Matalibul Furqan 5

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religion, not in deen.



  1. Eiman to be convinced, to accept, to verify something,
    to rely upon, or have confidence in. This is usually translated in
    English as belief or faith; and faith in turn signifies acceptance
    without proof or argument, or without reference to reason or
    thought, knowledge or insight. Faith is generally regarded as the
    negation of knowledge or reason; it is said about Kant, for instance,
    that “he found it necessary to deny knowledge in order to make room
    for faith.”
    Indeed, Kant himself suggests a trichotomy of the modes of
    cognition into knowledge, opinion and belief:
    Opinion is such holding of a judgment as is consciously insufficient,
    not only objectively but also subjectively. If our holding of a judgment
    be only subjectively sufficient, and is at the same time taken as being
    objectively insufficient, we have what is termed believing. Lastly, when
    the holding of a thing to be true is sufficient both subjectively and
    objectively, it is knowledge (The Critique of Pure Reason).
    According to the Qur’an, however, eiman is not what has been
    described above as believing; it is what Kant calls knowledge. In
    fact, eiman is synonymous with conviction and is based upon reason
    and knowledge. The Qur’an does not recognise as eiman any belief
    that is divorced from reason and involves the blind acceptance of
    any postulate. It is true that deen involves the acceptance of certain
    things which cannot be known through sense perception; but there
    is no reason to presume that things which cannot be thus perceived
    do not exist. Indeed, our reason and thinking compel us to
    recognise the existence of many such things. In any event, eiman,
    according to the Qur’an, signifies the conviction that results from
    full mental acceptance and intellectual satisfaction. This kind of
    conviction gives one a feeling of amn – inner contentment and peace
    (amn and eiman have a common root). And mu’min is one who
    accepts the truth in such a way that it ensures his own peace and
    helps him to safeguard the peace and security of the rest of
    mankind. Indeed, Al-mu’min is one of the attributes of God
    Himself.

  2. Jahannam: usually translated as hell, which again does not
    properly convey the Qur’anic sense of the term.
    According to the Qur’an, life has manifested itself in the human
    form after having gone through various stages of the process of


Islam: A Challenge to Religion 24

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