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Islamic ethics () is the "philosophical reflection upon moral conduct" with a view to defining "good character" and attaining the "pleasure of God" ( raza-e Ilahi). It is distinguished from "", which pertains to "specific norms or codes of behavior".

It took shape as a field of study or an "Islamic science" ( ʿIlm al-Akhlaq), gradually from the 7th century and was finally established by the 11th century. Although it was considered less important than and "in the eyes of the " (Islamic scholars) "moral philosophy" was an important subject for Muslim intellectuals.Campo, Encyclopedia of Islam, "Ethics and morality" 2009: p.217 Many scholars consider it shaped as a successful amalgamation of the Qur'anic teachings, the teachings of , the precedents of (see and ), the tradition, and non-Arabic elements (including and ideas) embedded in or integrated with a generally structure. Although Muhammad's preaching produced a "radical change in based on the sanctions of the new religion ... and fear of God and of the Last Judgment"; the tribal practice of Arabs did not completely die out. Later expanded the religious ethic of the Qur'an and in immense detail.


Terminology
A number of related terms refer to the right way to behave in Islam: Akhlaq, Adab, .


Akhlaq
Akhlaq (, , plural of ( khulq which means disposition), is the practice of , and in and falsafah (). Akhlaq is the most commonly used Islamic term for morality.Campo, Encyclopedia of Islam, "Ethics and morality" 2009: p.216

The science of ethics ( `Ilm al-Akhlaq) teaches that through practice and conscious effort man can surpass their natural dispositions and natural uncorrupted state ( ) to become more ethical and well mannered. Akhlaq is a kind of normative ethical system known as "", which is based on "virtues, or moral character", rather than "conceptions of the right (as in ) or the good (as in )".

Akhlaq is not found in the Quran, but its root – kh-l-q – is shared by khaliq (Creator) and makhluq (creature), which are found throughout the Quran. It is most commonly translated in dictionaries as: disposition, nature, temper, ethics, morals or manners or in general a person who has good manners, and behaves well.J. Cowan p. 299

(2016). 9780994240989, Enlight Press. .


Adab
Adab () in the context of behavior, refers to prescribed Islamic : "refinement, good manners, morals, decorum, decency, humaneness" (according to the book Religion and Law).Firmage, Edwin Brown and Weiss, Bernard G. and Welch, John W. Religion and Law. 1990, page 202-3 While interpretation of the scope and particulars of Adab may vary among different cultures, common among these interpretations is regard for personal standing through the observation of certain codes of behavior.Ensel, Remco. Saints and Servants in Southern Morocco. 1999, page 180 To exhibit Adab would be to show "proper discrimination of correct order, behavior, and taste."

A description of the difference between Akhlaq and Adab is:

  • Aklaq is ethics, the 'moral philosophy'; Ethics/ morality. Islamic behaviour, disposition, good conduct, nature, temper, ethics, morals or character of a person.
  • Adab is "the actual practices of moral philosophy"; Manner, attitude, behaviour and the etiquette of putting things in their proper place "a culture of refined behavior that shaped the ethical outlook of urban Muslims" There were writings setting forth "the virtues for different classes and groups to honor, including the ulama, rulers, bureaucrats, merchants and craftsmen".

Furthermore, according to one source (Abdulmajeed Hassan Bello), sharia (usually defined as Islamic law) is not just concerned with concerned "with legal rules and regulations indicating "what man is entitled or bound to do, ... but also what he ought, in conscience, to do or refrain from doing. Thus, shari’ah ... embraces both private and public activities."


Ihsan
(also Ihsaan, ), is an Arabic term meaning "beautification", "perfection" or "excellence", but is also defined in Islam (by Malcolm Clark) as ethics/morality "literally virtue, including right living", and (according to Ruqaiyyah Waris Maqsood) is a matter of taking one's inner and showing it in both deed and action.
(1994). 9780340609019, . .


