#06 - Moral System Of
Islam Islam
has laid down some universal fundamental rights for
humanity as a whole, which are to be observed and
respected under all circumstances. To achieve these
rights, Islam provides not only legal safeguards,
but also a very effective moral system. Thus, whatever
leads to the welfare of the individual or the society
is morally good in Islam and whatever is injurious
is morally bad. Islam attaches so much importance
to the love of God and love of man that it warns against
too much formalism. We read in the Qur'an:
It is not righteousness
that you turn your faces towards the East or West;
but it is righteousness to believe in God and the
Last Day and the Angels, and the Book, and the Messengers;
to spend of your substance, out of love for Him, for
your kin, for orphans, for the needy, for the wayfarer,
for those who ask, and for the freeing of captives;
to be steadfast in prayers, and practice regular charity;
to fulfill the contracts which you made; and to be
firm and patient in pain and adversity and throughout
all periods of panic. Such are the people of truth,
the God-conscious. (2:177)
We are given a beautiful description
of the righteous and God-conscious man in these verses.
He should obey salutary regulations, but he should
fix his gaze on the love of God and the love of his
fellow-men.
We are given four directions:
a) Our faith
should be true and sincere,
b) We must be prepared to show it
in deeds of charity to our fellow-men,
c) We must be good citizens, supporting
social organizations, and
d) Our own individual soul must be
firm and unshaken in all circumstances.
This is the standard by which
a particular mode of conduct is judged and classified
as good or bad. This standard of judgment provides
the nucleus around which the whole moral conduct should
revolve. Before laying down any moral injunctions,
Islam seeks to firmly implant in man's heart the conviction
that his dealings are with God, who sees him at all
times and in all places; that he may hide himself
form the whole world, but not from Him; that he may
deceive everyone but cannot deceive God; that he can
flee from the clutches of anyone else, but not from
God's.
Thus, by setting God's pleasure
as the objective of man's life, Islam has furnished
the highest possible standard of morality. This is
bound to provide limitless avenues for the moral evolution
of humanity. By making Divine revelations as the primary
source of knowledge, it gives permanence and stability
to the moral standards which afford reasonable scope
for genuine adjustments, adaptations and innovations
though not for perversions, wild variation, atomistic
relativism or moral fluidity. It provides a sanction
to morality in the love and fear of God, which will
impel man to obey the moral law even without any external
pressure. Through belief in God and the Day of Judgment,
it furnishes a force which enables a person to adopt
the moral conduct with earnestness and sincerity,
with all the devotion of heart and soul.
It does not, through a false
sense of originality and innovation, provide any novel
moral virtues, nor does it seek to minimize the importance
of the well-known moral norms, nor does it give exaggerated
importance to some and neglect others without cause.
It takes up all the commonly known moral virtues and
with a sense of balance and proportion it assigns
a suitable place and function to each one of them
in the total scheme of life. It widens the scope of
man's individual and collective life – his domestic
associations, his civic conduct, and his activities
in the political, economic, legal, educational, and
social realms. It covers his life from home to society,
from the dining-table to the battle-field and peace
conferences, literally from the cradle to the grave.
In short, no sphere of life is exempt from the universal
and comprehensive application of the moral principles
of Islam. It makes morality reign supreme and ensures
that the affairs of life, instead of dominated by
selfish desires and petty interests, should be regulated
by norms of morality.
It stipulates for man a system
of life that is based on all good and is free from
all evil. It encourages the people not only to practice
virtue, but also to establish virtue and eradicate
vice, to bid good and to forbid wrong. It wants that
their verdict of conscience should prevail and virtue
must be subdued to play second fiddle to evil. Those
who not respond to this call are gathered together
into a community and given the name Muslim. And the
singular object underlying the formation of this community
(Ummah) is that it should make an organized effort
to establish and enforce goodness and suppress and
eradicate evil.
