By
Nikhat Sattar
March 5,
2021
GIVEN the
lack of analytical thought, deep reflection and serious scholarship in many
Muslim societies today, the fact that intellect was cited by the Holy Prophet
(PBUH) as the most critical aspect of a Muslim’s life might come as a surprise.
Dr Khaled
Abu al-Fadl mentions that the Prophet is said to have stated:
“To everything there is a foundation, and the
foundation of a believer is the intellect. And to every person, there has to be
an objective. And the objective of the true believer has to be the intellect.
And to every home, there are people that are responsible and accountable and in
the homes of true believers, it is the intellect that holds everyone to account
... and for every journey, there is a purpose and the true purpose of the
journey of a true believer is the intellect.”
The Prophet
is also said to have stated that the best person and worshipper is one who
possesses intellect, has developed it and invested in it.
Intellect
and ethics are also linked in Islam because only a person with intellect can
assess the goodness and eternity of ethical values and can abide by ethical
standards.
With the
Quran instructing Muslims to deliberate and think deeply, it is ironic that
many Muslim societies, scholars, rulers and laypersons are unable or unwilling
to apply their intellect and rationality to their beliefs and actions. Blind
following of religious leaders without critically applying one’s own intellect;
assuming that interpretations of the Quran by earlier scholars are fixed and newer
interpretations are no longer possible; believing in all Ahadith without
testing them for authenticity are common practices.
So many of
us are led by emotions that are easily stirred by whatever we hear or are
taught in madrasas or whatever is published in the increasingly large numbers
of religious magazines and books. We seldom engage with this information at an
intellectual level, question their validity, sort them through, look for
evidence, search other sources for proof or subject them to a critical
evaluation before placing our belief in them.
We often
quickly transform these beliefs into action, sometimes with disastrous
consequences for our families, friends and communities. A young man once stated
that a Hadith said that God would punish a man if even a strand of his sister’s
hair was visible. There are other numerous and more serious examples that make
lives miserable for others.
Many
Muslims resist alternative interpretations of the Quran that differ from
traditional Tafsir, to the extent of sticking the labels of ‘Kufr’
and ‘Fitna’ on anyone who dares to do so. This is the reason why many
reputable scholars leave their countries to live in places where they can
think, debate and write with greater freedom, for the practise of intellect and
debate and expression must necessarily go hand in hand.
Intellect
causes desire in humans to seek knowledge: the Arabic word ‘Ilm’ has
been used in the Quran hundreds of times in various connotations. Intellect
enables humans to comprehend signs of God and establishes the link between
knowledge, faith and practice. This knowledge differs from information, because
it is only the intellect that can sort out false and biased information from
true knowledge and separate fact from fiction.
Al Ghazali,
the famous Muslim thinker, stresses upon the need to understand and assess
knowledge so that one can act upon it. He said that if a Muslim refuses the
role of intellect in religion, this is a contradiction because a true
believer’s piety is based on intellect.
The Quran
and ahadith are often memorised, both in their original form as well as their
translations. This is considered to be the height of religious knowledge. Even
when the meaning of these texts is discussed, the usual format is of a
religious teacher expanding upon his own interpretation of Quranic verses.
Humans are
gifted with varying degrees of intellect. It is up to them to hone it, develop
it and enhance it. Intellect increases with use, and becomes dormant and rusty
if left unutilised.
Intellect
demands that compassion should be paramount in dispensing justice; changes in
social and economic realities should be considered in applying religious
instructions that responded primarily to social conditions of the times of
revelation. Intellectual and ethical thought also require that oppression of
people in any part of the world cannot be defended for economic or political
interests. Yet we find that man-made laws are assumed to be the eternal word of
God, and Muslim countries are racing to develop friendly relations with
oppressive regimes.
Muslims are
floundering because they have mostly disregarded this important pillar of Islam
— intellect.
-----
Nikhat
Sattar is a freelance contributor.
Original
Headline: Intellect & Islam
Source: The Dawn, Pakistan
URL: https://newageislam.com/islam-spiritualism/quran-instructs-muslims-deliberate-think/d/124464
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