By Tavis Adibudeen, Staff Writer
It
has been related that a man, who presumed himself to be knowledgeable,
came upon a bakery one day. He deceived the baker and managed to steal
two loaves of bread from the bakery. The man then continued on his path
until he came upon a pomegranate seller. He deceived the store owner
and stole two pomegranates.
The
man then continued until he saw a poor sickly man on the road. He gave
the two loaves of bread and the two pomegranates to the sick man and
proceeded to depart. He was, however, unaware that someone had been
watching the entire incident and was now approaching to question him.
The
approaching man asked him why he had taken those four items and then
bestowed them upon the hands of the infirm man. He replied, "Are you
not Ja'far ibn Muhammad (Imam as-Sadiq)?"
The questioner said,
"Yes."
"What good is your lineage to you if
you have no knowledge?"
Imam as-Sadiq (peace be upon him) replied, "Which verse
from the Book of Allah confounds me?"
The man then recited,
'Whoever brings a
good deed, he shall have ten like it, and whoever
brings an evil deed shall be recompensed only with the like of
it.' (Qur'an
6:160)
He
continued, "When I stole the two loaves of bread, that counted as two
evil deeds, and when I stole the pomegranates, that counted as two more
evil deeds. That is a total of four evil deeds. When I gave the four
items to the sick man, that counted as 40 good deeds. So, Allah has
subtracted
my four evil deeds from my forty good deeds, leaving me with
36 good deeds!"
Imam as-Sadiq said, 'May your mother lose you! It is you
who are ignorant of the Book of Allah. Have you not heard that Allah
said,
'(Allah)
accepts (deeds) from the pious only.'
When
you stole the two loaves of bread, that counted as two evil deeds. And
when you stole the two pomegranates, that counted as two evil deeds,
also. And when you gave them to other than their owner without the
permission of their owner, you have added four evil deeds to four evil
deeds.
You have not added four evil deeds to forty good
deeds.'
The man then began staring blankly at
the Imam, so the Imam left him.
In
this story, a man who believed himself to be knowledgeable and was even
well-respected among the people, actually revealed his own ignorance
and lack of sound intellect ('aql).
The Essential
Reason
Reason is an essential component of
religion (din), and it is only through reason that human
beings can come to understand how shari'ah
(the
path of Islam) is to be implemented in their communities and societies.
Although revealed knowledge is the first ingredient, if it is not
coupled with sufficient intellect and reason, it is doomed to
fail.
In
the case of the man in the above story, knowing a verse from the Book
of Allah was not enough for this man, without sound reasoning, as Allah
says:
"He grants wisdom
(al-hikmah) to whom He pleases,
and to whomever wisdom is granted is surely given an abundance of good
(khayran kabiran); but none will grasp
the message except men of understanding (ulul-albab)."
(Qur'an 2:269)
In his tafsir, al-'Allamah at-Tabataba`i wrote regarding this verse,
"Al-Lubb literally means kernel, the softer part
within a hard shell. It is used in the meaning of al-'aql (understanding) because understanding has
the same position vis-a-vis the man as the
kernel has vis-a-vis its hard shell.
It is used in this very meaning in the Qur'an. The use of the noun
al-'aql with the meaning of understanding, seems to
be of a later origin; that is why it has not been used in this form in
the Qur'an..."1
Al-Kulayni reported that the Messenger of Allah (may
Allah bless him and grant him peace) said,
"Allah
did not distribute among (His) servants anything better than wisdom;
so, the sleep of the wise is better than the wakefulness of the
ignorant, and the sitting of the wise is better than the rising of the
ignorant. And Allah did not send any prophet nor any messenger until
(his) understanding was perfected and his wisdom was superior to all
the wisdom of his people. And what the prophet keeps hidden in his mind
is superior to the endeavors of those who endeavor. And the servant
does not fulfill his obligations (towards) Allah until he knows Him;
and all the worshipers together do not reach in the excellence of their
worship what a wise (person) attains; and the wise people are the
people of understanding; Allah says: and none but men of understanding mind."2
From the eloquent words of the
Messenger of Allah, we can gather that understanding or intellect
(al-'aql) goes hand-in-hand with wisdom
(al-hikmah). The power of the intellect
(quwwat-ul-'aqiliyyah)
is inherent in every human being, but it has two possible uses. It can
be used for learning the divine knowledge of Allah and other beneficial
knowledge, as well as for teaching and formulating plans that are
beneficial to the Muslim community (ummah),
or it can be used for deceit and self aggrandizement. Moreover, if the
intellect is not fostered at all, if it is not nursed with the supreme
knowledge, it will remain in ignorance (jahiliyyah).
