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If you wish to understand how to enjoy great contentment and blessing through belief, and how to experience fulfillment and ease, listen to the following
parable: Two people travel for both pleasure and business. The first one is
conceited and pessimistic, and so ends up in what he considers a most wicked
country. He sees himself surrounded by poor and hopeless people tormented by
bullies and living ruined lives, for everyone suffers the same misery. Trying to forget everything by intoxicants transforms everyone into a stranger or an
enemy. He has awful visions of corpses and orphans, and his soul is plunged into torment.
The second person, a God‑serving, decent, and fair‑minded man, goes to a
country that he considers quite excellent. Seeing a universal festival, he finds
joy and happiness in every corner, and a house for remembering God overflowing
with rapture. He sees the celebrations of a general discharge from duties
(death) accompanied by cries of good wishes and thanks. Hearing a drum and a
band for enlisting soldiers with happy calls of “God is the Greatest” and “There
is no god but God,” he becomes happy at his own joy and that of others. He
enjoys a comfortable trade and thanks God.
When he meets his relative, he understands the latter’s situation and says:
“You’ve become crazy. The bad and ugly things you see come from and reflect your
inner world. You imagine laughter to be weeping, and discharge from duties to be
sack and pillage. Come to your senses and clean your heart, so that this
inauspicious veil will be raised from your eyes and you may see the truth. This
is an orderly, prosperous, and civilized country with a powerful, compassionate,
and just ruler. Things are not as you see or think.” The man comes to his senses
and is full of regret: “Yes, I’ve really gone crazy because of all those
intoxicants. Thank you. May God be pleased with you for rescuing me from such a
hellish state.”
O my soul! The first person represents an unbeliever or a heedless sinner who
sees this world as a place of general mourning, all living things as weeping
orphans due to the pain of separation and decay, people and animals as lonely
and uncivilized creatures cut down by death, and great masses (mountains and
oceans) as terrible corpses without souls. His unbelief and misguidance breed
great anxieties that torture him.
The second person believes in and affirms God Almighty. He sees the world as
a place where people praise Him, a practice arena for people and animals, and an
examination hall for people and jinn. Animals and humanity are demobilized so
that after death believers can travel in spiritual enjoyment to the other
world—for this world needs a new generation to populate and work in it.
All animals and people enter this world for a reason. All living things are
as soldiers or officials, happy with their appointed task. The sound we hear is
their praise and glorifying as they begin, or their pleasure while working, or
their thanksgiving as they finish. Believers see all things as obedient
servants, friendly officials, a lovable book of their Most Generous Master and
All‑Compassionate Owner.
Many more such beautiful, sublime, and pleasurable truths arise from belief.
This is because belief bears the seed of what is, in effect, a Tuba tree of
Paradise, whereas unbelief contains the seed of a Zaqqum tree of Hell. Safety
and well‑being are found only in Islam and belief. Therefore, always thank God,
saying: “Praise be to God for Islam and perfect belief.” |