The Theme of Man in the Qur’anic/Islamic Conscience—(2)
In the previous article, I explained that, according to the Qur’an, when God creates a thing (khalq); He at the same time puts into it, in addition to its qadr, the laws of its behavior (amr , “command” or sunnatullah “the way of God”), and that this should not to be confused with laws imposed ON Man but, rather, laws ingrained IN him—what the Qur’an calls “fitra” (30:30). Amr means that if X happens, Y must essentially follow. Man is not an exception, since these laws are ingrained in every created being to provide steadiness to this world which thus makes it livable. These laws are so steady that we can establish our perspectives in this world based on them. Interestingly, the fact that this concept is reiterated so many times in the Qur’an reflects how crucial it is that we properly conceive it (33:38, 62; 35:44; 40:85; 48:23; 7:54).
The only, yet major, difference in Man than other beings is that Man has been granted the freedom to choose his X’s, but not the Y’s (see the previous example) for him/herself rather than being dictated by God. Interestingly, this means that Man not only has the freedom to choose his/her own set of references, but s/he has been provided with potentialities that can equally make him/her a morally and aesthetically “perfect” man or a “Satanic” one (95:5).
But why is it easier for Man to “gravitate down to the Earth” (7:175-176)?
It is because of what the Qur’an calls “pettiness (da’f)” and “narrowness of mind (qatr)” which are effortlessly existent in Man. His/Her self-destructive selfishness and the greed to which s/he is a constant prey, his/her hasty, panicky behavior, his/her lack of self-reliance, and the fears that perpetually haunt him/her arise ultimately from the effortlessly existing narrowness of his/her mind (70:19-21; 17:100; 21:37; 17:11). Eventually, this results in Man being oblivious of the long-term consequences of his reactions—the Y’s. The Qur’an ubiquitously talks about this condition where Man becomes conscientiously “blind” and “deaf” despite being physically sound (7:179; 22:46)—Man becomes completely immersed in the externalities of this life, where s/he becomes a slave for anything and everything—societal traditions, fear, parental upbringing, political and religious authoritarians, people’s expectations, culture, the unknown, money, sex, time and place, etc. (30:7; 9:24) i.e. He becomes a conscientiously dead Man and a lively Satanic mosaic. S/He becomes so outward that s/he loses the realizability of the real moral and spiritual consequences of his deeds—Good becomes bad and vice versa; corruption becomes reformation and vice versa (18:103-5; 2:11-12). He loses himself in the middle of the chaos of the world that s/he does no longer remember what s/he once was. Indeed, this echoes strongly with what the Qur’an says in 59:19 that s/he who forgets God (i.e. his/her primordial, God-conscious nature and his/her responsibility of being a morally sound and autonomous being), God causes him/her to forget him/herself. For it is God’s “remembrance” that ensures the cementing of personality where all details of life and particulars of human activity are properly integrated and synthesized; “forgetting” God, on the other hand, means fragmented existence, “secularized” life, an unintegrated and eventually disintegrated personality, and enmeshment in the details at the cost of the whole. This is precisely Muhammad Iqbal’s distinction between Godliness and un-Godliness:
The sign of a kafir is that he is lost in the horizons;
The sign of a mu’min is that the horizons are lost in him.
It is in this sense that all evil deeds are very often termed dalal by the Qur’an. This term is usually translated as “misguidedness” which is correct provided that we clearly understand that misguidedness signifies primarily that “one will not go anywhere”, no matter how long or how hard one walks. That is to say, dalal, is sterile or vainless—what the Qur’an calls batil. Arguable, torture in hell basically consists of the realization that the mountains one had built have suddenly shrunk to a particle of sand and that all false Gods will come to nothingness (6:24;94; 7:53; 10:30; 11:21; 16:87; 41:48; 7:139; 11:16; 22:62; 29;67; 47:3). This establishes the equation of batil and dalal and their contrast with hidaya (getting somewhere) and haqq (the truth).