Wednesday 3 July 2013

The Challenges to Religious Belief from Sociology

The Challenges to Religious Belief from Sociology

Definition of Sociology

The word ‘sociology’ comes from the Latin ‘socios’ meaning friend or ally and the Greek suffix "-ology" which means "study of". It is a social science involving the study of the social lives of people, groups, and societies. It is sometimes defined as the study of social interactions. Sociology is a relatively new discipine having its orgins in the early 19th century. It usually concerns itself with the social rules and processes that bind and separate people not only as individuals, but as members of associations, groups, and institutions.
Sociology is interested in human behavior as social beings; thus its range of interest includes the analysis of short contacts between anonymous individuals on the street to the study of global social processes.

Emile Durkheim (1858-1917)

Durkheim attempted to demonstrate that religious phenomena stemmed from social rather than divine factors. As a sociologist he was interested in the origins, meaning and function of religion. He came to define religion in terms of its function within society. He saw it as a means of social cohesion. In The Elementary Forms of the Religious Life (1912), Durkheim noted that religion is an important part of the stability and integration in a society. Societies divide the world up into ‘the sacred’ and ‘the profane’. Religion provides a unified system of belief and practices relative to sacred things. Durkheim understood sacred things as those things which are set apart and forbidden. These beliefs and practices unite people into a single moral community e.g. the church.
Durkheim suggests that by worshipping god, people are in fact worshipping society. It is easier to visualise and direct feelings towards a symbol or totem rather than a complex concept as society itself.
Religion gives a framework for the values and ideas held by society. It does not exist independently of the people who practice it. It is not a set of beliefs and practices, but a community activity. The group activities that religion involves act as a means whereby society is strengthen. Religion is therefore not so much about God, but more about the consolidation of society. Religion provides a particular society with its sense of identity. Religion expresses something of the purpose of a society, and can often provide a society with a distinctive identity. It is very much a group activity.

Karl Marx (1818-1883)

Marx saw society as structuring itself to meet the material and social needs of its members. This has given rise to a capitalist society, where the workers produce goods and services, and rich industrialists and landowners profit from their labours. This in turn forces the individual to view their labour, and therefore themselves, as an object, producing goods within the capitalist system, and results in their alienation. This alienation prevents the individual from being truly human, and creates a tension in society.
Marx was influenced by Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel (1770-1831). Hegel taught that history has been a long series of reflections. A thought is usually proposed as a development of previous thoughts. Others then reflect and respond to this thought, and a possibly contradictory thought is proposed, creating a tension between the new and the original thought. This tension is then resolved by a third proposal, which takes the best of the two.
Hegelian thought:
Marx saw that this dialectic was leading to a state of revolution, where the tension of society itself would become resolved, before becoming a part of a further tension. The tension was caused by the alienation of the individual by the oppression of capitalism, which prevented the individual from being truly human.
Although Marx was himself religious, he came to see religion as a part of the oppressing structures that were alienating humanity.
Marx saw organised religion as:
  • dehumanising
  • disempowering
  • authoritarian
  • stifling free social self-expression
Marx saw true human nature as being both self-conscious and self-deterministic. This true character is frustrated by both capitalism and religion. Religion replaces this determinism with empty meaningless imagery, devoid of dignity.

Marx’s writings

Marx’s writings include the view that economic forces were increasingly oppressing human beings. He believed that political action was a necessary part of philosophy. His various essays also show the influence of Hegel on his philosophy of history. The Communist Manifesto was written jointly with Friedrich Engels (1820-1895) on the eve of the German revolution of 1848. Its full title is The Manifesto of the Communist Party. In it Marx and Engels presented their political and historical theories. The Communist Manifesto interpreted history as a series of conflicts between classes. It predicted that the ruling middle class would one day be overthrown by the working class. The result of this revolution, according to Marx and Engels, would be classless society in which the chief means of production are publicly owned.
In Das Kapital Marx described the free market system. He considered it to be the most efficient and dynamic economic system. However, he also regarded it as being flawed. Eventually it would destroy itself through increasingly severe periods of inflation and depression.
According to Marx the free market system accumulates more and more wealth but becomes less and less capable of using this wealth wisely. Marx saw the accumulation of riches being accompanied by the rapid spread of human misery.

