Introduction: There's a lot more to being a "monotheist", than just
simply believing that there's "One God" - as seemingly opposed to two,
three or more. For example, Hindus claim belief in "One God", since they
see the other "gods" as simply manifestations of the One Supreme God and
that they do not worship their images as independent "gods", but they
see them as only "manifestations" of the One God. Also, Christians claim
that the members of the Trinity are "one" in "substance!" but
different in their qualities, they (officially) use the words
"person" or "hypostasis" to justify this. But, Is it right for a believer in Pure Monotheism to accept
the belief in such so-called "concepts of God", lets see that according to the
Islamic teachings ..
According
to Islam, "monotheism" is much more than simply believing in the
existence of "only One God" - as seemingly opposed to two,
three or more. One should understand that Islam's criticism of the other
religions that claim to be "monotheistic" is not because
they are "polytheistic" in the classic sense, but because they
direct various forms of worship to other than Almighty God. Many
non-Muslims are unaware of the distinction between simply believing in
the existence of only One God and reserving all
worship for Him alone. Many Christians are painfully unaware of this
point, and thus you often find them asking how Muslims can accuse the
followers of Jesus, peace be upon him, of being "polytheists"
when they were all "monotheistic Jews". First of all, it should
be clarified that the word "polytheist" doesn't really sound
right in this context, since to many it implies simply believing in the
existence of more than one God. So in an Islamic context, "associators",
"man-worshippers" or "creature worshippers" might be more
accurate and appropriate terms - especially since Christians believe
Jesus to be both "100% God and 100% man", while still paying
lip-service to God's "Oneness". However, as we're previously
touched upon, what is really at the root of this problem is the fact
that Christians - as well as the members of other religions - don't
really know what "monotheism" means - especially in the Islamic
sense. All of the books, articles and papers which were written by
Christians invariably limit "monotheism" to believing in the
existence of "One Sovereign and Creator God". Islam, however,
teaches much more than this.
Suffice it to say that
just because someone claims to be a "monotheistic" Jew, Christian
or Muslim, that doesn't keep them from falling into corrupt beliefs and
idolatrous practices. Many people, including some Muslims, claim belief
in "One God" even though they've fallen into acts of idolatry.
Certainly, many Protestants accuse Roman Catholics of idolatrous
practices in regards to the saints and the Virgin Mary. Likewise, the
Greek Orthodox Church is considered "idolatrous" by many other
Christians because in much of their worship they use icons. However, if
you ask a Roman Catholic or a Greek Orthodox person if God is "One",
they will invariably answer: "Yes!". This lip-service, however,
does not stop them from being "creature worshipping" idolaters.
The same goes for Hindus, who just consider their gods to be
"manifestations" or "incarnations" of the One Supreme God.
Everyone should be
aware of the fact that throughout the long history of the "Abrahamic
Faiths", there have people who, while believing in "One God",
have adopted beliefs and practices that completely nullify their claim
to "monotheism". This is the Muslim view of Christians. We're
well aware of the fact that they claim belief in "One God" with
their lips, but this doesn't mean that they don't nullify their claim in
other ways. This is because many people simply haven't been taught
everything that Pure Monotheism entails. From an Islamic point of view,
"monotheism" can be nullified in many ways. For example, simply
believing that it is better to rule by man-made laws than to rule by the Divinely Revealed Law of
Almighty God makes one a "polytheist". Certainly, a person who
does such a thing, whether Jewish, Christian or Muslim, doesn't ever
believe that there is another Almighty Creator and Sovereign Lord.
However, for all practical purposes, such a person has take another
"god", whether they choose to admit it or not. In this way they are
associating partners with Almighty God (Arabic: shirk), and thus
become a "polytheist" in a practical sense, regardless of their
lip-service to "monotheism". This holds true even if the person
doesn't believe what they are doing is "worship". For example,
Roman Catholics who pray to the Virgin Mary will staunchly deny that
they are "worshipping" her. They instead call it "adoration"
or some other watered-down term. However, from an Islamic point of view,
what is worship if not this? Islam teaches that prayer and supplication
are the marrow of worship, so if one directs their prayers to an
intermediary (even if the pray is "ultimately" meant
for God), then what is left of worship?
