadays much more dangerous and
wider in scope than the madness of the kings of old.
A single lunatic can made a hell of the life of all
the people around him but, one can very well
imagine, what would happen if the whole people were
to lose their heads.
During the era we speak of as the
Age of Ignorance the entire human race had become so
depraved, so cruel- hearted that it took pleasure in
the suffering of man. This is not poetry but
supported by hard facts of history: man had turned a
demon who was most enthusiastic to witness the death
and suffering of his own species. He prized the
spectacle of the pangs of death suffered by human
beings more than the pleasure he derived from
merry-making, eating and drinking.
Gladiatorial sports involving
combats between men and wild beasts under the Romans
displayed more vividly than any other crime against
humanity, the abyss for human nature to sink. But
this was not an enormity that had captured the
imagination of a few guilty conscience. Writing
about the immense popularity of these shows Lecky
says in his History of European Morals that
the magnificent circus, the gorgeous dresses of the
assembled Court, the contagion of a passionate
enthusiasm thrilling almost visibly through the
mighty throng, the breathless silence of
expectation, the wild cheers bursting simultaneously
from eighty thousand tongues, and echoing to the
farthest outskirts of the city, the rapid
alternation of the fray, the deeds of splendid
courage that were manifested were all fitted to
entrance the imagination.’ (W.E.H. Lecky: History of
European Morals, Vol. l, p.119.). The interest and
enthusiasm that attended these games of
inconceivable atrocity was so intense that special
laws were found necessary, and sometimes
insufficient, to check them.
Thus, the beast in man had taken
hold of him during the Age Of Ignorance. He had, by
his deeds, furnished the proof that he had forfeited
the right to live in this world, or, rather, he had
himself lost every desire to remain in this world
any more. Yet, his Lord and Master, the Most
Compassionate and the Most Merciful had decided
other- wise. He wanted to save the world and the
progeny of Adam from death and destruction through a
Messenger who was told that:
"And (O Muhammad) We sent thee
not save as a mercy for the peoples."
It is plain as day that the
entire duration of the world's existence since the
debut of the holy Prophet of Islam stems from his
merciful deeds. First of all he removed the Sword of
Damocles hanging over the head of humanity by giving
it a new ideal to live for and a new zest and
confidence to work for it. A new age of culture and
civilization, arts and learning, material and
spiritual progress-a new brave world-came into
existence through his efforts.
The first and foremost service
that be rendered to the humanity consisted of the
faith in the Oneness of God. No other creed more
revolutionary, more life-giving and more profitable
could have been vouchsafed to the humanity. Man had
been proud and presumptuous, boastful of his
creations Eke philosophy and poetry and the art of
government; he took pride in enslaving other
countries and nations; often arrogated himself even
to the position of God; but he also demeaned himself
by bowing his bead before inanimate, lifeless
objects, things of his own creation and the
mountains, rivers, trees and animals; and harboured
credulous beliefs and irrational fear of the demons
and devils. He spent his life in the fear of the
unknown and the hope from non-existent powers which
could not but foster mental confusion, cowardice,
doubtfulness and indecision in him. The Prophet of
Islam made him self-reliant, courageous, rational
and undoubting by removing the fear of everything
else save that of his real Master and the Lord. It
was because of him that man came to recognise his
Creator as the Supreme Power, the Enricher and
Destroyer. This new discovery meant a world of
change for him as he cut himself adrift from all
superstitious beliefs, irrational fears, dubiousness
and misgivings. He could now see the unity of cause
in the manifoldness of phenomena, was reassured of
his pivotal position in the scheme of creation,
became aware of his worth and dignity, in short, his
acceptance of the serfdom of the One and only God
made him the master of every other created being and
object. It was, thus, for the first time that man
became aware of the exalted position allotted to him
by God.
Unity of Godhead came to be
recognised, thank to the last Prophet, as the
guiding principle for all schools of thought,
philosophies and creeds. Even polytheistic religions
were so powerfully influenced by it that their
votaries began to fight shy of their creeds and
started putting up constructions to explain away
their rites and observances demanding devotion to
gods and demi-gods. The heathen belief in the
worship of numerous deities began to suffer from a
sense of inferiority from which it has still not
re-covered. This was the greatest gift bestowed on
humanity by the holy Prophet.
