Friday, 22 May 2026

Duties as Aesthetical Being

 


 Quranic Foundations And Structure Of Muslim Society

 Chapter II. 

DUTIES

 

The facts stated in the preceding chapter being what they are, the question is: Has the Holy Qur’an prescribed any duties relating to the aesthetic aspect of human life?

The answer is: yes

 

Let us look into the details.

1. The Holy Qur’an wants its followers to beautify their Faith and their actions, and strive to obtain beautiful reward from God, as the following verses reveal:

“Who can be more beautiful in religion—Faith and Action— than one who surrenders his whole self to Allah while doing good (to mankind)…” (4:125).

“… and that, seek the forgiveness of your Lord, and turn to Him in repentance, He will grant you enjoyment, good and beautiful, for a term appointed.” (11:3).

“Those who do good (beautifying their deeds) obtain a (like) beautiful (reward)—and more (through Divine Grace). No darkness (of ugliness and sorrow) nor shame shall cover their faces (on the Day of Judgment)! They are Companions of the Garden: therein they will abide.” (10:26).

“And if anyone earns any good, We shall give him an increase in beauty (or, of good) in respect thereof.” (42:23).

“But if any have done wrong and have thereafter substituted beauty (in conduct) to take the place of evil, truly, I am Oft-Forgiving, Most Merciful.” (27:11). 

 

2. In respect of beauty in conduct, the Qur’anic verses bear reference in the form of command to certain specific situations also.

For instance

a.       Beauty in speech:

“Speak to people employing beauty (in your speech).” (2:83).

b.       Beauty in behavior towards Parents:

“We have enjoined on man beauty (in conduct) in respect of his parents.” (29:8).

c.       Beauty in preaching and argument:

“Invite (all) to the Way of your Lord with wisdom and beautiful preaching; and argue with them in ways that are best and most beautiful.” (16:125). 

 

3.    As regards physical life, the following emphatic verse refers to the duty of beautifying it in all manner, of course, in harmony with the Qur’anic norms and principles:

“Say: Who has forbidden things of beauty which Allah has brought forth for His servants, and the things, clean and pure, which He bath provided for sustenance? Say: They are, in the life of this world, for those who believe (and) purely for them on the Day of Judgment. Thus do We explain the Signs in detail for those who have knowledge.” (7:32). 

 

4.    In respect of dress, we are told first that one of the functions of dress is beautification of the human personality:

“O children of Adam! We have bestowed upon you raiment to cover your shame* and as a means of beautification; and the raiment of piety (which covers and beautifies the inner self) is the best** That is of the Signs of Allah that haply they may be admonished.” (7:26).

* Here the Holy Qur’an condemns the cult of nudism, which is a product of the psychological perversions of modern times. 

**  Here we obtain the principle that the garments we wear should never transgress the bounds of piety; otherwise, they will become source of ugliness. Thus, the Holy Qur’an voices a masculine protest against those perversions in dress which have plagued modern womanhood in the West and in the countries coming under the influence of the West.

Then, as if to emphasize the element of sanctity in beautification through dress, and to emphasize it for rectifying the wrong notion preached by certain other religions, it says, referring to worship, and, because a Muslim must compulsorily pray five times during the day and the night, referring actually to all the twenty-four hours of one’s daily life, as follows

“O Children of Adam! look to your adornment at every time and place of prayer: eat and drink: (Enjoy) but waste not by excess;* for Allah loves not the wasters.” (7:31). 

 * Mark that the Holy Qur’an allows aesthetic fulfillment but not luxury, which is vice.

 

5. To conclude: The Holy Qur’an demands and commands positive beautification of every aspect of human life: spiritual, moral, intellectual and physical. Its teaching in this respect has been beautifully summed up by the Holy Prophet (Peace be on him) in these words:

“Verily Allah has made obligatory the employment of beauty in respect of everything.”* (sahih al-Muslim), (Mishkat al Masabih, Kitab al-said, al-Fail  al-awwal, p. 357).

* The Holy Prophet (Peace be on him) has commanded Muslims to fulfill aesthetic requirements even in respect of such matters as putting on the clothing over the dead body, preparing a grave, slaughtering an animal and killing an enemy soldier on the battlefield. (See: Mishkat al-Masabih, Bab Ghusl- al-Mayyit, p. 143; and Kitab al-said, p. 357). 

 

And let every Muslim artist and artisan remember the following Prophetic exhortation:

“Verily, when a servant (of Allah) executes any task, Allah loves that he executes it with thorough skill and for stability and perfection.” (Kanz al-’Ummal).


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to be continued . . . . . 

Quranic Foundation & Structure Of Muslim Society In The End Times


 

Friday, 15 May 2026

Aesthetical Being

 


 Quranic Foundations And Structure Of Muslim Society

Part 4. DUTIES AS AESTHETICAL BEING

 Chapter 1. 

Preliminary observations

 

The Holy Qur’an has given to humanity a theory of Aesthetics of its own. The present is not, however, the proper occasion to expound it. Only the following five points may be mentioned here:

1.    The Qur’anic concept of Beauty is wedded to spirituality or godliness.

2.    According to the Qur’anic teaching, the essential attributes of Beauty are:

Piety, Purity, Sublimity, Harmony, Balance, Proportion, Order and Perfection.

3.    The Holy Qur’an upholds only that Art which is noble and sublime, both in its conception and its goal, and it regards as vulgar and inadmissible all those forms of Art which do not enshrine the essential attributes of Beauty, as it understands and acknowledges.

4.    According to the Holy Qur’an, the spiritual value, or, religion, is the highest, and below it stand in serial order the moral, the intellectual and the physical values.

