Chapter 2: Surat Al-Baqarah (The Cow), verses 215-216
Translation:
“They will ask you about alms-giving. Say: ‘Whatever you bestow in charity must go to your parents and to your kinsfolk, to orphans and to the helpless and to the wayfarer in need. God is aware of whatever good you do.’ Fighting is ordained for you, much as you dislike it. But you may hate a thing although it is good for you, and love a thing although it is bad for you. God knows, but you do not know.” (2:215-216)
Commentary:
The general
tendency is for people to spend their money on themselves and their families.
But Islam urges them to spend for the cause of God, which is quite a different
form of expenditure. While the former involves spending on oneself, the latter
means spending on others. Another tendency is to exert one’s energy on
attaining worldly position — something which meets the eye — while striving
for everlasting reward, which we still cannot see, should be one’s most
important goal. It is the very thing that man dislikes that is pleasing to God,
and God’s good pleasure alone will benefit us in the next, infinitely vaster
world. In God’s sight, evil lies in man doing what he himself wants, rather
than what pleases his Creator. Evil may benefit a person in this temporal world;
in the hereafter it will do him only harm.
“God knows, but you do
not know” means that God is above the feelings which only touch the surface,
impulses aimed at that which meets the eye. Men tend to remain caught up in such
superficial emotions. Consequently, they form prejudiced opinions, they cannot
think objectively. God’s decision, bears the stamp of reality. Unaffected by
unrelated issues, it is true and infallible. Men, for their part, are fallible
creatures. Spurred on by base emotions, they tend to arrive at biased, unjust
and unrealistic conclusions. It is better then to accept what God tells us, and
to renounce our personal views.