The second great favour conferred
by the Messenger of God on human beings was the
concept of equality and brotherhood of mankind. The
world before him was divided by manifold divisions
of castes and creeds, tribes and nations, some
claiming ranks of nobility for themselves and
condemning others to the position of serfs and
chattels. It was for the first time that the world
heard the revolutionary message of human equality
from the Prophet of Islam.
"O Mankind, Your God is one and
you have but one father. You are all progeny of
Adam, and Adam was made of clay. Lo! the noblest
among you, in the sight of God, is the best in
conduct. No Arab has any preference over a non-Arab
save by his piety." (Kinz-ul-Ummal)
The Prophet made this declaration
on the occasion of his last Haj before a
congregation of one lakh and twenty- four thousand
persons. His announcement put the seal on the twin
principles of the Unity of God and the Unity of
mankind. These are the two natural foundations for
raising any edifice of peace and progress,
friendship and cooperation between different peoples
and nations. They create a twin relationship between
human beings-that of One Lord and one father for all
of them. Oneness of God is the spiritual principle
of human equality just as common lineage of the high
and the low, the white and the coloured places them
on the same plane of humanity.
The world was not in a frame of
mind to give ears to the message of equality of
human beings when it was first announced by the
Prophet of Islam. It was then a radical call, making
a clean sweep of the then social relationships and
economic and political orders. So striking and
revolutionary was this call that it had sent the
world into jitters. Today we find the principle of
human equality enshrined in the constitutions of
different countries and being proclaimed from the
forum of the United Nations Organisation in the
shape of the Charter of Human Rights but it was all
due to the pioneering efforts of the followers of
Muhammad, Muslim missionaries and reformers, who
made indefatigable efforts to establish a truly
egalitarian Muslim society. It was this model
established through their toil and tears that later
on came to be accepted as the standard for human
existence in this world. There was a time when
numerous clans and families claimed their descent
from the sun or moon. Quran quotes the belief then
held by the Jews and the Christians in these words:
"The Jews and the Christians say : We are the
children of God and those whom He loves." (V: 18)
The Pharaohs of Egypt claimed them- selves to be the
incarnation of Sun-god while India had several
ruling families which arrogated themselves as the
progeny of sun and moon. The Emperors of Iran called
themselves Kesra or Chosroes which meant that Divine
blood flowed in their veins. The last Iranian
Emperor was known as Yazdgard chiefly owing to the
Divine respects paid to him by his subjects.
The Chinese rulers deemed
themselves to be the sons of Heaven. They believed
that the Heaven was their god, who, with his spouse,
the goddess earth, has given birth to the human
beings and P'au Ku, the Chinese Emperor, was the
first-born son of Heaven enjoying supernatural
powers. The Arabs were so proud of their language
that every other nation besides their own was an
Ajami or dumb to them. Likewise, the Quraish of
Mecca being extremely conscious of maintaining their
superiority, claimed a position of privilege even in
the performance of Haj. This was the shape of
things, all over the world, when the Quran heralded
that all human beings were equal.
"O mankind! Lo ! We have created
you male and female, and have made you nations and
tribes that ye may know one another. Lo 1 the
noblest of you, in the sight of Allah, is the best
in conduct. Lo! Allah is Knower, Aware." (XLIX – 13)
In another surah, which is the
opening chapter of the Quran, it was declared that-
"Praise be to Allah, Lord of the Worlds." (I:1)
The third great gift and a boon
to the humanity bestowed by the Prophet of Islam is
the Islamic concept of human dignity. During the Age
of Darkness when Islam made its appearance none was
so ignoble and humiliated as man. Without any worth,
he bad absolutely no sense of human dignity.
Oftentimes trees and animals regarded as sacred
owing to religious beliefs or traditions, enjoyed a
more coveted place than man himself. Human
sacrifices at the altar of deities were a common
spectacle. It was solely due to Muhammad, the
Prophet, that man came to appropriate the fact that
human beings, the glorious creation 'of God, were
entitled to much more loving regard, respect and
honour than any other creature. The rank holy
Prophet accorded to man was next only to God, for
God had Himself heralded the purpose of man's
creation in these words of lasting beauty-
"He it is Who created for you all
that is in the earth." (II. 29)
Man was declared as the best of
creations, the ruler of the world and all that
exists in it.
