The Anatomy of Belief: Exploring Faith, Certainty, and Intention - Session 2
Unpacking the profound spiritual wisdom of Dua-e Makarem al-Akhlaq to understand the delicate balance between knowing the truth and actively choosing it.
The Four Pillars of Spiritual Ascent
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At the heart of Islamic spiritual tradition lies the Dua-e Makarem al-Akhlaq (The Prayer for Noble Morals), a profound supplication attributed to Imam Zayn al-Abidin (AS). This prayer serves not just as a ritual, but as a vast treasure trove of spiritual psychology. The supplication opens with four foundational requests from the Divine:
The most complete faith (Iman)
The best of certainties (Yaqin)
The best of intentions (Niyyah)
The best of deeds (A’mal)
By carefully analysing these requests, we uncover a fascinating distinction. The Imam asks for faith to be made “complete” (implying it has levels and degrees), but asks for certainty to be the “best” (implying a difference in quality, rather than quantity). This nuanced phrasing opens the door to a deeper understanding of human belief.
The Difference Between Knowledge and Faith
To understand faith, we must first understand how it differs from raw knowledge or belief. Knowledge can often be completely involuntary. If you accidentally touch a hot stove, you instantly know and believe that the fire burns. You did not choose to acquire this belief; the physical reality forced it upon you.
However, faith (Iman) is profoundly different. You can possess absolute, undeniable knowledge of a fact and still refuse to have faith in it. The Quran illustrates this through the story of Pharaoh and Prophet Moses. When Moses presented his undeniable miracles, Pharaoh and his followers knew in their hearts that these signs were from God.
As the Quran states,
“And they rejected them, while their souls were convinced of them, out of injustice and arrogance.” (Surah an-Naml, Chapter 27, The Ant, Verse 14)
They possessed complete knowledge and certainty of the truth, yet they actively chose to deny it.
The Equation of True Faith
If knowledge alone doesn’t equal faith, what is the missing ingredient? True faith requires an element of free will. It is the combination of intellectual belief and the heart’s desire.
You can have a strong conjecture about a truth (even if it’s not 100% absolute certainty) and still possess profound faith because your heart embraces it. Conversely, you can have 100% intellectual certainty about a truth, but if your heart rebels against it, you will remain devoid of faith. Therefore, faith is ultimately the acceptance of the heart—the willingness to bear the weight of the truth. Because both our intellectual understanding and our hearts’ desires fluctuate, our faith naturally experiences degrees of weakness and strength.
Why the Truth is Often Rejected
This dynamic explains a common historical phenomenon: why did so many people reject the concept of the Resurrection when the prophets first preached it?
It was not a logical dispute about God’s power. If God could create humanity from nothing, bringing them back to life would logically be entirely within His power. The rejection stemmed from the consequences of the truth. Accepting the Resurrection meant accepting absolute accountability. Every word spoken, every action taken, and every resource consumed would be subject to divine reckoning. People rejected the truth not because their minds couldn’t comprehend it, but because their hearts desired unchecked freedom and the ability to live without moral boundaries. They chose willful ignorance over divine responsibility.
Elevating Certainty
While faith fluctuates, certainty (Yaqin) represents the absolute bedrock of spiritual realisation. However, not all certainty is created equal. Being certain that the sun will rise tomorrow is an ordinary certainty with no spiritual merit. True spiritual certainty has three ascending qualities:
‘Ilm al-Yaqin (The Knowledge of Certainty): Understanding truth through strong, undeniable proofs.
‘Ayn al-Yaqin (The Eye of Certainty): Witnessing the truth firsthand, almost as a spiritual vision.
Haqq al-Yaqin (The Truth of Certainty): Completely embodying and realising the truth within oneself.
The prayer specifically asks for the “best of certainties”—certainty in what resides with God. True certainty transforms a person; as early Islamic narrations point out, a sign of genuine certainty is a deep reverence for God that prevents a person from compromising divine principles just to please other people.
Cultivating the Best of Intentions
The journey of faith and certainty culminates in our intentions and actions. However, cultivating the “best of intentions” is incredibly difficult. We cannot simply force ourselves to have perfectly pure motives.
This is why the supplication turns entirely to divine reliance: “O Allah, through Your grace, provide for my intention... And reform through Your power what has been corrupted in me.” By asking for God’s subtle grace (Lutf), we acknowledge our own limitations. We are asking the Divine to intervene, to repair the damage we have done to our own souls in the past, and to guide our hearts toward the purest intentions, which ultimately manifest as the best of deeds.







