Introduction
The Linguistic Meaning of Fitrah
The Religious Meaning of Fitrah
Fitrah and Human Responsibility
Alienation from Fitrah
The Christian Doctrine of Original Sin
Introduction
In attempting a definition
of fitrah, I give an exposition of its linguistic and religious meaning. The
religious understanding of fitrah is based on the positive interpretation of fitrah.
Suffice it to say that linguistic and
positive religious explanations have one thing in common: both define fitrah as an inborn
natural predisposition which cannot change, and which exists at birth in all human beings.
What makes our religious understanding positive is that it not only acknowledges fitrah as
a natural predisposition, but also one which is inclined towards right action and
submission to Allah, the One God.
After discussing the implications for
human responsibility, I compare, for the benefit of Western readers, the Islamic concept
of original goodness with the Christian concept of original sin. I argue that the doctrine
of original sin, from an Islamic point of view, cannot be reconciled with the notion of
Divine mercy nor the human responsibility. Since the doctrine of original sin features
significantly in the Christian concept of human nature, and as Islam and Christianity are
the worlds largest revealed religions, this aspect of their creeds presents an
interesting contrast, well worth investigating.
The Linguistic
Meaning of Fitrah
Every new-born child
is born in a state of fitrah. Then his parents make him a Jew, a Christian or a Magian,
just as an animal is born intact. Do you observe any among them that are maimed (at
birth)?
The word fitrah comes from the Arabic
radicals fa ta ra, the verbal noun being fatrun. The root action means, he clove, split,
slit, rent or cracked it. Note the usage of the first form fatarahu (He created it); that
is, He caused it to exist, newly, for the first time. Thus fatirus-samawat, the
Originator or Creator of the heavens.
The second form, fattara(hu) (verbal noun
taftir), denotes repetition, muchness and frequency of the root action which means, as we
saw, he clove, split, slit, rent or cracked it. Futira (ala shay) is
equivalent to tubia, which is the passive form of tabaa (verbal noun
tabun) he sealed, stamped, printed or impressed, being a synonym of khatama, he
sealed. Ar-Raghib says that it means the impression of a thing with the engraving of the
signet and stamp; thus tabaallahu ala qalbihi Allah sealed his
heart, that is the unbelievers heart. Similarly, khatama alaihi,
pertains to the natural constitution which denotes a quality of the soul; either by
creation or habit, but more especially the creation. Also, taba allahu
ala amr Allah created (him) with a disposition to the affair, state or
condition. Likewise, tubia ala shay he was created with a
disposition to a thing which is synonymous with jubila or futira. Tabun
originally a verbal noun signifies nature or an inborn disposition. Its synonyms
are sajjiyah, jibillah, khaliqah, tabiah and mizaj. These are names for innate
natural disposition which cannot change, and which exists at birth in all human beings. Thus, fitrah, having the same
meaning as tabun, linguistically means an inborn natural disposition.
The term fitrah literally means,
creation; the causing a thing to exist for the first time; and the natural constitution
with which a child is created in his mothers womb. It is said that is the meaning in
the Quran (30:29), and in the central, opening hadith.
The Religious
Meaning of Fitrah
In the context of the hadith, according
to Abu Haytham, fitrah means to be born either prosperous or unprosperous [in relation to
the soul]:
And if his parents are
Jews, they make him a Jew, with respect to his worldly situation; [i.e. with respect to
inheritance, etc.] and if Christians, they make him a Christian, with respect to that
situation; and if Magians, they make him a Magian, with respect to that situation; his
situation is the same as that of his parents until his tongue speaks for him; but if he
dies before his attaining to the age when sexual maturity begins to show itself, he dies
in a state of conformity to his preceding natural constitution, with which he was created
in his mothers womb.
Fitrah is also associated with Islam and
being born as a Muslim. This is when fitrah is viewed in respect to shahadah that
there is no god but Allah and that Muhammad is the Messenger of Allah which makes a
person a Muslim. Fitrah, in this sense, is the faculty, which He has created in mankind,
of knowing Allah. It is the natural constitution with which the child is created in his
mothers womb, whereby he is capable of accepting the religion of truth. That fitrah
refers to religion is further shown in a tradition in which it is related that the
Prophet, may Allah bless him and grant him peace, taught a man to repeat certain words
when lying down to sleep, and said: Then if you die that same night, you die upon
the fitrah (in the true din). Also by the saying: The paring of the nails is
of the fitrah (i.e. of the din).
