It is generally believed in our religious
circles that the teachings and directives of Islam only appeal to our emotions
and sentiments; they do not address our intellect and as such they have
to be accepted and obeyed without being inquisitive into the logic and
philosophy behind them. The Asharites, the largest school of Muslim dialectics,
also hold this view.
This view seems to contradict the
Qur’an.
The Qur’an explicitly states that all Islamic beliefs and directives
have sound reasons behind their inception. Consequently, whenever the Qur’an
urges man to accept certain dogmas, it cites arguments to substantiate
its claims. It warns those who evade and ignore its call to use their faculty
of reasoning instead of being slaves to emotions like hate and prejudice.
In fact, a little deliberation shows that the Qur’an wants us to
obey certain religious commandments precisely because the Almighty has
blessed us with the faculty of reasoning. Thus, a perfectly healthy person
who is mentally insane has been relieved from all religious responsibilities
in Islam. In spite of being fit in all other respects, he has not been
asked to say his prayer or fast, nor is he liable to punishment for any
crime he commits.
An important point which must be understood
in this regard is that we are required to accept certain realities without
observing them because their existence can be logically deduced. For example,
we are not able to see God, the Day of Judgment too is as yet concealed
from our eyes, nor have we witnessed Gabriel revealing the Divine Message
to the Prophet (sws). Yet, we believe in all these because present in the
Qur’an,
in our own intuition and in the various phenomenon of nature are signs
which testify that these realities are rationally proven facts. It is highly
irrational on the part of man to demand a visual display of realities which,
though unseen, can be understood rationally. It is his misfortune that
on the one hand when he delves deep in the domains of science, he accepts
certain realities which cannot be observed but the existence of which can
be proven by other means, and on the other hand, he adopts a completely
different attitude when he comes across certain metaphysical realities
of life.
In other words, some realities upon
which the Qur’an asks us to believe are certainly beyond the perception
of senses but not beyond the perception of reason. Just as footsteps on
sand testify beyond doubt that someone has traveled past, likewise writ
large on every matter of this universe is that someone has just gone past
and left an indelible expression of his own existence.
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