Saturday, 22. March 2008, 09:29:08
Allah, Muslim Society, Prophet, Quran
...
The
Mosquein
Islamic history was the focal point where political, social, and religious activities were perfectly blended together. The concept of Islamic ideology paid as much attention to a man’s well-being and welfare in this world as much as the life hereafter. In this sense the role of the mosque has always been instrumental in the social-moral and political uplift of the Muslim Community. However, in the later period after Khilafat-e-Rashida, the period of first four pious caliphs with the decline of the political supremacy of the Muslims resulting in their disintegration under foreign rule, the concept and role of the mosque also underwent fundamental changes. Consequently the active and dynamic role the mosque played in the life of the Ummah in the period of our prophet and caliphs was reduced to a place of rituals and worship. The later concept continues up to today. This has not only rendered the mosque ineffective as a center of social uplift but it has rather indirectly or directly increased the sectarianism and parochialism among Muslims. It is therefore of paramount importance that the present concept of the role of mosques be analysed and redefined in the light of its original concept and function in the days of the Prophet and in the context of the present needs of the Muslim community.
(1) Mosques have lost their social character much more so in cities. More emphasis is given on the neutral role of the mosque in society and is no more a part of the social life of the Community.
(2) Mosques tend to belong to sects, localities but not to the Muslim community as a whole.
(3) With the exception of a few mosques, persons from other sects are not allowed in some mosques. Strange it may look but the entrance of other sects in some mosques is forbidden by notices written on their main doors i.e. Masjid Hanfiah, Masjid Gausia, Masjid Ahle-Hadith etc.
(4) Islam does not advocate the division of loyalty towards God and Caesar. The mosque was not only a place of worship, but also the center of political, social and military activities in early Islam. Due to various political and historical reasons the role of mosque was reduced to a place of worship only.
In order to revive the mosque at least as a center for community, it is essential to study the role and function of the mosque built by the Holy Prophet when he migrated from Makkah to Medina. Intention here is not to delve into details but a casual look at Islamic literature will reveal that the mosque was a place for Salaat as well as a center of temporal activities. The concept of holiness is alien to the Islamic concept of mosque and is a later development.
By -
Religion Islam
Monday, 10. March 2008, 09:56:03
Prophet, Quran, Islam, Islamic Teachings
The aim and objective of
Islamic Teaching is to remove all non-Quranic ideologies, beliefs, and practices prevalent in present-day Islam, and replace them with Quranic concepts based upon reason and rationale. Quran is essentially directed towards individuals who are in search of truth so that they can overcome the forces of secularism and be able to establish a pure Islamic society.
Human intellect alone cannot solve life’s problems. God's revelation is required for human guidance in the same way that vision requires light. God’s revelation in its complete and final form is safely preserved in the Quran. This is the universal and permanent source of guidance for humanity for all time. Therefore, no further revelation, nor any prophet, nor any messenger from God can come now. The Quran is the final book of God and Muhammad (Peace Be Upon Him) his last prophet and messenger.
Every claim of the Quran is based on reason and knowledge, and its truths are beyond space and time. In order to comprehend Quranic truths, it is essential to keep abreast of the advances made in human knowledge. And since God has endowed human beings with the ability to conquer the forces of nature, it is necessary that these forces be conquered only to fulfill God’s program for humanity. The life and character of the Prophet represents the pinnacle of human dignity, decency, and greatness. His exemplary life is the best role model for humanity. There is no doubt about that part of the Prophet’s life which is preserved in the Quran. However, in regard to the part which is outside the Quran, if there are historical narrations which contradict the Quran, or if they go against the high moral character of the Prophet, then these narrations are to be questioned and should not be attributed to the Prophet. The same applies to the lives of his companions.
The goal of the Deen (Islam) is to promote obedience to the laws of Allah Almighty by freeing human beings from obedience to other human beings. Such obedience to the laws of God is only possible through the establishment of a system of government based on these laws. Without this, the Deen (or the system of life based on the Quran) is not possible.
