Quranic Foundations And Structure Of Muslim Society
Chapter 2.
DUTIES of Commission
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Moral Development ensuring Moral Perfection.
(1) Cultivation and practice of Truthfulness enjoined:
The Holy Qur’an lays down the command in the following two verses:
“O you who believe! Guard your duty to Allah (in respect of truthfulness) and be with those who are true (in thought, word and deed).” (9:119).
“O you who believe! Guard your duty to Allah and speak words (that are) true and directed to the right point: that He may make your conduct whole and sound and forgive you your sins. He that obeys Allah and His Messenger, has indeed attained the highest achievement.” (33:70-71). The first verse commands the Muslims:
a. to be most conscientiously truthful, namely, through guarding their duty of obedience to God Who is all time a witness even to their innermost thoughts and feelings, not to speak of speech and action;
b. to be comprehensively truthful, because conscientious truthfulness means truthfulness in every respect, namely, in thought, word and deed;
c. to develop the spirit and activity of truthfulness by upholding the cause of truthfulness and by loving the company of those who are genuinely truthful.
The second verse commands, not only conscientious truthfulness in speech, but also guarding against even unconscious slip from truth by making the speech “directed to the right point.”
“directed to the right point” also means employing accuracy in expression, which is a part of wisdom—another great excellence upheld by the Holy Qur’an. (2:269)
Truthfulness in thought, word and deed is, therefore, a duty. Indeed, it is such an important duty that it forms one of the essential attributes of righteousness (3:14-16), and Heaven has been promised to those who uphold truth in their hearts and practice it in their actions (33:35). In Heaven itself, the righteous will enjoy their blissful life in “an Assembly of Truth in the Presence of the Sovereign Omnipotent.” (54:55).
(2) Guarding of Oaths enjoined:
Taking lightly one’s oaths is the quality of the person who is deficient in moral earnestness and lacks in true devotion to truthfulness. Hence, in order to maintain sound moral outlook and character, it is a duty to guard one’s oaths, i.e., to be true to one’s oaths; and this is what the Holy Qur’an has commanded:
“… and guard your oaths.” (5:89).
(3) Cultivation of the spirit of Sincerity and Uprightness enjoined:
Sincerity means freedom from pretence. Uprightness (or, honesty) means freedom from fraud. Both these qualities are actually forms of truthfulness, implying that there should be sameness in reality as in appearance. In other words, what we express in words should be the same as we feel in our hearts, and in no way should we do injustice to our speech by making it immoral through making it discordant with what we believe to be true. The Holy Qur’an has thus commanded sincerity and uprightness (side by side with truthfulness in giving evidence and with justice in pronouncing judgment), in the following verse:
“… and when you utter a word, do justice there unto…” (6:152).
(4) Steadfastness in everything good and true enjoined:
The Holy Qur’an has commanded the Muslims to be steadfast in the cause of Truth:
“… and be ever ready (i.e., fixed in your resolve)…” (3:200).
Again:
“O you who believe! when you meet a (hostile) force, stay firm…” (8:45).
This should be so, because firmness is one of the basic qualities of true Believers:
“Allah keeps firm those who believe, with the Word that stands firm, in this world and in the Hereafter …” (14:27).
Hence, steadfastness in all that is good and true is duty.
(5) Modesty enjoined:
Modesty, which means “restraint by a sense of seemliness” and which implies spiritual purity and moral decency in one’s inner attitudes and outward behaviour in respect of moral decorum, has been emphasized in a beautiful manner in the following Qur’anic verses:
“O children of Adam! We have bestowed raiment upon you to conceal your shame, and as an adornment. But the raiment of piety, that is the best. Such are among the Signs of Allah, that you may be admonished.
“O children of Adam! Let not Satan seduce you, in the same manner as he got your parents out of the Garden (of felicity), stripping them of the raiment (of innocence and purity), that he might manifest their shame to them …” (7:26-27).