Additionally, how
can someone who believes in Almighty God follow man-made laws instead of
God's Law, without admitting that they've begun worshipping other than
God? Do they know better than God?
Even though Almighty God never stated
it in terms of capability, He has clearly taught that nothing in His
creation can represent Him, that He is transcendent above Creation as
well as UN-CHANGING. Almighty God prior to any alleged incarnation or
manifestation had already
clearly said that He is nothing like His creation. Christians, Hindus
etc. DO worship the creation - whether they choose to admit it or not.
God should not to be associated
with His creation and NOTHING in His creation can represent Him.
Nothing is like Him. He is the
Creator, not created, nor a part of His creation. Almighty God's "wishes", will or omnipotence have nothing to do with it.
It should be kept in mind that "freedom" doesn't always mean
freedom to do certain things, but it can also mean being above doing
certain things. It's safe to say that all Christians picture "Jesus" as
a MAN. Even if (just for argument's sake) God was "in"
him, they're still worshipping something created (i.e. the MAN part).
Anyway...the
oldest excuse amongst idolaters is that they're not worshipping an idol,
but only what it represents - a holy man that God was inside of or a
particular "manifestation of God". They see them as vehicles that help
them concentrate and get closer to Almighty God. Even the idol
worshippers at the time of Muhammad, may God bless him and give him
peace, believed in Almighty God. They only worshipped their idols so
that they could get closer to Him (See Quran 39:3).
Thus, The most fundamental and the most important
teaching of Prophet Muhammad and all the prophets through history
(blessings of Allah and peace be upon them) was the faith in the unity
of God in its pure true meaning.
No believer in Pure Islamic Monotheism
(Arabic:
Tawheed)
should ever be moved into accepting or condoning any set of beliefs that
even have a scent of contradicting the Divinely revealed commandments.
This is expressed in the primary Kalimah of Islam as "There is
no deity but Allah" (La ilaha illallah). This beautiful phrase is the
bedrock of Islam, its foundation and its essence. It is the expression of this belief
which differentiates a true Muslim from a kafir (unbeliever), mushrik
(one who associates others with God in His Divinity) or dahriyah (an atheist).
The Meaning of the Kalimah
In Arabic the word ilah means 'one who is
worshipped', that is, a being which on account of its greatness and power is considered
worthy to be worshipped: to be bowed to in humility and submission. Anything or any being
possessing power too great to be comprehended by man is also called ilah. The
concept ilah also includes the possession of infinite powers and conveys the
sense that others are dependent on ilah and that he is not dependent on anyone
else. The word ilah carries, too, a sense of concealment and mystery. The word Khuda
in Persian, Deva in Hindi and God in English have similar connotations.
Other languages also contain words with a similar meaning.
The word Allah, on the other hand, is the
essential personal name of God. La ilaha illallah literally means "There is
no ilah other than the One Great Being known by the name Allah." It
means that in the whole of the universe, there is absolutely no being worthy to be
worshipped other than Allah, that it is only to Him that heads should bow in submission
and adoration, that He is the only Being possessing all powers, that we are all in need of
His favour, and that we are all obliged to seek His help. He is concealed from our senses,
and our intellect cannot perceive what He is.
Now we know the meaning of these words, let us look more
closely at their real significance.
From the earliest known history of man as well as from the
oldest relics of antiquity that we have been able to obtain, it appears that in every age
man recognised some deity or deities and worshipped them. Even today every nation, from
the most primitive to the most advanced, believes in and worships some deity. Having a
deity and worshipping him is ingrained in human nature. There is something within man's
soul which forces him to do so.
But the question is: what is that thing and why does man
feel impelled to do so? The answer to this question can be discovered if we look at the
position of man in this huge universe. Neither man nor his nature is omnipotent. He is
neither self-sufficient nor self-existing; nor are his powers limitless. In fact, he is
weak, frail, needy and destitute.
