Harun Yahya - The Importance Of Conscience In The Qur'an -
The Importance Of Conscience In The
Qur'an
This
book introduces the real concept of conscience that is related in the
Qur'an and draws our attention to the kind of understanding, thought,
and wisdom that a truly conscientious person has.
Living The Qur'an By Following The
Conscience At All Times
The sole purpose of a person who becomes aware of the existence of Allah and
the hereafter, is to please Allah and to live eternally in paradise. It is impossible
for someone who acts upon his conscience and wisdom, to set an objective other
than this. Another great error of man is tothink that religion is a belief that
covers only a small portion of one's life; that it is something to be remembered
only on certain days, and that nothing is related with it except some rites
of worship. On the contrary, in the Qur'an, it is stated that man's whole life,
along with all rites, must be for Allah:
Say: 'My prayer and my rites, my living and my
dying, are for Allah alone, the Lord of all the worlds.' (Surat al-An'am: 162)
This means that in all his words, decisions and actions,
man must pay attention to whether Allah is pleased with him or not. If he thinks
that something is not pleasing to Allah, then he must totally avoid it. There
is no other choice for a man who will be called to account for the life he has
led, and whose eternal abode will be decided by the result. Furthermore, someone
who is not ungrateful and who thinks and comprehends the truth, will surely
not consider anything more important than pleasing his Lord, Who created him
out of nothing, gave him life when he was nothing and bestowed upon him the
favour to live in the paradise forever.
He who decides to live all his life for Allah once
again turns to his conscience in order to find out how to please Allah. In the
Qur'an, Allah has made clear all His orders and the deeds that He forbids. First
of all, one who acts upon one's conscience strictly observes these orders and
forbidden deeds. He pays the highest attention to the deeds that are approved
and forbidden, and practises all the orders he reads in the Qur'an. He takes
the models of good behaviour communicated in the Qur'an as a guide to himself;
he acts with extreme sincerity and fulfils everything written in the Qur'an
to the best of his understanding and means.
He who reads the Qur'an will see that Allah orders
people to carry out certain rites of worship. One of these is to practise regular
prayers:
When you have finished the prayer, remember Allah standing,
sitting and lying on your sides. When you are safe again keep up prayer. Prayer
is prescribed for the believers at specific times. (Surat an-Nisa': 103)
This verse is a reminder that regular prayer is obligatory.
The conscience of everyone who reads this verse will tell them to stand for
prayers. The person may either practise what his conscience and the Qur'an require
of him, or he may avoid practising the commands of the Qur'an by making various
excuses. It must, however, never be forgotten that whatever excuse one may find
for not keeping up prayer, this excuse will not be accepted in the hereafter.
In another verse, Allah asks man to act justly whatever
the conditions and circumstances may be:
You who believe! Be upholders of justice, bearing witness
for Allah alone, even against yourselves or your patterns and relatives.Whether
they are rich or poor, Allah is well able to look after them. Do not follow
your own desires and deviate from the truth. If you twist or turn away, Allah
is aware of what you do. (Surat an-Nisa': 135)
Performing Allah's commands meticulously even if they
conflict with one's interests is only possible through listening to the voice
of one's conscience. Let us think of some situations that one who is called
to attention in the verse above, may face. It may be that a person's bearing
witness with justice may possibly cause a relative of his to be convicted of
some crime. Yet, even in such a situation, a person who knows that he will give
account after his death, listens to his conscience and acts in accordance with
the command in the Qur'an, for no benefit in this world can be greater than
his benefit in the hereafter.
In another verse, Allah states the following about
acting justly:
You who believe! Show integrity for the sake of Allah,
bearing witness with justice. Do not let hatred for a people incite you into
not being just. Be just. That is closer to taqwa. Have fear of Allah. Allah
is aware of what you do. (Surat al-Ma'ida: 8)
In order for someone to act on this verse properly,
he has to control his anger even when he is most furious, and give a just decision.
The person he converses with may be someonewhom he dislikes because of his manners
and speech and even someone against whom he bears a grudge. Regardless of whom
that person may be, it is a command from Allah to be just to everyone.
Another example is Allah's command to people to avoid
suspicion and gossip:
You who believe! Avoid most suspicion. Indeed some suspicion
is a crime. And do not spy and do not backbite one another. Would any of you
like to eat his brother's dead flesh? No, you would hate it. And have taqwa
of Allah. Allah is Ever-Returning, Most Merciful. (Surat al-Hujurat: 12)
In the above verse, Allah guards man against some
bad character traits. Actually, the three specific manners mentioned in this
verse are interrelated. Someone who backbites has some bad suspicions about
the person he backbites. Similarly, someone who spies on someone else does so
on the grounds of certain suspicions. Such types of behaviour are very common
and somehow accepted by society, though they are definitely against conscience.