Marx’s theories

Marx’s theory is sometimes referred to as dialectical materialism. The basis of Marxism is the conviction that socialism is inevitable. Marx believed that capitalism, was doomed and that socialism was the only alternative. Marx believed that the individual, not God, is the highest being. People have made themselves what they are by their own labour. They use their intelligence and creative talent to dominate the world by a process called production. Through production, people make the goods they need to live. The means of production include natural resources, factories, machinery, and labour.
The process of production, according to Marx, is a collective effort, not an individual one. Organized societies are the principal creative agents in human history, and historical progress requires increasingly developed societies for production. Such developed societies are achieved by a continual refinement of production methods and of the division of labour. By the division of labour, Marx meant that each person specialises in one job, resulting in the development of two classes of people – the rulers and the workers. The ruling class own the means of production. The working class consist of the non-owners, who are exploited (treated unfairly) by the owners. According to Marx, all history is a struggle between the ruling and working classes. All societies have been torn by this conflict. Past societies tried to keep the exploited class under control by using elaborated political organisations, laws, customs, traditions, ideologies, religions and rituals. Marx argued that personality, beliefs and activities are shaped by these institutions. By recognising these forces, he reasoned, people will be able to overcome them through revolutionary action.
Marx believed that private ownership of the chief means of production was the heart of the class system. For people to be truly free, he declared, the means of production must be publicly owned – by the community as a whole. With the resulting general economic and social equality, all people would have an opportunity to follow their own desires and to use their leisure time creatively. Unfair institutions and customs would disappear. All these events, said Marx, would take place when the proletariat (working class) revolted against the bourgeoisie (owners of the means of production).

Marxism in the Twentieth Century

Marxist ideals became the driving force behind the Russian revolution in 1917. Communist parties sprung up throughout Europe. In Britain Marxism influenced the Labour party. Fear of Communism was largely responsible for the election of the Nazi party in 1933 in Germany. After WWII Europe became divided with the Communist Block in the east and NATO in the west. China became Communist in 1949. Cuba became Communist in 1959. The clash of political ideals after WWII resulted in the ‘Cold War’ in which the mistrust between the USA and USSR resulted in a nuclear arms race. Marxism has been discredited by events in the early 1990s, when the Communist countries of the Eastern Bloc crumbled and fell, and the new governments embraced free market capitalism.
However, many religious people recognise that Marx was identifying an important social phenomenon, and Christianity and Marxism have a great deal in common. Christian Socialism is taught by many Church leaders, and Christian action to alleviate the hardships of the poor is based on Marx’s socialist principles. Some draw comparisons between Liberation Theology and Communism. However, the Christian ideal is of voluntary participation in the socialist activity, rather than compulsion.

Max Weber (1864-1920)

The German sociologist Max Weber believed that the power of religion is wrapped up with the power of the charismatic leaders who begin religious movements, and with the people who continue their work. He made some distinctions between mainstream religion and the ‘sect’. He tried to find a positive role for religion in the development of society. Durkheim had argued that religion was a social glue that bound society together. Weber thought that religion had a more active role – religious movements could often be important agents of social change. He looked at the relationship between religion and economic activity. He observed the way in which Protestantism had given rise to the development of capitalism. Capitalism is not simply a money making system. Rather, it is a ‘way of life’, with its own ideology and ethical system of duties and obligations.
He noted that Protestantism emphasised the individual, and the individual’s need to work for God’s glory. In The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism Weber quoted John Wesley:

The Protestant Work ethic

The Protestant Work ethic is a code of morals based on the principles of thrift, discipline, hard work, and individualism. It came to be known as the ‘Protestant’ work ethic after its promotion by leading Protestant theologians such as John Calvin. The work ethic provides a strict moral and spiritual framework in which a person can strive to live a ‘good’ life. The Reformers were anxious not to give the impression that these ‘good works’ gave a person access to Everlasting Life. This could only come about through the Grace of God. However, Luther believed that God calls individuals to work in some capacity or other, and we fulfil our vocation when we perform the tasks God gives us.

