What does the conceptual framework of Islam imply about the universe within which we live?

 

Part II of II

...In other words, they are universal ideas which we are to take with us as we travel throughout the universe.

 

 

Under Islamic perceptions, in eternity, justice will prevail.

 

You will face justice in regards to how well you met your responsibilities in your journey through life.

 

But justice implies judgment and who would be willing to judge knowing they would have to face the results of “bad” judgment calls as well as the “good” ones in the hereafter?

 

Who will do the judging if it may imperil them in terms of their personal eternal state of being?

 

Perhaps we should stop putting our fellow souls in jeopardy by calling upon them to judge.

 

Perhaps it is time to eliminate, in our present life forms, the concept of judging.

 

How do we do this and still protect journeys for which we all have a responsibility?

 

We could do so by accepting the Islamic concept that justice will prevail.

 

We could start leaving justice to eternity.

 

Now individual actions will not be examined in order to bring justice but rather to right wrongs, in order to prevent harm from being inflicted upon other journeys.

 

Accepting the Islamic belief that justice will prevail implies we would  move from judging journeys to protecting journeys.

 

We would move from being judgmental to rectifying wrongs imposed upon journeys, to protecting others from having their personal journeys infringed upon.

 

The universe would now experience a nonjudgmental traveler, humanity.

 

End