The Purpose of Life From Islamic Perspective

Nonfiction, Religion & Spirituality, Middle East Religions, Islam
Cover of the book The Purpose of Life From Islamic Perspective by Muham Sakura Dragon, PublishDrive
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Muham Sakura Dragon ISBN: 9781516300631
Publisher: PublishDrive Publication: June 27, 2016
Imprint: PublishDrive Language: English
Author: Muham Sakura Dragon
ISBN: 9781516300631
Publisher: PublishDrive
Publication: June 27, 2016
Imprint: PublishDrive
Language: English

What is the meaning and purpose of life?’  This is, perhaps, the most important question that has ever been asked.  Throughout the ages, philosophers have considered it to be the most fundamental question.  Scientists, historians, philosophers, writers, psychologists and the common man all wrestle with the question at some point in their lives. 

‘Why do we eat?’  ‘Why do we sleep?’  ‘Why do we work?’  The answers we would get to these questions would be similar.  ‘I eat to live.’  ‘I sleep to rest.’  ‘I work to support myself and my family.’  But when it comes to what the purpose of life is, people are confused.  We see their confusion by the type of answers we receive.  Youths may say, "I live for booze and bikinis."  The middle aged professional might say, "I live to save enough for a comfortable retirement."  The old man would probably say, "I’ve been asking why I’m here most of my life.  If there’s a purpose, I don’t care anymore."  And perhaps the most common answer will be, "I really don’t know!"

How, then, do you discover the purpose of life?  We basically have two options.  The first is to let ‘human reason’ - the celebrated achievement of the Enlightenment - guide us.  After all, the Enlightenment gave us modern science based on careful observation of the natural world.  But have post-Enlightenment philosophers figured it out?  Camus described life as "absurd"; Sartre spoke of "anguish, abandonment and despair."  To these Existentialists, life has no meaning.

Islam is the response to humanity’s search for meaning.  The purpose of creation for all men and women for all times has been one: to know and worship God.

The Quran teaches us that every human being is born conscious of God,

"(Remember) when your Lord extracted from the loins of Adam’s children their descendants and made them testify [saying]: ‘Am I not your Lord?’  They said: ‘Yes, we testify to it.’  (This was) in case you say on the Day of Judgment: ‘We were unaware of this.’  Or you say: ‘It was our ancestors who worshipped others besides God and we are only their descendants.  Will you then destroy us for what those liars did?’"(Quran 7:172-173)

The Prophet of Islam teaches us that God created this primordial need in human nature at the time Adam was made.  God took a covenant from Adam when He created him.  God extracted all of Adam’s descendants who were yet to be born, generation after generation, spread them out, and took a covenant from them.  He addressed their souls directly, making them bear witness that He was their Lord.  Since God made all human beings swear to His Lordship when He created Adam, this oath is imprinted on the human soul even before it enters the fetus, and so a child is born with a natural belief in the Oneness of God.  This natural belief is called fitra in Arabic.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

What is the meaning and purpose of life?’  This is, perhaps, the most important question that has ever been asked.  Throughout the ages, philosophers have considered it to be the most fundamental question.  Scientists, historians, philosophers, writers, psychologists and the common man all wrestle with the question at some point in their lives. 

‘Why do we eat?’  ‘Why do we sleep?’  ‘Why do we work?’  The answers we would get to these questions would be similar.  ‘I eat to live.’  ‘I sleep to rest.’  ‘I work to support myself and my family.’  But when it comes to what the purpose of life is, people are confused.  We see their confusion by the type of answers we receive.  Youths may say, "I live for booze and bikinis."  The middle aged professional might say, "I live to save enough for a comfortable retirement."  The old man would probably say, "I’ve been asking why I’m here most of my life.  If there’s a purpose, I don’t care anymore."  And perhaps the most common answer will be, "I really don’t know!"

How, then, do you discover the purpose of life?  We basically have two options.  The first is to let ‘human reason’ - the celebrated achievement of the Enlightenment - guide us.  After all, the Enlightenment gave us modern science based on careful observation of the natural world.  But have post-Enlightenment philosophers figured it out?  Camus described life as "absurd"; Sartre spoke of "anguish, abandonment and despair."  To these Existentialists, life has no meaning.

Islam is the response to humanity’s search for meaning.  The purpose of creation for all men and women for all times has been one: to know and worship God.

The Quran teaches us that every human being is born conscious of God,

"(Remember) when your Lord extracted from the loins of Adam’s children their descendants and made them testify [saying]: ‘Am I not your Lord?’  They said: ‘Yes, we testify to it.’  (This was) in case you say on the Day of Judgment: ‘We were unaware of this.’  Or you say: ‘It was our ancestors who worshipped others besides God and we are only their descendants.  Will you then destroy us for what those liars did?’"(Quran 7:172-173)

The Prophet of Islam teaches us that God created this primordial need in human nature at the time Adam was made.  God took a covenant from Adam when He created him.  God extracted all of Adam’s descendants who were yet to be born, generation after generation, spread them out, and took a covenant from them.  He addressed their souls directly, making them bear witness that He was their Lord.  Since God made all human beings swear to His Lordship when He created Adam, this oath is imprinted on the human soul even before it enters the fetus, and so a child is born with a natural belief in the Oneness of God.  This natural belief is called fitra in Arabic.

More books from PublishDrive

Cover of the book Hilda Lessways by Arnold Bennett - Delphi Classics (Illustrated) by Muham Sakura Dragon
Cover of the book The Cricket on the Hearth by Charles Dickens (Illustrated) by Muham Sakura Dragon
Cover of the book The Statue by Arnold Bennett - Delphi Classics (Illustrated) by Muham Sakura Dragon
Cover of the book The Invisible Man by H. G. Wells (Illustrated) by Muham Sakura Dragon
Cover of the book Anthony van Dyck: 70 Drawings & Studies by Muham Sakura Dragon
Cover of the book English Slovakian Bible №5 by Muham Sakura Dragon
Cover of the book English Finnish Bible №2 by Muham Sakura Dragon
Cover of the book Un Tempio nel Verde by Muham Sakura Dragon
Cover of the book Rebellion by Muham Sakura Dragon
Cover of the book Peer Gynt by Henrik Ibsen - Delphi Classics (Illustrated) by Muham Sakura Dragon
Cover of the book Human, All Too Human by Friedrich Nietzsche - Delphi Classics (Illustrated) by Muham Sakura Dragon
Cover of the book All You Need Is Less by Muham Sakura Dragon
Cover of the book English Italian Bible VI by Muham Sakura Dragon
Cover of the book The New Spiralizer Cookbook by Muham Sakura Dragon
Cover of the book Pink and White Tyranny by Harriet Beecher Stowe - Delphi Classics (Illustrated) by Muham Sakura Dragon
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy