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Goodness That Doesn’t Depend on Others

 

 

یہ مضمون اردو میں پڑھیں

I said it with complete confidence, almost as if it were self-evident. “At some point,” I said, “being good has to be reciprocal. If someone has no principles, why should I keep mine?”

He didn’t respond immediately. He let the question sit between us, the way one lets a fragile object rest before touching it. “That,” he finally said, “is exactly where the real test begins.”

I looked at him, a little unsettled.

“Being good with good people,” he continued, “is not a moral achievement. It is convenient. The question is what happens to your principles when the other person has none.”

I had never framed it that way.

He leaned forward slightly. “If your ethics rise and fall with how others treat you, then you are not principle-centered. You are other-centered.”

That stung, because it felt true. I thought of how easily my tone changes. How quickly patience disappears when I feel wronged. How naturally I justify sharpness by calling it ‘self-respect’ or ‘realism’.

He seemed to read that hesitation. “Look carefully,” he said. “If someone is polite, you are polite. If someone is rude, you feel entitled to being rude. That is not morality. That is mirroring.”

I tried to defend myself. “But isn’t that human? Isn’t it unrealistic to expect goodness when there is injustice?”

He nodded. “It is human. That’s why it’s common. But principles are not meant to describe what is commonly practiced. They describe what you stand for when you are pulled toward the satisfaction of reciprocating others.” He paused, taking a sip from his coffee mug, then added, “Otherwise, your values are not values. They are bargains.”

That word stayed with me—bargains. I remembered a conversation I had once witnessed at work. A colleague had been consistently unfair, dismissive, and almost humiliating. When someone finally responded with equal harshness, everyone nodded approvingly. “He deserved it,” they said. And yet, something in that moment felt small. Satisfying, perhaps—but small.

He gave an example that shifted everything: “There was a time,” he said, “when oppression reached unbearable levels. People were tortured, boycotted, and killed. If there was ever a moment where retaliation felt justified, it was then.”

I knew what he was referring to.

“And yet,” he continued, “even at points where consequences felt inevitable, the message was not driven by revenge. It carried an extraordinary hope—that people might still understand, still turn back, still find mercy.”

I interrupted him. “But weren’t they unjust? Didn’t they deserve punishment?”

“They did,” he said calmly. “Justice and mercy are not opposites. But notice this: the moral standard was not lowered just because the other side had no standards.”

That sentence landed heavily. He explained that this is the difference between reciprocal morality and principled morality. Reciprocal morality says: I will be as good as you are. Principled morality says: I will be as good as I aspire to be. “Your character,” he said, “is not revealed by how you treat decent people. It is revealed by how you behave when decency is absent.”

I thought about how often I excuse myself by saying, “Anyone would react this way.” He gently dismantled that comfort. “Anyone can react,” he said. “Very few can remain anchored.” He wasn’t asking for passivity. He wasn’t suggesting silence in the face of injustice. He was drawing a line between standing firm and becoming contaminated. “You can resist wrongdoing,” he said, “without becoming it. You can oppose injustice without letting it decide who you become.”

He told me something that felt almost counterintuitive: “When you abandon your principles because someone else has none, you hand them more power than they already have.”

That unsettled me. I realized how often my anger feels righteous, how easily I tell myself that harshness is strength. But beneath it, there is something reactive, something fragile.

He looked at me and said, “If your goodness disappears the moment it is not returned, then it was never rooted deeply enough.” There was no accusation in his voice. Just clarity. I thought about how this applies everywhere—marriages, workplaces, politics, and social media. We are constantly measuring others rather than deciding how ethical we aspire to be.

He ended quietly, almost gently. “Principles are not tested in fair weather,” he said. “They are tested when keeping them costs you something.”

I sat with that. It became clear that goodness, when conditional, is not goodness at all. It is strategy. And strategy collapses the moment conditions change. Standing on principles is not about winning moral points. It is about refusing to let the absence of values around you hollow out the values within you.

That day, I understood something that has stayed with me since:  Being good to good people is easy. Being good despite bad behavior is rare. And only the second tells you who you truly are.

Controlling Outcomes Vs. Controlling Response

 

 

 

یہ مضمون اردو میں پڑھیں

Ali works hard, prays regularly, gives charity, and fasts. Everyone who knows him considers him a pious and ideal Muslim. For years, life has been smooth.

One day, Ali faces a significant setback in his business. He looks concerned, but as expected, stays humble and trusts that God will help him overcome his problems. Then a family member falls ill. His prayers grow longer, and his pleas become more urgent. Still, nothing seems to change.

Slowly, troubling thoughts creep in: Why is God not listening to me? Why has He turned away? What have I done to exchange His favors for His indifference? His internal dialogue grows stronger. Complaints fill his heart.

Deep down, Ali believes that his prayers, fasting, and charity will ensure the outcomes he wants. He thinks his devotion to God should bring him a smooth life in this world. When it doesn’t, his faith starts to shake.