‘Raiment of piety’, in verse 26, emphasizes the observance of modesty in the inner attitude as well as outward behaviour; while the words: ‘let not Satan seduce you’ in verse 27, proclaim the duty of the observance of modesty.
(6) Marriage enjoined for providing the protection of the moral fortress of married life to the individual:
The law has been laid down:
Marry those among you who are single, or the virtuous ones among your slaves, male or female: If they are in poverty Allah will give them Means out of His Grace: for Allah encompasses all, and He knows all things.” (24:32).
That marriage provides a moral fortress, a fortress of chastity, has been emphasized by the Holy Qur’an in the word muhsin—hisn meaning fortress—employed in the verse which points out the true motive with which a Muslim should marry:
“… desiring chastity, not lust …” (4:24).
(7) Chastity under all conditions: Preservation of sexual sanctity enjoined:
Chastity implies maintenance of purity in thought, word and deed, in respect of the sexual passion. The Holy Qur’an makes it a duty when it commands:
“Those who find not the wherewithal of marriage shall keep themselves chaste (in thought, word and deed)…” (24:33).
Elsewhere, the womenfolk have been specifically commanded:
“… and that they shall observe the principle of chastity (even in respect of the most distantly related aspects of attitude and behaviour), that is best for them…” (24:60).
(8) Laboring for earning one’s livelihood enjoined:
The Holy Qur’an has commanded:
“… and seek of (i.e., strive and labour for) Allah’s Bounty (i.e., means of livelihood): and remember Allah much, that you may prosper.” (62:10).
The above command to strive and labour for earning one’s livelihood has actually been given in the context of the observance of special weekly congregational worship on Fridays. This does not mean, however, that the command is confined only to Fridays. On the contrary, the Holy Qur’an has emphasized the virtue of laboring for earning one’s livelihood by repudiating the Jewish-Christian notion of the Sabbath—of the false belief as to the sanctity of idleness and abstinence from work—and asserting that labour for honest earning is most definitely a part of worship.
Expounding the Qur’anic view, the Holy Prophet (Peace be on him) says:
“To engage in labour for honest livelihood is duty…” (Mishkat al-Masabih, vol. 2, p. 7).
(9) Earning livelihood through honest means enjoined.
The verse quoted in the preceding injunction implies one more command: namely, to earn one’s livelihood by honest means and in honest manner, because it has to be earned as “God’s Bounty” and not as Satan’s favor. Moreover, the command to earn has been combined with the command to “remember Allah much, that you may prosper”, thereby commanding spiritualization of the effort for earning, which alone can truly guarantee the maintenance of one’s conscience as sound and unblemished.
(10) Benefiting oneself from only that which has been lawfully acquired, enjoined:
The most basic need of man is food, and hence it is hunger in respect of which it is most difficult to observe lawfulness. Even an honest person finds it most difficult to abstain from employing debasing or illegitimate means, like theft, when he is confronted with death by starvation. Hence, the Holy Qur’an has mentioned food when laying down the duty of benefiting oneself from only that which has been lawfully acquired. It says:
“O mankind! eat of whatsoever is on the earth (provided it is) lawfully acquired, and good (i.e., lawful for your health) …” (2:168).
Then the Holy Qur’an goes beyond food and lays down the general law:
“O you who believe! Spend out of the good things which you have lawfully earned and out of that which we have brought forth for you from the earth . . .” (2:267).
According to Qur’anic commentators, this verse relates to spending in charity for others, from which a person benefits spiritually. But, spending on one’s personal needs should all the more strictly be based on what one has lawfully earned, because in that way alone can the spiritual health—the integrity of personality—be properly maintained.
(11) Virtue of industry enjoined:
To lead a hard life, to engage in perpetual endeavor for the flowering up of one’s talents and faculties, to struggle incessantly through honest labour for higher and higher achievement: that is the law of life in Islam, emphasized time and again in the Holy Qur’an and enshrined in the life of the Holy Prophet (Peace be on him). Emphasizing this law, the Holy Qur’an says:
“… and that for man shall be nothing (i.e., no man deserves) save that wherefor he makes effort, and that (the fruit of) his effort will soon come in sight.” (52:39-40).