By -
Religion Islam
Saturday, 9. February 2008, 08:05:42
Salvation, Islam, Quran
Private relationship between man and his Creator is essentially founded on the idea of salvation. Salvation is common to all religions, even to Buddhism which does not acknowledge the existence of God.The idea of salvation was born out of the belief that man's stopover on earth was one of bondage. How to free him from that bondage thus became the main object of his life.
Islam on the other hand, is neither such a relationship between man and God, nor is it characterized by the experience of an individual of a subjective nature, but is essentially a
"Code of Life" regulating the conduct of affairs concerning the individual as well as the collective life of human beings. Secondly, it does not consider man’s life on earth a period of bondage; therefore the idea of salvation does not arise in this approach. In reality Islam has assigned to man a very high position in the universe. Islam expects him to take up the challenge of life boldly in order to harness the forces of nature for the development of his own self and the larger community of mankind. The fallacy of considering Islam a religion springs from the fact that absolute "faith" in God is of fundamental importance to it, as it is supposed to be more or less so in all religions, past and present, but it is not only the " faith" in God that should serve as a criterion in arriving at a correct estimate of one or the other. The real question we should be concerned with is, what is the concept of God which is supposed to be the common factor?
By -
Religion Islam
Sunday, 11. February 2007, 18:53:06
Quran
Religion is based on a conception of God which is the creation of man's own imagination. There is another conception of God which has been vouchsafed to man through Revelation. According to the revealed conception, God is a Being who controls the entire universe and moves it on to its final destiny in accordance with certain inviolable laws. According to these laws, everything in the universe from its initial stage, grows, develops, and, in time, attains its full stature, like the seed which grows gradually into a huge tree. Man is no exception. There are God's inviolable laws which govern man's development also. According to the revealed conception of God and that conception of God alone can be true which He has given Himself the relationship between man and God comes about through the laws which He has designed for man's development. To understand the Essence of
God; and to know what He is, is beyond the scope of human intellect. What we can understand, however, are His laws which pertain to our development. The laws have been preserved in the
Holy Quran. Those who follow them develop and go ahead: those who contravene them are deprived of growth like the seed which happens to be buried under hard soil.
By Parvez-Video
Saturday, 8. April 2006, 09:40:48
Quran
The Quran seeks to awaken in human the consciousness of
his/her intimate relation to the universe. Its main
emphasis is on reason and knowledge. Its purpose is to
help to build up a free, self-reliant and rational
personality, vivified with the sense of Allah Almighty
working in the universe according to His immutable,
unalterable laws. Now the question is: How to understand
the Quran. For this purpose, some pre-requisites are
suggested. Study them very carefully, minutely, and
meticulously before manifesting any emotional reactions.
Pre-requisite No. I
For understanding the Quran, it is not enough to have
mastered its language, the Arabic language. A man may be
proficient in the Arabic language and yet the meaning of
the Quran may elude him.
Pre-requisite No. 2
He/She should approach this Divine Book with a receptive
mind, free from preconceived ideas and notions, prejudice
and bias.
Pre-requisite No. 3
He/She should be serious about human life and universe in
which we live, and should have an intense consciousness of
participation in a purposeful cosmic process.
Pre-requisite No. 4
He/She should be anxious to guard against pitfalls in the
way of life and to steer clear of the obstacles which
hinders their progress.
These are, according to the Quran, the essentials pre-
requisites for understanding the Quran. Those who do not
approach the Quran in this way, it remains a sealed book
to them. In Quran's Surah Anbiya, the Messengers recounted
in the Quran that; we are told how those who were not
perceptive and alive were only bewildered when they
listened to the Anbiya's wise advice. Some of them
confessed that they found their words unintelligible like
in Quran chapter 11 verse 91; They said to Shuaib,What you
say is incomprehensible to us. So dear all in the light
of above discussion to me our first task is to understand
the real meaning of the Quran with the help of all the
intellectual faculties we possess. It can only be then
that we can proceed to assess the values of its teaching.
