The Urgency to Incorporate Maqasid Shari’ah as an Eludication of
‘Benefit’ as a Purpose of Law in Indonesia’s Legal Education
Nurizal Ismail
1
, Fajri Matahati Muhammadin
2
and Haninditio Danustya
3
1
Sekolah Tinggi Ekonomi Islam Tazkia, Bogo, West Java, Indonesia
2
Faculty of Law, Universitas Gadjah Mada, Yogyakarta, Indonesia
3
PT. Garuda Maintenance Facility Aero Asia Tbk, Banten, Indonesia
Keywords: Introduction to Jurisprudence, Purpose of Law, Legal Education, Maqashid Al-Shari’ah, Indonesia
Abstract: The Indonesian legal system is a religious one. However, there is strong traces of secularism in the legal
education in non-Islamic universities. This article observes the teaching of purposes of law in the
‘Introduction to Jurisprudence’ course (ITJ) at the top law schools in Indonesia, particularly on the
‘Purposes of Law’ Chapter via the most used textbooks. It finds that there is little space for religiosity there
especially on one of the main purposes of law according to all the textbooks: ‘utility’ primarily based on
Jeremy Bentham’s utilitarianism theory. It is argued that the current approaches to utility is a secular
approach which does not conform to the character of Indonesia. This article argues further that the
Maqashid Al-Shari’ah is more appropriate to explain ‘utility’ in context of the Indonesian legal system, and
should take its place among the ‘purposes of law’ chapter in the Indonesian legal education.
1 INTRODUCTION
Is it not strange when a nation has a religious
legal system, but a secular legal education? There is
no question that Indonesia is a religious nation. The
first pillar of the State Ideology i.e. Pancasila is
Ketuhanan Yang Maha Esa (Belief in the One and
Only God). Further, the entire Pancasila itself was
greatly a contribution of the Muslims and Islamic
teachings (Rohman, 2013). From such ideology, a
religious legal system was established. The 1945
constitution is religious, starting from its preamble
(see para 3-4), and key provisions such as Article 29
and 28J. Then, the entire statutory regulations and
all legal products and any judicial decisions will
always start by mentioning Ketuhanan Yang Maha
Esa.
This is a manifestation of the character of the
Indonesian society which is Religio-Magis. The term
religio-magis means that Indonesians are religious
and spiritual by nature, and believe in an ‘unseen
world’ and that it affects the material world
(Wiranata, 2005). This is a direct contradiction
towards secularism which holds a worldview that the
material world is all there is (Al-Attas, 1993 dan
Cox, 2013). However, secularism is one of the
intellectual hegemonies imposed by ‘The West’ via
colonialism (Daud, 2013) with Indonesia as one of
the victims.
Centuries of Dutch colonialism eroded the pre-
existing established legal traditions in Indonesia
including Islamic law (Ramlah, 2012). Although, in
time, the Indonesian legal system managed to keep
and develop parts of the Islamic tradition in its legal
system, as mentioned earlier and further in the
establishment of the Religious Court and others such
as the Islamic Banking Act etc.
However, the legacy of secularism remains in
Indonesia’s legal education, and this paper aims to
help de-secularize it. This paper observes the
Introduction to Jurisprudence (ITJ) course which
sets the foundation of law students’ understanding of
the concept of law, taught at the first semester. A
previous study has observed the ‘Classification of
Norms’ chapter and found that it establishes a
secular mindset to perceive the law: ‘legal norms’
and ’religious norms’ are separate (Muhammadin
and Danusatya, 2018).
Continuing the aforementioned study, this paper
explores the ‘purposes of law’ chapter of ITJ. More
particularly, this paper further focuses on the
‘purpose to achieve benefit’ theories used in the ITJ
1084
Ismail, N., Muhammadin, F. and Danustya, H.
The Urgency to Incorporate Maqasid Shari’ah as an Eludication of ‘Benefit’ as a Purpose of Law in Indonesia’s Legal Education.
