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In 2016, be certain of your station, your destination

By Afis A. Oladosu
15 January 2016   |   4:13 am
Brethren, in my never ending search for the meaning of life, I am constantly humbled by the reality of my origin. Each time I contemplate my own children, they remind me of the truth that I am equally a child of another person and that that other person is also a child of another person.
Deputy Speaker, Oyo State House of Assembly, Musa AbdulWasiu, (right); presenting a motorcycle to Mr. Abdullahi Kupalo (second from right), while the Chief Executive Officer, Zakat and Sadaqat Foundation, Imam Abdullahi Shuaib, (third from right); and Secretary, ZSF Board of Directors, Alhaji AbdulWaheed Amida,  admiring the gesture.

Deputy Speaker, Oyo State House of Assembly, Musa AbdulWasiu, (right); presenting a motorcycle to Mr. Abdullahi Kupalo (second from right), while the Chief Executive Officer, Zakat and Sadaqat Foundation, Imam Abdullahi Shuaib, (third from right); and Secretary, ZSF Board of Directors, Alhaji AbdulWaheed Amida, admiring the gesture.

“With Him are the keys of the invisible. None but He knows them… Not a leaf falls, but he knows it, not a grain amid the darkness of the earth, nor anything …but is recorded in a clear Book”. (Q6:59)
Brethren, in my never ending search for the meaning of life, I am constantly humbled by the reality of my origin. Each time I contemplate my own children, they remind me of the truth that I am equally a child of another person and that that other person is also a child of another person.

But what mattered in this introspective exercise is not only that I belong to a long chord in the seemingly unending chain of life and living but that I and my forebears share the same origin. Those who bore me were once like my humble self- a dirty spermatozoid agent which became mixed with blood in order to become a weak and seemingly inconsequential object (Q23:12-13).

Those who bore me, like the children I claim are mine today (in reality how valid is that claim to what I actually do not create?), were once kept away in three levels of darkness which they could not by themselves illuminate. The Quran refers to that darkness as a triad- the darkness of the stomach, the darkness of the womb and the darkness of the amnion fluid in which the fetus is tucked away and protected from the exigencies of life of the bearer of the womb.

Thus each time I contemplate how the fetus of yesterday has become the man and woman of today, each time I ponder the miracle in the birth of man, in his growth and ultimate death I become attentive to the fact that all of us are actually signs (ayaat) from and of the inimitable creation of the Almighty. We are all programmed (scientists would call this the genetic code), to be what we are today, to age and die.

Thus this sermon is in interested in pondering the inner meaning of the choice you and I did not have in coming to the world (Q28:68), in determining where to be born and which womb to bear us. These realities function in reminding me of my destiny, in making me aware of my station and my ultimate destination. My destiny and yours, brethren, is in the first instance, enframed in between the knowable and the unknowable. Ponder the knowable: “Indeed We have created man from an essence of clay, then placed him as a drop of semen in a firm resting place, then changed the semen into a leechlike mass, then leechlike mass into a fetus lump, then fetus lump into bones, then clothed the bones with flesh, and then We brought him forth as quite a different creature from the embryo – so blessed is the Almighty, the best of all creators” (Q23:12-13).

Dear brother, if it is true that none of us came to the world by choice, it means none of us would leave the world by choice; if it is true that an authority took charge of our being from non-being, it is only proper that the same authority should take charge of our ultimate transition from being to non-being. But dear Sister, is it not true, and strange at the same time, that the moment we are in this world, we begin to plot ways by which we can outlive the world?; is it not true that as soon as we emerge from non-existence to existence, we forget the essence of our being and the consequence of our existence?.

What about the unknown? What about the unknowable in regard to our destiny? Again let us listen to the Quran: “Surely the Almighty alone has the knowledge of the Hour, He is the One who sends down the rain and He knows what is in the wombs. No one knows what he will earn the next day; and no one knows in what land he will die. Surely, He knows all this and is aware of everything. (Q31: 34). Now the Almighty says “He alone has the knowledge of the Hour”, at least two issues are implicated here: the freedom he grants us from the pursuit of the unattainable and the responsibility He gives us to to search for the obtainable. By the unattainable, the Quran refers to the exact knowledge of the day of resurrection; by the unattainable it gestures to that moment you and I would exit the world. By the obtainable, the Qur’an reminds us that we are created to act and be acted upon; that we have to work in order to eat; that the heavens would not rain gold; that you cannot plant yam and expect to harvest maize. As subjects that are destined for extinction, we shall continue to pursue the obtainable until the unknowable intervene to transmit us to the Inimitable.

The above explains why we have been imbued with the capacity to ‘take charge’ of our destiny, of our ‘station’, in preparation for our destination. But some among us do not know their destiny; others are oblivious of their station; some conflate the ‘station’ with the destination. The reason this happens is our failure to understand our origin.
Brethren, contemplate your origin and those of your children. Though we all know the role we played in bringing them to the world, we are utterly unable to account for how ‘nothing’ became ‘something’. We all know that to the ‘farmer’ belongs the task of tilling and planting the ‘seed’; how the seed would grow and germinate belongs to the Almighty.

Eventually I became located in the womb of my mother. I became like a tendril – I was engrafted unto the womb of my mother by a power beyond me. I had no independent existence. I needed to breathe; I did that through my mother. I needed to eat; she was my food supplier. I needed a fine bed to sleep; nothing proved more luxurious than her womb. Where exactly was I? I never know. Was my mother’s womb my destination or station?

On the day I was born it should have been clear to me that my mother’s womb was indeed not the destination but a station in my life. If I had been told while still in her womb that there are better pleasures and enjoyment in this world such would have made no sense to me. If I had the chance, I would have preferred to remain in her womb forever. But immediately I came to ‘know’ this world, I forgot the pleasures of the womb. The moment I tasted life on earth, I pooh-poohed all the pleasures my mother’s womb afforded me. This world became my destination. It feels as if I am in another ‘womb’ – the womb of the world. Here all information about another life after this world is a fiction. But is this really my destination? No. Is this a station in my long journey back to my origin, back to the Almighty, back to my destination? Yes!!!
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