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When Truth Comes Through Imperfect Messengers

 

 
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یہ مضمون اردو میں پڑھیں

A friend once shared an observation that really resonated with me: “If there are no differences, there will be no development.” At first, it seemed like a clever phrase, but the more I thought about it, the more true it felt. Every meaningful growth in my life—whether in thinking, faith, or relationships—has come from moments of disagreement, discomfort, or friction. However, I also realized something else. Often, when someone I disagree with says something wise, I feel tempted to ignore it. Why? Because my heart is already closed to them. Maybe they spoke harshly before. Maybe they behaved in a way that made me feel distant. And so, even when truth comes from their mouth, I am unwilling to accept it. This is where we cheat ourselves.

A Story We All Know Too Well

Imagine you’re in a workplace meeting. A colleague who is usually rude or dismissive suddenly offers a suggestion that is genuinely helpful. What happens inside? Part of you resists: “Why should I give him credit? He never respects me.” Another part quietly recognizes that the suggestion is right. Now, if you dismiss the idea just because of who said it, you miss out on the benefit. Your colleague might remain unaffected, but you end up deprived. The wiser path is more difficult: to accept the truth regardless of how it is presented.

Message vs. Messenger

Remember this: God has not made the truth dependent on the perfection of its messengers. Parents who struggle with their own habits can still teach their children valuable lessons. A teacher with personal flaws may still inspire a spark of wisdom in a student. Even a stranger’s careless remark might contain insight if we are willing to separate behavior from value. When someone speaks the truth but doesn’t live by it, that is between them and God. When we hear the truth but dismiss it because of bias, that becomes our issue with God.

The Inner Discipline

Living this way demands discipline.

  • Pause the ego: Ask, “Is this statement true?” before asking, “Do I like the person?”
  • Pick out what is useful: Even a single good word can influence your growth.
  • Leave the rest: You aren’t required to accept what is wrong or toxic.

It’s like panning for gold: you sift through dirt and keep the shining particles that can enrich your life.  

Reflection:

Development thrives on differences. But the condition is that we keep our hearts open enough to recognize value—even in the words of those we may not admire. Every encounter offers the possibility of growth. The question is: are we humble enough to accept the good wherever it comes from, and strong enough to leave the rest?

Fulfillment of Desires or Eternal Bliss

 

 

یہ مضمون اردو میں پڑھیں

In Surah An-Nāzi‘āt, God draws a clear contrast between two paths a person can choose. One side includes those who go beyond limits and follow their desires without restraint. The other side features those who fear standing before their Lord and prefer the Hereafter over the temporary pleasures of this world. This timeless comparison acts as a mirror for us: which qualities influence our daily choices?

The Two Traits of the Misguided

The Qur’an points out two main tendencies that misguide people.

  1. Transgressing limits—crossing boundaries set by God and conscience, whether in pursuit of power, wealth, or self-indulgence.
  2. Following desires blindly—making choices driven by impulses or short-term satisfaction without considering consequences or moral responsibility.

These traits are not exclusive to ancient societies. They are evident today in unchecked consumerism, dishonest dealings, and the normalization of instant gratification.

The Two Traits of the Guided

In contrast, the righteous are characterized by two inspiring qualities:

  1. Awareness of accountability—they live with the understanding that one day they will face God. This awareness serves as an inner compass, guiding their decisions.
  2. Preferring the Hereafter—they evaluate every decision based on eternal success, willingly sacrificing temporary benefits for lasting gains.

This orientation does not mean totally abandoning worldly life. Instead, it means that faith and responsibility influence everyday decisions: in business, family, and social interactions.

From Awareness to Change

Once we understand these four distinctions between the people of God’s Paradise and those of Hellfire, it becomes natural to recognize our current state and then intentionally begin moving toward our goals. It will be a gradual process of change, likely involving the following steps:

  • Awareness: recognizing when our actions are motivated by desires instead of principles.
  • Small steps: substituting one bad habit at a time with a healthier choice.
  • Consistency: developing the habit of prioritizing eternal values in daily life—what we eat, how we earn, how we speak, and how we treat others.