Thursday, 16. March 2006, 18:39:27
Quran
The knowledge of divine law relating to the external universe is derived from a close observation of nature, scientific experiments and discoveries, but not in the case of laws relating to human life and the regulation of its conduct which are communicated only through Revelation to the Messengers and conveyed by them as Messenger of God to mankind. It is this wherein Islam as a din also distinguishes itself from the Material concept of life which takes no cognizance of the Divine Guidance by means of revelation.
God did not merely create the universe, but has also laid down definite laws comprising it. The Law of Cause and Effect, and the Law of Uniformity in Nature, among others, being of basic importance, deal with the external nature of the universe. He has, besides, prescribed definite laws regulating human life and its activities. That is why the Quran speaks of those who study nature and try to discover the laws that govern it as men of knowledge and insight; because, says the Quran: The signs of His power and wisdom are spread out in the heavens and on earth, but only people who have conviction in the truthfulness of His Laws can perceive them - Quran chapter 45 verse 3-
In seeking knowledge, the believers are spurred on by their belief. His signs are not only in the outer universe but also in your own creation as well as that of other living beings who are istributed everywhere. But these signs are only for those who believe in the truthfulness of His Laws - Quran chapter 45 verse 4-. They know that; And in the rotation of night and day; in rain that comes down from the clouds and gives new life to dead land; and winds that change irection as per fixed timings. In all these there are signs showing truthfulness of the Divine Laws; but only for those who use their intellect and reason - Quran chapter 45 verse 5-
In this way faith in God does not follow from purely logical arguments; it springs from the direct experience of order, harmony,and beauty in nature. Along with that the Messenger has told: The Almighty , Whose Laws successfully function in outer universe, has also revealed for human society the Divine Code which is based on absolute truth.If they do not have Eiman in the Divine Laws revealed to you, even after pondering over His signs which are distributed throughout the universe, then O Messenger, ask them what other lore will they believe in -Quran chapter 45 verse 6-
Monday, 2. January 2006, 09:01:37
Quran
Trail of human thought, from Grecian to the most recent time philosophers and scientists, is fraught with conflicts and contradictions. In the beginning, the universe in its nature, to the human thought, was simply a dune of inanimate clay.
Nature of Universe
Now it is found that it is not such a heap of clay but a "pure movement" or "abstract energy" in its origin. It brought two questions to the human thought: what is the origin of the absolute energy; how the diversified fickleness and wondrously awe-inspiring novelties gushing forth? The human mind to these questions is still struck with awe and finds no head or tail of what he has discovered over years for understanding the nature of universe.
Life and Consciousness
The human mind pondered over the nature of life and consciousness, and eventually concluded that it came out of itself merely on the basis of mechanistic process of its evolution from the organic matter, but when maturity prevailed over his experiments and experiences, he changed his mind and inferred that life and consciousness can never be the outcome of this mechanistic process; it has its origin somewhere else. Again the searching question to the mind was "where does lie its origin? The human thought till now finds no clue to it to go ahead.
Ethics: Good and Evil in Life
The other questions flashed in the human mind were about the occurrence of the events: why does man labor under the vicissitudes of calamities and misfortunes? Why is he yoked in the well of life as an oppressed and suppressed person? Eventually what is his fault in case of failure? Why is evil let loose in the universe? Why does 'good' not prevail everywhere? What is, ultimately, the remedy to the human ills and misfortunes? He reflected deeply over these issues. But his insight was trapped when he found that the solution, he discovered was itself a riddle of a perplexing enigma. He searched for other pragmatic solutions but soon became disparaged and discouraged of what he had invented. Now his final analysis of the things is that "good" is what synchronizes permanent values and "evil" is what is discordant to these values. Here again new questions popped up: what are the permanent values? Why are these permanent? Where do these values come from? Unfortunately the human reason could not answer these questions. He is, at present, awfully wonder-struck at this point and finds no clues to these questions.