He is dependent on a multitude of forces to maintain his
existence, but all of them are not essentially and totally within his powers. Sometimes
they come into his possession in a simple and natural way, and at times he finds himself
deprived of them. There are many important and valuable things which he endeavours to get,
but sometimes he succeeds in getting them, while sometimes he does not, for it is not
completely in his own power to obtain them. There are many things injurious to him;
accidents destroy his life's work in a single moment; chance brings his hopes to a sudden
end; illness, worries and calamities are always threatening him and marring his way to
happiness. He attempts to get rid of them, and meets with both success and failure.
There are many things whose greatness and grandeur overawe
him: mountains and rivers, gigantic animals and ferocious beasts. He experiences
earthquakes, storms and other natural disasters. He observes clouds over his head and sees
them becoming thick and dark, with peals of thunder, flashes of lightning and heavy rain.
He sees the sun, the moon and the stars in their constant motions. He reflects how great,
powerful and grand these bodies are, and, in contrast to them, how frail and insignificant
he himself is!
These vast phenomena, on the one hand, and the
consciousness of his own frailty, on the other, impress him with a deep sense of his own
weakness, humbleness and helplessness. And it is quite natural that a primitive idea of
divinity should coincide with this sense. He thinks of the hands which are wielding these
great forces. The sense of their greatness makes him bow in humility. The sense of their
powerfulness makes him seek their help. He tries to please them so that they may be
beneficial to him, and he fears them and tries to escape their wrath so that he may not be
destroyed by them.
In the most primitive stage of ignorance, man thinks that
the great objects of nature whose grandeur and glory are visible, and which appear to be
injurious or beneficial to him, hold in themselves the real power and authority, and,
therefore, are divine. Thus he worships trees, animals, rivers, mountains, fire, rain,
air, heavenly bodies and numerous other objects. This is the worst form of ignorance.
When his ignorance dissipates to some extent and some
glimmers of light and knowledge appear on his intellectual horizon, he comes to know that
these great and powerful objects are in themselves as helpless and dependent, or rather,
they are still more dependent and helpless. The biggest and the strongest animal dies like
a tiny germ, and loses all his power; great rivers rise and fall and become dry; the
highest mountains are blasted and shattered by man himself; the productiveness of the
earth is not under the earth's control - water makes it prosperous and lack of water makes
it barren. Even water is not independent. It depends on air which brings the clouds. Air,
too, is powerless and its usefulness depends on other causes. The moon, the sun, and the
stars are also bound by a powerful law outside whose dictates they cannot make the
slightest movement.
After these considerations man's mind turns to the
possibility of some great mysterious power of divine nature which controls the objects he
sees and which may be the repository of all authority. These reflections give rise to
belief in mysterious powers behind natural phenomena, with innumerable gods governing
various parts and aspects of nature such as air, light and water. Material forms or
symbols are constructed to represent them and man begins to worship these forms and
symbols. This, too, is a form of ignorance, and reality remains hidden to the human eye
even at this stage of man's intellectual and cultural pilgrimage.
As man progresses still further in knowledge and learning,
and as he reflects more and more deeply on the fundamental problems of existence, he finds
an all-powerful law and all-encompassing control in the universe. What a complete
regularity is observed in sunrise and sunset, in winds and rains, in the motions of stars
and the changes of seasons! With what a wonderful harmony countless different forces are
working jointly. And what a highly effective and supremely wise law it is according to
which all the various causes in the universe are made to work together at an appointed
time to produce an appointed event! Observing this uniformity, regularity and complete
obedience to one great law in all fields of Nature, even a polytheist finds himself
obliged to believe that there must be a deity greater than all the others, exercising
supreme authority. For, if there were separate, independent deities, the whole machinery
of the universe would be upset.
He calls this greatest deity by different names, such as Allah,
Permeshwar, God, Khuda-i-Khuda'igan. But as the darkness of
ignorance still persists, he continues worshipping minor deities along with the Supreme
One. He imagines that the Divine Kingdom of God may not be different from earthly
kingdoms. Just as a ruler has many ministers, trusted associates, governors and other
responsible officers, so the minor deities are like so many responsible officers under the
Great God Who cannot be approached without winning the favour of the officers under Him.
