Secularism and Moral Values
By Dr Jaafar Sheikh Idris
MORAL values, such as honesty, trustworthiness, justice and chastity, are
originally innate values which Allah planted in the hearts of mankind; then He
sent His messengers with a system of life in accord with this innate disposition
to affirm it.
"So set your face toward the religion, as one by nature upright; the instinctive
(religion) which Allah has created in mankind. There is no altering (the laws)
of Allah's creation. That is the right religion but most people do not know."
[Surat Ar-Rum:30].
A believer adheres to these moral values because his nature, fortified by faith,
induces him to do so, and because the religion he believes in commands him with
them and promises him a reward for them in the Hereafter. Secularism, on the
other hand, even in its less virulent form that satisfies itself with removing
religion from political life, rejecting it and the innate values as a basis for
legislation, undermines the two foundations for moral values in the hearts of
mankind. As for secularism in its extreme atheistic form, it completely
demolishes these two foundations and replaces them with human whims, either the
whims of a few rulers in dictatorial systems or the whims of the majority in
democratic systems.
"Have you seen the one who has taken his own desire as his god? Would you then
be a guardian over him?"
[Al-Furqan:43].
Since whims and desires are by their nature constantly changing, the values and
behaviors based on them are also mutable. What is considered today to be a
crime, punishable by law with the severest of penalties, and causes its
practitioners to be deprived of certain rights granted to others, becomes
permissible tomorrow, or even praiseworthy, and the one who objects to it
becomes "politically incorrect." This shift from one point of view to its
opposite, as a result of society's estrangement from innate religious values, is
a frequent occurrence. However ignorant a traditional society may be, it, or
many of its members, will maintain some innate values; but the further a society
penetrates into secularism, the fewer such individuals will become, and the more
marginal their influence will be, until the society collectively rebels against
those same innate religious values it used to uphold. There may be another
reason for some traditional Jahili cultures to maintain innate religious values:
they might appeal to their desires, or they represent their heritage and do not
conflict with their desires.
"And when they are called to Allah and His Messenger to judge between them, Lo!
a party of them refuse and turn away. But if the right is with them they come to
Him willingly."
[Al-Nur: 48-49].
Their relationship with truth is similar to Satan's, as described by the Prophet
(sallallahu alayhe wa sallam) to Abu Hurairah, whom Satan had advised to recite
Ayat al-Kursi when going to bed: "He told you the truth, even though he is an
inveterate liar." Contemporary Western, secular societies are the clearest
examples of the shifting, self-contradictory nature of jahili civilization. From
one angle it views culture and the values it rests upon as a relative, variable
phenomenon. However, from another angle it characterizes some values as human
values, views their violation as shocking, and punishes their violators
severely. The sources of this problem are two fundamental principles which
democratic secular societies rely upon. The first is majority rule as a standard
for right and wrong in speech and behavior; the second is the principle of
individual freedom. These two principles will necessarily conflict with each
other if they are not subordinated to another principle that will judge between
them. Secularism, by its very nature, rejects religion, and in its Western form
it does not consider fitrah (innate values) a criterion for what is beneficial
or harmful for humanity. It has no alternative but to make these two principles
an absolute standard for what behavior is permissible and appropriate, and what
isn't. The contradiction and conflict between these two principles is showing
itself plainly in some of the current hot issues in these societies. Those who
advocate the acceptance of homosexuality and the granting to avowed homosexuals
equal rights and opportunities in every aspect of life, including military
service, base their argument on the principle of individual rights. They see no
one as having the right to concern themselves with what they call their "sexual
orientation." The same argument is made by supporters of abortion. You
frequently hear them say incredulously, "How can I be prohibited from freedom of
choice in my own affairs and over my own body? What right do legal authorities
have to involve themselves in such personal matters?" The only argument their
opponents can muster is that this behavior contradicts the values held by the
majority of the population. Even though the basis for many people's opposition
to abortion is moral or religious, they can't come out and say so openly, nor
can they employ religious or moral arguments, since secular society finds
neither of them acceptable. If we accept that there is no basis for values
except individual or majority opinion, and that it is therefore possible for all
values to change from one era to another, and from one society to another, this
means there is no connection between values and what will benefit or harm people
in their material and spiritual lives, which in turn means that all values are
equality valid and it doesn't matter which values a given society accepts or
rejects. However, this means that all behavior considered abhorrent by secular
societies today, such as sexual molestation of children and rape of women for
which it has serious penalties, are considered repulsive only because of current
inclination, which might change tomorrow, so certain serious crimes may become
acceptable, based on the principle of individual freedom. The reason a
secularist is confused when posed with certain questions is that his repugnance
toward such crimes is not really based on these two principles, which have
become the only accepted bases for argument in societies dominated by
secularism; the real reason for it is the remnants of the moral feelings he
still possesses from the original nature with which Allah endowed him, and which
linger on in spite of his secularism. Perhaps the confusion of the secularist
would increase if he were asked for what reason he had given such precedence to
these democratic values, until he made them the standard by which all other
values and behaviors are judged. If he says his reverence for them is based
merely on current personal preference and inclination, or on cultural
chauvinism, he will have no reply to one who opposes him on the basis of his
contradictory personal preferences, or because the norms of his society differ
from those of the other. The flimsy foundation of values in secular societies
makes them liable to turn at any time against all the values they currently hold
dear. It also paves the way for them to descend to their practices of the
occupation and colonization of weaker nations. There is nothing to make them
refrain from doing so, once one of them stands up and announces that there is a
nationalist benefit to be gained by it and a large number of fellow citizens
believe him. His policy proposal becomes official policy, based on the standard
of majority approval. It is, however, as you can see, an approval based on
nothing more than greed. This has been the justification for every transgression
in history. In fact it is the basis on which any animal attacks another.
Personal freedom and majority rule are not, then, the fundamental values on
which secular culture is based. That is because freedom entails choice, but it
is not the criterion for that choice. I mean that whoever is given the freedom
to choose needs a standard that he can use as the criterion for his choice.
Likewise, majority opinion is not itself the standard; it is merely the result
of many individual choices made on the basis of some standard. So what is the
basis for the choices of a free individual and a free society in the secular
system? It is, without the slightest doubt, those whims and desires which have
taken the place of the real Deity.