DOI: 10.5220/0009923110841091
In Proceedings of the 1st International Conference on Recent Innovations (ICRI 2018), pages 1084-1091
ISBN: 978-989-758-458-9
Copyright
c
2020 by SCITEPRESS – Science and Technology Publications, Lda. All rights reserved
textbooks. It is found that that this, too, inclines
towards a secular understanding of law and does not
conform to the religious character of the Indonesian
society and legal system. As an alternative solution,
this paper proposes to include the Maqashid Al-
Shari’ah in the ‘purpose of law’ chapter of ITJ. This
inclusion will help conform to the religious character
of the Indonesian society and legal system.
Hopefully, also, this is one more step towards the
de-secularization of Indonesia’s legal education.
2 METHOD
This paper uses a literature research, analyzing
the purpose of law which involves the nature of law
and formulation of legal doctrines. As this paper
intends to observe the teaching of the ‘purpose of
law’ chapter in the ITJ course in Indonesian law
schools, then the most used textbooks by the top law
schools in Indonesia (according to the rankings of
the Ministry of Research and Higher Education)
would be the object of observation. This paper
chooses three textbooks, i.e. Pengantar Ilmu Hukum
by Sudikno Mertokusumo (Mertokusumo, 2006),
Menguak Tabir Hukum by Achmad Ali (Ali, 2015),
and Pengantar Ilmu Hukum by Peter Mahmud
Marzuki (Marzuki, 2008), from which to compare
from. Other than that, relevant literature will be used
as tool to analyze.
3 FINDINGS AND DISCUSSIONS
The idea of ‘purpose of law’ is to identify what
the law is aimed to achieve, so that therefore law
would later be understood and interpreted in a way
so that it achieves such aim. In the ITJ Course, this
is generally taught the same way in different
textbooks, albeit some differences in ways of
explanation. They all usually come down to three
general purposes of law i.e. achieve: justice, benefit,
and certainty(Ali, 2015; Marzuki, 2008;
Mertokusumo, 2006).
3.1 Purposes of Law in the ITJ Course:
Achieving ‘Benefit’
This paper focuses more on the second purpose
of law i.e. to achieve benefit. The textbooks mostly
explain this with Jeremy Bentham’s theory of
utilitarianism. Sudikno Mertokusumo, for example,
argues that the main purpose of law is to achieve
order and balance (Mertokusumo, 2006, p. 77) and
there are three theories to explain how to achieve
that purpose. Utilitarianism is Mertokusumo’s
second theory on purposes of law (the first theory is
‘theory of ethics’ or ‘justice’) (Mertokusumo, 2006,
p. 80). He explains generally what utilitarianism is
(i.e. to achieve happiness to as much people as
possible), then notes how this theory lack balance –
albeit not elaborating why he thought so.
The third and last theory on purpose of law
according to Mertokusumo, however, is ‘combined-
theory’. It seems that the purposes of law under this
category of theories would combine the two other
theories (i.e. justice and utility). Under this third
heading, he cites a number of theories: (a) law must
achieve order and justice depending on the character
and era of the society, and (b) law must achieve
interpersonal and intrapersonal peace, and to achieve
the purpose of the nation which is to provide
happiness and prosperity towards the society
(Mertokusumo, 2006).
Peter Mahmud Marzuki proposes four purposes
of law: benefit, morality (justice), peace/welfare, and
certainty of law (Marzuki, 2008). In explaining
utility as a purpose of law, Marzuki relates
Bentham’s utilitarianism with Weber’s high
efficiency and productivity as a society’s need. He
emphasizes how the scholars explain that
utilitarianists would see that a legal system is a
means towards an effort to increase an efficient
allocation of resources (Marzuki, 2008). He notes
that, other than to fulfill physical/material needs, law
must more importantly fulfil ‘human existential’
needs (which relates to ‘justice’ as another purpose
of law) (Marzuki, 2008).