"Verily We have honoured the
children of Adam. We carry them on the land and the
sea, and have made provision of good thing for them,
and have preferred them above many of those whom We
created with a marked preferment." (XVII: 70)
Man had been accustomed to
associate nobility with those who claimed themselves
to be the progeny of gods and demi-gods. In order
that the honour of the common man was not usurped
again by the selected few, the prophet announced :
"The whole of mankind is the
family of God and he amongst His family is dearest
to Him, who does good to others." (Mishkat)
A celestial Tradition of the
Prophet alludes to the deep concern of God for the
welfare of human beings. It says: "God would ask
(someone) on the Day of Judgement, "I was ill but
you did not pay a visit to Me." The man would reply
; "How could have I paid a visit to Thee. Thou art
the Lord of the worlds." But God would say, "Do you
not recollect that one of My slaves was ill. Had you
gone to see him, you would have found Me by his
side." Then God would again ask, "O Son of Adam, I
asked you to feed Me, but you refused it to Me." The
man would submit, "How could have I fed Thee, Thou
art the Lord of the Worlds". But the reply of God
would be: "Do you not remember that one of My slaves
had asked you for food. Didn't you know that if you
had given him food, you would have found it with Me
!" God would again ask, "O son of Adam, I asked you
water to drink but you refused it to Me." The man
would say in reply, "O Lord, How could have I given
water to Thee. Thou art the Lord of the worlds." But
the reply given by God would be: "Do you not
recollect that one of My slaves asked you for water,
but you refused. Did you not know that if you had
given him water, you would have found it with Me."
(Sahih Muslim)
Islam preaches unalloyed and
absolute unity of God and rejects every form of
anthropomorphism. Still, it employs this similitude
to drive home the rank and dignity of man in the
eyes of God. Has any other religion or philosophical
thought accorded a nobler place to human beings than
Islam?
The Prophet of Islam taught that
the surest way to attract blessings of God was to be
kind and considerate to others.
"The Most Compassionate (God) is
kind on those who are kind to others. If you would
show kindness to those who live on the earth, He who
lives in the Heaven, shall shower His blessings on
you." (Abu Da'ud)
You can very well imagine the
pitiable condition of man in the days when this
powerful voice of human dignity had not been raised
in the world. A mere whim of a king or emperor could
then cost the life of a thousand men. It was then
not unusual for an ambitious adventurer to put to
sword the entire population of a conquered land.
Alexander converted all the countries from Greece to
India into a vast battlefield. Caesar played with
the lives of human beings as if they were wild
beasts. The two World Wars fought only recently had
cost the lives of millions merely for securing
markets for the industrial produce of advanced
nations or to establish national or political
ascendancy of certain nations over all others. Iqbal
has correctly assessed the political ambitions of
man in this verse.
Man is still possessed by the imperialistic lust,
What a pity ! Man prowling after man as yet.
At the time when Muhammad was
invested with the mantle of prophethood, a general
sense of pessimism springing from the worthlessness
of human nature and hopelessness of Divine succour
filled the air. The ancient religions of the East
and the mutilated Christianity, especially in the
West, had an equal share in producing that mental
climate. The philosophy of re-birth, preached by the
religions of ancient India, which assigned no place
to the will and decision of man, meant that the
present life was but a form of retribution for one's
actions during his previous life with which the
Christian doctrine of Original Sin and Atonement had
joined hands to shake the confidence of millions,
all over the world, in the respondence and
amenability of human actions. Mankind had lost faith
in the mercy of God whose eternal and immutable
decree seemed to have condemned man to a
pre-determined destiny without reference to his evil
or virtuous behaviour. But Muhammad affirmed that
man was born with a clean slate and perfect freedom
of action. He was, declared the Prophet, the author
of his actions, both good and evil, and deserved
reward or punishment in accordance with his own
decision to shape the course of his actions.
Discarding the theory of vicarious Atonement, the
Quran established once for all that every man was
his own redeemer.
"And that for man shall be naught,
Save that wherefor he maketh effort,
And that his endeavour shall be presently observed."
(LIII : 39-40)
This was a message of salvation
to man which gave him a new confidence in himself
and in his ability to chart out his destiny. He
applied himself with a renewed vigour, confidence
and determination to shape up his own life and
brighten the future of humanity.
