Affliction, Patience and Prayer:
Reading Job (P) in the Qur'an
Isra Umeyye Yazicioglu
University of Virginia
And [remember] Job, when he cried out to his
Sustainer, "affliction has befallen me: but Thou
art the most merciful of the merciful!" Whereupon
We responded upon him and removed all the
affliction from which he suffered; and We gave him
his family, doubling their number as an act of
grace from Us, and as a reminder unto all who
worship Us.
Qur'an 21:83-841
Introduction
The aim of this paper is to reflect on the
Qur'anic account of Job (p)2 in the light of a
contemporary Muslim exegete, Bediuzzaman Said Nursi
(d. 1960). Nursi's approach is interesting in that
through an attentive reading of Job's (p) story in
the Qur'an, he redefines evil and patience. My other
reason for choosing Nursi's interpretation is that he
focuses on the turning point in the story, i.e. Job's
prayer. In what follows I will first give a general
introduction to the story of Job (p) in the Qur'an
and then analyze Nursi's interpretation of Job's (p)
prayer.
Job (p) in the Qur'an
Like many other narratives in the Qur'an, the
story of Job or Ayyub (p) is spread over the Qur'an,
and only certain episodes of his venture are
depicted. Hence, the Qur'anic account of Job (p) is
quite brief compared to the biblical one. The fact
that many details of biblical Job (p) are not
mentioned in the Qur'an need not mean that the
biblical background is totally rejected in Islam. In
fact, many classical Muslim commentators accepted
additional information, which overlaps in many points
with the biblical narrative.3 Nevertheless, the silence of
the Qur'an on these details is also significant.
Hence, it will be helpful to keep in mind what is
explicitly mentioned in the Qur'anic account.
In the Qur'an, Job is described as among the ones
who received revelation from God, alongside
messengers such as Noah, Abraham, Ishmael, Isaac,
Jesus, Jonah, Moses, etc. – peace be upon them all.
They were, including Job, sent as "heralds of glad
tidings and as warners" so that "humankind might have
no excuse before God after their coming" (4:163). Job
(p) is mentioned as one of the "righteous", "elected"
and "guided unto straight path" (6:84).
Specific mention of Job's "affliction" is made in
two other passages:
83 And [remember] Job,
when he cried out to his Sustainer, "affliction has
befallen me: but Thou art the most merciful of the
merciful!" 84 Whereupon We responded
upon him and removed all the affliction from which
he suffered; and We gave him his family, doubling
their number as an act of grace from Us, and as a
reminder unto all who worship Us. (Qur'an
21:83-84)
41 And call to mind Our
servant Job, [how it was] when he cried out to his
Sustainer, "Behold, Satan has afflicted me with
[utter weariness and suffering:– 42 [and
thereupon was told:] "Strike [the ground with thy
foot: here is cool water to wash with and to
drink!" 43 And We bestowed upon him new
offspring, doubling the number as an act of grace
from Us, and as a reminder unto all who are endowed
with insight. 44 [And finally We told
him:] "Now take in thy hand a small branch of
grass, and strike therewith, and thou wilt not
break your oath!"– for verily, we found him full of
patience in adversity; how excellent a servant [of
Ours], who, behold, would always turn unto Us!
(Qur'an 38:41-44)
From these, it is quite clear that (1) Job's
affliction involved his body as well as his family;
(2) he prayed to God, noting his distress, as well as
complaining about Satan; (3) God answered his call
graciously; he fully recovered and was rewarded
double the number of offspring; (4) his story is to
be "a reminder to all who worship God"; and Job (p)
deserves praise as one who "proved to be patient,"
and who was an "excellent servant", "continuously
turning toward [God] (awwab)."
I find it interesting that Job's patience and his
cry unto God are mentioned side by side in the text:
"for verily, we found him full of
patience in adversity; how excellent
a servant [of Ours], who, behold, would
always turn unto Us!" (38:44) –
and from 21:83 and 38:41 it is clear that Job's
turning to God involves complaint. Job's patience
does not seem to be incompatible with his complaint
about his situation. Another significant point seems
to be the difference between Job's prayers. In one
passage Job (p) cries unto God by saying, "affliction
has befallen me", while in the other he says, "Satan
has afflicted me with weariness and suffering." Given
that the Qur'an denies any creative power to Satan,
and both good and evil are said to be from
God,4
why would Job (p) blame Satan for his situation? Does
he not know that even the sickness is created by God?