Marzuki’s third purpose of law is to achieve
‘peace/welfare’ which can also, to some extent, be
categorized as ‘benefit’ under the scope of this
paper. Citing Thomas Hobbes who argues that the
purpose of law is to achieve order, Marzuki explains
that peace and welfare can be achieved when the law
regulates fairly. What he means by ‘fair’ is that the
law regulates all the interests to be protected in a
good balance so that everyone can achieve their
share as much as possible (Marzuki, 2008).
Achmad Ali explains the theories of purposes of
law by categorizing the eras of the theories. The first
era is the ‘conventional’ theories, i.e. ethics (justice),
benefit, and normative-dogmatic (certainty of law)
(Ali, 2015). Particularly on benefit as purpose of
law, Ali is very critical towards utilitarianism. He
argues that not all forms of happiness can be
accepted because: priorities must be made so that
not all happiness are accepted, and that happiness
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does not always satisfy the society’s sense of justice
so it must be balanced also with considerations of
justice (Ali, 2015). In essence, according to Ali,
utilitarianism cannot stand alone as a purpose of law.
The second era on theories of purposes of law
according to Ali is the modern theories. The mod ern
theories rely on Gustav Radburch’s view that law –
at the same time—has three purposes: justice,
benefit, and certainty (Ali, 2015) which may be
applied in a fixed hierarchy between the three, or no-
fixed hierarchy so that different cases may
necessitate different priorities. Ali also cites an
‘Eastern purpose of law’ theory, which holds peace
as the main purpose of law. Under this theory, for
example, criminalization can be avoided if the
victim and perpetrator has managed achieve an
amicable settlement (Ali, 2015).
3.2 Man, Polity, Civilization, and Diin
It is very difficult to truly analyse the extent of
proper ‘benefit’ without first exploring the nature of
man, polity, and civilization. Surely, it is common
sense that any theory of ‘benefit’ should be
consistent with that nature. This subsection in
particular explains the collision between two
worldviews, i.e. secular and religious, where the
fundamental difference in explaining ‘benefit’ is the
position of diin or religion.
In secularism, there is no true place for
religion. Secularism is not merely a political stance,
but an entire worldview which separates the material
or empirical world from the metaphysical one and
ignoring the relevance of the latter (Al-Attas, 1993;
Cox, 2013). This is closely linked with scientism,
which is a theory that states that knowledge only (or
primarily) is obtained from sensory or empiric
experience (Elliot Sober, 2010). This cannot be
separated from August Comte’s (d.1857) who argues
that the most advanced level of man is when he
utilizes knowledge only from positively tested
through objective verification, free from anything
metaphysical (Comte, 1998; Kumar, 2006).
However, as Elliot Sober notes, such a view is
always painfully limited to see and analyze what can
be observed materially (Elliot Sober, 2010). The
truth is that many others exist as a truth beyond
empirical and material realities, such as morality and
intuition (Johnson, 2013) subjective consciousness
(Chalmers, 2010), and others (Tzortzis, 2016).
Therefore, secularism will forever be woefully
incomplete and lack holistic nature at an
epistemological level and includes the same
weakness in every knowledge derived from it
(Husaini and Kania, 2013). Especially, as will be
explained in the following paragraphs, in the
position and importance of diin or religion which
secularism ignores. Much especially in Indonesia,
where scholars have noted the characteristics of the
Indonesian people as religio-magis as explained in
the introduction of this paper.
Syed Naquib Al-Attas explains that a man exists
with a dual nature, where “…he is both a body and
soul” (Al-Attas, 1995). The latter clearly being
beyond the material realms of reality and beyond
what secularism may comprehend or consider. Al-
Attas further explains that there are two levels of
human souls, i.e. the higher rational soul (al-nafs al-
natiqah), and the lower animal soul (al-nafs al-
hayawaniyyah), where the former should rule –but
not destroy—the latter (Al-Attas, 1993). While the
latter inclines to fulfil worldly biological needs, the
former inclines to search and worship God intimate
relation as a form of spiritual happiness (Al-Attas,
1995).
