Moral Violation and God's Punishment: The Missing Link
The argument that moral violations invite God’s punishment (such as in
the form of natural disaster) is a famous one. In a way, this argument
is usually used by its proponents to support moral enforcement. Since
God’s punishment will be very costly to all of us, it would be better if
we spend our resources to maintain the good morality of society.
The
question is: Is this a plausible argument? The quick answer would be
no. Some of the arguments against moral enforcement have already been
set out in my previous article. This time around, we will try to take a
look at this famous religious foundation of moral enforcement.
Saying
that God might punish the people for misbehavior and moral violations
is not necessarily incorrect. There are certain instances in the Holy
Book that give us examples of God’s harsh punishment to those who oppose
God’s rules. So we have some precedents here.
But we need to dig
deeper and try to understand the major aspects of those precedents, at
least from Islamic point of view. All of those cases happen in the
distant past where the prophets and their supporters are minorities,
they involve a situation where the prophets have directly informed the
people about the possible punishment from God, and there are also
preliminary warnings from the nature indicating the coming of a
disaster.
What can we derive from such cases? God
practically works in accordance with modern legal conceptions, i.e. no
law shall be enforced to the people without proper and timely public
disclosure. By proper, I mean that the law has been disseminated in a
way that is understandable to the public. After all, you cannot expect
someone to follow your order if they do not have any capacity to
understand such order.
Of course this will be problematic for our
modern age since the last prophet of Islam died more than 1,400 years
ago. There are no longer direct messenger of God that can actually
inform us precisely what God really wants.
Now, some might argue
that the existence of prophet is no longer necessary since the prophet
has left us the Holy Book. That might be plausible but not sufficient.
Based on the precedents provided by the Koran, God’s punishment was
enforced to society where no record of systematic holy book was
available. Interestingly, for societies that received a systematic holy
book, there is also no record of direct punishment from God.
One
then can argue that when a society have a systematic rules of moral
values, God gives the chance to such society to settle their own
problems. Whether they will follow such rules or whether they will
prosper or not is simply another case.
Notice also that once we
discussed the history of Islam, we no longer see any threats of
punishment from God and the history of Islamic civilization works in
accordance with the laws of nature. Some existed for a long time and
prospered, some were crushed. But at all time, the civilizations depend
entirely on how good they cope with the situation and condition,
including in this case, how they apply and enforce the rules.
And
I think this is the correct interpretation. In a world where a prophet
still exists and can directly deliver the heavenly message to all of us,
people can easily understand what God wants. Then it would be logical
for the people to comply with God rules of morality and for God to gives
punishment based on a fair warning mechanism.
But without a
prophet, rules become rationally indeterminate, namely that there are
various ways to read the provisions of such rules and how to enforce
them in practice (i.e. whether they should stay as moral rules or
whether they should be formally turned into laws).
Without any
practical authority to determine the absolutely correct interpretation
(since no one can speak on behalf of God), how can we expect a fair God
to impose punishment in the form of disasters against indeterminate
moral violations?
Furthermore, there is no way we can
actually know whether a disaster is a part of God’s punishment. First,
without any authority from God, making the claim that a disaster is a
form of God’s punishment is as easy as making the claims that cats and
dogs are spies from Mars.
Second, we can actually say that in
terms of fairness, the overall distribution of natural disaster might be
fair enough, i.e. that no one in this planet is completely safe from
the power of nature. This means that whether you are good or bad,
disaster may always occur against you. So how should we interpret that?
Thus,
we should stick with such fact and accept the notion that there is
indeed a missing link between moral violations and God’s punishment.
Sure, you can always make your own claim, but it is not good enough to
justify any moral enforcement attempt.