These are some of the points worthwhile considering.
Nursi's exegesis will be helpful in unpacking
them.
Nursi on Job's Prayer
Nursi sees the prophet stories in the Qur'an as
"tips of iceberg", i.e. as particular cases under
which universal lessons are concealed.5 In line with the
tradition, Nursi takes Job's prayer in 21:83 as one
of the prayers that needs to be incorporated in a
believer's life. Besides, he regards the fact that
Job's prayer is graciously accepted by God as a clue
that it was an "effective" and successful
prayer.6 In his exegesis, Nursi first gives a
brief narrative background to Job's story. Then he
moves on to discuss the implications for the
reader.
1. Narrative Background
Nursi keeps his background to the Qur'anic episode
to the minimum, for he thinks that there is a meaning
even in "lack" of details in the Qur'an. Nursi
summarizes the story of Job as follows. Job (p)
remains afflicted with an awesome sickness for a long
time. Yet thinking of its great reward, he shows
perfect patience and does not complain. He only
complains to God when this sickness poses a threat to
his connection with God. That is, when "the worms
generated from his wounds" reaches to Job's heart and
tongue and threaten his worship, Job (p) cries for
help, saying, "O my Lord, verily affliction has
befallen me: but Thou art the most merciful of the
merciful!" Here, Nursi notes Job's intention in
prayer: Job does not cry out in a manner accusing God
nor is he primarily concerned about himself. Rather,
in his prayer Job (p) is primarily concerned about
his worship of God. Here lies the secret of Job's
prayer according to Nursi. And, since it forms the
turning point of the story in the Qur'an – bringing
about a radical change in the situation – Nursi
directs his attention to deciphering it.
2. The Secret of Job's Prayer
According to Nursi, Job's prayer was readily
accepted by God because it was a "pure sincere,
disinterested and devout supplication."7 The lack of any
direct request in the prayer supports Nursi's
interpretive move: Job (p) only mentions that he is
in distress and that he trusts in God's mercy. He
makes no direct demands about regaining his health or
his family.
Yet, what does it mean to be unselfish or
disinterested in praying during distress? How can one
be disinterested about one's pain? And even if it
were possible to achieve insensitivity about one's
situation, why would that be a virtue? Does Nursi
really think that one should not care about being in
physical pain or about losing one's family? If so,
this sounds quite inhuman. Fortunately, Nursi does
not mean this.
In fact, Nursi regards human sensitivity and
vulnerability as humankind's greatest
talent.8 For this constitutes the perfect
background against which bounties and gifts of God
shine. That is, what makes the human being the "best
of creation" is her ability to receive a whole
spectrum of physical, emotional and spiritual
pleasures and pains.9 This is a great privilege because it
enables the human being to be an excellent mirror of
the Divine Names:
God Almighty, in order to display His infinite
power and unlimited mercy, has made inherent in man
infinite impotence and unlimited want. Further, in
order to display the infinite variety of the
impress of His Names, He has created man like a
machine receptive to pain and pleasure perceived
from an infinite variety of
directions.10
On the one hand, the human being has the
ability to sense and enjoy a vast range of pleasures,
both spiritual and bodily: "beneficial matters like
good health, well-being, and pleasures cause man to
offer thanks and prompt the human 'machine' to
perform its functions in many respects, and thus man
becomes like a factory producing thanks." On the
other hand, the human being is susceptible to
misfortunes, anxieties and pains which reminds her of
her utter weakness and makes her turn to God with her
whole being.
Hence, Nursi would not suggest that the secret of
Job's (p) supplication lies in being indifferent
about one's affliction. After all, if one is neutral
about being sick, one cannot love the manifestation
of God's Names such as Healer, Provider, and Helper.
What, then, does Nursi mean by "disinterested"
prayer?
