At this point in the book
it has been explained that matter, thought to be an absolute existent,
is actually nothing but a perception-an image experienced by every
person in his brain. And it has been shown how important this
reality has been for the increase of fear and love toward God,
the spread of spirituality and good morals and the collapse of
materialism.
There is another concept similar to matter that materialists
have considered eternal and absolute-time. But like matter, time
is also a perception and is not eternal; there is a moment when
it was created. This fact, which has now been established by scientific
proofs, was revealed in several verses of the Koran.
Time Is A Concept That Is Formed From The Comparison
Of One Moment With Another
Time is a concept that depends totally on our perceptions
and the comparison we make between our perceptions. For example,
at this moment you are reading this book. Suppose that, before
reading this book, you were eating something in the kitchen. You
think that there is a period between the time when you were eating
in the kitchen and this moment, and you call it "time". In fact,
the moment you were eating in the kitchen is a piece of information
in your memory, and you compare this moment with the information
in your memory and call it time. If you do not make this comparison,
the concept of time disappears and the only moment that exists
for you will be the present moment.
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We think that a lapse
of time has occurred between the moment the telephone
rings and when we hear the voice of a friend, and we
call this interval "time". Time is a perception that
arises from making a comparison between what we experience
at one particular moment and the past. |
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For example, a high school graduation ceremony is something
in a person's memory. By comparing other pieces of information
in his memory since the graduation, with the present moment, he
forms an idea of time and, according to the information in his
memory, he determines the length or the shortness of this time.
But this sense of length or shortness is completely in his brain,
and comes from this comparison.
In the same way, when someone sees a person bend over
to pick up a pen that he had dropped on the floor and put it on
the table, he makes a comparison. In the moment when the observer
saw the person put the pen on the table, that person's bending
over, picking up the pen, walking to the table are pieces of information
in the observer's brain. The perception of time arises from the
comparison of the person putting the pen on the table with these
pieces of information.
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Time is a concept that depends on comparing
events we have experienced. For example, someone goes
into a room. Later he sees a pen on the floor and
bends over to pick it up. Then, he takes the pen to
a table and places it there. The person makes a comparison
between all these actions. He thinks that a space
of time has passed between each one and so the perception
of time comes to be.
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Renowned physicist Julian Barbour defines time in this
way:
Time is nothing but a measure of the changing positions
of objects. A pendulum swings, the hands on a clock advance.40
In short, time is composed of a few pieces of information
hidden as a memory in the brain; rather, it arises from the comparison
of images. If a person did not have a memory, that person would
live only in the present moment; his brain would not be able to
make these interpretations and, therefore, he would not have any
perception of time.
A person's past is composed
of information given to her memory. If a person's
memory is erased, her past is also erased. The future
is composed of ideas. Without these ideas, only the
"present moment" of experience remains.
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The Views Of Scientists On The Idea That Time
Is A Perception
Today it has been scientifically accepted that time
is a concept that arises from our making a definite sequential
arrangement among movements and changes. We will try to make this
clearer by giving examples from those thinkers and scientists
who have established this view.
The physicist Julian Barbour caused a great stir in
the scientific world with his book entitled The End of Time in
which he examined the ideas of timelessness and eternity. He pointed
out that the idea that time was a perception was very difficult
for many people to accept. In an interview with Barbour reported
in Discover magazine, these comments are made about time being
a perception:
"I still have trouble accepting it" he (Barbour) says.
But then, common sense has never been a reliable guide to understanding
the universe - physicists have been confounding our perceptions
since Copernicus first suggested that the sun does not revolve
around Earth. After all, we don't feel the slightest movement
as the spinning Earth hurtles through the void at some 67,000
miles per hour. Our sense of the passage of time, Barbour argues,
is just as wrongheaded as the credo of the Flat Earth Society.41
As we can see above, this renowned physicist pointed
out that any idea we have of time being absolute is false, and
that research done in modern physics has confirmed this. Time
is not absolute; it is a variously perceived, subjective concept
depending on events.
