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The problem of justice as one of God's attributes has had its own
distinct history. Various schools of thought in Islam have held
different views on the subject, interpreting it in accordance with
their own distinctive principles.
Some Sunnis who follow the views of the theologian Abu'l Hasan
Ash'ari do not believe in God's justice as a matter of faith, and
they deny that justice is accomplished by the divine acts.
In their view, however, God treats a certain person, and whatever
punishment or reward He gives him, irrespective of what he might
appear to deserve, will represent justice and absolute good, even
though it might appear unjust when measured by human standards.
These Ash'aris, thus, distinguish God's attribute of justice from
His acts and they, therefore, regard as just, whatever can be
attributed to God. If He rewards the virtuous and punishes the
sinful, this is justice, but so would be the reverse; it would still
be in the broad sphere of His justice.
Their claim that the very terms
"justice" and
"injustice" are meaningless when applied to God is no
doubt intended to elevate God's most sacred essence to the position
of the highest transcendence. But no thoughtful person will regard
these superficial and inadequate notions as having anything to do
with God's transcendence. In fact, they involve a denial of order in
the world, of the principle of causality, both in the general order
of the world and in the conduct and deeds of individual men.
The followers of al-Ash'ari believe, moreover, that the bright
lamp of the intellect is extinguished whenever it is confronted with
the perceptions and problems of religion, that it is unable to
benefit man or light up his path.
This claim conforms neither to the teachings of the Quran nor to
the content of the sunnah. The Quran considers disregard for the
intellect to be a form of misguidance and repeatedly summons men to
reflection and meditation in order to learn divine knowledge and
religious beliefs. Those who fail to benefit from this bright lamp
can only be compared to the animals. The Quran says:
"The
worst of creatures in the sight of God are those persons who are
deaf and dumb and do not reflect."
(8:22)
The Prophet of Islam says:
"God has assigned two guides to
man: one external to him, the messengers of God, and the other
internal, his own power of thought."
The Mutazilites and
Shi'as are in opposition to al-Ash'ari and
his school, out of all the attributes of God, have selected
justice to be a focus principle of their creed. Relying on both
transmitted and rational proofs, they have also refuted and rejected
as incompatible with the principle of justice, the doctrines of the
unmediated effect of divine destiny and the predetermination of
man's acts.
They believe that justice is the basis of God's acts, both in the
ordering of the universe and in the establishing of laws. Just as
human acts can be weighed according to the criteria of good and bad,
the acts of the Creator are also subject to the same criteria. Since
the logic of reason determines that justice is inherently
praiseworthy and injustice inherently reprehensible, an object of
worship whose characteristics include infinite intelligence and
spirit, will never undertake an act that reason regards as
impermissible.
When we say that God is just, it means that His all-knowing and
creative essence does nothing that is contrary to wisdom and
benefit. The concept of wisdom, when applied to the Creator, does
not mean that He chooses the best means for attaining His goals or
remedying His deficiencies, for it is only man who is called on to
move from deficiency toward perfection. God's concern is to make
beings emerge from deficiency and impel them toward perfection and
the aims inherent in their own essences. God's wisdom consists of
this, that He first implants a form of His favour within each
phenomenon, and then, after bestowing existence upon it, impels it
toward the perfection of its capacities through a further exercise
of His generosity.
Justice has then, an extensive meaning, which naturally includes
the avoidance of oppression and all foolish acts. Imam Ja'far as-Sadiq,
peace be upon him, says in explanation of God's justice:
"Justice in the case of God means that you should not
ascribe anything to God that if you were to do it would cause you to
be blamed and reproached."
With man, oppression and all the forms of corrupt activity in
which he engages, derive, without doubt, from ignorance and lack of
awareness and need coupled with innate lowliness; sometimes as well,
they are the reflection of hatred and enmity, which leap forth from
man's inner being like a spark.
Numerous are those people who are disgusted with their own
oppressiveness and corruption. Nonetheless, because of ignorance
about the final outcome of their deeds, they continue, from time to
time, to act with injustice and pollute themselves with all kinds of
shameful, corrupt deeds.
Sometimes man feels that he needs something that he does not have
the resources or ability to acquire. This is the root cause of many
evils. The feeling of need, hunger and greed, the prevalence in man of a desire to harm or dominate-all, these are factors leading to
aggressive behaviour.
Under their influence, man loses the reins of self-control. He
concentrates all his efforts on fulfilling his desires and violating
all ethical restrictions. He starts squeezing the throats of the
oppressed.
The unique essence of God, that infinite being, is free of all
such tendencies and limitations, for nothing is hidden from His
knowledge is without bounds and it is inconceivable that He should
suffer from anything. He, the Pre-Eternal One
Whose eternal rays bestows life and sustenance on all things and Who
assures their movement, variety and development.
A subtle essence that comprehends all the degrees of perfection
stands in no need of anything so that its absence might induce
anxiety in Him when He conceives a desire for it. His power and
capacity are without any doubt, unlimited and they do not fall short
of anything so that He might then be led to deviate from the path of
justice and transgress against someone, or take vengeance in order
to quieten his heart or undertake some inappropriate and ill sided
act.
