My 4-year-old daughter Salma is attending
her first classes in kindergarten. Miss Zainab, her respectful
teacher, taught her how to write the alphabet in both Arabic and
English, as well as how to draw some interesting objects: a duck, a
bird, and a watermelon. Salma started practicing and training on
exploring her new world of figures, alphabet, and simple objects. She
started drawing them on her notebook; then her experience shifted
gorgeously to drawing on the white walls of our apartment.
Her mother and I started blaming her for
what she was doing and warned her many times against repeating it. As
an overactive child, she is not that easily deterred or stopped. She
continued drawing on her favorite palette — the white walls of our
long-awaited apartment. Whenever I reproached her, she apologized and
then did it again. I discovered that after she apologized, it seemed
that she was relieved from the psychological burden that she felt from
my sharp looks.
Later, I tried something else. I thought it
would be a better deterrence if I did not accept her apology or give
her any attention when she did the same bad thing. To be frank, till
now, I cannot forget her look and the feeling of despair and
disappointment she felt because I had ignored her! I also felt that
she only had two options: either she would develop a psychological
complex, or she would play havoc and spread "mischief" on
the walls.
Now, let's leave the microcosm of my child
and have a wider look at our world. Imagine that the doors of mercy
are closed and that any mistake automatically and inevitably admits
one to hell. What would the case be? What do you expect of a sinner
who has lost every hope of forgiveness? Could he try to be a good man
any more or to amend his ways? Absolutely not; after all, why bother
doing so when it is too late?
Here we can perceive the greatness of the
Islamic institution of tawbah. Islam teaches that it is never
too late for a faithful Muslim to repent to Allah and to regret the
sin he has committed. Hence, it is better to immediately start a new
leaf and let bygones be bygones. As long as one is sincere in his
repentance, Allah will accept it from him and forgive all his sinful
deeds:
(Do
they not know that it is Allah Who accepts the repentance of His
servants and receives (approves their) charity, and that Allah is
the Relenting, the Compassionate?)
(At-Tawbah 9:104)
Nevertheless, what if there is no way that
a person will repent? What if there is not the least chance that he
will apologize, repent to Allah, and seek His forgiveness?
The answer is simple: If there is no chance
that the sinner will repent and that Allah the Almighty will accept
his repentance, the sinner faces one of two outcomes, one as bitter as
the other. He will either develop a psychological complex, or play
havoc and spread mischief on earth.
To clarify this, if someone commits a sin
and he knows for sure that he will not be able to compensate for it or
repent in order to be relieved from the scourges of sinning, he will
dismay and feel all the despair that is on earth. Moreover, nothing
whatsoever will alleviate his bitter feelings. However, Islam does not
like its adherents to live in dismay or to be in a state of endless
despair. A Muslim should always be optimistic and aspire for what is
not only good, but the best.
The second outcome a sinner faces if there
is no chance of his choosing to get his sins abolished and forgiven is
that he will be careless about everything and will start spreading
mischief on earth. When someone loses all hope of forgiveness, he
feels that he has lost everything and has nothing left to lose. Thus,
he starts doing all sorts of evil that can be imagined of a person who
has nothing to deter him, or to appeal to his mind or soul to bring
him back to the fold of reason and true faith.
The famous example of this is the incident
of the man from the earlier Children of Israel who killed 99 people
and thought it was high time to repent and start a new leaf. He
searched for someone to help him by showing him the way and was
referred to a worshiper. Upon hearing his awful story, the worshiper
frightened him by claiming that all the doors of goodness were closed
before him and that whatever he would do, Allah the Almighty would not
forgive him. Upon that, the man added the worshiper to the list of his
victims. Then he searched further for someone to guide him. He was
referred to a scholar who appeased his heart and assured him that the
gate of repentance was wide open and no one could close it before
Allah's creatures. Upon hearing that, the man repented and died as a
faithful believer and was finally admitted to Paradise by the grace of
Allah.
It is a sign of Allah's utmost mercy that
He instituted repentance (tawbah) for the sinful worshipers to
come back to Him seeking His forgiveness and pardon. Repentance is
thus an open door for inspiring hope; one's feeling regret and remorse
is the first step towards the straight path, the path of Allah, His
messengers and the believing men and women. Allah Almighty says,
(Allah
accepts only the repentance of those who do evil in ignorance and
repent soon afterwards; it is they whom Allah will forgive and Allah
is Ever All-Knower, All-Wise.)
(An-Nisaa' 4:17)
Repentance also fills one's heart with hope
in the limitless mercy of Allah. Repentance is the last defense
against despair and psychological complexes, and all people need this
Islamic institution ofrepentance. The Prophet (peace and blessings be
upon him) stated that all humans are prone to mistakes and sins, but
that "the best of them are the oft-repenting."
Another thing that is important here is the
meaning of the collocation , which occurs frequently
whenever any scholar or da`i is talking about tawbah and
its procedures. Tawbatun nasuh is the sort of repentance that
has no hesitation whatsoever in it. It is a repentance with full and
complete commitment on the part of the person who performs it seeking
Allah's forgiveness.
Again, and as a further sign of Allah's
mercy showered on His creatures, if a person repents and then sins,
and then he repents once again, Allah the Almighty forgives him and
pardons his bad deeds:
(Say:
"O My servants who wronged against their souls, do not despair
of Allah's mercy! For Allah forgives all sins; for He is indeed
Forgiving, Compassionate.")
(Az-Zumar 39:53)
To conclude, Islam cares for disseminating
the spirit of hope within the life of the individual and the community
as a whole. It is also firmly committed to abolish the psychological
complexes from the life of its adherents and works against the
accumulation of the bad and destructive effects on their respective
lives. Almighty Allah says in His Ever-Glorious Qur'an, (And
turn to Allah all of you, O believers! so that you may be successful.)
(An-Nur 24:31)