Universal Mercy and Education
Universal Mercy and Education
The adage nowadays is that we all need love. So many people are talking
about this. Islam teaches us that God's act of creating humanity was an act of
mercy and compassion. Compassion represents the love between parents and
children as well as that between children and parents. However, universal love
can best be seen through all elements of the universe working together with
each other for the benefit of all life.
Humanists proclaim that their philosophy is founded upon love. However,
humanism does not encompass specific ethical values, is based upon personal
interest or bias, and is far down the continuum toward insincerity. Humanism is
abstract, out of balance, and sometimes appears to be working on the behalf of
particular nations, languages, and belief systems. In reality, Prophets were
ideal examples of love and mercy, for their approach to love and mercy was
based on being balanced in this life and the Hereafter. Muhammad, the final
Prophet, was sent by God's Mercy and, metaphorically, is like a spring of pure
water in a hot desert. This spring, infused with the limitless resource of
love, can quench any degree of thirst and purify and enlighten any drinker who
pauses to drink from it.
The Prophet's compassion
Mercy and compassion is like a magic key that opens the hearts that were
so hard that no one thought they would ever be opened. But the Prophet did even
more than this: He lit the torch of belief in God within them. Believers,
hypocrites, unbelievers, and all beings and creatures benefited from His mercy.
Believers were rewarded because the Qur'an states: For the believers full of
pity, compassionate (9/128) and: The Prophet has a greater claim on the
believers than they have on their own selves (33:6).
This is true, because the Prophet, the representative of Divine
compassion, is definitely nearer to us than we are to ourselves. Although the
desires of the flesh may lead us astray, the Prophet always responds with
mercy, kindness, and sympathy. For example, he said: "Whoever leaves an
inheritance, it belongs to his relations. Whoever dies with debt, it belongs to
me" (Muslim, "Fara'id," 14). Can one imagine greater sympathy?
His compassion embraced hypocrites so that they would be shielded from
worldly torment. He knew who the hypocrites were but never exposed them, for
this would have deprived them of the full citizenship rights that their outward
profession of faith and practice allowed them to enjoy. Living among Muslims,
their rights to belong and believe differently were held in compassionate
regard. This greatly reduced their anxieties about their assertions of unbelief
in the Afterlife.
Even the unbelievers benefited from his compassion. God did not destroy
the unbelievers, although He had done so in the past, for: God would never
chastise them while you were among them (8:33). This verse refers to unbelievers
of all times. God will not destroy people as long as believers are alive. In a
related statement, he proclaimed: "I was sent to people as a mercy, not to
curse them." (Muslim, "Birr," 87). In other words, he came with
mercy, not with condemnation and a desire to invoke calamity upon them.
The Prophet was particularly compassionate toward children. He played
with them, would sit beside them when they were crying, and listened to them.
He empathized with a mother's pain, saying: "One without pity for others
is not pitied" (Bukhari, "Adab," 18). Once he told a man who
boasted that he had never played with his children or showed them his love:
"What can I do for you if God has removed compassion from your
heart?" (Muslim, "Fara'id," 64). His compassion even extended to
animals. While in Mina, some Companions tried to kill a snake. Watching the
activity from afar, the Prophet stated: "It was saved from your evil, and
you were saved from its evil." (Nasa'i, "Hajj," 114). Even
though the snake is a lowly reptile, it plays a vital role in the environmental
balance. The Prophet further stated: " A prostitute was guided by God's
truth and ultimately went to paradise because she gave water to a dog dying of
thirst in the desert" (Bukhari, "Anbiya'," 54; Muslim,
"Salam," 153).
Educating others is active compassion
The Prophet, fully aware that moving his people away from their idolatry
and barbarism and toward Islam and success in both this life and the eternal
afterlife, emphasized education and literacy. He understood what his
contemporaries did not: The main duty and purpose of human life is to seek
understanding. The effort of doing so, known as education, is a perfecting
process through which we earn, in the spiritual, intellectual, and physical
dimensions of our beings, the rank appointed for us as the perfect pattern of
creation. Education through learning and a commendable way of life is a sublime
duty that manifests the Divine Name Rabb (Upbringer and Sustainer). By
fulfilling it, we attain the rank of true humanity and become a beneficial
element of society.
Right decisions depend on having a sound mind and being capable of sound
thought. Science and knowledge illuminate and develop the mind. For this
reason, a mind deprived of science and knowledge cannot reach right decisions,
is always exposed to deception, and is subject to being mislead.