None of the motivations for unjust behaviour can be found in
God and indeed the very concepts of oppression and injustice are
inapplicable to a being Whose generosity and mercy embrace all
things and the sanctity of Whose essence is clearly manifest
throughout creation.
The Quran repeatedly negates all idea of injustice by God,
considering Him in His sanctity utterly removed from all unworthy
acts. It says:
"God never considers it permissible to act
unjustly toward His servants; it is rather men who commit oppression
and injustice."
(10:44)
In this verse, God dissociates Himself from all notion of
injustice, something repugnant to men and, instead, attributes it
to them.
In addition, how is it possible that God should call on men to
establish justice and equity while at the same time staining His own
hands with unrighteous deeds? The Quran says:
"God commands men
to act with justice and virtue and enjoins upon them generosity to
kinsfolk. He forbids them evil deeds and oppression. He admonishes
you out of His mercy, so that you may accept His
advice."
(16:90)
Islam values justice so highly that if one group of Muslims wish
to deviate from the path of justice and start engaging in
oppression, they must be repressed, even if this involves war. This
is the command of the Quran:
"If two parties of believers fight with each other,
make peace between them. If one of them has committed aggression
against the other, then make war on the aggressor until he returns
to observance of God's command. Once he has so returned, then
reconcile them and make peace in utter justice. Certainly God loves
the just."
(49:9)
The interesting point that emerges from this verse is that the
mediator is strictly instructed to make sure, when bringing about
reconciliation, that the dispute is settled in accordance with
justice, without showing lenience to the aggressor. It may happen,
in cases where war has been started for aggressive purposes, that a
mediator tries to end the dispute by insisting on leniency and the
overlooking of faults and ultimately persuades one of the parties
to renounce its claim in favour of the other. This lenient approach,
although legitimate in itself, may reinforce the spirit of
aggressiveness existing in those who gained by starting the war. It
is, in fact, conventional to satisfy the aggressor in such cases by
granting him some concession.
Although the voluntary renunciation of one's claim is a desirable
act in itself, it will, under such circumstances, have an
undesirable effect on the mentality of the aggressor. The aim of
Islam is to uproot force and injustice from Islamic society and to
assure its members that no one can gain anything by aggression and
force.
If we look at the order of creation, we can see that a vast and
comprehensive equilibrium prevails among all physical phenomena.
This is evident in the regularity of the atoms, the haste of the
electrons, the rotation of the planets, and the movements of all
bodies. It is visible in the mineral and vegetable realms, in the
precise relations that exist among the organs of a living being, in
the balance among the inner components of the atom, in the
equilibrium among the vast heavenly bodies and their finely
calculated forces of attraction. All these forms of balance and
equilibrium, together with the other precise laws that science is
still seeking to explore, bear witness to the existence of an
undeniable order in the universe, one which is confirmed by
mathematical equations.
Our veracious Prophet has expressed this universal justice and
comprehensive equilibrium-the fact that nothing is irregular or out
of place, in this concise and eloquent statement: "It is true
equilibrium and symmetry that maintain the earth and the
heavens."
The Quran attributes the following words to Moses, peace be upon
him and our Prophet:
"Our God is the one who endowed all things with the
needful and then guided them for the continuation of their existence."
(20:50)
In this short sentence, Moses expounds to the Pharaoh the manner
in which the world was created together with its orderliness and
beauty, which are among God's signs. His aim was to save him from
his erroneous thoughts and help him perceive the existence of a just
and divinely instituted order in the universe.
One of the norms ruling ineluctably over nature is, therefore,
order and justice, and all things by virtue of their subordination
to the norms and laws of nature, are engaged in the process of
evolution toward perfection that is specific to each of them. Any
deviation from this universal pattern of order and the relations
founded upon it would result in confusion and chaos.
Whenever some irregularity occurs in nature, phenomena themselves
produce a reaction, and inward or outward factors emerge to remove
the barriers to development and re-establish the order needed to
continue on the path to perfection.
When the body is attacked by microbes and other factors of illness, white globules begin to neutralize them, in accordance with
ineluctable norm. Whatever medicine may be prescribed is an external
factor aiding the white globules in their task of neutralization and
re-establishing equilibrium in the body.
Finally, it is impossible that God, Whose love is infinite and
Who unstintingly grants His favours to His servants, should perform
the slightest unjust or inappropriate act. This is, indeed, what the
Quran proclaims:
"It is God Who has made the earth a place of abode for
you, Who has raised the heavens, created you in the best of forms,
and given you delicious and pleasing foods as sustenance. This is
God, your Lord."
(40:64)
The question of God's justice involves certain problems, such as
the existence of disasters, loss and evil in the natural order and
inequalities in the social order. This question arouses, in fact, a
whole storm of questions and objections in the minds of many people.
The problems they face are so fundamental, that what start out as
doubts and hesitations, ultimately become an indissoluble complex.
Such people ask how it is possible that in a world created on the
basis of intelligence and wisdom, so much suffering, pain and evil
should prevail; that the world should be subjected constantly to the
successive blows of hardship and misfortune, with loss and
deficiency always in the ascendant.
