49 - December 2 thru December 8, 2002,
Vol XII
Islam
denounces terrorism
God forbids murder of innocents
BY HARUN YAHYA,
AUTHOR
Killing
a person for no reason is one of the greatest sins related in the Qur'an:
... if someone kills another person - unless
it is in retaliation for someone else or for causing corruption in the
earth - it is as if he had murdered all mankind. And if anyone gives life
to another person, it is as if he had given life to all mankind. Our Messengers
came to them with Clear Signs, but even after that many of them committed
outrages in the earth. (Qur'an, 5:32)
..those who do not call on any other deity
together with God and do not kill anyone God has made inviolate, except
with the right to do so, and do not fornicate; anyone who does that will
receive an evil punishment. (Qur'an, 25:68)
As the verse suggests, a person who kills innocent people for no reason
is threatened with a great torment. God informs us that killing even a
single person is as evil as murdering all mankind on earth. A person who
observes God's limits can do no harm to a single human, let alone massacre
thousands of innocent people. Those who assume that they can avoid justice
and thus punishment in this world will never succeed, for they will have
to give an account of their deeds in the presence of God. That is why believers,
who know that they will give an account of their deeds after death, are
very meticulous to observe God's limits.
God Commands the Faithful to be Compassionate and Merciful
Islamic morality is described in one verse as:
Then to be one of those who have faith and urge each other to steadfastness
and urge each other to compassion. Those are the Companions of the Right.
(Qur'an, 90:17-18)
As we have seen in this verse, one of the most important features of
the morality that will lead believers to salvation on the Day of Judgement
and to enter into paradise is "being one of those who urges each other
to compassion".
The true source of compassion is love of God. A person's love of God
gives rise to his feeling love for the things He has created. Someone who
loves God feels a direct link and closeness to the things He has created.
This strong love and closeness he feels for the Lord, who created him and
all mankind, leads him to display a pleasing morality, as commanded in
the Qur'an. True compassion emerges as he lives by this morality. This
model of morality, full of love, compassion and sacrifice, is described
in these verses:
Those of you possessing affluence and ample wealth should not make
oaths that they will not give to their relatives and the very poor and
those who have made emigration in the way of God. They should rather pardon
and overlook. Would you not love God to forgive you? God is Ever-Forgiving,
Most Merciful. (Qur'an, 24:22)
Those who were already settled in the abode and in faith before they
came, love those who have migrated to them and do not find in their hearts
any need for what they have been given and prefer them to themselves even
if they themselves are needy. It is the people who are safe-guarded from
the avarice of their own selves who are successful. (Qur'an, 59:9)
... those who have given refuge and help,
they are the true believers. They will have forgiveness and generous provision.
(Qur'an, 8:74)
Be good to your parents and relatives and to orphans and the very poor,
and to neighbours who are related to you and neighbours who are not related
to you, and to companions and travellers and your slaves. God does not
love anyone vain or boastful. (Qur'an, 4:36)
Charity (zakat) is for: the poor, the destitute, those who collect
it, reconciling people's hearts, freeing slaves, those in debt, spending
in the Way of God, and travellers. It is a legal obligation from God. God
is All-Knowing, All-Wise. (Qur'an, 9:60)
This high level of morality that is demanded from believers, described
in the Qur'an, stems from their deep love of God. Thanks to their devotion
to Him, they scrupulously abide by the morality revealed by Him in the
Qur'an. Believers never try to make people feel indebted because of the
compassion they demonstrate and the help they offer people, and do not
even expect to be thanked. Their true aim is to try to gain God's good
pleasure by means of the morality they exhibit, because they know that
they will be called to account for that morality on the Day of Judgement.
In the Qur'an, God has expressly revealed that hell will be the outcome
for those who knowingly refuse to live by the morality of the Qur'an:
"What has brought you into hell-fire?" They will say, "We
were not among those who prayed and we did not feed the poor." (Qur'an,
74:42-44)
Continued on next week
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