So they must also be worshipped and appealed to for help, and should in no case be
offended. They are taken as agents through whom an approach can be made to the Great God.
The more a man increases his knowledge, the greater becomes
his dissatisfaction with the multiplicity of deities. So the number of minor deities
begins to decrease. More enlightened men bring each one of them under the searchlight of
scrutiny and ultimately find that none of these man-made deities has any divine character;
they themselves are creatures like man, though rather more helpless. They are thus
eliminated one by one until only one God remains.
But the concept of one God still contains some remnants of
the elements of ignorance. Some people imagine that He has a body as men have, and is in a
particular place. Some believe that God came down to earth in human form; others think
that God, after settling the affairs of the universe, retired and is now resting. Some
believe that it is necessary to approach God through the media of saints and spirits, and
that nothing can be achieved without their intercession. Some imagine God to have a
certain form or image, and they believe it necessary to keep that image before them for
the purposes of worship.
Such distorted notions of godhead have persisted and
lingered, and many of them are prevalent among different people even today.
Tawhid is the highest conception of godhead, the
knowledge of which God has sent mankind in all ages through His Prophets. It was this
knowledge with which, in the beginning, Adam was sent down to earth; it was the same
knowledge that was revealed to Noah, Abraham, Moses and Jesus (God's blessings be upon
them all). It was this knowledge which Muhammad (blessings of Allah and peace be upon him)
brought to mankind. It is Knowledge, pure and absolute, without the least shade of
ignorance. Man became guilty of shirk, idol-worship and kufr only
because he turned away from the teachings of the Prophets and depended on his own faulty
reasoning, false perceptions or biased interpretations. Tawhid dispels all the
clouds of ignorance and illuminates the horizon with the light of reality.
Let us see what significant realities the concept of Tawhid
- this little phrase: la ilaha illallah - embraces: what truth it conveys and
what beliefs it fosters.
First, we are faced with the question of the universe. We
are face to face with a grand, limitless universe. Man's mind cannot discern its beginning
or visualise its end. It has been moving along its chartered course from time immemorial
and is continuing its journey in the vast vista of the future. Creatures beyond number
have appeared in it - and go on appearing every day. It is so bewildering that a thinking
mind finds itself wonderstruck. Man is unable to understand and grasp its reality by his
unaided vision. He cannot believe that all this has appeared just by chance or accident.
The universe is not a fortuitous mass of matter. It is not a jumble of unco-ordinated
objects. It is not a conglomeration of chaotic and meaningless things. All this cannot be
without a Creator, a Designer, a Controller, a Governor.
But who can create and control this majestic universe? Only
He can do so Who is Master of all; Who is Infinite and Eternal; Who is All-Powerful, All-
Wise, Omnipotent and Omniscient; Who is All-Knowing and All-Seeing. He must have supreme
authority over all that exists in the universe. He must possess limitless powers, must be
Lord of the universe and all that it contains, must be free from every flaw and weakness
and none may have the power to interfere with His work. Only such a Being can be the
Creator, the Controller and the Governor of the universe.
Second, it is essential that all these divine attributes
and powers must be vested in One Being: it is impossible for two or more personalities
having equal powers and attributes to co-exist. They are bound to collide. Therefore,
there must be one and only one Supreme Being having control over all others. You cannot
think of two governors for the same province or two supreme commanders of the army!
Similarly, the distribution of these powers among different deities, so that, for
instance, one of them is all- knowledge, the other all-providence and still another
life-giver - and each having an independent domain - is also unthinkable. The universe is
an indivisible whole and each one of such deities will be dependent upon others in the
execution of his task. Lack of co-ordination is bound to occur. And if this happened, the
world would fall to pieces. These attributes are also untransferable. It is not possible
that a certain attribute might be present in a certain deity at one time and at another
time be found in another deity. A divine being who is incapable of remaining alive himself
cannot give life to others. The one who cannot protect his own divine power cannot be
suited to govern the vast limitless universe.