A good criterion for comparison would be to think
of one's self in such a situation. No one would ever wish to be spied on and
have his secrets and mistakes pried into and revealed. He would not wish to
be gossiped about, or for other people to have bad and incorrect suspicions
about him. Someone who discovered he was being talked about in this way would
be greatly distressed and feel he was being treated unjustly. Subjecting someone
to such pain and making him live in such circumstances is wicked and inexcusable.
It is an indication of a man's conscience that he never subjects someone else
to something which he himself would not like to be subjected to. For this reason,
Allah compares these manners to 'eating the dead flesh of one's brother.' This
is just as disgusting as backbiting, suspicion and faultfinding. Besides, Allah
threatens those who engage in such acts with hell:
Woe to every faultfinding backbiter No indeed! He will
be flung into the Shatterer. And what will convey to you what the Shatterer
is? The kindled Fire of Allah reaching right into the heart. It is sealed in
above them in towering columns. (Surat al-Humaza: 1-9)
Backbiting, prying into the secrets of others, and
accusing people on the basis of mere suspicion, are often products of jealousy,
envy and grudges, and are directly opposed to Quranic morals. Such behaviour
is absolutely incompatible with conscience even though it is not greatly renounced
by society. When one considers how Allah will repay these actions, the most
appropriate conduct in accordance with Qur'anic morals is not to do them even
for a moment, and to strongly discourage others from doing them.
The behaviour and thoughts of someone who has grasped
the essence of the Qur'an, will be based on the good morals prescribed by Islam
in general. In other words, he who lives this good character will always think
and act conscientiously. He will never forget death and the hereafter, and this
will make all his actions be oriented towards the hereafter. Such a remark-able
man will think about the hereafter not only for himself, but also for his loved
ones and his whole community. All his efforts will be geared towards preparing
for this eternal home. Even with regards to seemingly ordinary events, the conscientious
person comments with reference not to the world, but to the hereafter. For example,
if he has a very wealthy friend, he instantly thinks that his friend too will
die one day and give account in the hereafter. He particularly avoids making
speeches that might make his friend attached to this world. He encourages him
to be generous, and reminds him of paradise and hell. He prays for his good
and peace both in the world and the hereafter, and that Allah will cause them
to meet in a happy hereafter. A conscientious man displays his love for his
friend by making efforts for his hereafter and by forbidding him the wrong and
enjoining the right.
At first sight, someone who acts upon his conscience
and always seeks Allah's good pleasure may seem to be no different to others.
He too goes to work or school, does shopping, and enjoys himself. He, however,
seeks Allah's pleasure in everything he does. In a verse Allah states:
There are men, who proclaim His glory morning and evening,
not distracted by trade or commerce from the remembrance of Allah and the establishment
of regular prayers and the payment of regular charity; fearing a day when all
hearts and eyes will be in turmoil. (Surat an-Nur: 37)
One may wonder how it is possible to seek Allah's
good pleasure in the common, everyday actions one does, and how it is possible
to remember Allah at every moment. Firstly, it must be stated that for someone
who follows his conscience, the rites of worship and Allah's commands are above
everything else. He never forgets that Allah is always watching him. In the
trade he engages in, he does not become concerned with his benefits in the world,
but his benefits in the hereafter.
He never declines in honesty, and
never stoops to commit any act for which he will not be able to give account,
or be ashamed of in the hereafter. Even if he knows that he will lose income,
he is not tempted to cheat in measure, weight or calculation. In every issue
he is most reliable and trustworthy. He does not delay the paying of his debts
when he has the means; or if someone who owes him is in difficulty, he may give
up the debt. In the Qur'an it is advised thus:
If (the debtor) is in difficult circumstances, (let there
be) a deferral until things are easier. But making a free gift of it would be
better for you if you only knew. (Surat al-Baqara 2:280)
A believer never forgets that the
only power that will give favour and prosperity is with Allah. He does not transgress
by being spoiled with what he has, and on the contrary thanks Allah for every
favour He grants him.
There are many other events which
man meets in his daily life through which he can remember Allah and seek His
good pleasure by relying on the truth and wisdom of His Word conveyed by His
Messenger in the Qur'an. Everyone who wants to live by the deen should read
the Qur'an by using his conscience and practise what he has read once again
by employing his conscience.
