Fate and Destiny and the Carrier of the Call
A Firm Understanding and an Unyielding Path
In an era rife with frustration, with trials accumulating on the nation's shoulders, and the path to change fraught with dangers and difficulties, the need arises for the carrier of the call to resume Islamic life with a deep understanding of fate and destiny, an understanding that establishes certainty, grants steadfastness, and creates a personality that is not shaken by storms, nor diverted from its goal by terrors.
Indeed, talking about fate and destiny is not an intellectual luxury, nor a philosophical discussion conducted for the sake of argument, but rather a fundamental principle of Islamic belief, which has a direct impact on the behavior of a Muslim, especially the carrier of the call, who has dedicated himself to God Almighty to establish His religion on earth and restore the usurped authority of Islam.
Everything that happens in the universe, from life and death, wealth and poverty, health and disease, earthquakes and volcanoes, is a decree from God. As for what is specific to humans in terms of actions that they have the ability to do or refrain from doing, they are from their own actions and earnings, and they will be held accountable for them.
Human actions fall between two circles: a circle beyond their ability and will, meaning they have no power over it, and a circle under their will and ability. Indeed, human actions that fall under their ability and will are from their earnings, and they will be held accountable for them... And fate is what humans have no power over, from matters of life, death, livelihood, and the like.
When the carrier of the call realizes this deep understanding of fate and destiny, he is freed from the feeling of helplessness, and he knows that change is not inevitably going to happen simply because it was decreed in God's knowledge, but rather it is linked to the will to change among humans and their actions within the divine will.
Therefore, the carrier of the call does not surrender to difficulties nor justify his inaction with fate, nor does he say as it is said: "This is our fate," but rather he knows that God created him free-willed, obligated and commanded, and that he must work to establish His law, and that he will be held accountable for his shortcomings if he falls short.
It is not correct what some say that a person is forced to do his actions, for God has given him a will, and given him reason, and shown him the way, and commanded him and forbade him, then He holds him accountable for his actions. If he were forced, the reckoning would not be valid.
The history of the Islamic nation is full of examples who lived this understanding, so they set out with strength to work to change reality, and the fatalistic occult did not control them, nor was fate and destiny an excuse for inaction. The Prophet ﷺ, despite his knowledge that he is the chosen Messenger of God, and that victory and empowerment are a certain promise, did not become complacent, but rather endured harm, and was patient with adversity, and raised his companions to strive and work, and planned, and migrated, and established the state in Medina.
When the Companions faced great calamities such as Uhud or Hunayn or the killing of leaders, they did not say: "This is the decree of God, so let us stop striving," but rather they knew that the results are in the hands of God, and that what is required of them is to strive and work according to God's commands in absolute obedience.
Belief in fate should not lead to complacency, but rather should motivate action, because it means that God knows what was and what will be, but He did not force man to do it, but rather He decreed it with His knowledge and encompassing, and left him the freedom of choice.
One of the most dangerous things that the nation is afflicted with today is the deviation in understanding fate, until some of its children use it as an excuse to escape responsibility, saying: "What happens to us of humiliation, occupation, and dependency is the decree of God, and it cannot be changed."
This understanding is false and contrary to the Book and the Sunnah. God did not command us to be complacent, but rather said: ﴿AND PREPARE AGAINST THEM WHATEVER YOU ARE ABLE OF POWER﴾, and He said: ﴿INDEED, ALLAH WILL NOT CHANGE THE CONDITION OF A PEOPLE UNTIL THEY CHANGE WHAT IS IN THEMSELVES.﴾.
Whoever thinks that the humiliation and degradation we live in today is an irreversible decree has denied the texts of revelation, and nullified human responsibility, and made the Sharia futile, and God forbid that He would order us to establish the state and then forcibly prevent it, or burden us with what we cannot do or what is beyond our capacity.
The carrier of the call lives in a reality full of trials; he is chased, imprisoned, dismissed from his job, betrayed, and his idea is fought from every direction. Here, the true impact of understanding fate and destiny appears.
He knows that harm is fate, that sustenance is fate, and that victory is fate. But at the same time, he knows that his assignment to the call is a mandatory command and his failure to do so is a sin, and every tribulation that befalls him in this path will be a reward for him before God, and that God will not ask him why wasn't victory achieved? Rather, He will ask him whether he carried the call as he was commanded or fell short in it?
He walks on a long path, hoping only for the face of God, and knows that killing or imprisonment or displacement is only a term written for him that will neither advance nor be delayed, so he carries the call with steadfastness, and says as the Prophet ﷺ said: "By God, if they put the sun in my right hand and the moon in my left to abandon this matter until God makes it prevail, or I perish in it, I will not abandon it."
Fate and destiny in Islam are not an obstacle in the path of change, but rather a motive to work with sincerity and tranquility, because it establishes in the heart that what afflicted you was not meant to miss you, and what missed you was not meant to afflict you, and that if you are truthful with God, then you are promised victory, even after a while.
If the carrier of the call combines belief in fate and hard work, and diligent striving and reliance on God, then he is walking on the path of Muhammad ﷺ, and will be from the generation of empowerment, not from the generation of justification.
In conclusion, we say to the carriers of the call:
Work, strive, and be patient, for you are on the right path, and God will support His religion through you or through others, so make yourselves from His chosen soldiers, who have a good understanding, perfect their work, and remain steadfast no matter how strong the storms, and by God, this nation will establish the Rightly Guided Caliphate on the method of Prophethood soon, whether those who wish it or those who refuse.
﴿O you who have believed, respond to Allah and to the Messenger when he calls you to that which gives you life.﴾
Written for the broadcast of the Central Media Office of Hizb ut-Tahrir
Mahmoud El Leithy
Member of the Media Office of Hizb ut-Tahrir in the Wilayah of Egypt