Why is it that in various parts of the world, terrible,
overwhelming events assault mankind, resulting in untold loss and
destruction? Why is one person ugly and another beautiful, one
healthy and another sick? Why are all men not created equal, and
does not their inequality point to an absence of justice in the
universe?
Justice in the order of things depends on its being free of
oppression, discrimination and disaster, or the absence from it of
all defect, sickness, and poverty; this, they say, alone would
result in perfection and justice.
We must begin by admitting that our evaluation of the affairs of
the universe does not permit us to penetrate the ultimate depths of
phenomena; it is inadequate for the analysis of the ends and
purposes of things.
Our initial understanding of unpleasant events and disasters is
bound to be superficial; we are not prepared to recognize any truth
lying beyond our initial impression. We cannot, at the outset,
delineate the ultimate aims of those events, and we, therefore,
regard them as signs of injustice. Our feelings become aroused and
lead us into the most illogical analyses.
But if we reflect more profoundly, we will see that this
one-sided evaluation of events we label injustice comes from making
our interests or those of people to whom we are directly or
indirectly related, our criterion and yardstick. Whatever secures
our interests is good, and whatever harms us is bad. In other words,
our judgment of good and bad is based on a short-eyed perception,
narrow horizons of thought, and a lack of precise knowledge
concerning the norms of creation.
Is our existence the only issue involved in every occurrence? Can
we make our own profit and loss into the criterion of good and evil?
Our material world is constantly engaged in producing change. Events
that did not exist today will occur tomorrow; some things will
disappear and others will take their place.
It is obvious that what is useful and beneficial for some people
today will cease to exist tomorrow. But for us who are human beings
and attached to our own existence and the things of the world, the
acquisition of things is good and their loss is bad. But despite man
and his attachments, the changing nature of the world produces
constantly changing phenomena. If the world did not comprehend the
possibility of change, phenomena themselves would not exist, and,
therefore, there could also be no question of good and evil.
In such a hypothetical, unchanging world there would be neither
loss and deficiency nor growth and development, no contrast or
differentiation, no variety or multiplicity, no compounding or
motion. In a world without deficiency or loss, there would also be
no human, moral or social criteria, limits, or laws. Development and
change are the result of the motion and rotation of the planets; if
they ceased to exist, there would be no earth, no moon and no sun,
no day, no month and no year.
A somewhat comprehensive view of the world will permit us to
understand that what is harmful for us today, or may be so in the
future, is beneficial for others. The world as a whole moves in the
direction dictated by the overall purpose of being and benefit of
being; individuals may suffer harm in this process, and it may even
be that mankind at large does not stand to benefit.
Were we able to plunge deeply enough into the ocean of knowledge
and turn the pages of its book replete with mysteries with the
finger of our understanding, the ultimate purpose and outcome of all
events and phenomena would be revealed to us. However, our power of
judgment is not sufficiently comprehensive to deal with the complex
web that confronts us: we know neither the chain of preceding causes
that have produced the phenomena of today, nor the chain of future
effects those phenomena, in turn, will produce.
If it were possible for us to look down from above on the broad
plain of the world, in such a way that we could see all the positive
and negative aspects of everything, all the mysteries of everything
occurring in the world; if it were possible for us to evaluate the
effects and results of every event in history, past, present and
future and everything occurring between pre-eternity and
post-eternity, and, if this were possible for us, then we might be
able to say that the harm of a given event outweighed its benefit
and brand it as evil.
But does man have such comprehensive awareness of the horizontal
and vertical chains of causality? Can he situate himself on the
moving axis of the world?
Since we do not dispose of such an ability, since we will never
be able to traverse so infinite a distance, however long be our
stride; since we will never be able to lift the veil from all these
complexities and take their due measure, it is best that we refrain
from one-sided and hasty judgments that are based on our own
short-sightedness. We should recognise that we must not make our own
benefit the sole criterion for judging this vast universe. The
relative observations we make within the framework of the limited
data at our disposal and the specific conditions to which we are
subject can never furnish criteria for a definitive judgment.
Nature may often be working toward the fulfilment of a
particular goal that is unimaginable to man, given his conventional
circumstances. Why cannot it not be supposed that unpleasant
occurrences are the result of efforts aimed at preparing the ground
for a new phenomenon that will be the instrument of God's will upon
earth? It may be that the conditions and circumstances of the age
necessitate such processes.
If all the changes and upheavals that terrify us did not take
place within a given plan and design and for the sake of a specific
aim, if they were to be extended throughout time without producing
any positive or constructive result, there would be no trace on
earth of any living creature, including man.
Why should we accuse the world of injustice, of being chaotic and
unstable, simply because of a few exceptional occurrences and
phenomena in nature? Should we start objecting because of a handful
of unpleasantness, major and minor, forgetting all the
manifestations of precision and wisdom, all the wonders we see in
the world and its creatures, that testify to the will and
intelligence of an exalted being?
Since man sees so much evidence of careful planning throughout
the universe, he must admit that the world is a purposive whole, a
process moving toward perfection. Every phenomenon in it is subject
to its own specific criterion, and if a phenomenon appears
inexplicable or unjustifiable, this is because of man's short-sightedness. Man must understand that in his finiteness, he
lacks the capacity to understand the aims of all phenomena and their
content; it is not that creation has any defect.
