Ethical Viewpoint of Islam
By Abul A'la Maududi [Pg. 20]
Source
Ethical viewpoint of Islam
The Predicament of the Modern World
Contemporary Approaches to Morality
Shades of Religious Morality
Polytheistic Morality
Morality of Asceticism
Morality without Religion
A Rapid Look at the Secular Moral Philosophies
The Highest Good or the Ultimate End of Human Conduct
Knowledge of Good and Evil
Sanction Behind Moral Law
Motive of Moral Conduct
Islamic Viewpoint
First Questions
Foundations of Morality
Source of Moral Values
Sanction and Motives
Islamic Concept of God and Its Consequences for Morality
A Perfect Ethical System
Horizon Enlarged
Mission of Man
Under normal circumstances when the stream of life runs calm and undisturbed,
every individual enjoys a sense of mental peace and satisfaction; but the
clear and shining surface of the stream fails to reveal the impurities which
have settled at the bottom. They remain hidden and concealed. Deceived by
the superficial calmness of the surface, people seldom feel the need to
probe under the surface and get a feel of the currents and crosscurrents
existing inside. But when the stream goes in spate, the impurities hidden
at the bottom rise to the surface and become the gazing-stock. It is then
that every one who has eyes under his brows can see very clearly that the
life-stream has been carrying within its fold such a bewildering stock of
filth and impurities. This precisely is the moment when people are likely
to become conscious of the necessity of probing deeper into the realities
of life, of finding out the causes of the rot that-was, otherwise, hidden
from the public view, and of devising ways and means to keep the stream
of life pure and clean. If, however, the people do not wake up to this need
even at such critical moments, this would betray a degree of moral insensibility
which makes human beings totally indifferent to the very idea of social
and moral well-being. Thank God, man has not stooped to that extent, and
herein lies the real hope of the future.
(I) The Predicament of the Modern World
The times through which we are passing are disturbed and distressing. They
present an abnormal spectacle. The life-stream is in convulsion. Nations
of the world are in conflict with each other and everyone is anxious to
strike at the other only to serve his national interests. The tension has
grown to such dimensions that it is no longer confined to governments and
national leaderships only but has strained relations even on the personal
level. Nations are arrayed against nations. Communal groups are at daggers
drawn with each other. Individuals are behaving like sworn enemies of other
individuals. Personal and social rivalries are rampant. Life is in a tumult.
The result is that the moral vices, which people were nurturing within their
bosoms now stand fully exposed. We are able to see in plain colors the moral
depredations which had hitherto escaped the observation of the ordinary
men and women. Only the unthinking can now harbor the delusion that nothing
is wrong with the diseased humanity, that all is well in the state of Denmark.
Only those individuals whose moral sense is perhaps altogether dead can
remain unmindful towards the diagnosis and the treatment of the crisis that
is threatening our existence. The contemporary situation is alarming and
the danger is too pressing to be ignored.
The world has progressed in certain important directions. Nevertheless we
are, today, witnessing the sorry spectacle of great nations indulging, on
a large scale, in the moral vices which the conscience of humanity has always
condemned with one voice. Injustice and ruthlessness, cruelty and brutality,
falsehood and fraud, treachery and hypocrisy, breach of trust, self-aggrandizement,
exploitation and other crimes are no longer confined to individuals. They
have become an integral part of the national policies of -certain countries.
The great nations of the world are committing in relation to their rival
nations and groups acts which, if committed even by their own subjects,
would evoke for them the severest punishments. Instances are not lacking
where, in the name of "diplomacy" and "strategy", nations have chosen to
select condemned criminals and placed them at the helm of their affairs.
There is no form of villainy, however heinous, which under the direction
of such leaders, these nations have not committed during the second World
War. Lies were fabricated and broadcast on a wide scale. The very air which
we breathe has been poisoned by Radios spinning tissues of falsehood. Even,
today double-talk and double-act are the order of the day. Many a nation
has taken upon itself the role of virtual robbers and bandits-what else
is imperialism or colonialism, red or white or yellow!
What is more gruesome is the triumph of hypocrisy. Even in the face of naked
aggrandizement, powerful nations have been trying to pose as angels and
debunking their rivals while the fact is that the pot and the kettle are
both equally black. Justice means justice only for their own people; rights,
whatever they are, for them alone. Their ethical code not only legalizes
that other peoples can be deprived of their just rights, but on occasions
even approves of such acts as highly meritorious. The nations of the world
have one standard for taking things in and another for giving them out.
The criterion which a nation lays down for itself vanishes into thin air
as soon as the question of other people's benefit comes in. Every nation
infringes those very rules of morality which it insists upon others to observe.
There are instances in which representatives of great powers, while putting
their signatures on international agreements with solemn faces and cultured
looks, have nurtured in their hearts the resolve to go back on their pledges
at the first opportunity of furthering their national interests. And when
all this is going on a vast scale there are very few who dare to raise the
voice of truth and awaken the benumbed conscience of humanity. Sermons on
morality are directed at others only and not at their own people and their
own selves, however heinous their own crimes may be. It seems as if the
conscience of humanity has been deadened. [1. Editor's Note: A friend who
was kind enough to go through the draft (translation) objected that the
above statement seems rather exaggerated. The indictment on the modern world
is, in fact, so grave and the charges so revolting that the first reaction
of every good human being would naturally be; it cannot be true! which perhaps
would be another way of saying: it should not be true! But alas! it is true
and only those who are unaware of the gruesome facts of life or who are
too enamored of the exterior charm and glamour of the West can ignore or
refuse to admit them. The record of the great powers is, unfortunately,
not clean on this score. Both kinds of persecution, physical and moral,
have been shamefacedly resorted to by the imperialist powers in their unfortunate
colonies. Germany and Japan committed these crimes in the areas they conquered.
Even the record of SOAP in Japan and at the personal level of the GIs in
the society at large has been despicable. Russia's crimes under Stalin and
particularly the Communist Oppression in the Muslim states of Asia has been
unparalleled in its heinousness. And what is being done in Vietnam by the
great leader of the democratic world at the time of the writing of this
note is sufficient to put every conscientious human being to shame. (By
the way Bertrand Russell had demanded that the U.S. President should be
prosecuted for his crimes against humanity). The author has deliberately
avoided giving specific instances in the text and has confined himself to
making general statements, which nonetheless are based on actual behavior
of the so-called civilized world. Every point can be substantiated by an
undergoing row of horrifying data, hair-raising statistics and harrowing
statements and confessions. Those who want to read the story of this revolting
depravity of modern man may see the following, to mention only a few; Lord
Russell of Liverpool, The Scourge of the Swastika, London, 1959; Linyu Tang,
The Secret Name, London, 1960; E. F. M. Durbin, The Politics of Democratic
Socialism (particularly the Appendix), London, 1948; Father Trevor Huddlestone,
Naught for Your Comfort, Collins, London: Bertrand Russell, How Near is
War? A Fleet Forum Publication, London : Henry S. Cammager, Freedom, Loyalty,
Dissent, Oxford, 1944; David Dallin, Forced Labor in Soviet Russia. A concise
documented statement will also be found in; Khurshid Ahmad, Fanaticism,
Intolerance andlslam, Islamic Publications Ltd., Lahore, 1960.]
