T h e V i s i o n o f I s l a m
        
        
          14
        
        
          feelings take the form of a spiritual anguish, they are more piquant
        
        
          by far than anything in this world. They cannot be compared with
        
        
          worldly delights. Intuition tells us that these inner feelings are
        
        
          reflections of that superior, divine reward which is called Heaven.
        
        
          It is said, therefore, in the Quran that the Heaven into which the
        
        
          believers will enter in the Hereafter will be a “known provision”
        
        
          (37:41) to them. It will not be a thing unknown, but a thing with
        
        
          which they were already acquainted in the life of this world:
        
        
          “He will admit them to Paradise He has made known to them”
        
        
          (47:6).
        
        
          According to Abu Saeed Khudri, the Prophet once said: “The
        
        
          man who goes to Heaven will recognize his home even better than
        
        
          he recognized his house on earth.” (Bukhari).
        
        
          When men give charity “with their hearts filled with awe…”
        
        
          (23:61); when they are able to recite the Quran in such a way that
        
        
          their eyes are “filled with tears” (5:86); when, while intensely
        
        
          remembering God, they “forsake their beds to pray to their Lord in
        
        
          fear and hope” (32:16); when they experience such painful moments
        
        
          as realizing the truth of what is stated in the Quran: “…and the
        
        
          love of God is stronger in the faithful” (2:165); when they have the
        
        
          most sublime spiritual experiences; when some hidden truths are
        
        
          unveiled before them; when, with restless hearts and quivering
        
        
          lips, they call their Lord with such inspired words as had never
        
        
          before come to their lips, then they are actually receiving divine
        
        
          provision from their Lord. They are tasting one of the many fruits
        
        
          that their Lord has reserved for them. In this world these fruits
        
        
          take the form of spiritual experiences; in the next world they will
        
        
          take the form of heavenly rewards. Then the faithful will feel that
        
        
          these are the very things of which they had been given a foretaste
        
        
          on earth: “Whenever they are given fruit to eat, they will say: ‘This
        
        
          is what we were given before,’ for they shall be given the like.” (2:25)
        
        
          What the people of Paradise are going to receive in the life
        
        
          hereafter has already been introduced to them in the life they
        
        
          left behind. How foolish it would be if they imagined that in the
        
        
          next life they would be introduced to tastes, with which they had