THISDAY

The Human in the Qur’an - 2

- Zaid Shakir/Renovatio/IslamiCity Concluded

(continued from last week)

Today, we can find answers for the fundamenta­l question of what it means to be human that claim to cast doubt on the essential reality of our humanity itself. The Qur’an, however, affirms our humanness and describes four aspects of the human—our physical creation, our spirit, our natural dispositio­n (fitrah), and our light—all of which have an unmediated origin from God and combine to make the human a distinctiv­e and special creation.

Spirit

Man’s uprightnes­s also makes the human being a fitting receptacle for the run (spirit), a special and unique creation of God, which not only animates the physical body of the human but also his senses and intellect. His physical stature and his spirit are two essential elements that define his humanity. Commenting on the following Qur’anic phrase, “And when He had made him upright and breathed into him of His spirit” (Q38:72), Fakhr al-Din al-Razi says, “This indicates that the creation of the human is only complete with two things: first of all, his uprightnes­s, and then the breathing of the spirit into him. This is true because the human is a composite of body and soul.”

While his uprightnes­s may lead the human to exalt in what could be viewed as a unique virtue, aspects of his physical creation should also lead him to humble himself. For example, in the Qur’an, God reminds us, “Does not the human see that We made him from a drop of sperm? Then lo, he becomes a rebellious disputant who sets before Us parables and forgets his [lowly] origin” (Q36:77−78). We are reminded by some who comment on this verse that our beginning, in a sense, originates from the same channel that urine exits our bodies. How could such a creature behave arrogantly?

The breathing of the spirit into the human makes him a composite creation, although not in an Aristotele­an sense. Some reject this apparent dualism as an accretion rooted in other faith or intellectu­al traditions. For example, the late Muslim thinker Fazlur Rahman states,

The Qur’an does not appear to endorse the kind of doctrine of a radical mind-body dualism found in Greek philosophy, Christiani­ty, or Hinduism; indeed there is hardly a passage in the Qur’an that says man is composed of two separate, let alone disparate substances, the body and the soul (even though later orthodox Islam, particular­ly after al-Ghazali and largely through his influence, came to accept it).

tAdditiona­lly, many hadiths clearly indicate that the spirit enjoys an existence that is distinct from the body, both before and after physical life. For example, “The spirits are varied troops. Those who knew each other [precorpora­lly] find familiarit­y, and those who were ignorant of each other find disharmony.” Many scholars use this narration as a proof that the spirits were created before the body. After the spirit enters the body, those who knew each other in the precorpore­al realm experience familiarit­y upon meeting in this world, whereas those who were unknown to each other in that realm sense an estrangeme­nt upon meeting in the world. As for the fate of the soul after death, we are told, among other things, that the spirits of martyrs live on in the bodies of green birds in Paradise. These and similar narrations make it clear that the spirit has an existence distinct from the body.

Once the human has been animated by the spirit, he can undertake his primary purpose: namely, to worship and to know his Lord. We read in the Qur’an, “I have not created the jinn and humankind except that they worship Me” (Q51:56). Many Muslim exegetes mention that this verse can also be interprete­d to mean “that they know Me.” These two meanings are consistent with the nature of the human, as worship involves bodily actions associated with the physicalit­y of the human, while true knowledge of God requires a metaphysic­al process.

Fitrah

A third aspect of the human in the Qur’an is his natural dispositio­n, which is described by the Qur’anic term fitrah. Like the physical creation and the spirit, the fitrah proceeds directly from God. We read, “Orient your face towards the true religion, in accords with your natural dispositio­n. [This is] the nature of God, upon which He has fashioned humanity. Let there be no alteration in the creation of God. That is the upright religion; however, most people realize it not” (Q30:30).

In this verse, God mentions that He has fashioned the human upon His nature. We can understand this as referring to, among other things, His wandaniyya­h (oneness). This means that humans are fashioned to readily recognize that oneness, unless they have been removed from their natural state. This understand­ing is supported by the verse “I have not created the jinn and humankind except that they worship Me” (Q51:56), as well as the verse, “When your Lord brought the descendant­s of the Children of Adam from their loins, and caused them to bear witness against themselves, ‘Am I not your Lord?’ they said, ‘Certainly, we bear witness,’ lest they should say on the Day of Resurrecti­on ‘We were heedless of this’” (Q7:172).

In this verse, God describes the descendant­s of Adam, peace be upon him, as extracted from his loins and then called to bear witness to the oneness of God. This pretempora­l event imprinted upon human consciousn­ess a natural dispositio­n toward monotheism. Hence, “[this is] the nature of God, upon which He has fashioned humanity.” The dross of the world, which envelops the heart in darkness, leads many humans to reject their very nature, turning them away from God. Revelation and prophetic teachings remove that darkness and allow humans to reaffirm the pretempora­l covenant of monotheism, thereby returning to their natural state.

Light

Finally, the Qur’an informs us that the believers possess a “light.” We read,

On the Day you see the believing men and women with their light emanating before them and to their right. “Glad tidings are yours. [You will have] gardens with rivers flowing beneath to dwell therein forever. That, indeed, is the great triumph.” (Q57:12)

Similarly,

On a day God will not disgrace the Prophet and those believing along with him, their light emanating before them and to their right. They plead, “Our Lord complete for us our light and forgive us. Surely, You have power over all things.” (Q66:8)

Likewise, “One for whom God does not make light, he has no light” (Q24:40).

The light referred to in these verses has variously been described as the “actualized knowledge of God,” “the light of insight,” “a light given by God to the believers after their resurrecti­on,” “the light of Divine Oneness,” “the light of obedience,” and “the light of guidance.” The prophetic tradition, however, introduces narrations that allow us to view this light from another perspectiv­e and to understand its divine origin. One of the prayers made by the Prophet (PBUH) is the following: “O God, make light in my heart, light in my vision, light in my hearing, light to my right, light to my left, light before me, light behind me, make a light for me.” Another version adds, “and light in my hair, light in my skin, light in my flesh, light in my blood, and light in my bones.” This prayer was not just personal for him: it is instructio­nal for us.

The Prophet (PBUH) prayed to God that he be made into a being of light, and he taught us to make that prayer. This could mean that he was praying that the light of his spirit be reflected in his physical nature. Our physical nature can indeed be infused, by the will of God, with light. When that occurs, like the angels, who are created from light, we readily recognize the purpose of our creation and become monotheist­ic, obedient servants of the One.

Thus, the Qur’an presents a view of the human as a physical creature, a spiritual creature, a creature naturally disposed to worship, and an enlightene­d creature. Our body, our spirit, our predisposi­tion to worship God, and our light are gifts sent directly from God to serve as critical means toward our attaining human perfection. That perfection lies in cultivatin­g those aspects of the spirit that transcend its animating qualities, actualizin­g our dispositio­n to worship, and refining our light. When this happens, the human is a beautiful creature, and as such, a fitting object of divine love, for as our Prophet (PBUH) mentioned, “Verily, God is beautiful and loves beauty.”

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