Republished from Level Truth.
“You never get a second chance to make a good first impression.” Old proverb
True belief has a reward in the hereafter. Disbelief does too, but you don’t want it. Such has been the message of all the prophets — each and every one of them.
How can we justify an afterlife? Well, where else can the injustices of this life be rectified, if not in an afterlife? What we perceive to be injustices in this worldly life would be a poor reflection upon God’s sense of fairness, if these “injustices” aren’t offset by appropriate rewards and punishments in the hereafter.
Some of the worst of the worst enjoy some of the most luxurious lives. Meanwhile, some of the best of the best suffer terribly. For example, which prophet had an easy time of it? Which prophets lived pampered lives of splendor to match that of a mafia boss, drug lord, or tyrannical ruler, either of our time or of theirs?
If we are to trust in the mercy and justice of our Creator, we cannot believe He restricts the rewards of piety and the punishments of transgression to this worldly life, for the inequities of life are clear.
So there will be a Day of Judgment, we’ll all be there, and it will be a bad time to start thinking about changing our lives for the better. Because our lives will be, in a word, over. It’ll be too late. The record of our deeds will be done. And there’s no going back.
Mankind will be sorted according to beliefs and deeds. The faithful will be vindicated, the disbelievers condemned, the transgressors (if not forgiven) punished according to the severity of their sins.
Jews declare Paradise to be a birthright of the “Chosen People,” Christians claim “not to be perfect, just forgiven,” and Muslims believe that all who die in submission to the Creator are eligible for redemption.
Those who followed the revelation and the prophet of their time will be successful, whereas those who forsook the revelation and the prophet of their day did so to the compromise of their souls.
According to Islam, the believing Jews were upon the truth right up until they rejected the prophets who followed (that is, John the Baptist and Jesus Christ), their teachings and, in the case of Jesus, the revelation he conveyed.
In this manner, the Jews lived in submission to God not on His terms, but on their terms. When God sent prophets or revelations they didn’t like, they chose to remain upon the religion of their forefathers rather than upon the religion of God. In this manner, they fell into disobedience and disbelief.
Similarly, Jesus’ followers who did not worship him as God, were upon the truth, right up until they rejected the final prophet (that is, Muhammad). Again, Jesus’ followers submitted to God, but only on their terms.
And that’s not good enough. When called upon to honor the final revelation (the Quran) and the prophet who conveyed it (Muhammad), they rejected and fell into the same disobedience and disbelief as their Jewish cousins.
According to Muslims, the religion of truth has always been Islam (that is, submission to the will of God), for that is what all prophets taught. However, the refinement of Islam is to be found in the final revelation and in the teachings of the final prophet.
In revealing the final revelation, God warned that all preceding religions and revelation have been changed from original form. Hence, the only group that submits to God’s true religion in the present day is the Muslims.
However, those who die neither knowing of Islam nor willfully avoiding investigation, we can’t claim that they will go either to hell or heaven. Only God is the one to judge on that.
In this manner, if it can be imagined that there are Jews who died without having known of the prophets who followed, and Christians who died unaware of Muhammad and Quran, their abode is a thing that only God decides.
God will judge people according to their submission to the revelation to which they had been exposed during their lifetimes, and test their faith and obedience.
Hence, the ignorant who die sincerely seeking the religion of truth have hope for salvation.