It is related from
Abu Ja'far (peace be upon him),
"When Almighty Allah created reason (al-'aql),
He tested it. Then He ordered it to come forward and it came forward.
Then, He ordered it to go back and it went back. On this Almighty Allah
said: 'I swear by My Power and Majesty that no creation of Mine is
dearer to Me than you are, and I have only made you perfect in those
whom I love. Lo! To you are My orders and prohibitions addressed. And
for you are My rewards and retributions reserved."3
It
is commonly held in circles of materialist thinkers that human beings
have very few differences from animals other than a small genetic
advantage on the evolutionary chain of life. They maintain that
intellect is purely the function of brain waves, while simultaneously
insisting that morality and justice are necessary for humanity's
continued survival. In the toil of this conundrum, they fail to explain
how humanity should determine what is moral and just, if there is no
criterion that is above the level of human understanding.
According
to the scholars of Islam, basic morality and justice are ingrained in
the human soul, but the power of the intellect must be trained (through
divine guidance) to understand and apply morality and justice
correctly. In doing so, the soul can surpass the spiritual height of
angels or be abased into functioning at the level of other animals.
Essentially, the animal lower self (nafs) must be taught to connect to its inner
spirit (ruh), which is infused in all humans from within
their mothers' wombs.
A report has reached us from Imam 'Ali
(upon whom be peace) which reads,
"Surely God has characterized the angels by intellect
('aql)
without desire and anger, and the animals with anger and desire without
reason. He exalted man by bestowing upon him all of these qualities.
Accordingly, if man's reason dominates his desire and ferocity, he
rises to a station above that of the angels; because this station is
attained by man in spite of the existence of hurdles which do not vex
the angels."4
If
this does not occur, a person is left to follow his own whims and
foolish rationalizations, or he is misled by those who use their
intellects for the purpose of achieving their own evil ambitions.
Overcoming
Ignorance
It important to understand that there
are different degrees of ignorance, and only some of them are
blameworthy.
An-Naraqi
distinguishes between two types of ignorance: (1) simple ignorance and
(2) compound ignorance. Someone with simple ignorance has a deficiency
in his power of intellect because the individual, "lacks knowledge and
learning, but is aware of his ignorance. This is in contrast to
'compound ignorance'-- a state in which one not only does not realize
his ignorance but considers himself to be
knowledgeable."5
Those
with simple ignorance may sometimes be well aware of the truth but
persist in their ignorance for the sake of pride, culture, wealth, or
other perceived worldly benefits. They have reasoned that it is more
beneficial for them to remain ignorant. In doing so, they are refusing
knowledge, and their simple ignorance then becomes rejection
(kufr).
When
it is said to them: "Come to what Allah has revealed; come to the
Messenger": They say: "Enough for us are the ways we found our fathers
following." What! Even though their fathers were void of knowledge and
guidance? (Qur'an
5:104)
Beyond
ignorance, the intellect can also be morphed into cunning, treachery,
and deceit. When a person becomes proud of his intelligence and begins
to view himself as superior to others, the intellect can become a
burden and lead to many vices. Any intellect can be easily humbled by a
superior intellect, and even the greatest of intellects is still
infinitesimal compared to the knowledge and wisdom of Allah, Who is
Al-'Alim (The All Knowing) and Al-Hakim (The Wise).
Our
reason must, therefore, be regulated. While it is conceivable to arrive
at Divine knowledge and superior understanding of the Real Realm
through pure reason, it is very arduous and dangerous. Many
philosophers have gone astray by seeking a purely internal/intellectual
quest for true knowledge. To balance this danger, Allah has revealed
the Qur'an, which is the Criterion
(Furqan) for all
thought and action. Reason is used to understand the
Qur'an, and the Qur'an clarifies and guides the intellectual
seeker.
Allah created all signs in the
universe, including the Qur'an,
in such a way that they appeal to the intellect. There is a perfect
symposium of order between the stars, the planets, galaxies, light,
matter, energy, and all living things. Each has perpetual reason and
purpose, and man's endless quest is to understand it. In doing so, he
comes to know his Lord.
