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Knowledge
and Religious Experience (continued)
What, then, according to
the Qur«n, is the character of the universe which we inhabit? In the first
place, it is not the result of a mere creative sport:
We have not created
the Heavens and the earth and whatever is between them in sport. We have not
created them but for a serious end: but the greater part of them understand
it not (44:38-39).22
It is a reality to be reckoned
with:
Verily in the creation
of the Heavens and of the earth, and in the succession of the night and of the
day, are signs for men of understanding; who, standing and sitting and reclining,
bear God in mind and reflect on the creation of the Heavens and of the earth,
and say: "Oh, our Lord! Thou hast not created this in vain" (3:190-91).
Again the universe is so
constituted that it is capable of extension:
He (God) adds to
His creation what He wills (35:1).23
It is not a block universe,
a finished product, immobile and incapable of change. Deep in its inner being
lies, perhaps, the dream of a new birth:
Say - go through
the earth and see how God hath brought forth all creation; hereafter will He
give it another birth (29:20).
In fact, this mysterious
swing and impulse of the universe, this noiseless swim of time which appears
to us, human beings, as the movement of day and night, is regarded by the Qur«n
as one of the greatest signs of God:
God causeth the day
and the night to take their turn. Verily in this is teaching for men of insight
(24:44).
This is why the Prophet
said: Do not vilify time, for time is God.24 And this
immensity of time and space carries in it the promise of a complete subjugation
by man whose duty is to reflect on the signs of God, and thus discover the means
of realizing his conquest of Nature as an actual fact:
See ye not how God
hath put under you all that is in the Heavens, and all that is on the earth,
and hath been bounteous to you of His favours both in relation to the seen and
the unseen? (31:20).
And He hath subjected
to you the night and the day, the sun and the moon, and the stars too are subject
to you by His behest; verily in this are signs for those who understand
(16:12).
Such being the nature and
promise of the universe, what is the nature of man whom it confronts on all
sides? Endowed with a most suitable mutual adjustment of faculties he discovers
himself down below in the scale of life, surrounded on all sides by the forces
of obstruction:
That of goodliest
fabric We created man, then brought him down to the lowest of the low
(95:4-5).
And how do we find him
in this environment? A restless25 being engrossed in
his ideals to the point of forgetting everything else, capable of inflicting
pain on himself in his ceaseless quest after fresh scopes for self-expression.
With all his failings he is superior to Nature, inasmuch as he carries within
him a great trust which, in the words of the Qur«n, the heavens and the
earth and the mountains refused to carry:
Verily We proposed
to the Heavens and to the earth and to the mountains to receive the trust (of
personality), but they refused the burden and they feared to receive it. Man
alone undertook to bear it, but hath proved unjust, senseless! (33:72).
His career, no doubt, has
a beginning, but he is destined, perhaps, to become a permanent element in the
constitution of being.
Thinketh man that
he shall be thrown away as an object of no use? Was he not a mere embryo? Then
he became thick blood of which God formed him and fashioned him, and made him
twain, male and female. Is not He powerful enough to quicken the dead?
(75:36-40).
When attracted by the forces
around him, man has the power to shape and direct them; when thwarted by them,
he has the capacity to build a much vaster world in the depths of his own inner
being, wherein he discovers sources of infinite joy and inspiration. Hard his
lot and frail his being, like a rose-leaf, yet no form of reality is so powerful,
so inspiring, and so beautiful as the spirit of man! Thus in his inmost being
man, as conceived by the Qur«n, is a creative activity, an ascending spirit
who, in his onward march, rises from one state of being to another:
But Nay! I swear
by the sunsets redness and by the night and its gatherings and by the
moon when at her full, that from state to state shall ye be surely carried onward
(84:16-19).
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[See
Notes]
Date/Time Last Modified: 6/18/2002 8:02:53 AM
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