We are only truly human if we learn, teach, and inspire others. It is
difficult to regard those who are ignorant and without the desire to learn as
truly human. It is also questionable whether learned people who do not renew
and reform themselves in order to set an example for others are truly human.
Status and merit acquired through knowledge and science are higher and more
lasting than those obtained through other means.
Given the great importance of learning and teaching, we must determine
what is to be learned and taught, and when and how to do so. Although knowledge
is a value in itself, the purpose of learning is to make knowledge a guide in
life and illuminate the road to human betterment. Thus, any knowledge not
appropriated for the self is a burden to the learner, and a science that does
not direct one toward sublime goals is a deception.
Essentials of a good education
A real educator must have several virtues, among them the following:
First: He or she must give due importance to all aspects of a person's
mind, spirit, and self, and then raise each to its proper perfection. The
Qur'an mentions the evil-commanding self that drags people, like beasts with
ropes around their necks, wherever it wants to go and encourages them to obey
their bodily desires. In effect, it wants people to ignore their God-given
ability to elevate their feelings, thoughts, and spirits.
The Qur'an quotes Prophet Joseph: Surely the self commands evil, unless
my Master has mercy (12:53). Commanding evil is inherent in the self's nature.
However, through worship and discipline, the self can be raised to higher ranks,
to a position where it accuses itself for its evils and shortcomings (75:2),
and then still higher where God says to it: O self at peace! Return unto your
Master, well-pleased, well-pleasing (89:27-28).Higher than the self at peace
(at rest and contented) is the self perfectly purified. Those who rise to this
degree are the nearest to God. You remember God when you see them, for they are
like polished mirrors in which all of His attributes are reflected. The
Companions' desire to follow the education system provided by Prophet Muhammad
enabled almost all of them to reach this degree of moral and spiritual
perfection. Millions of people have followed and continue to follow their
example.
Second: An education system is judged by its universality, comprehensiveness,
and the quality of its students. The Prophet's students carried Islam
throughout the world. As Islam is universal in nature and valid for all times
and places, it found a ready acceptance among people of different races,
religious backgrounds, intellectual levels, and age differences - from
modern-day Morocco and Spain to the Philippines, from the Russian steppes to
the heart of Africa. Its principles remain valid today. Despite numerous
upheavals and changes, as well as social, economic, intellectual, scientific,
and technological revolutions, his system remains the most unique and original.
In short, it represents humanity's best hope for the future.
Third: An education system is judged by its ability to change its
students. What the Prophet accomplished during his Prophethood speaks for
itself. To those who deny or question his Prophethood, we challenge them to go
anywhere in the world and accomplish, within 100 years, even one-hundredth of
what he accomplished in the deserts of Arabia 1,400 years ago. Let them take
all of the experts they can gather, and then we will wait to see their results.
Education and young people
A nation's future depends on its youth. Any people who want to secure
their future should apply as much energy to raising their children as they
devote to other issues. A nation that fails its youth and abandons them to
foreign cultural influences jeopardizes their identity and is subject to
cultural and political weakness.
The reasons for the vices observed in today's generation, as well as the
incompetence of some administrators and other nation-wide troubles, lie in the
prevailing conditions and ruling elite of recent generations. Likewise, those
who are charged with educating today's young people will be responsible for the
vices and virtues that will appear in the next generation. Those who wish to
predict a nation's future can do so correctly by taking a full account of the
education and upbringing given to its young people. "Real" life is
possible only through knowledge. Thus, those who neglect learning and teaching
should be counted as "dead" even though they are living, for we were
created to learn and communicate to others what we have learned.
Conclusion
The Prophet's compassion encircled all creatures. Education was one of
the most important components of his compassion, for only by educating them
could he lead his people out of ignorance and into the status of being true
human beings who understood the reasons for their creation, their
responsibilities to God, and their duties toward humanity and all of creation.
In this time of rapidly increasing information, as distinct from
knowledge, we need to instill in ourselves and our children the desire to
acquire useful knowledge and then use it to benefit ourselves and humanity at
large. Knowledge acquired for a right purpose is an inexhaustible source of
blessings for the learner. Those who posses such a source are always sought by
people, like a source of fresh water, and lead people to the good. Knowledge
limited to empty theories and unabsorbed pieces of learning, which arouses
suspicions in minds and darkens hearts, is a "heap of garbage" around
which desperate and confused souls flounder. Therefore, science and knowledge
should seek to uncover humanity's nature and creation's mysteries. Any
knowledge, even "scientific," is true only if it sheds light on the
mysteries of human nature and the dark areas of existence.
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