This meaning is affirmed by surah 30 ayah
30:
Set your face to the
din in sincerity (hanifan) which is Allahs fitrah (the nature made by Allah) upon
which He created mankind (fataran-nas). There is no changing the creation of Allah.
That is the right din but most people know not.
Apparently Abu Hurairah, may Allah be
pleased with him, cited this verse after the central hadith which means that, in his view,
the fitrah of the hadith is the same fitrah in the ayah. The ayah refers to the fitrah as
good because the right religion is being described as Allahs fitrah. Thus according
to Abu Hurairah, fitrah is associated with the din of Islam.
Since Allahs fitrah is engraved
upon the human soul, mankind is born in a state in which tawhid is integral. Since tawhid
is intrinsic to mans fitrah, the prophets, peace be upon them, came to remind man of
it, and to guide him to that which is integral to his original nature. The ayah describes
a fitrah of primordial faith which Allah Himself implanted in human nature. It implies
Islams essential message of submission to the will of Allah as taught as practised
by the prophets.
The Laws or the shariahs, which the
prophets were sent with, are guiding lights to the essential faith in Allah which is
created in every human being. Furthermore, since this faith comes from Allah, it naturally
follows that only laws capable of guiding man back to it must also come from Allah, hence
Islam is also called din al-fitrah, the religion of human nature.
That every child is born in this pure
state of fitrah is also supported by the following hadith concerning the polytheists:
It is related that the
Prophet, may Allah bless him and grant him peace, said that he saw in a vision an old man
at the front of a large tree and around him were children and in the vision he was told
that the old man was Ibrahim and that the children who were around him were the children
who, before attaining the age of discretion, had died. At this, some Muslims had asked
hum: "And the children of the polytheists too, Messenger of Allah?" The Prophet,
may Allah bless him and grant him peace, replied: "The children of the polytheists as
well."
Being with Ibrahim meant being in
Paradise, and this includes children of polytheistic families. It is clear, from the
Quran and from the hadith, that every child is born with a pure nature, as a Muslim.
Islam recognises that all children, whether born of believing or unbelieving parents, go
to Paradise if they die before attaining the age of discretion.
Imam Nawawi defined fitrah as the
unconfirmed state which exists until the individual consciously acknowledges his belief.
Hence, if a child were to die before he attains discretion he would be on of the inmates
of Paradise. This view applies to the children of polytheists as well, and is supported by
the above-quoted hadith. The legal implication of this hadith is that all children are
born pure, sinless and predisposed to belief in one God; moreover they are of the inmates
of Paradise; however, if their parents are non-Muslims, the religion of their parents will
be applicable to them in this world.
Islam is also called din al-fitrah, the
religion of human nature, because its laws and its teachings are in full harmony with the
normal and the natural inclination of the human fitrah to believe in and submit to the
Creator. Like the word al-Islam, the word din also means, according to Lane, obedience and
submission, among other meanings. Allah states:
And who is better in
obedience (in din) than he who resigns himself to Allah? (Quran 4:125)
There shall be no
compulsion in obedience (din). (Quran 2:256)
Ad-din implies religion in the widest
sense of the word, embracing both the practical aspects of the acts of worship and
ordinary transactions of life, and the teachings of religion; and it is a name for that
whereby one serves Allah.
Truly, the religion
(din) in the sight of Allah is al-Islam. (Quran 3:19)
And, according to Lane, it means
particularly the religion of al-Islam. The synonyms of ad-din are ash-shariah (the
law), tawhid (Oneness of Allah) and wara (caution). Ad-din also comes from the verb
dana, meaning he had indebted. This is significant, according to al-Attas,
because man is indebted to Allah for his existence and sustenance. The believer will
realise that his spirit acknowledged Allah in pre-existence, and that the debt that he
must return is his self, and this can be done by service and submission to Allah. This
return implies a return to mans inherent spiritual nature, to his fitrah. The one
who submits to Allah is called abd (a slave) of Allah, and his service is called
ibadah (slavehood or conscious submission to the will of Allah). By worshipping
Allah in such a manner, man in fulfilling the purpose of his creation and existence.
