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When Limits Become Pathways

 

 

اردو میں مضمون پڑھیں

Some hardships in life are temporary: an illness heals, a financial setback eases, a broken relationship mends. Others, however, are chronic and permanent. A disability, a lifelong medical condition, or the passing of a loved one—these create limits that will not be undone in this world. For many, such limits feel suffocating. But faith teaches us to see these limits not as closed walls, but as doors opening into eternity.

When Limits Feel Final

Chronic pain, disability, or loss can make us feel that life will never again be “normal.” A person with partial blindness struggles with everyday tasks like reading or driving. Someone with arthritis or a spinal injury may wake up every day with pain that never goes away. A widow might find the silence of her home permanent. The frustration is not just in the difficulty itself, but in its lasting nature. It feels like a lifelong sentence.

The Test of Response

The Qur’an and narratives ascribed to the Prophet ﷺ remind us that what truly matters is not just what happens, but how we respond to it. The Prophet ﷺ said: “No fatigue, nor disease, nor sorrow, nor sadness, nor hurt, nor distress befalls a Muslim—even if it were the prick he receives from a thorn—but that Allah expiates some of his sins for that.” (Bukhari, Muslim).

This does not mean that the hardship itself is automatically rewarding. It means that when the believer responds with patience, faith, and gratitude, the hardship becomes a way of purification and elevation.

Redefining Success

Worldly success often measures ability, productivity, and control. Chronic limits seem to challenge all three. But from a divine perspective, true success isn’t based on outward achievements; it’s about how faithfully you live within your limits. A believer who cannot walk but responds with patience may be earning more eternal success than someone who runs marathons with arrogance.

The Eternal Opportunity

Every chronic condition can be viewed as a gateway to everlasting reward.

  • A woman who lives with partial blindness but thanks God daily for her other eye walks through the door of gratitude.
  • A man in a wheelchair who still greets others cheerfully walks through the door of resilience.
  • A parent who loses a child yet continues to serve family and community demonstrates trustworthiness.

Every limit turns into an opportunity when viewed through the lens of faith.

Not Passive Acceptance, But Active Growth

Accepting chronic limits as God’s will does not mean resignation or passivity. It means:

  • Seeking treatment and support through lawful methods.
  • Learning lessons about our reliance on God.
  • Taking corrective or supportive actions for ourselves and others within moral and legal boundaries.
  • Growing spiritually by shifting our focus from worldly perfection to eternal preparation.

Drop in the Ocean

Compared to eternal life, even a lifetime of pain is just a drop in the ocean. Believers who enter Paradise will look back on worldly hardships as nothing. The Prophet ﷺ taught that on the Day of Judgment, a person who experienced the hardest life in this world will be dipped once into Paradise, and then asked: “Did you ever see any hardship?” He will reply: “No, by God, I never saw any hardship.” (Muslim)

 

Reflection Exercise: Doors in Disguise

Think of one chronic limit in your life—or in the life of someone close to you.

  • How does it make you feel confined?
  • What opportunities could this limit actually create for eternal growth—through patience, gratitude, service, or trust in God?
  • Write down one way you can intentionally turn this chronic limit into an “eternal door.”

When Wisdom is Hidden

 

 

Life often puts us in unexpected, surprising, and often undesirable situations where the reason behind what we face isn’t clear right away. Illness, loss, delays, or betrayal can seem unbearable when no clear good comes from them. In those times, faith reminds us not to mistake our limited view for the absence of divine wisdom.

The Limits of Human Vision

Our understanding is like looking through a small window — we see only pieces, not the full picture. God’s wisdom, however, encompasses everything—present, past, and future. When we struggle to understand the purpose of an event, it’s not because no purpose exists, but because we are not yet able to see it completely.

The Qur’an reminds us,

“…perhaps you dislike a thing and it is good for you; and perhaps you like a thing and it is bad for you. God knows, while you do not.” (Al-Baqarah 2:216)

The Test of Trust

Faith is tested most deeply when the wisdom behind the events that affect us is hidden from us. It is easy to feel grateful when blessings are clear, but it’s more difficult when blessings are hidden as trials. In these moments, trust in God becomes the believer’s anchor: the belief that the One who is merciful, wise, powerful, and all-knowing does not act without purpose.

Pain as a Hidden Mercy

Sometimes, trials strip away illusions, awaken gratitude, or purify the heart. Other times, they guide us to paths we wouldn’t have chosen but which lead to growth and elevation. The hadith states: “No fatigue, nor disease, nor sorrow, nor sadness, nor hurt, nor distress befalls a Muslim, even if it were the prick he receives from a thorn, but that God expiates some of his sins for that.” (Bukhari, Muslim).

This hadith does not mean that every hardship automatically brings a reward. Instead, when a believer responds with patience, gratitude, and faith, hardship acts as a form of purification—wiping away sins and increasing good deeds. The event is a test; the way one reacts is what earns the reward.

The Danger of Demanding Immediate Clarity

When we insist to understand everything immediately, we risk arrogance and despair. Arrogance, because we think God owes us an explanation; despair, because without one, we lose hope. The Qur’an (Al-Hajj 22:11–15) warns against those who worship God only conditionally — happy when things go their way but turning away when trials come.

Living with Hidden Wisdom

Living faithfully in unexpected circumstances means:

  • To accept events as part of God’s greater plan.
  • Seeking lessons and responsibilities without demanding complete clarity.
  • To trust that nothing allowed by God escapes His mercy, knowledge, power, and wisdom.
  • To remain hopeful that the unseen wisdom, if not revealed in this world, will be shown in the hereafter.

Reflection Exercise: Trusting the Unseen

Think of an unexpected event in your life, the cause of which is still unclear — a setback, a delay, or a hardship that keeps puzzling you.

  1. Write down what feels confusing or painful about it.
  2. Now, change your perspective: If you accept that God’s knowledge, wisdom, and mercy are working — even when you cannot see how — what new possibilities open up in how you might live with this event?
  3. Finally, write a brief statement of trust, such as: “I do not see the wisdom now, but I choose to trust that God does, and I will respond with patience and responsibility.”

This small exercise does not solve the mystery, but it plants the seed of trust — a trust that keeps the heart steady until clarity appears, whether in this life or the next.