Morality in the Qur’an: The Greater Good of Humanity
Author M.A.
Draz
Editor: Basma
I. Abdelgafar
Publisher: Islamic
Book Trust
ISBN: 9789670526461
Year: 2018
Pages: 165pp
Price: RM35.00
Sheikh
Mohammad Abdullah Draz (1312-1377 H, 1894-1958 CE) is often referred to as “the
teacher of the teachers” and in “a league of his own”. He is one of the most
important Islamic and Azhari scholars of the past century, and has made
significant contributions to contemporary Islamic thought, especially in
Qur’anic Studies and Maqasid Studies.
The original
form of this book is Sheikh Draz’s doctoral dissertation titled, La morale du
Koran, which earned him a doctorate degree with the highest level of
distinction at the renowned French Sorbonne University in 1947 CE. The Sheikh’s
theory of morality presented in this book has not been matched in its
originality, parsimoniousness, integrity, depth and comprehensiveness, past or
present.
Through a thematic interpretation of the Qur’an, the Sheikh proposes the following five critical elements of morality: obligation, responsibility, sanction, intent, and effort. Each element plays an indispensable role in the conscience of a believer and each requiring awareness and attention. The Sheikh demonstrates that every human, believer or non-believer, possesses a “light” that enables them to determine good and evil on a fundamental level and propels them toward duty, kindness and charity. However, the believer possesses a “double light”, a deep knowledge that incorporates divine law into our very essence in a process that fuses our will with that of our Creator.