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IN A WORLD WHERE TIME FLEW
BACKWARDS, PAST WOULD BE FUTURE

Because every event is shown to us in a
definite series, we think that time always moves forward.
For example, a skier always skies down a mountain, not up
it. A drop of water does not rise up from a pool, but always
falls down into it. In this situation, a skier's position
on a mountain is in the past, while his position down the
mountain is the future. However, if the information in our
memories were to be displayed in reverse, as we would rewind
a film, what is for us the future, that is the downhill
position, would be the past and the past, that is the uphill
position, would be the future.
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François Jacob, thinker, Nobel laureate and famous
professor of genetics, in his book entitled Le Jeu des Possibles
(The Possible and the Actual) says this about the possibility
that time can move backwards:
Films played backwards make it possible for us to imagine
a world in which time flows backwards. A world in which milk separates
itself from the coffee and jumps out of the cup to reach the milk-pan;
a world in which light rays are emitted from the walls to be collected
in a trap (gravity center) instead of gushing out from a light
source; a world in which a stone slopes to the palm of a man by
the astonishing cooperation of innumerable drops of water which
enable the stone to jump out of water. Yet, in such a world in
which time has such opposite features, the processes of our brain
and the way our memory compiles information, would similarly be
functioning backwards. The same is true for the past and future
and the world will appear to us exactly as it currently appears.42
Because our brain works by arranging things in a sequence,
we do not believe that the world works as described above; we
think that time always moves forward. However, this is a decision
our brain makes and is therefore totally relative. If the information
in our brains were arranged like a film being projected backwards,
time would be for us like a film being projected backwards. In
this situation, we would start to perceive that the past was the
future and the future was the past and we would experience life
in a way totally opposite than we do now.
In fact, we cannot know how time moves or, indeed,
if it moves at all. This demonstrates that time is not an absolute
reality but only a kind of perception.
The fact that time is a perception was proved by the
greatest physicist of the 20th century, Albert Einstein, in his
"General Theory of Relativity". In his book, The Universe and
Dr. Einstein, Lincoln Barnett says this:
Along with absolute space, Einstein discarded the concept
of absolute time - of a steady, unvarying inexorable universal
time flow, streaming from the infinite past to the infinite future.
Much of the obscurity that has surrounded the Theory of Relativity
stems from man's reluctance to recognize that sense of time, like
sense of colour, is a form of perception. Just as space is simply
a possible order of material objects, so time is simply a possible
order of events. The subjectivity of time is best explained in
Einstein's own words. "The experiences of an individual" he says,
"appear to us arranged in a series of events; in this series the
single events which we remember appear to be ordered according
to the criterion of 'earlier' and 'later'. There exists, therefore,
for the individual, an I-time, or subjective time. This in itself
is not measurable. I can, indeed, associate numbers with the events,
in such a way that a greater number is associated with the later
event than with an earlier one.43
From these words of Einstein, we can understand that
the idea that time moves forward is totally a conditioned response.
Einstein himself pointed out, as quoted in Barnett's
book: "Space and time are forms of intuition, which can no more
be divorced from consciousness than can our concepts of colour,
shape, or size."44
According to the "General Theory of Relativity", time
is not absolute; apart from the series of events according to
which we measure it, it has no independent existence.
Our dreams are very important in understanding the
relativity of time. In our sleep we experience events that we
believe go on for days but actually, we are having a dream which
lasts for only a few minutes or even a few seconds.
In order to make this clearer, let us think of an example.
Let us think of a specially designed room with one window and
that we spend a certain amount of time in it. In the room there
is a clock by which we will be able to see the passage of time.
Through the window we can see the sun coming up and going down
at regular intervals. After a few days we are asked how long we
have stayed in the room. Our answer will be calculated by information
we have received based on looking at the clock from time to time
and on how many times the sun rose and set. For example, we calculate
that we have spent three days in the room. But if the person who
put us in the room comes and says that we were actually in the
room for two days, that the sun we saw in the window was actually
artificially produced, and that the clock in the room was fast,
then our calculations would make no sense.
