BODY-SOUL CONFLICT
The
 idea which has influenced most the climate of philosophical and 
religious thought is that body and soul are mutually antagonistic, and 
can develop only at each other’s expense. For the soul, the body is a 
prison and the activities of daily life are the shackles which keep it 
in bondage and arrest its growth. This has inevitably led to the 
universe being divided into the spiritual and the secular.
Those
 who chose the secular path were convinced that they could not meet the 
demands of spirituality, and thus they led highly material and 
hedonistic lives. All spheres of worldly activity, whether social, 
political, economic or cultural, were deprived of the light of 
spirituality; injustice and tyranny were the result.
Conversely, those who wanted to tread the path of spiritual excellence came to see themselves as ‘noble outcasts’  from
 the world. They believed that it was impossible for spiritual growth to
 be compatible with a ‘normal’ life. In their view physical self-denial 
and mortification of the flesh were necessary for the development and 
perfection of the spirit. They invented spiritual exercises and ascetic 
practices which killed physical desires and dulled the body’s senses. 
They regarded forests, mountains and other solitary places as ideal for 
spiritual development because the hustle and bustle of life would not 
interfere with their meditations. They could not conceive of spiritual 
development except through withdrawal from the world.
This
 conflict of body and soul resulted in the evolution of two different 
ideals for the perfection of man. One was that man should be surrounded 
by all possible material comforts and regard himself as nothing but an 
animal. Men learnt to fly like birds, swim like fish, run like horses 
and even terrorize and destroy like wolves but they did not learn how to
 live like noble human beings. The other was that the senses should be 
not only subdued and conquered but extra-sensory powers awakened and the
 limitations of the sensory world done away with. With these new 
conquests men would be able to hear distant voices like powerful 
wireless sets, see remote objects as one does with a telescope, and 
develop powers through which the mere touch of their hand or a passing 
glance would heal the unhealable.
The
 Islamic viewpoint differs radically from these approaches. According to
 Islam, Allah has appointed the human soul as His Khalifah (vicegerent) 
in this world. He has invested it with a certain authority, and given it
 certain responsibilities and obligations for the fulfillment of which 
He has endowed it with the best and most suitable physical frame. The 
body has been created with the sole object of allowing the soul to use 
it in the exercise of its authority and the fulfillment of its duties 
and responsibilities. The body is not a prison for the soul, but its 
workshop or factory; and if the soul is to grow and develop, it is only 
through this workshop. Consequently, this world is not a place of 
punishment in which the human soul unfortunately finds itself, but a 
field in which Allah has sent it to work and do its duty towards Him.
So
 spiritual development should not take the form of a man turning away 
from this workshop and retreating into a corner. Rather, man should live
 and work in it, and give the best account of himself that he can. It is
 in the nature of an examination for him; every aspect and sphere of 
life is, as it were, a question paper: the home, the family, the 
neighborhood, the society, the market-place, the office, the factory, 
the school, the law courts, the police station, the parliament, the 
peace conference and the battlefield, all represent question papers 
which man has been called upon to answer. If he leaves most of the 
answer-book blank, he is bound to fail the examination. Success and 
development are only possible if man devotes his whole life to this 
examination and attempts to answer all the question papers he can.
Islam
 rejects and condemns the ascetic view of life, and proposes a set of 
methods and processes for the spiritual development of man, not outside 
this world but inside it. the real place for the growth of the spirit is
 in the midst of life and not in solitary places of spiritual 
hibernation.
Criterion of Spiritual Development
We
 shall now discuss how Islam judges the development or decay of the 
soul. In his capacity as the vicegerent (Khalifah) of God, man is 
answerable to Him for all his activities. It is his duty to use all the 
powers which he has been given in accordance with the Divine will. He 
should utilize to the fullest extent all the faculties and 
potentialities bestowed upon him for seeking Allah’s approval. In his 
dealings with other people he should behave in such a way as to try to 
please Allah.
 In
 brief, all his energies should be directed towards regulating the 
affairs of this world in the way in which Allah wants them to be 
regulated. The better a man does this, with a sense of responsibility, 
obedience and humility, and with the object of seeking the pleasure of 
the Lord, the nearer will he be to Allah. In Islam, spiritual 
development is synonymous with nearness to Allah. Similarly, he will not
 be able to get near to Allah if he is lazy and disobedient. And 
distance from Allah signifies, in Islam, the spiritual fall and decay of
 man.
From
 the Islamic point of view, therefore, the sphere of activity of the 
religious man and the secular man is the same. Not only will both work 
in the same spheres; the religious man will work with greater enthusiasm
 than the secular man. The man of religion will be as active as the man 
of the world indeed, more active in his domestic and social life, which 
extends from the confines of the household to the market square, and 
even to international conferences.
