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THE
QUR'ANIC DOCTRINE OF SALVATION |
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of how God can regard as just and declare to be just
the believer who in himself is far from being just —
the Qur'an has nothing to say. Justification is regarded
simply as an act of God's mercy, and the idea of there
being possibly any incompatibility between absolute
justice and unconditional forgiveness never seems once
to come up in the whole book. That Muhammad ever had
this question rise up within his mind we can see no
proof in the Qur'an. And it is at this point that the
doctrine of justification as taught in the Qur'an appears
to the Christian theologian to be superficial; and it
is therefore sometimes said, not without a certain amount
of truth, that there is no true doctrine of justification
in the Qur'an, which simply asserts that if one repents
and seeks to obey the divine commands, God pardons.
This is, however, consistent with what we have elsewhere
seen of the teaching of the Qur'an on sin.
We must next ask what the Qur'an has to say as to
the motives which ought to influence a man in the performance
of good works.
Such works when done in faith must be done for
the sake of God, that is, with a desire to please
God, and to gain His favour, and not for self-glory
or temporal gain. This is to be seen clearly in such
a passage as the following. 'They who fulfilled their
vows, and feared the day whose woes will spread far
and wide, who though longing for it themselves, bestowed
their food on the poor, and the orphan, and the captive,
(saying) "We feed you for the sake of God only:
we seek from you neither recompense nor thanks: A stern
and calamitous day dread we from our Lord".' 1 |
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THE
ATTAINING OF SALVATION |
37 |
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Yet while done 'for God's sake' that the believer
may gain the approbation of God — such deeds must be
accompanied by a certain moral act or attitude. This
is seen, perhaps, most clearly in regard to alms-giving.
Alms-giving, as in Judaism, is one of the principal
of the means of attaining righteousness, but the giving
of alms must not be considered as a mere outward act.
He who in his alms-giving does not give sympathy, and
perform an act of real self-sacrifice, cannot, according
to the Qur'an, expect thereby to gain any righteousness.
'Ye shall never attain to goodness till ye give alms
of that which ye love: and whatever ye give, of a truth,
God knoweth it.' 1 The essence of alms-giving
is self-sacrifice, self-renunciation. The following
passage also brings out this idea very clearly. 'There
is also a man who selleth his soul for the things which
are pleasing unto God: and God is gracious unto (His)
servants.' 2
Good works are not merely a duty demanded of the believer,
but he must ever aim to excel in them. The more he excels
in all good deeds the more certain proof does he exhibit
of the reality of his faith and his repentance and his
desire to be pleasing to his Lord. Thus we find such
passages as, 'And vie in haste for pardon from your
Lord, and a paradise, vast as the heavens and the earth,
prepared for the God-fearing: who give alms alike in
prosperity and in success and, who master their anger
and forgive others: for God loveth the doers of good.3
' Be emulous, then in good deeds. To God shall ye all
return, and He will tell you concerning the subjects
of your disputes.' 4 |
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