This example shows that our knowledge about the rate
at which time passes depends on references which change according
to the person who is perceiving it.
One twin sister takes a space trip
at a speed close to the speed of light. When she returns
thirty years later, the sister who stayed on the earth will
be much older compared to the sister who went into space.
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This is an example of how under different circumstances
a person perceives the same amount of time as longer or shorter.
Here is another example. For a person who is waiting for his brother
to come out of an operation, one hour seems like several. But
if the same person is doing something he really enjoys, he cannot
understand how the hour passed so quickly.
Einstein scientifically established the following fact
in his "General Theory of Relativity": The rate at which time
passes changes according to the speed of a body and its distance
from the center of gravity. If the speed increases, time decreases,
contracts, moves slower and seems that the point of inertia approaches.
Let us explain this with one of Einstein's thought
experiments. Suppose that there are two twin brothers. One of
them stays in this world, the other goes on a space journey during
which he travels
almost at the speed of light. When he returns from space, he will
find that his twin brother is much older than he is. The reason
for this is that the time passed much more slowly for the brother
who went on the space trip. The same example can be thought of
in relation to a father who went on a space trip in a rocket traveling
at nearly 99 percent of the speed of time and his son who remained
on this earth. According to Einstein, if the father was 27 years
old and his son was three, 30 earth-years later when the father
returned to earth, the son would be 33 and the father would be
30 years old. 45
The relativity of time is not something that is relative
to the speeding up or slowing down of the clock; it comes from
the fact that every material system, to the particles at the subatomic
level, works at different rates of speed. In an environment where
time was slowed down, a person's heartbeat, rate of cell division
and brain activity would happen more slowly. In this situation,
a person would go about his daily business unaware that time had
slowed down.
The Concept Of The Relativity Of Time Is Revealed
In The Koran
As we explained in previous pages, time is not an absolute
reality; with discoveries in modern science it has been definitely
proved that it is a relative perception. It is a wonder that this
discovery made by science in the 20th century was revealed in
the Koran 1400 years before.
For example, in some verses, it is pointed out that
life is very short. A human life of approximately 60 years is
said to be as short as an hour in a day.
On the Day He calls you, you
will respond by praising Him and think that you have only tarried
a very short time. (The Koran, 17: 52)
On the day We gather them together-when
it will seem if they had tarried no more than an hour of a single
day - they will recognize one another... (The Koran, 10: 45)
In other verses, it is revealed that time is much shorter
than people think it is.
He will say, "How many years did you tarry on
the earth?" They will say, "We tarried there for a day or part
of a day. Ask those able to count!" He will say, "You only tarried
there for a little while if you did but know!" (The Koran, 23:
112-114)
In other verses in the Koran it is said that time moves
with a different speed in different dimensions. For example, it
is revealed that one day in God's sight is equal to a thousand
years. (The Koran, 22: 47) Other verses speak of this:
The angels and the Spirit ascend
to Him in a day whose length is fifty thousand years. (The Koran,
70: 4)
He directs the whole affair from
heaven to earth. Then it will again ascend to Him on a Day whose
length is a thousand years by the way you measure. (The Koran,
32: 5)
In the style used in many verses of the Koran, it is
clearly shown that time is a perception. For example, God speaks
of a number of believers (The Companions of the Cave) whom He
put into a deep sleep for over 300 years. Later, when He woke
them up, these people thought that they had been asleep for a
very short time; they could not imagine how long they had been
asleep:
So We sealed their ears with
sleep in the cave for a number of years. Then We woke them up
again so that we might see which of the two groups would better
calculate the time they had stayed there. (The Koran, 18: 11-12)
That was the situation when we
woke them up so they could question one another. One of them asked,
"How long have you been here?" They replied, "We have been here
for a day or part of a day." They said, "Your Lord knows best
how long you have been here..." (The Koran, 18: 19)
The situation referred to in the verse below is an
important proof that time is a psychological perception:
Or the one who passed by a town which had fallen
into ruin? He asked, "How can God restore this to life when it
has died?" God caused him to die a hundred years then brought
him back to life. Then He asked, "How long have you been here?"
