Wa `alaykum As-Salamu
wa Rahmatullahi wa Barakatuh.
In the Name of Allah, Most Gracious, Most Merciful.
All praise and thanks are due to Allah, and peace
and blessings be upon His Messenger.
Dear brother in Islam, we would like to thank you for
your interesting question the great confidence you place
in us. We implore Allah Almighty to help us serve His
cause and enlighten our hearts with the light of Islam!
As regards the issue you raised, we’d like to furnish
you with a detailed discussion of the differnt queries
regarding qadar as given by Dr Ja`far Sheikh
Idris, professor of Islamic studies, Institute of
Islamic and Arabic Sciences, Washington, who states:
“The original meaning of the Arabic word qadar is
a specified measure or amount whether of quantities or
qualities. It has many other usages, which branch out
from this core. Almighty Allah says, “We have created
every thing by measure (bi-qadar).” (Al-Qamar:
49)
Allah (Mighty and Exalted bre He) knows before creating
anything, that He is going to create it and that it
shall be of such and such magnitude, quality or nature,
etc. He also specifies the time of its coming into being
and its passing away, and the place of its occurrence.
If so, then one who believes in the true God should
believe that there are no accidents in nature. If
something disagreeable happens to him, he should say
“Allah qaddara (ordained), and He did what He
willed” and not grieve himself by wishing that it had
not occurred, or worrying why it should occur. If, in
contrast, something agreeable happens to him he should
not boast of it, but thank Allah for it. In this
context, Allah says, “Naught of disaster befalleth in
the earth or in yourselves but it is in a Book before We
bring it into being. Lo! That is easy for Allah. That ye
grieve not for the sake of that which hath escaped you,
nor yet exult because of that which hath been given.
Allah loveth not all prideful boasters.” (Al-Hadid:
22-23)
If Allah Almighty predetermines everything, that
includes our so-called free actions, in what way can
they be said to be free, and how are we responsible for
them? This question occasioned the appearance, at a very
early history of Islam, of two extreme theological
sects. One of them, called the Qadariyyah,
asserted man’s free will and responsibility to the
extent of denying Allah’s foreknowledge, and claiming
that Allah knows our free made actions only after we
have performed them. The other, called the Jabriyyah,
held the opposite view and claimed that there was no
difference between the motions of inanimate things and
our movements in performing so-called free actions, and
that when we use intentional language we speak only
metaphorically.
But there is no need to go to such extremes, since it is
not difficult to reconcile Divine qadar
(predestination) and human responsibility. Allah decided
to create man as a free agent, but He knows (and how can
He not know!) before creating every man how he is going
to use his free will; what, for instance, his reaction
would be when a Prophet clarifies Allah’s message to
him. This foreknowledge and its registering in a ‘Book’
is called qadar.
“But if we are free to use our will” a Qadari
might say, “we may use it in ways that contradict
Allah’s will, and in that case we would not be right in
claiming that everything is willed or decreed by Allah.”
The Qur’an answers this question by reminding us that it
was Allah who willed that we shall be of free will, and
it is He who allows us to use our will. Allah, Most
High, says, “Lo! This is an Admonishment, that
whosoever will may choose a way unto his Lord. Yet ye
will not, unless Allah willeth. Lo! Allah is Knower,
Wise.” (Al-Insan: 29-30)
“If so,” a Qadari might say, “He could have
prevented us from doing evil."
Yes indeed He could. Allah says, “Had Allah willed,
He would have brought them all together to the guidance;
if thy Lord had willed whoever is in the earth would
have believed, all of them, all together.” (Yunus:
99) “Had Allah willed, they were not idolaters; and
We have not appointed thee a watcher over them neither
art thou their guardian.” (Al-An`am: 107)
But Allah has willed that men shall be free especially
in regard to matters of belief and disbelief. Allah
Almighty says, “Say: The truth is from your Lord; so
let whosoever will believe, and let whosoever will
disbelieve.” (Al-Kahf: 29)
But men would not be so free if whenever any of them
wills to do evil Allah prevents him from doing it and
compels him to do good.
“If our actions are willed by Allah,” someone might say,
“then they are in fact His actions.”
This objection is based on a confusion that Allah wills
what we will in the sense of granting us the will to
choose and enabling us to execute that will, i.e., He
creates all that makes it possible for us to do it. He
does not will it in the sense of doing it, otherwise it
would be quite in order to say, when we drink or eat or
sleep for instance that Allah performed these actions.
Allah creates them, He does not do or perform them.
Another objection, based on another confusion, is that
if Allah allows us to do evil, then He approves of it
and likes it.
However, to will something in the sense of allowing a
person to do it is one thing; and to approve of his
action and commend it, is quite another, NOT everything
that Allah wills He likes. He has, as we have just read
in the Qur’an, granted man the choice between belief and
disbelief, but He does not, of course, like men to
disbelieve (to be thankless). Allah Almighty says,
“If you art ungrateful, Allah is independent of you. Yet
He approves not ungratefulness in His servants; but if
you are grateful, He will approve it in you.” (Az-Zumar:
7)”
Based on Dr. Ja`far Sheikh Idris’s article “Belief in
Qadar”. (Source: http://isgkc.org/pillars_qadar.htm).
You can also read:
Between Destiny, Working and Free Will
Fate or Free Will, Nature or Nurture
Allah Almighty knows best |