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Fear, Strictness, and Unconditional Love

 

 

یہ مضمون اردو میں پڑھیں

Fear, like reward, is an extrinsic motivator. From childhood, many of us are conditioned through fear: “A ghost will come,” “A bird will eat you,” “If you don’t eat, the doctor will prick you with a needle.” Fear-based environments suppress creativity and initiative because they require freedom, curiosity, and fearlessness.

In education and parenting, replacing fear with awareness and consciousness-raising is essential. Instead of acting out of fear of punishment or desire for grades, children should learn to connect their actions to meaning, values, and inner purpose.

The Problem with Fear

  • Fear kills creativity. Creativity requires freedom, curiosity, and safety.
  • Fear may produce compliance, but rarely reflection or love for the act itself.

The Problem with Strictness

Strictness can sometimes appear effective, as harshness can sometimes curb childhood misbehavior. But, in the medium and long term, the outcome depends entirely on the child’s perception.

  • One child may interpret punishment as, “I did wrong; I must improve.”
  • Another may interpret it as, “I must hide my mistakes better from my parents.”
  • A third may grow rebellious or secretive, losing trust in the parent altogether.

Thus, punishment does not guarantee character growth. Its effect hinges on how the child internally constructs the experience.

Moreover, strictness often suppresses impulses rather than training self-regulation. A child whose impulses are repeatedly suppressed may remain impulsive into adulthood, unable to reflect or self-control without external force.

The Role of Unconditional Love

The foundation of healthy parenting is unconditional love. A child who knows, deep within, that they are loved regardless of success or failure develops self-worth and stable confidence. This kind of confidence is not arrogance or loudness; it is the quiet strength to remain composed in difficulty.

Unconditional love creates trust. When children trust their parents’ love, they feel safe to share their inner struggles, mistakes, and perceptions. Without this, strictness only drives them to silence, secrecy, or duplicity.

  • A child’s deepest need is unconditional love.
  • Love builds self-worth and stable confidence — not arrogance, but calm resilience in difficulty.
  • Love also creates trust; without it, children stop sharing inner struggles, and strictness drives them into secrecy.

Conclusion

Fear and strictness may seem effective, but they are risky. Unconditional love, trust, and supportive guidance are safer and more powerful foundations for lasting growth.

 

یہ مضمون اردو میں پڑھیں

A key question in religious life is: what truly drives us to carry out our responsibilities? Is it the watchful eye of others, the fear of authority, or the living presence of faith in our hearts? The distinction matters greatly because it influences the durability and sincerity of our actions.

The Fragility of Fear-Based Motivation

When motivation relies solely on fear—such as the fear of parents—its effect is temporary. As long as their watchful eyes are on us, we may behave with discipline. But once that gaze is removed, the sense of urgency diminishes. Fear rooted in human oversight cannot support a lifelong commitment. It remains conditional, circumstantial, and externally driven.

Faith as an Inner Source

By contrast, when someone’s religious life comes from faith, there’s no need for external oversight. A person rooted in faith is motivated from within, even when unseen. The Qur’anic perspective on motivation isn’t about compliance while being watched, but about an awakened awareness: knowing that God observes us whether we are in the open or under a desk, whether praised by others or hidden from view.

Consequences Vs. Conditioning

Some may object: If God motivates us with reward and punishment, why can’t parents or others do the same?

The first and most fundamental difference is this: God does not use reward and punishment as tools of behavior training or modification. The rewards and punishments mentioned in the Qur’an are not reinforcements designed to shape habits; rather, they are the ultimate consequences of our deeds. Once those consequences appear in the Hereafter, there is no possibility of change or improvement. Human beings, on the other hand, employ rewards and punishments in a very different way: as temporary reinforcements to encourage or discourage behavior, with the aim of improvement and growth, not eternal condemnation or reward.

A second difference follows from this: Divine promises of reward and warnings of punishment take root in faith. Once a person believes, these truths become part of their worldview. They are not external constraints but internalized realities. Thus, even in solitude, the believer’s heart whispers: “My Lord sees me.” No other fear or motivation can compare to this inner certainty.

Choosing Integrity Beyond Oversight

This distinction presents a timeless challenge: will we choose a life guided by inward faith or one controlled solely by human authority? A life of faith means our honesty, responsibility, and discipline stay intact, no matter who is watching. It is the difference between merely appearing obedient and genuinely being committed.

A Practical Framework: Moving from Fear-Based to Faith-Based Motivation

  1. Awareness of Source
    Ask yourself: Why am I doing this act? If the answer is “to please someone” or “to avoid punishment from people,” pause and reorient. Shift the “why” from people to God.
  2. Internalizing Divine Presence
    Develop the habit of quietly reminding yourself: God sees me here and now. This practice slowly roots your actions in His presence rather than in human approval.
  3. Private Acts of Worship
    Intentionally perform good deeds in secret—such as small prayers, acts of charity, or kindness that only God sees. These strengthen internal motivation.
  4. Reframing Reward and Punishment
    Instead of viewing divine reward as a bribe and punishment as a threat, see them as natural consequences of being in or out of alignment with God’s truth. This shifts obedience from a transaction to a matter of conviction.
  5. Journaling Integrity Checks
    At the end of each day, note moments when you acted solely because of people’s presence, and moments when you acted purely for God. Over time, this practice reveals patterns and enables change.
  6. Gradual Replacement, Not Rebellion
    Respect parental or social authority, but don’t depend on it. View it as scaffolding that should eventually be replaced by the inner pillar of faith.

Conclusion

True moral growth starts when the fear of human authority is replaced by awareness of God. Faith turns obligation into devotion, watching into sincerity, and external pressure into internal freedom. When our motivation comes from faith, it supports us not only in public but also in quiet moments where no human can see.