Life After Death
Life After Death
Life After Death
Islam believes that all human beings who follow God’s guidance by treading the path, the
Shari'a, that has been laid out for them, are capable of living an ethical life. There is nothing
flawed in the human make-up and God does not limit salvation to ‘an elect’, but it is open to
all. This life is not all there is. It is only a testing ground and preparation for the life hereafter.
This is the true and abiding abode of human beings. Every human being who becomes truly
the servant of God in all things can rely upon the mercy of God on the Day of Judgement [Q.
2:286]. This life is a test that prepares us for death, which is inevitable [Q. 28:88; 3:185].
Death is the point of transition to the afterlife, or akhira. Every human being has two angels
(Kiraman and Katibin) assigned to them to record their good and bad deeds throughout their
lives [Q. 82:10-12]. It is a mercy from God that good deeds are written down as soon as the
intention is formulated, whilst bad deeds are not written until after the act has been
performed, thus the intention to carry out a bad deed does not in itself incur a penalty. These
records will be brought out on the Day of Judgement. When we are dead, there is nothing
more that we can do to affect our records of good or bad deeds – except for three things that
we can leave behind us. Upright children full of taqwa (God-consciousness) can be an on-
going credit to us after we die. If we do something for education, as a teacher, or through
writing a book, or contributing to a library, the knowledge goes on spreading long after we
are dead. Finally, we can establish a charitable trust (waqf) to go on doing good for later
generations. As soon as human beings are buried and the mourners have filled in the grave
and left, the angels of the interrogation, Munkar and Nakir, appear. They ask the dead
person: Who is your Lord? What religion did you follow? and Who was your prophet? This is
followed by a foretaste of the joys of heaven or the torments of hell. If heaven, the grave
expands, becomes light and airy and is filled with the sweet scents of heaven. If hell, the
grave contracts, becomes dark and cold, and is filled with the stench of hell. Life in the
grave, or barzakh, is understood in Islam as a timeless state in another dimension, in which
one awaits the resurrection [Q. 23:100]. Some Muslims believe that they can perform pious
acts in the name of the person who has died and thus assist them during their time in
barzakh. The state of barzakh is difficult fully to understand. After death one enters into
another realm that lies beyond our powers to describe. On the one hand, it is real and is to
be feared, or awaited, but on the other hand, Muslims know that if one digs up a dead body
some time later, the process of decay will have taken place. Our human language and
knowledge break down when we try to describe what happens beyond death. One way of
glimpsing this is to recall the mi'raj or night journey and ascent to heaven of Muhammad.
Muhammad was taken from Makka to Jerusalem and from there ascended to heaven where
he had an audience with God. All this took place in a single instant. Yet the tradition tells us
that on the way to Jerusalem, Muhammad passed the grave of Moses and saw Moses there
in prayer. When he arrived in Jerusalem, Muhammad was greeted by all the earlier
prophets, including Moses, and he led them in prayer. After his initial audience with God,
Muhammad met Moses in heaven and held conversation with him. That is three meetings
with Moses in three quite different contexts all in a single instant. In this way we can see that
something that happens after death can be both ‘real’ and beyond our earthly
comprehension.
On that day, no-one will be held responsible for the sins of another, blame cannot be
offloaded and merit cannot be transferred to anyone else [Q. 82:19]. There will be no place
to hide anything. Everything will be known by God and must be acknowledged. The records
kept by the recording angels will be produced and each person will be weighed in the
balance of God’s justice [Q. 84:7-12]. The tradition is that every good deed will count ten
times more than every bad deed. This is a clear indication that God’s wrath is overcome and
justice is tempered by mercy. This can be seen by two Hadith: When God decreed the
creation, he pledged himself by writing in his book, which is with him: my mercy shall
overwhelm my wrath. Almighty God has said: O son of Adam, so long as you call upon me
and ask of me, I shall forgive you for what you have done, and I shall not mind. O son of
Adam, were your sins to reach the clouds of the sky and were you then to ask forgiveness of
me, I would forgive you. O son of Adam, were you to come to me with sins nearly as great
as the earth and were you then to face me, giving me no partner, I would bring you
forgiveness nearly as great as it. The prophets too will be present at the judgement and will
appear before God to testify as witnesses. God, as an act of mercy, will invite the prophets
to plead on behalf of their followers. Muhammad will be invited to intercede for Muslims;
indeed most Muslims believe that he can intercede for them with God now, before the Day of
Judgement. Some believe that many holy people, e.g., the Imams and the Friends of God
(waliullah), may have a share in intercession, with God’s permission. Once the actions of
each person are weighed in the balance, they will be sent to heaven or hell. There is no third
option. The Qur'an tells us that heaven and hell are beyond our earthly capacity to
understand [Q. 32:17]. Heaven is most often referred to as The Garden, or al-Jannah, in
which we will be in the presence of God. The Qur'an uses images of heaven that are not
only spiritual: joy and peace, gardens with running streams, food without labour, wonderful
companions, and “whatever souls desire” [Q. 88:2-16; 36:57]. Some scholars have
interpreted these images as figurative rather than literal, basing this on a Hadith that speaks
of heaven as a state that no human eye has ever seen or human ear heard, and which has
not been imagined by the human heart. Heaven is as difficult for us to imagine as it must be
for a caterpillar to imagine the life of a butterfly. Hell has many descriptions and names in the
Qur'an. The most commonly used are terms of fire, e.g., al-Nar. The common theme is of
unimaginable torment and loss. The question was asked by some: Is hell eternal? Some
scholars have argued on the basis of some verses in the Qur'an that there may be some
who are sent there ‘only for a time’ to be purged from their sins, after which the mercy of
God will admit them into heaven [Q. 11:106-108]. However the Qur'an states explicitly that
those who die unrepentant of shirk, or maintaining that God shares divinity with any being or
thing, will never be forgiven [Q. 4:48].