Over time, consistent effort builds a character grounded in honesty and responsibility.

 

 

Reflection: Where Do I Stand?

Surah An-Nāzi‘āt highlights four key qualities: two of misguidance and two of guidance. Reflect on each to determine where you stand.

The Misguided Traits

  1. Transgressing limits
  • Do I knowingly violate the moral or ethical boundaries established by God and conscience?
  • Are there parts of my life where I justify wrong actions?
    1. Following desires blindly
  • How often do I let impulse, comfort, or peer pressure decide for me?
  • What desires most frequently override my conscience?

 

The Guided Traits

  1. Awareness of accountability before God
  • Do I live with the feeling that I will soon stand before God?
  • Does this awareness influence how I speak, earn, spend, or treat others?
    1. Prioritizing the Hereafter
  • When faced with a choice between short-term benefits and eternal success, which one do I usually choose?
  • Which recent decision of mine shows a preference for the Hereafter?

 

How to Use This Exercise

  • Keep a private journal of your answers and review them regularly to monitor your progress.
  • Pick a small area where you want to move from “desire” to “eternity.”
  • Each night, reflect on your choices: “Which side did I strengthen today?”

 

Conclusion

Life is a sequence of daily choices. Each decision either fuels desire or deepens awareness of eternity. Surah An-Nāzi‘āt reminds us that true success goes to those who focus their hearts on the Hereafter, not just worldly gains. The real challenge is to let that focus influence every small act—until choosing eternity over desire becomes natural.

Mercy: God’s Present Priority

 

 

یہ مضمون اردو میں پڑھیں

When we observe the world around us, we often see injustice, suffering, and cruelty. Many ask: if God is just, why does He allow wrongdoers to prosper and the innocent to endure suffering? The Qur’an offers an important insight into this question: while God is fully just, His priority in this world is mercy rather than immediate justice. Justice will be fully realized on the Day of Judgment. Until then, mercy guides God’s interactions with humanity.

Mercy Over Immediate Justice

The Qur’an says:

“What would God gain by punishing you if you are grateful and believe?” (An-Nisa 4:147).

God does not rush to punish. Instead, He offers chances for people to reflect, repent, and return. If justice came immediately, human freedom would break down, and the test of life would end. Mercy creates room for growth.

The Daily Signs of Mercy

Every breath we take is a gift of mercy. Our ongoing existence, despite our mistakes, reflects mercy. Even when we sin, the door of repentance remains open until our last breath. The Prophet ﷺ taught that God’s mercy outweighs His wrath, and that He divided His mercy into a hundred parts — leaving just one part on earth, by which parents show love to children and creatures show kindness to one another — and reserved ninety-nine parts for the Hereafter (Bukhari, Muslim).

Mercy in Trials

Even hardships are wrapped in mercy. A painful illness can cleanse sins. A financial setback can humble arrogance. A delayed blessing can strengthen patience. While we may not see mercy immediately in our suffering, faith assures us that God’s wisdom and compassion are active even in what hurts.

Mercy as Protection From Ourselves

If God were to deal with us by pure justice right now, even our small ingratitudes and hidden sins could destroy us.

“If God were to seize people for their wrongdoing, He would not have left upon the earth any creature.” (An-Nahl 16:61).

It is only by mercy that we are given time to recognize our flaws, seek forgiveness, and amend our lives.

Mercy Today, Justice Tomorrow

Mercy being the current priority doesn’t mean justice isn’t present. Instead, justice is postponed, but signs of it can still be seen everywhere. On the Day of Judgment, fairness will be perfectly maintained. Until then, God gives room for repentance, growth, and choice.

The Signs of Justice Already Present

Even now, the world still reflects God’s justice — it can be seen in many forms.

