ALLAH EXISTS WITHOUT A BEGINNING NOR AN END
Praise
be to Allah, the Lord of the worlds, to Him belong the endowments and
the befitting perfections and commendations. I ask Allah to raise the
rank of Prophet Muhammad, sallallahu ^alayhi wa sallam, and to protect
his nation from that which he fears for it.
Brothers
and Sisters, Know that Islam is the way of life. If the person has the
right creed and faith in Allah, he will succeed in his life and in the
hereafter. The true creed and right faith is found in Islam. The creed
of Ahlus-Sunnah wal Jama^ah (The followers of the great Prophet
Muhammad, peace be upon him). It's the creed of Millions of Muslims
worldwide.
Brothers and sisters, one must have the right faith in Allah. And to fear Allah at all times.
The
saying that Allah, ta^ala, exists without a place is the belief and the
creed of the Messenger of Allah, sallallahu ^alayhi wa sallam, the
Companions and those who graciously followed them, and it shall be until
the Day of Judgment. The proof of this precious statement is what Allah
said in the Qur'an, in Surat ash-Shura, ayah 11:
which means:
"There is nothing like Him and He has the attribute of Hearing and Seeing." This
ayah absolutely and totally clears Allah of resembling the creation. It
comprises that Allah, ta^ala, is different from the creations in the
Self, Attributes, and Doings. Hence, it shows that Allah, ta^ala, exists
without a place, because the one who exists in a place would, by
nature, be composed of atoms, i.e., he would be a body, occupying a
space, and Allah, ta^ala, is clear of occupying spaces.
Al-Bukhariyy, al-Bayhaqiyy and Ibn al*Jarud related that the Messenger of Allah, sallallahu ^alayhi wa sallam, said:
which means: "Allah
existed eternally and there was nothing else." This hadith proves that
Allah was alone in al-'azal, (the status of existence without a
beginning,) i.e., before creating any of the creation. There was nothing
with Him: no place, no space, no sky, no light, and no darkness. It is
determined in the rules of the Religion and the judgments of the sound
mind that Allah, the Exalted, does not change. Hence, it is impossible
that after having been existing without a place, He would become in a
place, because this is a development, and the development is a sign of
needing others, and the one who needs others is not God.
Imam
Abu Mansur al-Baghdadiyy related in his book, Al-Farqu Bayn al*Firaq,
that Imam ^Aliyy, the fourth of the caliphs, may Allah reward his deeds,
said:
which means: "Allah existed eternally and there was no place, and He now is as He was, i.e., without a place."
Imam Abu Hanifah, who is one of the authorities of as-Salaf, said in his book Al-Fiqh al*Absat: "Allah
existed eternally and there was no place. He existed before creating
the creation. He existed, and there was no place, creation, or thing;
and He is the Creator of everything."
Imam al-Hafidh al-Bayhaqiyy said in his book, Al-Asma'u was-Sifat, on page 400: "....
What was mentioned towards the end of the hadith is an indication of
denying Allah has a place and denying the slave is alike to Allah,
wherever he was in proximity or remoteness. Allah, the Exalted, is
adh*Dhahir--hence, it is valid to know about Him by proofs. Allah is
al-Batin--hence, it is invalid that He would be in a place." He also
said: "Some of our companions used as a proof to refute the place to
Allah the saying of the Prophet, sallallahu ^alayhi wa sallam : 'You are
adh-Dhahir and there is nothing above You, and You are al-Batin and
there is nothing underneath You.' Therefore, if there is nothing above
Him and nothing underneath Him, He is not in a place."
Imam
Ahmad Ibn Salamah, Abu Ja^far at*Tahawiyy, who was born in the year 237
after Hijrah, wrote a book called Al-^Aqidah at*Tahawiyyah. He
mentioned that the content of his book is an elucidation of the creed of
Ahl as*Sunnah wal Jama^ah, which is the creed of Imam Abu Hanifah, who
died in the year 150 after al*Hijrah, and his two companions, Imam Abu
Yusuf al-Qadi and Imam Muhammad Ibn al*Hasan ash-Shaybaniyy and others.
He said in his book: "Allah
is supremely clear of all boundaries, extremes, sides, organs and
instruments. The six directions do not contain Him--these are attributed
to all created things." Such is the saying of Imam Abu Ja^far who
is among the heads of as-Salaf. He explicitly stated that Allah is clear
of being contained by the six directions. The six directions are above,
below, in front of, behind, right, and left.
The
linguist and scholar of hadith, Imam Muhammad Murtada az-Zabidiyy,
narrated by a continuous chain from himself back to Imam Zayn al-^Abidin
^Aliyy Ibn al-Husayn Ibn ^Aliyy Ibn Abi Talib, (who was among the first
of as-Salaf, who earned the title of as-Sajjad, i.e., the one who prays
a lot), that Zayn al-^Abidin said in his treatise as*Sahifah
as-Sajjadiyyah about Allah:
which means: "O Allah, You are clear of all imperfection. You are Allah, the One Who no place contains You." He also said:
which means: "O Allah, You are clear of all imperfection. You are Allah, the One Who is not in boundaries."
In
the explanation of al-Bukhariyy in the chapter on Al-Jihad, Hafidh Ibn
Hajar said: "The fact that the two directions above and below are
impossible to be attributes of Allah, does not necessitate that Allah
would not be attributed with aboveness, because attributing aboveness to
Allah is a matter of status and the impossibility lies in it being
physical."
The
scholar Imam Zayn ad-Din Ibn Nujaym, the Hanafiyy, in his book Al-Bahr
ar*Ra'iq, on page 129 said: "Whoever says it is possible that Allah
would do a doing in which there is no wisdom commits blasphemy, and also
he commits blasphemy by affirming a place to Allah, the Exalted."
Imam Ahmad ar-Rifa^iyy al-Kabir, who lived around the year 600 after al-Hijrah, said:
which means: "The ultimate knowledge about Allah is to be certain that Allah exists without a how or a place."
Imam
Muhammad Ibn Hibah al-Makkiyy, in his book Hada'iq al-Fusul wa Jawahir
al-^Uqul,--also called Al-^Aqidat-as-Salahiyyah because he gave it as a
gift to Sultan Salah-ad-Din al-Ayyubiyy who ordered that this book be
taught to the children in schools and broadcast from the top of
minarets--said:
which means: "Allah
existed eternally and there was no place, and the judgment about His
existence now is that He is as He was, i.e., without a place."
Imam Ja^far as-Sadiq said: "He
who claims that Allah is in something or on something or from
something, commits ash-shirk. Because if He was in something, He would
be contained, and if He was on something, He would be carried, and if He
was from something, He would be a creature."
Shaykh
^Abdul-Ghaniyy an-Nabulsiyy said: "He who believes that Allah fills the
heavens and earth or that He is a body sitting above al-^arsh (ceiling
of Paradise; throne) is a kafir."
Imam Abul-Qasim ^Aliyy Ibnul-Hasan Ibn Hibatillah Ibn ^Asakir said in his ^Aqidah: "Allah
existed before the creation. He does not have a before or an after, an
above or a below, a right or a left, an in front of or a behind, a whole
or a part. It must not be said when was He, where was He, or how was
He. He exists without a place."
Imam Abu Sulayman al-Khattabiyy said: "What
is obligatory upon us and upon every Muslim to know is that our Lord
has no shape or form, because the shape has a 'how' and 'how' does not
apply to Allah or His Attributes."
Know
beyond doubt that the question 'how' does not apply to Allah, because
this is a question about shapes, bodies, places, depths and dimensions;
Allah is clear of all of that. Also be firm that it is invalid to say
about Allah "... but we do not know how", because in essence, it
falsely indicates that Allah has a color, shape, dimensions, body,
place, but one is ignorant of the 'how' of it.