The more you reflect on the problem, the firmer must your
conviction be that all these divine powers and attributes must exist in one and the same
Being alone. Thus, polytheism is a form of ignorance that cannot stand rational scrutiny.
It is a practical impossibility. The facts of life and nature do not fit in with it. They
automatically bring men to Reality, that is Tawhid, the Unity of God.
Now, keeping in mind this concept of God, look closely at
this vast universe. Exert yourself to the utmost and say if you find among all the objects
that you see, among all the things that you perceive, among all that you can think, feel
or imagine - all that your knowledge can comprehend - anyone possessing these attributes.
The sun, the moon, the stars, animals, birds or fishes, matter, money, any man or a group
of men - does any of them possess these attributes? Most certainly not! For everything in
the universe is created, controlled and regulated, is dependent on others, is mortal and
transitory; its slightest movements are controlled by an inexorable law from which there
can be no deviation. Their helpless condition proves that the attire of divinity cannot
fit their body. They do not possess the slightest trace of divinity and have absolutely
nothing to do with it. It is a travesty of truth and a folly of the highest magnitude to
attribute divine status to them.
This is the meaning of La ilaha, (i.e. there is no
god) no human and material object possesses the divine power and authority deserving
worship and obedience.
But this is not the end of our quest. We have found that
divinity is not vested in any material or human element of the universe, and that none of
them possesses even the slightest trace of it. This leads us to the conclusion that there
is a Supreme Being, over and above all that our eyes see in the universe, Who possesses
Divine attributes, Who is the Will behind all phenomena, the Creator of this grand
universe, the Controller of its superb Law, the Governor of its serene rhythm, the
Administrator of all its workings: He is Allah, the Lord of the Universe and no one and
nothing is associated in His Divinity. This is what illallah (but Allah) means.
This knowledge is superior to all other kinds of knowledge
and the greater you exert yourself, the deeper will be your conviction that this is the
starting-point of all knowledge. In every field of inquiry - be it that of physics,
chemistry, astronomy, geology, biology, zoology, economics, politics, sociology or the
humanities, you will find that the deeper you probe, the clearer become the indications of
the truth of La ilaha illallah. It is this concept which opens up the doors of
inquiry and investigation and illumines the pathways of knowledge with the light of
reality. And if you deny or disregard this reality, you will find that at every step you
meet disillusionment, for the denial of this primary truth robs everything in the universe
of its meaning and significance.
The acceptance or denial of this phrase produces a world of difference
between man and man. The believers in it become one single community and those who do not
believe in it form an opposing group. For the believers there is unhampered progress and
success in this world and in the hereafter, while failure and ignominy are the ultimate
lot of those who refuse to believe in it.
But the difference between the believers and the
unbelievers does not result from the mere chanting of a few words. Obviously, the mere
utterance of a phrase or two is not in itself important. The real difference lies in the
conscious acceptance of this doctrine and complete adherence to it in practical life. Mere
repetition of the word 'food' cannot dull hunger; mere chanting of a medical prescription
cannot heal the disease.
In the same way, if the Kalimah is repeated
without any understanding, it cannot work the revolution which it is meant to bring about.
This can occur only if a person grasps the full meaning of the doctrine and accepts and
follows it in letter and spirit. We avoid fire because we know that it burns; we keep away
from poison because we know that it can kill. Similarly, if the real meanings of Tawhid
are fully grasped, we avoid, in belief as well as in action, every form of disbelief,
atheism and polytheism. This is the natural consequence of belief in the Unity of God.
Rules of Pure Monotheism
The
pure worship and monotheism, which is the religion of Abraham, consists
of worshipping God alone, of dedicating yourself sincerely to serving
Him. God said: "I have not created jinn
and men but to worship Me" [Qur'an 51:56].