I have not created the
Jinn and man but that they should serve Me (li yabuduni). (Quran 51:56)
Such worship or submission does not
entail loss of freedom, for, freedom is to act as ones true nature demands; that is,
as ones fitrah demands. Al-Attas succinctly explains the connection between
submission, fitrah and din as follows:
When we say that such a man
is fulfilling the purpose for his creation and existence, it is obvious that that
mans obligation to serve God is felt by him as normal because it comes as a natural
inclination on the mans part to do so. This natural tendency in man to serve and
worship God is also referred to as din,
here in the religious context it has a more
specific signification of the natural state of being called fitrah. In fact din also means
fitrah. Fitrah is the pattern according to which God has created all things
Submission to it brings harmony, for it means realisation of what is inherent in
ones true nature; opposition to it brings discord, for it means realisation of what
is extraneous to ones true nature. // S.M.N.
Al-Attas, Islam, Secularism and the Philosophy of the Future, London: Mansell Publishing
Limited, 1985, pp. 57-58.
Fitrah and Human
Responsibility
Man is distinguished from the rest of the
creation because he has been endowed with intellect (aql) and free-will (iradah).
The intellect enables him to discern right from wrong. He can use these faculties to
complement his fitrah and to please Allah or to be untrue to it and displease Allah. The
choice is his. The prophets and Divine revelation are external sources of guidance to
guide the intellect and will of man. The Quran declares that the Prophet, may Allah
bless him and grant him peace, enjoins the right and lawful things (maruf) and
forbids the wrong and unlawful things (munkar). Man is responsible for his actions and
accountable to Allah for every atom of right and wrong that he does. It is in this sense
of accountability that guides man to act in accordance with the Divine will. It empowers
him to struggle against the wrong-doing of his lower self (nafs) as well as the negative
influences of the social circumstances. The central hadith makes plain that it is the
social circumstances after the birth of the child that causes the individual to diverge
from fitrah. Hence if someone follows an aberrant path it is not because of any innate
wrong within his nature, but because of the emergence of the lower self or nafs after
birth, and negative effects in the social circumstances.
The concept of fitrah as original
goodness, in my view, does not merely connote a passive receptivity to good and right
action, but an active inclination and a natural innate predisposition to know Allah, to
submit to Him and to do right. This is mans natural tendency in the absence of
contrary factors. Although all children are born in a state of fitrah, the influence of
the environment is decisive; parents may influence the religion of the child by making him
a Christian, Jew or Magian. If there are no adverse influences, then the child will
continuously manifest his fitrah as his true nature. Since many infants are born with
gross physical deformities, the maiming referred to in this hadith is not meant in the
physical sense; it means that all children are born spiritually pure, in a state of
fitrah. The reference to animals born intact in the central hadith should be viewed as an
analogy to illustrate the parallel spiritual wholeness of children at birth.
It is precisely because of mans
free-will and intellect that he is able to overcome the negative influences of the
environment and attain to the highest level of psycho-spiritual development, an-nafs
al-mutmainnah, the self made tranquil. At this level, his inner and
outer being, his soul and body, are able to conform to the requirements of his fitrah and
the dictates of the shariah. He actualises his fitrah, and attains psycho-spiritual
integration and inner peace.
