Muslim's Character
CHAPTER 16
PATIENCE
Patience is Tower of Light
"Patience is a light."
(Muslim)
In the intricate paths of life
when
difficulties and hardships confront a man, and the darkness of
adversities and
suffering becomes long, it is patience only that acts like a light for
a
Muslim, that keeps him safe from wandering here and there, and saves
him from
the muddy mire of disappointment, desperation and frustration. Patience
is such
a basic quality that a Muslim needs it to shape his life in this world
and in
the next. On this basis only he should attend to all his work. He
should make
it a torchlight for guiding his way, else he will be defeated in the
field of
life. He should prepare his self to tolerate the hardships and
difficulties,
and should not holler or raise hell. He should not sit waiting for the
results,
however late that may take. He should not run away from
responsibilities,
whatever they may be. No doubts and misgivings, no hardship of trouble
should
prompt his intellect to indulge in violence. He should have plenty of
self-confidence. He should not be frightened by the dark clouds
appearing on
the horizon of life, even if they may
be appearing continually, nay, he should be fully sure that these
clouds of
adversities and hardships will disappear, and the clear and bright
atmosphere
of success and glory will appear again. Therefore, the demand of wisdom
and
far-sightedness is that its coming should be awaited with patience,
peace and
conviction.
The Almighty God has stressed
this point
sufficiently that no man can escape tests and trials, so that man may
be alert
and ready at the time when these hardship and
difficulties descend on him, and he should not be frightened by
these
heavenly and earthly tribulations, and need not be disappointed and
disheartened.
"And verily We shall try you
ill
till We know those of you who still
hard (in the cause of Allah) and the steadfast, and till We test
your record."
(Muhammed: 31)
The poet has expressed the
same idea in
these words:
"We had anticipated the
hardships of
the night before their coming. So when they descended, there was no
addition to
our knowledge."
Undoubtedly if accidents and
debacles are
faced with a clear sight and full preparations, it will prove
advantageous for
man and this will help in stabilizing and consolidating his position.
The two Pillars of Patience
Patience relies on two
important
realities. The first reality is concerned with the nature of this
worldly life.
Its details are: Allah has not made this world a house of peace and
satisfaction or of rewards and recompense, but He has made it a house
of
trials. The time that a man spends in this world is really a time for
unending
experiences. He comes out of one trial in order to undergo another
trial which
is harder and different from the one through which he has already
passed, that
is man is tested once by one thing and again by its opposite, as iron
is first
heated in the fire and then it is put in the water. Similarly man is
tested by
favorable as well as opposing means.
When Allah blessed Hazrat
Sulaiman with a
grand and magnificent empire, he knew about these natural laws of the
world. He
had said:
"This is of the bounty of my
Lord,
that He may try me whether I give thanks or am ungrateful. Whoever
gives
thanks, he only gives thanks for (the good of) his Own soul,' and
whoever is
ungrateful (is ungrateful only to his own soul's hurt). For surely, my
Lord is
Absolute in independence, Bountiful."
(Nahl: 40)
The
causes of trial through sadness and hardships are vague and
unfixed. However, we can understand them properly by the example of the
soldiers fighting in the battlefield. In the battlefield some groups
are made to
fight till they have to lose their valuable lives, so that the lives of
other
groups may be saved. The security of other sections is dependent on the
remaining groups being made to fight in new battles. This strategy is
followed
in the wider interest of the country and for- greater advantages, by
the great
leadership of the army In this fighting the life of a man has no
importance,
because the problem is much wider.
Same is the position of luck
or fate. A
certain man is put to different kinds of trials, till he falls down
defeated,
as there is no other way for him, except that he should greet the
hardship that
has arrived with patience and submission. Since this life is a testing
ground,
we should strive hard for success in it.
What is the trial or
examination of life?
It is not words that they can be written, or talks to which attention
may be
paid. The questions of the examination are these hardships and
difficulties
which confront a man, and which open before him the path of fright,
terror, and
frustration. Examination is the name of the anti-reality defects which
prompt a
man to be jealous and nourisher of rancor against his sincere friend;
examination is the name of the tyrannies for which a nation occupies
the place
of god and the other people offer their blood as sacrifice for
retrieving their
usurped rights.
The history of life on this
earth from
the first day tin today is very sorrowful. The right thing is that man
should
himself make his own way in this life, and he
should be sure that the way to his destination is fun of thorns
and
filth.
The second reality is
concerned with the
nature and temperament of faith.
Faith is the name of the
relationship
between man and his Lord. As in the relationship of men, the true
friendship
and sincerity can only be judged when it is confronted with unfavorable
and
bitter conditions, when they have to deal with the hardships brought
about by
the vagaries of time, and when they are surrounded by various kinds of
problems. At such a time a man's real worth and sincerity is known.
Exactly
similar is the case of faith. To find out the truth and sincerity about
faith
it is necessary that a Muslim be tried, he should be put in the
crucible of
fire to see whether he comes out glowing like the gold or whether he
will be
burnt away with the impurities.
"Do men imagine that they
will be
left (at ease) because they say, We believe, and will not be tested
with
affliction? Verily, We tested those who were before you. Thus Allah knows
those
who are sincere, and knows those who feign.
(Ankabut.. 2, 3)
Undoubtedly,
Allah's knowledge covers all manifest and concealed
matters, and from this examination there will be no addition to His
knowledge,
because He knows all the conditions from the beginning till the end.
The Divine
knowledge cannot be made a basis for man's reckoning. His reckoning
will be on
the basis of his own personal deeds. If some criminals deny their
crimes, then
on the Day of Judgment in what way proof can be brought against them
except by
putting them to trial in this world and man's own parts of the body may
give
evidence against him?
About such people Quran has to
say this:
“ And on the Day We gather
them
together.. We shall say to those who ascribed partners (to Allah)..
Where are (now)
those partners of your make-believe ? Then they will have no
contention
except that they will say.. By Allah, our Lord, we never were
idolaters. See
how they lie against themselves, and (how) the thing which they devised
has
failed them /"
(AI-An'am.. 22-24)
How can the reckoning of such
criminals
be taken in the light of the Divine knowledge? Their justifiable
retribution will be proper only when all their misdeeds are
placed
before them. Their efforts and striving to create corruption and
mischief among
others and all their misdeeds will be repeated before them.
On these two bases the
foundation of
patience has been kept. And for this reason religion demands
it, but he
who shuts his eyes from realities by force of his nature is dumbfounded
when he
has to face hardships and his hands and feet become inactive when he
has to
fight difficulties. His rashness dislikes waiting and patience and he
is unable
to tolerate it, Therefore, when anything untoward happens, or he has to
suffer
some kind of failure, or when he meets with an accident, the earth with
all its
great vastness becomes narrow for him, and the conditions become
exasperating
for him. He wants to come out of these conditions in the
twinkling of an
eye, but it is obvious that in this effort he will not ; be successful
for it
is against the temperament of the world and the religion, It is proper
for a
Muslim to learn to be patient and to wait and to wait for long.
"Man is made of haste. I shall
show'
you my signs, but ask Me not to hasten,"
(AI-Ambiya.. 31)