The Real Test

Ali’s struggle isn’t unique. Many of us believe that our acts of worship guarantee specific worldly outcomes. But the Qur’an teaches us differently: life isn’t a transaction to secure comfort here; it’s a test of our response. God has created a controlled environment where outcomes are His domain, but our reactions are ours.

The Illusion of Control

Most of us fall for the illusion that we can control results through effort, planning, or prayer alone. We think: If I do everything right, life will match my desires. When reality proves otherwise, frustration and disappointment follow.

The Gift of Response

What God has truly given us is not control over outcomes, but the ability to respond.

  • The illusion of control over outcomes can lead to both entitlement and despair when outcomes don’t meet expectations. When we convince ourselves that life must go exactly as we planned, we quietly develop a sense of entitlement. We begin expecting smooth results as a “reward” for our good deeds, prayers, or hard work. When reality challenges this expectation, two reactions usually emerge:
  1. Entitlement: “I deserve better than this. Why did this happen to me?”
  2. Despair: “If God didn’t give me what I asked for, maybe He doesn’t care.”

Both entitlement and despair reveal the trap of misplaced control. Instead of seeing hardships as tests, we view them as betrayals. Our inner dialogue becomes bitter, and our worship feels transactional rather than devotional. The Qur’an, however, reminds us that entitlement is misplaced — even the prophets faced rejection, loss, and pain despite their unwavering faith. The message is clear: acts of devotion are not bargaining chips for worldly comfort, but anchors to help us respond with dignity when comfort is taken away.

The gift of response opens the door to dignity, growth, and eternal reward. Although outcomes are beyond our control, God has given us something greater: the freedom to choose how we respond. This is where human dignity resides. A calamity may take away wealth, health, or status, but it cannot take away your ability to face it with patience, gratitude, trust, and integrity. Each response becomes:

  • A doorway to growth: Hardships reveal our weaknesses but also help us build resilience, empathy, and humility.
  • A means of purification: Prophet Muhammad ﷺ taught that no fatigue, grief, or worry befalls a believer except that God expiates some sins through it — as long as we respond with faith.
  • A step toward eternal reward: Worldly outcomes fade, but the responses we choose carry into the hereafter. Opting for gratitude over bitterness or integrity over retaliation turns fleeting trials into everlasting gains.This gift of response is what keeps us from being slaves to circumstances. It allows us to turn every situation — whether joyful or painful — into an opportunity to align with God’s will and achieve success that lasts beyond this world.

Scripture as Reminder

The Qur’an consistently shifts our focus from outcomes to responses. It reminds us that challenges, injustices, and even hostility from others are part of God’s controlled environment of testing. Our duty is not to control results but to maintain faith and integrity in how we respond.

Why This Feels Hard

It is natural to become emotionally attached to what we desire. When things fall apart despite our best efforts, we ask: Why me? Why now? Why didn’t God prevent this? This emotional pain can blind us to the truth: that even in this moment, there is potential for growth, atonement of sins, and elevation in God’s eyes.

Responding in the Right Spirit

Responding isn’t about passivity. It’s about facing reality with the correct mindset.

  • Patience when hurt.
  • Gratitude when blessed.
  • Trust when uncertain.
  • Integrity when provoked by injustice.

This captures the core of our test.

Active Acceptance, Not Passive Resignation

Accepting God’s will does not mean giving up or feeling helpless. Faith is not about passively resigning but about taking active responsibility. Every situation, whether happy or difficult, offers lessons and chances to grow. When something happens, we should ask: What is God teaching me here? What responsibilities have I overlooked? What actions can I take to improve things? If others are at fault, then within moral and legal limits, we are also expected to respond in ways that promote justice and prevent harm. Submitting to God’s will involves releasing resentment and despair, while also striving to carry out our duties with humility, responsibility, and renewed determination. This is the balance of faith: trusting God’s wisdom in the outcomes while also actively fulfilling the roles He has given us.

Reflection: From Illusion to Response

Take a few calm minutes with pen and paper. Recall one positive and one negative event from the past few days.

  1. Write down your immediate reflex response to those events — your emotions, thoughts, and any spontaneous actions you took.
  2. Now, reconstruct those events through the lens of faith: remembering that a merciful, wise, all-knowing, and all-powerful God allowed them for your eternal growth and success.
  3. Reflect on the difference between your reflexive reaction and your faith-based response.
  4. Ask yourself: What responsibility does this event place on me? What lessons can I learn, what corrective actions can I take, and how can I respond within moral and legal boundaries — whether the responsibility lies with me or with others?
  5. Compare:
  • How do your reflexive reactions and feelings differ from your faith-based responses?
  • What new freedom do you find when you shift from the illusion of control to the gift of response?

This practice helps us move from frustration to faith, from despair to hope, and from reacting blindly to responding with dignity.