Why would he forbid things in this world but not the afterlife?Praise be to Allaah.
Firstly: It should be known that Allaah, may He be exalted and glorified, is Wise in His commands and prohibitions. He does not command anything except that which is in peoples best interests and He does not forbid anything except that which is harmful. People may or may not come to understand the reasons behind these commands and prohibitions, although Allaah has His Wisdom in any given issue. Having said that, it is still not right to make following a command or prohibition dependent upon knowing the wisdom behind it; rather we should hasten to carry out the commands of shareeah, regardless of whether the wisdom behind it is clear to us or not. If it is clear, then praise be to Allaah, and if it is not, then the Muslim should not let the fact that he does not know it prevent him from acting in accordance with the ruling of shareeah. This is true submission to the command of Allaah, and Islam means submission to Allaah, may He be exalted, and obeying Him. If a person makes his actions dependent on understanding matters which may or may not convince him, he is in effect following his own thoughts and desires, not his Lord and Master.
The above does not mean that it is not important to look for the wisdom behind the rules of shareeah, or that doing so is forbidden, but we should not make knowing the reasons a condition for acting upon the ruling.
Secondly: there is no connection between things that are prohibited in this world and those that are allowed in the Hereafter. It is not correct to think of the Hereafter as being like this world; each realm has its own rules and laws. It is not correct to suggest that something is permitted in this world on the basis that it is permitted in Paradise or in the Hereafter, otherwise we would end up allowing things that we know from the basics of Islam are forbidden, such as drinking wine, taking more than four wives, singing etc. On this basis, the confusion reflected in the question about silk being forbidden in this world although it is permitted in Paradise should be cleared up.
I’m a non-Muslim and I didn’t know this too much at all. What if a Muslim knows the person who wears silk and the person wears silk because of skin problems, will he say I will tell people if they judge you he has an exemption to the silk is haram rule, he is not sinning if they say he is to defend him?
GreetingWhy would he forbid things in this world but not the afterlife?
the answer to this qurstion is not that easy to explain and even more complicated to understand if you have little knowledge about Islam. It is a long story about free choice and predestination etc.Why would he test people?
I never heard of this covenant before.the answer to this qurstion is not that easy to explain and even more complicated to understand if you have little knowledge about Islam. It is a long story about free choice and predestination etc.
In short...God is omnipotent...He already knows the outcome so He does not need to test us...but...
long before we were born in this world we already existed and we were asked "am I not your God?"
and we answered "kealu balaa!" (no you are!). the kealu balaa covenant.
when we were born in this world that event has been erased from our memory...so we do not remember.
It is easy to believe in Him when He stays in front of us...so here we are in this world ... we seek our way to God on our own...we make certain decisions...good or bad...we take actions good or bad
and by doing so, we make ourselves witnesses of our own decisions...actions...and spoken words...
this test is not for God...it is for us...
in the end everything boils down to: did we really believe in God or not? our permanent destination (heaven or hell) is dependant on that.
look it up on Google.I never heard of this covenant before.
agreed..the answer to this qurstion is not that easy to explain and even more complicated to understand if you have little knowledge about Islam. It is a long story about free choice and predestination etc.
In short...God is omnipotent...He already knows the outcome so He does not need to test us...but...
long before we were born in this world we already existed and we were asked "am I not your God?"
and we answered "kealu balaa!" (no you are!). the kealu balaa covenant.
when we were born in this world that event has been erased from our memory...so we do not remember.
It is easy to believe in Him when He stays in front of us...so here we are in this world ... we seek our way to God on our own...we make certain decisions...good or bad...we take actions good or bad
and by doing so, we make ourselves witnesses of our own decisions...actions...and spoken words...
this test is not for God...it is for us...
in the end everything boils down to: did we really believe in God or not? our permanent destination (heaven or hell) is dependant on that.
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