THE CONCEPT OF TEMPTATION IN ISLAM
The word "temptation" has diverse shades of meaning which arenot !
too
far from one another in essence. The COED defines it as "tempting or being tempted"; thing that attracts, attractive course" (Fowler and Fowler, 1955- Pp. 1311-12). A.S.Hornby
,
also defines the word in an identical manner.Hornby
1991, P. 1323).
In. a similar vein, Chambers 20th Century Dictionary defines temptation as "act of tempting; state of being tempted; that which tempts; enticement to evil; trial".(Kirkpatrick, 1983, P. 1331).
The last connotations, namely "enticement to evil" and "trial" are not mentioned directly in the two dictionaries earlier referred to. However, the very root of the word", i.e. tempt is defined byHornby
as "persuade somebody to do something wrong or unwise; act rashly; take a risk", (Hornby
, P. 1323. Similarly, Chambers 20th century defines the word tempt as "to put to trial; to test; to try or tend to persuade, especially to evil; to entice. "(Kirkpatrick, P. 1331).
Regarding the active participle of tempting, i.e. the tempter, the three dictionaries agree that the Tempter is the devil orsatan
.(Fowler & Fowler, P. 1312; Horny, P.1323, and Kirkpatrick, P. 1331).
From the above, it is clear that temptation means enticement to do a wrong thing, a test,a
trial. For our purpose in this paper, we shall be referring to these connotations wherever we use the term. It is true that the Chief Tempter is Satan (Shaytan
) who is also calledIblis
in Islamic circles. He has aides among spirits as well as among men and women. (Qur'an 114: 1-6)
This brings us to the question of the identity of Satan. He is the devil, roughly equated toEsu
in Yoruba (Dopamu
, 1986). He is calledIdobolo
among the people ofEtsako
in Edo State of Nigeria. In English, he is known as "the supreme spirit of evil." (COED.,P
- 342.
He is also the chief fallenangel ;
the chief evil spirit; adversary of God and tempter of men". (Kirkpatick
P.1149).
In Islamic theology, beliefIn
the angles of God is one of the articles of faith. These angles whose numerical strength is known only toAllah,
are winged spiritual beings, created by God from light for His service. They are capable of changing to any form but have no freewill. They obeyintoto
God's command without any hesitation.(Qur'an 66:6: 33:56: 82: 10-12 and 42:5;Balogun
, 1971, Pp. 34-37; and Abdul, 1974 Pp.20-21).
Iblis
used to be among the angel until" be disobeyed God when he and other angels were ordered to bow to Adam as a mark of respect on.account
of his being more learnedthan
they
.(Qur'an 2:30-34; 7:11; and 15:28-30^ seeRaji
, 1986 too).
-Out of arrogance,Iblis
refused to bow to Adam, while the angels did. He boasted that^«*wing been created from fire, he was superior to Adam who was created from clay. He was conscious too of the fact that he was by far senior in age to Adam. Yet he knew that Adam had an edge over him in knowledge. (Qur'an 7:11-13 and 17:61).
For thus disobeying God,Iblis
was expelled from the lofty '.circles
of angels and humiliated by God. (Qur'an 7:13-18.) On his own part,the be
devil asked for one,favour
from God and that was long life. He begged to be spared till the end of the world, and that was granted. He then vowed to deal sternly with Adam and his children, entice them to evil and attempt to make them perpetually ungrateful to God.(Qur'an 7:14-17 and 62-«3 and Hughes, 1964, P.84).
The Almighty God left him alone but told him that he had no authority over the true, pious servants of His. As regards these, God promised to strengthen them with His impregnable Holy Spirit (ar-Ruhu
‘l-Ouds
) through angelic promptings (Qur
'-an 17:65). That was the beginning of the struggle between good and evil.
From the above, it is evident that, from the Islamicstand¬point
, the struggle is between the angels and satanic forces not directly between God and Satan since there Is absolutely no basis for equating the Creator (God) to the created (Satan) In section III, (No, l) below, we shall see how the devil tempted Adam and his wifeHawwa
(Eve) in the Garden of Eden.
We may now dwell briefly on the purpose of life on earth and the trials which are inevitable. For a lucid explanation, the following twoQur'anic
quotations are apposite:
Blessed be He Who owns all sovereignty and He has the ability to do all things. .He created life and death so as to try you in order to reveal those among you.who
will be most righteous; He is the Mighty, the Forgiving. (Qur'an 67:1-2)
Do people think that they would be left alone when they say "We have faith (in God)", and would not be tested with afflictions? We have indeed tested those who came before them. Allah doubtless knows those who are sincere and knows those whoarc
liars.
(Qur'an 29:2).
From the above verses, it is evident that God did not send man to this world for the fun of it. Man's existence on earth is an avenue of testing his faith, his sense of appreciation to God and his fellow human beings and his ability to resist evil, shun the devil and have a pure, angel-inspired heart filled to the brim with Gods holy words, thoughts, and pleasure and resolve to always be on the side of truth.
It is a truism that God always tries His servants in different ways. It is true too that when being tried Satan acts as anuissance
to man, trying to lure him to always go the wrong way. It has to be explained that trials here way mean death, material losses, famine, diseases etc. It may also mean wealth, high Position, academic excellence or physical strength. In any condition one finds himself, he can either follow the right path and earn eternal salvation or follow Satan's evil (though attractive) promptings and be doomed.
At the end of it all, one's success or failure shall be judged on the basis of his ability or otherwise to resist and shun the devil. Some of the hints on how a Muslim should shun Satan are given below in Section V.