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Life as an Interaction with God

 

 

یہ مضمون اردو میں پڑھیں

Most of us think of our lives as interactions with people—family, friends, colleagues, and society at large. But what if we changed our perspective and viewed life itself as an ongoing interaction with God? This simple yet powerful shift alters how we interpret our daily experiences, whether joyful or painful.

People as Channels, Not Sources

When I say that life is an interaction with God, it means that the people around me—my family, friends, neighbors, even strangers—are not the ultimate sources of what happens in my life. They are channels through which God allows different events and experiences to reach me. Every joy, every hardship, every opportunity or setback comes into my life not because of them by themselves, but because God willed it so.

This perspective eliminates the illusion that others control my destiny. They may influence my story, but the true Author is God.

The Uncontrollable Flow of Events

None of us has power over which situations happen—whether it’s a success, a loss, a celebration, or a trial. These are outside our control. They unfold only with God’s permission and design. Recognizing this truth brings humility and frees us from the exhausting effort of trying to control the uncontrollable.

The Real Test: My Response

If events are beyond my control, then where does my responsibility lie? In my response. My spiritual growth does not depend on how smooth or tough my circumstances are, but on how I respond to them.

Every situation presents an opportunity.

  • Joy leads me to gratitude.
  • Grief urges me to be patient.
  • Conflict calls me toward justice and forgiveness.
  • Uncertainty urges me to trust in God.

In each case, the real interaction is not with the person in front of me but with God who allowed that moment to happen in my life.

Growing Closer to God

Seen this way, life stops feeling like a random series of highs and lows and instead becomes a meaningful conversation with the Divine. My choices—my patience, gratitude, honesty, and compassion—are my ways of responding to Him. And with each genuine response, I move closer to His presence.

Reflection Prompts for Daily Life

  1. When something upsets me today, can I pause and ask: “What response would bring me closer to God in this moment?”
  2. When I feel grateful for something, do I remember to acknowledge the true Giver behind it, not just the person through whom it came?
  3. When faced with conflict, can I see it not as a battle with another person but as a test from God to practice patience, fairness, or forgiveness?
  4. At the end of the day, can I look back and identify one moment where I responded in a way that honored God, and one where I need to improve tomorrow?

 

 

 

یہ مضمون اردو میں پڑھیں

Imagine a child being held down by loving hands while a nurse administers a vaccine. The child writhes, screams, and looks with accusing eyes at the very people who care most. To the child, it feels like betrayal. To the parent, it is heartbreaking—but also necessary. They know that this sting protects life.

That scene captures something essential about pain: it is real, it hurts, but it may carry within it a hidden good. The human challenge is not to erase pain—we can’t—but to decide what meaning we attach to it and how we respond.

Pain Is Unavoidable

Every serious wisdom tradition, whether philosophical or religious, acknowledges that pain is an integral part of life’s fabric. To deny this is to live in illusion. Even prophets did not escape it. Job—Ayyub in the Qur’anic narrative—cried out with utter honesty, I am severely afflicted, and You are the Most Merciful. [Please relieve me of this affliction.] (Al-Anbiaa 21:83).

Pain, then, is not a sign of weakness. It is a central part of the human condition. What distinguishes one person from another is not the presence or absence of pain, but the posture taken toward it.

Patience as Response, Not Numbness

Too often, patience is misunderstood as suppressing emotions, as if a patient person feels nothing. In reality, patience does not cancel pain—it reframes it. It is the difference between saying, “Why me? This is unfair,” and saying, “This hurts, but I will meet it with dignity.”

Viktor Frankl, reflecting on his years in Auschwitz, captured this insight powerfully: “Everything can be taken from a man but one thing: the last of the human freedoms—to choose one’s attitude in any given set of circumstances.” His point was not that pain can be escaped, but that meaning can be chosen in the midst of it.

The Inner Dialogue That Shapes Suffering

What we whisper to ourselves in silence determines how much heavier—or lighter—pain becomes. If my inner dialogue repeats, “This is meaningless, this is punishment, this is the end,” despair deepens the wound. If instead I tell myself, “This is a test, a training, a chance to endure with grace,” then suffering begins to serve a purpose.

This is not denial. It is the psychological equivalent of what cognitive therapy refers to as “reframing.” Albert Ellis, the pioneer of rational emotive behavior therapy, argued that emotions are not directly created by events but by the beliefs we form about those events. The sting of pain may be physical, but the fire of despair is often interpretive.

Training Through Pain

Think of an athlete pushing through the last few repetitions on a weight rack. The burn is sharp, the muscles tremble, and yet the pain is embraced—it is a signal of growth. Or imagine a soldier advancing into danger, fully aware that bullets may bite into flesh. The soldier’s willingness is not born of ignorance of pain but of commitment to a cause larger than himself.

In both cases, pain is not an obstacle but a pathway. Its meaning makes it bearable, even transformative. Ordinary life offers smaller but similar examples: the sleepless nights of a parent caring for a sick child, the grind of a student persevering through exams. Pain tied to purpose changes its character.

Eternalizing Our Response

One of the profound ways to look at suffering is to see it as a moment that becomes permanent in the story of who we are. Once a moment passes, it cannot be rewritten. What remains is not the ache itself, but the memory of how we carried it. Did we meet it with bitterness, or with dignity? With despair, or with endurance?

This way of thinking elevates the ordinary. Even the sighs and tears that escape us in moments of trial are not failures, so long as the heart resists complaint against the Source of life. Every response is written into our character, becoming an integral part of who we are eternally.

Pain as a Teacher

If ease teaches us gratitude, pain teaches us patience. Pain is not only the fire that tests, it is the classroom where steadfastness and patience are learned. And like every classroom, its lessons are not automatic—they must be chosen, practiced, and repeated until they shape us.

The child who received the injection does not see it as mercy. But the parent knows. Similarly, we may not grasp the hidden wisdom in our own suffering. But if we can turn our inner dialogue from complaint to meaning, pain becomes not just a burden to endure, but a teacher that refines us.

That is why the ancients and the moderns alike have reminded us: suffering is inevitable, but despair is optional. The sting remains, but so does the possibility of growth.