Our attitude to the bitter and unpleasant occurrences of this
world resemble the judgment made by a desert dweller when he comes
to the city and sees powerful bulldozers destroying old buildings.
He regards this demolition as a foolish act of destruction, but is
it logical on his part to think that the demolition is unplanned and
purposeless? Of course not, because he sees only the process of
demolition, not the calculations and plans of the architects and
others involved.
As a certain scientist said:
"Our state is like that of
children who watch a circus packing up and preparing to move on.
This is necessary for the circus to go elsewhere and continue with
its life of excitement, but those short-sighted children see in the
folding of the tents and the comings and goings of men and animals
nothing but the dissolution and termination of the circus."
If we look a little more deeply and imaginatively at the
misfortunes and disasters that plague man and interpret them
correctly, we will appreciate that in reality, they are blessings,
not disasters. A blessing being a blessing, and a disaster being a
disaster is de pendent upon man's reaction to it; a single event may
be experienced quite differently by two different people.
Misfortune and pain are like an alarm warning man to remedy his
deficiencies and errors; they are like a natural immune system or
regulatory mechanism inherent in man.
If wealth leads to self-indulgence and pleasure-seeking, it is a
misfortune and a disaster, and if poverty and deprivation lead to
the refinement and development of the human soul, they are a
blessing. Thus, wealth cannot be counted as absolute good fortune
nor poverty as absolute misfortune. A similar rule covers whatever
natural gifts man may possess.
Nations who are confronted by various hostile forces and
compelled to struggle for their survival are strengthened thereby.
Once we regard effort and struggle to be a positive and constructive
endeavour, we cannot overlook the role played by hardships in
developing man's inner resources and impelling him to progress.
People who are not obliged to struggle and who live in an
environment free of all contradiction will easily be immersed by
material prosperity in their pleasures and lusts.
How often it happens that someone willingly endures hardship and
pain for the sake of a great goal! Were it not for that hardship and
pain, the goal might not appear so desirable to him! A smooth path
along which one advances blindly and mechanically is not conducive
to development and growth, and a human effort from which the element
of conscious will has been removed cannot produce a fundamental
change in man.
Struggle and contradiction are like a scourge impelling man
forward. Solid objects are shattered by the pressure of repeated
blows, but men are formed and tempered by the hardships they endure.
They throw themselves into the ocean to learn how to swim and it is
in the furnace of crisis that genius emerges.
In fact, the most
wretched of men are those who have grown up in the midst of luxury
and comfort, who have never experienced the hardships of life or
tasted its bitter days along with the sweet: the sun of their lives
rises and sets within, unnoticed by anyone else.
Following one's inclinations and adhering to one's desires, is in
compatible with firmness and elevation of spirit, with purposeful
effort and striving. Pleasure-seeking and corruption, on the one
hand, and strength of will and purposive ness, on the other,
represent two contrary inclinations in man. Since neither can be
negated or affirmed to the exclusion of the other, one must strive
constantly to reduce the desire for pleasure and strengthen the
opposing force within one.
Those who have been raised in luxury, who have never tasted the
bitter and sweet days of the world, who have always enjoyed
prosperity and never endured hunger, can never appreciate the
taste of delicious food nor the joy of life as a whole and they are
incapable of truly appreciating beauty. The pleasures of life can be
truly enjoyed only by those who have experienced hardship and
failure in their lives, who have the capacity to absorb difficulty
and to endure those hardships that lie in wait along every step of
man's path.
Material and spiritual ease become precious to man only after
experiencing the ups and downs of life and the pressure of its
unpleasant incidents.
Once man is preoccupied with his material life, all dimensions of
his existence are enchained, and he loses aspiration and motion.
Inevitably, he will also neglect his eternal life and inward
purification. As long as desire casts its shadow on his being and
his soul is ensnared by darkness, he will be like a speck tossed
around on the waves of matter. He will seek refuge in anything but
God. He therefore needs something to awaken him and induce maturity
in his thoughts, to remind him of the transitoriness of this
ephemeral world and help him attain the ultimate aim of all heavenly
teachings; the freedom for the soul from all the obstacles and
carriers that prevent man from attaining lofty perfection.
The training and refinement of the self is not to be had cheaply;
it requires the renunciation of various pleasures and enjoyments,
and the process of cutting loose from them is bitter and difficult.
It is true that such exertions will be for the sake of purifying
man's inner being and allowing his latent capacities to appear.
Nonetheless, patient abstention from sin and pleasure-seeking is
always bitter to man's taste and it is only through obstinate
resistance to lower impulses that he can fulfil his mission of
breaking down the barriers that confront him and thus ascend to the
realm of higher values.
Those who are drunk on the arrogance of power and success and who
have totally forgotten humane ethics because of the seduction of
their soul and their senses will sometimes find, in various corners
of the world, that the occurrence of unpleasant events makes them
open to fundamental changes and developments that tear away from
them the veils of forgetfulness. They may even be guided to a path
leading to some degree of moral perfection and a future more
fruitful than their present. They are people in whom misfortune has
induced a profound transformation.
