Tue05072024

Last updateSun, 20 Aug 2023 9pm

Back You are here: Home Library Islam Islam: Faith, Practice & History Part I: Beliefs Lesson 1-Why Religion? 2. Some Necessary Qualities Of Religion

2. Some Necessary Qualities Of Religion

2. Some Necessary Qualities Of Religion

 The religion which can fulfill the needs of mankind must have the following qualities:

(a) It must satisfy the intelligence and intellect of human beings.

 Islam gives foremost importance to human intelligence. Islam emphasizes that you must understand the faith and then believe in it. Belief follows understanding, and not vice versa.

 (b) It must teach and demonstrate dignity of human beings.

 Islam places human beings over and above all other creations of God; it promotes equality among human beings. Islam does not allow human beings to lose their dignity by bowing down in worship to a fellow man, animal or an inanimate object.

 (c) It must be a complete guide to develop the body, mind and spirit of humans as a whole.

 Islam does not only develop the soul at the expense of the body; nor does it promote the care of the body at the expense of the soul. It promotes development of all aspects of human life in a balanced way. Islam not only talks in general terms about the code of life; it gives specific details and also provides examples in the lives of the prophets and imams.

 (d) It must conform with human nature.

 The teachings of Islam takes the human nature into consideration. It does not promote, for example, celibacy which is completely against human nature.

 (e) It should not be a tool in the hands of oppressors to suppress the masses.

 Islam promotes social justice and rejects the theory of predestination. The oppression of a tyrant ruler is not predestined by God. This leaves no room for the tyrant rulers and oppressors to say that the masses have been predestined for serving the ruling class.

 * * *

 This lesson is based on:

 

            Syed Saeed Akhtar Rizvi, Need of Religion, Tanzania 1970.

            Dar Rah-e Haq, The Roots of Religion, Qum 1982.

            Nāsir Makārim Shirazi, Principles of Islamic Ideology, Tehran 1985.

 

It has been compiled & edited for this course by S.M. Rizvi.

 

You have no rights to post comments

Find us on Facebook