Once you know that God has created you to serve Him, you will realize
that there can be no service except with Pure Monotheism (Arabic:
Tawheed). Just as there is no formal prayer without purity, and
there is no purity with uncleanliness, so there is no worship of God
while worshipping others along with Him (Arabic: Shirk). By
associating others with Almighty God, man's worship is spoilt, his deeds
are vain and he is doomed to eternal Hellfire. If you are cognizant of
all this, you will realize that your most important care should be to
have all the knowledge pertinent thereto, that God may save you from
Hell's terrible abyss. Almighty God said: "God will not forgive any the association of anything
with Him; but He will forgive any lesser offense to whomsoever He
chooses" [Qur'an 4:47]. Such pertinent knowledge consists of
four basic rules, elaborated in Almighty God's Holy Book.
First
Rule:
The first rule
is the knowledge that the unbelieving pagans whom the Prophet Muhammad,
the peace and grace of God be upon him, opposed, did acknowledge that
Almighty God - May He be glorified - is indeed the Creator, Provider and
Maker of this world. However, this did not make them Muslims. Evidence
therefor is in the verse: "Ask them: 'Who sends down for you your provision from
the sky and grows it out of the earth? Who hears your prayer and sees
your condition? Who brings the living out of the dead and the dead out
of the living? Who directs the course of the world?' They will answer:
'God.' Answer: 'Would you then not fulfill your duty to Him?'"
[Qur'an 10:32]
Second
Rule:
The second rule
is to know that the unbelievers claim that they do not pray to their
objects of worship and call on them except to the end that they may
intercede on their behalf with God, as the verse said: "Those who worshipped others as
patrons beside God, claiming that they did so only to come through their
intercession nearer to Him, will receive the judgment of God in the
matter they contend. God will not guide the ingrate, the liar" [Qur'an 39:3]. Evidence regarding intercession
is in the verse: "They serve beside God
beings which can neither benefit nor harm, claiming, 'These are our
intercessors with God.'"[Qur'an 10:18] There are two kinds of intercession, one illegitimate
and the other legitimate. The former is that which is sought from
sources other than God regarding matters where all the power lies in God
alone. Evidence for this is-in the verse: "O men who believe, spend
of that which We have provided for you before the Day when there will be
neither sale nor purchase, neither favors nor intercession. The
unbelievers are themselves unjust." [Qur'an 2:254]. The legitimate intercession is
that which is asked of Almighty God, where the intercessor receives his
power from Him, and the interceded for is he whom God is pleased to
accept as such for his word and deed. Almighty God said:
"No one may intercede with God except by His permission"
[Qur'an 2:55]
Third
Rule:
The third rule
is the knowledge that the Prophet Muhammad, may God bless him and give
him peace, appeared among people of many religious traditions. Some
worshipped angels; others worshipped the prophets and saints of God;
others worshipped trees and stones, sun and moon. All of these peoples
were fought by him, as they must, relentlessly without distinction.
Evidence therefor is in the following Qur'anic verses:
"And fight them, that there may be no aberration in religion, and all
religion belongs to Almighty God" [Qur'an
2:193].
,
"Day and
night, sun and moon, are His creation and sign. Do not worship the sun
or the moon, but God, their Creator, if you seek the truth"
[Qur'an 41:37]. ,
"Almighty God does not command you to take the angels and prophets as
Lords" [Qur'an 3:80]. ,
"And God said to Jesus, son of Mary: 'Did you ask men to take you and
your mother for objects of worship beside Almighty God?' He answered:
'Praise be to You, O God! How can I have asked that which is not mine to
ask? If I did, You know it and all that is in my mind. I do not know
what is in Your mind, O Transcendent, All- Knowing God! I have not
conveyed to them except what You have commanded me to convey, namely,
Worship and serve God, my and your only Lord. I was a witness for You in
their midst. When You caused me to die, You took over the witnessing on
them as well as on all else. If You punish them, they are Your
creatures; and if You forgive them, You are the Mighty, the Wise" [Qur'an 5:116-118]. , "Those unto whom they pray
[i.e., the saints] themselves seek an avenue to their Lord's mercy,
compete in coming close to Almighty God, and fear His punishment.
Punishment of your Lord is certainly to be shunned"
[Qur'an 17:57]. ,
"Have you considered al-Lat, al-'Uzza and the third one Manat?