Considering the harmful effects of neglectfulness and the
intoxication of arrogance, on the one hand, and the numerous moral
lessons taught by misfortune, on the other, it can be said that
failure and misfortune are relative insofar as, they contain great
blessings; they contribute fruitfully to the building of man's
awareness and will.
Hardship is then, the preliminary to higher, more advanced
states of being; it prepares man for the recompense that awaits him,
and from his response to it, it becomes apparent whether he has
attained the lofty degree of sincerity and devotion or is sunk in
decay.
The Quran says:
"We have created man in the embrace of hardship."
(90:4)
Or, again:
"We test you with fear,
hunger, the loss of wealth and possessions, death, and the loss of
the fruits of your toil. Give glad tidings to those who struggle
manfully on this path that those who say when afflicted with
calamity and pain,
'We are from God and to Him we return on our path
to perfection,
'-that it is they who receive kindness and mercy from
their Lord together with their suffering,
and they it is who are
truly guided."
(2:155-57)
Without doubt, God could have created a world without hardship,
pain and misfortune, but that would have meant His depriving man of
freedom and choice; he would have been let loose in the world as a
creature without will or the power of decision, just like any other
creature lacking perception and awareness, formed exclusively by
nature and totally obedient to it. Would he then have deserved the
name of man?
Having paid the heavy price of losing all his innate capacities
and freedom, his most precious resource, would he have advanced
toward perfection, or decayed and declined? Would no t the world,
too, have lost all goodness and beauty, these being comprehensible
only in terms of their opposites?
It is plain that the power to distinguish and discriminate makes
possible the existence of good and evil, of beauty and ugliness. By
giving man the inestimable blessing of freedom and the ability to
choose, God, whose wisdom is manifest throughout creation, wished to
display fully His ability to create phenomena bearing witness to His
wisdom and power.
He placed within man's being the possibility of doing both good
and evil, and although He compels him to do neither, He always
expects him to do good. God does not approve of evil; it is
righteous conduct that meets with His approval and, in exchange for
which He provides abundant, unimaginable reward. God warns man
against following the path of evil and threatens him with punishment
and torment if he does so.
Thus, by using the power of choice that God has bestowed on him,
man can act as he should, conforming both to divine guidance and to
his own conscience.
But, if occasionally his foot should slip and he should commit
some sin, the path remains open for him to return to purity and
light, to God's favour and mercy. This is in itself a further
manifestation of God's generosity and all-embracing justice, one
more of the blessings He bestows on His servants.
Were God to give immediate reward to the virtuous for their
righteous conduct and acts, they would not in any way be superior to
the corrupt and the sinful. And if the evil in thought and in deed
were to be always met with instant punishment and retribution,
virtue and purity would not enjoy any superiority in this world to
vice and impurity.
The principle of contradiction,
is in fact, the basis of the
created world; it is what enables matter to change and evolve so
that God's grace flows through the world. Were matter not to take on
different shapes as a result of its encounter with various beings
and were being unable to accommodate new forms within itself, the
differentiation and advancement of being would be impossible. A
stable and unchanging world would resemble stagnant capital that
produces no profit. For creation, change is the capital that brings
about profit. It is, of course, possible that the investment of a
certain portion of capital should result in loss, but the constant
motion of matter as a whole definitely results in profit. The
contradiction that takes place in the forms of matter results in the
advancement of the order of being toward perfection.
There is some question as to whether evil exists in the world in
the real sense of the word. If we look carefully, we will see that
the evil of things is not a true attribute; it is a relative one.
Firearms in the hands of my enemy are an evil for me, and
firearms in my hands are an evil for my enemy. Setting aside me and
my enemy, firearms are in themselves neither good nor bad.
The course of nature can be said to be mathematical; that is, its
system has been established in such a way as no t to answer all of
our needs. We, however, wish to fulfil all our countless desires
without encountering the least hindrance, and the forces of nature
do not answer the limitless wishes we cherish, wishes which are in
any event worthless from the point of view of our essential nature.
Nature pays no attention to our desires and refuses to submit to our
wants. So when we encounter unpleasantness in our lives, we become
unjustifiably upset and we term the causes of our discomfort as
"evil."
If someone wants to light his lamp when there is no oil in it, he
will not start sighing and complaining or curse the whole universe.
Creation is constantly advancing toward a clear goal, through
unceasing effort and striving. Specific causes determine each step
it takes, and the changes and development it undergoes are not
designed to meet men's approval or satisfy their desires.
It should be accepted that some of the occurrences of this world
will not correspond to our wishes, and we ought not to regard as
injustice things we experience as unpleasant.
Imam Ali, peace be upon him, the Commander of the Faithful, describes
the world as an abode of hardship, but nonetheless a good place for
the one who knows it properly. Although he encountered himself all
kinds of hardship and unpleasantness, he constantly drew men's
attention to the absolute justice of God.
Another important point which must not be overlooked is that good
and evil do not represent two mutually exclusive categories or
series in the order of creation. Goodness is identical with being,
and evil is identical with non-being; wherever being makes its
appearance, non-existence is also implied.