Saturday 9 March 2013

A brief summary of all sins

1. Associating partners with Allah (Shirk) Great Shirk: worshiping beings other than Allah (proof all over Quraan) Small Shirk: Riya The Prophet (saws),
"Should I not inform you of that which I fear for you even more than the dangers of Dajjal? It is the hidden shirk: A person stands to pray and he beautifies his prayer because he sees the people looking at him". (Sahih; Sunan ibn Majah)
2. Committing murder: (Furqan; 68)
3. Performing Sorcery (2: 102)
4. Not performing the Prayers (Maryam: 59)
5. Withholding the Zakat (Charity) (3: 180)
6. Breaking the fast of Ramadhan or not fasting in that month with a valid excuse.
Prophet (saws) said,
"Islam is built upon five pillars: testifying that there is no true god except Allah and that Muhammad is the messenger of Allah, performing the prayers, paying the zakat, making the pilgrimage to the house, and fasting the month of Ramadhan." (Sahih al-Jami # 2837)
7. Not performing the pilgrimage when one has the ability to do so (above hadith)
8. Disobeying one's parents (al-Isra: 23)
9. Cutting off the ties of relationships (Muhammad: 22)
10. Committing adultery or fornication (al-Isra: 30)
11. Committing sodomy
The Prophet (saws) said,
"Allah will not look at a person (with pleasure) who commits sodomy with a man or a woman." (Sahih al-Jami # 7678)
12. Taking or paying interest (2: 275)
13. Devouring the wealth of orphans (4:10)
14. Forging statements concerning Allah or forging Hadith (al-Zumar: 60)
15. Fleeing from the battle (al-Anfal: 16)
16. Wrongdoing, deception or oppression on the part of the ruler (al-Shura: 42)
17. Being arrogant, boastful, vain (al-Nahl: 23)
18. Giving false testimony (al-Furqan: 72)
19. Drinking alcoholic beverages (5: 90)
20. Gambling (5: 90)
21. Slandering innocent women (al-Nur: 23)
22. Misappropriating something from the booty (3:161)
23. Stealing (5:38)
24. Committing highway robbery (5: 33)
25. Making false oath
Prophet (saws) said,
"If someone is ordered to take an oath and he takes a false oath in order to take possession of property of a Muslim, then he will incur Allah's wreath when he meets Him." (Sahih al-Jami # 6083)
26. Committing oppression (al-Shuara: 277)
27. Levying illegal taxes
Prophet (saws) said,
"Do you know who the bankrupt is? The bankrupt form my nation is the one who appears on the Day of Resurrection having performed the prayers, fasted and paid the zakat, but had also abused that person, slandered that person, wrongfully taken the wealth of that person and spilled the blood of that person. These people will take from his good deeds. If his good deeds are thereby exhausted, he will be given their sins and then he will be thrown into the hell-fire." (Sahih al-Jami #87)
28. Consuming forbidden wealth or taking it by any means (2: 188)
29. Committing suicide (4: 29)
30. Being a perpetual liar (3: 61)
31. Ruling by laws other than the laws of Islam (5: 44)
32. Engaging in bribery (2: 188)
33. Women appearing like men and vice-versa
Prophet (saws) said,
"Allah's curse is upon women who appear like men and upon men who appear like women." (Sahih al-Jami # 4976)
34. Being a dayyouth
Dayyouth: is the one who approves the indecency of his womenfolk and who is void of jealousy or the pimp who facilitates indecency between two people. Prophet (saws) said,
"Allah has forbidden the Paradise to three people: the alcoholic, the runaway slave, and the one who is complacent in the face of the evil deeds that his family is performing." (Sahih al-Jami # 3047)
35. Marrying for the purpose of making a woman allowable for another (Baqarah)
36. Not keeping clean from the remains of urine
Ibn Abbas reported that Prophet (saws) passed by a grave and said, "These two are being punished and they are not being punished for something hard. But it is a great sin. One of them did not keep himself clean form his urine and the other went around spreading tales." (Sahih al-Jami # 2436)
37. Acting for show (al-Maoon: 4-6)
38. Acquiring knowledge only for worldly gain or concealing knowledge (2: 160)
39. Breaching trusts (al-Anfal: 27)
40. Reminding people of one's kindness (2: 27)
41. Denying predestination (al-Qamar: 49)
"If Allah were to punish the inhabitants of the heavens and earths, then He would punish and He would not be doing injustice to them. If He were to have mercy on them, His mercy would be greater than from their actions. If a person had amount of gold equivalent to Mount Uhud or similar to Mount Uhud and spent it in the Path of Allah, (that spending) would not be accepted form him by Allah until he believes in the preordainment of good and evil. And until he knows that what afflicted him was not going to miss him and what missed him was not going to afflict him. If you were to die with any belief other than that, you would enter the Hellfire."