Imam al-Ghazaliyy said: "
Allah, the Exalted, existed eternally and there was no place. He is not
a body, jawhar (atom), or property, and He is not on a place or in a
place."
All
of these sayings show that attributing the sensuous physical aboveness
and place to Allah is contrary to the Qur'an, the Hadith, the Ijma^, and
the intellectual proof. The intellectual proof that Allah exists
without a place lies in the fact that the one who is in a place would
have an area, and the one who has an area is in need of it, and the one
who needs others is not God. Moreover, as the mind determines that Allah
existed without a place before creating places, the mind determines
that after Allah created the places He still exists without a place.
The
scholars like Imam Ahmad ar*Rifa^iyy determined that lifting the hands
and the faces towards the sky when performing du^a (supplication) is
because the heavens are the qiblah of du^a just as the Ka^bah is the
qiblah of as*Salah. From the heavens, the mercies and blessings of Allah
descend.
Hence,
it is clear for the one who seeks the truth that the saying that Allah
exists without a place is what complies with the Qur'an, the Hadith, the
Ijma^, and the criteria of the sound intellect. Be firm and certain
that before creating places, Allah Who created everything (places and
others), existed without a place, and after creating places, He still
exists without a place.
Since
we have determined that the creed of the Muslims is that Allah exists
without a place and that the question 'how' does not apply to Allah, it
is clear to us that al-^arsh (the throne) which is the biggest of the
creations of Allah and the ceiling of Paradise, is not a place for
Allah, the Exalted.
Imam Abu Mansur al-Baghdadiyy related that Imam ^Aliyy Ibn Abi Talib, the fourth caliph, said:
which means: "Allah created al-^arsh as an indication of His Power and did not take it as a place for Himself."
Imam Abu Hanifah said in his book, al*Wasiyyah,: "
... and He is the Preserver of al*^arsh and other than al-^arsh,
without needing it, for had He been in need, He would not have the power
to create the world and to manage and preserve it. Moreover, had He
been in a place needing to sit and rest**before creating al-^arsh, where
was Allah?" That is, the question 'where was Allah' would have applied to Him, which is impossible.
Also, in his book, Al-Fiqh al-Absat, Imam Abu Hanifah said: "Allah
existed eternally and there was no place; He existed before creating
the creation. He existed and there was not a place, a creation or a
thing; and He is the Creator of everything. He who says 'I do not know
if my Lord is in the heavens or on the earth,' is a kafir. Also is a
kafir whoever says that 'He is on al-^arsh, and I do not know whether
al-^arsh is in the heaven or on the earth'."
Consequently,
Imam Ahmad declared a kafir whomever says these last two phrases
because they contain attributing a direction, boundary, and place to
Allah. Everything which has a direction and boundary is by necessity in
need of a Creator. Thus it is not the intention of Imam Abu Hanifah to
prove that the heaven and al-^arsh are places for Allah, as those who
liken Allah to the creation claim. This is by virtue of the
aforementioned saying of the Imam: "Had He been in a place needing to sit and rest, then before creating al-^arsh where was Allah?", which is clear in negating that Allah has a direction or a place.
In his book, Ihya'u ^Ulum ad-Din, Imam al*Ghazaliyy said: "...
