Divine Human Relationship Essay

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The divine-human relation requires humans to fulfill certain actions to fulfil their devotion. Scholars classified action according to its legal and ethical values which impacted the individual responsibilities of humans towards themselves, each other, and their Creator. There are numerous places in the Quran that connected action (‘amal) with faith (imān). For example, the phrase “those who believe and do the righteous acts” was repeated 57 times. Belief to a Muslim is not enough by itself; the Quran emphasized that a Muslim must believe in what God revealed and follow the belief with flowing the commands of God, and acting upon them.
Human actions were assigned a legal value and classified according to the strength of their legal value. …show more content…

For example, divine obligations to perform included obligatory (farḍ) and recommended (mandūb). Covenants of faith and acts of worship such as the five pillars of Islam (belief in God, prayer fasting, pilgrimage, and almsgiving) are included in the obligatory actions. God would reward those who perform the obligatory and recommended acts; however, penalty would befall those who ignore or neglect the farḍ only. No chastisement for those who opt not to carry out mandūb acts. There are acts that are forbidden to indulge in as theft, deceit, or fornication. Individuals who abstain from indulging in forbidden (ḥarām) and detested (makrūh) acts will be rewarded; those who carry out the ḥarām acts will be penalized. The category of Mubāḥ renders acts legally neutral; hence Sharī’ah “advocates the moral autonomy of the individual, and seeks to balance its individualists and communitarian orientation in the foundation of its laws”, where humans have the discretion to carry out Mubāḥ or abstain. In addition to the legal value of actions, there are ethical obligations in each action and provide an opportunity to reflect on the intersection between law and ethics in action. The determination of the prohibition and permissibility of actions is …show more content…

In this regard, one can reflect on the purpose of prayers and why would anyone pray. Prayers can be definitely described as deontological, an obligation as prescribed by God. It can be described pastoral and shepherding where one follows the footsteps of the Prophet who encouraged the community to establish worship the way he is teaching. Prayers can be described as a mystic act to achieve unity with God, or done in devotion to God seeking to serve and please Him. Hence, the crafting of a practical Islamic theology can be obligatory, permissible, or prohibited depending on what it is intended to achieve. Would knowledge and its methodology promote or deny knowledge revealed by God? Would its outcome yield benefits to Muslims and humanity? Would it provide an opportunity to forbid injustice and

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