(Kitab al-Sunnah by Ibn Abu Asi # 245. Albani says that its chain is sahih)
42. Eavesdropping on other's private conversation (Hujarat: 12)
43. Spreading harmful tales(al-Qamar: 10)
44. Cursing others
Prophet (saws) said,
"Abusing a Muslim is evil and fighting him is disbelief." (Sahih al-Jami # 3598)
45. Not fulfilling one's promises
Prophet (saws) said,
"Whoever has a four characteristic is a complete hypocrite. Whoever posses any of these characteristics has the characteristics of hypocrisy until he gives it up; whenever he makes a promise, he breaks it up…." (Bukhari)
46. Believing in what soothsayers & astrologers say
Prophet (saws) said,
"Whoever goes to fortune-teller and asks him about something will not have his prayer accepted for forty nights." (Sahih al-Jami # 5816)
47. A wife being rebellious to her husband (4: 34)
48. Putting pictures of beings with souls on clothing, curtains, rocks and any other items
Prophet (saws) said,
"…the people who will receive the greatest punishment on the day of judgment are those who compete with Allah in creation [those who make pictures or statues]." (sahih al-Jami # 1691)
49. Striking one's self, wailing, tearing one's clothing, pulling one's hair & similar deeds as a form of mourning
Prophet (saws) said,
"One who strikes his cheeks or tears his clothing and shouts in the manner of pre-Islamic culture is not one of us." (Sahih al-Jami # 5713)
50. Committing injustice (al-Shura: 42)
51. Being overbearing or taking advantage of the weak, slaves, wives or animals
Prophet (saws) said, "Allah will torture those who torture people in this world"(Muslim)
52. Harming neighbours
Prophet (saws) said,
"A person whose neighbour is not safe from his mischief will not enter paradise." (sahih al-Jami # 7002)
53. Harming and abusing Muslims (al-Ahzab: 58)
54. Wearing one's clothes too long, i.e. below the ankles
Prophet (saws) said,
"What is below the ankles will be in the hellfire [note: this is a general hadith which applies irrespective of whether pride is involved or not and is not limited to prayers]." (Bukhari)
55. Harming the slaves of Allah
Prophet (saws) said that Allah said,
"Whoever shows enmity to a slave of Mine (Allah's) I shall be at war with him." (Sahih al-Jami # 1778)
56. Men wearing silk & gold
Prophet (saws) said,
"Gold and silk have been permitted for the females of my nation and forbidden for its males." (Sahih al-Jami # 209)
Prophet (saws) said,
"Men who wears silk in this world will have no portion [of heavens] in the hereafter." (Muslim)
57. Running away of a slave
Prophet (saws) said,
"If a slave runs away, his prayers will not be accepted." (Sahih al-Jami # 257)
58. Sacrificing animals for other than Allah
Prophet (sawss) said,
"The one who sacrifices for other than Allah is cursed by Allah." (Sahih al-Jami # 4988)
59. Claiming that somebody is one's father while the claimant knows it is not true
Prophet (saws) said,
"One who claims that someone is his father and knows that it is not true will be forbidden of paradise." (Sahih al-Jami # 5865)
60. Arguing or quarrelling for show & not seeking the truth
Prophet (saws) said,
"Whoever argues in support of something that is wrong and he knows it Allah will be angry with him until he stops." (Sahih al-Jami # 6073)
61. Not allowing excess water to flow to others
Prophet (saws) said,
"Whoever doesn't allow the access water or pasture for others will not share in the blessings of Allah on the day of judgment." (Sahih al-Jami # 6436)
62. Not measuring the weights properly (al-Mutafafifeen: 1-3)
63. Thinking that one is safe from Allah's planning (al-Araf: 99)
64. Eating carrion, blood or pork meat (al-Anam: 145)
65. Not praying in the congregation & praying by one's self without a valid excuse
Prophet (saws) said,
"Whoever hears the call to prayer and doesn't come to prayer, there is no prayer for him say for the one who has valid excuse." (Sahih al-Jami # 6176)
66. Continually not performing the Friday prayers and congregational prayers without any valid excuse Prophet (saws) said,
"If people don't stop abandoning the Friday Prayers Allah may seal their hearts and they will become headless." (Muslim)
67. Harming others by manipulation one's bequests (4: 12)
68. Being deceitful or deceptive (Fatir: 43)
69. Spying on the Muslims & pointing out their secrets (al-Kalam: 11)
70. Abusing or reviling anyone of the Companions of the Prophet (saws)
Prophet (saws) said,
"Do not revile my companions for, by the one in whose hands is my soul, if you were to spend in charity a mountain of gold similar to mount Uhud it would not be equal to a handful or a half a handful (or what they have done)." (Sahih al-Jami # 7187)

