Archive
SCIENTIFIC WORK - 2025 SCIENTIFIC WORK - 2024 SCIENTIFIC WORK - 2023 SCIENTIFIC WORK - 2022 SCIENTIFIC WORK - 2021 SCIENTIFIC WORK - 2020 SCIENTIFIC WORK - 2019 SCIENTIFIC WORK - 2018 SCIENTIFIC WORK - 2017 SCIENTIFIC WORK - 2016 SCIENTIFIC WORK - 2015 SCIENTIFIC WORK - 2014 SCIENTIFIC WORK - 2013 SCIENTIFIC WORK - 2012 SCIENTIFIC WORK - 2011 SCIENTIFIC WORK - 2010 SCIENTIFIC WORK - 2009 SCIENTIFIC WORK - 2008 SCIENTIFIC WORK - 2007

DOI:  https://doi.org/10.36719/2663-4619/123/82-88

Mehmet Ergun

Bartin University

https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6149-2358

mergun@bartin.edu.tr

 

The Sanctity of Labor and Work According to Islamic Law

 

Abstract

 

The existence, sustenance, and sovereignty of humankind in the universe are proportionate to their labor and work. The most sacred gain for an individual is what they produce and earn through their own effort. According to a fundamental principle, one’s labor and work are never in vain; the reward of such efforts will inevitably and fully be granted one day. For this reason, humanity has been encouraged to engage in productive activity—even by going to the mountains with a rope to gather a bundle of wood—and has been strongly urged to avoid laziness and begging. All prophets sent by Allah as leaders for humanity personally practiced various professions, ensuring their own and their families’ livelihoods through lawful and legitimate means without depending on others. They left behind the principle of “the sanctity of honest labor and lawful earnings” as a prophetic tradition. To work and produce is a sacred endeavor that gives meaning to life, brings peace, and provides blessing. Using the intellect, body, health, and will bestowed by Allah in pursuits that please Him constitutes a source of dignity and honor for human beings. Conversely, unjust and unlawful means of gain, sought through laziness or irresponsibility, are deemed behaviors contrary to human dignity. A Muslim is obliged, on the one hand, to earn sustenance for their own survival, and on the other hand, to provide for the dependents under their care. Additionally, through giving from their earnings with a sense of social responsibility and as an act of worship, they seek happiness in both this world and the Hereafter. It is precisely because of this multifaceted contribution to both worldly and spiritual life that labor and work are considered sacred in Islam. For this reason, this paper examines, with supporting evidence, the subject of “The Sanctity of Labor and Work According to Islamic Law.”

Keywords: Islamic law, labor, work, production, sanctity

 

 


Views: 46