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The question whether there is a life after death does not fall
under the jurisdiction of science, as science is concerned only with
classification and analysis of data. Moreover, man has been busy with
scientific inquiries and research, in the modern sense of the term,
only for the last few centuries, while he has been familiar with the
concept of life after death since times immemorial. All the prophets
of God called their people to worship God and to believe in life after
death. They laid so much emphasis on the belief in life after death
that even a slight doubt in it meant denying God and made all other
beliefs meaningless. The very fact that all the prophets of God have
dealt with this metaphysical question of life after death so
confidently and so uniformly - the gap between their ages being
thousands of years - goes to prove that the source of their knowledge
of life after death as proclaimed by them all, was the same, i.e.,
Divine revelation.
We also know that these prophets of God were greatly opposed by
their people, mainly on the issue of life after death, as their people
thought it impossible. But in spite of opposition, the prophets won
many sincere followers. The question arises: what made those followers
forsake the established beliefs, traditions and customs of their
forefathers, notwithstanding the risk of being totally alienated from
their own community? The simple answer is: they made use of their
faculties of mind and heart and realized the truth. Did they realize
the truth through perceptual consciousness? Not so, as perceptual
experience of life after death is impossible. Actually, God has given
man, besides perceptual consciousness, rational, aesthetic and moral
consciousness too. It is this consciousness that guides man regarding
realities that cannot be verified through sensory data. That is why
all the prophets of God while calling people to believe in God and
life after death, appeal to the aesthetic, moral and rational
consciousness of man. For example, when the idolaters of Makkah denied
even the possibility of life after death, the Quran exposed the
weakness of their stand by advancing very logical and rational
arguments in support of it:
"And he has coined for us a similitude, and has forgotten the fact
of his creation, saying: who will revive these bones when they have
rotted away? Say: He will revive them Who produced them at first, for
He is the Knower of every creation, Who has appointed for you fire
from the green tree, and behold! you kindle from it. Is not He Who
created the heavens and the earth, able to create the like of them?
Yes, and He is indeed the Supreme Creator, the All-Knowing."
(36:78-81)
At another occasion, the Quran very clearly says that the
disbelievers have no sound basis for their denial of life after death.
It is based on pure conjecture:
"They say, 'There is nothing but our present life; we die, and we
live, and nothing but Time destroys us.' Of that they have no
knowledge; they merely conjecture. And when our revelations are
recited to them, their only argument is that they say, 'Bring us our
fathers, if you speak truly.' (45:24-25)
Surely God will raise all the dead. But God has His own plan of
things. A day will come when the whole universe will be destroyed and
then again the dead will be resurrected to stand before God. That day
will be the beginning of the life that will never end, and that Day
every person will be rewarded by God according to his or her good or
evil deed. The explanation that the Quran gives about the necessity of
life after death is what the moral consciousness of man demands.
Actually, if there is no life after death, the very belief in God
becomes irrelevant, or even if one believes in God, that would be an
unjust and indifferent God: having once created man and not concerned
with his fate. Surely, God is just. He will punish the tyrants whose
crimes are beyond count: having killed hundreds of innocent persons,
created great corruptions in the society, enslaved numerous persons to
serve their whims, etc. Man's having a very short span of life in this
world, and this physical world's too being not eternal, punishments or
rewards equal to the evil or noble deeds of persons are not possible
here.
