| This is a grammatically
edited excerpt from the chapter 'Adab an-Nikah'
from Imam Ghazzali's 'Ihya Ulum-id-din'
translated by Fazlul-Karim. Also blended with this
translation is an excerpt from 'The Proper Conduct of
Marriage in Islam' and this is a translation of the
same chapter by Muhtar Holland.
Benefits of marriage
There are five benefits:
(1) to beget children, (2) to control sexual urges, (3)
to obtain peace of mind, (4) to increase divine service,
and (5) to gain rewards for duties to family. [Item (4)
and (5) are not dealt with in this Appendix.]
(1) To beget
children. This is the main purpose for marriage. The
aim is to engender and preserve the human race. Four
objectives are accomplished through procreation: - (i)
to increase mankind (ii) Islam is propagated by
increasing the number of followers of the Prophet,
p.b.u.h. (iii) parents will hope to leave behind
children who will pray for them (iv) and if a child dies
before the parents, the prayers of the child in Paradise
will be very beneficial for the parents.
The first objective is
very subtle and not easily comprehended by man. It is a
natural truth and the following is its proof. Take for
example a landowner who has generously given a servant a
large amount of seed and the tools for cultivation, and
who has also given this servant land for cultivation.
Now if the servant refuses to till this land and instead
allows it to remain uncultivated, useless and dormant,
and furthermore, if he also carelessly destroys the
seeds, it is clear then that this servant will become an
object of wrath by the landowner. Similarly God has
created man and woman with the wherewithal to produce
and raise children. The uterus is the fertile field and
both the male and female organs are the tools for
cultivation. He also created sexual passion in both the
male and female for the bearing of children through the
use of these organs. This is proof of God's design. The
Prophet has clearly substantiated this when he said
"Marry and keep a family". He who does not marry,
destroys these seeds and allows these tools to lie
useless and dormant and he thereby goes against God's
wishes. Infanticide has also been prohibited by God for
this reason.
From Muhtar Holland's
Translation: [Pages 17 & 18 ]
If the sole motive for
marriage were to ward off lust, the plague-stricken
Mu'adh would hardly have cried: "Find me a wife, lest I
meet Allah as a celibate!" You might perhaps object:
"Surely Mu'adh had no expectation of children at that
moment, so how do you explain his desire for marriage?"
but to this I would reply as follows: The child is
produced by sexual intercourse. Intercourse is brought
about by the prompting of sexual appetite, which is an
involuntary impulse. The only voluntary contribution a
man can make is to procure the stimulus to sexual
desire, and this can normally be anticipated. One who
has contracted a marriage has therefore performed his
duty and done what he had to do; the rest is beyond his
own volition.
That is why marriage is
recommended even for the impotent, for the stirring of
desire is hidden and not susceptible to observation.
Indeed, the recommendation to marry extends even to the
totally castrated person who can never expect children,
in much the same way as a bald man is recommended to
pass the razor across his pate as others do (on
Pilgrimage), following the example of the righteous
ancestors. In the same vein, the practices known as
ramal and idtiba are still recommended during
the Pilgrimage. The original purpose of these was to
demonstrate stamina in the face of the unbelievers, the
imitation of this display of fortitude became the model
conduct for later generations.
Such are the
considerations in forming their severe disapproval of
abstinence from marriage, even in cases were sexual
appetite is enfeebled. [end of Muhtar Holland's
translation]
(2) The second
benefit of marriage
The second benefit of
marriage is to be safe from the machinations of the
devil and to satisfy lust and hence protect the private
parts. The Prophet said: "If a man marries, half of his
religion is saved. Fear God for the remaining half." The
Prophet said: "Whoever among you is able to marry,
should marry, and whoever is not able to marry, is
recommended to fast, for fasting diminishes his sexual
power." The pleasure which lies within sexual
intercourse is an example of happiness in the afterlife.
There is no benefit derived from a thing in which there
is no pleasure.
(3) The third benefit
of marriage
Marriage brings peace of
mind as love grows between the couple. Peace of mind is
necessary for divine service. God says: "It is He Who
has created you from a single person, and He has created
from him his wife, in order that he might enjoy the
pleasure of living with her." Hazrat Ali said: "Give
peace to the mind because it becomes blind when it
becomes disturbed." There is a Hadith which says that
there are three special times for a wise man: - he
speaks secretly with his Lord at one time, he takes
account of his actions at another time, and he occupies
himself with food and drink at another time. In another
narration, a wise man is not desirous except in three
matters: to earn his livelihood for the next world, to
earn his livelihood for this world, and to taste the
pleasure of lawful things. The Prophet said: "There is
effort in every action and there is struggle in every
effort. He who adopts struggle goes towards my Sunnah
and guidance. The Prophet said: Upon complaint to
Gabriel about the lessening of my sexual passion, he
advised me to take Harisah. The Prophet said: Three
things are dear to me among earthly matters - perfume,
woman and prayer, the latter is coolness to my eyes.
This comfort is necessary for peace of mind.
From Muhtar Holland's
translation: [Pages 20-22 . . . Conclusion]
He who obeys his master
out of the desire to please Him is not the same as one
who obeys merely in quest of deliverance from the perils
of this agency.
Passion and procreation
are both divinely ordained, and there is a link between
the two. It would be wrong to say that the purpose is
pleasure and the child is a necessary by-product (as,
for instance, relieving oneself is a necessary
consequence of eating, but not an end in itself.) No,
the begetting of children is the aim of nature and the
divine Wisdom, while sexual appetite is merely an
incentive thereto.
By my life, there is in
sexual appetite yet another dispensation, apart from the
impetus to procreate, namely the joy experienced in
satisfying it. If only that delight were lasting, it
would be unparalleled by any other joy. It gives a
foretaste of the delights we are promised in Paradise,
for the prospect of a bliss we had never tasted would
fail to impress. The prospect of sexual intercourse
would hardly stimulate the impotent, nor would the
pleasures of kingship and dominion serve to excite the
interest of the very young. One advantage of worldly
pleasures is that the hope of enjoying them permanently
in Paradise can act as a spur to the worship of Allah.
Consider this Wisdom,
this Mercy, this divine Providence! See how two lives
derive benefit through this one appetite: an outer life
and an inner life. The outer life is the life a man
leads through the continuance of his line, which
constitutes a kind of survival, while the inner life is
the Otherworldly life. The bliss [of sexual
satisfaction], deficient because it is so ephemeral,
thus stimulates a desire for perfect bliss, for bliss
everlasting, and serves as an incentive to the worship
which lead to its attainment. Desiring this so ardently,
the creature finds it easier to persevere in the course
that will bring him to such felicity in Paradise.
Relaxation and
recreation for the soul [pg. 27 Muhtar Holland's
Translation]
This [third benefit of
marriage] is obtained by enjoying the company and sight
of one's wife, and by shared amusement, whereby the
heart is refreshed and strengthened in worship; for the
lower self (nafs) is prone to boredom and
inclined to shun duty as something unnatural to it. If
constrained to persevere in something repugnant, it
jibes and backs away, whereas if revived occasionally by
pleasures it acquires new strength and vigor. In
familiarity with women, one finds the relaxation to
banish cares and to refresh the heart.
The souls of the pious
need legitimate recreation, which is why the Exalted One
said:
"That he may rest
with her." [Qur'an 7:189] |