This is a horrifying and detestable situation indeed and it is extremely
painful for me to delineate upon it. The glaring moral vices I have referred
to above are sufficient to show the depths of the abyss of moral degradation
to which we have stooped.. In fact the entire humanity is suffering from
the festering sores of moral depravity. The virus has spread all over the
body-social, and governments and parliaments, courts and chambers of law,
radio and the press, universities and educational institutions, banks and
commercial combines have, in different degrees, become infected with its
venom. The greatest tragedy of all is that even knowledge, learning and
science, which are the most precious assets of mankind and its common heritage,
have been poisoned and are being callously harnessed for the very annihilation
of mankind. [2. How Biology was used by the Nazis and demography is being
used by many for purposes of power-politics is a sordid story. "So much
evil use has been made of knowledge that our imagination does not readily
rise to the thought of the good uses that are possible." Russell, Human
Society in Ethics and Politics, ab. cit., p. 238.] Resources which Providence
has bestowed upon mankind are being frittered away in mutual wrangles and
feuds and the noble qualities of courage, sacrifice, generosity, patience
and resolution, have been yoked to the service of vicious ends.
It is obvious that social evils make their appearance on a vast scale only
when moral degradation of the individuals is steep, when the grip of the
moral values becomes lax and when fidelity to the standards of discipline
is shattered. You cannot conceive of a society possessing a majority of
morally robust individuals and collectively exhibiting signs of moral corruption.
It is inconceivable that a community of virtuous people should entrust its
leadership to a group of unscrupulous persons and remain passive spectators
when their communal, national and international affairs are conducted in
flagrant violation of moral principles. Therefore, if the peoples of the
world are exhibiting on a large scale the seamy side of human nature through
their collective institutions and policies, that can only lead us to the
view that, in spite of all its intellectual and material progress, mankind
is passing through a period of intense moral decadence which has gripped
by far the greatest majority of human beings. It is better to frankly confess
about this situation than hide our heads, ostrich-like, in the deceptive
hey of polished phrases, varnished words and meaningless platitudes. No
amount of prankish prattle or window-dressing can hide the rot. Nay, that
will do positive harm. For, if this state of affairs persists, the time
is not far off when humanity will meet with a colossal disaster and will
plunge headlong into an era of all-pervading darkness. [3. "Are we to continue
entrusting our affairs to men without sympathy, without knowledge, without
imagination and having nothing to recommend them except methodical hatred
and skill in vituperation? (I do not mean this as an indictment of all statesmen;
but it applies to those who guide the destinies of Russia and to some who
have influence in other countries). When Othello is about to kill Desdemona,
he says, "But yet the pity of it, Iago. Oh Iago, the pity of it". I doubt
whether Malenkov and his opposite number, as they prepare the extermination
of mankind, have enough pity in their character to be capable of this exclamation,
or even to realize the nature of what they are preparing. I suppose that
never for a moment have they thought of man as a single species with possibilities
that may be realized or thwarted. Never have their minds risen beyond the
daily considerations of momentary expediency in a narrow contest for brief
power……The future of man is at stake." Bertrand Russell, ibid., p. 238.]
Now, if we do not wish to make a blind rush for that evil day, we should
look for the primary source from where the present evil is emanating with
all the fury of a flood. And since it is a moral crisis it must obviously
be traced in the contemporary moral systems, followed to by the people of
the world. Attitude and behavior have their roots in the ethical beliefs
and moral concepts of the people. In the final analysis the ultimate forces
responsible for the malaise will be found only there.
The question, therefore, arises: What are the contemporary moral systems
which are fashioning the life-pattern of the individual and the society?
When we analyze this question closely we find that all these systems broadly
fall under two categories:
1. Systems which are based on belief in God and life-after-death; and
2. Systems which are devoid of any idea of God and arise from secular sources.
Let us now examine both these broad approaches to morality and find out
the modes of their expression and their respective effects.
(II) Contemporary Approaches to Morality
(a) Shades of Religions Morality
Ethical conceptions based on belief in God and life-after-death are determined
by the nature of man's ideas about God and life-hereafter. Our examination
of the problem shall proceed as under:
(i) polytheistic Morality
A great majority of human beings who believe in God are guilty of associating
other deities with the One True God Who is the Creator of the universe and
man. They have invested beings other than God, with certain powers concerning
their own day-to-day life, although all such powers belong to God alone.
They have drawn a wishful and imaginary picture of these godlings and have
attributed to them some or all "divine" powers. They commit sins hoping
that these godlings would secure them forgiveness. Like unbridled animals
such individuals roam about and graze in the pastures of life as they please,
indifferent to the rights of others and neglectful of their own duties and
obligations, making no distinction between things lawful and unlawful. In
exchange for a handful of offerings, these godlings, they assume, would
guarantee them salvation. Even if they go out to commit burglary, the policemen
fall asleep through the courtesy of these godlings! It appears as if an
agreement has been entered into between these people and their patron-gods
to the effect that these people shall hold favorable nice belief about the
godlings and shall propitiate them by occasional offerings and in lieu thereof
the godlings have undertaken to look after the affairs of these individuals
to their best advantage in this world, and to intercede with God on their
behalf in the hereafter pleading that these persons had been under their
protection and should not, therefore, be made to suffer in any way. In certain
cases even the need of intercession may not arise, for someone else has
atoned their sins in advance. [4. For a more detailed evaluation of polytheism
see: Abu] A`la Maududi, Islam our Jahiliyyah (Urdu). Islamic Publications
Ltd., Lahore. An English Translation of the same is under preparation.-Editor.]
These polytheistic beliefs have reduced to absurdity the doctrine of life-after-death
with the result that the whole structure of morality built up by religion
has crumbled to dust. Though many moral teachings of religions are still
preserved in the pages of religious literature and are endowed with all
outward show of respect, nevertheless, beliefs of the nature mentioned above
have provided innumerable avenues of escape from the necessity of fulfilling
the moral obligations, and that too in such a wonderful way that whichever
avenue of escape they choose to take, they are always sure of reaching invariably
the goal of salvation.