  • The balance of the universe: planets orbit with precision, seasons follow cycles, and ecosystems sustain themselves. This harmony reflects God’s attribute of justice, demonstrating that disorder is not the normal state of creation.
  • The balance of life on Earth: The food chain controls populations, natural systems recycle and renew themselves, and every living being finds its sustenance within the order God has established. Justice is evident in this inherent balance.
  • The conscience within: God has placed in every person an inner witness that good and evil are not equal. This moral guide warns us, even when we ignore it, that someday good and evil will be fully separated. Our guilt, admiration for virtue, and desire for fairness are all signs that justice is real and unstoppable.

Therefore, although perfect justice is delayed, signs of justice are present everywhere — in the universe, in nature, and inside the human heart — guiding us toward the day when justice will be fully revealed.

 

Reflection Exercise: Traces of Justice

Take ten quiet minutes today.

  1. Look at the world around you — the sky, the order of day and night, the way your body sustains life. Write down three signs of balance or order that reflect God’s justice.
  2. Reflect on one moment recently when your conscience strongly told you: “This was wrong,” or “This was good.” How did you respond?
  3. Conclude with this thought: If God has left signs of justice so clear in creation and within me, how much more perfect will His final justice be when nothing is hidden?

Forgive When You Can, Endure When You Must

 

 

یہ مضمون اردو میں پڑھیں

Life constantly exposes us to the faults of others: betrayal, neglect, harsh words, injustice. In these moments, we grapple with two strong reactions — to forgive or to endure. Both are noble in their own way, but each needs wisdom, the right timing, and sincerity.

The Power of Forgiveness

Forgiveness is not a sign of weakness. It’s a deliberate choice to rise above resentment and prevent bitterness from controlling the heart. It involves releasing the desire to retaliate, while trusting ultimate justice to God.

The Qur’an eloquently establishes this elevated standard:

Good and evil are not equal. Respond [to others’ evil] with what is much better [by forgiving them and standing firm on the right path]. You will then see that the one between you and whom there was hostility has become a dear friend. [However,] only those who persevere patiently attain this [understanding], and only the incredibly fortunate attain this [wisdom]. And if [at any time] an incitement from Satan provokes you, seek refuge in God. He, indeed, is the hearing, the knowing. (Fussilat 41:34 – 36)

Here, forgiveness isn’t just a virtue; it’s a powerful force, especially when the other person still has some potential for goodness. When you forgive, you break the cycle of hostility and open the door to reconciliation. Sometimes, forgiveness itself becomes a way to mend broken relationships and rebuild communities.

The Weight of Endurance

There are times, however, when forgiveness isn’t immediately possible. The pain might be too intense, the injustice ongoing, or the offender unrepentant. In such cases, Islam teaches us to practice sabr — patient endurance.

Endurance doesn’t mean silent suffering or hiding pain. It involves enduring hurt without falling into vengefulness or despair, all while seeking God’s strength and waiting for His justice. Endurance preserves dignity even when forgiveness feels impossible.

Justice Remains Honored

Choosing forgiveness or endurance does not mean abandoning justice. The Qur’an affirms the right to seek redress and hold others accountable. The believer is called to pursue justice — but only within the moral and legal limits God has set. Forgiveness is not required when it causes harm to continue, and endurance is not a license for injustice to go unchecked.

Therefore, forgiveness and endurance are not alternatives to justice but ways of embodying and supporting God-consciousness.

Mercy as Worship

Both forgiveness and endurance are acts of worship when done for God’s sake. When you forgive, you imitate God’s attribute of mercy. When you endure, you recognize His wisdom and sovereignty. In both cases, you choose not to be controlled by ego, revenge, or despair.

Once again, we must remind ourselves of the Qur’anic directive and the hope associated with this ethic.

Respond [to others’ evil] with what is much better [by forgiving them and standing firm on the right path]. You will then see that the one between you and whom there was hostility has become a dear friend. (Fussilat 41:34 – 35)

This verse is not only a command but also a hope: hearts that are hostile today can, through forgiveness or endurance, be transformed tomorrow.

A Practical Example:

Consider a workplace scenario: a colleague takes credit for your hard work.