The Prophet of Islam also
declared that sins were but temporary deviations
from the right path, inherent in the nature of man,
and were brought about by ignorance, mistake and the
promptings of the devil or man's own sensual
desires. But the innate desire of man was to regret
his mistakes and seek pardon of God with a contrite
heart. To be broken in spirit by a sense of the
guilt and to seek the forgiveness of God showed the
goodness of human Feature and attracted mercy of the
Lord. This gospel of hope and good tidings was a
revolutionary message to the despondent humanity
condemned for ever by the guilt of Original Sin and
his past misdoings. What a great change it meant in
the prevailing atmosphere of gloom and depression of
spirits is illustrated by the fact that the Prophet
came to be known as ‘Apostle of Repentance’.
Repentance, he said, did not involve
faintheartedness, nor did it arise from fear of
disapprobation, but was a bold and a daring step of
the first man, Adam, who had thus shown the nobility
of his innate nature. The Prophet of Islam endued
repentance with the sacredness attached to the acts
of devotion to God. He preached the virtues of
seeking pardon so forcefully that even the
irredeemable sinners, who had lost all hope of
forgiveness, resolved to turn away from the sinful
ways and to begin a new life of virtue and
uprightness, and many of them attained a sublimity
of spirit that was envied by others.
Describing the clemency of God
which is ever willing to forgive the sinners, the
Quran employs a diction so alluringly charming that
one wonder & whether God loves them more who seek
His forgiveness after deviating from the path of
virtue. The Quranic verse quoted here shows how
forbearing, how long-suffering and how magnanimous
God is to the man who cares to turn towards Him for
exoneration of the sins. Says the Quran:
"Say thou : O my bondman who have
committed extravagance against themselves, despair
not of the mercy of Allah; verily Allah will forgive
their sins altogether. Verily He! He is the
Forgiving, the Merciful." ( XXXIX: 53)
Some other verses of the Quran
exhorting the believers to acquire positive merits
and to win their way to the everlasting Bliss,
address them in these words :
"And vie one with another for
forgiveness from your Lord, and toward the Garden as
wide as are the heavens and the earth, prepared for
those who ward off (evil) : "And those who spend (of
that which Allah hath given them) in ease and in
adversity, those who -control their wrath and are
forgiving toward mankind;. Allah loveth the good
-And those who, when they do an evil thing or wrong
themselves remember Allah and implore forgiveness
for their sins. Who forgiveth sins save Allah only
?- and will not knowingly repeat (the wrong) they
did.
The reward of such will be
forgiveness from their Lord, and gardens underneath
which rivers flow, wherein they will abide for
ever-a bountiful reward for workers!" (III : 133-36
)
Among the characteristics of the
true believers, enumerated in another verse,
repentance takes precedence of all others.
"They are those who repent, who
worship, who praise, who fast constantly, who bow
down, who prostrate themselves, who command the
reputable and restrain from the disreputable and who
keep the ordinances of Allah : and bear thou glad
tidings to the believers!" ( IX : 112)
The place of honour accorded to
those who repent of their sins is illustrated by the
verses of the Quran revealed on the occasion of the
forgiveness of three companions (The companions were
Kab ibn Malik, Hilal ibn Ummayya and Mirara ibn Rabi
who merely out of lethargy failed to join the
expedition. They confessed their weakness openly) of
the holy Prophet, who bad been excluded from other
followers for their failure to accompany the Prophet
in the expedition of Tabuk, Before the verse alludes
to the mistake of these companions being condoned by
God, it mentions the Prophet and the Ansars and
Muhajirs in order that no stigma wag attached to
them after their mistakes had been pardoned. The
Quran, in this way, teaches all believers, who take
the companions of the Prophet as models of virtue,
that no ignominy attaches to a man after a genuine
change of heart. The way these verses explain the
consequences of blotting out of the sins and elation
of the repentant sinners can hardly be found in the
scriptures of other religions or treatises on
ethics. These verses read:
"Allah hath turned in mercy to
the Prophet, and to the Muhajirin and the Ansar who
followed him in the hour of hardship. After the
hearts of a party of then! had almost swerved aside,
then turned He unto them in mercy. Lo ! He is Full
of pity, Merciful for them.
"And to the three also (did He
turn in mercy) who were left behind, when the earth,
vast as it is, was straitened for them, and their
own souls were straitened for them till they be
thought them that there is no refuge from Allah save
toward Him. Then turned He unto them in mercy that
they (too) might turn (repentant unto Him). Lo !