Politics: Form of Governance
Then this trail of human thought caught another question: when the man has to live his life socially on this biosphere, which form of governance be lived so that there be no wedges of human interests creating clashes and chaos among the contending groups of masses? It was confoundingly a confusing question to him. The human mind struggled days in and days out for its satisfactory solution but enchanted every time by the solutions he discovered he remained deceptively oligarchic. Now he is of the view that there should be a universal law operative in the universe under a single state of the whole of mankind. He had not moved further when other questions clasped his faculty: which would be the universal law that could entail satisfaction to the confronting and contradicting segregations of the human beings? From where would that law be made available? And what would be the pragmatic test of the fact that this law accomplished what it purports to accomplish? He is today wonder-struck standing and reclining at the crossroads of life he wants to live by.
Economics: Dissipation of Earnings
Then, there came again another problem of the same similitude and magnitude: basic needs of human life are limited but the area of his rapacious desires and wants for more than what he needs abounds the very limits imposed on, then how could that be managed, so that the entrepreneurial aspect of the society is not hampered and consequently every body is provided with the necessities of life smoothly? Seemingly it was a basic problem to the human vision but its satisfying answer put the human thought in the whirlpool of chaos and confusion to the extent that though he spent a lot of his time and energy on its solution, it remained paradoxically a quagmire for the human intellect. The human faculty could neither solve it nor it was empowered potentially to solve it. Today the human reason is standing at the confounding crossroads where one school of thought says 'depriving man of his hard earnings is an injustice to him' and the second school of though roars 'every one should work to the best of his potential and be given only what is enough for him to make his both ends meet'. The human reason is awe-struck on this crucial point and is probing the way to proceed righteously further and farther. This was the economic aspect of human life and reflected no exception to the multi-variate impediments the human reason has been confronting incessantly on the walk of life.
Internal Conflicts Within Man
Though confused, man never forgot to exercise the option of his choice and will. In doing so he got trapped on way to his path where there was no external danger encountering him; it was only the will-o'-the-wisp clung to the apron of his intellect at every measure he suggested. It was his new adversary whom he did not understand. It was invisibly a plague to him and now, wherever he goes; it follows him advertently or inadvertently. This was both a melee and affray within human reason and his desires, and made human thought awfully peevish and petulant.
Mysticism or Religion
To get rid of this affliction, he coined a series of arcane techniques but of no use. He became so confused of the hardened crust of the way of his life, the extended journey he traversed, the intensity of the conflicts he encountered and the difficulty of the new mixed metaphors in his life that he decided to bereave his own intellect and opt for something else, irrational and illogical, the taken-for-granted paradigm.
He, within the fold of his own vision close to the lap of an ice-covered mountain of reason and rhyme, saw an enchanting orchard bestowing shady groves, showering cold winds with peaceful calm rivulets and providing silence and solace with absolutely no sigh of any leaf. Enchantingly he jumped there and felt so sleepy that he forgot the spectrum of his own goal and destination he had been endeavouring so far. This fascinative, intoxicative, rapturous and solace-infusing orchard is the mysticism, which the tired philosophers of the West termed as religion and God. To human thought, this is now the ultimate consequence of the human conflicts and the final answer to all those questions, which have kept him, perplexed throughout the whole of his life career. This is the halt where the human vision has put up today.
Basic Infirmity of Human Thought
But this is not the first halt in the life span of human thought where he has made this alluringly intoxicating envisioned garden the product of his life. So often this has happened earlier that whenever he confoundingly became tired of the hard realities and wearisome conflicts of life, he opted for escape. Mysticism (the other name of personal concept of God and religion) is the last resort to escapism. Even the history of human thought stands witness to this fact that the horn of tranquility has never been any cause of solace for a long period of time to the human thought. Now, after he passed the plateau of tiring mental activity, he has again started probing for virtuous satisfaction and real consolation; so the western philosopher, perplexed with the conflicting state of life today, is searching for the blissful solace in the garb of religion, which could not be any cause of satisfaction any longer. He would, in real sense again come out in the search of that ideal world where he hopes he might find the satisfying solution to those problems which have kept him in the state of agony, grief and restiveness for the whole of his life.