The conscience looks for the
manners that wIll please Allah most
Man's conscience takes great pains
in working for the pleasure of Allah. It always thinks, 'How can I please Allah
most?' It never seeks other people's pleasure, or worries about its position
in their eyes. It turns only to Allah in penitence. Some people live Islam not
by using their conscience, but in a traditional and habitual way as they have
seen from their ancestors. They perform certain rituals of worship that they
have memorised and with this they are satisfied. They have chosen a lifestyle
which pays lip service to Islam. The reason for doing this may be to avoid conflict
with their associates or simply because they were raised that way. Rather than
thinking what to do to please Allah most, they think, 'What is the minimum I
should do to make people believe that I am religious?'
It is, however, impossible to live
Islam without employing the conscience fully. A truly conscientious person thinks
about how he can practise every act of worship in the best manner. He strives
to ensure that neither his actions nor his speech will pose a risk on the Day
of Account. He knows that he will be repaid in the hereafter for what he has
done. Allah warns people with respect to this:
Establish regular prayers and regular charity. Any good
you send ahead for yourselves, you will find with Allah. Certainly Allah sees
what you do. (Surat al-Baqara: 110)
An example from the Qur'an to someone
seeking to do something to the best of his ability, and in the most beautiful
way is the command given to the believers about 'saying the best'.
Say to My slaves that they should only say the best.
The shaytan wants to stir up trouble between them. The shaytan is an outright
enemy to man. (Surat al-Isra': 53)
He who knows this command of Allah
will find the best speech by referring to his conscience. He will not just say
whatever comes into his mind. On the contrary, he makes themost beautiful and
impressive speeches, and he takes great care not to hurt or dishearten the people
he talks to. He chooses the speech which will please Allah most, and while doing
it, he employs his conscience as a key reference.
In another verse, Allah categorises
mankind in three groups in terms of their attachment to Islam:
Then We made Our chosen slaves inherit the Book. But
some of them wrong themselves; some are ambivalent; and some outdo each other
in good by Allah's permission. That is the great favour. (Surah Fatir: 32)
As stated in the verse, some people
do not live by Islam at all. Others only follow a part of what their conscience
bids them, and spend only some of their time and means for Islam, though not
when it conflicts with their interests. They do not make a serious effort for
Islam and good manners to be spread among the people. Thinking that they already
pay attention to what is forbidden and permitted, they take it for granted that
the acts of worship they practise make them morally competent.
In actual fact, what suits conscience
most is to choose and practise the most morally correct and beautiful deeds
of those which are permissible and acceptable. With relation to this, in the
Qur'an, Allah refers with high regard to those who follow the best of what is
said:
Those who listen well to what is said and follow the
best of it, they are the ones whom Allah has guided, they are the people of
intelligence. (Surat az-Zumar: 18)
The third group, who outdo each
other in good, are those who act in full accordance with their conscience. They
outdo each other to gain the highest reward from their Lord, and step forward
willingly in every service and every act of goodness, without waiting for anyone
else to do it. When there are better things that they can do, their conscience
does not allow them to continue with the lesser, without striving for improvement.
As seen, conscience requires not
only knowing Allah and accepting His existence, but also performing acts that
will please Him and paying great attention to this. The majority of people assume
that believing in Allah's existence alone is sufficient. In some verses of the
Qur'an, these people are addressed thus:
Say: 'Who provides for you out of heaven and earth? Who
controls hearing and sight? Who brings forth the living from the dead and the
dead from the living? Who directs the whole affair?' They will say, 'Allah.'
Say, 'So will you not have taqwa?' That is Allah, your Lord, the Truth, and
what is there after truth except misguidance? So how have you been distracted?
(Surah Yunus: 31-32)
As seen in the above verses, such
people believe in the existence of Allah, and even accept that Allah provides
for them, that He gives life and death, and that He is the Creator and Owner
of everything. They employ their conscience only so much as to have such an
awareness, and see this sufficient for their faith. Someone who makes full use
of his conscience, however, feels a fear full of respect towards Allah since
he can grasp the sublimity of Allah. This fear is different from other fears
experienced; this is the fear of losing Allah's approval. The whole life of
a person who feels this fear passes solely by seeking to gain his Lord's pleasure.
He does not set a limit to himself in drawing near to Allah. In the Qur'an,
Allah shows Ibrahim as an example and says:
Who could have a better religion than someone who submits
himself completely to Allah and is a good-doer, and follows the religion of
Ibrahim, a man of pure natural belief? Allah took Ibrahim as an intimate friend.
(Surat an-Nisa': 125)
Someone who acts one hundred percent
upon his conscience, will strive to reach the highest level of understanding
possible for the human mind; he will labour day and night to grasp the might
and majesty of Allah and to draw near Him and become His intimate friend. Since
he can never be sure to have established the highest degree of friendship and
nearness, his effort and willingness will continue until he dies.
One may wonder how it is possible
to be near to Allah. The key to this is again our conscience, as explained in
the following pages.