Therefore, to fulfil the true needs of a man, one
must not only fulfil the worldly materialistic needs
but also that of the spiritual needs. This is where diin
comes in. The word diin is usually translated as
‘religion’, but the true word covers more than a mere
theological concept of God’s existence. From the
Arabic word al-diin rooting from the trilateral dal-
yaa-nuun, numerous interrelated derivative
meanings can be found such as ‘religion’, ‘a
particular law/statute’, ‘a way/course/manner of
conducting/acting’, ‘indebted’, and so much more
(Mukhtār, 2008). And, in fulfilling the human soul
inclination to worship God, diin comes with total
submission (istislam) to God (Al-Attas, 1995). This
show how diin is very central.
When man organizes themselves into a society
and inevitably with a political structure, they
become a polity. The Arabic term Madinah needs to
be discussed here. While the word literally means
‘city’, where there is a ruler, the word Madinah in
Arabic has its roots derived from the word diin as
well (the word ‘ruler’ is also termed as dayyaan
which also roots from diin) (Al-Attas, 1995; Faris,
1979). And this is why, as mentioned also in the
Introduction, the entire legal system and statutory
regulations and other legal products in Indonesia
always mentions Ketuhanan Yang Maha Esa.
Further, the ideal goals of a utopian society as a
civilization is usually termed as ‘civil society’.
Indonesia has its own concept of ‘civil society’
which is borrowed from an Islamic concept called
‘masyarakat madani’ or Madani society. It must be
seen how there is an important relation between
man, polity, and civilization here. A man organizes
himself into a polity and aspires to advance
civilization towards a certain ideal, which is to
achieve the ‘civil society’ or Madani society.
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Therefore, there has to be a certain connectivity
between all those variables.
The term ‘civil society’ in the Western concept is
secular and therefore does not include the
fundamental nature of man, therefore to say that
‘civil society’ and Madani society are synonymous
(as some, like Nurcholis Madjid claim) is incorrect
(Alatas, 2010). The word ‘Madaani’ in Arabic refers
to the people of Madinah (at the time of Prophet
Muhammad), and –alike the word Madinah—is
derived from the root word diin (Manzhur, 1414).
In fact, even the word ‘civilization’ in Arabic is
tamaddun which, also, is derived from the word diin
(Al-Attas, 1995). This shows that the concept of an
ideal Madani society cannot be merely set by
Western standards of tolerance, democracy, and
‘nation state’ as writers such as Nurcholis Madjid
proposes (Alatas, 2010). It has to also include
especially the true nature inclination of the human
soul to worship his God. All this shows how diin is
central and should be at the heart of understanding
the nature and need of a man either individually,
when organized in a polity, and in viewing the
utopian civilization. Diin is the centre of what bonds
man, society, and governance as one integral unit
(Muhammadin and Danusatya, 2018). No theory of
achieving ‘benefit’ can truly be complete when it
does not incorporate diin. Therefore, secularism (and
its derivatives), would miss out on a very important
element.
3.3 Maqashid Al-Shari’ah as a Purpose
of Law
In Islamic Jurisprudence or UÎul al-Fiqh,
Maqashid Al-Shari’ah is one of the legal theories to
understand the law from a purposiveness
perspective. The general idea is that the Al-Shariʿah
(or God’s rules) has certain aims and purposes
(maqasid) which is to realize benefit or interest of
the people (maslaha), essentially by promoting
benefit and removing harm (Ali, 2014, p. 517;
Ismail, 2014, pp. 5–6). Therefore, maslaha becomes
the ‘illah (cause) of legal rules. This far, Maqashid
Al-Shari’ah may seem to serve a similar purpose to
utilitarianism. However, the approach it takes would
be different.
Ibn Ashur defines Maqashid Al-Shari’ah as the
purposes (al-ma’ani) and wisdoms (al-hikam)
considered by the Lawgiver in all or most of the
areas and circumstances of legislation, which are not
confined to a particular type of the Maqashid Al-
Shari’ah commands (Ashur, 2006). ‘Alim uses term
‘hadf’ that he means Maqashid Al-Shari’ah purposes
(maqasiduha) which are to be achieved by
legislation of the rules/laws in the form of masalih
(benefits/welfares) for humankind both in this world
and the hereafter either by the way of promoting
benefits and removing harm (Alim, 1994). Ibn Abd
al-Salam relates maslaha with the obtaining
enjoyments (al-ladzzah) and happiness (al-afrah) in
here and the hereafter (Abdal-Salam, 1994).