Allah! He is the Relenting, the Merciful." (IX:
117-118)
Remission of sin leads us to one
of the chief attributes of the Divine Being, that
is, His mercy and compassion. The bounty of God's
mercy is the constant theme of the Quran. Says God:
"My mercy embraceth all things" (VII: 156) while a
celestial Tradition of the prophet tells us: "Verily
my Mercy overcomes My anger." ( XII: 37) To despair
of the God's mercy was made a cardinal sin. Quoting
Jacob and Abraham, two great Prophets of God, the
Quran announces "Verily none despaireth of the
comfort of Allah except a people disbelieving" (XII:
37) and "who despireth of the mercy of his Lord save
those who are astray ?" (XV: 56)
The misery and suffering the
human race endured upon earth was, according to the
Jewish and Christian doctrines, but a feeble image
of the never-ending agony which awaited man in the
future world. The monastic orders of the Medieval
Ages had taken up this doctrine, which, in itself,
was sufficiently revolting, but they bad developed
it with an appalling vividness and minuteness. The
humanity scared by these ghastly visions and
glimpses of eternal suffering, was relieved by the
Prophets' emphasis on God's all embracing mercy and
the efficacy of repentance which could wipe the
slate clean of even the most vicious among the
castaways of society.
And now we come to yet another
gift of the prophet- hood of Muhammad which is still
more far-reaching, more beneficial to the humanity
at large. This was the concept of the unity of
spirit and matter, the harmony of the sacred and the
mundane. He taught that the distinction made
between, the two was superficial and formal for
every action of man, his behaviour and moral, was
guided by his motive or mental attitude which, in
the terminology of religion, was known as niyat
or intention. For no religious belief is
entirely divorced from the realities of human
experience in its manifold practical aspects, the
intention or purpose with which any act is done sets
the test of its being good or bad. It does not
recognise the division between the temporal and
ecclesiastical since man's desire to propitiate God
and to follow His commands sincerely permeates into
every fibre of human activity, no matter whether it
is the art of government or war, availing oneself of
one's earthly possessions or satisfaction of one's
natural desires or earning one's living or leading a
married life. With a noble intention every mundane
act is turned into a virtuous deed and a means to
attaining propinquity to God. On the contrary, no
merit whatsoever attaches to acts like devotion to
God or fighting in the path of God if the sincere
desire to attain the will and pleasure of God were
absent.
The ancient world had divided
life into two compartments, religious and the
secular ; and the result was that a wedge had been
driven between those who selected one of these as
the pursuit of their life. Oftentimes, the two
groups were at loggerheads with one another, for,
the ‘world’ and ‘religion’ were to them incompatible
spheres of human life. Every man had to choose one
of the two since nobody could be expected to travel
in two boats simultaneously. The prevalent view was
that the path of salvation Jay not through the rough
and tumble of life, but away from the social,
economic and political problems of worldly pursuits.
No concept of religion which bars the gates to
material progress and acquisition of power, riches
and fame could be of interest to intelligent,
capable and ambitious persons with the result that a
great segment of humanity had delivered itself from
the rigorous discipline of asceticism which bad come
to be associated with religion. By withdrawing
themselves from the virtuous energies, these men had
prevented the great importance of morals from
appearing perceptibly in public affairs. The State
had revolted against the Church and made itself free
from all obligations to it. This hideous
schizophrenia not only divested what was called
worldly, from the gifts of spiritual beatitude, but
also gave birth to the modern faithlessness and
agnosticism of Europe which is now threatening to
inundate the entire world, if only, because of its
political and cultural supremacy. The present wave
of crass materialism, loss of faith and moral
debasement is but a direct consequence of the
division between the spirit and matter invented by
the old pagan civilizations.
The Prophet of Mercy, who was
sent to the humanity as a Warner as well as a
messenger of glad tidings, converted the entire life
of man into devotion to God by denying the existence
of any cleavage between the spiritual and temporal
spheres of human affairs. He demolished the wedge
between the men of religion and those of the world
and commended all of them to unite their efforts for
attaining the pleasure of God and service of
humanity. It was because of him that the world could
see the ascetics who wore crowns on their heads and
the warriors who spent their nights in devotions and
prayers.
It would be difficult to conceive
of a more complete transformation of life than the
one brought about by the fusion of the secular and
the sacred, which would require several volumes to
be explained in detail. Iqbal has very succinctly
versified the significance of this concept in one of
his immortal poems.
