Think for a moment what this other world must be like. God’s
prophet has stated that heaven and hell exist there, and that everyone who dies
must eventually find his eternal abode in one of the two. Those who are
obedient to God in this world and act in a virtuous fashion will be rewarded
with a place in paradise, while those who are evil and rebellious towards God
will be cast into an excruciating fire.
It is important to understand that human actions fall into
one of the two categories. The first comprises everyday, routine matters, in
which no moral choice has to be made, and also purely accidental happenings
whose outcome, whether good or bad, cannot be judged from the moral standpoint
because they contained no purposive element, the second category is very
different in nature because it covers a wide and complex range of actions the
rights and wrongs which have to be scrupulously considered before being carried
out. This is known as the ethical category.
Imagine a stone balanced precariously on the branch of a
tree. You walk under it, it falls, hits you, and you find yourself badly
injured. Do you strike the tree and bear a grudge against it? Of course not.
But suppose a man picks up a stone, throws it at you with the intention of injuring
you and actually does so, won’t you become enraged and feel an urge to
retaliate in like manner? You would be perfectly justified in feeling that this
wrong should be punished because the act was intentional. Here it is a question
not just of some random happening, but of right and wrong action, good and bad
intentions, in a word, ethics.
The examples chosen to clarify this point are of a simple
nature in that the outcome of the action is immediately apparent and, moreover,
in the second case, it is possible to make an instant moral judgment. But there
are other much more complex situations in life where wrong-doing goes
undetected, it effects may be hidden or delayed for long periods, and the
culprits may never be brought to book either by the moral condemnation of
society or in a court of law. Some times evildoing is, of course, perceived as
such, but the miscreant is so clever and resourceful that he is able to escape
punishment, or the human resources required to inflict punishment are lacking
and so the evil-doer goes Scot free. Crimes are often repeated for just such
reasons. But the perpetrator of evil should not congratulate himself too soon
on the success of his schemes or on his ability to escape, for it is exactly
this type of action that he will be called to account for by his creator on the
day of judgment. Everyone, no matter from what walk of life he hails, will be
required to stand before his maker and lay his life absolutely bare before him.
On the basis of the actions which fall into the ethical category, where moral
precepts, scruples, are of overriding importance, he will either be ushered
into paradise or cast down into the flaming pits of hell. If all this was kept
hidden from him in this world, it was because God’s plan to put man on trial.
The after world is where man will reap the full consequences
of his deeds according to their moral nature, every action has some
consequences for the perpetrator, and every state that he finds himself in
precipitates a favourable or unfavourable reaction. He then makes or breaks
himself by the manner in which he employs his faculties.
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