Other terms
Other terms found in the Quran that "denote the concept of moral or religious goodness"Fakhry, Ethical Theories in Islam, 1994: p.12 are:
  • al-khayr (goodness),
  • al-birr (righteousness),
  • al-qisr,
  • al-iqsat (equity),
  • al-adl (justice),
  • al-haqq (truth and right),
  • al-ma’ruf (known and approved), and
  • al-taqwa (piety).
  • "Pious actions" are "normally referred to" as salihat; "impious or sinful actions" as sayyi’at.Fakhry, Ethical Theories in Islam, 1994: p.11


Ethics v. morality
Juan E. Campo describes the difference between Akhlaq/ethics and morality in Islam as :
Ethics means philosophical reflection upon moral conduct, while morality pertains to specific norms or codes of behavior. Questions of ethics, therefore, involve such subjects as human nature and the capacity to do good, the nature of good and evil, motivations for moral action, the underlying principles governing moral and immoral acts, deciding who is obliged to adhere to the moral code and who is exempted from it, and the implications of either adhering to the moral code or violating it. Morality encompasses the values and rules that govern human conduct ...


Scriptural sources

Quran
The Quran, which Muslims believe to be the verbatim word of God, serves as the primary source of moral teachings in Islam.Clark (2011), p. 283 Verse declares:
  • "Righteousness is not in turning your faces towards the east or the west. Rather, the righteous are those who believe in Allah, the Last Day, the angels, the Books, and the prophets; who give charity out of their cherished wealth to relatives, orphans, the poor, ˹needy˺ travellers, beggars, and for freeing captives; who establish prayer, pay alms-tax, and keep the pledges they make; and who are patient in times of suffering, adversity, and in ˹the heat of˺ battle. It is they who are true ˹in faith˺, and it is they who are mindful ˹of Allah˺."
Another verse states:
  • "Believers are those … who avoid vain talk; who are active in deeds of charity; who abstain from sex except with their wives, or whom their right hands possess. Thus they’re free from blame, but those whose desires exceed those limits are transgressors. Believers faithfully observe their trusts and covenants and keep their prayers. They will be the heirs, who will inherit Paradise, where they will dwell." (Q.)Clark, Islam For Dummies, 2011: p.248

However, the Quran offers "more in the way of general principles"—justice, goodness, kindness, forgiveness, honesty, and piety – "than specific rules".


The Ten Commandments In Quran
Quran provides the Ten Commandments which is believed to be as originally revealed to : Tafsir ibn Kathir , see Chapter heading for the Commentary of Verse 6:151"In the Quran, the Ten Commandments are discussed in Surah Al-An'am, 6:151–153":
(2017). 9781507204870, Simon and Schuster. .
(2025). 9780615995595, Hussein M. Naguib. .
The numbering of the verses is given in bold while the numbering of the Commandments is in superscript.

Evidence for these verses having some relation to Moses and the Ten Commandments is from the verse which immediately follows them:

According to a narration in , , a prominent narrator of traditions said, "In Surah Al-An`am, there are clear Ayat, and they are the Mother of the Book (the Qur'an)." He then recited the above verses. Tafsir ibn Kathir , Commentary of verse 6:151. Al-Hakim said, "Its chain is Sahih, and they () did not record it."

Also in Mustadrak Hakim is the narration of Ubada ibn as-Samit:

mentions a narration of Abdullah ibn Mas'ud in his :

First CommandmentDo not associate others with God(151)(22)Do not put other gods before me
Second CommandmentHonour your parents(23–24)Honour thy father and thy mother
Third CommandmentDo not kill your children for fear of poverty(26–31)Do not murder
Fourth CommandmentDo not come near indecencies, openly or secretly.(32)Do not covet thy neighbour's wife, Do not commit adultery
Fifth CommandmentDo not take a life except justly(33)Do not murder
Sixth CommandmentDo not come near the property of the orphan except to enhance it(152)(34)Do not covet his slaves, or his animals, or anything of thy neighbour
Seventh CommandmentGive full measure and weigh with justice(35)Does not exist, instead there is Remember the sabbath day
Eighth CommandmentWhenever you testify, maintain justice even regarding a close relative(36)Do not bear false witness against thy neighbour
Ninth CommandmentFulfil your covenant with God(34)Do not take the name of the Lord thy God in vain
Tenth CommandmentFollow God's path and not any other(153)(37–39)Do not make unto thee any graven image or idols neither kneel before them nor worship them


