| There is no belief in an afterlife in religions
that espouse the concept of reincarnation, except sometimes as
an intermediate stage between lives in this world. As we have
explained in the preceding chapters, this mistaken idea holds
that people return to the world after each death, and that this
process of transformation is continuous.
According to decadent Hinduism, every time people
are reborn, they are born into one of the different castes according
to what good or evil they did in their previous lives. It is well
known that the caste system is still prevalent in Indian society;
whatever people may do in this world, they cannot change their
caste. If you are born as an untouchable, you will inevitably
die as an untouchable; if you are born a worker, you will die
a worker. It is believed that it is what people have done in their
previous lives that determines into what caste they will be born.
Therefore, someone who is an untouchable in this life will, according
to the idea of karma, be reborn into a higher caste in their next
life if their actions are good.
Again,
according to this erroneous belief, if one has "good karma", he
will be born into a higher caste each time he comes into this
world, and finally he will be born into the highest caste as a
Brahmin - priest. It is believed that if one does good deeds during
his life as a Brahmin, he will not come back to this world again.
For someone of this kind, the "wheel of life" is completed and
he has "attained Nirvana".
According to this belief, "attaining Nirvana" means
that one has thrown off all worldly desires and returned to the
soul of Brahman who is described as the "Soul of the World", with
whom one is united. In Indian religions, this is thought to be
the greatest happiness a soul can achieve. Thus, according to
this incorrect belief, even though a person may do good every
time he is born into this world, this will never result in his
having an afterlife; he will return to and become united with
the soul of Brahman.3
In some Buddhist sources, we are given the following
information about life after death:
Whether one is reborn in Heaven or in one of the
various levels of Hell, the forms of existence in these places
are transitory, as they are on earth, and are not eternal. As
in Hinduism, the period of time during which the individual
remains in these places depends on the amount of good and evil
they have done while on earth. When the proscribed time has
been completed, they will return to earth again. Heaven and
Hell are no more than temporary states of existence in which
the acts of the individual while on earth receive their reward.4
Thus we see that in karma concept there is a belief
of a kind in a Heaven and Hell in which people receive the reward
of their actions. However, because this belief is not derived
from a religion of truth, it contains many inconsistencies and
logical fallacies. First of all, it is claimed that Heaven and
Hell are transitory, not eternal-this is not what true religions
tell us.
The most illogical aspect of this idea is the belief
that this whole system works by itself. In other words, the existence
of a Creator Who created the life of this world, Who created the
Garden and the Fire, and Who rewards or punishes people for their
actions, is denied. This is an extremely illogical and totally
unacceptable proposition. In the absence of a creative power that
governs justly, a supreme power capable of creating Heaven and
Hell, any claim that people will go to Heaven or to Hell is unacceptable
to our intelligence and our conscience.
Moreover, apart from these beliefs, the concept
of karma provides no explanation whatsoever as to how Heaven and
Hell came into being without a Creator. These claims are merely
erroneous beliefs, maintained as a tradition and as a superstition.
The afterlife as described in the Qur'an
As we have seen above, in religions that accept
the idea of karma there is either no belief in an afterlife, or
there is mention of the next world as a place where one stays
temporarily. Whereas, Allah tells us in the Qur'an that when people
have lived on earth for a short time they will stay in their "real
home", the next world, for ever. According to the Qur'an's teaching,
it is this world that is transitory. Everyone, when they have
lived in this world for some 50 or 60 years on average, will receive
their reward in Heaven or in Hell for all they have done during
their time on earth. This is explained in the Qur'an as follows:
The life of this world is nothing but a game and
a diversion. The abode of the hereafter-that is truly Life if
they only knew. (Surat al-Ankabut: 64)
The life of this world is nothing but a game and
a diversion. The hereafter is better for those who do their duty.
So will you not use your intellect? (Surat al-An'am: 32)
Belief in the afterlife is one of the basic tenets
of Islam. Therefore it is not possible for a Muslim to accept
the validity of any belief that denies the existence of an afterlife,
or to be guided by such a belief. Those who adopt a superstitious
belief of this kind on the basis of hearsay, as an affectation
or to follow the latest fad, need to keep this in mind. Allah
describes the fate of those who deny the existence of the next
world in the following words:
As for those who denied Our Signs and the encounter
of the hereafter, their actions will come to nothing. Will they
be repaid except for what they did? (Surat al-Araf: 147)
As we see in this verse, the actions of those who
reject Allah's words and deny the existence of the next world
will not receive a pleasant reward. Even though such people's
actions are good, if they are not done in order to win Allah's
blessing and His mercy and to attain the Garden, but rather in
order to have a better life in the next incarnation, they will
not find favour with Allah, unless Allah wishes that it should
be so.
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People are preoccupied with a great many activities in
the life of this world. They go to school, work, get married,
look after their families, travel, read, write… However,
people who devote themselves to that sort of activity
and forget that they will one day die actually do themselves
great harm, as human life is not restricted to this world.
Compared to the eternal life of the hereafter, the life
of this world is no more than the blink of an eye. The
important thing is for an individual to spend his life
in an effort to please Allah, to Whom he will have to
give account in the hereafter. Someone who becomes caught
up in the idea of karma and other similar superstitious
beliefs and loses sight of the hereafter may one day suffer
terrible surprise and regret when he suddenly finds himself
at the Day of Judgement.
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Life in the Garden or in the Fire will go on for
ever
Contrary to what those who believe in karma say,
the Garden and the Fire are not places in which we stay temporarily.