The Miracle of
the Human Mind
The caliph once sent a Jewish scholar
to debate with Imam 'Ali ibn Musa
Ar-Ridha (peace be upon him). The Jew said to him,
"How can you accept Muhammad as the Messenger of God when he showed no
miracles?"
The
Imam replied, "The greatest miracle of God is the human mind. It allows
ideas to be thought through and reasoned out. Man must accept God
through reason, not through miracles."
At
first glance it might seem as though this story confirms that the
Prophet showed no miracles, while history proves that he performed many
remarkable actions that can only be accomplished through Allah's power
and will. We know of the moon splitting, rocks, trees, and other
inanimate objects testifying to Allah's Oneness and the Prophet's
Message, and angels coming to the aid of the Muslim army in a time of
need; however, these events were not enacted to prove Muhammad's
prophethood to anyone. If they were, then not a
single person would have disbelieved. Abu Jahl,
the Prophet's arch enemy, witnessed some of these miraculous
occurrences with his own eyes, yet he died in disbelief. He had
developed compound ignorance.
"That is because they
hate what Allah has revealed; so He has made their deeds
fruitless." (Qur'an 47:9)
The
Jew in the above story was looking for some otherworldly phenomena that
would have proved Prophet Muhammad's message and turned him into a
believing Muslim. But the reality is that, even if Imam
Ridha himself had made a tree speak to the man and
profess the declarations of faith (shahadatain),
that man still would not have believed. If he could not arrive at
belief through the miracle of his own intellect, after obviously having
studied Islam thoroughly enough to debate with a Muslim, nothing could
turn his heart.
"Allah hath set a seal
on their hearts and on their hearing, and on their eyes is a veil;
great is the penalty they (incur)."
(Qur'an 2:7).
There
are many intellectuals in academia, particularly in the western world,
who are not Muslim, but who have a deep undying interest in studying
Islam and writing about it, as though they were themselves
ulema`
(Muslim scholars). I am not referring to those who show enmity towards
Islam and Muslims. Their goal is clear. But those who claim another
religion while defending Islam unflinchingly are intriguing and
puzzling to most Muslims.
Even
more puzzling are those Muslims who are so firmly established upon
error that they refuse to listen to any manner of reasoning. The man in
our first story was afflicted with that degree of compound
ignorance.
The Middle
Path
The
true path in the realm reason, as with all aspects of Islam, is the
middle road. We must not rely completely on reason so much that we
ignore revelation or the people of knowledge, nor must we become so
content with our own ignorance that any attempt by someone to reason
with us is met with contempt. The Muslim Ummah,
in this age, is unfortunately plagued with these two extremes. Our
disunity and overall lack of forward progress is largely due to
polarization of the community.
On the one side are those who have
nearly abandoned revelation completely in favor of reason. For them
even the shari'ah
can be explained away through contrivance. For some it is assuredly
intentional, while most people on this end have fallen victim to the
societies in which they were raised, where materialism and rationalism
are predominant, and knowledge-based faith is
alienated.
On the other side of the rift, are
dogmatic traditionists who insist on
their narrow interpretation of shari'ah
to the exclusion of all other sects and schools of thought. They
condemn others to Hell and are quick to dismiss any reason, even if it
is based upon revelation.
The Prophet himself has answered both
sides in beautiful words, such as:
"Ask questions of the learned, speak with the wise, and
associate with the poor."6
In
asking questions of learned people, one gains knowledge outside the
realm of one's own opinion and worldly desires. In other words, one
should not rely completely on his own reasoning, rather he should also
seek knowledge from those who know. By speaking with the wise, one
becomes wiser himself and learns to use his intellect to synthesize the
knowledge that he is given. It is not enough to simply have knowledge.
One must also possess a degree of wisdom.
Those
first two points are obvious in their benefits, but why has the Prophet
included the last piece of advice? Even in pondering that question, we
have begun the process of reasoning! Sitting with those who are poor
makes us reflect on ourselves, our preoccupation with this worldly life
and on how Allah has given us a responsibility of giving to those in
financial need and teaching those in intellectual need. This also
humbles those with higher intellect to sit with those who have not
achieved such levels and to realize that they cannot be superior to
them except through piety and good deeds.
We can also find evidence in support of
this "middle path" throughout the Qur'an. Allah is constantly reminding the
believers to think, to ponder over His words and to investigate matters
deeply.