Hadith
, which are based on reports of the teachings, deeds and sayings, silent permissions (or disapprovals) of the Islamic prophet , as well as various reports about Muhammad's companions, also serves as an important source for Islamic moral teachings. Some hadith cited expressing good conduct, deeds, morals in Islam, and the importance of these include:
  • Narrated 'Aishah: the Messenger of Allah said: "Indeed among the believers with the most complete faith is the one who is the best in conduct, and the most kind to his family" ()
  • "Yahya related to me from Malik that he had heard that the Messenger of Allah, ... 'I was sent to perfect the ethical conduct'." (Muwatta Malik)

A "famous" hadithCampo, Encyclopedia of Islam, "Ethics and morality" 2009: p.215 "Hadith of jibril" describes the angel Jibril () questioning Muhammad about "what is faith?" "what is Islam?" and "What is Ihsan (perfection or virtue)?", where in reply Muhammad lists the "Five Pillars of Islam", the "Six Articles of Faith", and describes (which Clark defines as ethics, or "virtue and including right living") thusly:

  • "To worship Allah as if you see Him, and if you cannot achieve this state of devotion then you must consider that He is looking at you."
    (1998). 9781557785169, Paragon House.


Other sources
Besides the Quran and hadith, there are a number of other sources, (not all universally followed in Islam):
  • the works of Islamic scholars and philosophers;
  • Arabic virtues that predate Islam, (such as "honor, courage, loyalty, hospitality, self-control", etc.;
  • the moral examples set by important Islamic personalities (such as the four rightly guided caliphs for Sunni Muslims);
  • works on Adab (i.e. etiquette, manners);
  • "philosophical reflection" by the school of Islam known as the Mu`tazilites and others;
  • "works of Greek ethicists", (which were translated into Arabic);
  • the 99 names of God, which among other qualities/attributes include names based on virtues – "the gentle, the grateful, the just, the giver, the equitable, the loving", etc.;
  • Ethical values from Sufism "including humility and poverty".


Contrast with other faith-based systems
One perspective holds that Islamic ethics place less emphasis on original sin and asceticism than Christian ethics, and to a lesser extent, Jewish ethics. Unlike the doctrine of inherent sinfulness found in some Christian traditions, Islam is said to view human beings as born in a state of natural purity, capable of moral choice. Although the Qur’an contains over a hundred references to hell and judgment, it also emphasizes trust in God, gratitude, and life-affirming values such as generosity and moral stamina. Islamic ethical teachings, including the concept of vicegerency ( khalifah) and obligatory acts like zakat, are often framed in terms of social responsibility and active moral conduct. This view contrasts with what has been described as the more ascetic or sin-focused tendencies in other Abrahamic traditions.Hindery, CrossCurrents, "Muslim and Christian Ethics" Winter 1973: p.389Hindery, CrossCurrents, "Muslim and Christian Ethics" Winter 1973: p.390


History
Some of the most important scholars who contributed to the area of moral philosophy during the Middle Ages were
  • (932–1030), the Persian author of Refinement of Character,
  • Abu Hamid al-Ghazali (c.1058–1111), author of Revival of the Religious Sciences,
  • Ali ibn Hazm (994–1064) "the Andalusian man of letters".
Also influential were
  • Abu Yusuf Yaacub al-Kindi (c.801–873),
  • Abu Bakr Muhammad al-Razi (d. ca 925),
  • Abu Nasr al-Farabi (d.950),
  • Abu 'Ali al-Husayn Ibn Sina (aka Avicenna, d.1037),
  • Muhammad ibn Rushd (aka Averroes, d. 1198),
  • Nasir al-Din al-Tusi (1201–1274).
Moral philosophy as a topic of Muslim scholarly discussion "declined after the 12th century", but underwent a revival in the 19th and 20th centuries.


Codification of Islamic ethics
Islamic ethics was codified, based on the Qur'an and practices of Muhammad, over a period of time and in context of the practices of the Muslim community (ummah). The Quran commands every human being, in all spheres of life, to "command the good and forbid evil", as spelled out by Muhammad. Another key factor in the field of Islamic ethics is the belief (as described in the Qur'an) that all mankind has been granted the faculty to discern God's will (), and thus the moral responsibility to submit to His will by following Islam, regardless of their environment.

