The Holy Qur’an is the Final
Testament of the Almighty. Humankind has with it this Word of God preserved
word for word. With the passage of time the adherents to this sublime masterpiece
have increased to billions.
One question is bound to arise in
the minds of all the people who refer to the Word of God for guidance:
What is the real topic of the Book. If we care to read the Book with sincerity
and seriousness of purpose, it is evident as the mid-day sun that the sole
aim of this scripture is the guidance of man; man is the real end that
the Book aims. It is his guidance that is the real objective of the Book.
Naturally, the next moment we think of a typical individual, the characteristic
man whom the Book conceives. In the following lines we make an effort to
depict the type of person the Holy Qur’an envisages -- the kind
of traits its believers should carry.
An intellectual study of the Book
would reveal that there are basically three main facets that every Muslim
should have who believes in the truth of this Book. These are professing
faith, doing good deeds and finally urging people to adopt this faith and
these deeds.
First we take into account faith as
the first ornament in the personality of a believer. Faith in Allah is
the chief ingredient of a person who believes in the book. A believer is
not someone who has yet to overcome the intellectual confusions in his
way to discover God. He is somebody for whom Allah is the central entity
in his life. He has great confidence in God. He sees His benevolence when
every reasoning fails. He spots the ray of hope when the world of strategies
is darkened. He feels himself cured when the science of medicine is silent
over the remedy. When people fail to find a way out, he stands with his
brimming trust on the Almighty and proclaims to all the world that he is
seeing the way. He is not an individual who is still roaming in the world
of reasoning to experience Allah -- he has gone way ahead. For the former,
the faith in Allah has not gained grounds in the heart, but for the latter
Allah has become the rock. This is the kind of faith the Holy Qur’an
asks
from its believers.
The second pearl in the realm of faith
is the belief in Prophet Muhammad (sws). Faith in the Holy Prophet (sws)
is something that brings a striking change in one’s personality. Faith
in the Holy Prophet (sws) asks us to follow his Sunnah and pay due regard
to his commands. When this faith bears deep roots in our conscience, only
then every other relationship of this world becomes inferior to his relationship.
The love for the Holy Prophet (sws) should supersede every other affiliation
with anyone else in this world. But gaining a sound understanding of this
faith is very essential for its true application in our lives. Today when
the person of the Holy Prophet (sws) is no more in this world, it is his
personality with which we should associate our emotions. The way we adore
someone’s being in the shape of a poet or a statesman who is no more in
this world, in the same manner the faith in the Prophet Muhammad (sws)
should prevail in our lives. He should be the centre of our love.
The last major tenet of faith is the
faith in the Hereafter. Though it may be regarded as an offshoot of one’s
faith in Allah, the Hereafter’s concept is a unique phenomenon in the creed
of Islam. Looking forward to a different world is something that everyone
feels once or more than once in his life. But where this world is and what
it will be like are the important questions. It shouldn’t be sought somewhere
else. According to the Holy Qur’an, it is all above us. All of us
see the vast expanse over us. The stars, the planets, the satellites, the
solar systems, all these are relating a different story. All this would
be converted into a new earth and new heaven on the Day of Judgement, as
the Qur’an says (14:48). Regarding the time of the event, the Holy
Prophet (sws) has guided people in a glorious fashion: The time of death
in everyone’s life is Doomsday for him. For him the period to amass the
valuables for the Hereafter ends with his death.
Keeping all this in mind, one should
nurture the faith in the Hereafter in one’s life. The aspiration for Paradise
is only the starting point. Its culmination is achieved when one starts
living in quest for Paradise. Look at the person who sits on a station
with all his luggage and waits for the train: Everything settled, the luggage,
the necessities, the ticket. And then observe the calm on that passenger,
narrating a unique story. That’s the analogy of a person who is now inquisitive
about the Hereafter -- the Paradise. Now the desire for Paradise has transformed
into a craving to see Paradise. He is not afraid of something dangerous
over there -- rather living to see ahead. That is the kind of faith the
Holy Qur’an expects from its believers.
The next shade of a believer’s life
are the deeds he offers before God. Our world is a place of action. The
ethical responsibilities the Book of God entails on a believer are not
very hard to find. The world of morals is deeply rooted in one’s conscience.
He doesn’t need to know the basic rights and wrongs in his life. The dictates
of conscience guide him to the way of truth. But the force of our faith
in Allah, in the Holy Prophet (sws) and in the Hereafter takes a natural
outlet in our deeds.
At every moment in our life, at every
occasion in our life, faith in the Almighty makes us remember Him -
while signing an official file, while delivering a verdict or while weighing
an item at our shop. We remember God when we disrupt our sleep in the night
-- in the way taught by our beloved Holy Prophet (sws). At every occasion,
our heart keeps His thought alive. Similarly, faith in the Prophet Muhammad
(sws) doesn’t let us become oblivious of the plight of his Ummah and his
mission. We are always concerned over the dire straits of the Muslims.
In the same way, faith in the Hereafter is reflected in our every decision:
when erecting a building, when deciding for a wife or when bequeathing
our heritage.
All these motives behind the deeds
of a believer develop a unique individual on this earth. On the one hand,
he is like a fierce horse ready to waylay the enemy. On the other hand,
he is like gentle rain that showers on every soul. As the Prophet Jesus
(sws) has said he is vigilant as a serpent and harmless as a dove.
Finally, the third facet is the promotion
of faith and deeds. Promoting the Will of God among fellow citizens is
one of the striking features of his life. But he is not the one who humiliates
others to promote his point. He is the one who knocks at others’ doors
in the darkness of night, in the calmness of solitude to narrate his feelings.
His soul saddens over the poor morals over his fellow citizens; he fears
for the day when such people would be the fuel of the inferno. But he never
considers himself superior while spreading the Word of God. He doesn’t
say: ‘O ye people, God is great, ye art not’. Instead he utters: ‘O ye
people, God is great, I am not’. Similarly, he is not the one who has learnt
to speak and speak alone. He listens to every positive thing that is related
to him. He spreads the opinion he thinks right but very astonishingly accepts
other’s viewpoint if he finds his weaker. For him the tools of perseverance
and wisdom are the weapons to move among his fellow beings.
This is the picture of the person
who is the true follower of the path of God as narrated in His Book. This
is the type of personality that the Holy Qur’an wants us to acquire.
But surely like every achievement asks an immense toil, same is true over
here. The path to this accomplishment may be traversed through two invaluable
assets. First is our continued, permanent link with the Book of God. Just
like we spend some moments in our every day routine on fulfilling the needs
of our stomach, in the same fashion we need to spare some time daily with
the Holy Qur’an. Secondly, the company of true scholars and pious
individuals is indispensable for someone who wishes to achieve the character
desired by God. The sweetness of faith one experiences in the meeting with
such blessed souls is something only those can feel who have tasted it.
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