These are the multi-variate issues of human life for the solution of which the human thought has traversed such a long mental journey and these are the halts where he has stood today awe-struck, confounded and is wandering about in a depressed state of mind! He will again come forward and take initiative to start his mental traverse. This is not despising to him. On the contrary these trails of human thought are appreciative and facilitative. If you have to weigh and watch of what he brought, just visit the Negroes of Africa or America and Australia and the high sounding philosopher and inventing scientist in the contemporary world, the difference of the mental vision/horizon found in the mores and cores of these two segments of people would make it clear that all this has become possible only due to this tedious and long intellectual journey of the human thought, and this constant struggle is a thing of beauty as a joy for ever. But the basic infirmity of the human thought is that man proceeds on the axiom of hit and trial, coins a way for himself without knowing whether it would lead him to the destination sought or to the caverns of destruction and annihilation. But before reaching its farther end, he finds that cognizance of the ultimate reality is beyond the scope of human intellect. Hence man follows the way opened to him, faces dacoits and buccaneers, combats with the beasts of the jungle where the brutalities of wilderness in man, find blood streams gushing out during the clashes, and the humanity broken, tortured, exploited. But the human thought remains outpouring continuously. Sometimes it so happens that the way he has been moving to, leads to somewhere else he did not visualize earlier. These are the halts where the human thought reclines deadly tired and consequently the Western thought is now searching for these refuges like the 'Rosicrucians', the 'mystics', the 'sages', the 'hermits' folds at present.
The Problem in Real Sense
The question is whether the human thought be left to itself to operate on the process of hit and trial or there is any other mechanism which leads the humanity to its goal of life. In other words: is he endowed with the faculty to really solve the problems compatibly to the urges of his life he has? If man has no other means leading him confidently and safely to his destination, there is no alternative except his own hit and trial mechanism and hence the calamities and disasters so encountered be faced bravely with perfect calm and patience. Compulsion has no remedy in the world. But if there is a way leading man to his destiny safe and sound, it would surely be a psychopath who would not prefer to follow it. This problem has become the real crux of the matter today.
The fact is that man is a finite being and the powers with which he is endowed are necessarily limited in scope. Human reason is no exception. It has serious limitations. But the glorious successes of reason led man to over-estimate its capacity: he expected that reason would give him absolute knowledge. When this expectation was not fulfilled, he became disillusioned with reason and went to the other extreme in rejecting reason outright and forgot that only a few aspects of reality are accessible to reason and reality has an infinity of aspects. There is also no denying the fact that human reason can subdue the forces of nature-the history has proved it-but this is also a stark fact that it cannot find by itself a satisfactory solution to the complexity of the problems of mankind, even its manifestations, the sciences, do not and cannot possibly help to solve these problems of human life. If a nation adopts a wrong course of action, it may be years before it begins to experience its effects because reason can legitimately function within its own sphere and ceases to be reliable the moment it steps beyond it. We can put it to the best only when we know what it can do and what it cannot.
As indicated earlier we are witnessing the violent reaction against reason today. After a long period of unquestioned supremacy, its authority was challenged from various quarters: mystics, philosophers, scientists, psychologists because according to them, the intellect is compelled to invent specious reasons to justify the irrational operations of unconscious desires. Reason functions according to the role one gives it. In voyaging across the uncharted seas of existence, the man cannot depend solely on the fitful flickering light of reason. The Qur'an sets forth a sustaining practical program for this inviting enterprise-the reason-and corroborates that human reason acting in the light of Revelation enshrined in Qur'an cannot miss the right path.
