In
the Qur'an life in this world is an inseparable part of a continuum, a
unified whole - life, death, life - which gives our life a context and
relevance. In this context, the life of the individual is made
meaningful and enriched inasmuch as it is full of 'good works'. Life in
this world leads to the afterlife, a belief which is fundamental in the
Qur'an. The afterlife is not treated in the Qur'an in a separate
chapter, or as something on its own, for its own sake, but always in
relation to life in this world.
Linguistically
it is not possible in the Qur'an to talk about this life without
semantic reference to the next since every term used for each is
comparative with the other. Thus: al- 'ula and al-akhira (the First and
the Last life), al-dunya and al-akhira (the nearer and the
further/latter life). Neither has a name specific to itself, or
independent of the other. Consequently, the frequency of the terms in
the Qur'an is the same, in the case of dunya and akhira - each appears
115 times.'
There
is a reference, direct or indirect, to one aspect or another of the
afterlife on almost every single page of the Qur'an. This follows from
the fact that belief in the afterlife is an article of faith which has a
bearing on every aspect of the present life and manifests itself in the
discussion of the creed, the rituals, the ethics and the laws of Islam.
In discussing the afterlife, moreover, the Qur'an addresses both
believers and non-believers. The plan of two worlds and the relationship
between them has been, from the beginning, part of the divine scheme of
things:
“Allah is the One Who created you, then provided for you, then will cause you to die, and then will give you life.”Quran 30:40
“Indeed, it is We who give life and cause death, and to Us is the destination.”50:43
“He created death and life that He might try you &cording to which of you is best in works.”67:2
According
to the Qur'an, belief in the afterlife, which is an issue fundamental
to the mission of Muhammad, was also central to the mission of all
prophets before him.
Belief in the afterlife is often referred to in conjunction with belief in God, as in the expression: 'If you believe in Allah and the Last Day'. Believers are frequently reminded in the Qur'an, 'Be mindful of Allah and know that you shall meet Him' (2:233) (used in this instance to urge fitting treatment of one's wife in intimate situations). 'To Him is the homecoming/ the return' (36:83;
4O:3). As a belief in the afterlife is so fundamental to Islam, it is
only right that Muslims should regularly be reminded of it not only
throughout the pages of the Qur'an but also in their daily life.
practicing Muslims in their five daily prayers repeat their praise of
God at least seventeen times a day,
'The Master of the Day of Judgment' (1:4). “Being inattentive to the afterlife” (30:7) or “to the prospect of coming to judgment” (32:14)
are signs of the unbeliever. All this heightens the believer's sense of
responsibility for actions in this life. In fact the principles and
details of religion are meant to be seen within the framework of the
interdependence of this life and the afterlife and to color the Muslims'
conception of life and the universe and have a bearing on their actions
in this life.
The Importance of the Resurrection and Judgment in the Afterlife
Divine wisdom and justice necessitate the resurrection of the dead and judgment in an afterlife:
“We have not created the heavens and the earth and all that is between them save in truth. Surely the Hour' is coming.”15:85
The resurrection is thus:
...a
binding promise from God that shall be fulfilled though most people may
not know it, so that He may resolve their differences for them.
In
the Qur'an, judgment is so essential to human beings that Allah has
created them with a peculiar, innate permanent judge within themselves,
that is 'conscience', the 'reproachful soul'. Indeed this is marked in a chapter entitled The Resurrection in which Allah declares:
“I
swear by the Day of Resurrection, and by the reproachful soul! Does man
think We shall never put his bones together again? Yes indeed: We can
remould his very fingers.”75:1-4
The
'reproachful soul' foreshadows the judgment and is here placed side by
side, in the oath, with the resurrection that precedes the judgment. In
answer to the unbelievers' incredulity that the scattered bones of dead
people can be resurrected into new life, Allah swears that it will be
done. Modem interpreters see in the phrase, 'his very fingers',
reference to the power of Allah who moulds our finger prints in a way
unique to each individual: He has done it in this life and can do it
again in the afterlife.