This natural inclination to obey God, is, according to the Qur'an, in conflict with another human inclination, the desire for material possessions and comforts; first for basic survival or security, then for status in society. Ultimately, this desire results in a state of , "heedlessness", or ignorance of mankind's responsibility to obey God.

The establishment of Islam brought a great transformation in the society, moral order of life, , and the hierarchy of values in the Arabian Peninsula.

  1. The division of Arabs into varying tribes (based upon blood and kinship), was confronted by the ideal of a unified community, an " ", based upon .
  2. The acceptance of the worship of a multitude of deities besides Allah – a view challenged by strict , which dictates that Allah has no partner in worship nor any equal;
  3. The trait of muruwwa (), which Islam discouraged, instead emphasizing on the traits of humility and piety;
  4. The focus on achieving fame or establishing a legacy, which was replaced by the concept that mankind would be called to account before God on the ;
  5. The reverence of and compliance with ancestral traditions, was challenged by Islam's assignment of primacy to submitting to God and following revelation.

But although pre-Islamic Arabia exemplified "heedlessness", it was not entirely without merit, and certain aspects—such as the care for one's near kin, for widows, orphans, and others in need and for the establishment of —would be retained in Islam, re-ordered in importance and placed in the context of strict .


Politics and public policy
According to Lenn Goodman, many medieval Muslim thinkers pursued and approaches in discourses regarding . On the other hand, Roderick Hindery finds it difficult to find "humanistic values that have not been later affirmed" by Muslim (and Christian) "theologians and religious ethicians", as they "reexamine and rewrite" their religion's "history to make it coincide with a humanistic history".Hindery, CrossCurrents, "Muslim and Christian Ethics" Winter 1973: p.382


Human rights
Some scholars and activists have esteemed "the Islamic tradition as the highest manifestation of human right", while others have criticized the concept of "human rights" as a "western colonial invention used to oppress Muslims by making them conform to certain western norms". In 1990, the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) issued the Cairo Declaration of Human Rights (CDHR), in reply to the 1948 Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR). The CDHR is based on traditional law ("shari‘a is mentioned throughout the entire document as the most authoritative source of law"), and guarantees some human rights, while denying some articles from the UDHR "dealing with gender, the family, religious freedom, and importantly, self-determination".
(2025). 9780199679010

Ash'arism, one of three theological schools of generally denies that there are universal moral truths. Ethics are based solely on God's command, which might align with human rights by coincidence, but this is not necessary. Therefore, many conservative Muslims doubt that human rights are beyond cultural ties or universal.Zhussipbek, G. (2021). Liberalism and Islam in Central Asia. In Routledge Handbook of Contemporary Central Asia (pp. 437–450). Routledge. p. 439

, another orthodox theological school of Sunni Islam, however, overshadowed by Ash'arism in the last centuries, yet still prominent in , adheres to , which can be deducted through reason.Rico Isaacs, Alessandro Frigerio Theorizing Central Asian Politics: The State, Ideology and Power Springer, 2018 ISBN 9783319973555 p. 108 Thus, Muslims adhering to Maturidi theology, might possibly agree on human rights.Zhussipbek, G. (2021). Liberalism and Islam in Central Asia. In Routledge Handbook of Contemporary Central Asia (pp. 437–450). Routledge. p. 445


Religious pluralism
While religious minorities were not granted equality with Islam, classical , allowed the functioning of the and courts of , and in lands ruled by Islam. These were usually accommodated within the Islamic legal framework, as seen in the early Caliphate, , the Indian subcontinent, and the Ottoman Millet system. Non-Muslims were allowed to engage in religious practices that were forbidden to Muslims by Islamic law. In a notable example, practice of "self-marriage" where a man could marry his mother, sister or daughter, was to be tolerated according to (1292–1350). He based his opinion on the precedent that Muhammad had knowledge of their practices, coming in contact with them, but did not forbid such self-marriages. Religious minorities were also free to do whatever they wished in their own homes, provided they did not publicly engage in illicit sexual activity in ways that could threaten public morals.


