For me Islam, the faith I belong to, means piety first of all. Whenever I talk about the
central features of Islam, I always try to interpret this faith above all as a great universal
call to piety, to surrender to God. And piety is not some sort of a sacred hobby for
killing boredom or a holy recreation for its own sake. Piety is a call to morality and the
good. In this limitless world we cannot make a limitless number of steps. But piety and
morality teach us that the steps we make should be along the path of the good and
be moral.
For me Islam, the faith I belong to, means piety first of all. Whenever I talk about the
central features of Islam, I always try to interpret this faith above all as a great universal
call to piety, to surrender to God. And piety is not some sort of a sacred hobby for
killing boredom or a holy recreation for its own sake. Piety is a call to morality and the
good. In this limitless world we cannot make a limitless number of steps. But piety and
morality teach us that the steps we make should be along the path of the good and
be moral.
The entire Qur’an is a sublime Divine saga about how behind this visible, enormously
large world there lies moral assurance, the eternal foundation, the Source to which
in the end everything will return. In a way, piety is an obligation to watch over man’s
morality, to watch over constant remembrance of God, that omnipresent basis and
texture of the world, that pulse of the world. On the other hand, piety and morality
remind us of the man’s primordial essence, which is that he/she is God’s creature.
Konular | Din Araştırmaları |
---|---|
Bölüm | Sunuş Yazıları |
Yazarlar | |
Yayımlanma Tarihi | 30 Aralık 2015 |
Gönderilme Tarihi | 10 Kasım 2015 |
Kabul Tarihi | 20 Nisan 2015 |
Yayımlandığı Sayı | Yıl 2015 Sayı: 1 |