Leaving aside such perverted beliefs, we find that even where the doctrine
of belief in God and life-after-death has retained its original purity of
form, its demands and requirements have been restricted to a very narrow
sphere of man's individual life and the entire gamut of socio-cultural life
has been excluded from its active jurisdiction. A few acts, a few ceremonies,
a few rites and rituals and a few restrictions in the sphere of individual
and family life are all that God appears to demand of His believers and,
in exchange for these offerings, He has prepared for them a soothing Paradise.
If they fulfill these demands in relation to God, they are at liberty to
pursue other affairs of this world as they wish. If they fail to carry out
even these `easy' religious duties, they can still hope for Divine forgiveness
which will throw open to them the gates of Paradise and secure for them
unrestricted entrance therein despite their heavy load of sins. This narrow
and distorted concept of religion has greatly circumscribed the field of
religious practices, as a result of which most of the important spheres
of human life have become excluded from the guidance and control of religion.
Moreover, even in this narrow domain of religious life, there is an escape
from moral discipline and some people do not hesitate to take advantage
of this leeway.
(ii) Morality of Asceticism
There is another group of religious people who are free from the above mentioned
perverted notions, who hold sincerely to the belief in God, and harbor no
false illusion about life-after-death. Such people are blessed with undoubted
moral purity and a high and noble character, but, generally speaking, their
narrow conception about religion and spiritual life have made them ineffective.
They adopt an attitude of indifference to the practical problems of life,
and either confine their activities to a few specific acts which engross
them in cleansing and purifying their souls so that they may be able to
hear voices from the Unseen and catch glimpses of the Divine Being in this
world of matter. They think that the path of salvation lies not through
the rough and tumble of life but somewhere on its outskirts, so that they
may just touch it and escape without coming into full contact with it. According
to them, the only way of attaining proximity to God is to mould a few outer
aspects of life in the pattern furnished by religion, to purify the soul
by using some useful methods, and to pass their lives in meditation and
contemplation, in religious exercises and so-called spiritual practices,
as if God wanted them to develop extra-sensory powers and to grow into something
super-human, and as if He has sent to this earth human beings equipped with
all the moral and material qualities to live here not as human beings made
of flesh and bones and inspired by moral and social ideals but like jinn
or angels renouncing the world in toto. This attitude is in radical violation
of the entire scheme of nature and is a virtual revolt against the Will
of God as immanent in His Creation. The greatest harm done to humanity by
this wrong concept of religion is that it has removed from practical life
some of those individuals whom God had endowed with high moral qualities,
thus leaving the field or worldly affairs mostly for persons of inferior
moral caliber. [5. See: Henry Hazlitt, The Foundations of Morality, D. Van
Nostrang Company, Inc., Princeton, 1964; Chap. 22.]
This, in brief, is the situation obtaining in the religious world. The greater
part of humanity has been deprived of the moral force which comes from belief
in God and life-after-death. As against this the minority which is in possession
of this force, has voluntarily withdrawn itself from the leadership and
guidance of mankind, presenting the spectacle of a battery which has exhausted
itself through misuse.
(b) Morality Without Religion
The ethical code adhered to by most of those persons and nations which wield
power and are directing the affairs of humanity today is devoid of any conception
of God and life-after-death. This is not accidental, for the ethical values
of humanity have been deliberately divested by these people of the idea
of God and the life-hereafter. Indeed, they have openly refused to accept
the guidance of God in ethical matters. Although the greater part of them
do profess one religion or the other, they have reduced their religious
faith to a few norms of individual and personal life, a sort of private
belief which every individual should carefully keep to himself alone. They
believe that religion should have no concern with the collective life of
humanity. There is no need, therefore, for them to turn to any supernatural
.guidance for the direction of human affairs. This view began to influence
the life and thought of the people and social movements emerged during the
nineteenth century to organize life on a morality without religion. Dr.
Flex Adler of Columbia University was one of the pioneers of the movement.
The movement was initiated in America in 1876. The basic creed of the ethical
movement was expressed in the following words in the statement of objectives
of the American Ethical Union, a federation .of six ethical societies of
America:
To assert the supreme importance of the ethical factor in all relations
Of life, personal, social, national and international, apart from any theological
or metaphysical considerations." [6. Vide Encyclopaedia Britannica, Vol.
8, p. 757.]
The movement also spread to England where a Union of Ethical Societies was
formed. The society later merged itself in the Ethical Union in 1928. Its
main object was stated to be:
"To promote by all lawful means the study of ethical principles; to advocate
a religion of human fellowship and service, based upon the principle that
the supreme aim of religion is the love of goodness, and that moral ideas
and the moral life are independent of beliefs as to the ultimate nature
of things and a life-after-death; and, by purely human and material means,
to help men to love, know, and do the right in all relations of life."
These words fully represent the views of the upholders of secularism and
also fairly reflect the mind of the people who wield power and control the
destinies of the people in the modern world. Most of them have, in practice,
deprived their ethics of the idea of God and of Life-hereafter and freed
themselves from every obligation to follow the guidance of religion in the
sphere of social morality. [7. For a detailed study of this school of thought
see: F. Adler, An Ethical Philosophy of Life (1918) and The Reconstruction
of the Spiritual Ideal (1923); H. J. Bridges, The Ethical Movement, 1911;
A. Martin, The Distinctive Features of the Ethical Movement, 1926; also:
"The Ethical Movement", Encyclopaedia Britannica. Vol. 8, pp. 756-57 and
Gustane Spillies, "The Ethical Movement" in Hastings' Encyclopaedia of Religion
and Ethics.-Editor.]
Now we shall try to review briefly the ethical philosophies and standards
which the leading western philosophers have developed after freeing their
thought from the grip of religion.
(III) A Rapid look at the Secular Moral Philosophies
(a) The Highest Good or the Ultimate End of Human Conduct
The first basic question of ethical philosophy is: What is the supreme good
the attainment of which should be the life purpose of man, the goal of all
his endeavors, the summum bonum to which human conduct is to be directed
and in the light of which it may be judged as to what is good or evil, right
or wrong, virtue or vice?
Man has not been able to find an agreed ethical standard. With some this
standard is happiness, [8. The school of thought which subscribes to this
view is known as "Eudemonism" its important shades being "Egoistic Eudemonism",
"universalistic Eudemonism" or "Utilitarianism" and "Altruistic Eudemonism"
or "Altruism".-Editor.] with others perfection [9. "Perfection" is the name
of this school which maintains that the highest good of human conduct is
the fullest development of all the capacities of man in so far as these
can co-exist in an harmonious whole.--Editor.] and with yet others duty
for the sake of duty. [10. The founder of this school is Immanuel Rant.-Editor.]
If we take "happiness" as the highest good, a number of questions arise.