The Possibility of the Resurrection of the Dead
In
addition to the necessity and desirability of the resurrection and
afterlife, the Qur'an turns repeatedly to its possibility. During the
Meccan period of the Prophet's mission, a great deal of the Qur'an was
concerned with the three fundamental beliefs of the unity of God, the
prophethood of Muhammad and other prophets before him, and the
resurrection and judgment. The resurrection in particular seemed
incredible to unbelievers. Indeed much of what one hears today is
reminiscent of what unbelievers said at the time of the revelation of
the Qur'an. They felt the resurrection to be biologically impossible,
asking again and again:
“How, after we die and become dust and bones could we be raised again?”56:47
Against
this, the Qur'an employs a basic argument which is not difficult to
accept rationally, equating two similar feats: the power that can
accomplish something once can do it again. From the fact that human
beings now exist, it is clear that divine power was not incapable of
making them:
“Why should it be assumed that such power will be incapable of doing for a second time what it achieved the first” (50: 15)? Indeed a second creation is easier than a first one (30:27).
The Qur'an repeatedly reminds people that they were made into human beings from something very small:
“Is
man not aware that We created him from a little germ? Yet he is
flagrantly contentious. He raises an argument and forgets his own
creation. He asks: 'Who will give life to rotten bones?' Say: 'He who
first brought them into being will give them life again: He has
knowledge of every creation; who has made for you out of the green tree
fire and lo! from it you kindle.’”36:77-80
This
last point affirms the ability of a power that generates things from
seemingly opposite or different things - a fire from green trees and
bodies from bones and dust; just as a full grown man is different from
the little germ that was his beginning. If they ask:
'What! When we are lost in the earth shall we be created afresh?'32:13
“The answer comes: We know all that the earth takes away from them. We have a book which records all things.”50:4
Another
rational argument the Qur'an uses to convince disbelievers of the truth
of the resurrection is the comparison between the greater act of
creation and the lesser act of resurrection:
Perhaps
when the unbelievers say it is not possible to turn dust into a new
creation, what they really think is that it is not possible for human
power like their own; but, after all, they have not created themselves
or the heavens and the earth (52:35-6). A greater power than their own
has created them once and can do so again, and has also created what is
greater than them. As the Qur' an argues with the unbelievers, sometimes
it even omits the name of the Creator, in order to focus their minds
more clearly on the argument itself, saying simply, 'He who did it first',
'who created the Heavens', etc. When the Prophet recites Qur'anic
verses that confirm the resurrection in the afterlife, the unbelievers
of his time challenge him personally:
Bring back to us our fathers-if what you say be true!
The Qur'an directs the Prophet:
“Say: 'It is Allah who gives you life, then makes you die, then He shall gather you to the Resurrection.’”45:25-6
In
discussing the resurrection, moreover, the Qur'an cites phenomena very
familiar to human beings to show the power that takes creation through
different stages, particularly in the life of people and plants.
People,
if you doubt the resurrection, remember that We first created you from
dust, then from a living germ, then from a tiny clinging thing, and then
from a half-formed lump of flesh, so that We might manifest to you Our
power. We cause whatever We please to remain in the wombs for an
appointed term, and then We bring you forth as infants- that you may
grow up and reach your prime. Some are caused to die young and some are
caused to live on to abject old age when all that they once knew they
know no more.
You
sometimes see the earth dry and barren: but no sooner do We send down
rain upon it than it begins to stir and swell, -putting forth every kind
of radiant bloom. That is because Allah is Truth:
“He resurrects the dead and has power our all things.” 22:5-6
Indeed the Qur'an uses the very same Arabic verb for bringing forth ‘people from their mothers' wombs’ (16:78) 'bringing forth' plants from the earth’ (6:99) and 'bringing forth' people from the earth at the resurrection’ (30:19).