He replied, "I have been here a day or part of a day." He said,
"Not so! You have been here a hundred years. Look at your food
and drink-it has not gone bad-and look at your donkey so We can
make you a Sign for all mankind. Look at the bones -how We raise
them up and clothe them in flesh." When it had become clear to
him, he said, "Now I know that God has power over all things."
(The Koran, 2: 259)
As we see, these verses clearly reveal that time is
relative and not absolute. This means that time changes according
to the perceptions of the perceiver; it is not a concrete existent
that exists on its own apart from the perceiver.
The Relativity Of Time Explains The Reality Of
Fate
As we see from the account of the relativity of time
and the verses that refer to it, time is not a concrete concept,
but one that varies depending on perceptions. For example, a space
of time conceived by us as millions of years long is one moment
in God's sight. A period of 50 thousand years for us is only a
day for Gabriel and the angels.
This reality is very important for an understanding
of the idea of fate. Fate is the idea that God created every single
event, past, present, and future in "a single moment". This means
that every event, from the creation of the universe until doomsday,
has already occurred and ended in God's sight. A significant number
of people cannot grasp the reality of fate. They cannot understand
how God can know events that have not yet happened, or how past
and future events have already happened in God's sight. From our
point of view, things that have not happened are events which
have not occurred. This is because we live our lives in relation
to the time that God has created, and we could not know anything
without the information in our memories. Because we dwell in the
testing place of this world, God has not given us memories of
the things we call "future" events. Consequently, we cannot know
what the future holds. But God is not bound to time or space;
it is He who has already created all these things from nothing.
For this reason, past, present and future are all the same to
God. From His point of view, everything has already occurred;
He does not need to wait to see the result of an action. The beginning
and the end of an event are both experienced in His sight in a
single moment. For example, God already knew what kind of end
awaited Pharaoh even before sending Moses to him, even before
Moses was born and even before Egypt became a kingdom; and all
these events including the end of Pharaoh were experienced in
a single moment in the sight of God. Besides, for God there is
no such thing as remembering the past; past and future are always
present to God; everything exists in the same moment.
If we think of our life as a filmstrip, we watch it
as if we were viewing a videocassette with no possibility to speed
up the film. But God sees the whole film all at once at the same
moment; it is He who created it and determined all its details.
As we are able to see the beginning, middle and end of a ruler
all at once, so God encompasses in one moment, from beginning
to end, the time to which we are subject. However, human beings
experience these events only when the time comes to witness the
fate that God has created for them. This is the way it is for
the fates of everyone in the world. The lives of everyone who
has ever been created and whoever will be created, in this world
and the next, are present in the sight of God in all their details.
The fates of all living things-planets, plants and things-are
written together with the fates of millions of human beings in
God's eternal memory. They will remain written without being lost
or diminished. The reality of fate is one of the manifestations
of God's eternal greatness, power and might. This is why He is
called the Preserver (al-Hafiz).
The Concept Of "Past" Comes From Information
In Our Memories
Because of suggestions we receive, we think we live
in separate divisions of time called past, present and future.
However, the only reason we have a concept of "past" (as we explained
earlier) is that various things have been placed in our memories.
For example, the moment we enrolled in primary school is a bit
of information in our memory and we perceive it therefore as an
event in the past. However, future events are not in our memories.
Therefore, we regard these things that we do not yet know about
as things that will be experienced or happen in the future. But
just as the past has been experienced from our point of view,
so has the future. But, because these events have not been given
to our memories, we cannot know them.
