Islam: Creator of the Modern Age There can be no doubt that Islam, - TopicsExpress



          

Islam: Creator of the Modern Age There can be no doubt that Islam, in essence, is the discovery of such divine guidance as shows man the path to eternal success in the Hereafter. Scientific and industrial developments may not be directly related to the aims and objectives of Islam, but it is nevertheless an indisputable fact that they are major offshoots of the Islamic revolution. Had the Islamic revolution never seen the light of day, scientific and industrial developments would also have remained unrealized. From Darkness to Light God created a perfect world. Then He created man in perfect form. Next He commanded man to live in the world and make use of everything he found in it. Man was told, moreover, that there was only one Creator who should be worshipped. Man was to worship this God alone, and none else besides Him. But man went astray. He began to worship anything which was visibly prominent, such as rivers, mountains, etc: He could not continue to make an invisible God the centre of his attention. Worse, his inclination towards visible gods went on increasing. Anything large and impressive was regarded either as a god, or as possessing divine attributes. This engendered, on the one hand, the concept of the sacredness of certain personalities and, on the other, the process of nature worship, or pantheism. This worship of some thing or person other than God finally developed into shirk, or polytheism. This shirk gradually came to dominate all aspects of belief and practice, finding its way into every household as bringer of good omens and a nullifier of bad omens, thus becoming a part of all customs. Moreover, once it took the shape of belief in a divine king, it became a necessary part of the political system. This was the religion of the ancient world. Worship in those days was based wholly on shirk – to put it in religious terminology, or, in common parlance, superstition. All the Prophets in the past had come with the mission of rectifying this perversion. In all ages, throughout the history of man, they called for the renunciation of shirk and the adoption of monotheism. About one lakh (a hundred thousand) Prophets, were said (according to one of the Traditions) to have come to the world from the time of Adam to the time of the Messiah (Christ). But man was not willing to give ear to what they had to say. The message of the Prophets was thus confined only to the proclamation of truth; it could not go so far as to bring about a revolution based on this truth. Rooting out shirk, or superstition was not a purely religious undertaking. It had a bearing on all human concerns. The truth is that this all-pervasiveness of superstition served as hurdle to all kinds of human development. Placing nature upon a pedestal of sanctity had completely discouraged any investigation of it. Without such investigation, scientific and industrial progress was simply not possible. Progress towards the general acceptance of human equality was likewise barred by beliefs concerning the superiority or inferiority of a man’s birth, which had grown out of a variety of baseless suppositions, all governed by superstition. The emergence of all those factors which today add up to enlightenment and progress had been rendered impossible by a complete absence of scientific vision. It was superstition which was responsible for delaying the birth of such an outlook by many centuries. Efforts on the part of the prophets over a period of thousands of years had proved that any struggle which was confined to intellectual or missionary fields, was not sufficient to extricate man from the grip of superstition. Even the governments of those times were founded upon superstitious beliefs. The interests of the rulers lay, therefore, in the perpetuation of the age of superstition, so that their subject might continue to be swayed by the belief in the divine right of kings. (This was so that they should not question their right to rule.) That was why they used all their military and political might to suppress any attempts to put an end to polytheism and superstition by means of a missionary struggle. Now the question arose as to what strategy should be employed to break down the barriers raised by vested interests. This was the state of affairs when the final Prophet ‘Mohammad, may peace be upon him, came to the world in the 6th century AD. It was God’s decree that he be a da’i (missionary) as well as a mahi (eradicator). He was entrusted by God with the mission of not only proclaiming to the world that superstitious beliefs were based on falsehood, but also of resorting to military action, if the need arose, to eliminate that system for all time. Addressing the Prophet, the Qur’an observes: “We have revealed to you this book so that, by the will of their Lord, you may lead men from darkness to light.” (14:1). This same mission of leading men from darkness to light had been entrusted to all the Prophets in turn. The sense, however, in which the Prophet of Islam was distinct from the others was that in his case, God had decreed – since no Prophet was to come after him – that he should not just communicate the divine message to humanity and leave it at that, but that he should also take practical steps to change the entire existing state of affairs. The prerequisites for putting this plan into action were all provided by God. Moreover, God also guaranteed that any shortcoming in worldly resources would be amply compensated for by special help from the angels.
Posted on: Sat, 08 Jun 2013 06:15:04 +0000

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