What kind of happiness is it that is sought? Is it the happiness that follows
the gratification of bodily and sensual desires, or that which a man feels
when he is engaged in self-adornment from the viewpoint of art, aesthetics
or spiritualism? Whose happiness is to be sought: the happiness of the individual,
or of the society of which the individual is a member, or of the entire
mankind, or simply the happiness of others?
Similarly, several questions arise if we take "perfection" as the supreme
end. For example, what is the conception and standard of perfection? Whose
perfection is to be sought: of the class or group to which one belongs,
of the individual, of the society, of the nation or of the whole of humanity?
Similarly those who adhere to the view that `duty for the sake of duty"
constitutes the moral standard cannot avoid certain searching questions:
What in fact is this imperative? Who has laid it down? What is the rationale
for its obedience?
Different answers have been given to each one of these questions by different
groups of thinkers, and the answers are different, conflicting and even
contradictory, in theory as well as in practice. Those who are at the helm
of affairs in the modern world-may they be rulers and administrators, generals
of armies, judges of courts of law, legislatures, teachers engaged in training
new generations, business magnates controlling the economic machinery, etc.-have
no agreed standard of values. Instead, every individual or group has its
own separate standard and although working within the framework of the same
culture each is wedded to a different ideal. There is no uniform and accepted
summum bonum. With some it is personal happiness and it is this which determines
their entire social conduct (Egoistic Eudemonism and in its crude form simple
Hedonism). In spite of this, we are deceived by their cultured appearance
and fall into the delusion that they can suitably serve as administrators,
judges, ministers, teachers, or as other similar public functionaries. Side
by side with these people there are others who regard as their objective
the happiness and well-being of the specific group with whom they are bound
by ties of affection and interest (Utilitarianism). For them this is the
supreme good and to strive for it constitutes real virtue. This viewpoint
makes them dangerous for the rest of mankind. And yet their outward decency
induces us to take them for gentlemen. Similar situations confront us when
we consider the cases of those who regard `perfection' as the ultimate good
or those who believe in `duty for duty's sake.' Their dignified appearance
hardly bears any affinity with their moral values and this misleads the
people. The result is that despite loud protestations of morality, these
conflicting notions and the dual-standards employed by the leaders of the
modern civilization have wrought havoc inhuman life. And the root lies in
the confusion of moral values and concepts and the lack of a universally
accepted standard which is in keeping with the realities of human existence.
(b) Knowledge of Good and Evil
The next important problem of moral philosophy is to discover the means
whereby we may distinguish the good from the evil. What are the real means
to obtain knowledge of good and evil, right and wrong?, How to end out virtue
and vice? What is the correct source of this knowledge? Mankind has no agreed
answer to this question either. Everybody plays a different tune. Some say
that human experience is the only reliable source of our knowledge of good
and evil, [11. This is the view-point of Empiricism.-Editor.] that this
source consists of the knowledge of laws of life and conditions of existence;
others say that it is intuition, [12. This school of thought is known as
Intuitionism.-Editor.] and still others claim that it is reason. [13. Rationalism
is the name of the school which presents this `view'. 3t is represented
by philosophers like, Plato, Aristotle, Spinoza, Hegel etc.-Editor.]
We are again confronted with a confused situation. If we hold that the above-mentioned
criteria are the sources of our knowledge of moral values, it automatically
becomes the first principle of ethics that there should be no absolute standard
of morality and that, like a shapeless fluid, ethics should follow the line
of least resistance and take all forms according to the shape of the vessel
that contains it. This would lead us to pure relativism.
To arrive at true knowledge by means of human experience alone it is essential
that full data and complete information should be available at one place
and then some omniscient and perfectly balanced. mind should deduce conclusions
therefrom. But neither of these two pre-requisites can be fulfilled. First
of all, human experience has not yet attained perfection. Data are inadequate;
knowledge of experience is imperfect; and its flow being continuous we are
not in a position to be clear about the exact fund of experience which would
suffice to reveal the reality to our unwary eyes.
Secondly, whatever fund of human experience has accumulated. so far, its
different cross-sections have their own specialists and experts, who deduce
conclusions in their narrow and limited field according to their vision
and peculiar mental make-up, what to say of their prejudices and predilections.
The question now arises; is it possible to regard such conclusions, based
as they are on imperfect vision and partial experience, as correct? If not,
how prudent and fair it would be to consider this source sufficient to yield
a reliable knowledge of good and evil? [14. For a fuller appreciation of
this point see: John Lock, An Essay concerning Human Understanding, Everyman's
Library, )i. P. Dutton & Co., New York, 1947: Bertrand Russell, Human Knowledge:
Its Scope and Limits, Simon and Schustee, New York, 1948. For a criticism
of empiricism see: William Adams Brown, Pathways to Certainty, Charles Scribner's
Sons, New York, 1931; Lecomte du Nuoy, Human Destiny, Mentor Book, 1963
; Sir Muhammad Iqbal, Reconstruction of Religious Thought in Islam, Lahore;
Sayyid Abul A'la Maududi, The Religion of Truth, Lahore. -Editor.]
The same is true of the laws of life and of the conditions of human existence.
Either we should wait until such time when our knowledge of these laws and
conditions becomes so perfect as to enable us to build up our code of good
and evil. Or, in view of the present imperfection and incompleteness of
our knowledge, different individuals should try to build up their own codes
of good and evil according to their own limited fields, prejudices and intellectual
levels. But this would perhaps necessitate a change, almost every morning,
in their ethical norms. For, with the discovery of every fresh installment
of knowledge, values will change with the result that what is good today
may become evil tomorrow and vice versa. Thus, we would be caught in the
whirlpool of sheer moral relativism and utter confusion.
Reliance on reason and intuition presents similar difficulties: No doubt,
human reason is capable, within certain limits, of distinguishing good from
evil, and every individual has been endowed with it in some measure. Similarly
the knowledge of good and evil is, to some extent, intuitive, because human
conscience instinctively feels uneasy in the presence of evil. But neither
of them is sufficient by itself to be taken as an authoritative and reliable
source of our knowledge of moral values. Indeed, whichever is uncritically
accepted as self-sufficient, it will fail us before we reach the journey's
end. It may give us knowledge but not wisdom. Our information will remain
imperfect, biased, limited to certain fields, distorted and disbalanced
and even contradictory. The variety of interpretations would be bewildering.
A commonly agreed and universally accepted standard will continue to elude
our grip. [15. Those who want to pursue a study of these aspects of normal
philosophy may see: C. D. Broad, Five Types of Ethical Theory, Routledge
& Kegen Paul Ltd., London, 1951 : William E. Hocking, Types of Philosophy,
Revised Edition, Charles Scribner's Sons, New York, 1939 (for relativism
see pp. 121-138 & for Utilitarianism see pp. 175-212); Iqbal, Reconstruction
of Religious Thought in Islam; Al-Ghazzali, Tahafatul Falasafa, English
Translation by Karnali, Pakistan Philosophical Congress, Lahore.-Editor.]