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If God puts future events into our memories, then,
the future would be the past for us. For example, a thirty year
old person has thirty years of memories and events in his memory
and, for this reason, thinks he has a thirty year past. If future
events between the ages of thirty and seventy were to be put into
this person's memory, then, for this thirty year old individual,
both his thirty years and the "future" between the ages of thirty
and seventy, would become the past. In this situation past and
future would be present in the memory, and each one would be lived
experiences for him.
A person's past is actually information
located in his memory. If that person's memory were erased,
his past would be gone. The future is composed of human
thoughts. We make plans for the future and think about it,
but if our thoughts were destroyed there would remain no
concept of the future. If our memory and our thoughts were
taken from us, we would have only the moment of experience,
or this particular moment, left.
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Because God has made us perceive events in a definite
series, as if there were a time moving from past to future, He
does not inform us of our future or give this information to our
memories. The future is not in our memories, but all human pasts
and futures are in His eternal memory. This, as we said before,
is like observing a human life as if it were already wholly depicted
and complete in a film. Someone who cannot advance the film sees
his life as the frames pass one by one. He is mistaken in thinking
that the frames he has not yet seen constitute the future.
Past And Future Are News Of The Unseen
In the verses, God reveals that the only one who knows
what is secret, invisible, unseen and unknown is He Himself:
Say: "O God, Originator of the
heavens and the earth, Knower of the Unseen and the Visible, You
will judge between Your servants regarding what they differed
about." (The Koran, 39: 46)
Say: "Death, from which you are
fleeing, will certainly catch up with you. Then you will be returned
to the Knower of the Unseen and the Visible and He will inform
you about what you did." (The Koran, 62: 8)
He said, "Adam, tell them their
names." When he had told them their names, He said, "Did I not
tell you that I know the Unseen of the heavens and the earth,
and I know what you make known and what you hide?" (The Koran,
2: 33)
Generally, the word "secret" is thought to refer only
to something unknown about the future; however, both the past
and the future are secret. Those who have lived in the past and
those who will live in the future are kept in God's sight. However,
God gives some of the knowledge kept in His sight to the memories
of people and makes it known. For example, when God gave knowledge
concerning the past in some verses, He told the Prophet Muhammad
that this was news of the unseen:
That is some of the news of the
Unseen which We reveal to you. Neither you nor your people knew
it before this time. So be steadfast. The best end result is for
those who do their duty. (The Koran, 11: 49)
This is news of the Unseen which
We reveal to you. You were not with them when they decided what
to do and devised their scheme. (The Koran, 12: 102)
God gave the Prophet Muhammad information about some
things that had not yet happened which was news of the unseen
about the future. For example, the taking of Mecca (The Koran,
48: 27) and the victory of the Greeks over the pagans (The Koran,
30: 3-4) were revealed to the Prophet Muhammad before they happened.
The Prophet's sayings about the signs of the day of resurrection
and the end times (which were news of the unseen to people of
that time) show that God taught these things to him.
The Koran explains that news of the unseen is given
to prophets and some devout believers. For example, it was revealed
to Joseph that the trap set for him by his brothers will come
to nothing (The Koran, 12: 15), and to the mother of Moses it
was revealed that her son would escape the cruelty of Pharaoh
and become a prophet. (The Koran, 28: 7)
Finally, all that we call past and future is news of
the unseen hidden in the sight of God. God gives some of this
knowledge to the memories of those He chooses, at a time He chooses,
thus making them aware of some of the unseen. The events which
become visible and observable are characterized by human beings
as being past events.
The Importance Of Submission To Fate
The fact that past and future are already created in
God's sight, and that everything has happened and is present at
God's sight, demonstrates a very important truth. Everyone is
in complete submission to his fate. Just as a person cannot change
his past, so he cannot change his future, because, like the past,
the future has already happened. Everything in the future is determined-when
and where events will happen, what he will eat, who he will talk
to, what he will discuss, how much money he will earn, what diseases
he will get, and when, where and how he will die. All these things
are already in God's sight and already experienced in His memory.
