Hey Netti
However, we do have Revelation given us to get a sense of His will for us. If divine standards were abitrary in the way I think of the word, then the 10 Commandments would be meaningless and all the injunctions we find in the Koran about how to conduct ourselves would be meaningless and the Path of Righteousness to which Revelation points would be nothing but a wild goose chase.
First of all consider this: if God really wanted to guide all of mankind using the Ten Commandments/Revelation, He easily could have. But not all men are guided by revelation. Does this mean there is a defect in God's revelation? Of course not. But, since nothing stopped Him from controlling the nature of men so that everyone uniformly obeyed His rules (like the Angels), this must mean that God created us this way. This conclusion can not be avoided (if you believe that God is omnipotent and omniscient), but this does not render pointless His commandments because
revelation is meant specifically to guide those He wants to guide. Revelation is like registered mail, it is meant for specific individuals.
Maybe G-d is arbitrary in some ultimate sense that we don't understand. But for our purposes, the above expectations don't seem arbitrary. As you go through the injunctions, the underlying principle becomes clear: I think it's called Devotion.
Allow me to try and reconcile your objections with Twakkul:-
If we were created to stray, what is the point of heaven and hell, people will ask? For example: the Quran states that certain men are destined for hell. The obvious objection here is that this (seems to) negate the love of God. But
this argument is only valid if hell was eternal. It is also stated in the Quran that all men will not enter heaven until the
"camel pass through the eye of the needle". Does this remind you of something? In the Bible, Jesus (pbuh) used the same analogy when describing the chances of a rich man entering heaven. His audience asked if this meant that no rich man would ever enter heaven, but Jesus (pbuh) said God can make
anything possible i.e. even make the camel pass through the eye of a needle. So the Quran (almost indirectly) confirms that all men will eventually enter heaven.
This is the real basis of Twakkul: that God is preparing man for a life of eternal bliss in heaven, step by step. The process is difficult, and painful. Some go through hell in this life, some will go through hell in the next, but ultimately whatever finite pain one experiences,
it can never be weighed against an infinite reward. That is Tawakkul, God's love.
The common objection to this is: why not just dispense with all the pain and put everyone in heaven to begin with? There are two responses to this: firstly, no amount of finite pain can even compare with infinite pleasure so we have no right to complain, and secondly that this was an ultimate arbitrary action on the part of God. Maybe He wanted to inflict pain on man, before sending him to heaven, just so that the rest of creation would not feel as if they got jipped... Who knows? Whatever God's reasoning might be (and I do not presume to know it) I can say that it was arbitrary because I know no one can force God to act.
How would one presume to know G-d's thinking on this?
My presumptions were only that God is an infinite, omnipotent and omniscient Creator, and we are His creations. The rest are just the logical conclusions which follow, considering the revelation contained within the Quran.
Here you cite Jesus to demonstrate an Islamic principle?
Of course. I believe he was a Muslim, remember?