  1. Seek Clarification
    The first step is to avoid jumping to conclusions and politely ask for clarification. You might approach your colleague and say: “Your action has raised questions about honesty in my mind. Before letting my thoughts wander negatively, I would like to hear your perspective.” Sometimes misunderstandings are cleared up right here.
  1. Seek Redress Through Systems
    If the concern continues, the next step is to use the organization’s grievance system, such as HR processes, supervisor escalation, or formal reporting. This is not revenge but a way to ensure fairness within the existing structures.
  1. Choose Forgiveness or Endurance
  • Forgiveness: If the issue cannot be formally resolved, you may choose to forgive, releasing bitterness while trusting God for ultimate justice.
  • Endurance: If forgiveness feels impossible, practice sabr. Bear with dignity, avoid gossip or revenge, and pray for God’s strength while waiting for His justice.

In every situation, act with integrity, protect your soul from resentment, and make sure your response pleases God.

 

Reflection:

Think of a time when someone wronged you.

  1. Recall your instinctive reaction: What emotions, words, or actions came naturally in that moment?
  2. Now reconsider through the lens of faith:
  • Can forgiveness lead to reconciliation?
  • If forgiveness isn’t possible yet, how can endurance help you maintain dignity while waiting for justice?
  • What actions toward justice still fall within your moral and legal duties?
  1. Reflect on transformation: How would your heart and relationships change if you responded with forgiveness or endurance for God’s sake instead of ego’s demand?

God's Purpose Beyond the Worldly

 

 

اردو میں مضمون پڑھیں

One of the most profound insights offered by revelation is that life isn’t a random event but a carefully planned test. The Creator who brought the heavens and the earth into existence, who gave humans life and death, is not an indifferent force. He is described in the Qur’an as All-Knowing (Al-ʿAlīm), All-Wise (Al-Ḥakīm), All-Powerful (Al-Qadīr), and All-Merciful (Al-Raḥīm). Understanding these attributes changes how we see every event—whether it’s a joyful blessing or a painful loss.

Life’s Scheme: Trial With Purpose

The Qur’an declares:

“Who created death and life to test who among you does good deeds. He is the Almighty, the Forgiving.” (Al-Mulk 67:2)

This means every person, without exception, is placed in situations designed to reveal their reactions—patience during hardship, gratitude in ease, faith in uncertainty, and humility in success. The purpose of life is not just to enjoy comfort but to prepare the soul for the eternal life hereafter.

Misconception: Religion Based on Fear?

Many believe that religion begins with fear—fear of punishment, loss, or divine wrath. But as scholars like Maulana Amin Ahsan Islahi pointed out, the true foundation is recognizing blessings and the responsibilities that come with them. Fear often arises because of how much we value what we risk losing.

  • We fear losing health simply because health is valuable.
  • We fear losing loved ones because love is a divine gift itself.
  • We fear death because life has inherent value.

The Qur’an opens not with threats but with gratitude:

“All gratitude is due only to God, the Lord of the universe.” (Al-Fātiḥah 1:2)

Thus, gratitude is fundamental, and fear is secondary—a reminder of the importance of what has been entrusted to us.

The Analogy of Inoculation

A powerful analogy for understanding divine trial is that of a child receiving an inoculation. A toddler being held down for three injections cries out in pain, unable to understand why those who love him—parents and grandparents—would permit such “torture.” Yet those very parents, with tears in their eyes, suffer through the child’s pain because they know the temporary pain will protect him from lifelong disease.

Similarly, God does not take pleasure in human suffering. Instead, He allows temporary hardship because it serves a greater purpose: to strengthen the soul, expand its capacity, and prepare it for eternal life. As Rumi wrote: “Don’t get too comfortable. Life’s tests are not to crush you but to polish you.”

God’s Priority: The Hereafter, Not This World

The Qur’an clarifies that worldly success is not the ultimate concern of the Creator:

“You seek the gains of this world, while God only desires the rewards of the hereafter [for His servants]. God is Almighty, Wise..” (Al-Anfāl 8:67)

This distinction is essential. While worldly comforts may come and go—wealth gained or lost, efforts rewarded or seemingly wasted—the divine plan focuses on the soul’s eternal success. The real question isn’t, “Am I comfortable today?” but rather, “Am I growing closer to my Lord through this experience?”