places do not contain Him, nor do the directions, earth, or heavens. He
is attributed with an istiwa' over al-^arsh as He said in the
Qur'an--with the meaning that He willed--and not as what people may
delude. It is an istiwa' which is clear of touching, resting, holding,
moving and containment. Al-^arsh does not carry Him, but rather al-^arsh
and those that carry al-^arsh are all carried by Allah with His Power
and are subjugated to Him. He is above al-^arsh and above the heavens
and above everything-- in status-- an aboveness that does not give Him
proximity to al-^arsh or the heavens as it does not give Him farness
from earth. He is higher in status than everything: higher in status
than al-^arsh and the heavens, as He is higher in status than earth and
the rest of the creation. "
Shaykh ^Abdul-Ghaniyy an-Nabulsiyy said: "He who believes that Allah filled the heavens and earth or that He is a body sitting above al-^arsh, is a kafir." Ayah 93 of Surat Maryam:
means: "All those in the heavens and earth must come to Allah as a slave." In his Tafsir (book of explaining the Qur'an), Imam ar-Raziyy said: "...
and since it is affirmed by this ayah that everything that existed in
the heavens and earth is a slave to Allah, and since it is obligatory
that Allah is clear of being a slave, thus He is clear of being in a
place or direction, or on al-^arsh or al-kursiyy."
Hence Surat Taha, ayah 5, in the Qur'an:
clearly
does not mean that Allah sits on the throne or that Allah is firmly
established on the throne. In the Arabic language, the word istawa has
fifteen (15) different meanings, among of which are to sit, to
subjugate, to protect, to conquer, and to preserve. Based on what we
have covered so far it is clear that it is blasphemous to apply the
meaning 'to sit' to Allah. However the terms to preserve and to
subjugate are in compliance with the Religion and the language.
Imam
Hafidh Ibn Rajab al-Hanbaliyy explained the meaning of al-istiwa' by
al-istila', which means subjugating. That is, Allah attributed Himself
with subjugating al-^arsh in al-'azal (the status of existing without a
beginning, that is, before creating the creation). Since al-^arsh, the
largest creation of Allah, is subjugated to Allah, then everything else
which is smaller than al*^arsh is under the control of Allah.
It
was affirmed about Imam Malik Ibn Anas, may Allah reward his deeds, in
what al*Bayhaqiyy related with a sound chain from the route of ^Abdullah
Ibn Wahb, that "We were at Malik's when a man entered and said, 'O Aba
^Abdillah, (meaning Imam Malik), ar-Rahmanu ^alal-^arsh istawa, how did
He istawa?' Malik looked down astonishingly and then lifted his head and
said '^alal ^arsh istawa as He attributed to Himself. It is invalid to
say how, and how does not apply to Him. I see that you are an innovator.
Take him out'." Hence, the saying of Imam Malik, ' How does not apply
to Him,' means that His istiwa' over His ^arsh is without a how, i.e.,
it is not with a body, place, shape, or form as sitting, touching,
suspending above, and the like.
Hence,
there is no basis for the saying of those who liken Allah to the
creation, which they falsely attribute to Imam Malik, that al-istiwa' is
known and the how of it is unknown. What they mean by that is that
al-istiwa' is sitting but the how of that sitting is unknown. This
saying of theirs is invalid, because sitting, no matter how it is would
be by organs and parts that fold. Moreover, that term that they
attribute to Imam Malik was not affirmed about him or others.
Imam al-Lalaka'iyy narrated about Umm Salamah and Rabi^ah Ibn Abi ^Abdar-Rahman:
which means: "The
attribute of istiwa' is not unknown, because it is mentioned in the
Qur'an. Al*kayf, that is, the how of it is inconceivable, because its
applicability to Allah is impossible." Hence, the ahadith and the
ayat that attribute aboveness to Allah, refer to the aboveness of status
and not the aboveness of place, direction, touching or suspending.
Al-Mushabbihah
are those who liken Allah to the creation; they believe Allah resembles
the creation. They attribute to Allah places, directions, shapes, and
bodies, and they try to camouflage it by saying: "However, we do not
know how His place is, or how He is sitting, or how His face is, or how
His shin is, or how his light is." All of that does not clear them of
blasphemy.
Praise
be to Allah the Lord of the worlds the One Who is clear of resembling
the creation, all nonbefitting attributes, and all that which the
blasphemers unrightfully say about Him.
And Allah knows best.
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