Freedom of expression
In classical Islamic law, public expression was subject to legal and ethical limits shaped by principles of justice (), public interest (), and the prevention of harm (darʾ al-mafāsid). Among the most serious offenses that could involve public expression were blasphemy (insulting Islam or its sacred symbols) and apostasy (renouncing the religion after professing it), though jurists differed on definitions and legal procedures. In some historical periods, apostasy laws were applied in ways that did not fully follow the procedures outlined in classical Islamic legal texts. While enforcing religious orthodoxy and protecting public order were recognized roles of Islamic authorities, some applications of these laws were influenced by political motives or lacked proper legal process. This pattern was not unique to Islam and can be found in other major religious traditions as well.
(2025). 9780816054541, Infobase Publishing.

In the medieval Arab Muslim world, literary expression was shaped by a range of informal controls. Zoltan Szombathy notes that there was no formal censorship system in the pre-modern Islamic world like those found in modern states. Instead, expression was shaped by social expectations, , and personal discretion. Offensive speech could prompt responses ranging from social disapproval to imprisonment or, in rare cases, execution. These responses were driven more by political and social circumstances than by consistent legal rules. Controversial or irreverent poetry often circulated widely, with authors relying on rhetorical skill and indirect language to avoid backlash. The boundaries of acceptable speech were not fixed, but shaped by the ethical values and power dynamics of the time.

During the Abbasid period, Caliph (r. 775–785 CE) led a campaign against individuals labeled as Zindiqs—a term applied to , dualists, and some freethinkers—which involved arrests, executions, and the commissioning of refutations. such campaigns were more common in the early period of Islamic history, whereas later practice generally tolerated heterodox beliefs so long as they remained private.

(2025). 9780759101906, . .

On the other hand, Amira Nowaira writes that

Islamic thinkers of the early medieval period expressed ideas and engaged in debates that would appear strangely enlightened in comparison with the attitudes and views adopted by modern Islamic scholarship.
An example being the toleration of medieval physician, philosopher and alchemist Abu Bakr al-Razi (865–925 CE), who argued that the Quran was "illogical and self-contradictory".

Islamic literature also includes charming anecdotes of tolerance towards non-Muslims and others lacking in power. Imad-ad-Dean Ahmad quotes a letter by a cousin of Caliph al-Ma'mun, in which he gives permission to a Christian he was attempting to convert to speak his mind freely, as evidence that in Islam even religious controversies were not exempt from open discussion. In a letter written by the fourth Rashidun Caliph and first cousin of Muhammad, Ali ibn Abi Talib to his governor of Egypt, . The Caliph advises his governor on dealings with the poor masses thusly:


Health and medical peer review
Because Islam views itself as a total system governing all areas, Islamic medical ethics view the patient as a whole. Classical texts speak more about "health", than "illness", showing an emphasis on prevention rather than cure.

The first documented description of a process is found in the Ethics of the Physician by Ishaq ibn 'Ali al-Ruhawi (854–931) of al-Raha, , where the notes of a practising were reviewed by peers and the physician could face a lawsuit from a maltreated patient if the reviews were negative.


Animal welfare
Concern for the treatment of animals can be found in the Qur'an and in the teachings of the Islamic Prophet Muhammad, which inspired debates over by later medieval Muslim scholars. The 10th-century work, " Disputes Between Animals and Man", part of the Epistles of the Brethren of Purity, has been considered a classic in this regard. Inspired by the : "All living beings roaming the earth and winged birds soaring in the sky are communities like yourselves." (), the Shafi'i jurist 'Izz al-Din Ibn 'Abd al-Salam al-Sulami (d. 1262) formulated the first full-fledged charter of the rights of livestock and animals in his legal treatise Rules for Judgement in the Cases of Living Beings () which was based on the stories and sayings of Muhammad.


Environmentalism
A number of sources assert the benevolent attitude of Muhammad and Islam towards natural resources, conservation and wildlife. Tom Verde writes in that in early Islam, after Muslims established themselves in , Muhammad surveyed the natural resources in the region—the wadis (riverbeds); the rich, black volcanic soil; the high rangelands—and decreed that they be preserved and set aside as a hima ("protected place"). Ibrahim Ozdemir writes that "approximately 200 verses" in the Quran are concerned with the environment—such as one stating "greater indeed than the creation of man is the creation of the heavens and the earth".


