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It was perhaps a ‘loud cry’ that I
heard in my deep and comfortable slumber. I was furious to hear this. I
had just taken time to rest after going through the ordeal of being interviewed
about the moral aspect of my past life. I half expected to fail on that
account for not having in my list marvelously noble endeavors to numerate
before the ghastly looking yet humble interviewers. ‘Thank God!’ I took
a sigh of relief. They retreated only after asking me about the basic articles
of faith. In my emotional fatigue, I soon stepped into the great unknown.
But, much to my dismay, the luxurious sleep, as it seemed to me, proved
to be as ephemeral as footprints on the sands of the Sahara. This compelling
cry went deep down into my soul and galvanized my body into trying to stand
up straightaway. After tottering a bit, I succeeded in that mission and
mechanically cast a look over my dress. What! I muttered: I was annoyed
to see that someone had sprinkled dust all over my white dress while I
was sound asleep. I was wondering about this mystery when I received a
jerk from behind.
The Holy Qur’an has vehemently asserted that man should not suffer from the illusions that once dead he would never be put to life again. The Creator who fashioned him for the first time is fully capable to resurrect him when the appointed time comes. Man is, indeed, bound to stand before his Lord for all the acts that emanate from him in this world. This is no grand task for the Lord of worlds. He would just have a ‘loud cry’ delivered into His servants’ ears and they would stand up like they never died.
In this life, a person sometimes manages to get away with the crimes he commits because of his abundant wealth and high connections. His relations and friends come to console him in case he has to suffer some punishment for his own egregious mistakes. So much so, that he is befriended by the sentry and the jail superintendent for a simple puff of a cigarette or a marginal share of his delicious and appetizing meal. But, on the Last Day, neither would he be able to benefit from his wealth and authority nor would his superior contacts come forward to help him. Whatever crime he commits shall be made public. Even the secrets of his heart will be probed. Everything that he willfully plotted to hurt or harm anyone would be ascertained and accordingly punished.
No consolation or support shall be offered by the closest of relations. Everyone will be so preoccupied with his own troubles that it would be impossible to extend solace to others. The relations for whom he went against the dictations of his conscience, and the people with whom he mutually devised ill means to amass worldly wealth, would all be like strangers to him.
These are the warnings of the Qur’an
sounded to mankind that they may take heed before the damage, in reality,
is done. Before it is too late, we must come to realize that we have been
blessed with this life in order to be tested by the Almighty as to who,
from among us, strives to conform to the moral ideals and tries his level
best to please his Lord. It must be appreciated that the Creator has already
directed us to the way we must spend our life in this world. The testimonies
of our conscience and the dictations of our intuition help us always strike
the right choice between good and evil. In other words, the Merciful Master
has equipped us with a sublime vision that helps us see what is evil as
bad and what is good as right. Hence, it is no hard job to make the right
choice. However, as the essence of a test and trial entails, there are
certain inherent limitations as well. Our free will to do what we please
and the kingdom of Heaven being hidden from our eyes offer potential resistance
to us to remain steadily on the right path. No doubt, both factors contribute
to make the test of life immensely difficult and tricky, but it is nonetheless
these that actually entitle us to receive the fabulous reward which awaits
us in the form of the blissful place called ‘Heaven’. We have neither been
bound to believe in the Hereafter nor have we been forced to go to a mosque
to say the ritual prayer five times a day. And if we succeed to see the
hidden through what is visible and prostrate before the Supreme Being without
actually having seen him, we surely deserve to be rewarded with the splendid
prize that the Wise and Just Master has promised at scores of places in
His Book.
As pointed out earlier, the freedom given to us may well be employed to either live a comfortable and careless life by trampling underfoot the moral values for self pleasure or be blessed with an eternal life brimming with sheer contentment and pleasure in the Hereafter. Those who go for the second choice would although face adverse circumstances in the present life would be calm and relaxed in the Afterlife, when everyone else would be running around, gasping breathlessly out of fear and confusion. The true servants of the Lord would be called upon to cross the threshold of Paradise and join the righteous:
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