But this knowledge is not yet in a person's memory.
Therefore, those who are sorry, upset, outraged and
worried about the future, are anxious in vain. The future they
are so worried and anxious about has already happened. And no
matter what they do, they cannot change these things.
At this point it is very important to point out that
it is necessary to avoid a mistaken understanding of fate. Some
people misunderstand and think that what is in their fate will
happen anyway so there is nothing they can do. It is true that
everything we experience is determined in our fate. Before we
experienced an occurrence, it has been experienced in God's sight
and is written in all its details in the Mother of the Book (Lawh
Mahfuz) in God's sight. But God gives everyone the sense that
he can change things and make his own choices and decisions. For
example, when a person wants to drink some water, he does not
say "If it is my fate I will drink", and sit down without making
any move. Instead, he gets up, takes a glass and drinks the water.
Actually, he drinks a predetermined amount of water from a predetermined
glass. But as he does this, he senses that he is acting according
to his own desire and will. He senses this throughout his life
in everything that he does. The difference between a person who
submits himself to God and to the fate created by God, and someone
who cannot grasp this reality is this: the person who submits
himself to God knows that everything he does is according to the
will of God despite the sense that he has done it himself. The
other person mistakenly assumes that he has done everything with
his own intelligence and power.
GOD KNOWS AND SEES
OUR PAST AND FUTURE AS ONE MOMENT
In this picture the
people do not see the car and those in the car do not see
them. For this particular moment they are unaware of one
another. But someone who looks at this picture from a distance
and from a different place will easily see everything on
both sides at the same moment. The same thing happens in
human life.
We have the concepts of the past and the future and, because
we are bound to time, we are able to see our future only
as time passes. But since God is not bound to time and space,
He sees our past, our future and our present in one single
moment, with complete vitality and clarity. For example,
the sudden stop that this driver will make when he sees
the people on the road is known and seen beforehand in the
sight of God.
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For example, when a person who has submitted himself
to God learns that he has contracted a disease, knows that the
disease is in his fate and he trusts in God. He thinks that because
God has put it in his fate, it will certainly bring him great
good. But he does not wait without taking any measures thinking
that if he is fated to get better he will get better. On the contrary,
he takes all possible precautions; he goes to a doctor, pays attention
to his diet and takes medicine. But he does not forget that the
effectiveness of the doctor, the treatment, the medicine, as well
as whether or not he will get better are all in his fate. He knows
that all this is in God's memory and was present there even before
he came into the world. In the Koran, God reveals that everything
that human beings experience is written beforehand in a book:
Nothing occurs, either in the earth or in yourselves,
without its being in a Book before We make it happen. That is
something easy for God. That is so that you will not be grieved
about the things that may have escaped you or exult about the
things that come to you. God does not love any vain or boastful
man. (The Koran, 57: 22-23)
For this reason, anyone who believes in fate will not
be troubled or despair about things that happen to him. On the
contrary, he will have the utmost trust and confidence in his
submission to God. God has determined in advance everything that
happens to a person; He has commanded that we not be sorry for
the things that happen to us, and be self-satisfied by the blessings
that we receive. The difficulties that human beings experience,
together with their wealth and success, is determined by God.
All these things are in the fate predetermined by our Lord to
test human beings. As it is revealed in one verse, "...