It seems that even though Nursi affirms the innate
wish for health and comfort, he is concerned about
the misuse of this inclination. The dislike
of misfortunes is justified only so long as one does
not forget that it is God who makes one dislike the
misfortunes.11 For this dislike is given for a
purpose, i.e. so that we realize our need for God's
mercy and admit this in honesty and praise. The
moment we disconnect this wish from the One who gave
us that wish in the first place, we will imagine a
clash between our own will to get well and God's will
who gives the affliction. In other words, we will be
deluded in thinking that while we want healing, God
opposes us by decreeing sickness, and
therefore that God is against us. Once the
situation is couched in these dichotomous terms,
there emerges the insoluble "problem of evil." That
is, it appears that one has to choose between oneself
and God: either to demand comfort
despite God's will, i.e. to be "selfish,"
or to ignore suffering, which is quite
contrary to one's nature.
According to Nursi, there is no way out of this
impasse. For if God is against me there is no way I
can win. Nursi likens the one who criticizes God's
mercy to someone who "strikes his head against the
anvil and breaks it." Nothing happens to the anvil; I
only destroy myself. To imagine a clash between my
need and the One who gave me that need is "to use a
broken hand to exact revenge[; and this] will only
cause further damage to the hand."12
Needless to say, within the terms of this
dichotomy, one cannot talk of "unselfish" prayer, and
indeed, Nursi's notion of Job's (p) "disinterested"
request is not intelligible at all. Yet, it is
precisely this dichotomy that Nursi sees being
transcended in Job's prayer. In order to make that
prayer, Job (p) must have been aware that his
situation did not mean that God was against him.
Indeed, according to Nursi, such a dichotomy is too
absurd to be real. Nursi notes that if we are
deprived of God, we are deprived of everything, and
hence our fuss about our loss of health becomes
absurd. If we are wretched orphans on earth with no
merciful maker or protector, if our lives do not have
any permanent value or meaning and we are condemned
to a death with no hereafter, we are already in huge
trouble – even if we have the best health and wealth
in the world. Hence Nursi reminds us: "if thou
findest him not, then the whole world is one endless
cruel image. Thou who dost suffer from a worldful of
woe – why complain at one pain?" The solution to this
conundrum is only to be found through turning to God
like Job; hence Nursi advises: "make God thy refuge!
Smile thus in the face of thy woe; woe itself then
shall smile, and smiling, shrink and quite
change!"13
It seems that in his profound prayer, Job (p) is
seeking refuge in God in this way. Job (p) turns to
God not in accusation of Divine mercy but in
patience, which comes from trusting in God's
mercy.
Job's Patience
But, how is this patience really possible? And how
does such patience truly manifest itself? As
Nietzsche rightly said, what really hurts is not the
suffering itself but the meaninglessness of
suffering. Job (p) could 'endure' suffering (which,
to repeat, did not mean enjoying it or being
unaffected by it, but meant rather refraining from
falling into despair) because he knew that it could
neither be meaningless nor cruel. Nursi goes into
insightful explanations of how, even though one would
not long for suffering per se, one can, once it
befalls one, come to terms with it by trusting God's
mercy and wisdom. I will not be able to go into these
details, but will mention one of his metaphors. Nursi
gives the metaphor of a great tailor who hires a poor
man as his model so as to display on him his
wonderful art of dressmaking. The tailor swiftly
dresses the model with a beautiful garment and then
starts to change the dress to display other beautiful
styles. In this situation, asks Nursi, does the model
have the right to complain by saying, "why are you
changing my beautiful garment and giving me
discomfort by making me stand up and sit down?"
Surely he does not. Similarly,
in order to display the impresses of His Most
Beautiful Names, the All-Glorious Maker, the
Peerless Creator, alters within numerous
circumstances the garment of existence He clothes
on living creatures, bejewelled with senses and
subtle faculties like eyes, ears, the reason, and
the heart. He changes it within very many
situations. Among these are circumstances in
the form of suffering and calamity which show
the meanings of some of His Names, and the rays of
mercy within flashes of wisdom, and the subtle
instances of beauty within those rays of
mercy.14
Thus, whatever befalls humankind, including
calamities, serves a great purpose of making Divine
art known.15 For instance, the Divine Name
Healer necessitates sickness, while the Divine Name
Provider calls for hunger and thirst. Hence Nursi
concludes, "since life is a mirror to Beautiful names
of God, whatever comes to life is
beautiful."16 Hence, there is no real evil but
only apparent evil.