Here we furnish some basic
moral teachings of Islam for various aspects of a
Muslim's life. They cover the broad spectrum of personal
moral conduct of a Muslim as well as his social responsibilities.
God-Consciousness
The Qur'an mentions this as
the highest quality of a Muslim:
The most honorable
among you in the sight of God is the one who is most
God-conscious. (49:13)
Humility, modesty, control
of passions and desires, truthfulness, integrity,
patience, steadfastness, and fulfilling one's promises
are moral values that are emphasized again and again
in the Qur'an:
And God loves those
who are firm and steadfast. (3:146)
And vie with one another
to attain to your Sustainer's forgiveness and to a
Paradise as vast as the heavens and the earth, which
awaits the God-conscious, who spend for charity in
time of plenty and in times of hardship, and restrain
their anger, and pardon their fellow men, for God
loves those who do good. (3:133-134)
Establish regular
prayer, enjoin what is just, and forbid what is wrong;
and bear patiently whatever may befall you; for this
is true constancy. And do not swell your cheek (with
pride) at men, nor walk in insolence on the earth,
for God does not love any man proud and boastful.
And be moderate in your pace and lower your voice;
for the harshest of sounds, indeed, is the braying
of the ass. (31:18-19)
In a way which summarizes the
moral behavior of a Muslim, the Prophet (PBUH) said:
"My Sustainer
has given me nine commands: to remain conscious of
God, whether in private or public; to speak justly,
whether angry or pleased; to show moderation both
when poor and when rich; to reunite friendship with
those who have broken off with me; to give to him
who refuses me; that my silence should be occupied
with thought; that my looking should be an admonition;
and that I should command what is right."
Social Responsibility
The teachings of Islam concerning
social responsibilities are based on kindness and
consideration of others. Since a broad injunction
to be kind is likely to be ignored in specific situations,
Islam lays emphasis on specific acts of kindness and
defines the responsibilities and rights within various
relationships. In a widening circle of relationships,
then, our first obligation is to our immediate family
– parents, spouse, and children – and
then to other relatives, neighbors, friends and acquaintances,
orphans and widows, the needy of the community, our
fellow Muslims, all fellow human beings, and animals.
Parents
Respect and care for parents
is very much stressed in the Islamic teaching and
is a very important part of a Muslim's expression
of faith.
Your Sustainer has
decreed that you worship none but Him, and that you
be kind to your parents. whether one or both of them
attain old age in your life time, do not say to them
a word of contempt nor repel them, but address them
in terms of honor. And, out of kindness, lower to
them the wing of humility and say: My Sustainer! Bestow
on them Your mercy, even as they cherished me in childhood.
(17:23-24)
Other Relatives
And render to the
relatives their due rights, as (also) to those in
need, and to the traveler; and do not squander your
wealth in the manner of a spendthrift. (17:26)
Neighbors
The Prophet (PBUH)
has said:
"He is not a
believer who eats his fill when his neighbor beside
him is hungry."
"He does not
believe whose neighbors are not safe from his injurious
conduct."
Actually, according to the
Qur'an and Sunnah, a Muslim has to discharge his moral
responsibility not only to his parents, relatives
and neighbors, but to the entire mankind, animals
and trees and plants. For example, hunting of birds
and animals for the sake of game is not permitted.
Similarly, cutting down trees and plants which yield
fruit is forbidden unless there is a pressing need
for it.
Thus, on the basic moral characteristics,
Islam builds a higher system of morality by virtue
of which mankind can realize its greatest potential.
Islam purifies the soul from self-seeking egotism,
tyranny, wantonness and indiscipline. It creates God-conscious
men, devoted to their ideals, possessed of piety,
abstinence, discipline and uncompromising with falsehood.
It induces feelings of moral responsibility and fosters
the capacity for self-control. Islam generates kindness,
generosity, mercy, sympathy, peace, disinterested
goodwill, scrupulous fairness and truthfulness towards
all creation in all situations. It nourishes noble
qualities from which only good may be expected. |