-(The names of false gods which were worshipped by the pre-Islamic
Arabs)- Are yours the males and
His the females? Is this not ridiculous? All of them are but names which
you have named, following the example of your ancestors. God gave no
voucher for them. You follow but a guess and your own desires"
[Qur'an 53:19-23].
Fourth Rule:
The people who associate partners
with Almighty God, in both belief and worship, in our own day are worse and hence more
guilty than those of pre-Islamic times. For, the ancient ones used to only worship others
besides God in prosperity and return to genuine faith in adversity, whereas the present
day associationists are constant in their unbelief, regardless of prosperity or adversity.
Evidence for this is in the Qur'anic verse: "And when they ride in barks [in stormy seas] they address their
prayers to Almighty God in complete sincerity, but relapse into shirk (i.e. associating
partners with Him) when they reach the shore"
[Qur'an 29:65]. Now let us study the effects which the belief in La
ilaha illallah has on the life of a man and see why he should always make a success
of life and why one who denies it becomes a failure in life, both here and in the
hereafter. 1. A believer in this Kalimah can never be narrow in
outlook. He believes in a God Who is the Creator of the heavens and the earth, the Master
of the East and the West and Sustainer of the entire universe. After this belief he does
not regard anything in the world as a stranger to himself. He looks on everything in the
universe as belonging to the same Lord he himself belongs to. His sympathy, love and
service are not confined to any particular sphere or group. His vision is enlarged, his
intellectual horizon widens, and his outlook becomes as liberal and as boundless as is the
Kingdom of God. How can this width of vision and breadth of mind be achieved by an
atheist, a polytheist or one who believes in a deity supposed to possess limited and
defective powers like a man?
2. This belief produces in man the highest degree of
self-respect and self esteem. The believer knows that Allah alone is the Possessor of all
power, and that none besides Him can benefit or harm a person, or provide for his needs,
or give and take away life or wield authority or influence. This conviction makes him
indifferent to, and independent and fearless of, all powers other than those of God. He
never bows his head in homage to any of God's creatures, nor does he stretch out his hand
before anyone else. He is not overawed by anybody's greatness. This attitude of mind
cannot be produced by any other belief. For it is necessary that those who associate other
beings with God, or who deny God, should bow in homage to some creatures, regard them able
to benefit or harm them, fear them and place their hopes in them.
3. Along with self-respect this belief also generates in man a
sense of modesty and humbleness. It makes him unostentatious and unpretending. A believer
never becomes proud, haughty or arrogant. The boisterous pride of power, wealth and worth
can have no room in his heart, because he knows that whatever he possesses has been given
to him by God, and that God can take away just as He can give. In contrast to this, an
unbeliever, when he achieves some worldly merit, becomes proud and conceited because he
believes that his merit is due to his own worth. In the same way pride and self-conceit
are a necessary outcome and concomitant of shirk (association of others with God
in His divinity), because a mushrik believes that he has a particular relation
with the deities which does not exist between them and other people.
4. This belief makes man virtuous and upright. He has the
conviction that there is no other means of success and salvation for him except purity of
soul and righteousness of behaviour. He has perfect faith in God Who is above all need, is
related to none and is absolutely just. This belief creates in him the consciousness that,
unless he lives rightly and acts justly, he cannot succeed. No influence or underhand
activity can save him from ruin. As against this, the kafirs and the mushriks
always live on false hopes. Some of them believe that God's son has atoned for their sins;
some think that they are God's favourites, and will not be punished; others believe that
their saints will intercede with God on their behalf; while others make offerings to their
deities and believe that by so bribing the deities they acquire a licence to do whatever
they like. Such false beliefs keep them enmeshed in sin and evil deeds; depending on their
deities, they do not bother about their souls and living pure and good lives. As to
atheists, they do not believe that there is any Being having power over them, to Whom they
should be responsible for their good or bad actions; therefore they consider themselves
independent to act in whatever way they like. Their own fancies become their gods and they
live like slaves of their wishes and desires.