This chaos, to which I have been referring, is not confined to learned treatises
and philosophic discourses only, but is fully reflected in practical life,
in the civilizations and cultures of the world. [16. See Pitirim A. Sorokin,
The Crisis of Our Age, E. P. Dutton & Co., New York, 1951, Chapters I, III
and IV. Editor.] People who are actively engaged in building up human civilization,
whether as leader or as followers, are all turning to these diverse sources
to know what is good or evil, and which is right or wrong, with the result
that the good of one individual or group is in conflict with the good of
other individuals or groups. This chaos has left human morality without
any solid basis. Things which the world had always held to be morally reprehensible
and those which were, for ages, regarded as crimes and sins have now become
either absolute or relative virtues, at least with some groups of human
beings. Similarly, what mankind once considered to be meritorious acts of
virtue are laughed at today as crass stupidity. Several groups are going
against these, not only without any sense of guilt or shame but rather with
boastfulness. In days gone by, if anyone told a lie, he still believed that
truth and no falsehood was the standard of morality. [17. This is what Lenin
says: "we must be ready to employ trickery, deceit, law breaking, withholding
and concealing truth. We can and must write in a language which sows among
the masses hate, revulsion, scorn, and the like, towards those who disagree
with us." quoted by Henry Hazlitt, The Foundation of Morality, op. cit.,
p. 340.-Editor.] But certain modern ideologies have turned lying into a
virtue and have given it the august name of propaganda. A whole science
of broadcasting falsehood has been developed and many a nation is practicing
it on a large scale in the sacred name of diplomacy. Similar is the case
with other evils, which have all along been recognized as evils but have
now, thanks to new fangled philosophies, been raised to the dignity of virtues,
either in an absolute or a relative sense.
(c) Sanction Behind Moral Law
The third fundamental question of ethics is: What is the sanction behind
the moral law? In response to this problem the advocates of the theories
of happiness and Perfection state that the virtues leading to happiness
or perfection are self-enforcing and the vices making for sorrow or imperfection
are repugnant to human nature, and that, therefore, the ethical law does
not stand in need of any external authority. Another group also arrives
at the same conclusion but through a different line of reasoning. It says
that the law of duty is the self-imposed law of "practical reason", and
hence it does not need any force external to itself. A third group holds
that political power is the real sanction behind moral law and vests all
those powers and functions to the state, which originally belonged to Almighty.
A fourth school assigns this status to society. All these replies have created
and are still creating disorder and confusion in the life of humanity. The
first two carried individual liberty to such irresponsible extremes that
the very fabric of corporate and social life was threatened with subversion.
The reaction. came with the appearance of new social theories which either
elevated the state to the status of an absolute divinity and reduced the
individual to the position of an abject slave or a cog in the lifeless machine
of social organization, or left to society as a whole the decision of what
is morally good and bad for an individual. In reality, however, neither
the state nor the society as a whole is free from imperfections and susceptibility
to error.
(d) Motive of Moral Conduct
We are confronted with a similar situation when we come to the question
of the motive which induces man to obey moral law even against his natural
inclinations or personal interests? One school of thought says that desire
for pleasure or fear of pain are sufficient to act as motives for this purpose;
another group thinks that longing for perfection and a natural distaste
for imperfections form the motive force. A third group relies on man's inborn
respect for law; while a fourth group gives expression to the hope that
the state constitutes the proper agency to reward acts virtuous and to punish
acts contravening moral law. A fifth school lays emphasis on the rewards
and punishments awarded by the society in the form of esteem or denunciation.
Each of these answers to the basic question of motives finds a prominent
place in one or the other contemporary ethical system. But even a cursory
examination shows that all these motives can serve equally well as inducements
to moral vice or moral good. In fact they may be more effective for evil
than for good. In any case, they are wholly inadequate as basis for higher
morality.
The foregoing brief and rapid survey [18. Those interested in a thorough
discussion over these problems of moral philosophy may read the following
with profit: H. Sidgwick, Method of Ethics and History of Ethics; J. Martinean:
Types of Ethical Theory; H. Rashdall, Theory of Good and Evil (2 Vols.);
C. D. Broad, Five Types ofEthical Theory; Henry Haziitt; The Foundations
of Morality; Jacques Maritain, Moral Philosophy: An Historical and Critical
Survey of the Great Systems, New York, 1964. Editor.] of the contemporary
moral scene makes it evident that the world is faced with widespread moral
confusion. Having made himself independent of God, man has not been able
to discover any alternative basis for building up his moral life with any
degree of satisfaction. All the basic ethical questions have become insoluble
for him. He has neither been able to discover that supreme good which could
serve as the object of all his endeavors and enable him to judge the right
from the wrong, the virtue from the vice; nor he has discovered a satisfactory
source for his knowledge of moral values. He has not even succeeded in securing
for himself that sanction on the basis of which some noble, comprehensive
and universal code of morality could be enforced; nor has he put his finger
on that motive which could induce human beings to follow the path of truth
and virtue and abstain from falsehood even in the face of adversity. Having
rebelled against God, man tried arrogantly to solve these questions without
His guidance, and he thought he had solved them. But it is precisely a result
of this escape from the Lord that he is faced with a crisis which is threatening
the very existence of human civilization.
This is the situation with which humanity is beset today. Has the time really
not yet come when we should search for that true basis on which moral life
might be happily built? This kind of search is not merely an academic one
but is also a practical necessity and one of the most pressing needs of
our times. The critical times through which we are passing have added infinitely
to its importance. It is in view of this consideration that I am making
my own submissions on the problem and I hope that those who are conscious
of this need will give some deep thought to them.
(IV) Islamic Viewpoint
After years of thought and reflection I have reached the conclusion that
there is only one correct basis for morality and that is presented by Islam.
Here we get an answer to all the basic ethical questions; an answer free
from the weaknesses and fallacies from which the viewpoints expressed by
secular and other religious philosophies alike suffer. The fundamental weakness
of all these systems of ethics religious or secular-is that they fail to
build up simultaneously a firm and integrated moral personality of the individual
and a sound and healthy organization of the body-social. The situation is
altogether different in respect of Islam. Here we find such comprehensive
moral guidance as can ensure our progress to the highest pinnacle in every
sphere of human life and activity. Islam gives us basic moral norms and
values to guide and control the entire gamut of man's life. It gives a comprehensive
code of behavior for the individual and shows him the way to the highest
possible moral excellence and also gives ethical principles on which the
edifice of a truly righteous society can be raised and which, if accepted
as the basis of individual and collective conduct, can save human life from
the chaos and anarchy that have overtaken it today. Let us now make an effort
to appreciate the Islamic viewpoint.