There is one exception, however. It is the
affliction that is brought upon one by one's ill
will. This brings us to the crux of Nursi's
interpretation of Job's prayer: the real affliction
and the real evil is the one that damages the
servant's relationship with her Creator.
Real Affliction
As alluded to earlier, one is in serious trouble
when one's relationship with God is harmed. This is
the only affliction that is really evil. According to
Nursi, Job's prayer is primarily meant to remedy this
evil more than any apparent evil, such as bodily or
emotional discomfort. Indeed, Nursi emphasizes that
in our emulation of this great prophet, we need to
incorporate his prayer especially for overcoming this
evil.
Nursi notes that corresponding to Job's "outer"
bodily sicknesses, we have "inner" spiritual
sicknesses: "If our inner being was to be turned
outward, and our outer being turned inward, we would
appear more wounded and diseased than Job. For each
sin that we commit and each doubt that enters our
mind inflicts wounds on our heart and our spirit."
That is why, according to Nursi, we need Job's (p)
prayer even more than Job (p). For his physical
wounds were threatening merely his worldly life,
while our spiritual wounds threaten our eternal life.
And just as the worms reached Job's heart and tongue,
threatening his physical worship, "the wounds that
sin inflicts upon us and the temptations and doubts
that arise from those wounds will—may God protect
us!—penetrate our inner heart, the seat of belief,
and thus wound belief. Just as the worms that arose
from his wounds penetrated to his heart and tongue,
so too penetrating to the spiritual joy of the
tongue, the interpreter of belief, they cause it to
shun in revulsion the remembrance of God, and reduce
it to silence."17
The danger in sinning is not that it readily
obliterates one's faith. To be sure, the sinner is
still a believer. Yet, the door of unfaith has opened
before him. For, one may be misled by one's feeling
of guilt, just as, as mentioned earlier, one can be
misled by one's innate dislike of misfortune. Nursi
notes, for instance, that when one commits a shameful
deed secretly, one's feeling of guilt, if not
channeled to repentance, may make one
dislike the idea that there is a hereafter,
or that there are angels that record one's deeds, or
even the idea that there is a God toward whom one is
accountable.18 In turn, "there will arise from
this [dislike] a desire to deny God, and bear enmity
toward Him. If some doubt concerning the existence of
the Divine Being comes to his heart, he will be
inclined to embrace it like a conclusive proof." If
one does not seek remedy for one's pain of guilt by
turning to God, one may eventually end up denying
God. This, however, only exacerbates one's trouble,
as pointed out earlier: "The wretch [who, for
instance, had failed to do his rituals] does not know
that although he is delivered by denial [of God] from
the slight trouble of duty of worship, he has made
himself, by that same denial, the target for millions
of troubles that are far more awesome. Fleeing from
the bite of a gnat, he welcomes the bite of the
snake."19 The person, having lost God in his
heart as well as in his tongue, will find himself in
utter emptiness and insecurity. This loss, indeed, is
the real affliction according to Nursi. If
this is real danger, the prayer should be
directed toward it. The main concern of one's prayer
should be about this threat to one's relationship
with God. Hence the secret of Job's prayer: it was
"effective" because Job was primarily interested in
maintaining his connection with God.
By making this analogy between inner and outer
sickness, Nursi not only appropriates Job's prayer
for the contemporary reader's context, but he also
helps us to understand Job's reference to Satan in
the Qur'anic passage: "And call into mind Our servant
Job, [how it was] when he cried out to his Sustainer,
'Behold, Satan has afflicted me with
weariness and suffering!"20 It seems that in
turning to God, Job's primary concern is the danger
posed by the whisperings of Satan, who was probably
trying to convince him that his Lord has abandoned
him or perhaps that he was being wronged by God.
