In the Holy Qura'n, we read the following verses:
Allah: There is no god but He; His are the Greatest Names. (20:8)
Say: Call upon Allah or call upon the Beneficent God (al-Rahman);
whichever you call upon, He has the Greatest Names." (Qura'n, 17:110) To
Allah belong the Greatest Names; therefore, call on Him thereby, and leave
alone those who violate the sanctity of His Names..." (Qura'n, 7:180)
In order to familiarize ourselves with Allah's Attributes, we have to
consult the Holy Qura'n, traditions, or even common-sense. On page 220
of his Book of Unity (of Allah), Shaikh Muhammed ibn `Ali ibn Babawayh
al-Qummi al-Saduq quotes Imam Ja`fer al-Sadiq quoting his forefathers quoting
the Messenger of Allah saying, "There are ninety-nine Attributes, one hundred
minus one, of Allah; whoever counts them will enter Paradise." He is also
quoted saying that whoever learns these Attributes by heart and comprehends
their meanings (and acts upon it) will enter Paradise. One should be familiar
with the meanings and implications of these names, not just with their
count. Nobody can sufficiently be acquainted with the Attributes of Allah
as He Himself says in 73:20: "He knows that you cannot (sufficiently) count
Him (His Attributes)." A tradition says, "Derive your manners from the
Attributes of Allah." Allah has willed to show His servant His Attributes
which collectively describe Him without His Name being a separate part
thereof, even though He is not identical to them in essence.
On page 112, Vol. 1, the renown scholar al-Kulaini al-Razi cites Hisham
ibn al-Hakam saying that when he once asked Imam Ja`fer al-Sadiq about
Allah's Attributes and their derivation, as well as the derivation of the
word "Allah," the Imam said to him, "O Hisham! The proper noun `Allah'
is derived from `ilah;' the Creator requires the existence of creation
[to testify to His being its Creator]. This is a noun, not an adjective.
Anyone who worships a name without worshipping what the name stands for
is actually committing kufr, apostasy; in reality, he does not worship
anything at all. One who worships the name and the meaning is also committing
kufr, for he will be worshipping two. Only one who worships the
meaning without the name is in line with the concept of Tawhid (Unity of
God). Have you understood all of this, O Hisham?" He answered him in the
affirmative, requesting him to provide more explanations, whereupon the
Imam said, "There are ninety-nine Attributes of Allah. Had each Attribute
been the same as it describes, each one of them would have been a god by
itself. But `Allah' is the meaning one deducts once he becomes familiar
with all these Attributes. They all, O Hisham, in their collective sense,
are not the same as He Himself. Bread is something you eat. Water is something
you drink. A garment is something you put on. And fire is something that
burns. Do you understand all of this, O Hisham, fully enough so that you
would promote it and fight the enemies of Allah for its sake?!" Hisham
answered him in the affirmative, whereupon the Imam added, "May Allah grant
you thereby benefits, and may He keep your feet firm thereupon, O Hisham!"
Imam al-Sadiq has said,
O son of Adam! If a bird were to eat your heart, it would not have felt
satisfied. If the hole of a needle were put before your vision, it would
have covered it up. How dare you, using these two, expect to know by them
the domain of the heavens and the earth?! Had you been truthful, you would
have looked at this sun: it is one object among many of Allah's creations.
Had your eyes been able to see all of it, then, and only then, would you
have really been truthful. Allah, the Exalted and the Great, says, "And
to your Lord is the [end] goal" (Qura'n, 53:42). So, when speech reaches
the subject of Allah, it is then that you should hold your tongue...
EXPLANATION AND DERIVATION OF THE WORD "ALLAH"
Views vary in this regard. One says it is derived from one who ilahs
(as a verb) another when the latter seeks refuge with him during the time
of fear or calamity, and he would grant him refuge and a safe haven; so,
the word would become ilah (as a noun) of people, just as one may
be their imam when he leads them in congregational prayers or becomes
their undisputed leader, or just as a robe becomes a rid' when it
is worn, or lihaf when used as a covering. Since it is an adjective
for someone who is great, "There is nothing like unto Him" (Qura'n, 42:11),
people desired to glorify Him by giving the word the prefix al,
thus it became Al-ilah. But they found the hamza in the beginning
and also in its midst, where it is quite heavily stressed, heavy on the
tongue, so they eliminated it and it became just as it is revealed in the
Holy Qura'n, that is, "Allah." This viewpoint is supported by al-Harith
ibn Asad al-Muhasibi and a group of scholars, and there are dissenters.
Derivation of the Word "Allah"
Some say that the word "Allah" is derived from the verb walaha
(past tense), yawlahu (present tense), from the root noun walah.
The waw was replaced with a hamza, just as the case with
wisad and isad, wisha and isha, wikaf and ikaf.
Walah is extreme love. Prophet Yahya (John the Baptist) used to
be forlorn most of the time whereas Jesus used to be mostly merry and always
wearing a smile on his face. They both sought the judgment of the Almighty
in their regard, whereupon Allah inspired them, "The nearest of you to
Me is the one who thinks best of Me." And surely Allah knows best.
The Almighty is Endless regarding His essence, perpetuity, eternity,
Attributes, qualities and blessings. His creation, on the other hand, are
described as reaching the end of their life terms, being limited in their
characteristics, thoughts, and spheres. The one who is incapacitated cannot
reach the Endless One. No wonder, then, that the minds are forever overcome
by the lights of His Independence, and the reasons are too feeble to realize
the brightness of His Greatness. He is as He describes Himself when He
says in 6:18 and 6:61, "He is the Supreme above His servants."