(a) First Questions
The first grave mistake which secular philosophers have committed in connection
with ethics and moral values lies in starting their enquiry from the wrong
place. Instead of beginning with first questions, they have jumped into
the middle and lodged themselves into a muddle. They have disturbed the
sequence in which the question of the basis of morality should have been
discussed. And once the order is disturbed nothing but confusion results.
The question, what is the criterion of right and wrong for purposes of human
conduct and what is the ultimate good for the realization of which man should
direct his efforts is, in reality, a question which arises much later. The
first problem to be settled is that of man's place and status in the universe.
This problem enjoys priority over all others, because it would be meaningless
to build up any ethical system without first deciding as to the real position
of man in the universe. The question about standards of conduct will defy
all solutions unless the status and the position of man are correctly determined.
For example, if you have to determine your conduct in relation to a commodity
and to decide how far and in what way it is rightful for you to utilize
it for your benefit, you must, in the first instance, ascertain your legal
status, vis-a-vis, the said commodity. If it belongs to another person and
your position is merely that of a trustee, your conduct must, of necessity,
be different from what it would be if you were the owner of it and had full
proprietary rights over it. And that is not all. Not only the question of
status is decisive in determining the nature of your conduct vis-a-vis the
commodity in question but on this very point will rest- another very fundamental
question; who would be the proper authority to determine your conduct in
relation to it, i.e., whether ,you yourself enjoy this authority, or it
would be enjoyed by the person whose agent you are.
Islam takes up this very question before anything else and tells us clearly
that the status of man in this world is. that of an `abd (God's servant
arid slave) who is also Khulifat-ul-Allah (Allah's deputy and vicegerent).
All things in the world with which he comes in contact belong to God. Even
his own body and the capacities with which he is endowed are not in fact
his own, [19. That is why suicide is a moral crime in Islam: .Editor.] but
are a trust from the Lord.
God has appointed him as his vicegerent giving him the power to use these
objects for his benefit. And in this lies his test and trial. The final
results of this test will not be declared in this world but only at the
time when individuals and nations and, indeed, the whole of mankind shall
have finished their career on the earth and the consequences and effects
of their actions and strivings shall have become fully manifest: It is then
that God will examine the account of each human being and will decide as
to who has duly carried out the duties of His stewardship and who has not.
And this examination will not be confined to any one thing or one department
of life, but will cover the entire range of a person's individual and social
conduct. It will be an examination of all the faculties of his mind and
body with which he has been endowed and also of every kind of authority
and power over external objects which has been delegated to him. [20. For
a detailed study of this point see Maududi, Foundations of Islamic Faith
and Culture, Islamic Publications Ltd., Lahore.]
This being man's real position in the world, it logically follows that he
is not the master-but the agent and the deputy. His power and authority
are bound to be limited. Sovereignty belongs to God alone; man is His vicegerent
and the only moral course open to him is to fulfill the task which the Sovereign
has assigned to him. He is not totally free to determine his own behavior,
the standards of right and wrong must be taken from the Sovereign. Man has
no absolute right to determine the course of his own conduct-the course
of conduct has been laid down by the Lord. Man's job is to faithfully and
scrupulously pursue the mission assigned to him. The code of conduct is
not to be formulated by man, he has to take it from God and follow it. Creator
is the law-giver; man has to act within that framework which the Sovereign
has laid for him. Once this position is accepted and the nature of God-man
relationship is clearly understood all ethical questions which have been
agitating the minds of philosophers from time immemorial find appropriate
solutions. These solutions are clear, precise and definite. And they are
based on reality. They are universal and eternal.
(b) Foundations of Morality
If the position assigned to man by Islam is accepted by him, then it becomes
automatically settled, that:
(i) to emerge successfully from the test prescribed by God and to attain
His pleasure constitute the supreme good and the ultimate objective of human
life;
(ii) the criterion of right or wrong for human conduct lies in determining
how far it helps or hinders man in the attainment of this supreme good;
(iii) the real source of man's knowledge of good and evil is found in the
guidance furnished by God through His prophets-other sources of knowledge
can be employed only as auxiliaries and aids to it, but none of them deserves
to be treated as its substitute; and,
(iv) the real sanction for morality lies in the love for aid the fear of
God-the real motive-force which would impel us to observe the canons of
morality and to abstain from immoral conduct would be the love of God, the
desire to seek His Pleasure, the fear of His Displeasure and the consequences
-good or otherwise-which are to follow in the Hereafter.
In this way not only all the basic moral problems are solved satisfactorily,
but the system of morality reared on this foundation also duly incorporates
within itself all the best from the moral ideas presented by philosophers
and moral theorists from time to time, assigning to them their due place
within its framework. The weakness of the ethical systems expounded by philosophers
and the sages is not that they are totally devoid of truth and reality but
that they regard some particular aspect of truth as the whole truth. Whey
have fallen a prey to the fallacy of regarding the part as the whole, and
as this apparently left many gaps and loopholes which they had to fill by
drawing upon imagination and falling on materials of doubtful validity,
thus introducing a large slice of unreality in their systems and making
the over-all picture distorted and disproportionate. On the other hand,
Islam presents the whole truth and in this whole truth all partial truths,
which remain imperfect in isolation from one another, are assimilated and
synthesized into a perfect unity, nothing superfluous, nothing lacking.
Happiness has a place in Islam, but it is the happiness which follows the
observance of the law laid down by God. It is physical as well as mental,
artistic as well as spiritual; it relates to the individual as much as to
the group, the nation and, indeed, to humanity as a whole. All these different
kinds of happiness are not conceived by Islam as antagonistic to one another
but mutually coherent and harmonious.
In Islam, there is a place for perfection also. It consists in emerging
successful from the test prescribed by God in the trial of existence; and
it relates to the individual, the nation and, indeed, to the whole of mankind.
The correct ethical conduct for an individual, therefore, is to advance
himself towards perfection and to assist and help others in the same direction.
Kant's standpoint also finds a place of honor in Islam and here the concept
of Duty also gets the sheet-anchor which it lacks in Kant's own system of
thought.
The `categorical imperative' of which Kant wrote, but which he could not
elucidate, is in reality God's Law. God has determined its form and it is
entitled to obedience solely in virtue of being His law. Indeed, moral goodness
is nothing other than absolute and willing submission to the Law of God.