The Qur’anic Perspective on Worldly Attractions

The Qur’an repeatedly warns us not to be fooled by the allure of this life.

Be mindful that the example of this worldly life—mere sport and amusement, a façade, a source of boasting, and competing with each other in wealth and progeny—is that of rain that brings forth a crop which tempts the rejecters. The crop blooms, and then you see it turn yellow, and then [ultimately] becomes worthless stubble. [In contrast to this fleeting life,] in the hereafter there is severe punishment, [on the one hand,] and God’s forgiveness and His pleasure [on the other]. The life of this world [you prefer over the hereafter] is a mere deceptive deal. (Al-Ḥadīd 57:20)

Like the brief greenness after rainfall, worldly pleasures are temporary. They may dazzle the eye for a moment but eventually fade, leaving only the reality of the hereafter.

Constructing Meaning in Life’s Events

The real challenge, then, is how we create meaning from our experiences. A sudden loss, like the death of someone we love, can be seen as senseless cruelty—or as part of a test by a Merciful, Wise, and All-Knowing Creator. A surprising gain can lead to arrogance—or to gratitude. Our interpretations shape our emotional reactions, our resilience, and ultimately, our destiny.

Viktor Frankl, in Man’s Search for Meaning, noted that humans can endure almost any suffering if they find meaning in it. The Qur’anic worldview offers that meaning: everything is part of a purposeful test by a loving Creator who values our eternal well-being.

Conclusion: Living With the End in Mind

Life isn’t about escaping pain or chasing fleeting joys. It’s about enduring temporary hardships for lasting growth. Just as a parent lets a child endure brief pain for long-term health, so God permits us tests for eternal good.

The Qur’an describes this world as “a deceptive deal” (Al-Ḥadīd 57:20) and reminds us that true success is in the hereafter. Living wisely means understanding every situation—whether it’s easy or difficult—in light of this divine plan, always remembering that we are tested by the Merciful, Wise, All-Knowing, and All-Powerful One.

So, the main question is: How will you shape your life knowing it’s a test not for worldly comfort but for eternal success?

 

Reflection: Constructing Life Through God’s Attributes

Take a quiet moment, a pen, and a sheet of paper. Reflect on your recent life experiences—both joyful and painful—and use the following prompts:

Step 1: Identify the Event

  • Write down one positive and one negative event from your recent life (e.g., a promotion, the death of a loved one, an illness, or an unexpected gift).

Step 2: Recall God’s Attributes

  • Remind yourself: The One testing me is Merciful (Raḥīm), Wise (Ḥakīm), All-Knowing (ʿAlīm), and All-Powerful (Qadīr).

Step 3: Ask Yourself

  • If this event is from such a God, what greater purpose could it serve for my eternal success?
  • How can I respond in a way that shows patience, gratitude, and humility?

Step 4: Reframe the Event

Write a sentence reinterpreting the event from the perspective of the hereafter.

  • Example (loss): “Though I feel pain at losing my job, perhaps it is an opportunity to rely more on God and to purify my intentions.”
  • Example (gain): “This success is not my achievement alone, but a trust from God to be used responsibly.”

Step 5: Commit to an Action

  • Choose one small action that reflects your newly re-framed meaning (e.g., performing an act of charity, saying an extra prayer, or reaching out with comfort to someone in hardship).

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.”

Gratitude Before the Loss

 

 

Most of us only recognize blessings after they are gone. A sudden illness reminds us of the gift of health. The passing of a loved one exposes the depth of their presence in our lives. Even a small disruption in our daily routine makes us realize how much ease we had been enjoying unnoticed. Yet faith calls us to something higher: to practice gratitude before the loss, not only after it.

The Blindness of Familiarity

Human beings adapt quickly. Breathing, walking, eating, seeing, the presence of family—these become “normal,” and familiarity breeds neglect. Neglect erodes gratitude. We only recognize the extraordinary nature of these gifts when one of them is disrupted.

