Pleased with Allah’s Decree
WHEN there is just one
son, parents have to make him live with them; when there are several, it’s
easier, as some of them can go abroad. After all, parents should not be left
all alone. That is why one should have many children,’ says a
mother-of-five empathetically. I remain silent, not agreeing with her simply
because not everyone is blessed with children.
My mind shifts to some childless couples and unmarried people I know.
If Allah has kept them barren,
what should their outlook be on life during old age?
Should they constantly be
complaining to Allah for the fate decreed on them, or should they accept their
fate and be content with it, achieving peace of mind?
Almost anyone and everyone can
choose to be ungrateful. A short person may wistfully look at taller people and
lament on his or her natural stature; a pauper sitting on the curb may stare
enviously at the glamorous cars passing by; a blind person can very well gripe
about not being able to see; and of course how slightly dark-skinned people wish
they had fairer skin.
If one were to cave in to
negative thinking, ungratefulness and wistfulness for the blessings one has
supposedly missed out on in life, he or she would be losing on something
greater: the blessings they have been granted by Allah! Life’s just too
short to lose the good moments wishing for what was not meant to be yours in
the first place.
The tendency to be ungrateful and
negative in thinking is admittedly more common in women; this is a fact that
has been mentioned in several Ahadith.
It is common to behold an unmarried girl, desperately wondering why a decent proposal has not come her way. As years pass by, the pressure to marry her off mounts on her parents.
A married woman who has not conceived a child will despair hopelessly, as she hears of the third pregnancy of a friend who got married a year after she did.
Another mother-of-three, standing
in her tiny kitchen, may be crying hot tears of envy at thoughts of how other
women her age live in compound villas with 24-hour maids. The cycle of
ingratitude continues throughout some people’s lives: want something – pine,
despair for it – achieved it and forgot about it; want something else – pine,
despair for it – got it and forgot about it.
“And He gave you from all you asked of Him. And if you should count
the favour/blessings of Allah, you could not enumerate them. Indeed, mankind is
most unjust and ungrateful.”
[Surah Al Ibrahim,34]
[Surah Al Ibrahim,34]
There is great Divine wisdom
behind the concept of being pleased with Allah’s decree, known
as “Al-Ridaa Bil-Qadr”. Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him) prayed for
this blessing in one of his ‘masnoon’ dua’s. It is indeed the requisite ticket
to blissful peace of mind and unparalleled contentment of soul during this
world’s life.
“O Allah I
ask you for a reassured soul, that believes in meeting you, and is pleased with
Your Decree, and is content with what you have bestowed .”
But how does one achieve this
desired goal?
Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him) taught us a strategy to acquire this state;
“Do not
look to those above you. Look to those below you, as it will more likely remind
you of Allah’s favors bestowed on you.”
(Al-Bukhari and Muslim)
Allah [subhanahu wa taála] says;
“And do not wish for that by which Allah has made some of you exceed others. For men is a share of what they have earned and for women is a share of what they have earned. And ask Allah of His bounty. Indeed, Allah is ever, of all things Knowing.”
[Surah An
Nisa,32]
“…But perhaps you hate a thing and it is good for you and perhaps
you love a thing and it is bad for you. And Allah knows, while you know
not.”
[Surah Al
Baqarah, 216]
Also, we are encouraged to look up to those who do good so that we can try to be like them.
Allah [subhanahu wa taála] says;
“Whatever you have will end, but what Allah has is lasting. And we will surely give those who were patient their reward according to the best of what they used to do. Whoever does righteousness, whether male or female, while he is a believer — We will surely give them their reward according to the best of what they used to do.”
[Surah An
Nahl, 96-97]
If one persistently refuses – for
Allah’s sake – to wistfully or enviously look at, or think about, people who
are better off than him in worldly blessings, eventually he will reach a point
when he will never be bothered by, or concerned with, what others have.
Instead, he will focus on the good deeds he can do that will grant him a good
destination in the Hereafter – the eternal life – where happiness and blessings
are everlasting, not fleeting.
On achieving Ridaa Bil-Qadr, an
unmarried woman will not feel anything when she hears of girls younger than her
getting married or having babies; a childless man will not feel any regret or
rancor when his brother begets his tenth child; an old woman, who has outlived
her spouse and all her children, will not feel anything when she hears of other
families gathering together on Eid. They will instead be content with what
Allah has decreed for them and have a kind of peace and calmness inside them
that cannot be bought with all the wealth in this world.
Allah [subhanahu wa taála] says;
“Those who have believed and whose hearts are assured by the remembrance of Allah. Unquestionably, by the remembrance of Allah hearts are assured.” [Surah Ar Ra’d,28]
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