Traditional Akhlaq ethical system
Akhlaq is described as a system of "" that emphasize the virtues, or moral character of the human actor involved. Virtue ethics are one of "three major approaches in " in human societies—the other two being "deontology", which emphasizes duties or rules, and "consequentialism", which emphasizes the consequences of actions of the human actor. Another source, (Technical University Darmstadt), describes "virtue theory" ethics as emphasizing moral education to "develop good habits of character based" on "rules like 'do not steal'," etc.


Virtue and good character
Moral Character primarily refers to the assemblage of moral qualities (virtues and vices) in an individual. Promotion of good/virtuous character is found in the canonical texts of Islam. The Quran describes Muhammad as being 'on exalted quality of character' (Q ), and refers to him as 'an excellent example' () which ultimately means that the religious and moral examples, set by Muhammad, are to be followed and cultivated by the Muslims in order to construct a morally good character.Leaman, The Qur'an, (2006), p. 139-143 In addition, numerous sayings of Muhammad highlighted the importance of good character:
  • Anas ibn Malik reported that the Prophet said: The one with good morals and character already owns the best of this world and the Hereafter (Tabarani and Abu Dawud).
  • Abu Hurayrah reported that the Prophet said: I have been sent for the perfection of character (Imam Ahmad and Bayhaqi).
  • Anas ibn Malik reported that the Messenger of Allah said: A person reaches the best and most honored levels in the Hereafter as a result of good character.... And bad character condemns a person to the lowest depths of Hell (Tabarani).
  • One can repent for any sin but bad character – because with bad character, before a person can attempt to ask forgiveness for one sin, he commits a worse (Tabarani, Isfahani).
There was a debate among the early Islamic moralists as to whether character could be changed to promote virtue and diminish vices. They recognized the dual aspect of character – innate and acquired – and thus noted that with conscious practice it could be changed to a certain degree. "Just as a muscle grows stronger with exercise, character grows strong with practice ... the good act becomes easier to us each time we do it."

Muslim moralists have discussed the importance of having a good character as well as the ways of acquiring it. , a 16th-century Muslim scholar and moralist, says that 'To cure yourself of a bad feature of character is an obligation'.Birgivi (2005), p.110 Continuous practice of moral virtues and a conscious effort to internalize those qualities can lead to the formation of a morally good character.Birgivi (2005), p.108 Al-Isfahani says that purification of soul means the control, not the elimination, of desires. He taught that character meant not only obeying the laws of Islam but internalizing them in your soul. According to Birgivi, changing of character depends on such things as 'a person's wish' and 'the strength of one's understanding', and the preservation of a good character requires the avoidance of the company of evil-charactered people who indulge into indecent activities, drunkenness, and meaningless gossip.Birgivi (2005), p.111


Theory
Ethics or "Disposition" is a "faculty" ( malakah),J. Cowen p.1082 – malaka (pl. -at) trait of character, faculty, talent "a property of the soul" ( nafs), "which comes into existence through exercise and repetitive practice" is not easily destroyed. A particular malakah may appear because of one of the following reasons:

  1. (natural state): The original state in which humans are created by . Muslims believe Allah determined certain aspects of their lives for which they are not accountable (e.g., their place of birth and physical appearance)J. Esposito p. 89
  2. 'Āda (habit): Formed by continual repetition of certain acts and creates a certain disposition.
  3. Practice and conscious effort: Which if persistent will eventually produce a disposition.

Although fitra produces certain dispositions, (it is thought) man can surpass nature through and effort. While dispositions caused by mental faculties (i.e., intelligence, memory, mental agility etc.) are not alterable, others dispositions can change. Man's capacity to change his dispositions need not mean destroying instincts of reproduction or self-preservation, but avoiding extremes so they (the dispositions) perform their functions properly.

  • "Indeed I have been sent to complete the best of character ( akhlaq)." (Hadith of Muhammad narrated by ) , 6017
  • "The most complete of believers in iman (faith) are those who are best in character." (Hadith narrated by , the brother of ) Sahih al-Tirmidhi, 2003


'Ilm al-Akhlaq
ʿIlm al-Akhlaq is translated in English as "ethics, moral science, morals" ( ʿIlm being science or study). defined Ilm al-Akhlaq as "the way to acquire the well being of the soul and to guard it against the vices".