God's command is a pre-ordained decree." (The Koran, 33: 38)
In another verse, God reveals that "We
have created all things in due measure." (The Koran, 54: 49)
Not only human beings but also all things animate and inanimate,
the sun, the moon, mountains and trees have their fate determined
by God. For example, a broken antique vase was broken at the moment
determined by its fate. While it was being made, it was determined
who would use this centuries-old vase, as well as in which corner
of which house and with which other objects it would stand. The
designs on the vase and it colors were determined in advance in
its fate. It was known in God's memory on which day, which hour,
which minute, by whom and how it would be broken. The first moment
the vase was made, the first moment it was placed in the window
for sale, the first moment it was placed in the corner of the
house, the moment it was broken into pieces, in short, every moment
in the centuries-long life of this vase, was present in God's
sight as one single moment. Whereas even though the person who
would break the vase was not aware that he would break it until
a moment before it happened, that moment was experienced and known
in God's sight. For this reason, God tells human beings not to
be sorry for the things that may have escaped them. What have
escaped them escaped in accordance with their fate, and they cannot
change it. People must learn a lesson from what happens in their
fate, see the purpose and benefits that accrue to them from it.
They must always incline themselves toward the endless mercy,
compassion and justice of our Lord, Who creates their fate, and
spares and protects His servants.


Every existing thing is created with
a fate. Even before a vase is manufactured, it is determined
in God's sight who will make it and in what style, who will
buy it and from where, in what house and in what corner
it will be placed, and on what day, in what moment and why
it will fall and be broken.
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Those who lead their lives heedless of this important
reality are always anxious and fearful. For example, they are
very worried about the future of their children. They are very
concerned about questions such as these: What school will they
go to? What profession will they follow? Will they have good health?
What kind of lives will they lead? However, every moment of a
person's life is determined in God's sight, from the time he is
a single cell to the time he learns to read and write, from the
first answers he gives in a university exam to what company he
will work in during his life, what papers he will sign and how
many times he will sign them, where and how he will die. All of
these things are hidden in the memory of God. For example, at
this moment, a person is in the fetal stage, at primary school
and at the university. These are all in God's memory as one single
moment, along with the moment he celebrates his thirty-fifth birthday,
the first day he begins his job, the moment when he sees the angels
after he dies, the moment when he is buried, and the moment on
the Last Day when he will give an account to God.
Consequently, it is pointless to worry and be fearful
about a life whose every moment has been lived, experienced and
is still present in the memory of God. No matter how hard a person
tries and no matter how anxious he may be, everyone, his children,
spouse, friends and relatives will live the life that is present
at God's sight.
If this is the case, a person of conscience and intelligence
who grasps this reality must submit humbly to God and to the fate
He has created. Actually, everyone is already in submission to
God, created in subservience to Him. No matter whether he likes
it or not, he lives subservient to the fate created for him by
God. A person who denies his fate is a denier because being a
denier is written in his fate.
Those who submit themselves willingly to God may hope
to enjoy God's pleasure and mercy and to win paradise; they will
live a life of well being in security and happiness both in this
world and in the world to come. This is because, for a person
who submits himself to God, knowing that there is nothing better
for him than the fate created for him by God, there is nothing
to fear or be anxious about. This person will make every effort,
but he knows that this effort is in his fate and, no matter what
he does, he will not have the ability to change what is written
in his fate.
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Even before a car is manufactured,
it is determined in its fate what color it will be,
who will buy it and even what it will be like in the
junkyard. |
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A believer will submit himself to the fate created
by God. In the face of what happens to him, he will do his best
to understand the purpose of these happenings, take precautions,
and make an effort to change things for the better. But he will
take comfort in his knowledge that all these things come to be
according to fate and that God had determined the most beneficial
things in advance. As an example of this, the Koran mentions measures
taken by Jacob for the security of his children. In order to make
his sons beware of people with evil intentions, Jacob advised
his sons to enter the city by different gates but he reminded
them that this would never influence the fate determined by God.