Again:
“For each (human being) is a rank according to the deeds which he does: for your Lord is not unaware of what they do.” (6:132).
The first verse says that no human being deserves any success in life except what he labours for. The second verse emphasizes progress on the basis of genuine, practical endeavor.
Industry is, therefore, an important duty to self, according to the Holy Qur’an.
(12) Virtue of pursuing stable and sound Progress life, through:
a. Planning one’s life and activity soundly;
b. Aiming at consequential (as opposed to wasteful) activity.
c. Aiming at the highest and the soundest productivity in one’s activity, enjoined:
The Holy Qur’an commands:
“O you who believe! Fear Allah (in wasting your life and talents in vain or wrong pursuits and through unsound planning and execution), and (in all types of actions) let every soul look to what (resulting good and worthiness for success and progress) he has sent forth for the morrow. And fear Allah (for making your activity positive, planned, consequential and progressive, thereby manifesting your true and active thankfulness to Him for His bounties): for Allah is well-acquainted with (all) that you do.” (59:18).
That the human outlook should be progressive, which necessitates aiming at the highest and the soundest productivity, is borne out by the fact that man, according to the Holy Qur’an, is an evolutionary being and the character of human life is evolutionary:*
“So I do call to witness the ruddy glow of Sunset; the Night and its Homing; and the Moon in her Fullness: you shall surely travel from stage to stage.” (84:16-19).
A critical study of the Holy Qur’an reveals that it is not only the human personality which is evolutionary but also the universe wherein humanity originated and has to fulfill its destiny.
(13) Cultivation and maintenance of Optimism enjoined:
Optimism, or maintaining an unflinching attitude of hope, is based, in a Muslim’s life, on his unswerving faith in and sincere reliance on God, and has been mentioned in the Holy Qur’an as an essential attribute of Islamic life:*
“Is one who worships devoutly during the hours of the night prostrating himself and standing (in adoration), who takes heed of the Hereafter, and who places his hope in the Mercy of his Lord (like one who does not)? …” (39:9).
* That Pessimism, as mentioned before, amounts to infidelity (Kufr) also shows that, according to the Holy Qur’an, the Faithful is he for whom Optimism is an inseparable quality of character.
To maintain optimistic attitude in life is, therefore, duty.
(14) Cultivation and maintenance of the spirit and the attitude of Generosity (or, Spirit of Benevolence) enjoined:
Actual generosity is a duty to others. But the cultivation and maintenance of the spirit and the attitude of generosity is a duty towards self because of the purity and enrichment that it acquires thereby. It is this spirit and this attitude that have been emphasized together with actual generosity, as essential attributes of righteousness, in the following verses:
“And vie with one another, hastening to forgiveness from your Lord, and to a Garden whose breadth is that (of the whole) of the heavens and of the earth, prepared for the righteous, —those who spend (freely), whether in prosperity or in adversity…” (3:133-134).
“Those who spend (in Charity) of their goods by night and by day, in secret and in public, have their reward with their Lord; on them shall be no fear, nor shall they grieve.” (2:274).
(15) Constancy in Life commanded; hence its observance is duty:
Success and productivity in life demands constancy in our effort, and hence devotion to the principle of constancy is a duty to self. The Holy Qur’an enjoins it in respect of Prayer, saying that life is truly and ultimately successful of those “who,” besides possessing other virtues, “are constant at their worship.” (70:23).
Now, Prayer being the most basic character-building exercise according to the Holy Qur’an, the above verse refers indirectly to the merit of cultivation and maintenance of the principle of constancy in respect of all virtues. This fact has been directly emphasized by the Holy Prophet (Peace be on him) when he says:
“The action (of goodness) most loved by God is that in which the principle of Constancy is observed most.” (Bukhari: Sahih, Vol. 2, p. 957).
to be continued . . . . .