Alienation from
Fitrah
The central hadith suggest that
circumstantial (i.e. parental and other social) influences cause man to change and become
alienated from his fitrah. However in Quran 30:30 (There is no changing in the
creation of Allah.) suggests that fitrah is universal unchanging given of the human
constitution. This meaning is consistent with the linguistic definition of fitrah as
innate natural disposition which cannot change, and which exists at birth in all human
beings. The synthesis of the meanings of both statements is that although fitrah remains a
universal unchanging given of the human constitution, people may, because of the elements
of intellect and free-will, decide and choose to conduct themselves in a wrong or unlawful
manner. All the children of Adam, including those who deviated from the path of tawhid,
possessed fitrah. Civilisations which have been condemned and destroyed by Allah because
of their practice of polytheism (shirk) and unbelief (kufr), possessed fitrah. Fitrah is a
universal and immutable given of the metaphysical human constitution, and as a rule,
cannot be corrupted or altered. No wrong action can pollute the Divine spirit
[modifiers note: i.e. spirit created by God] which Allah has blown into man
(Quran 15:29) despite the many generations of polytheism and unbelief. For example,
a generation whose forefathers were mushrikun (those who practice shirk) does not possess
a fitrah of a lesser quality than a generation of believers. However, both shirk and kufr
represent the antithesis of fitrah by undermining its very object and raison detre;
kufr is a rejection of the oneness of Allah (tawhid). When a individual commits shirk or
kufr he denies his own nature. Fitrah which is integral to mans spirit (ruh) was
created by Allah so that he man acknowledge Him as the Lord Who has power over all things.
Tawhid is intrinsic to mans fitrah because Allah in His infinite wisdom intended for
man to know Him as the One God. This is why man was able to acknowledge his Lord before
his existence on earth, that is, in pre-existence state.
The function of the prophets and Divine
revelation is not only to remind man about that which he already knows (that is, tawhid),
but also to teach him that which he does not yet know (that is, shariah). Man
already knows tawhid because of the pre-existent fitrah as well as his earthly unchanging
fitrah. The prophets have come only to remind man of tawhid; the choice is left to the
individual, as suggested in the following verse:
Surely, this is a
reminder; so whoever wills, let him take a way to his Lord. (Quran 76:29)
Knowledge of the Divinely revealed laws,
the methodology of worship and devotion, etc. are acquired by man from shariah which
is based on Divine revelation and the teachings of the prophets. Since every individual is
endowed with the innate knowledge of tawhid, he is held accountable for his belief in
Allah precisely because of his fitrah. Not every soul, however, will be held accountable
for not practicing shariah because knowledge of shariah is acquired only by
those who received the message of the Divine revelations and the teachings of he prophets.
The distinction between the inborn
knowledge of tawhid (which includes the knowledge of right and wrong) and the acquired
knowledge of shariah (which includes what is lawful and unlawful) is significant
because of the legal implications of each. The mushrik, one who violates tawhid, will not
be pardoned for his polytheism, irrespective of whether he received the message of Islam
or not. On the other hand, the practice of shariah is only required from the Muslim
while the non-Muslim (who did not receive the message of Islam) is not expected to fulfill
this obligation. An individual may be forgiven for not practising the shariah if he
had not received the message of Islam, but he will not be forgiven for rejecting tawhid.
The Muslim will thus be held responsible for tawhid and shariah. Dr. Faruqi Ahmad
Dasuqi, who holds this view, adds that the hunafa of past centuries had acknowledged
tawhid and will not be held accountable for shariah.
Apart from the chosen prophets, I venture
to say that there is no difference between the fitrah of individual men: all men are
endowed with the same or an equal fitrah. The believer is in harmony with his
fitrah because his instincts are directed in service of Allah, but the unbeliever is
alienated from his fitrah because his instincts are in the service of everything else
besides Allah. The reason for mans destruction of himself and his environment is
that he has become alienated. Nevertheless, he can overcome this estrangement his will and
intellect with the Divine will and knowledge. It is mans recourse to Islam which
will enable him to effect such a reconciliation.
The Christian
Doctrine of Original Sin
Religions may be contrasted with secular
philosophies in that the former recognise the transcendent principle of human nature while
the latter tend to view man as a material being. Religions usually refer to this
transcendent principle as the spirit or the soul in man. Most religions recognise three
dimensions within man: body, mind and spirit. Secular theories of human nature tend to
recognise only the body and sometimes the mind. Western psychologists such as Carl Jung
recognise the spiritual dimension not as an independent unchanging reality, but as a part
of the human psyche. Religions in general, with the exception of Hinayana Buddhism,
recognise the spiritual dimension of man as a distinct unchanging reality of human nature.