Approach to the Quran
For this purpose our first task is to understand the real meaning of the Qur'an with the help of all the intellectual faculties we possess. We can then proceed to assess the value of its teaching. How are we to test the truth and usefulness of the Qur'anic teaching? The Qur'an itself helps us to answer this question. It proposes three ways in which it may be tested and offers to abide by the results of these tests. It is significant that the tests proposed are all acceptable to reason. Nowhere is the supernatural invoked. The appeal is invariably to human reason and experience.
Before proceeding to consider the tests, let us recapitulate the teaching of the Qur'an. The Qur'an enjoins man to believe in God, to follow His laws, to believe in one's own self, to love and serve his fellow-beings, to act in a virtuous manner so as to develop and express the best in him, and finally to believe in and prepare for the Hereafter. All these we are invited to test in the light of reason. Is there anything in this teaching that is repugnant to reason? No doubt it is possible to doubt the existence of God and the reality of the Hereafter. But then, it is also possible to doubt the existence of the world. There is no conclusive proof of the existence of objective world and some philosophers have argued, in all seriousness, that belief in such a world is unjustified. All that we can be sure of is the actual momentary sensation. In spite of philosophical arguments our belief in objective reality remains unshaken. Life pays little heed to the cobwebs of such philosophers. The point to bear in mind is that suprarational realities are not less real because they cannot be proved by logical arguments. In applying the rational test it is permissible to ask whether there is anything in the teaching, which runs counter to reason and to that part of human knowledge which commands universal acceptance. The question as to whether every element in it can be logically proved is inadmissible, because, the teaching, if it is to be true to its nature, cannot avoid reference to realities, which transcend reason. In this case, the rational test will take the form of determining whether or not the teaching is in direct conflict with reason and whether it furthers the interests of humanity. It is needless to say that the Qur'an has stood the test of reason and proved itself to be in harmony with the best in man:
Say (O Muhammad! To the unbelievers): I say not unto you (that) I possess the treasures of Allah, nor that I have knowledge of the unseen, and I say not unto you: Lo I am malak. I follow only that which is revealed to me.
Say: are the blind man and the seer equal? Will ye not then reflect on this? (The Qur'an 6:50, 11:24)
Secondly, the Qur'an invites people to judge it in the light of history. It asks them to ponder over the rise and fall of nations. It assures them that if they seek the causes of the downfall of a people, they will find that the people had contravened the principles of right conduct and permanent values, which were communicated to them by the Nabi of their age. Right belief and right conduct enable a nation to rise to power and wrong beliefs and actions lead to its downfall. Time and again the Qur'anic teaching, which confirms the teaching of earlier Anbiya, was put to the test and was found to be a trustworthy guide to the good life. People who rejected it and followed the wrong path inevitably fell into decay and were overtaken by a dreadful fate. The Qur'an advises men to pay attention to the facts of history in order to discover the difference between the ways of life of the nations, which flourished and prospered and those, which perished. It will be brought home to them that the latter cherished false and harmful beliefs and their conduct was not in harmony with the eternal laws of God:
But they deny the knowledge that they could not compass and whereof the final result had not come unto them. Even so did those then deny? Then see what were the consequences for the wrong-doers (The Qur'an 10:39).
Finally we come to the pragmatic test. The unbelievers are repeatedly urged to apply this test and satisfy themselves about the truth and value of the Qur'an. A tree is judged by the quality of its fruit and a creed by its effects on the life and conduct of men. The believers who had accepted the teaching and had regulated their lives in accordance with it, provided irrefutable evidence of its value to man. Their character had been transformed overnight. Formerly they were mean, selfish, quarrelsome, narrow-minded and self-centered caring only for petty gains. Afterwards, they were united in the pursuit of noble ends, were bound to each other by ties of love and affection, were kind and just to their enemies and lived up to the high ideals, which they professed. The Qur'an had brought into existence a new type of man- self-respecting, self-reliant, conscious of his worth and desirous of enhancing it and fired with the ambition to set up a better social order in the world. These men by their lives and actions testified to the value of the Qur'an, the spirit of which they had imbibed. The Nabi, Muhammad PBUH, was fully justified in pointing to these men as a living testimony for the truth of the faith he preached. The astounding effect of the faith on the life of man was the strongest proof of its truth and values:
Say: O my people! Work in your own way. I too am working. Thus ye will come to know for which of us will be the happy sequel. Lo! The wrong doers will not be successful (The Qur'an 6:136).