5.    As regards the aesthetic value, it should permeate and pervade all the aspects of human life: physical, intellectual, moral, spiritual, and social.

Our concern in the present discourse being the duties of man as the possessor of aesthetic consciousness, we may first of all observe with advantage the emphasis on aesthetic value found in the Holy Qur’an in respect of God, universe and man.

We find in the Holy Writ as follows:—

 

(1) GOD:

God is the Possessor of Absolute Beauty:

The Holy Qur’an says:

“Allah is the Light of the heavens and the earth.” (24:35).

This is one of the most profound verses, endowed with depths of meaning that are unfathomable. In understanding its implication from the point of view of the problem before us, however, the guidance for us lies in the fact that, according to the Holy Qur’an, darkness is ugliness, as the following verse denotes:

“But those who have earned evil will have a reward (in the Hereafter) of like evil: ignominy will cover them: no protector they shall have from (the wrath of) Allah: (ugliness will be their lot) as if their faces had been covered with a cloak of darkest night. Such are the companions of the Fire; they will abide therein.” (10:27).

 

Now, if darkness relates to ugliness, light relates to beauty,—and thus the transcendental Light of God implies the possession of transcendental Beauty by Him.

 

Again, God is the Absolute, as we have seen elsewhere. Hence His beauty is Absolute Beauty.

The Holy Prophet (Peace be on him) has, as the expounder of the Holy Qur’an par excellence, made a very explicit and direct statement in this regard. He says:

“Allah is Beautiful and He loves Beauty.” (Muslim’s sahih, Bab Tahrim al-Kibr, p. 65).

 

 

(2) UNIVERSE:

Being the Possessor of Absolute Beauty, God has very naturally created everything of the world in the frame of beauty, as the following verse says

“… He Who has created has made everything most Good and Beautiful.” (32:7).

This is a statement about the universe as a whole and covers all things in the heavens and on the earth.

The Holy Qur’an goes, however, beyond this universal statement and embarks, in order to emphasize the existence of beauty further, on certain details with reference to: (1) the earth, its plant life and animal life, (2) the heavenly bodies that surround the earth, and (3) Heaven in the World Hereafter, or, what is called, the next world.

        (1)     The earth, its plant life and animal life:

The Holy Qur’an says:

(a)        in respect of all things:

“That which is on the earth We have made but as an adornment for it …” (18:7). 

Mark that ‘adorn’ means ‘add beauty to’. 

(b)       in respect of minerals and plants:

“… and We produced therein (i.e., in the earth) all kinds of things in due balance.” (15:19).

Mark that ‘balance’ is an essential attribute of beauty. 

(c)        in respect of plants only:

“(vegetation grows) till the earth is clad with its golden ornaments and is decked out in beauty…” (10:24).

(d)       in respect of animals:

“And cattle He has created for you (O mankind): from them you derive warmth, and numerous benefits, and of their (meat) you eat. And therein is beauty for you as you drive them home in evening, and as you lead them forth to pasture in the morning.” (16:5-6).

“And (God has created) horses, mules, and donkeys, that you may ride them, and as adornment; and He will create (in future, through the mind and ingenuity of man, other vehicles) that you know not (at the time of the revelation of the Qur’an).” (16:8).

“(The sacrificial cow, ordered by Moses, was to be) bright in her color, providing pleasure to the beholders.” (2:69). 

 

(2)          The heavenly bodies that surround the earth:

In this respect, the Holy Qur’an says:

“And assuredly We have set constellations in the heaven and We have beautified it for beholders.” (15:16).

“We have indeed decked the lower heaven with beauty (in) the stars…” (37:6). 

 

(3)          Heaven in the World Hereafter:

The Holy Qur’an says about Heaven

“… how beautiful an abode and place of rest!” (25:76).

“… beautiful Place of (final) Return.” (38:25).

“Now no person knows what delight of the eyes (—what aesthetic satisfaction—) is kept hidden (in reserve) for them (in Heaven)—as a reward for their (good) deeds.” (32:l7).

“But Allah will deliver them from the evil of that Day, and will shed over them a Light of Beauty and a (blissful) Joy.” (76:11).

“Some faces, that Day, will beam (in brightness and beauty), looking towards their Lord (Who is the Source of all Beauty and the Bestower of all Blessings).” (75:22-23).

 

 

(3) MAN:

According to the Holy Qur’an, human beings are possessors of Beauty, both outwardly and inwardly. It says:

“We have indeed created man in the best and the most beautiful* constitution.** (95:4).

*Ahsan means: the best, the most beautiful.

**Taqwim means: constitution, mould, form, nature, symmetry.  Man is, therefore, “the comeliest specimen of God’s handiwork”, according to Maulana Abdul Majid Daryabadi (English Translation and Commentary of the Holy Qur’an, p. 956, n. 438); and according to Allama Abdullah Yusuf Ali (English Translation and Commentary of the Holy Qur’an, p. 1759, n. 6199), “to man God gave the purest and the best nature.” Mark here that symmetry and purity are the attributes of beauty.

 

“And (it is Allah Who has) given you shape (O mankind!), and made your shapes beautiful…” (40:64).

“By the Soul and Him Who endowed it with proportion and order*…” (91:7).

*Mark that proportion and order are attributes of Beauty. Hence this verse refers definitely to the beauty of the inner personality of the human being.

The above discussion proves that the Holy Qur’an is vehemently emphatic on the aesthetic value, affirming as it does, beauty in God, universe and man.


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to be continued . . . . . 

Quranic Foundation & Structure Of Muslim Society In The End Times