5. The believer never becomes despondent. He has a firm faith
in God Who is Master of all the treasures of the earth and the heavens, Whose grace and
bounty have no limit and Whose powers are infinite. This faith imparts to his heart
extraordinary consolation, fills it with satisfaction and keeps it filled with hope.
Although he may meet with rejection from all sides in this world, faith in and dependence
on God never leave him, and on their strength he goes on struggling. Such profound
confidence can result from no other belief than belief in one God. Mushriks, kafirs
and atheists have small hearts; they depend on limited powers; therefore in times of
trouble they are soon overwhelmed by despair and, frequently, they commit suicide.
6. This belief produces in man a very strong degree of
determination, patient perseverance and trust in God. When he makes up his mind and
devotes his resources to fulfilling the Divine Commands in order to secure God's pleasure,
he is sure that he has the support and backing of the Lord of the universe. This certainty
makes him firm and strong like a mountain, and no amount of difficulties, impediments and
opposition can make him give up his resolution. Shirk, kufr and atheism
have no such effect.7. This declaration inspires bravery in man. There are two
things which make a man cowardly: (i) fear of death and love of safety, and (ii) the idea
that there is someone else besides God who can take away life and that man, by adopting
certain devices, can ward off death. Belief in La ilaha illallah purges the mind
of both these ideas. The first idea goes out of his mind because he knows that his life
and his property and everything else really belong to God, and he becomes ready to
sacrifice his all for His pleasure. He gets rid of the second idea because he knows that
no weapon, no man or animal has the power of taking away his life; God alone has the power
to do so. A time has been ordained for him, and all the forces of the world combined
cannot take away anyone's life before that time. It is for this reason that no one is
braver than the one who has faith in God. Nothing can daunt him: not even the strongest
tempest of adversity and the mightiest of armies. Where can the mushriks, the kafirs
and the atheists get such great determination, force and power from? They hold life the
dearest thing in the world; they believe that death is brought about by the enemy and can
be warded off by running away from him!
8. The belief in La ilaha illallah creates an attitude
of peace and contentment, purges the mind of jealousy, envy and greed and keeps away the
temptations of resorting to base and unfair means for achieving success. The believer
understands that wealth is in God's hands, and He apportions it out as He likes; that
honour, power, reputation and authority - everything - is subjected to His will, and He
bestows them as He will; and that man's duty is only to endeavour and to struggle fairly.
He knows that success and failure depend on God's grace; if He wills to give, no power in
the world can prevent Him from so doing; and if He does not will it, no power can force
Him to. On the other hand, the mushriks, the kafirs and the atheists
consider success and failure as dependent on their own efforts and the help or opposition
of earthly powers. Therefore, they always remain slaves to cupidity and envy. They never
hesitate to turn to bribery, flattery, conspiracy and other kinds of base and unfair means
to achieve their ends. Jealousy and envy of others success eat them away, and they will
stop at nothing to bring about the downfall of a successful rival.
9. The most important effect of La ilaha illallah is
that it makes man obey and observe God's Law. One who has belief in it is sure that God
knows everything hidden or open and is nearer to him than his own jugular vein. If he
commits a sin in a secluded corner and in the darkness of night, He knows it; He even
knows our thoughts and intentions, bad or good. We can hide from everyone, but we cannot
hide anything from God; we can evade everyone, but it is impossible to evade God's grip.
The firmer a man's belief in this respect, the more observant will he be of God's
commands; he will shun what God has forbidden and he will carry out His behests even in
solitude and in darkness, because he knows that God's 'police' never leaves him alone, and
he dreads the Court whose warrant he can never avoid. It is for this reason that the first
and the most important conditions for being a Muslim is to have faith in La ilaha
illallah. 'Muslim', means one 'obedient to God' and obedience to God is impossible
unless one firmly believes in La ilaha illallah.
In the teachings of Muhammad (blessings of Allah and peace
be upon him) faith in One God is the most important and fundamental principle. It is the
bedrock of Islam and the mainspring of its power. All other beliefs, commands and laws of
Islam stand firm on this foundation. All of them receive strength from this source. Take
it away, and there is nothing left of Islam. |