Allah says in His Book that He only created us so that we would worship Him, but we also find elsewhere in the Qur’an that He created us in order to test us. Is this not regarded as a contradiction?
Praise
be to Allah
There is no
contradiction between being created to worship Allah and being created in
order to be tested.
Worship in
itself is a test from Allah, may He be exalted, to His slaves, so that He
may make known who will believe and who will disbelieve, who will be
disobedient and who will be obedient, then He will reward the doer of good
for his good deeds and will punish the doer of evil for his evil deeds.
Moreover, the reason for testing people is so as to see a person’s reaction
at the time of calamity: Will he bear it with patience or will he panic? And
it is to see his reaction when he is tested with blessings and calamities:
will he give thanks or will he be grateful?
Perhaps because
the questioner thought that there was a contradiction between the two
matters, he thought that tests are limited to calamities, so whoever bears
them with patience will attain reward, and whoever panics and shows
ingratitude will incur a burden of sin and punishment.
This is
indicative of a limited understanding of what is meant by tests and trials.
The correct
understanding is that what is meant by tests and trials here is broader in
meaning than calamity. Tests and trials include all the affairs and deeds of
the son of Adam, and all the details of his life, for his life is a test,
his good health is a test, his poor health is a test, his happiness is a
test, his wealth is a test, his provision is a test, the environment in
which he lives is a test, and his knowledge is a test. In all of that,
Allah, may He be exalted, is testing this man and his behaviour to see
whether he will follow the path of righteousness or the path of evildoing,
whether he will obey the Most Gracious or will obey the Shaytaan. Hence
Allah, may He be glorified and exalted, says (interpretation of the
meaning):
“[He]
who created death and life to test you [as to] which of you is best in deed
– and He is the Exalted in Might, the Forgiving”
[al-Mulk 67:2]
“And
it is He who created the heavens and the earth in six days – and His Throne
had been upon water – that He might test you as to which of you is best in
deed”
[Hood 11:7]
“Had
Allah willed, He would have made you one nation [united in religion], but
[He intended] to test you in what He has given you; so race to [all that is]
good. To Allah is your return all together, and He will [then] inform you
concerning that over which you used to differ”
[al-Maa’idah
5:48]
“And
it is He who has made you successors upon the earth and has raised some of
you above others in degrees [of rank] that He may try you through what He
has given you. Indeed, your Lord is swift in penalty; but indeed, He is
Forgiving and Merciful”
[al-An‘aam
6:165].
All these verses
indicate that this test or trial is the reason for man’s creation; this test
also includes the religious duties. So whoever carries out his duties
towards his Lord – in all aspects of his life – will succeed, and whoever
falls short will incur loss commensurate with his shortcomings.
Ibn Qayyim
al-Jawziyyah (may Allah have mercy on him) said:
Allah, may He be
exalted, has told us that the creation of the universe, death, life, and the
making attractive of the earth and all that is on it are all for the purpose
of test and trial, in order to test people as to which of them is best in
deed, so that man’s deeds might be in accordance with what is pleasing to
the Lord, may He be exalted, and thus will be in harmony with the purpose
for which he was created and for which the universe was created, which is
true servitude to Allah, which means loving Him and obeying Him. This is the
best of deeds (as referred to in the verse quoted above), and such are the
deeds that He loves and is pleased with.
End quote from
Rawdat al-Muhibbeen (61).
Al-‘Allaamah
Muhammad al-Ameen ash-Shinqeeti (may Allah have mercy on him) said, in his
commentary on the verse (interpretation of the meaning),
“And
I did not create the jinn and mankind except to worship Me”
[adh-Dhaariyaat 51:56]:
What this verse
means, “except
to worship Me”
is: so that I may enjoin on them that they should worship Me and I will test
them; that is, I will test them with religious duties, then I will requite
them for their deeds: if their deeds are good, then the outcome will be
good, and if their deeds are evil, then the outcome will be bad.
The only reason
why we say that this is what the verse means is because this is indicated by
many clear verses in the Book of Allah. He, may He be exalted, clearly
stated in several verses of His Book that He created them in order to test
them as to which of them is best in deed, and that He will requite them for
their deeds.
Allah, may He be
exalted, says at the beginning of Soorat al-Kahf (interpretation of the
meaning):
“Indeed,
We have made that which is on the earth adornment for it that We may test
them [as to] which of them is best in deed”
[al-Kahf 18:7].
These verses
clearly state that the wisdom behind His creation of mankind is to test them
as to which of them is best in deed, and this explains the word “except
to worship Me”
[adh-Dhaariyaat 51:56],
because the best thing to explain the Qur’an is the Qur’an.
It is known that
the outcome of the deeds referred to can only be achieved by rewarding the
doer of good for his good deeds and requiting the doer of evil for his evil
deeds. Hence Allah, may He be exalted, clearly stated that the reason for
creating them, first of all, then resurrecting them later on, is to reward
the doer of good for his good deeds and to requite the doer of evil for his
evil deeds. This is seen in the verse at the beginning of Soorat Yoonus in
which Allah, may He be exalted, says (interpretation of the meaning):
“Indeed, He
begins the [process of] creation and then repeats it that He may reward
those who have believed and done righteous deeds, in justice. But those who
disbelieved will have a drink of scalding water and a painful punishment for
what they used to deny”
[Yoonus 10: 4].
And He says at
the beginning of Soorat an-Najm (interpretation of the meaning):
“And to Allah
belongs whatever is in the heavens and whatever is in the earth – that He
may recompense those who do evil with [the penalty of] what they have done
and recompense those who do good with the best [reward]”
[an-Najm 53:31].
Allah, may He be
exalted, denounced man for thinking that he would be left neglected, that
is, without purpose, with no commands or prohibitions, and He stated that He
did not cause man to pass through the stages of development (in the womb)
until he became a human being, except to resurrect him after death and then
to requite him for his deeds, as He, may He be exalted, says (interpretation
of the meaning):
“Does man think
that he will be left neglected?
Had he not been
a sperm from semen emitted?
Then he was a
clinging clot, and Allah] created [his form] and proportioned [him].
And made of him
two mates, the male and the female.
Is not that
[Creator] Able to give life to the dead”
[al-Qiyaamah
75:35-40].
End quote from
Adwaa’ al-Bayaan fi Eedaah al-Qur’an bi’l-Qur’an, 7/445.
And Allah knows
best.
