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Effects of Tawhid on Human Life
Abul A'La Mawdudi, Towards Understanding Islam
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.
- 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?
- 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.
- 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.
- 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.
- 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.2
- 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.
- 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!
- 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.
- 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', as you have already been told, 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.
2. To have an idea of what a harrowing situation this despair of heart
can create, the reader is referred to the thought-provoking study of
modern life by Mr. Colin Wilson: The Outsider (11th impression. London
1957).
The testimony of Prof. Joad is also very explicit on this point. He
writes about the West: "For the first time in history there is coming
to maturity a generation or men and women who have no religion, and
feel no need for one. They are content to ignore it. Also they are
very unhappy, and the suicide rate is abnormally high." (C. E. M.
Joad. The Present and Future of Religion, quoted by Sir Arnold Lunn.,
And Yet So New, London, 1958, p. 228).
As to the world of Islam. let the views of a non-Muslim historian not
in any way sympathetic to Islam, be read with profit: "In this
uncompromising monotheism. with its simple, enthusiastic faith in the
supreme rule of a transcendent being, lies the chief strength of
Islam. Its adherents enjoy a consciousness of contentment and
resignation unknown among followers of most creeds." "Suicide Is Rare
in Muslim Lands" (Phillip K. Hitti, History of the Arabs, 1951, p.129).
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