What
 will distinguish their actions will be the nature of their relationship
 with Allah and the aims behind their actions. Whatever a religious man 
does, will be done with the feeling that he is answerable to Allah, that
 he must try to secure Divine pleasure, that his actions must be in 
accordance with Allah’s laws. A secular person will be indifferent 
towards Allah and will be guided in his actions only by his personal 
motives. This difference makes the whole of the material life of a man 
of religion a totally spiritual venture, and the whole of the life of a 
secular person an existence devoid of the spark of spirituality.
The Road to Spirituality
The
 first necessity for progression along the path of spiritual development
 is IMAN (faith). The mind and heart of a man should always be aware: 
Allah alone is His Master, Sovereign and Deity; seeking His pleasure is 
the aim of all his endeavors; and His commands alone are the commands 
that are to be obeyed. This should be a firm conviction, based not 
merely on the intellect, but also on acceptance by the will. The 
stronger and deeper this conviction, the more profound a man’s faith 
will be.
The
 second stage is that of obedience (it a’at), meaning that man gives up 
his independence and accepts subservience to Allah. This subservience is
 called § slam (submission) in the language of the Qur’~ n. Thus, man 
should not only acknowledge Allah as his Lord and Sovereign but should 
actually submit before Him and fashion his entire life in obedience to 
Him.
The
 third stage is that of taqwa (Allah-consciousness). It consists in a 
practical manifestation of one’s faith in Allah in one’s daily life. 
Taqwa also means desisting from everything which Allah has forbidden or 
has disapproved of; man must be in a state of readiness to undertake all
 that Allah has commanded and to observe the distinctions between lawful
 and unlawful, right and wrong, and good and bad in life.
The
 last and the highest stage is that of ihsan (godliness) It signifies 
that man has attained highest excellence in words, deeds and thoughts, 
identifying his will with the will of Allah and harmonizing it, to the 
best of his knowledge and ability, with the Divine will. He thus begins 
to like what is liked by the Lord and to dislike what He dislikes. Man 
should then not only avoid evil, for it displeases his Lord, but should 
use all his powers to eradicate it from the face of the earth; he should
 not be content with adorning himself with the good which Allah wants to
 flourish but should also strive to attain and propagate it in the 
world, even at the cost of his life. A man who reaches this stage 
attains the highest pinnacle of spirituality and is nearest to Allah.
This
 path of spiritual development is not meant for individuals only but for
 communities and nations as well. Like individuals, a community, after 
passing through the various stages of spiritual elevation may reach the 
ultimate stage of ihsan a state also, through all its administrative 
machinery, may become mu’min (faithful), muslim (obedient), muttaq§ 
(God-conscious) and muhsin (godly). In fact, the ideals aimed at by 
Islam are fully achieved only when the whole community accepts them and a
 muttaq§ and muhsin state comes into existence. The highest form of 
civilization, based on goodness, is then reached.
Let
 us now look at the mechanism of spiritual training which Islam has laid
 down to prepare individuals and society for this process.
The methods that Islam lays down for spiritual development rest, in addition, obviously, to faith (Iman), on five pillars.
The
 first is the Prayer (Salat), which brings man into communion with Allah
 five times a day, reviving his remembrance, reiterating his fear, 
developing his love, reminding him of this Divine commands again, and 
thus preparing him for obedience to Allah. It is obligatory to offer 
some of these Prayers in Congregation as well so that the whole 
community and society may be prepared to journey on the path of 
spiritual development.
The
 second is the Fast (Sawm), which for a full month every year trains 
each man individually, and the Muslim community as a whole, in 
righteousness and self-restraint,; it enables society, the rich and the 
poor alike, to experience hunger, and prepares people to undergo any 
hardships in their search to please Allah.
The
 third is the Almsgiving (Zakat), which develops the sense of monetary 
sacrifice, sympathy and co-operation among Muslims. There are people who
 wrongly interpret Zakat as a tax; in fact, the spirit underlying Zakat 
is entirely different from that of a tax. The real meaning of Zakat is 
sublimity and purification. By using this word, Islam seeks to impress 
on man the fact that, inspired by a true love of Allah, the monetary 
help which he renders to his brethren will uplift and purify his soul.
The
 fourth is the Pilgrimage (Hajj), which aims at fostering that universal
 brotherhood of the faithful which is based on the worship of Allah, and
 which results in a worldwide movement that has been responding to the 
call of Truth throughout the centuries and will, Allah willing, go on 
answering this call till eternity.
The
 last is Jihad, that is, exerting oneself to the utmost to disseminate 
the word of Allah and to make it supreme, and to remove all the 
impediments to Islam ¾ through tongue or pen or sword. the aim is to 
live a life of dedication to the cause of Allah and, if necessary, to 
sacrifice one’s life in the discharge of this mission. This is the 
highest spirituality, rooted in the real world, which Islam wants to 
cultivate. Life-affirmation based on goodness and piety, and not 
life-denial, is what Islam stands for. And this lends a unique character
 to Islam.
 
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