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ADVANTAGES & DISADVANTAGES
OF MARRIAGE
by
Muhammad Abdul-Rauf, Ph.D
ADVANTAGES
1. Procreation
This is the paramount advantage of
marriage; namely, to contribute through legitimate means to the continuity
and preservation of the human race. The sexual urge serves the function
of bringing the mates together for the fulfillment of this basic objective.
The procreational objective has
four aspects: to fulfill the will of God; to seek the love of the Prophet
Muhammad; to benefit from the prayer of the child; and to profit from
its intercession on behalf of its parents.
Almighty God, in providing the
male with intricate fertilizing organs and the female with a receptive
fertile womb, is telling us in the most eloquent but voiceless language
of the purpose of these provisions. To let them be idle is to ignore the
divine wisdom written on these God-given instruments. Imagine a farmer
who, although he is given a piece of fertile land, seeds and farming tools,
just lets the land go to waste, the seeds rot and tools rust. This farmer
not only is a fool, but is to be condemned for his wasteful and harmful
indifference.
Procreation through marriage is
also a means of seeking the pleasure of the Prophet Muhammad, peace and
blessings be upon him, who is believed to be alive in his grave and to
whom the deeds of the members of his nation are regularly presented. He
has called upon his nation: "Marry, so your number increases. The
practice of marriage is an answer to his call.
Prayer of a child is believed
to be beneficial to his dead parent. The Prophet, peace be upon him says:
When
the son of Adam dies, nothing would be of any more benefit to him except
three things: a continuous charity, some useful knowledge he has left
behind and a child who may pray for him.
Should the child die early and the
parents accept its loss as an act of God, without despair, it would be like
a ticket to Paradise for them. The Prophet, prayers and peace be upon him,
is related to have said:
A
child [who dies before reaching puberty] leads the parents to Paradise.
A child will
be brought [on the Day of Judgment] and told, "Get into Paradise."
But he will stand reluctantly and angrily at its gate and say, "I
am not going to enter Paradise without my parents." It will then
be said, "let his parents enter Paradise with him."
It is related that an unmarried man
of good conduct who lived in the early past shouted when he was rising from
sleep one morning. "Help me to get married! Help me to get married.
Maybe God will give me a child who will be useful to me on the Day of Judgment."
He was asked, "What has happened?" He said, "I dreamt that
the Day of Judgment had come, and all mankind was raised and brought together
in one place with the burning sun close over their heads. Everyone became
very thirsty and I was dying of thirst. Suddenly, children appeared among
us, lively and handsome, covered with protective light and carrying silver
ewers and golden goblets. They offered drinks to some but left out most.
When I stretched my hand to one of them and said, 'Give me to drink, I am
exhausted because of thirst,' he said, 'You have no child among us.' I asked,
Who are you? He said, 'We are Muslim children; our parents lost us when
we were young!"
2. Fulfillment
of the Natural Urge
The sexual urge is perhaps the
most powerful human inclination. It seems not to be an end in itself,
but a means to bring the mates together for the purpose of fertilization.
Yet its fulfillment is the most enjoyable and absorbing of human experiences.
Failure to fulfill this urge is likely to lead either to deviation or
to maladjustment. Deviation is dishonourable and is strictly forbidden
in Islam. Therefore, the Prophet, peace be upon him, calls upon youth,
saying:
O
you young people! Whoever of you can afford to get married, let him do
so. Those who cannot afford it, let them practice fasting, as it may be
a protection to them [against sin].
It is believed that the intense pleasure
of the climax of the sexual act, though short-lived, has the value of reminding
the believers of the more durable and more perfect enjoyment that awaits
them in Paradise. The experience should enhance their zeal to comply with
divine teachings.
So the practice of marriage is
the way to remove evil and protect against shameful failure. To try to
suppress the sexual urge by other means, such as fasting, may succeed
in preventing the eyes from looking at forbidden scenes and keeping the
sexual organs away from committing heinous abominations; but there is
no way of freeing the heart from engaging in meanest thoughts, pondering
and dreaming of acts it craves for, even during the hallowed time of the
performance of prayers. A person of any degree of respectability would
never dare to speak openly of such mean thoughts to any creature, but
he has no control over his mind to prevent if from roaming into these
thoughts when he is addressing his Creator in prayers! Some cannot afford
to do without women. Some also say that two-thirds of man's wisdom is
lost when his male organ becomes erect. Al-Junaid, one of the major founders
of the Sufi movement, used to say, "The sexual act is as important
to me as food." And thus a wife is food for the man and a measure
for purifying his heat. Therefore the Prophet, peace and blessings be
upon him, commanded that whenever a man sees a woman and feels attracted
to her, he should go and release his urge with his own wife in order to
remove the evil thoughts from his mind. The Prophet sometimes added, "His
wife surely can offer as much as this woman does." He
also forbade visiting women when husbands are away. It is related that
Ibn 'Abbas, a cousin of the Prophet, once noticed a youth staying behind
after a lecture he had given, when the other members of the audience had
gone. When Ibn 'Abbas asked him about his problem, the reluctant youth
complained that when he was overwhelmed by sexual excitement, he released
himself by performing masturbation. Ibn 'Abbas was horrified and condemned
the act, but said that the practice was less abominable than fornication.
It was because of fear of the
danger which might arise from an unfulfilled sexual urge that the early
Muslims did not hesitate to rush to new marriage once they became widowed.
Imam 'Ali, cousin and son-in-law of the Prophet, remarried on the seventh
day of the death of his wife Fatimah.
3. A Healthy
Relaxation
In marriage there is comfort to
the soul, there is beauty to look at, there is company, and there is play
and joking and relaxation, all of which relieve the heart from its burdens
and make the mind better able to concentrate during prayers and worship.