The first step towards self-knowledge is the recognition of our inmost spiritual essence
which is universal in man and which is immortal. It is this innate spirituality which
explains the urge at the heart of every man for betterment and self-realisation; and it is
this human spirit which explains mans capability to emerge out of darkness into
light and goodness. This emergence has been the unfailing history of man: nothing can stop
the human soul from projecting itself nearer to the source of all good, Allah. Islam and
Christianity both recognise this innate spirituality but they differ in the methods by
which to attain to this self-realisation, and they also differ in the methods by which
they attain to this self-realisation, and they also differ with respect to their views of
innate human nature. For the Christian view I need to turn to the doctrine of original
goodness in Islam. Such a comparison will bring into focus the divergent perspectives of
human nature of two major religions of the world.
Christianity, in all the varied forms in
which it exists today, is probably the largest religious movement. It emerged out of
Judaism as a religion of salvation by faith. Christianity became a universal religion of
redemption, and its world-renouncing strain has been strong for a great part of its
history. Judaism and Islam were never so dominated by monasticism and the ideal of
celibacy. This is not to say that Christianity did not have a world affirming strain in
it. The Kingdom of God was an imminently arriving state of this earth. With emphasis on
the person of Jesus, peace be upon him, rather than his preaching, salvation was to be by
rather than his preaching, salvation was to be by faith-union with Jesus in his supposed
death and resurrection. Jesus, peace be upon him, was exalted to heaven and acclaimed as
Lord, Son of God, and the meaning of Messiah an anointed prophet-king was
altered radically.
Paul was the main figure to work out
Christian theology almost entirely in terms of the doctrine for man. Jesus two
worlds are reinterpreted in terms of a great contrast between man in bondage to the flesh
and man redeemed in Christ. This theology is set out in the first eight chapters of The
Epistle to the Romans. The flesh (sarx) is man in his weakness and the spirit (pneuma) is
the Divine breath and power of life which makes man inwardly aware of himself as a person.
The whole person is either bound to sin or redeemed in Christ. As a rabbinically trained
Jew, Paul had to integrate his new gospel of salvation with the old doctrine of creation
and so he began the development of the Christian epic story:
Creation had originally been
perfect, but Adam fell and mankind has since been in bondage to sin; but through Christ,
the second Adam or Last man, the world or mankind are being restored to their original
perfection. Thus in the Christian doctrine of man the central theme is that Christ is the
Creators proper (=own) Man. // Don
Cupitt, The Nature of Man, (London: Sheldon Press, 1979), pp. 33-34.
To make this scheme more intelligible,
Paul had to emphasise both the parallels and the contrasts between Adam and Christ, peace
be upon both of them. Adam was first made in the image of God, but Christ is the true and
final image of God. Adams disobedience plunged mankind into ruin, but Christs
obedience restored mankind. Adam brought wrath and guilt upon mankind, Christ has brought
grace and acquittal.
This contrast profoundly affected later
Christian thought. The Christian doctrine of man has two themes, the Divine image and the
Fall. Since the latter theme is more directly relevant to my discussion of original sin I
shall focus on this aspect, Adams disobedience plunged the human race into ruin, and
fallen man could not of himself do good, please God or gain salvation.
A good example of the classic Christian
doctrine of man is Miltons Christian epic Paradise Lost (1667). The themes are the
special creation of man by God, the Divine image in man, original righteousness, the Fall
through mans disobedience, the curse on man and woman, and the ensuing original sin.
This scheme was wrecked by Darwinism and today liberal and humanistic theologians take
over the evolutionary view of mans gradual ascent, seeing Christ as a pinnacle of
human development. Others, such as Rudolph Bultman and Paul Tillich, have built their
theology on an existentialist doctrine of man.
The Christian is born in sin and in an
impure state, and cannot redeem himself by his own inner resources, but only through
Christ. Salvation for the Christian is centred on an external entity the mystical
body of Christ in which the Christian must participate in order to be saved.
By contrast, in Islam the redemptive
potential is centred in the individual himself, who engages in meaningful intercourse with
the guidance provided by the Quran and the Sunnah, Salvation in Islam depends on
faith (iman) and good conduct (ihsan), and not on faith alone. The Quran emphasises
the exertion of will, for there is nothing for man but that which he strove
for. This notion of the will also has implications for responsibility. A person is
responsible only for the manner in which he exercised his own will and not the will of
other persons.