Satan was trying to portray Job's affliction as evil,
while the real evil in fact lay in believing in
Satan's suggestion that God is against the servant.
When Job is complaining about Satan, he must be
complaining about these troubling suggestions. Hence,
as Nursi notes, it is for the sake of his worship of
God that Job (p) cries out for help. Unlike the
vicious model of Satan in which one has to choose
between God's decree and one's own comfort, Job (p)
seems to realize that his comfort lies in trusting
God's decree.
Thus, to sum up, real patience expresses itself in
impatiently crying out to God and complaining about
narrow concepts of evil. The "narrow concept"
involved here, as explicated above, is Satan's
version of evil, which takes affliction to be real
evil – perceiving it as a Divine attack. Yet "real"
evil consists precisely in this misperception of
affliction. Hence, as Nursi notes, the Qur'anic
passage on Job teaches us to redefine evil, and thus
patience, from a true perspective. It is not that
Nursi sees a shift here simply in the
content of evil or of patience. The
redefinition of evil does not simply involve a
distinction between the things that befall Job,
namely sickness and Satan's whisperings. Similarly,
patience is not simply a choice between endurance and
crying out. Rather, the redefinition of evil comes
with the recognition that nothing that befalls us,
including Satan's evil whisperings, can really hurt
us as long as we realize that the Merciful cannot be
against us and we seek refuge in God – which is what
Job does. It is thus for good reason that the Qur'an
notes, "for verily we found him full of patience
in adversity: how excellent a servant [of Ours] who,
behold, would always turn to Us!"
(38:44).
1. Throughout
this essay I have used Muhammad Asad's translation of
the Qur'an, The Message of the Qur'an (Dar
al Andalus: Gibraltar, 1984).
2. "P" stands
for the shortened form of the traditional Islamic
phrase "peace be upon him", evoked after mentioning
the name of any prophet.
3. Ibn Kathir,
for instance, mentions even "the heavenly assembly"
as a prelude to Job's affliction.
4. See, for
instance, Qur'an 4:78; 16:99.
5. Bediuzzaman
Said Nursi, The Words, from the Risale-i
Nur Collection, trans. Sukran Vahide (Istanbul:
Sozler Publications, 1998), p. 376. (All of his works
that are translated into English are available online
at <http://www.sozler.com.tr>)
6. Nursi,
Fruits of Belief, from the Risale-i Nur
Collection, trans. Hamid Algar (Ankara: Ihlas
Nur Nesriyat, n.d.), p. 21. [2nd Flash]
7. Ibid., p.
22.
8. Cf. "O
humankind! You are in need of God." (Qur'an
35:15)
9. Cf. "and
that it is He alone who causes [you] to laugh and
weep." (Qur'an 53:43)
10. Nursi,
Fruits, p. 33.
11. Cf.
Qur'an 7:94.
12. Nursi,
Fruits, p. 32.
13. Ibid.,
p. 32.
14. Nursi,
Words, [26th Word], p. 488, italics
added.
15. Nursi
also explains how the person is paid for being model
of Divine art, both in this world and in the world to
come.
16. Nursi,
Words, p. 488.
17. Nursi,
Fruits, pp. 22-23.
18. Nursi
gives examples: "For example, a man who secretly
commits a shameful sin will fear the disgrace that
results if others become aware of it. Thus the
existence of angels and spirit beings will be hard
for him to endure, and he will long to deny it, even
on the strength of the slightest indication.
Similarly, one who commits a major sin deserving of
the torment of Hell, will desire the non-existence of
Hell wholeheartedly, and whenever he hears of the
threat of Hell-fire, he will dare to deny it on the
strength of a slight indication and doubt, unless he
takes up in protection the shield of repentance and
seeking forgiveness" (ibid., 22-23).
19. Ibid.,
pp. 22-23.
20. Qur'an
38:41. Muhammad Asad in his explanation of verse
38:41 also notes that here in this prayer Job (p) is
complaining about "Satan's whisperings."
2004, Society for
Scriptural Reasoning
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