Such are tests, which the Qur'an desires to be applied. Even bitter critics will have to concede that the tests are crucial, practical and provocative.
Again and again the Qur'an exhorts man to think and think hard. The man who uses his reason is held up to admiration:
The blind man is not equal with the seeing, nor is darkness equal to light, nor is the shadow equal with the sun's refulgence; nor are the living equal with the dead (The Qur'an 35:19-22).
Those who think rightly can find the light of knowledge and can discover the path that leads to success:
Are those who know equal with those who know not? But only men of understanding will pay heed (The Qur'an 39:9).
Again:
Surely those who strive for Us, We guide them to our ways, and verily Allah Almighty is with those who lead a balanced life of goodness (The Qur'an 29:69).
The Believers (Mo'minin), according to the Qur'an, are: Those who, when the revelations of their Rabb are presented to them, do not fall thereat deaf and blind (The Qur'an 25:73). This is Iman! Not to accept even God's revelations as the deaf and the blind.
Cosmic Process
At present discussion emerges out of the question: why the Qur'anic Social Order which assures a peaceful, prosperous and glorious life to mankind has not been established anywhere in the world, not even in any Muslim state, although the Divine Guidance, enshrined in the Holy Qur'an, has been with us for fourteen centuries. The answer corroborative of the phenomenon is that cosmic process is slow, very slow when measured by serial or historic time. The point requires further elucidation. Evolutionary changes take place in the outer universe automatically, according to Divine plan, and by stages, each involving thousand and thousand of years to accomplish. This is cosmic process. In the case of man, however, this process works in a somewhat different way. Man (and here we mean man not travelling in the light of Divine guidance) when pressed by circumstances to modify any existing state of affairs, adopts a course which he thinks the best, works on it strenuously day in and day out, but finds at the end that the course adopted was wrong. He abandons it and embarks upon another course. This he has to repeat time and again. Often he feels exhausted during the course of his journey and leaves the experiment incomplete in dire frustration. Even when he reaches his destination, the labor involved and the time spent do not commensurate with the results achieved-the span of human life is so short and the distance to be traversed so lengthy. This process of "trial and error" is another form of cosmic process. Man has, however, not been left in wilderness to find his way out, un-aided by a guide or without any signposts on his way. He has been blessed with Divine guidance. If he adopts the course suggested by it straightaway, not only is he protected against pitfalls but the time taken to reach the goal also shrinks from cosmic reckoning to human calendar. Fourteen hundred years ago, a group of believers made this experiment most successfully, which, apart from the miraculous results it produced, proved that neither the Qur'anic Social Order was a utopia nor the program laid down to establish it was unworkable. Their later generations, however, abandoned that course; with the result that they met the same fate as did the past nations who acted similarly. (This, by the way, is the negative proof of the efficacy of the Divine Law governing the rise and fall of nations). The Divine course is still there and can be taken up by any nation who wished to reach human destination safely and within the shortest possible time:
Say: The truth from your Rabb is there; so let whosoever will accept, and let whosoever will reject (The Qur'an 18:29).
So why to waste time and shed blood! That nation will survive which strives to assure for all men a life of happiness, peace and prosperity. Armed might, control over the forces of nature and wealth will not avail a nation if its policies are detrimental to the interest of mankind. It is bound to pass away, for
Only that remains which is beneficial for mankind as a whole (The Qur'an 13:17)