On monastic order was laid the foundation of
Church,
How could mendacity contain the royalty in its
confines?
The conflict was deep, between hermitry and king-
ship,
One was triumphant, the other subdued.
Politics got rid of religion,
Helpless was the high priest.
When the world and religion parted ways,
Avarice was the ruler, King and Vizier.
Daulism was the doom of mind and matter,
Daulism made the civilization blind.
This is the miracle of the dweller of desert,
Whose warnings reflected the tidings-glad;
That the humanity's only refuge was this,
That (the mystic) Junaid unites with Ardsher (the
king) !
Yet another radical change
brought about by the Prophet of Islam in the life of
man was to make him conscious of the ultimate end of
his life. Unaware of his goal and
objective, man had his eyes fixed
on profane and paltry objects. He directed his whole
intelligence and labour to the acquisition of some
more wealth or land or fame or power. Virtue having
been associated with the pleasurable things, the
main object of the vast majority of people was to
sublimate their conceptions of happiness and longing
with the satisfaction of carnal desires, song and
colour, merrymaking, fun and amusement. Revelry of
the rich and powerful soon brought up a class of
parasites whose whole business was to tickle the
fancy of their patrons. But Muhammad told man that
the great business of mankind was to exert himself
and strive to attain the perfect knowledge of God;
to contemplate on His nature and attributes and lead
his wandering soul to divine propinquity through
realisation of the Unlimited ; to search out the
Unity of the Cause of all causes in the sterling
diverse phenomena of nature ; and to seek his
pleasure through being kind and just and virtuous.
He told man that these were the objectives whose
achievement conferred a rank on him envied by the
angels of God.
Thus, the prophethood of Muhammad
made a clean sweep of the existing order of things
in the world. The longing and desire of man was now
centered on a new objective: love of God took
possession of his being; the pleasure of God became
the immortal thirst of human heart and mercy and
kindness to God's creatures was recognised as the
greatest virtue which became the sole object of his
endeavour. It was then, after the advent of Islam
that the leading feature of all the countries,
Arabia and Iran, Syria and Egypt, Turkistan and
Iraq, North Africa and Spain, became the search for
higher and tender virtues, in the pursuit of which
we find engaged thousands of love-lorn souls. During
this period we find innumerable men of God preaching
love of God, kindness and com- passion to every
sentient being, merits of virtuous living,
acquisition of knowledge for attaining the pleasure
of God, revulsion to cruelty and indecency and the
grace of humility and modesty. They taught the
lesson of human dignity and brotherhood of man and
made this earth a kingdom of God.
If you peep into the souls of
these elevated souls, you would witness the
unbelievable flights of their imagination, purity of
their innermost feelings and nimbleness of their
perceptions. You would see how they were ever
willing to put their own life at stake for others,
made their own children and family sufrer for the
good of all and sundry, compelled the autocratic
kings and potentiates to do justice to the weak and
the poor and how rightfully just they were even to
their enemies. Of a fact, it would have been
difficult for us to believe today what a fine
specimen of humanity, what a sublime soul, were
these men of God if the historians and biographers
had not preserved a truthful record of their lives
and doings.
The striking change in the
manners and morals of the people was indeed a
miracle worked by the holy Prophet of Islam. Iqbal
mentions these gifts of Prophet Muhammad in some of
his inimitable verses.
He slept on a mat of rushes,
But the crown of Chosroes lay beneath the feet of
his followers;
He chose the nightly solitude of Mount Hira,
And founded a nation, law and government;
He passed his nights with sleepless eyes,
That his Millet might sleep on Chosroes throne
In the hour of battle, iron was melted by the flash
of his sword.
At prayer time, tears fell like drops of rain from
his eyes.
In his prayer for Divine help, his Amen' was a
sword,
Which extirpated the lineage of kings.
He inaugurated a new Order in the world,
He brought the empires old to an end:
In his sight the high and the low were one,
He sat with the slave at table one;
He burnt clear the distinctions of birth and clan.
His fire consumed all this trash and bran.
Another poet, Hali, has summed it
up in a verse wherein he says;
Springtide that now overfills the world,
Is the outgrowth of saplings planted by him.
Verily, God saith in truth: "We
have sent thee not save as a mercy for the peoples." |