The Trial of Faith: Doubt and Trust
            The whole Abrahamic experience unveils the essential 
              dimension of faith in the One. Abraham, who is already very old 
              and has only recently been blessed with a child, must undergo the 
              trial of separation and abandonment, which will take Hagar and their 
              child, Ishmael, very close to death. His faith is trust in God: 
              he hears God's command - as does Hagar - and he answers it despite 
              his suffering, never ceasing to invoke God and rely on Him. Hagar 
              questioned Abraham about the reasons for such behaviour; finding 
              it was God's command, she willingly submitted to it. She asked, 
              then trusted, then accepted, and by doing so she traced the steps 
              of the profound "active acceptance" 
              of God's will: to question with one's mind, to understand with one's 
              intelligence, and to submit with one's heart. In 
              the course of those trials, beyond his human grief and in fact through 
              the very nature of that grief, Abraham develops a relationship with 
              God based on faithfulness, reconciliation, peace, and trust. God 
              tries him but is always speaking to him, inspiring him and strewing 
              his path with signs that calm and reassure him.
            Indeed, trials of faith are never tragic in Islamic 
              tradition. All the messengers, like Abraham, experienced the trial 
              of faith and all have been, in the same manner, protected from themselves 
              and their own doubts by God, His signs, and His word. Their suffering 
              does not mean they made mistakes, nor does it reveal any tragic 
              dimension of existence: it is, more simply, an 
              initiation into humility, understood as a necessary stage in the 
              experience of faith.