Saturday 26 January 2013

Traps of Iblees (Shetan)

It is not possible to encompass one of Iblees' evils, let alone all of them. Since Iblees' evil is of six types, Iblees remains behind the son of Adam until he gets him to do one or more of these six evils.
The first evil is the evil of kufr and shirk and enmity to Allah and His Messenger (sallallaahu 'alaihi wa sallam). If he gains this from the son of Adam, his moaning is eased, and he rests from his ordeal with this man. Further, this is the first thing Iblees wants from the worshipper (al-'Abd). If Iblees gains this, he makes this person part of his army, one of his soldiers, and he appoints him as a deputy or agent against other human beings. Then, this person becomes one of the deputies or callers of Iblees.
If he despairs of enticing him with the first evil, and if this person is one of those for whom it was written that he would be a Muslim in his mother's womb, Iblees tries the second class of evil.
This is bid'ah (innovation). Iblees loves Bid'ah more than debauchery and disobedience because the harm of Bid'ah is in the essence of the religion. Moreover, it is an unrepentable sin and is against the call of the messengers and is a call to a message different from the one conveyed by Ar-Rasool. Bid'ah is a gate to Kufr and Shirk. Therefore, if Iblees gains the performance of Bid'ah from a person and makes him one of the people of Bid'ah, he also becomes one of his agents and a caller of his.
If Iblees fails and is unable to trap Al-'Abd at this class, and if he is one of those who were granted by Allah the gift of As-Sunnah and hatred of the people of Bid'ah and error, he proceeds to the third class of evil, which is the class of major sins in their various forms.
Iblees is very covetous of letting a person fall into major sin, especially if he is a scholar who is followed. Iblees is covetous of that, so that he may repel people from him and spread his sins and disobedience amongst the people. He uses some people as his agents to spread this person's sins under the false pretence that this will help them to get closer to Allaah. But in fact this person is the deputy of Iblees without knowing it. For those who would like abomination to be spread amongst the believers there is a great torment in this life and in the Hereafter especially if they take charge of spreading about enormities, not out of advice, but by obeying Iblees and being his agent. All this is to repel people from the Scholar and from his benefit.
Furthermore, the sins of this person (scholar), even if they reach the sky, are less to Allah than the sins of those who would like to spread his sins about. The scholar's sins are wrongdoing to himself. If he seeks forgiveness from Allah and repents, Allah will accept his repentance, and He will change his bad deeds to good deeds. However, the sin of those who spread about abominations are doing wrong to the believers by looking for their mistakes and by intending to expose them. Allah is in close observation, and He knows about this ambuscade. Nothing hidden in the chest or soul is hidden to Allah.
If Iblees is unable to snare Al-'Abd at this degree he moves him to the fourth class, or the minor sins. These sins may ruin a person if they accumulate. That is why Ar-Rasool (sallallaahu 'alaihi wa sallam) said, Be aware of the minor sins, because the simile of the minor sin is like the people who went to a desert. Then he (sallallaahu 'alaihi wa sallam) mentioned a Hadeeth the meaning of which is that every one of them brought a stick of wood until they had kindled a huge fire (just as the minor sins add up little by little until they become a major sin). The person continues taking the matter of minor sins easily until he considers them inconsequential. Therefore, a person who commits major sins but fears their effect is in a better condition than he is.