(c) Source of Moral Values
Similarly, as regards the source of the knowledge of moral good and evil,
Islam does not reject altogether those sources to which the philosophers
turn, but merely incorporates them at their proper place in its comprehensive
system. What it really rejects is that any one or all of them put together
(devoid of Divine Guidance) can be taken as the final and absolute source
of knowledge. The knowledge of good and evil provided to us by Divine Guidance
constitutes the real knowledge; while empirical knowledge derived from the
observation of laws of life and conditions of existence, ,rational knowledge,
and intuitive knowledge, all are its collaborators and aids. What Divine
Guidance states to be good receives confirmation from the experience of
humanity. The laws of life bear equal testimony to its being good and man's
reason as well as intuition lead him to the same conclusion. It is thus
the Divine Guidance, and not these sources of knowledge, which forms the
criterion of truth. In case any inference drawn from the historical experience
of mankind or from the laws of life, or any opinion formed on the basis
of reason or intuition, runs counter to Divine Guidance, credence will definitely
be given to Divine Guidance, and not to that inference or opinion. The chief
merit of having an authentic and reliable criterion is precisely this; our
knowledge becomes disciplined and we are saved from the chaos and anarchy
which result from the absence of an agreed criterion as well as from giving
license to every individual to fashion and follow his own opinions.
(d) Sanction and Motives
The question of the sanction of moral imperatives and that of the proper
motive-force behind them is also solved on the same lines. None of the solutions
suggested by the philosophers is rejected altogether. They are corrected,
modified and assigned their due place, after being lifted out of the fields
to which they had been wrongly extended. They are, thus, fitted into the
framework of a wider system and thus are assigned a proper place. God's
Law, because of its Divine origin, is self-enforcing. Sanction for it exists
in the mind of the believer who finds happiness in seeking God's Pleasure
and is desirous to attain the standard of perfection which is to be attained
by proximity to Him. Similarly, this sanction is inherent in the community
of the faithful and in the State which is based on Divine Law. The motive
that leads the believer to obey the moral law is his sense of duty as well
as his love of truth and hatred of falsehood; he is fully conscious of both
of these: and this constitutes the essence of belief. Fear of God's punishment
and hope of His Pleasure and reward also act an equally powerful motives
in inducing obedience to moral law.
Thus, Islam sets at rest the anarchy of thought and conduct which results
from the assumption that there is no power above man and from the attempt
to build up a whole ethical system on the basis of this unreal assumption.
Islam exposes the fallacy of this approach and states, at the very outset,
that morality can have its basis only in God's Will. This being the starting
point, Islam very clearly states its concept of God, which, in fact, constitutes
the real source of all its moral thinking.
(e) Islamic Concept of God and Its Consequences for Morality
The concept of God which Islam expounds implies that He is the Absolute
Sovereign, Master, and Creator of man and of the entire universe and there
is no one who shares with Him in any of the prerogatives and attributes
of Divinity. There is no one to exercise over Him the least iota of influence
and to get his recommendation accepted, except as a matter of absolute Grace
from Him and that too if one comes to Him purely as a suppliant. The success
or failure of every man depends upon his own conduct. No person can atone
for another person; neither can the burden of anyone be placed upon another's
shoulders; nor can anyone receive the reward for another person's good deeds.
There is no favoritism or partiality with God so that He may have greater
interest in any individual, family, clan, race or nation. All human beings
are equal in His eyes. There is one moral code for all and the only excellence
that matters with Him is moral excellence. He is Merciful and likes mercy;
He is Generous and likes generosity; He is Forgiving and likes forgiveness;
He is Just and likes justice. He is absolutely free from all injustice,
narrow-mindedness, cruelty, wickedness, callousness, bigotry and partiality,
and therefore likes only those who are free from these vices. All greatness
is His exclusive right and, therefore, arrogance in any human being, however
great, causes His displeasure. All godly qualities and divine attributes
belong to Him alone. He, therefore, dislikes any one behaving in an absolute
manner towards another person or group of persons. He is the Sole Owner
of whatever there is in the heavens or the earth, and what appears to us
as belonging to anyone among us is really in the nature of a trust from
Him. Therefore, any creature who sets himself up as an independent authority,
or is presumptuous enough to lay the basic law for others, or claims obedience
in his own right from other persons or groups of persons, automatically
puts himself in the wrong position, for God alone is the Lord of all and
the good of all lies in explicitly obeying Him. Again, He is the Benefactor
and is entitled to the gratitude and love of the beneficiaries. He is the
Bestower of all gifts and it is, therefore, His right that His gifts should
be utilized in accordance with His Will. He is Just and this makes it incumbent
upon His creatures to hope for rewards and to fear punishments. He is Omniscient
and knows also the hidden intentions of human hearts, therefore, no one
can deceive Him by an outward show of virtue or by a mere affectation of
piety. He is All-Encompassing and hence nobody can harbor the delusion that
he can commit crimes with impunity.
(f) A Perfect Ethical System
Reflect deeply over this concept of God. From this conception there naturally
emerges into shape a perfect ethical system for man, and this system is
free from all those defects which are to be found in the ethics of idolatrous
religions and of secular creeds. Here there are no backdoors of escape from
moral responsibility, nor is there any room for those cruel philosophies
whose protagonists divide humanity into warring sections on the basis of
the class, [21. Editor's Note: Lenin, while addressing an All-Russian Congress
of Youth, declared: "For us morality is subordinated completely to the interests
of the class struggle of proletariate." See: Hazlitt, op. cit. p. 341.]
clan, country or vested interests, behaving as the very embodiments of goodness
and nobility in relation to one and as devils personified in respect of
the other. Indeed, you will not find in this concept of God any basis for
that double-faced morality under which no strength of character can be built
up. Side by side with these merits of negative nature this concept of God
has the positive merit of setting up the most sublime and the most comprehensive
ideal of moral excellence and of providing the noblest and most effective
incentives for the moral effort of man.
In addition to the above merits, the idea that the test set by God is not
confined to any one aspect of life or to any particular branch of human
activity but extends to all aspects of life and all spheres of action enlarges
the field of morality and makes it co-extensive with life. Man's reason,
his powers of perception, his physical faculties, his ambitions and desires,
indeed, the entire human personality, is covered by this test. Beyond that,
it extends to man's relations with the external world to his attitude towards
everything that is to be found in it and to his behavior towards every person
with whom he comes into contact. And above all, his supreme test lies in
the spirit in which he performs his duty, namely, whether he does everything
with a feeling of responsibility to God-with the consciousness that he is
a dutiful servant of his Creator or accepts someone else as his master,
or acts independently, following his own desires. This all embracing conception
of morality is free from the distortions which are the natural result of
a narrow and limited concept of religion. It carries a man forward in every
sphere of life, indicates to him his moral responsibilities in every field
and gives him those principles of morality the observance of which can lead
to success in that test which God has prescribed for life's march towards
destiny.
