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THE
QUR'ANIC DOCTRINE OF SALVATION |
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himself to Him, and to put his reliance on Him. 'Believers
are they only whose hearts thrill with fear when God
is named, and whose faith increaseth at each recital
of His signs, and who put their trust in their Lord;
who observe the prayer, and give alms out of that which
we have supplied them. These are the believers.' 1
Having this confidence in God, one must be willing
to accept in all due submission, all that comes from
His hand whether it be prosperity or adversity. 'There
are some men who serve God in a single point. If good
come upon one of them, he resteth in it; but if trial
come upon him, he turneth him round, with the loss both
of this world, and of the next. This same is the clear
ruin.' 2 There must be no lurking thought
of the possibility of the falsehood of the religion,
nor any readiness to fall back to heathen ways and customs.
The first step which man is to take in faith
is the step of repentance. We have already said that
we do not intend to insist that faith comes before repentance;
indeed, many passages in the Qur'an speak as if the
order were repentance, faith, good works. Thus we find
the words, ' . . . and they shall meet with evil; save
those who repent, and believe, and do that which is
right; these shall enter the Garden. . . . 3
And elsewhere we see the same sequence of expression,
as in the following. ' . . . I will forgive him who
turneth to God and believeth, and worketh righteousness;
and then yieldeth to guidances . . . ' 4 |
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THE
ATTAINING OF SALVATION |
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While the Qur'an thus teaches clearly the necessity
for repentance, it nowhere makes very plain wherein
this repentance consists. That, however, it is repentance
for evil done, and a turning away from what is now seen
to have been wrong action or sin, we see from such passage
as the following. 'Verily repentance (will be accepted)
with God, from those who do evil ignorantly, and then
repent speedily, unto them will God be turned.' 1
But, as we have seen in our study of the Qur'anic teaching
on sin, that there is no clear idea of the heinousness
of sin as injury or despite done to the love of God,
so here we find no clear teaching that repentance involves
contrition of heart before a loving Father, against
whom man has sinned. Repentance is rather simply the
recognition, accompanied by regret, that the course
of action previously followed was not in accordance
with God's commands, or was contrary to the best interests
of the sinner himself.
We must, however, note that the Qur'an clearly distinguishes
between asking for the pardon of sin and repentance.
To seek forgiveness for a wrong done does not in itself
involve repentance for the sin committed. And this distinction
is a point which should be carefully noted. He who seeks
salvation is not merely to ask for forgiveness, but
is to repent. That is, he must resolve to quit the line
of action which he has previously followed and make
up his mind to enter upon a new line of action, one
which is believed to be consonant with the will of God
as revealed in the Qur'an. Thus we read, 'a book, whose
verses are established in wisdom and then set forth
with clearness (is a revelation) from |
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