The Maqashid Al-Shari’ah divides maslahat into
two categories, i.e. benefits of the hereafter and
benefits of the world, further divided into five
essentials i.e. in order of preference: preservation of
religion, life, reason, progeny and property (Al-
Atawneh, 2011; Al-Ghazali, 1971; Al-Shatibi,
1997). On the five essentials, there is a discourse on
whether or not the essentials are limited to those
five. Some scholars like Ibn Taymiyyah, Al-Qarafi,
Al-Qardhawi, and others, argue that there could be
more than five, such as preservation of honor,
fulfilment of trustworthiness, justice, and others
(Attia, 2008; Duderija, 2014; Zahrah, 1957). On the
other hand, other scholars such as Imam Ghazali,
Fakhr al-Din al-Razi, al-Āmadi, and Imam Shatibi
limit the scope of maqasid in five essentials (Attia,
2008), so that everything else are actually
derivatives of the five essentials.
Maslaha is further put into three levels, which
are: imminent necessities (al-dharurat), ordinary
necessities (al-hajat) and luxuries (al-tahsiniyat),
considered together with the order of the five
essentials (Munir, 2017; Naim, 2016). Also, there is
a division between individual and collective
necessities. With all these classifications, the
different classifications and levels would interact
with each other, sometimes necessitating preference
of one over the other depending on the situation
(Nyazee, 2003). This is how Maqashid Al-Shari’ah
operates as a cause of the law in achieving benefit.
However, within all the aforementioned
classifications of essentials, scholars generally agree
that the preservation of religion (hifz al-din) is the
most paramount and is the soul of the other
essentials, despite differences in how they are
elaborated in concept and application (Al-Ghazali,
1971; Naim, 2016; Nyazee, 2003). After all, the
general idea of maslaha is guided by the Al-Shariʿah
(God’s law, i.e. the Qur’an and Sunnah), and
anything against it is rejected (Al-Ghazāli, 1324).
This is because, in the worldview of Islam, true
success is achieving paradise in the hereafter
(Quran, 3: 185). It is also important to also live well
in the world (Quran, 67:15), while making the world
as a means to achieve paradise (Al-Jawziyah, 2010).
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3.4 Maqasid al-Shari’ah vs Utility in
the ITJ Course
Utilitarianism is a theory attributed to the
English jurist and philosopher Jeremy Bentham
(1748-1832), and is one of the widely used theory on
purpose of law. Bentham believed that all systems –
legal systems included—should be evaluated with
the principle of utility which obeys three axioms: 1)
The society’s interest in the sum of the interests of
the members of society; 2) That every man is the
best judge of his own interest; 3) and that every
man’s capacity of happiness as a great as any other’s
(Eldin, 2013). To Bentham, the purpose of the law is
the law can give a guarantee of happiness to new
individuals of people, as his ‘fundamental axiom’
dictates: “It is the greatest happiness of the greatest
number that is the measure of right and wrong”
(Bentham, 1977; Burns, 2005)
The main problem with Bentham’s theory roots
even as deep as his own axioms. For example, axiom
2 (every man is the best judge of his own interest) –
which is a popular assumption by much of the
common-folk—is clearly based on empiricism. After
all, it is hard to find anyone experiencing about a
person more than her/himself. It has been explained
in Section III.B how empiricism is a very limited
perspective, unable to consider the metaphysical
reality which is a fundamental part of man. Yet, this
is expected of Bentham as an atheist and as secular
positivist who felt very strongly against religion and
believed it to be an enemy to human happiness
(Crimmins, 1986).