The science also dwells on how the level of human virtue is determined by discipline and effort; the movement between the extremes of human behavior, "the lowest is below beasts and the highest surpasses even the ;" how 'knowledge is the thickest of veils', preventing man from seeing reality ( when ethics and purification ( tazkiyah) have not been mastered; and how by improving their akhlaq, the Muslims improve their (worship).


Tazkiyah al-Nafs
Tazkiyah al-nafs, "is the purification of the soul from inclination towards evils and sins, and the development of its fitrah (natural unsocialized state) towards goodness, which leads to its uprightness and its reaching perfection", according to Anas Karzoon.Karzoon (Vol.1 p.12) Scholars (such as Mulla Muhammad Mahdi Naraqi) teach that "moral virtues bring eternal happiness, while moral corruption leads to everlasting wretchedness", so that blameworthy traits ( akhlāq madhmūma) must be purged. God will help those seeking purification: "And those who strive for Us – We will surely guide them to Our ways. And indeed, Allah is with the doers of good." (Q.)


Malakah of the Soul: effects & characteristics
The soul is created devoid of traits. As one progresses through life, he develops malakat related to his lifestyle. The soul becomes accustomed to repeated behavior, which then determines actions. Noble faculties manifest moral and wise behaviour, while evil faculties manifest immorality. These faculties determine the fate in the .

The says:

  • We have bound every human’s destiny to their neck. And on the Day of Judgment We will bring forth to each ˹person˺ a record which they will find laid open. ˹And it will be said,˺ "Read your record. You ˹alone˺ are sufficient this Day to take account of yourself."
  • And the record ˹of deeds˺ will be laid ˹open˺, and you will see the wicked in fear of what is ˹written˺ in it. They will cry, "Woe to us! What kind of record is this that does not leave any sin, small or large, unlisted?" They will find whatever they did present ˹before them˺. And your Lord will never wrong anyone.
  • ˹Watch for˺ the Day when every soul will be presented with whatever good it has done. And it will wish that its misdeeds were far off. And Allah warns you about Himself. And Allah is Ever Gracious to ˹His˺ servants.


Goodness and happiness
The aim of tazkiyah and moral development is to attain felicity and happiness. Tazkiyah causes self-knowledge and knowledge of God. Man's most consummate felicity is reflecting divine attributes. According to Qatada ibn al-Nu'man, the content soul ( an-nafs al-mutma'inna) is, "the soul of the believer, made calm by what Allah has promised. Its owner is at complete rest and content with his knowledge of Allah's Names and Attributes..." The Purification of the Soul p.71


Norms/codes
"Practical guidelines"Clark, Islam For Dummies, 2011: p.246 or "specific norms or codes of behavior" for good doingCampo, Encyclopedia of Islam, "Ethics and morality", 2009: p.214
(2025). 9781438126968, Infobase.
based primarily on the and the are primarily "commonly known moral virtues" whose major points "most religions largely agree on". They include (to people and animals), charity,Leaman, The Qur'an, "MORALITY", (2006), p. 415 , , patience, , respecting and elders, keeping promises, and controlling one's .


Ethical education and behavior
Drawing on a cross-sectional study of Muslim youths in southern Thailand and other sources, academic Kasetchai Laeheem found that the "common behavioral problem" of a lack of Islamic ethics within Muslim societies, often leads to Muslim youths committing "sin openly" and "as a habit without shame". However, high levels of Islamic ethical behavior among Muslim youth, are often correlated with "the Islamic way of upbringing, knowledge of the religion, participation in Islamic activities, and practicing Islamic principles".


See also

Notes

Citations

Sources
  • Imam Ali, : Sermons, Letters & Sayings of Imam Ali
  • (2025). 9781438126968, Infobase.
  • (2003), The Oxford Dictionary of Islam
  • Ahmad Farid, The Purification of the Soul: Compiled from the Works of Ibn Rajab al-Hanbali, and .
  • (1997), Manhaj al-Islaami fi Tazkiyah al-Nafs
  • (1991). 9789004093003, E. J Brill. .
  • M. Masud (1996), Islamic Legal Interpretation: Muftis and Their Fatwas
  • Jean-Louis Michon (1999), The Autobiography of a Moroccan Soufi: Ahmad ibn 'Ajiba (1747-1809)


External links

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