The Shock of Loss as Reminder

When blessings are lost, even briefly, their value becomes strikingly clear. A headache makes us aware of the blessing of a clear head. A strained relationship reminds us of the comfort of harmony. These shocks can serve as gentle reminders: if deprivation feels so painful, how rich we must have been before.

Gratitude as Conscious Awareness

True gratitude is not mere words; it begins with awareness. The Qur’an reminds:

“And if you count God’s favors, you will never be able to number them.” (Ibrahim 14:34).

Counting here means to notice, reflect, and acknowledge what we often overlook. Gratitude is an act of conscious seeing.

The Discipline of Daily Thankfulness

We can train ourselves to notice blessings before they are lost by:

  • Pausing daily to reflect on three “ordinary” gifts we usually ignore.
  • Thanking God for each, as if we had just regained it after losing it.
  • Remembering that every blessing is fragile and temporary.

This practice creates what can be called “grateful imagination” — a mindset that treats the present as a gift, not as something owed.

Gratitude as Strength and Healing

Gratitude is not only spiritually uplifting; it is also strengthening. Modern research affirms that gratitude improves mood, resilience, and even physical health. Spiritually, it aligns us with God’s mercy. The Prophet ﷺ taught:

“Look at those who are below you and do not look at those who are above you, lest you belittle the favors of God upon you.” (Muslim).

Choosing Gratitude Beforehand

If we wait for loss to recognize blessings, gratitude becomes reactive. But when we learn to notice and thank God beforehand, gratitude becomes proactive—a deliberate act of worship. It then flows not from pain, but from choice. And chosen gratitude protects the heart from despair when loss inevitably arrives.

 

Reflection: Gratitude in Advance

Tonight, before you sleep:

  • Identify three ordinary blessings in your life that you rarely notice (e.g., your eyesight, your ability to breathe with ease, the presence of a loved one).
  • Imagine, just for a moment, what life would be like without each of them.
  • Now thank God for these blessings as if they had just been returned to you after being lost.

This small exercise trains the heart to live in gratitude before loss, so that when loss does come—as it must in this transient world—gratitude is already deeply rooted.

The 5 Stages of Empathy

 

 

Empathy is not a single skill that we suddenly “have.” It grows in stages, each one adding a new layer of emotional depth and perspective-taking. By understanding these stages, we can better recognize where we are in our empathic journey—and how to help others, including children, progress further.

Here is a model of five stages of empathy, arranged in developmental sequence.

Stage 1: Emotional Mirroring: The Raw Beginning

The very first form of empathy is not even conscious—it is emotional contagion. We mirror the feelings of those around us.

  • Example: A newborn cries upon hearing another baby cry, even though they don’t know why.
  • In a crowded theater, one person’s laughter spreads through the audience until everyone is chuckling.

This is empathy at its most basic: a shared emotional experience without awareness or interpretation.

Stage 2: Sympathy—Feeling For the Other

As we grow, we begin to recognize that the distress belongs to another person. Sympathy means we feel for them, even if we don’t deeply share or understand their inner world.

  • Example: A child brings their toy to comfort a crying sibling, saying, “Don’t be sad.”
  • At work, you may say to a colleague who lost a parent, “I’m so sorry for your loss.”

Sympathy is valuable because it acknowledges suffering, but it remains somewhat detached.

Stage 3: Self-Lens Empathy—Imagining Myself in Their Place

This stage involves a leap in imagination: asking, “How would I feel if that happened to me?” It is empathy filtered through my own lens.

  • Example: If you hear that a neighbor lost their job, you think, “If I were in that situation, I’d feel insecure and worried about money.”
  • Children in school often respond to a bullied classmate by saying, “That must feel terrible—I’d hate it if someone did that to me.”

This is deeper than sympathy, but it still centers on one’s own perspective rather than the other’s unique construction of reality.

Stage 4: Other-Lens Empathy—Seeing Through Their Eyes

Here empathy matures. We don’t just imagine ourselves in the situation—we try to understand it as the other person constructs it. This requires humility and decentering from our own worldview.