This is not to mention how it is difficult to truly
compare the happiness of different unique
individuals (Veenhoven, 2010), especially how the
empiric method cannot observe the subjective
consciousness as also touched in Subsection B,
where the experience of happiness lies. In fact,
happiness is truly a religious-spiritual experience
therefore a mere empiric approach to it can never
touch its essence (Al-Attas, 1995). As explained in
Section III.B also, the higher soul of a man can only
be satisfied when it fulfills its purpose to worship
her/his God.
Therefore, utilitarianism can never ultimately
fulfill the benefits towards the society which it
promises. It does not provide the apparatus required
to consider the need of God, much less towards a
society which its character and legal system puts the
belief in God on the highest and fundamental esteem
like Indonesia. On the contrary, the Maqashid Al-
Shari’ah does put hifz al-diin as an important
apparatus which is the most primary one and is the
soul of other essentials of the law. It provides the
instrument from which to apply religious spirituality
in understanding and applying the law towards a
religious society, which utilitarianism can never do
(Setia, 2016).
The aforementioned is a direct display of
compatibility of the Maqashid Al-Shari’ah towards
the soul of the Indonesian society legal system.
There is a reason why it is Ketuhanan Yang Maha
Esa which is the first pillar of Pancasila, and always
mentioned at the header of all products of law. The
main religious organizations, such as Nahdlatul
Ulama in their Deklarasi tentang Hubungan
Pancasila dengan Islam Scholars have even argued
that Pancasila, which is the state ideology and source
of all sources of law, is essentially a contemporary
application of the Maqashid Al-Shari’ah (Acac,
2015).
In terms of morality, Bentham’s theory is value-
neutral and knows no other indicator but pleasure
and happiness versus pain and displeasure caused to
others while sanctioning legislation and
criminalization (Bentham, 2000). This train of
thought will only result in a subjective morality
meaning that there is no absolute truth (Arif, 2016),
and the ignorance towards true objective and a
universal morality. This means that numerous
immoralities may be lawful if the people like it.
Such a train of thought is acceptable under
utilitarianism, while a people who believe that there
are universal and objective moral issues will not
agree with this. Minority opinions are subjugated
merely by virtue of being a minority and
utilitarianism justifies this.
On the contrary, Maqashid Al-Shari’ah answers
this problem. The belief in God leads to a universal
objective morality and makes it epistemologically
possible. When Euthyphro’s dilemma “Is something
morally good because God commands it, or does
God command it because it is morally good?” (the
former: is God therefore a tyrant? The latter: is there
a higher law binding God –thus He isn’t ‘Almighty’)
is settled by the Islamic response: God, as a defining
character of Himself and His commands, is good
(Akhtar, 2008; Tzortzis, 2016). Through hifz al-diin,
universal objective morality originating from God as
believed by the religious society can be introduced
in legal reasoning in understanding the laws.
With utilitarianism, the jurist cannot truly
understand or accommodate religiosity in religion-
based laws. A true testament to this is the debate
concerning the religious blasphemy laws. In the
Indonesian Constitutional Court Judgment No.
84/PUU-X/2012, para 3.13 displayed a very
utilitarian response of the Judges to justify
criminalizing religious blasphemy, i.e.
decriminalizing it may cause social disorder
(Crouch, 2011). While the court’s view may not be
entirely incorrect, it does not truly capture the true
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purpose of the blasphemy laws. Further, an equally
secular view would then respond that this is the
character backwards society as per Comte’s law of
three stages which puts religiosity as the most
primordial stage of man (Comte, 1998). Note also
that Bentham’s student and fellow utilitarianist John
Stuart Mill seems to agree with Comte on this
(Kumar, 2006). Such view was actually sounded by
the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner
for Human Rights in response to the Jakarta
Governor blasphemy case in 2017 (OHCHR, 2017).
This is not an explanation that befits the true nature
of blasphemy laws and its place in a religious
society.
