Source: Cupegraf Wallpapers |
An interesting news story came up on my Facebook feed the
other day, 'Terminally Ill Teen Married His Girlfriend Days Before Passing Away'.
It told the story of a 16 year old Muslim boy who fought cancer only for it to
return a few months later. On being told he had less than a week to live, he
proposed to his girlfriend. They had an Islamic wedding ceremony in hospital
and he died just three days later. He told his mother, "If God asks me,
I will say this is my wife." This story struck a chord with me. As I
reflected, I realised it wasn't just his actions to make things right before
God that impressed me but how he conquered the battle he must have been
fighting internally before he proposed. .
As human beings we don't like being hypocritical. Ironically,
we also don't always do what we believe to be right ether. This puts us in a
bind. When our actions go against the attitudes we hold it sends our insides in
a twist and we're not too fond of that feeling. So what do we do? Find any way
to reduce it. Rather than putting in the effort to change our behaviour, we often
take the easy route and change our attitudes instead. Psychologists call it dissonance
reduction, "making your view of the world fit with how you feel or what
you've done." Sometimes, in a fight to reduce our own discomfort,
we'll go to the extent of totally ignoring clear evidence to the contrary of
what we want to believe is true.
A classic example is of a smoker who struggles to quit even
though they know they're hurting themselves. With the same factual knowledge
about the dangers of smoking, they're still more likely to rationalise it using distorted logic than a non or ex-smoker.
We've all heard, "My friend's 90 year old grandma smoked all her life
and she's fit as anything."
As Muslims, our world view is based on the all-encompassing
knowledge of the One who created the world, our laws are based on the
rulings of the One who will judge us when we stand before Him, subḥānah (He is
far from imperfection). We know the Qur'ān couldn't have been written by anyone
other than God and that Muḥammad (SAW) could have been nothing other than a
messenger of God. So we committed to practice islām (submission),
putting aside our own limited views and adopting those of Allāh.
But we're human beings and we are going to make mistakes
(because that's just how we roll). Perhaps we can't understand the wisdom in an
instruction or fail in disciplining ourselves to act upon it. This causes a
huge uneasiness inside of us. We know this action is one we want to practice
but are wishing or acting like it isn't. Over time, that feeling of being a bad
dishonest person begins to fester. So what do we do? We subconsciously look for
ways out.
The easiest and most drastic way to let go of the anxiety is
to leave Islam altogether. 'I'm not acting like a Muslim so I guess I don't
believe in Islam.' I don't think I need to point out how illogical it would
be to forfeit salvation in what you know to be true based on your own fallible
behaviour. May Allāh protect us from judging the validity of His message by our
own actions.
For most of us, our religion is an undeniable truth that
can't be put to the side. So when we find ourselves continuously acting against
or disliking an Islamic ruling, our instinct to reduce our guilt is directed
instead upon questioning the ruling itself. Instead of acknowledging we're
finding something difficult, we can fall into the trap of justifying our
actions with supposedly religious rationalisations. We all know our own vices.
It could be lessening the importance of an obligation we find too difficult to
carry out, convincing ourselves it's just recommended. We might dismiss a sin,
explaining it away as irrelevant to our situation. We 'Fatwa Shop' to find an
opinion that's more in line with our own comfort or we just avoid researching
it at all in hopes the truth will just disappear. We look for loopholes, claim
exceptional circumstances and adopt alternative interpretations that quieten
that voice inside that's telling us 'You're a bad person for not doing what
God wants you to.'
"When you feel anxiety over your actions, you will seek to lower the anxiety by creating a fantasy world in which your anxiety can’t exist, and then you come to believe the fantasy is reality." - David McRaney
We need to be truly honest with ourselves (and we know
we all like to see ourselves as honest). There are issues in Islam in which Allāh,
in His wisdom, left room for differences of opinion and these are often minor
(e.g. what constitutes ḥalāl meat in a Christian-majority country). When we
take a fiqhi opinion that is more lenient than others within Islam, we really
need to be sure it's based
on evidence and not ease. There are other issues, however, which Allāh made clear
as day. Ṣalāh,
Zakāh and obedience to parents are obligations that are punishable if not carried out. Backbiting, slander,
interest, fornication and
homosexuality are explicitly forbidden by Allāh, no matter how common they may
be or how much the society around us may see them as acceptable. We do not have
the authority to change that. To deny the code of ethics that has been given to
us by our Creator is questioning His unfathomable wisdom and our very own claim
to be muslims, submitters to Him. Going against explicit ayāt is a very risky game to play.