When we speak of poverty, indigence, ignorance or disease we
should not imagine that they have separate realities: poverty is
simply not having wealth, ignorance is the absence of knowledge, and
disease is the loss of health. Wealth and knowledge are realities,
but poverty is nothing other than the emptiness of the hand and the
pocket, and ignorance, the absence of knowledge. Hence poverty and
ignorance have no tangible reality; they are defined through the
non-existence of other things.
The same is the case with calamities and misfortunes that we
regard as evil and the source of suffering. They, too, are a kind of
loss or non-being, and are evil only in the sense that they result
in the destruction or non-existence of something other than
themselves. Apart from this, nothing, insofar as it exists, can in
any way be called evil or ugly.
If calamities did not entail sickness and death, the loss and
ruin of certain creatures, thus preventing their capacities from
unfolding, they would not be bad. It is the loss and ruin arising
from misfortunes that is inherently bad. Whatever exists in the
world is good; evil pertains to non-being, and since non-being does
not form a category independent of being, it has not been created
and does not exist.
Being and non-being are like the sun and its shadow. When a body
is turned to the sun, it casts a shadow. What is a shadow? The
shadow has not been created by anything; it consists simply of the
sun not shining in a given place because of the existence of an
obstacle; it has no source or origin of its own.
Things have a real existence by virtue of having been created
without reference to things other than them; in this sense, they are
not evil. For a worldview derived from belief in God, the world is
equivalent to good. Everything is inherently good; if it is evil, it
is so only in a relative sense and in connection with things other
than itself .The existence of every thing is unreal for other than
it self, and untouched by creation.
The malarial mosquito is not evil in itself. If it is described
as such, it is because it is harmful to man and causes disease. That
which is created is the existence of a thing in and of itself, which
is a true existence; speculative or conditional existence has no
place in the order of being and is not real. We cannot, therefore,
ask why God has created relative or conditional existence.
Conditional or abstract entities are inseparable from the real
entities that give rise to them; they are their inevitable
concomitants and do not partake of their being. One cannot then
speak of conditional entities having been created.
That which is real must necessarily derive its being from the
Creator. Only those things and attributes are real that exist
outside the mind. Relative attributes are created by the mind and
have no existence outside it so one cannot go looking for the
creator.
Furthermore, that which has the potential to exist is the world
as a whole, with all the objects it contains and the attributes that
are inseparable from it; the world represents an indivisible unit.
From the vantage point of God's wisdom, either the world must exist
on the pattern that is peculiar to it, or it cannot exist at all.
A world without order or lacking the principle of causality, a
world where good and evil were not separate from each other, would
be an impossibility and a fantasy. It is not possible to suppose
that one part of the world should exist and another should not.
Creation is a whole, like the form and figure of man, and its parts
are inseparable from each other.
God is absolutely free of all
need and one consequence of this
is that He freely bestows being, like a skilled artist who is constantly busy
with the creation of new forms. Such abundant generosity and
creativity define the essence of the Lord Whose signs are manifest
and evident in every phenomenon.
Suppose that the owner of a factory employs both skilled and
unskilled workers to operate and administer his factory. When it is
time to pay their wages, he pays the skilled and qualified workers,
whose job is at a higher level, more than the unskilled workers.
Now, is this difference in wages just or unjust? Is the factory
owner acting equitably or inequitably?
Doubtless there is a difference involved here, but we cannot call
it discrimination. Justice does not require the factory owner to pay
unskilled workers the same as skilled workers. It means rather that
he should give to each category what it deserves. Such a rule will
clearly delineate the comparative value of each job and contribute
to the welfare of the workplace.
To make distinctions in such cases is an eloquent and practical
form of justice; not to do so would be equivalent to oppression,
discrimination and injustice; it would be the result of an
inadequate appreciation of the relative value of things in their
differentiation.
When we look at the world as a whole and
analyse its various
parts, we see that each part has its own special position and
function and is clothed in the qualities that are suitable to it. In
the light of this realization, we can understand the necessity of
vicissitudes in human life, of light and darkness, of success and
failure, for maintaining the general equilibrium of the world.
If the world were to be uniform, without variation or difference,
the varied and multiple species of being would not exist. It is
precisely in this abundant variety and multiplicity that do exist
that we see the splendour and magnificence of the world. Our judgment
of things will be logical, correct, and acceptable when we take into
consideration the equilibrium prevailing in the universe and the
interrelations that beneficially bind its various parts to each
other, not when we examine the part in isolation form the whole.
The order of creation is based on equilibrium, on receptivities
and capacities; what is firmly established in creation is
differentiation, not discrimination. This observation makes it
possible for us to examine the matter more objectively and
specifically. Discrimination means making a difference among objects
possessing the same receptivities and existing under the same
circumstances.
Differentiation means making a difference among capacities that
are unequal and not subject to the same circumstances.
It will be erroneous if we say that it would be better for
everything in the world to be uniform and undifferentiated, for all
the motion, activity and lively interchange we see in the world is
made possible by differentiation.
Man has various ways of perceiving and experiencing beauty, once
there is a contrast between ugliness and beauty. The attraction
exerted by beauty is, in a sense, the reflection of ugliness and its
power to repel.