Both will go on for ever. Also, just as those who go to the Garden
will never leave it, so will some of those who go to the Fire
stay there for ever. There is a superstitious belief not only
among those who accept the idea of karma but also among the general
public that Hell is only temporary, and that when people have
lived through the tortures of Hell and so been punished, they
will go to Heaven.5 Allah explains this in the following words:
They say, "The Fire will only touch us for
a number of days". Say, "Have you made a contract with Allah-then
Allah will not break His contract-or are you rather saying about
Allah what you do not know?" No indeed! Those who accumulate bad
actions and are surrounded by their mistakes, such people are
the Companions of the Fire, remaining in it timelessly, for ever;
whereas those who believe and do right actions, such people are
the Companions of the Garden, remaining in it timelessly, for
ever. (Surat al-Baqara: 80-82)6
Those who fear that death will bring a cessation
of existence will cry out for
destruction when they are in Hell
As we have already stated, one of the most important
reasons why some people believe in reincarnation is that they
are afraid of ceasing to exist when they die. Since they are frightened
by the thought of this, people who are unbelievers or have very
little religious faith either avoid thinking about death altogether
or they try to console themselves by believing in superstitions
such as reincarnation.

… and that Day Hell is produced, that Day man will remember;
but how will the remembrance help him? He will say, ‘Oh! If
only I had prepared in advance for this life of mine!’ That
Day no one will punish as He punishes and no one will shackle
as He shackles.
(Surat al-Fajr: 23-26) |
However, people do not cease to exist when they
die. It is only our bodies that die. The spirit will live forever.
However, this new life will be in the next world, not (as the
reincarnation idea would have us believe) in this one. Everyone
will be rewarded for what they have done during their earthly
life; their reward will be either a life of happiness and peace
in the Garden, in which there are infinite blessings and countless
good things, or a life in the fires of Hell, where there is unbearable
suffering and pain. The reward that those who deny Allah will
receive is the eternal torture of the Fire; they will wish a thousand
times over that they could die and cease to exist. Nevertheless,
they will receive the true and just reward for having denied Allah
during their time on earth. Allah describes the condition of the
inhabitants of the Fire in the following verses:
But as for him who is given his Book behind his
back, he will cry out for destruction but will be roasted in a
Searing Blaze. He used to be joyful in his family. He thought
that he was never going to return. (Surat al-Inshiqaq: 10-14)
When they are flung into a narrow place in it, shackled
together in chains, they will cry out there for destruction. "Do
not cry out today for just one destruction, cry out for many destructions!"
(Surat al-Furqan: 13-14)
The tortures of Hell are so violent and so painful
that those who fear death and an end to their existence, and turn
their faces away from Allah's religion, seeking consolation in
superstitious beliefs, and those who deny the existence of Allah
and the next world, will instead wish for that very end to their
existence in preference to the tortures of the Fire.
Everyone who has learnt from the Qur'an of the existence
of the next world, of the eternal agonies of the Fire and of the
extraordinary beauty of the eternal life in the Garden should
consider these things carefully and sincerely. Only someone lacking
in intelligence and lacking a conscience would admit the possibility
that the pains of Hell really existed and still refuse to reflect
on the implications. Faced with the possibility of such a terrible
thing as living in the Fire for ever, it would be the height of
stupidity to cast this awareness aside in one's determination
to "get the best out of life" during the short time we have on
Earth.
Instead, we should make a serious effort to avoid
bringing this torture upon ourselves, and we should meticulously
follow the teachings that Allah gives us in the Qur'an, and make
the best possible use of the time given to us in this world in
view of the reality of the afterlife. We will understand everything
fully only at the very moment when death comes to us. This is
what the Qur'an tells us about what is said at that moment by
those who have tried to avoid thinking about these things because
of their fear of death:
The throes of death come revealing the truth. That
is what you were trying to evade! The Trumpet will be blown. That
is the Day of the Threat. Every self will come together with a
driver and a witness: "You were heedless of this so We have stripped
you of your covering and today your sight is sharp". His inseparable
comrade will say, "This is what I have ready for you". Hurl into
Hell every obdurate disbeliever, impeder of good, doubt-causing
aggressor, who set up another god together with Allah. Hurl him
into the terrible punishment. (Surah Qaf: 19-26)
3- Buyuk Dinler ve Mezhepler Ansiklopedisi
(Big Religions and Sects Encyclopedia), 1964, Istanbul, p. 52
4- Dr. Ali Ihsan Yitik, Hint Kokenli Dinlerde Karma Inancýnýn
Tenasuh Inancýyla Iliskisi (The Relation of the Idea of Karma
in Indian Religions with the Idea of Reincarnation) , pp. 130-131
5- Editor’s note: This is only true, however, as we mention, for
those of the believers whom Allah punishes for major wrong actions
short of associating partners with Allah by admitting them to
the Fire. The disbelievers who reject Allah and His signs and
His Messengers will stay in the Fire forever as a result of their
actions.
6- Editor’s note: This verse was revealed about the Jews claiming
that the Fire would only touch them for a number of days, but
this was false in their case because the wrong action for which
they thought they would be forgiven was their rejection of Allah’s
signs and His Messengers including their murdering some of the
Messengers and Prophets, and finally their rejection of ‘Isa,
peace be upon him, and Muhammad, may Allah bless him and grant
him peace. For such open disbelief there is no emerging from the
Fire, unless the person turns to Allah in tawbah before his death.
As for believers who do major wrong actions, Allah will either
forgive them totally or He may punish them for a period of time
in the Fire and then bring them out of the Fire to the Garden
by His mercy and by the intercession of His Messenger, may Allah
bless him and grant him peace, and the intercession of the right-acting
among the Muslims. |