"It is not for a believing man or a believing woman, when Allāh and His Messenger have decided something that they have any choice about it. And whoever disobeys Allāh and His Messenger is clearly misguided." (Aḥzab, 33:36)
A Mu'min (Believer) doesn't pick and choose from the
rulings of Allāh, even when they fail to practice them (and sometimes they do).
When a Believer feels anxiety over their actions, they know they can't
reduce it by changing divine law. So what do they do? Like the 16 year old
groom, they take the hard way out and channel their emotional state into a
sincere resolve to change. They take precautions against returning to the sin,
however hard it is. A Believer uses that feeling of unease to get closer
to the One they disobeyed. They humble themselves, turn back to Allāh and plead
desperately for forgiveness.
But breaking habits can seem like an insurmountable task. What
if we struggle to muster up that determination to change? We do have another
way of dealing with our cognitive dissonance. It may not be as honourable but certainly
has it's own virtue. That is to cling on to it for dear life.
Forcing ourselves to be fixed in our views of morality while
our behaviour doesn't conform is going to irritate like an itch we just need to
scratch. Making ourselves focus when we hear verses and narrations that
go against what we personally want is difficult. But that's the internal
fight we have to commit to until we're strong enough to move forward, that's
the fight we have to take on to call ourselves muslims. To sin and
excuse it is challenging our Master. To keep sinning and hate it in our heart
is a sign that at least there is some God consciousness remaining. That's worth
holding on to.
Source: Cupegraf Wallpapers |
I often wondered why Allāh loves repentance so much. Perhaps that's in part because He knows of
the hidden battle raging within. He knows the strength it takes to crush our
ego, admit that we're wrong and change our behaviour instead of our minds.
Perhaps it's because Allāh knows that we used our guilt, and the instinctive
need to reduce it, for its true purpose.
"O Allah! You are my Master! None has the right to
be worshipped but You. You created me and I am Your slave, and I am faithful to
my covenant and my promise as much as I can. I seek refuge with You from all
the evil I have done. I acknowledge before You all the blessings You have
bestowed upon me, and I confess to You all my sins. So I entreat You to forgive
my sins, for nobody can forgive sins except You."
[Virtues, Arabic and transliteration of this du'ā in Bukhāri]
Beautiful and timely article, Layla. This was so very needed. BarakAllahu Feeki. <3
ReplyDeleteWa alaikum assalam warahmatullah, Madiyah. May Allah reward you for your lovely comment!
DeleteAlhumdulilah! This came at the right time for me
ReplyDeleteSo happy to hear that! May your relationship with Allah be deepened through your weaknesses as well as your strengths.
DeleteReally interesting topic. Well needed too. Because we justify not following the sunnah, now we justify losing out on the wajib like the commonest we hear "I did not fast this day if ramadhan because I did not di my sahur". May Allah ease our affairs.
ReplyDeleteI also came across the same story on my facebook newsfeed...
ReplyDeleteThis article was a wonderful write-up, and perfectly timed too, just after Ramadaan when we feel ourselves start to lack in devotion, this was just the boost I needed to re-focus. Shukran
Beautifully written. A sinner whose sin makes him humble and repents is far better than a believer whose worship makes him proud and arrogant. may Allah make us among those who repent nad save us from falling prey to temptations.
ReplyDeletehaya www.1newleaf.wordpress.com
MashaAllah very nice, I enjoy reading. so sweet. May Allah bless you always :)
ReplyDeleteExcellent writing and a timely reminder. In sha Allah those who repent are forgiven
ReplyDeleteI feel everyone is at different stages of their connection with Allah. Allah is most merciful, I can pray for forgiveness but my actions must speak louder. Good write up sis x
ReplyDeleteMa'sha Allah, such a nice article. We can never really know someone's intentions and inner struggles.
ReplyDelete