Op-Ed: Are Your Thoughts Creating Your Paradise or Your Hell?
- Klara Kassem

- Nov 1
- 5 min read

Let’s face it: we live in a world oversaturated with information — tweets, TikToks, TED Talks, and terrifying news. We’re drowning in data but starving of wisdom. The modern world runs on a simple rule: Whoever controls the narrative, controls the world.
But here’s the kicker: this isn’t new.
Thousands of years ago, the Bible opened with a cryptic yet profound statement:
“In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God.” (Bible, Book of John, Chapter 1, Verse 1)
That’s not just theology; it’s metaphysics with a dash of quantum logic. Your browser history isn’t just a trail of cat videos and “how to make sourdough,” it’s a blueprint of the reality you’re helping create.
The Source Code of Reality
Through the enlightening work of Aba Al-Sadiq Abdullah Hashem, it becomes clear that all information ultimately originates from God or the ultimate, everlasting consciousness, but as it enters creation, it is channeled, interpreted, influenced and transmitted through two opposing forces: the Spirit of God, which brings light, clarity, and expansion of consciousness; and Iblis, the deceiver, who distorts and limits truth to preserve power and control.
In essence, the war isn’t over the source of information — it’s over its interpretation and transmission.
As the Qur’an recounts in the words of the Prophet Muhammad, Iblis himself makes this admission after the final judgment:
“Indeed, Allah promised you a true promise, and I also promised you, but I deceived you. I had no power over you except that I called you, and you responded to me. So do not blame me; blame yourselves…” (Qur'an, Chapter 14 (Ibrahim), Verse 22)
The implication is stark: truth is always present — but so is deception. And most of us, caught in the chaos of competing narratives, often follow the loudest voice rather than the truest one.
And that’s exactly why we need the “Imam of the Time” — a divinely authorized guide who knows the source code behind the information we consume. This isn’t about control or authoritarianism. It's about responsibility. If information is creative power, someone has to know how to use it responsibly and for the benefit of all creation.
Let’s rewind history.
Eve and the serpent? A disinformation campaign.
Pharaoh vs. Moses? Data suppression at its finest.
Jesus vs. the Sanhedrin? Truth on trial.
Muhammad vs. Quraysh? Revolutionary information warfare.
The scriptures of the Abrahamic traditions read less like Sunday School stories and more like classified CIA briefings: high-stakes battles over who controls the narrative. Because whoever controls information, controls the people. And whoever controls the people, gets to shape the world.
In today’s terms: if you think algorithmic echo chambers are new, think again. They’ve just replaced the temple priests with tech bros and messengers with influencers. But the game hasn’t changed.
Who’s Using the Data?
We obsess over who’s collecting our data, but we rarely ask who’s interpreting it — and for what purpose?
Is information being used to liberate or dominate?
To educate or manipulate?
To create unity or chaos?
Aba Al-Sadiq flips the script here. He warns us not just about the volume of data, but about its origin and orientation. Without discernment, we become echo chambers for Iblis — propagating fear, division, consumerism, and the illusion of individual autonomy while we’re actually just copy-pasting someone else’s code.
Suppressing information is not just inconvenient — it’s a theological crime. According to Aba Al-Sadiq, the suppression of information is a rebellion against the will of the Creator. The highest source of information — God — is open to all, but we are required to choose the transmitter of that information wisely. Only God’s Messenger has the authority to transmit this information, because he alone knows how to place it correctly — so that it brings about prosperity, justice, and freedom.
Remember how prophets were always hated by the elite? It wasn’t because they wore sandals or refused to pay taxes. It was because they disrupted the information economy. They exposed corrupt narratives and introduced radical new ones: justice, oneness, mercy, liberation. And people in power hate that.
In quantum physics, the observer influences the outcome. In divine cosmology, the thinker creates the outcome. That’s why thought is sacred. Every belief you adopt is a brick in the architecture of the world we inhabit.
Your mind isn’t neutral. It’s a factory. The question is: are you producing poison or paradise?
To truly transform the world, we must return to the Source. Not just a source — the Source. And this is where Aba Al-Sadiq offers more than just commentary. He provides a roadmap. His mission is not merely to interpret the world but to restore divine structure, using information as a tool for balance, justice, and peace.
So, Who Gets to Speak?
The ultimate question becomes: who can we trust to bring liberating information?
The answer, if you’re willing to look past cynicism and zoom out from the noise, is clear in every prophetic tradition: a divinely appointed voice — not chosen by polls, followers, or branding, but by the Creator of all that exists. The Word that brought everything into existence from the very beginning.
Aba Al-Sadiq presents himself in that tradition — not as a guru hawking enlightenment, but as a custodian of divine information, here to help humanity rewire its internal circuitry toward light, just as Jesus said: “I have not come to abolish the Law, but to fulfill it” (Matthew 5:17).
Aba Al-Sadiq does not seek to discard the foundations of divine truth, but to illuminate and complete them in their rightful context for our time. If “justice is the principle of placing each thing in its rightful place,” as Plato said, then information must also be placed rightly. And for that, we need more than intelligence — we need divine discernment.
It’s not about faith vs. science, or tradition vs. modernity. It’s about recognizing that without divine guidance, our intelligence can become a very sophisticated form of self-destruction. So the next time you read, post, or even think — ask yourself: Where is this information coming from? Who benefits from me believing it? And who is guiding me to use it wisely?
Not all voices are equal, and not all knowledge is neutral. In a world wired with noise and misdirection, one voice cuts through with clarity — not because it’s louder, but because it speaks from the Source.
Only one voice can place all things where they belong. And in this age, that voice is Aba Al-Sadiq — the living Word, appointed to fulfill what was spoken in the beginning. Maybe it’s not just time we listened. Maybe it’s time we remembered what truth sounds like.







Really well written article. Bravo
There is no greater truth! holding onto one voice, the voice who is divinely appointed to speak saves lives. Labayk ya Aba Al-Sadiq Labayk! 🩷