  • Example: You might not understand why a friend is devastated over losing a poorly paid job. But when you learn that it gave them dignity and identity, you can enter into their pain more authentically.
  • A doctor recalls judging a patient for “overreacting” to a minor procedure, until she realized the patient’s lifelong trauma with hospitals. From then on, her empathy became more attuned.

This stage demands both emotional resonance and cognitive perspective-taking.

Stage 5: Compassionate Action—Empathy in Motion

The highest stage is when empathy moves into action. Compassion is empathy plus intention: not only feeling and understanding, but also acting to help.

  • Example: Hearing about a friend’s job loss, you not only empathize but also help update their résumé or connect them with opportunities.
  • In communities struck by disaster, empathy turns into compassion when people open their homes, share food, or provide comfort.

Without compassionate action, empathy risks remaining passive—or even overwhelming, if one only feels the distress but doesn’t channel it into something constructive.

Why This Matters

  • For parents: You can better see how empathy grows in children—from mirroring emotions to genuine compassion—and guide them at each step.
  • For relationships: It helps distinguish between saying “I feel sorry for you” (sympathy) and truly entering the other’s world (empathy).
  • For society: It shows that the ultimate goal is not just feeling—but acting.

Final Reflection

Empathy is like a ladder. It begins with raw mirroring, grows into sympathy, deepens through self- and other-lens perspective-taking, and finally culminates in compassionate action.

The Prophet Muhammad ﷺ is reported to have said:

“The most beloved of people to God are those who are most beneficial to others.”

True empathy is not what you feel inside—it is what you do for others.

The Journey is the Success

 

 

When we think about success, many of us picture a finish line: a point in the future where we will finally arrive, accomplish, and feel whole. But life, at its core, isn’t a fixed destination. It’s a process — a continuous journey that unfolds moment by moment.

Beyond Targets and Endpoints

We often set goals: “I will be successful when I stop getting angry,” or “I will be accomplished when I reach this position, this level of recognition, or this state of perfection.” But these are illusions of finality. Life does not promise us a single point of arrival. Opportunities may or may not come, circumstances may or may not align, and outcomes are not always within our control.

What is within our control is how we walk the path. The true measure is not whether we achieve every goal we set, but whether we keep refining ourselves along the way. Success is not about erasing every mistake or flaw; it is about continuously working on them, not giving up when things get difficult, and staying committed to growth.

Reflection: What personal “finish lines” have you been waiting for? Can you see them as ongoing journeys instead of final destinations?

Influence, Not Control

We can’t control everything — not circumstances, other people, or even the opportunities that may or may not come our way. What we can do is influence: we can make genuine efforts, correct our mistakes, and improve our character. But even then, outcomes still lie beyond our control.

  • Parenting Example: A parent may aspire to raise the “perfect child.” But children develop their own personalities, choices, and influences. The parent’s role is not to control every decision but to model values, guide patiently, and trust the process.
  • Teaching Example: A teacher cannot guarantee that every student will ace the exam. But by sparking curiosity, providing learning tools, and offering encouragement, the teacher influences the student’s growth journey.
  • Personal Growth Example: If someone struggles with anger, success isn’t in saying “I never get angry anymore.” True success is in not giving up on the effort — learning to pause, reflect, apologize when needed, and try again.

Reflection: In your life, where do you confuse control with influence? What changes when you accept that outcomes aren’t completely in your hands?

Redefining Success

Real success isn’t about checking off goals but about refusing to give up in the fight for what’s right. If dishonesty tempts you, success isn’t about claiming to be perfect, but about getting back up after each fall and choosing truth again.

The world often celebrates milestones — degrees earned, promotions achieved, targets hit. But life celebrates persistence. Did you keep learning? Did you keep walking? Did you continue refining yourself even when no one else was watching?

That is true success.

 

Reflection:

Think of one area where you feel you’ve “failed” repeatedly. What would it mean to view that not as failure, but as part of the ongoing process of growth?

Life isn’t about where you finally end up — because that’s beyond your control. It’s about whether you kept moving forward, continued learning, and stayed committed, without giving in to despair.

