Ready, willing and able

Only when we let go of our fatalistic thinking, can we change our lives.


Fahad Faruqui January 15, 2012

When the New Year approaches, most of us prepare to rattle off a laundry list of things that we plan to change in our lives in the coming year. We may want to lose weight, find a better job, or devote more time to studying to get accepted into a top university, and so on. About a month or two into the year, many of us will abandon these resolutions and simply blame it on unavoidable circumstances or “fate.” If God wanted something to happen in our lives then it would, right?

I began pondering the question of free will when I was in elementary school. I used to wonder if I would get the grade that I was predestined to have regardless of whether I had studied or not. The local mullah who taught me the Holy Qu’ran at the time said: “You don’t even have the power to lift a pencil without God’s will.” His fatalistic teachings in mind, life seemed to be like a television drama where I needed only to wait for a fixed plot to unfold.

That was not the ideal lesson to receive as an impressionable youngster because it can lead one to wonder how meaningful human action is and to what degree we should make an effort to actualise our dreams. If the circumstances of my life are written in stone, God has left me no choice than to align my desires with what He has decreed for me. From this vantage point, I have little incentive to put in the effort to pursue my goals.

If our lives are completely scripted, a letter for a dream job or a loan to start a business should magically arrive on our doorsteps, and surely, it’s only befitting to expect a serendipitous meeting with your true love. Just say “insh’Allah” (God willing) and the pieces of the jigsaw puzzle of one’s life will fall in place.

This perception is flawed in my view, because while God may give us the puzzle pieces, we must use the intellect and strength He has granted us to put the pieces together.

Understanding the degree of a human being’s free will has been debated since the time of the last prophet. According to Islamic scholar Abdallah Adhami, the companions of Prophet Muhammad (PBUH) often asked, “f-ma’l ‘amal,” meaning “what is the point of doing work?” or “what good are deeds?”

The importance of human action as a prerequisite for success in any intended pursuit is emphasised many times in the Quran and Hadith. Citing an axiomatic prophetic principle, Imam Adhami described how the ummah (community) of the last prophet should be “dynamic and committed to action”: “If the Hour (end of the world) were to arrive while you were just about to plant a seed into the ground, you should go ahead and plant it.”

God does not desire us to sit around and wait for our lives to happen. We learn that it is only through our effort to change our internal disposition that we can change our circumstances. “God will not change the condition of a people until they change what is in themselves.” (Quran 13:11)

This gives a renewed meaning to “insh’Allah” that, in essence, counters overdependence on predestination. We have the ability to pursue our goals and make decisions, but God has prior knowledge of the choices we will make using our free will and intellect.

Still, while rejecting the idea of Jabr (complete predestination), I was left grappling to understand where I belong in the continuum between free will and predestination. Tim Winter, a lecturer of Islamic Studies at Cambridge University, described the orthodox Muslim doctrine of ‘acquisition’, or kasb, to explain how our free will operates. “Our acts already exist (for God, time has no reality), but we can acquire them through the moral dimension of the ruh (human consciousness).”

So we aren’t controlled by a “joystick” placed aside the Divine Throne in the seventh heaven and, rather, human agency is needed to realise predetermined outcomes.

Indeed, why would God have created Adam and allowed Satan to freely lead men astray until eternity — unless he was picked to play the part of an antagonist? If humans were to live on predestined commands, then who is doomed to hell or who is raised to heaven would be purely arbitrary.

In essence, the fact that God has foreknowledge of our decisions does not negate the fact that we as humans have the free will to make those decisions.

Rumi scholar Kabir Helminski pointed to the importance of developing will, the capacity to choose consciously in the moment, to our spiritual path. “It is what makes us human more than anything else,” he wrote. “The highest development of spirituality is the development of will — in the end we will offer that will to God. In a sense that is the end of will, but really it is the end to all the obstacles and resistances from the nafs [ego] that block true will.”

Mr. Helminski’s thoughtful response reminded me of the 8th century Sufi ascetic Rabi’a al Adawiyya, who was seen in the streets of Basra carrying a lit torch in one hand and a bucket of water in the other. She said she wanted to set fire to paradise and extinguish the flames of hell so that people would devote themselves to God for God’s sake. Resigned to God’s will, she was neither motivated by the desire for eternal bliss in heaven nor the fear of hellfire, and through this metaphorical act, she hoped that the people of Basra would transcend materialism and turn to reality.

All of the prophets, from Adam to Mohammad, may God be pleased with them, worked hard to spread the message and remained patient through many trials and tribulations.

Ultimately, the chance that we would be able to realise our dreams — whether it is success in exams, job, or even a relationship — without putting in our heart and soul into them is next to nil.

Similarly, as much as I would have loved to see this article write itself, it didn’t.

In the end, we are responsible for our actions, successes and failures. In attaining our dreams and turning our New Year’s resolutions into reality, we should put forward our utmost effort rather than blindly holding ‘fate’ responsible for our failure to do so.

Wishing you all a productive New Year!

 Fahad Faruqui is a writer and educator. You can email him at fahad@caa.columbia.edu or connect with him on Twitter @fahadfaruqui

Published in The Express Tribune, Sunday Magazine, January 15th, 2012.

COMMENTS (2)

Saad Raees | 12 years ago | Reply

Beautifu! Just beatiful!! Thank God there are some people who could do motivational writing instead of just bragging about one political party or the other and make us more miserable!

Adeel | 12 years ago | Reply

This is a very awesome article written by the extremely creative author. He has given his thoughts a very beautiful words that are self explanatory.

I myself has the same opinion in this regard and fully agree with the writter.

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