Chapter XIV - Sinful
Acts
Classification
ins
are classified into:
- 1. Kabira or
great. 2. Saghira or small.
This division is based upon the following
interpreted text in the Holy Koran:
“To those who avoid the great
sins and scandals but commit only the lighter faults, verily the Lord will be
diffused of mercy.”
According to Islam, a human being does not possess
evil in his true nature or self but has the weakness of being tempted into
evil. Therefore, evil is not a human disposition but an acquired habit. It is a
mental disease and may be cured through right preaching and training. Satan,
who is evil by nature, was the first to sin, i.e. to disobey the command
of God. His sin was self-conceit and pride, enumerated among the heaviest sins.
The evil tendency is the bidding of an animal soil.
Joseph, the Prophet, is quoted in the Holy Koran
to have said to himself:
“I do not declare myself free
from (human) weakness; most surely it is the animal soul that commands evil
(and hence man does evil) but God is so Merciful to forgive as He is the most
Merciful.”
Therefore, if the carnal (animal) soul is brought
under the control of true self, one may become free from evil.
Among the great sins are:
1.
Associating any
being with God.
2.
Wilful murder.
3.
Adultery.
4.
Theft or Robbery.
5.
Unnatural crime.
6.
Drunkenness.
7.
Telling lies.
8.
Usury.
9.
Disobedience to
one’s parents.
10.
Charging illegally a
Muslim woman with fornication.
11.
False witness.
12.
Defrauding orphans.
13.
Despair of God’s
mercy under hard trials of destiny.
14.
Cowardice in
defensive religious warfare.
15.
Neglect of prayers
or fasting without any justification.
16.
Gambling.
Sincere repentance from any sin may bring God’s
mercy and salvation. If a non-Muslim embraces Islam, his past shortcomings are
all forgiven. A Muslim, by committing a great sin, becomes a sinner, but not an
infidel. According to “Sunnis.” The Prophets, all of them, including those of the
Old and the New Testaments, do not commit any great sin, but one liable for any
slight imperfections in action. For example, in the case of Adam, his action in
eating the forbidden fruit was not disobedience but weakness of the
understanding, or rather forgetfulness of the divine commandment and not
intentional disobedience thereof. Therefore, he is not to be treated as one who
was disallowed from seeking pardon at the hands of God. Nor does seeking pardon
of God necessarily mean committing any sin. It is only a sign of humility
towards the Almighty God. It is admitted that human beings in any stage of
human perfection are not perfect and that their imperfection is in itself
sufficient reason to seek God’s pardon, because an “imperfect’ cannot
act completely to the bidding of the “Perfect’ (i.e. God).
There is a tradition that the Prophet said: “I ask pardon of God and repent towards Him so
many times every day.” Thus, “sin” is human imperfection, a weakness in
being tempted, though the real self remains pure in its essence.
Suicide:-
Suicide is a great sin, because it is considered a
willful act to kill oneself. According to the tradition of the Prophet. “Whoever
kills himself will suffer in hell.” In Islam, life is respected and its
destruction, though it may be in one’s own care, is forbidden. Accordingly,
cases of death by suicide are very rare in Muslim countries. A true Muslim must
submit to the decrees of God and accept cheerfully all unavoidable events.
According to the teachings of the Holy Koran, some of these happenings should
be taken to be trials ordered by the Almighty God. The following is an English
translation of the Koranic text bearing on the subject:
“And He will most certainly try
you with some fear, hunger, loss of property, lives and fruits (i.e. result of
your strivings), and the Prophet is ordered to give good news to the patient in
all such trials; they, who, when a misfortune or a loss of property or lives
befalls them, should say nothing but that surely they are the belongings of God
and to Him they shall return. Upon those patient the Almighty God will shower
His blessings and mercy, whence they prove to be submissive and dutiful to
their Lord.”
From this point of view, a Muslim, in attempting
to commit suicide, is really revolting against the trials sent down to him
by God in the form of misfortunes.
Permissible And Prohibited Food
ood
is also divided in Islamic religion into permissible and prohibited. Among the
forbidden food are the following :
Quadrupeds that seize their prey with their paws
and teeth or talons, such as cats, tigers, etc.; and among birds; crows, kites,
eagles, etc.. Besides these, the flesh of elephants; the flesh of any animal
dying a natural death; the blood; the flesh of swine; and the flesh of those
animals over which names other than God’s name have been invoked when
slaughtered.
The following is an interpretation of the text in
the Holy Koran bearing on the subject:
“Forbidden to you is that
which dies of it self; and blood and flesh of swine, and that on which any name
other than that of Allah (God) has been invoked (while the animal is being
slaughtered) and the strangled (animal), and that beaten to death and that
killed by a fall and that killed by being smitten with the horn, and that which
beasts have eaten, except what you slaughter in the proper manner” ()
(V – 3)
An animal to be fit for food must be slaughtered
with a sharp knife; in using it care must be taken to avoid suffering to the
animal as far as possible. Before killing, the name of God must be
recited before using the knife (the formula Allahu akbar –God is Greater– is
usually said), signifying that it was God who allowed animals to be slaughtered
for the nourishment of human beings.