In the same way, if man were not tested and tried in life, piety
and virtue would have no value, and there would be no reason to
refine one's soul and nothing from which to restrain one's desires.
If a whole canvas is covered in a uniform way, we cannot speak of
it being a picture; it is the variation of colour and detail that
displays the skill of the artist.
In order for the identity of a thing to be known, it is essential
that it be differentiated from other things, for the measure by
which things or persons are recognized is the outer or inner
differences they have with each other.
One of the wonders of creation is the variation in the capacities
and gifts with which beings are endowed. In order to ensure the
continuance of social life, creation has given each individual a
particular set of tastes and capacities, the interplay of which
ensures the order of society; each individual meets some of the
needs of society and contributes to solving some of its problems.
The natural difference of individuals with respect to capacity
causes them to need each other. Everyone takes on some of the tasks
of society according to his own taste and capacity, and the social
life secured in that way makes it possible for man to progress and
advance.
Let us take a building or an airplane as an example. Each of them
has numerous separate parts, complex and detailed components that
differ greatly from each other in size and form, this difference
deriving from the responsibility that each component has toward the
whole.
Were this difference not to exist in the structure of the
airplane, it would no longer be an airplane but a compound of
assorted metals. If differentiation is a sign of true justice in the
airplane, it must also be an indication of divine justice among all
the creatures of the world including man.
In addition, we must be aware that differentiation among beings
is innate to their essence. God does not create everything with a
separate and discrete exercise of His will; His will is not
exercised individually. The entire world from beginning to end came
into being with a single exercise of His will; it was this that
enabled creatures in their infinite multiplicity to come into being.
There is then, a specific law and order that regulates all the
dimensions of creation. Within the frame work of causality, it as
signs a particular rank and position to everything. God's will to
create and regulate the world is equivalent to His willing order in
it.
There are definite philosophical proofs in support of this
proposition, and it is also expounded in the Quran:
"We created
everything with a certain quantity and limit; Our act is but one,
like the blink of an eye."
(54:49-50)
It would be wrong to imagine that the differentiation and
relations established by God in His creation are the same as the
conventional relations existing in human society. God's connection
with His creatures is not a mere convention or perceptual matter; it
is a connection deriving from the very act of creation. The order
that He has placed in all things is the result of His creating it.
Every being receives from God the amount of perfection and beauty it
is able to receive.
If there were no particular order regulating the world, any being
might, in the course of its motions, give rise to any other being,
and cause and effect might switch places. But it must be understood
that the essential interrelations among things are fixed and
necessary; the station and property bestowed on a thing adheres
inseparably to it, whatever rank and degree of existence it may
have. No phenomenon can go beyond the degree that has been fixed for
it and occupy the degree of another being. Differentiation is a
concomitant of the degrees of being' assigning to them differing
amounts of weakness and strength, deficiency and perfection.
It would be discrimination if two phenomena had the same capacity
to receive perfection but it was given only to one of them and
denied to the other. The degrees of being that exist in the order of
creation cannot be compared with the conventional ranks of human
society. They are real, not conventional, and not transferable. For
example, men and animals cannot change places with each other in the
same way that individuals can change the posts and positions they
occupy in society.
The relationship connecting each cause with its effect and each
effect with its cause derives from the very essences of the cause
and effect respectively. If something is a cause, it is so because
of some property that is inseparable from it, and if something is an
effect, it is so because of a quality inherent in it, which is
nothing other than the mode of its being.
There is then, an essential and profound order that links all
phenomena, and the degree of each phenomenon within the order is
identical with its essence. Insofar as differentiation relates to a
deficiency indwelling in the essence, it is not discrimination,
because the effusion of God's bounty is not enough for a reality to
come into being; the receptivity of the vessel destined to receive
the bounty is also necessary. It is for this reason that certain
beings suffer deprivation and do not attain higher degrees; it is
impossible that a thing acquire the capacity for being or some other
perfection and that God not grant it to it.
The case of numerals is exactly similar each number has its own
fixed place. Two comes after one and cannot change places with it.
If we change the place of a number, we will have changed its essence
at the same time.
It is clear, then, that all phenomena possess fixed ranks and
modalities and are subordinate to a series of stable and immutable
laws. Divine law naturally does not form a separate created entity,
but an abstract concept deduced from the manner in which things are
seen to exist. That which has external existence consists of the
levels and degrees of being, on the one hand, and the system of
cause and effect, on the other. Nothing occurs outside of this
system, which is none other than the divine norm mentioned by the
Quran:
"You will never find any change in the divine norm."
(35:43)
The order of creation is based on a series of laws inherent in
its essence. The place of every phenomenon within it is clearly
defined, and the existence of the various levels and degrees of
existence is a necessary consequence of the systematic nature of
creation, which inevitably gives rise to variety and
differentiation.
Variation and differentiation have not themselves been created;
they are the inseparable attributes of all phenomena. Every particle
in the universe has received whatever it had the potential to
receive; no injustice or discrimination has been visited upon it,
and the perfection of the universe, resembling a multiplication table
in its precise and immutable ordering, has thereby been ensured.