The Quran very emphatically states that the Day of Judgment must
come and God will decide about the fate of each soul according to his
or her record of deeds:
"Those who disbelieve say: The Hour will never come unto us. Say:
Nay, by my Lord, but it is coming unto you surely. (He is) the Knower
of the Unseen. Not an atom's weight, or less than that or greater,
escapes Him in the heavens or in the earth, but it is in a clear
Record. That He may reward those who believe and do good words. For
them is pardon and a rich provision. But those who strive against our
revelations, challenging (Us), theirs will be a painful doom of
wrath." (34:3-5)
The Day of Resurrection will be the Day when God's attributes of
Justice and Mercy will be in full manifestation. God will shower His
Mercy on those who suffered for His sake in the worldly life,
believing that an eternal bliss was awaiting them. But those who
abused the bounties of God, caring nothing for the life to come, will
be in the most miserable state. Drawing a comparison between them, the
Quran says:
"Is he, then, to whom We have promised a goodly promise the
fulfillment of which he will meet, like the one whom We have provided
with the good things of this life, and then on the Day of Resurrection
he will be of those who will be brought arraigned before God?" (28:61)
The Quran also states that this worldly life is a preparation for
the eternal life after death. But those who deny it become slaves of
their passions and desires, make fun of virtuous and God-conscious
persons. Such persons realize their folly only at the time of their
death and wish to be given a further chance in the world but in vain.
Their miserable state at the time of death, and the horror of the Day
of Judgment, and the eternal bliss guaranteed to the sincere believers
are very beautifully mentioned in the following verses of the Holy
Quran:
"Until, when death comes unto one of them, he says, 'My Lord send
me back, that I may do right in that which I have left behind! But
nay! It is but a word that he speaks; and behind them is a barrier
until the day when they are raised. And when the Trumpet is blown
there will be no kinship among them that day, nor will they ask of one
another. Then those whose scales are heavy, they are successful. And
those whose scales are light are those who lose their souls, in hell
abiding, the fire burns their faces and they are glum therein."
(23:99-104)
The belief in life after death not only guarantees success in the
Hereafter but also makes this world full of peace and happiness by
making individuals most responsible and dutiful in their activities.
Think of the people of Arabia. Gambling, wine, tribal feuds,
plundering and murdering were their main traits when they had no
belief in life after death. But as soon as they accepted the belief in
One God and life after death they became the most disciplined nation
of the world. They gave up their vices, helped each other in hours of
need, and settled all their disputes on the basis of justice and
equality. Similarly the denial of life after death has its
consequences not only in the Hereafter but also in this world. When a
nation as a whole denies it, all kinds of evils and corruptions become
rampant in that society and ultimately it is destroyed. The Quran
mentions the terrible end of 'Aad, Thamud and the Pharaoh in some
detail:
"(The tribes of) Thamud and 'Aad disbelieved in the judgment to
come. As for Thamud, they were destroyed by the lightning, and as for
'Aad, they were destroyed by a fierce roaring wind, which He imposed
on them for seven long nights and eight long days so that you might
see the people laid prostrate in it as if they were the stumps of
fallen down palm trees. "Now do you see remnant of them? Pharaoh
likewise and those before him and the subverted cities. They committed
errors and those before him, and they rebelled against the Messenger
of their Lord, and He seized them with a surpassing grip. Lo, when the
waters rose, We bore you in the running ship that We might make it a
reminder for you and for heeding ears to hold. So when the Trumpet is
blown with a single blast and the earth and the mountains are lifted
up and crushed with a single blow, then on that day, the Terror shall
come to pass, and the heaven shall be split for upon that day it will
be very frail. Then as for him who is given his book in his right
hand, he shall say, 'Here take and read my book! Certainly I thought I
should encounter my reckoning.' So he shall be in a pleasing life in a
lofty garden, its clusters nigh to gather. "'Eat and drink with
wholesome appetite for that you did long ago, in the days gone by.'
"But as for him who is given his book in his left hand, he shall
say: 'Would that I had not been given my book and not known my
reckoning! Would that it had been the end! My wealth has not availed
me, my authority is gone from me.'" (69:4-29)
Thus, there are very convincing reasons to believe in life after
death. First, all the prophets of God have called their people to
believe in it. Secondly, whenever a human society is built on the
basis of this belief, it has been the most ideal and peaceful society,
free of social and moral evils. Thirdly, history bears witness that
whenever this belief is rejected collectively by a group of people in
spite of the repeated warning of the Prophet, the group as a whole has
been punished by God even in this world. Fourthly, moral, aesthetic
and rational faculties of man endorse the possibility of life after
death. Fifthly, God's attributes of Justice and Mercy have no meaning
if there is no life after death.
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The article is published by:
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