To be always serious and deprive the soul of its joy is boring to the
heart and could blind it. Relaxing through the company of the spouse is
healthy; and that is why the Qur'an describes the spouse as a source of
mutual comfort. It is said that it is wise to divide one's time over three
types of activities: worshiping the Lord, self-examination and entertainment
of the heart. The Prophet, peace and blessings be upon him, used to say,
"Two worldly things are beloved to me -
women and perfume. But the light of my eye is in prayers."
It is related that Al-Asma'i, an ancient Arab philologist, once encountered
a beautiful Bedouin woman in the desert wearing a red dress and holding
worry beads in her beautifully henna-dyed hand. Al-Asma'i remarked, "What
a contrast!" meaning that the worry beads, a sign of deep religious
devotion, and the henna dye in the hands, a popular cosmetic practice,
did not go together. The beautiful righteous woman retorted poetically,
"There is in me a devotion to God which I cannot neglect; but there
must also be room for my heart and for my pleasure."
4. A Comfortable
Home
Marriage, moreover, provides cooperation
in the household and greatly relieves one from worries. Spouses cooperate
in the management of the house, in its upkeep, in cooking and washing,
and so forth. And thus there will be more time for worship and seeking
knowledge, and a climate conducive to concentration. It is therefore said
that a righteous wife is not a worldly asset only; she is a sure way to
success on the Day of Judgment. The Prophet, peace be upon him, says:
Seek
to have a grateful heart, a sweet tongue and a believing, righteous wife
who would help you in your endeavor to success on the Last Day.
He also says:
If
God loves a man, He give him a righteous wife. If he looks at her, she
pleases him; when he is with her, she is marvelous company; and when he
is away, she observes conscientiously his rights, protecting his property
and preserving her honour.
5. Social Importance
Finally, by adding responsibilities
upon the individual, marriage enhances his status in society and gives
him an opportunity for training in bearing the hardships of life. Living
with a spouse, a person of different inclinations and background, trains
one in accommodating oneself to new experiences; each party helps the
other in the exercise of the virtues of patience and forbearance. The
responsibility of rearing children and the need to earn for their living
are added meritorious aspect arising from marriage. Listen to the Prophet
when he says:
A
man will be rewarded for what he spends on his wife, even for putting
a morsel of food into her mouth.
He also says:Whoever
performs his prayers correctly, and spends on his children in spite of
his modest means, and does not speak ill against others, will be in Paradise
as close to me as these [two fingers of mine].
He also says:
Whosoever
is given three daughters and spends on them and treats them well . . .
surely God will reward him in Paradise.
DISADVANTAGES
There is no rose without thorns,
and marriage is no exception. There is no relationship that modifies the
mode of life of the individual or curtails the individual's freedom of
action so suddenly or so profoundly as does marriage. Whether husband
or wife, each has to take into account the reaction of the other party
to whatever he or she may do.
1. Burdens
and Risks
Upon marrying, the husband immediately
carries the burden of the responsibility of his wife's welfare; and each
birth brings forth more burdens. Sickness and other crises which may occur
to his wife or to any of his children will be his own problems, and many
of the things he would be able to enjoy by himself may fall outside his
reach because of his domestic burden. And thus marriage brings him both
hardships and deprivations.
The wife also, in addition to
her husband's demands, becomes exposed to the burden of pregnancy, the
pangs of birth, child care and the heavy task of nursing her husband and
children when they are sick. She has to do the shopping, prepare the daily
meals, and wash and clean. She has also to pay regard to her husband's
wishes and attitude. And so marriage for her is hard work and curtailment
of her freedom.
Another disadvantage is the risk
that marriage may prove to be a failure. If it is completely broken, then
that is disastrous; and if it is maintained in spite of continuous troubles,
life becomes hell. It is also likely in such a case of mutual tension
that the parties behave unjustly to each other; and this will pile up
sins for which they will deserve punishment on the Day of Judgment.
Moreover, the husband, in his
search to satisfy the insatiable desires of an overambitious wife, or
the needs of his children, may resort to corrupt or dishonest means, which
would bring ruin to himself in this wold and severe punishment in the
life to come. The Qur'an remarks in this respect:
O you who believe,
surely of your wives and your children there are enemies to you. So therefore
beware of them. [Qur'an 64:14]
Even if things proceed smoothly and
comfortably in the household, the company of the wife and her attractions
may excessively occupy the time and thought of her husband; and she may
become too often engaged in amorous activities with him. It is said, "Wisdom
is lost between the thighs of women."
2. Refutation
of Disadvantages
These seeming disadvantages may
appear to outweigh the disadvantages, however, the burdened spouse is
well compensated by the relief from the solitude and boredom of bachelorhood
through the company of the other party and the children they both rear.
Hardships they may suffer are worthy sacrifices in the interest of society.
If everyone should run away from the responsibilities of marriage, mankind
would degenerate, decline and ultimately disappear.
Engagement of the mind in the
affairs of the household is not alien to the domain of divine worship.
After all, the mind needs diversion and cannot easily be occupied in one
type of work all the time.
The possibility of resorting to
corrupt means to provide for domestic financial needs only arises with
unscrupulous persons, married or otherwise; and marriage or need alone
does not lead to corruption with conscientious, honest people. Married
couples, however, should use their wisdom and manage their affairs within
their means. They should not stretch their expenses beyond the income
which they legitimately earn.
The possibility of failure in
marriage is not a good cause for delay or reluctance. After all, there
is a risk in every course of action in life, be it business, study, a
journey or any other venture. If uncertainty of success were to debar
us from venturing the risk, life would surely become paralyzed. It is
only in courage and challenge that individuals and nations can aspire
to glory. Moreover, if due care is exercised in picking one's spouse,
the possibility of failure becomes rather remote.
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