He said, "My sons! You must not enter through
a single gate. Go in through different gates. But I cannot save
you from God at all, for judgment comes from no one but God. In
Him I put my trust, and let all those who put their trust, put
it in Him alone." (The Koran, 12: 67)
People may do what they like, but they will never be
able to change their fate. This is revealed in this verse:
Then He sent down to you, after the distress,
security, restful sleep overtaking a group of you, whereas another
group became prey to anxious thoughts, thinking other than the
truth about God-thoughts belonging to the Time of Ignorance-saying,
"Do we have any say in the affair at all?" Say, "The affair belongs
entirely to God." They are concealing things inside themselves
which they do not disclose to you, saying, "If we had only had
a say in the affair, none of us would have been killed here in
this place." Say, "Even if you had been inside your homes, those
people for whom killing was decreed would have gone out to their
place of death." So that God might test what is in your breasts
and purge what is in your hearts. God knows the contents of your
hearts. (The Koran, 3: 154)
It can be seen in this verse that even if a person
runs away from a task in the way of God in order not to die, if
his death is written in his fate, he will die anyway. Even the
ways and methods resorted to in order to escape death are determined
in fate and everyone will experience those things that are written
in his fate. And in this verse, God reveals to human beings that
the purpose of the things created in their fate is to test them
and to purify their hearts. In the Koran it is said that everyone's
death is determined in the sight of God and that the conception
of a baby happens with the permission of God.
God created you from dust and then from a drop
of sperm and then made you into pairs. No female becomes pregnant
or gives birth except with His knowledge. And no living thing
lives long or has its life cut short without that being in a Book.
That is easy for God. (The Koran, 35: 11)
In the verses below it is revealed that everything
a person does is written sentence by sentence and what those in
paradise experience are also things that have already been experienced.
As we said earlier, the real life of paradise is for us in the
future. But the lives of those in paradise, their conversations
and feasting is in God's memory at this moment. Before we were
born, the future of humanity in this world and the next had been
experienced in God's sight in a moment and is being kept in God's
memory.
Everything they did is in the
Books.
Everything is recorded, big or
small.
The heedful are amid Gardens
and Rivers,
on seats of honour in the presence
of a Competent Sovereign. (The Koran, 54: 52-55)
We can understand from this way of speaking in the
Koran that, in God's sight, time is a single moment and for Him
there is no past or future. As we see, some events that will be
for us in the future, are understood in the Koran as being long
passed. This is because both the past and the future are created
by God as a single moment. Therefore, an event which is related
to occur in the future, in fact, has already occurred, but, because
we cannot understand this, we think of them as future. For example,
in the verses where the account to be given to God by human beings
is described, it is understood as a long passed event.
And the trumpet is blown, and all who are in
the heavens and all who are on the earth swoon away, save him
whom God wills. Then it is blown a second time, and behold them
standing waiting! And the earth shone with the light of her Lord,
and the Book is set up, and the prophets and the witnesses are
brought, and it is judged between them with truth, and they are
not wronged… And those who disbelieve are driven into hell in
troops… And those who feared their Lord are driven into Paradise
in troops... (The Koran, 39: 68-73)
Some further examples of this are the following:
And every soul came, along with
a driver and a witness. (The Koran, 50: 21)
And the heaven is cloven asunder,
so that on that day it is frail. (The Koran, 69: 16)
And because they were patient
and constant, He rewarded them with a garden and garments of silk.
Reclining in the garden on raised thrones, they saw there neither
the sun's excessive heat nor excessive cold. (The Koran, 76: 12-13)
And Hell is placed in full view
for all to see. (The Koran, 79: 36)
But on this day the believers
laugh at the unbelievers. (The Koran, 83: 34)
And the sinful saw the fire and
realized they are going to fall into it and find no way of escaping
from it. (The Koran, 18: 53)
In the above verses, the events we are to experience
after death are described as finished. This is because God is
not bound to the relative dimension of time as we are. God has
willed all these events in timelessness; human beings have done
them, experienced them all and brought them to a conclusion. The
verse below reveals that every kind of occurrence, great and small,
happens within the knowledge of God and is inscribed in a book.
You do not engage in any matter or recite any
of the Koran or do any action without Our witnessing you while
you are occupied with it. Not even the smallest speck eludes your
Lord, either on earth or in heaven. Nor is there anything smaller
than that, or larger, which is not in a Clear Book. (The Koran,
10: 61)