We Have Become Very Creative With Allah
Modern Muslims are actually quite impressive.
Not necessarily in patience.
Not necessarily in discipline.
Not necessarily in self control.
But in negotiation.
We negotiate with Allah in ways previous generations could never imagine.
Not openly, of course.
We do not usually say:
“I reject Allah’s commands.”
That sounds too dramatic.
Too dangerous.
Too obvious.
Instead, we say things like:
“Technically it is not wrong.”
“Allah knows my heart.”
“It is complicated.”
“Everyone does it.”
“At least I am not as bad as others.”
“It is just modern life.”
And somewhere along the way, many of us quietly stopped asking:
“Does Allah love this?”
And started asking:
“Can I emotionally justify this to myself?”
That is where the problem begins.
Not necessarily in the sin itself.
But in becoming too confident in our own reasoning.
Especially when society agrees with us.
Friends support us.
The internet validates us.
And our conscience slowly becomes quieter over time.
Because a quiet conscience does not always mean Allah is pleased.
Controversial Relationship With Allah
Perhaps the most dangerous spiritual condition today is not openly rejecting Allah.
It is quietly becoming too certain that Allah agrees with everything we have emotionally normalised.
Many people still want Allah in their lives.
They still make duas.
Still pray occasionally.
Still listen to Islamic reminders.
Still cry during difficult moments.
Still hope for barakah.
But somewhere deep inside, the relationship changes.
Allah is no longer fully obeyed.
He is slowly negotiated with.
Not through direct rebellion.
But through carefully edited reasoning.
We begin filtering religion through comfort,
modern culture,
personal emotions,
social approval,
ego,
trauma,
and convenience.
And after repeating our justifications long enough, our conscience becomes calmer.
That is the frightening part.
Because modern culture increasingly teaches people that if something feels emotionally reasonable, it must also be morally acceptable.
But Islam never taught us to worship our emotions.
Islam taught us to struggle against ourselves too.
And perhaps that is the real controversial relationship many people have with Allah today.
Not disbelief.
But self legitimising spirituality.
“Everyone Does It” Has Become a Spiritual Argument
One of the most dangerous sentences today is:
“Everyone does it.”
Backbiting becomes normal office bonding.
Mocking others becomes “just jokes.”
Flirting becomes “harmless.”
Harsh speech becomes “being real.”
Public humiliation becomes “speaking facts.”
Slowly, sins stop looking ugly because society keeps repainting them.
And once something becomes socially common, many people unconsciously assume Allah must understand and tolerate it too.
But normalisation has never been proof of righteousness.
Entire societies can normalize things while still being spiritually unhealthy.
That is why the believer should fear not only sin.
But also the death of discomfort toward sin.
Some Grudges Are Not About Pain Anymore. They Are About Ego
This is becoming very common today.
People cut off siblings,
relatives,
friends,
or even parents for years.
Not because reconciliation is impossible.
But because pride slowly becomes disguised as “protecting my peace.”
Of course, Islam does not force people to remain in abusive or dangerous relationships.
Boundaries matter.
Mental wellbeing matters.
But sometimes, if we are brutally honest, the distance is no longer about healing.
It becomes punishment.
A silent emotional revenge.
And the frightening part is how spiritually justified we can start feeling while holding onto arrogance for years.
Especially when everyone around us says:
“You do not owe anyone anything.”
Maybe not.
But what if Allah still disliked the pride living quietly inside the heart?
Harsh With Others. Flexible With Ourselves.
Some people become extremely strict when judging others.
But strangely flexible when justifying themselves.
When others make mistakes, suddenly religion becomes very serious.
But when they themselves need convenience, exceptions suddenly appear everywhere.
This selective strictness is dangerous because it slowly turns personal benefit into a moral compass.
For example, some may speak aggressively about gender interaction,
modesty, or religious boundaries when discussing others.
Yet when convenience benefits them personally, the same strictness suddenly becomes “context.” This can be seen in office or transport or school gender mixing settings.
That is not sincerity.
That is selective morality.
And perhaps deep down, many people already know it.
Preaching Is Easy. Internal Accountability Is Hard.
Islam does not require perfection before advising others.
Otherwise nobody would be qualified to remind anyone.
But there is still danger when preaching becomes easier than self reflection.
Today, it is possible to post reminders,
share Quran verses,
upload motivational Islamic content,
and still avoid confronting our own unchecked behavior honestly.
Sometimes religion becomes presentation instead of transformation.
And the frightening thing is that public religious expression can slowly make a person feel spiritually safer than they actually are.
We Fear Social Disapproval More Than Displeasing Allah
This may be one of the quietest spiritual crises of modern life.
Many people today do not ask:
“Is this pleasing to Allah?”
They ask:
“Will society accept this?”
“Will people judge me?”
“Will I still fit in?”
“Will this make my life harder?”
And slowly, social comfort becomes more emotionally important than spiritual caution.
Especially in fast moving societies like Singapore where modern life rewards convenience, image management, and emotional comfort.
People are rarely pushed toward open disbelief.
They are pushed toward quiet compromise.
The Most Frightening Possibility
One of the most frightening possibilities in modern life is this:
A person may spend years believing they are spiritually safe…
while quietly normalising what Allah dislikes.
Not because they rejected Islam.
But because they became too skilled at explaining themselves to themselves.
Every decision had a reason.
Every compromise had context.
Every controversy had emotional justification.
And slowly,
the heart stopped trembling.
Perhaps that is the real controversial relationship with Allah today.
Not open disbelief.
But the quiet confidence that whatever we choose,
Allah will naturally understand.
Even if deep down…
we never seriously asked whether He approved.
Related Reads
• You Think You Are Close to Allah… But You Chose Only What Suits You