"Do they not ponder over
the Qur'an?
Had it been from other than Allah, they would surely have found therein
Much discrepancy." (Qur'an 4:82)
Allah
has also enjoined certain ethical standards for our intellectual health
that must be upheld so that we might reach intellectual maturation and
eventually become people of intellect or people of understanding
(ulul-albab).
Allah's Messenger (may blessings and
peace be upon him) explains,
"The
character of the intelligent is that he overlooks the ignorant, pardons
the wrongdoers, behaves modestly with those beneath his rank, and
competes with those of higher rank in giving charity. The intellectual
thinks before he utters; he will win when he speaks of good things and
will be saved when he abstains from speaking of evil. He clings to
Allah firmly when he is forced to encounter a seditious matter;
therefore, he withholds his hand and tongue. He hurries to virtue
wherever he finds it. He never abandons shyness and never shows
acquisitiveness. These ten characteristics distinguish the
intelligent.
"The
ignorant one wrongs anyone who associates with him, oppresses one who
is less fortunate, and attacks (wrongly) one who is affluent. He utters
without thinking about what he says. He commits sins whenever he speaks
and forgets whenever he remains silent. He hurries to every seditious
matter that would certainly befall him and neglects and moves slowly
towards virtue. He does not care for his past sins and does not refrain
from committing new ones. He moves slowly towards the act of giving
charity. He is neither remorseful for what has passed, nor for what he
has lost. These ten characteristics distinguish the
ignorant."7
Imam 'Ali relates:
Jibril came
down to Adam (peace be upon him) and said, 'O Adam, I have been ordered
to have you choose between three things: pick one, and leave the other
two.' Adam then asked Jibril what the three things were, and
Jibril replied, 'Intellect, modesty, and religion.' 'I choose
intellect,' Adam replied. So, Jibril told modesty and
religion to go away and leave him. However, they replied that
they had been ordered to stay with intellect wherever it may
be. 'So be it,' he said, and re-ascended to
heaven.8
The Relevance of
Islamic Principles
The Islamic Way (shari'ah), its ethics (akhlaq) and laws (ahkam), are based upon the principle of Divine
Justice ('adl)
and thus must be viewed as having purpose and meaning. Every action,
thought, spoken word, and deed that a Muslim is commanded to do has
some benefit for him, and every deed that is prohibited is, in some
manner, harmful to him. It is, therefore, on the basis of benefit and
harm, right and wrong, justice and injustice, and similar natural
truths that scholars of intellect ('aql) determine their ijtihad (deduction of Islamic rulings based on
shari'ah
but regarding matters not specifically mentioned in it).
Methods based on opinion (ra'y) or analogy
(qiyas)
fail to meet this standard because they are not based upon any
universal truths but rather upon circumstantial evidence and relative
parallelisms.
Those movements within the various
schools of Islamic thought that have sought to erase reason from all
avenues (including aqidah, fiqh, and akhlaq), insist upon only following the
Qur'an and hadith narrations for their rulings. Some of these
groups have even eliminated the position of 'alim (scholar) and allow any layperson to
interpret Qur'an and
Sunnah
according to his own understanding. In doing so they are
unintentionally promoting the use of guesswork and conjecture within
their own schools of thought.
By
eliminating all methods of reasoning, they have also cast out any
relevance which Islam might unfold for a believer. Frozen in a
ultra-precautionary, culturally oblivious time capsule, a believer in
this ideology approaches the world with a myopic lens. One can witness
such a person narrating a verse from the Qur'an or a hadith
to someone, without any explanation of it, and expect the listener to
act upon it as law, oblivious to their understanding of
it.
'Allamah Mutahhari explains:
"At
the time of the last Hajj, while encouraging the people to memorize and
preserve whatever they heard from him, and to convey to the future
generations, the Prophet (S) said:
"How often one conveys
knowledge to
another
who is more learned than himself.
"The one who hears ahadith
may possess more power of understanding and analysis than the narrator
himself. He may comprehend its spirit, purpose and meaning in a better
way on account of his superior knowledge. The religion can be
understood better in the light of knowledge. The secret of greatness
and miraculous character of the holy religion of Islam lies in the
immense scope of its teachings; and if any aspect of nature is
illuminated by means of science, it not only does not make obsolete the
teachings of Islam but makes them brighter and clearer.