Suicide, Suffering, and Sacred Endurance

 

 

Life can sometimes push people to the brink of despair. Chronic pain, serious illness, ongoing injustice, or personal loss can feel overwhelming. In such moments, a believer might question not only the purpose of their suffering but also the meaning of continuing life itself. Islam addresses this very human experience with both compassion and clarity, guiding us toward a path of sacred endurance rather than self-destruction.

Why Suicide is Prohibited

According to the Islamic worldview, life is not our possession; it is a trust (amanah) from God. Therefore, taking one’s own life is prohibited. This prohibition does not reject human pain but rather protects human dignity and purpose. Ending one’s life is like suggesting that God made a mistake in assigning our test, but in reality, every test is deliberate and meaningful.

Suffering as an Opportunity

The Prophet ﷺ taught that illness and hardship can cleanse a believer: “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 does not mean that suffering itself is automatically rewarded; the reward lies in the believer’s response. Enduring pain with patience, hope, and trust turns it into a means of purification and elevation. In fact, the trials during the final stages of life can become unexpected opportunities for spiritual growth — a chance to leave the world purified and closer to God.

Sacred Endurance: Not Passive, But Active

Accepting suffering as God’s will doesn’t mean passively resigning to it. It means:

  • Seeking all available treatment and support through lawful methods.
  • Reaching out for help rather than bearing pain alone.
  • Engaging in sincere prayer, not just to demand relief, but to seek God’s mercy, guidance, and strength.
  • Reflecting on what can be learned, the responsibilities we still have, and how we can support others even while we’re suffering.

Sacred endurance combines two attitudes: sabr (patience) and rida (contentment with God’s decree), while continuing to strive to improve our condition.

The Test of Hope

One of the most difficult aspects of deep suffering is holding onto hope. However, the Qur’an warns against giving up: “And who despairs of his Lord’s mercy except those who are astray?” (Al-Hijr 15:56). Losing hope not only leads to despair in this life but also causes spiritual decay. Hope doesn’t remove pain, but it keeps the heart alive and connected to God.

The Qur’an describes true righteousness as belonging not only to those who pray and give charity, but also to those “who are patient in hardship, ailment, and during battle. It is they who are true, and it is they who are God-conscious.” (Al-Baqarah 2:177). Endurance in suffering is thus woven into the very fabric of what it means to be a faithful servant of God.

The story of Prophet Ayyub (Job) عليه السلام demonstrates this truth. He was tested through the loss of wealth, children, and health, until his body was ravaged by disease and he was left with almost nothing. Yet, even in his deepest pain, he prayed: I am severely afflicted, and You, indeed, are the Most Merciful.” (Al-Anbiya 21:83). God not only healed him but restored his blessings, making his story an everlasting reminder that patience and trust in God turn even the harshest trials into opportunities for mercy.

We see echoes of this today. A man living with advanced cancer, confined to his bed, once said: “I used to think my illness ended my life. But now I see it gave me a new one. My children have seen my patience, my friends have learned the value of health, and I have discovered a closeness to God I never knew before.” His pain did not vanish, but by responding with faith, he turned his suffering into a legacy of resilience and a preparation for eternity.

Supporting Others in Despair

When someone around us is in deep pain, we, too, are tested in how we respond. Offering empathy, practical help, and a listening ear can be an act of worship. Sometimes, just sitting silently with a suffering person or helping them with a small task can give them the strength to endure another day.

The Eternal Perspective

Compared to eternity, even decades of suffering are just a drop in the ocean. 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 hardship.” (Muslim). This perspective does not diminish suffering but places it within a vast horizon of hope and reward.

Reflection: Transforming Pain into Purpose

If you’re experiencing a hardship now, or know someone who is:

  1. Write down your genuine feelings of pain and frustration.
  2. Reflect on ways to seek God’s help, medical assistance, or emotional support without feeling ashamed.
  3. Write a statement of sacred endurance, such as: “This pain is not meaningless. I will strive to respond with patience, seek help, and trust that God can turn this into purification and reward.”

This exercise does not eliminate suffering, but it reinterprets it as a place of spiritual growth instead of despair.