Christians believe that Christ has paid
the wages of sin through his death, and having suffered for all mens sins. Salvation
is based on this faith. Without the doctrine of original sin there would be no need for a
saviour and, consequently, the trinity, the crucifixion and the resurrection would become
meaningless.
Islam rejects the premises of these
doctrines, especially the concept of original sin which is alien to Islam and
inconceivable to the Muslim mind. Islam has a different version of the Fall. Adam
acknowledged that he had gone astray and sincerely sought Allahs forgiveness which
was granted to him unconditionally. Adam and his progeny descended from bliss to the earth
because of his error, and yet, none of his children inherited the blame for his error. The
volitional implication of fitrah is that man is responsible for his own wrong actions. It
is inconceivable to Muslim thinking that mankind should be punished for wrong actions that
others did. The concept of Divine forgiveness features strongly in the Quran, for
Allah accepts the sincere repentance of His slaves.
But the devil made
them slip from it, and caused them to depart from the state in which they were. And We
said, "Down with you and be henceforth enemies unto one another; and you shall have
in the land a state of settledness and necessities of life for a period."
Then Adam received words (of
guidance) from his Lord and He accepted his repentance: truly, He is the Acceptor of
Repentance, the Compassionate. (Quran 2:36-37)
Tawbah (literally, turning, i.e. away
from wrong action, and to Allah) or repentance plays a very significant and decisive role
in a Muslims life. Although man is born in a state of original goodness or fitrah,
he is also subject to temptation and folly. Allah has granted him the ability and
opportunity to repent which means that he should admit his errors and turn remorsefully
away from them to Allah.
Knowledge of Divine mercy as well as
knowledge of the innate goodness of the human fitrah, serves three very important
functions: firstly it gives the believer hope of salvation and success; secondly, it gives
him confidence in his own potential to do right and resist wrong; thirdly, it exhorts and
admonishes him to actively pursue all that is right and resist all that is wrong. These
are the merits of sincere repentance. Just as the Prophet Adam, peace be upon him,
repented and was pardoned for his wrong action, so may his descendents repent and be
pardoned for their wrong actions.
Confession and penance is a fundamental
pillar of the Roman Catholic Church, but for the rest of the Christian world it holds
virtually no fundamental value. Belief in Christ as a Saviour is of primary importance,
even for the Catholic who engages in penance mainly as a means of self-discipline or
self-retribution. No amount of confession or repentance can save the Christian from the
belief in Christ as the Saviour. Adherence to this doctrine can be problematic when viewed
in the light of the doctrine of original sin.
Neither Islam, common sense or modern
Western law, hold a person responsible for the deeds of someone else. Certain awkward
questions may also be posed to the adherents of this doctrine. For example, does
inheritance of Adams sin mean that man is born innately sinful or guilty of a sin he
did not commit or both? Did Christs suffering change human nature or did it only
absolve man of guilt for the sin he never committed, or both? If man is born innately evil
and sinful why is he still capable of choosing good over evil? What happened to the souls
before Christ who could have had the benefit of the latters alleged suffering; were
they saved by the Saviour they neither knew nor acknowledged or were they just too
unfortunate to be born at the wrong time? These questions are asked in all sincerity of
the believing Christian whose faith every Muslim is required to respect.
To conclude, fitrah may be defined as a
natural predisposition for good and for submission to the One God
While the concept
of fitrah offers a hopeful and positive outlook for the Muslim, the doctrine of original
sin is fraught with negative connotations and complex dogma. To the average Christian, man
is impure and bound for eternal damnation, even if he leads a life of virtue, if he does
not accept Christ as his saviour. Apart from the Christian theory, there are secular
theories of human nature which are also subject to determinism, fatalism and pessimism.
If, in this chapter, the reader has not
gained a clear conception of what fitrah is, it should at least be clear to him what it is
not. Fitrah does not refer to mans outward behaviour; not to his psyche, personality
or character. A definition of fitrah does not involve the role of man as an individual or
a collectivity as such. Rather, fitrah pertains to the deep, common spiritual essence of
man. It is humankinds natural and universal innate predisposition for goodness and
submission to One God. |