Even further, Mills’ harm principle dictates that
criminalization can only be done when there is harm
towards another person (Gray, 1996, p. 3). Thus, this
principle in addition to the secular ideology limits
criminalization only to ‘concrete’ and ‘tangible’
materialistic reasons for criminalization. This does
not fare well in the Indonesian ideology and legal
system. However, the Maqashid Al-Shari’ah
provides the proper apparatus to explain blasphemy
laws better. With hifz al-diin as an essential, the
concept of ghirah and can be introduced in context
of law. Ghirah is a sense of self-respect and honour,
from which without ghirah towards the religion a
man is as if without religion (Al-Jawziyah, 1997).
Ghirah towards the religion means that one’s heart
and soul will, by nature, be angry when the religion
is disrespected (Quthb, 2002), not too dissimilar
with the offense taken when one’s nation’s pride is
insulted. In context of Islam, blasphemy is a sign of
kufr (disbelief) and dishonours the basis of the
religion which is to glorify God (As-Sa’di, 2002).
Unlike the case of utilitarianism, concrete or
material damage caused are not required. The
damage, if one were to assume to be any, is
immaterial and is on the level of values. Meanwhile,
among the essences of secularism (which
utilitarianism is based on) are the desacralization and
the deconsecration of values (Al-Attas, 1993).
Further, Bentham’s concept of rewards for
‘moral acts’ (i.e. inflicting happiness and pleasure)
seems to only include personal satisfaction (which
ceases upon death), and the commemorations by
fellow citizens and future generations (which the
person does not experience) (Crimmins, 1986). This
means that true happiness which can be experienced
as a reward for ‘moral acts’ are very limited within
Bentham’s own logic which, as he claims himself, is
based on happiness.
Clearly, Maqashid Al-Shari’ah provides better
by recognizing rewards of the hereafter. Islam
teaches that deeds can be good despite being
unpleasant, as stated in the Qur’an in 2: 216 “…But
perhaps you hate a thing and it is good for you ….
And Allah Knows, while you know not..”. The verse
speaks of jihad, but similarly there are many deeds
which seem to be unpleasant but very virtuous (e.g.
charity, sacrifice, etc) which are important in a
society but utilitarianism provides no incentive for it
as it recognizes no hereafter.
While Islam is the majority religion in Indonesia,
all religions seem to believe in some form of
hereafter and the relevance of this material life to
achieve it. This is the religio-magis character of the
Indonesian society in general, where diin is central
in shaping a man, polity, and civilization. How
curious is it to not teach and utilize any theories that
do incorporates diin, and instead teaches and utilizes
a theory that has no place for diin?
4 CONCLUSION
While utilitarianism is the central theory used to
explain benefit-related purposes of law as elaborated
in Section III.A, it fails to capture the most essential
part of man. This essential part of man is religion or
diin, which is the connecting point between man,
polity, and civilization. Therefore, at best, maybe
ITJ can refer to it as a mere historical or comparative
view. However, utilitarianism should not be taught
as a main theory to explain benefit as a purpose of
law. On the other hand, the Maqashid Al-Shari’ah is
the more appropriate theory to explain benefit as a
purpose of law. While it is also a theory to explain
human necessity as a purpose and cause of law, it
recognizes diin as the central and most important
soul. This is the tool needed by jurists to interpret
and apply the law in accordance with the spirit and
values of the Indonesian ideology. There are all the
reasons to include this theory in the ITJ textbooks as
a main theory to explain benefit as a purpose of law.
Indonesia is not an Islamic State and not all
Indonesians are Muslims (albeit an overwhelming
majority). However, it is clear that the belief in God
and Islam –to some extent—is an integral part of the
fabric of the society and legal system. If scholars
saw it fit to transplant much of the Dutch legal
systems and relevant principles into the legal system
and education, it should be even more appropriate to
transplant Islamic legal principles and theories.
More so when these Islamic teachings, in this case
the Maqashid Al-Shari’ah, explains and helps
understand the law better within the paradigm of the
Indonesian value.
The Urgency to Incorporate Maqasid Shari’ah as an Eludication of ‘Benefit’ as a Purpose of Law in Indonesia’s Legal Education
1089
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