Not
only does the Qur'an present proof of the resurrection, but it turns
the argument against those who deny it, pointing out that they
themselves have no proof for their own position:
“They
say: 'There is nothing but out present life; we live and die, nothing
but time destroys us.' Of this they have no knowledge; they merely
conjecture.”45:24
At the resurrection they will know that what they said was wrong and will regret it. 16:39, 6:31
Recompense
There
is much description in the Qur'an of rewards and punishment. As human
beings have bodies, minds and spirits, all of which are gifts from Allah
and as, out of His grace He provided mankind with the means of
gratifying all these components in this life, so in the afterlife He
will provide means of gratifying them all to 'those who believed and did good works' (7:32). Bodies, as we have noted, will be 'a new creation' and in paradise will not suffer the shortcomings of worldly bodies.
'No mortal knows what comfort is in store for them as a reward for their labors' (32:17). 'No evil shall visit them' -
the Arabic word su' includes whatever is undesirable (39: 16; 40:7).
There is no tedium there, such as skeptics now invoke as an argument
against eternal existence.
'They will live in the land of perfect peace' (6:127).
The honor Allah will confer on them will be their highest reward.- An
opposite picture is given of punishment-the essence of which is
humiliation.
As
already pointed out, the Qur'an does not treat the afterlife as
something theoretical or in a separate chapter at the end of the book.
It is embedded in the text throughout and its effect on the reader is
enhanced by the vivid and powerful language of the Arabic text. After a
short conjunction like 'when' to indicate the afterlife, it commonly
employs the past and present tense as if it had happened and was already
here.
There
is an obvious interdependence between this life and the afterlife. We
have seen how the terms occur with equal frequency in the Qur'an and how
linguistically one cannot utter the name of one without semantic
reference to the other. Everything in the judgment has to do with action
in the world. Dwellers in paradise or hell sometimes talk about what
they did in this world(52:28; 40:47).
The Afterlife and the Present Life
In
the Qur'an, life in this world, through its relation to the afterlife,
has much more significance than it would otherwise have. A whole new
dimension is given to the lives of those who believe that they will live
beyond the grave, and will not be terminated in dust. They are
continually reminded of this (at least seventeen times a day, as we have
said, for practicing Muslims). The life of the individual continues in
the two worlds, but through different stages: from the womb to the
world, to the grave, to the resurrection, judgment and lasting life in
the final abode - the intervening period in the grave will seem 'a mere part of a day' (23:113).
The Qur'an does not disparage the present life; both lives are created by Allahand “to Allah belong the last life and the first life.” (53:25)
“He created for you all that the earth contains.” (2:29)
“Eat of what your Lord has given you and render thanks to Him.” 7:10; 50:7; 34:15; 7:32
In gathering wealth the faithful are 'seeking the bounty of Allah'. They are directed to do this after finishing the prayer in which they praise 'the Master of the Day of judgment' (62: 10; 65:17; 73:20). In seeking to attain paradise- they should always bear in mind the Qur'anic exhortation: 'Do not neglect your share in this world' (28:77).
Prophet Muhammad (peace and blessings of Allah be upon him) said:
“He whose day is no better than the day before it has done himself wrong.”
He (peace and blessings of Allah be upon him) also said:
“When
a son of Adam dies his deeds cease, except through three things: a
running charity that he founded, useful knowledge he left behind, or a
righteous son who prays for him.”
The Holy Prophet (peace and blessings of Allah be upon him) said that on the Day of Judgment:
“No
person will leave the judgment place before being asked about four
things: his life span and how he spent it, his knowledge and what he did
with it, his body and in which things he wore it out, and his wealth -
from where he collected it and how he spent it.”
“Allah
has ordained a law and a path for each of you. Had Allah wished it, He
could have made you into one nation, but in order to by you in what has
come to you, He has made you as you are. So vie with one another in good
works, for to Allah you shall all return and He will declare to you
what you have disagreed about.” (5:48)
Believers are taught in the Qur'an to pray:
“Lord, give us good in this life and good in the afterlife.”(2:201)
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