(g) Horizon Enlarged
The idea that the ultimate results of this test and the final outcome of
our moral efforts shall not be known in this life but in life-after-death
and that true success or failure shall be that which pertains to the next
world and not merely to this one, radically alters our outlook about our
life in this world and its affairs. With this belief man does not regard
the results that manifest themselves in this world as the true and final
criterion of good and evil, right and wrong, truth and falsehood, success
and failure, and, consequently, the question of obeying or disobeying the
moral law does not depend on his estimation of them. A man who adheres to
this concept will always be steadfast in observing the laws of morality,
whether its consequences bring him happiness or misery, and whether they
lead to worldly gain or loss. This does not mean that the material consequences
of his actions shall be wholly irrelevant to him. No. Rather, their role
shall be subservient to the success in the life-hereafter, which alone shall
form the decisive factor. His decision to choose a certain way in preference
to another will not rest on the calculation whether it is productive of
pleasure, happiness or gain in the present preliminary stage of life but
on the expectation of what it will lead to in life's final stage. 1-fence,
his moral principles shall remain unchanged under all circumstances and
his character shall remain immune from hasty and unfounded shifts and alterations.
Of course, his moral outlook shall be dynamic and progressive; that is to
say, his moral conceptions shall expand in their scope with the development
of civilization and the advancement of society. His moral principles, however,
shall remain unaffected by changes in external conditions and circumstances
of life: In other words, though progressive, he will not be a moral weathercock,
having no set of uniform ethical norms. His principles would not be like
shifting sands, nor would he be like a vessel without a rudder. Instead,
he will have firm grounds to stand upon, and firm standards to act as a
measure of progress he attains.
Thus, in the moral domain of human life, the Islamic concept of the life-hereafter
produces two important effects which are not obtainable from any other source:
First, it lends to morality a basis which is strong and unshakable;
Secondly, it imparts stability and firmness to human character and firm
foundations for human society.
Truth can have, say, ten different results in this world, and an opportunist
with his eyes on these results can adopt ten different courses, varying.
his strategy to suit the expected results; while in the life-hereafter truth
must, of necessity, have only one consequence and a believer, with his attention
centered on it, will invariably adopt only one course without the least
anxiety for immediate gain or loss. If we go only by the material consequences
and results which reveal themselves in this world, good and evil cease to
have any definite meaning and permanent significance. For, consequences
make the same thing appear sometimes good and sometimes evil, and in the
pursuit of such a will-o'-the-wisp the character of the pursuant also goes
on changing its pattern. But if the outlook is focussed on the consequences
of the life-hereafter, good and evil stand clearly defined and it becomes
impossible for the believer in that life to change his character if good
temporarily happens to produce unpleasant results or evil appears to produce
desirable consequences.
(h) The Mission of Man
Besides the above, the Islamic concept that man is God's vicegerent on earth
and that all the powers that he possesses are held by him in that capacity,
sets for him the end of life as well as the means for realization of that
end. It follows logically from this tenet that all conduct based on the
assumption that man is an independent being, free, to regulate his own affairs
in accordance with-his uncontrolled desires and unbridled interests, is
incorrect and that the right conduct consists in subjecting oneself to God's
Will and in accepting the limit laid down by Him. On the one hand, this
conception makes it incumbent upon man to abstain rigorously from that behavior
which smacks even remotely of rebellion against God or of allegiance to
any one besides Him or of haughtiness, since such behavior amounts to a
direct negation of his status as the vicegerent of God. On the other hand,
this conception ensures that man's utilization of the material possessions
bestowed by God and of his own God-given powers, as well as his leadership
and authority over other human beings, shall be wholly in accordance with
that conduct which God, the real Master and Sovereign of the world, has
been pleased to prescribe in relation to His kingdom and His subjects. This
is the logical demand of his status as vicegerent, for no viceroy can truly
be considered a viceroy unless he adheres strictly to the commands and the
policy of the Sovereign. It also follows from this principle that man has
been charged to utilize, in accordance with the Divine Will and Pleasure,
all the powers and faculties which have been given to him and all the resources
that have been placed at his disposal. In other words, man falsifies his
position as the vicegerent of God not merely by acting contrary to God's
Will in the use of his powers and the material resources of the world, but
also if he fails to utilize those powers and resources or wastes them or
ignores the duties assigned to him by the Sovereign in relation to them.
Furthermore, it also follows from this concept that the collective life
of mankind should be organized in such a manner that all human beings, i.e.,
all the vicegerents of God, should co-operate with one another in the execution
and fulfillment of the responsibilities laid upon them, and that in .the
social organization of mankind there should be no such flaw which might
render it possible for one individual or group to usurp the vicegerency
of the .other or to hinder its proper functioning except in the case of
those individuals or groups who set themselves up against God and thus falsify
their position as vicegerents. [22. The socio-political implications of
this concept have been developed by the author in his other articles, viz.,
"Political Theory of Islam" and "First Principles of Islamic State," see
Maududi, Islamic Law and Constitution; Islamic Publications Ltd., Lahore,
1960.-Editor.] It goes without saying that this attitude is bound to produce
sense of responsibility and moral consciousness in the followers of this
ideology.
This mission of man naturally follows from the principle of human vicegerency
and sets the moral goal for man. The natural demand of man's status as God's
vicegerent is that the purpose of his life should be to fulfill the Will
of God on earth and that the goal of his moral endeavors should be: to enforce
the Divine Law in that cross-section of world affairs the management of
which has been entrusted to him by God ; to create and maintain conditions
in which peace, justice and virtue may flourish : to suppress and eradicate
evil and disorder in all their forms: and to foster those virtues which
are liked by God and which He desires should prevail over this world and
its inhabitants.
This ethical outlook stands in sharp contrast with not- only the purposes
set forth for human life by Hedonism, Utilitarianism, Empiricism, Materialism,
Nationalism, and other secular creeds but also against those goals which
men of religion generally prescribe under the influence of mistaken and
narrow views of spirituality. Between these two exaggerated extremes, the
concept of the vicegerency of man places before mankind the truest and the
best purpose bringing into full play human faculties and capacities and
utilizing them for creating and developing the healthiest society and civilization.
In it there is freedom as well as restraint, life-fulfillment as well as
spiritual perfection.
These are the first principles given by Islam for raising a healthy structure
of human morality. Islam is not a national religion. It is not wedded to
any particular race or region. Nor is it the sole monopoly of any particular
group of people. It is the common legacy of the whole of mankind. Everyone
who is mindful of his own good and interest as also of mankind should reflect
whether the basis furnished by Islam for human morality is better than those
provided by mystic religions and secular philosophical systems. If he is
satisfied that the basis furnished by Islam is more sound than that provided
by any other moral system, then no false prejudices should stand in the
way of its acceptance by him. He should be the ally of none but truth.