If the Al-'Abd has prevented Iblees from trapping him at this level, he moves him to the fifth level. The fifth level is to occupy him with permissible things that do not gain him reward or punishment. However, the punishment of this level is caused by passing the reward missed by being occupied with these deeds.
If Al-'Abd has kept Iblees from succeeding at this level, and if he is careful about his time, being covetous with it, knows the value of moments, and knows the value of what comes of comfort or torment, Iblees transfers him to the sixth level. The sixth class is to occupy him with deeds of lesser reward to keep virtue away from him and to prevent him from attaining the reward of the favoured deed.
Therefore, he orders him to do a good action with less reward if that includes leaving a better action. Very few people are aware of this. Because if a person feels a strong urge to some kind of obedience, he does not doubt that it is true obedience and that he is getting closer to Allah. He never thinks that this call is from Iblees because he believes that Iblees never calls one to do good. Therefore, he thinks that this call is from Allah.. Actually he is excused because he never knew that Iblees would call one to seventy doors of good deeds either to get him to one door of evil or to let a better deed than these seventy deeds pass away from him.
This cannot be known except by a light from Allah, a light he instils in the heart of Al-'Abd. The source of this type of knowledge is following the way of Ar-Rasool (sallallaahu 'alaihi wa sallam) and taking care of the levels of deeds with Allah, the deeds of His favoured ones, the deeds more pleasing to Him, and those more beneficial to Al-'Abd, and deeds that have more Naseehah (guidance) from Allah, His Rasool, His Book, and His believing worshippers. No one has this type of knowledge except the inheritors of Ar-Rasool (sallallaahu 'alaihi wa sallam), his deputies in the Ummah, and his successors on earth. In addition, most of the creation is screened from this. This call does not come to their hearts. Allah gives His favour to whomever He wills from among His worshippers.
If Al-'Abd prevents Iblees from trapping him at any of these six levels, and if it becomes difficult for Iblees, he empowers his party of jinn and human beings with different kinds of harm, imputing disbelief to him, calling him midguided and an innovator, warning people against him, and intending to weaken him and to disturb his heart. Iblees, by using this method, tries to confuse this person's thinking and tries to prevent people from benefiting from him.
Therefore Iblees expends his utmost effort to empower the defenders of falsehood, from human beings and from jinn, against him. Then the believer is at war until death. Whenever he gives up, he is hurt or is taken captive. Hence the believer is in Jihad until he meets with Allah.
Finally, I hope you take note of this chapter and think about its great benefit. Moreover, make this knowledge your balance to weigh people and deeds. This shows you some universal realities and the level of people. Allah is the one from whom I seek aid, and on Him I depend.