Materialists who regard the existence of variation and
differentiation in the natural order as evidence of oppression and
injustice and imagine that the world is not ruled by justice will
inevitably experience life as difficult, unpleasant, and wearying.
The hasty judgment of the materialist confronted by hardship and
difficulty is like the verdict of a child watching a gardener
pruning the healthy, green branches of a tree in the spring. Unaware
of the purpose and significance of the pruning, the child will think
the gardener a destructive and ignorant person.
If all the bounties of the world were placed at the disposal of
the materialist, he would still not be content For once the world is
seen to be aimless and based on injustice, it is meaningless for man
to seek justice, and in a world that is lacking an aim, it is absurd
for man to set himself one.
If the origin and destiny of man are as the materialists depict
them, such that he is a grass that grows of itself and then
disappears, then man must be the most wretched of creatures. For he
would be living in a world with which he lacks all affinity,
compatibility and harmony. Thought, feeling and emotion would cause
him distress, being nothing more than a cruel joke played on him by
nature to increase his misery and wretchedness and augment his
suffering.
Were a man of initiative and genius to devote himself to the
service of humanity, what benefit would it hold for him? Posthumous
commemorations and honouring, ceremonies held at his tomb, would not
benefit him in the slightest; they would serve only to maintain a
hollow legend, because the person in question would have been
nothing more than a form assembled by nature for its amusement as a
plaything for a few days before being turned into a handful of dust.
If we look at the fate of the majority of people who are
constantly struggling with various kinds of sorrow, anxiety,
deprivation and failure, the picture grows still more bleak. With
such a view of human life, the only paradise materialism has to
offer man is a hell of terror and pain. The materialist position
that man lacks freedom and choice makes of him an even more wretched
creature.
The mono-dimensional worldview of materialism would have it that
man is like an automaton, with the mechanism and dynamism of its
cells operated by nature. Can human intelligence and instinct, not to
mention the realities of existence, accept such a banal and petty
interpretation of man, his life and his destiny?
Were this interpretation to be true, man would be as incapable of
experiencing happiness as a child's doll. Placed in such a
situation, man would be compelled to make of his own passions and
inclinations the foundation of morality and the yardstick of value,
to judge all things according to personal profit and loss. He would
do his utmost to destroy every obstacle in his path and loosen all
restraints on his carnal desires. Were he to act otherwise, he would
be regarded as backward and ignorant.
Anyone who possesses the slightest amount of insight, and judges
the matter in a disinterested and dispassionate way, will regard
these short-sighted and fantastic notions as valid, however much
they be decked out in philosophical and scientific sophistry.
A man with a religious worldview regards the world as an orderly
system possessing consciousness, will, perception and aim. The
supreme justice-dispensing intelligence of God rules over the
universe and every particle of being and watches over all actions
and deeds. A religious man, therefore, feels a sense of
responsibility vis-a-vis the consciousness that rules over the
world, and knows that a world created and administered by God is
necessarily a world of unity, harmony and good. He understands that
contradiction and evil have an epiphenomenal existence and play a
fundamental role in the achievement of good and the emergence of
unity and harmony.
Furthermore, according to this worldview which sketches out broad
horizons for man, life is not restricted to this world, and even the
life of this world is not restricted to material well-being or
freedom from effort and pain. The believer in religion will see the
world as a path that must be traversed, as a place of testing, as an
arena of effort. In it, the righteousness of men's deeds is tested.
At the beginning of the next life, the good and the evil in the
thoughts, beliefs, and actions of men will be measured in the most
accurate of balances. God's justice will be revealed in its true
aspect, and whatever deprivation man may have suffered in this
world, whether material or otherwise, it will be made up to him.
In the light of his destiny that awaits man, and given the
essential valuelessness of the goods of the material world, man orients
his conscious striving exclusively to God. His aim becomes to live
for Him and to die for Him. The vicissitudes of this world no longer
claim his attention. He sees ephemeral things for what they are, and
he allows nothing to seduce his heart. For he knows that the forces
of seduction would cause his humanity to wither and draw him down
into the whirlpool of materialistic misguidance.
Conclusion
In conclusion, we would add that even apart from the question of
receptivity, the existence of difference in the world does not imply
injustice. Oppression and injustice mean that someone is subjected
to discrimination although he has a claim equal to that of someone
else. But beings do not have any "claim" on God nor did
they ever, so if some things enjoy superiority over others this
cannot count as injustice.
We have nothing of ourselves: each breath and each heartbeat,
each thought and idea that passes through our mind, are taken from a
stock that we do not own and have done nothing to build up. That
stock is a gift from God, bestowed on us at the moment of birth.
Once we understand that whatever we have is nothing but a divine
gift, it will become apparent that the differences among the gifts
He gives men are based on His wisdom but have nothing to do with
either justice or injustice, because there was no question of any
merit or claim on our part.
This finite and temporary life is a gift to us, a present from
the Creator. He has absolute discretion in deciding the type and
quantity of the gift that He gives, and we have no claim upon Him.
We have, therefore, no right to object even if the gift given us
quite free of charge appears slight and inconsequential.
Kifayat al-Muwahhidin, I, p.442.
Nahj al-Balaghah, ed., Subhi Salh, p. 493.
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