"9
Anyone
who attempts to understand the religion but who refuses to learn the
philosophy, politics, culture, economics, sciences, and even the
general time/space circumstances in which he is living cannot be called
knowledgeable, and deriving one's understanding from this type of
person can be extremely dangerous. So, what can be said of one who will
not apply his own intellect to the knowledge that he obtains? He would
have then abandoned every possible method of understanding the
religion. If revelation, for example, is not to be understood through
reason, nor through the context of any particular science or
methodology, then the revelation is not understood at all. It is only
blindly adhered to, and only the most literal verse can be transformed
into action. Anything that encroaches on the line of interpretation is
considered to be invalid.
Islamic
thought can never advance and accommodate all of the people of the
world if it is approached using the above method. Even the translation
of religious texts would have been deemed reprehensible if it were not
for the dire need to relate the meaning of them to the people, beyond
basic memorization and literal application.
When
a thinker possesses the knowledge of revelation, prophetic commentary,
religious sciences, and his own ability to reason, the robe of Islam
becomes suitable for him to wear in any setting, in any country, and in
any time period. This is not to say that Islam is altered or reformed
to meet the needs of secularism or any other ideological or personal
agenda. The shari'ah
is a living organ that can appropriate a variety of cultural and
intellectual ideas into its framework, without sacrificing its undying
principles. That which is halal (permissible) remains halal, and that which is haram (forbidden) remains haram, but that which is textually neither grows
and adapts to the people and situations in which it
appears.
The
proof of this is evidential to anyone who has left another religion to
enter into the fold of Islam. The majority of those who convert from
another religion do so based on the reasonable proofs presented to
them. They make inquiries, solve philosophical problems, and ultimately
arrive at a largely intellectual conclusion. Islamic propagation, after
all, does not rely on the power of emotive reactions to pleasantries,
such as music and dance, nor the carnal desire of worldly possessions.
Furthermore, Allah does not expect people to believe on the basis of
blind faith. We are instructed to explore, study, and verify the truth
of Allah's words and the proof (hujjat) of His real and existing attributes
manifested in His creation.
Behold!
in the creation of the heavens and the earth; in the alternation of the
night and the day; in the sailing of the ships through the ocean for
the profit of mankind; in the rain which Allah Sends down from the
skies, and the life which He gives therewith to an earth that is dead;
in the beasts of all kinds that He scatters through the earth; in the
change of the winds, and the clouds which they Trail like their slaves
between the sky and the earth;- (Here) indeed are Signs for a people
that are wise.
(al-Qur'an
2:164)
The People of Intellect
Those
who strive to understand Allah's words and the religion that He has
chosen for them become the "people of intellect." Their thoughts and
actions have purpose and meaning. They do not speak except with their
knowledge and wisdom. Their intellectual understanding of revelation
guides their decisions.
The
people of intellect are those who study Allah's signs and reach pure
belief through their reasoning. They seek nearness to Allah, follow His
messengers, seek wisdom from His friends (awliya), teach those who are ignorant, lend their
support to those in need, and travel on the path of wisdom, peace, and
tolerance.
"And
when they listen to the revelation received by the Messenger, you will
see their eyes overflowing with tears, for they recognize the truth:
they pray: "Our Lord! we believe; write us down among the witnesses."
(al-Qur'an
5:83)
_________________________
1. Al-Mizan fi Tafsir al-Qur'an by al-'Allamah Muhammad Husayn at-Tabataba`i, commentary on Sura 2, verses 261-274.
2. Ibid.
3. Al-Kafi by Shaykh Abu Ja'far Muhammad ibn Ya'qub ibn Ishaq al-Kulayni Ar-Razi. From "Kitab al-'Aql wa-l-Jahl".
4. Jami' as-Sa'adat by Muhammad Mahdi ibn Abi Dharr an-Naraqi.
5. Ibid.
6. Tuhaf-ul-'Uqul, by Abu Muhammad al-Hasan ibn 'Ali al-Husayn ibn Shu'ba al-Harrani p. 34.
7. Ibid.
8. Mishkat al-Anwar fi Ghurar il-Akhbar by Hassan ibn fadl ibn Hassan Tabarsi.
9. Al-Tawhid Journal, Vol. IV No. 2, "The Role of Reason in Ijtihad" by Shahid Murtadha Mutahhari.
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