The Creator is the One Who is adored, and He is worthy of it; hence,
He is called ilah. He has made it clear for us that He is the One
who bestows His blessings upon those whom He creates in sundry ways. Adoring
is the ultimate form of glorifying. Reason testifies that the ultimate
end of glorification suits only the One Who is the source of benevolence
and bliss. It is to this fact that the Almighty refers when He says, "How
do you deny Allah while you were dead and He gave you Life"? (2:28).
Nobody knows Allah as He deserves to be known except Allah Himself.
In sermon 186 in Nahjul Balagha, Imam `Ali says the following:
One who assigns conditions to Him does not believe in His Oneness, nor
does one who likens Him to anything grasp the reality about Him. One who
illustrates an example for Him does not revere Him. One who points at Him
and imagines Him does not know the meaning of His Lordship. Anything known
by itself is a created thing, and everything that exists by virtue of other
things is the effect thereof. He does things but not with the help of instruments.
He assigns measures but not with the faculty of thinking. He is rich but
not by acquisition. Time does not keep company with Him, nor does He seek
help from any means. His Being precedes time. His Existence precedes non-existence,
and His eternity precedes beginning. By creating the senses, it is known
that He does not have the same. By comparing antitheses, it is known that
He has no antithesis, and by striking similarities between things, it is
known that there is nothing similar to Him. He has made light the contrary
of darkness, brightness the opposite of dimness, dryness the opposite of
moisture, and heat the opposite of coolness. He causes harmony among opposites.
He fuses together diverse things; He brings closer what is remote and distances
what is joined together. He is not confined to limits, nor computed by
figures. Matters are attracted to one another, and parts point out to what
is similar to them; the word "since" disproves their eternity, and possibility
disproves their perpetuity, while certain means keep them distant from
perfection. Through them does the Creator manifest Himself to the intellect,
and by them is He veiled from vision. Stillness and motion do not apply
to Him; how can anything that He causes to have any effect on Him, and
how can anything which He has created revert in its effect unto Him? Or
how can anything have an impact upon Him while He Himself brought it to
being? Had it not been so, He would have become subject to diversity, His
Being would have become divisible (into parts), and His reality would have
been prevented from being Eternal. Had He had a front, He would have had
a rear! He would have needed to be completed had there been any shortage
in Him. In that case, characteristics of His creatures would have appeared
in Him, and He would have become a sign (leading to other objects) instead
of the latter leading to Him. Through the might of His effectiveness is
He distanced above being affected by things. Neither change nor extinction
affect Him. He has not begotten anyone lest He should be said as having
been Himself born. He has not been begotten lest He should have been confined
to limits. He is too sublime to have sons, too pure to take women. Imagination
cannot reach Him to assess Him. Comprehension cannot conceive Him and fancy
a shape for Him. Senses do not perceive Him to probe Him. Hands cannot
touch Him to feel Him. He does not change into any condition. He does not
pass from one stage to another. Nights and days do not age Him. Light and
darkness do not alter Him. It cannot be said that He has a limb or extremity,
an end or an expiration, nor do things control Him to raise or lower Him,
nor does anything support Him to bend Him or keep Him erect. He is not
inside things nor outside them. He conveys news, but not with the tongue
or voice. He listens, but not with ear holes or organs of hearing. He speaks
but does not utter words. He remembers but does not memorize. He determines
but not by exercising His mind. He loves and approves without sentiments.
He hates and feels angry without any painstaking. When He intends to create
a thing, He says to it "Be" and it is, but not through a voice that strikes
(the ears). His speech is a manifestation of what He has created. His peer
never existed before, nor is He regarded as old; otherwise, He would have
become a second god. It cannot be said that He came into being after He
had not been in existence because in that case the effects of creation
would have been reflected on Him, and there would have remained no difference
between them and Him, and He would have no distinction over them. Thus,
the Creator and the created would have become equal, and the Initiator
and the initiated would have been on the same level. He created creation
without any model made by someone else, and He did not secure the assistance
of any among His creation for creating. He created the earth and controlled
it without having to hold it, retained it without having to support it,
making it stand without poles, raising it without pillars, protecting it
against bending or curving, defending it against crumbling or fragmenting.
He fixed mountains on it like pegs, solidified its rocks, caused its streams
to flow and expanded its valleys. Whatever He made did not suffer any flaw,
and whatever He strengthened did not permit any weakness. He manifests
Himself over the earth through His authority and greatness. He is aware
of what there is inside it through His knowledge and understanding. He
has power over everything on earth by virtue of His sublimity and dignity.
Nothing on earth that He asks defies Him, nor does it oppose Him to overpower
Him. He is not in need of anyone to feed Him. All things bow down to Him
and are humble before His greatness. They cannot flee away from His authority
to someone else in order to escape His benefit or harm. There is no parallel
for Him who may match Him, and none is like Him to equal Him. He will destroy
the earth after its existence, till all that exists on it will become non-existent.
But the extinction of the world after its creation is no stranger than
its formation and invention the first time. How could it be? Even if all
the beings on earth, be they birds or beasts, cattle or pasture herds,
of different origins and species, clever or not so clever nations, all
jointly combine efforts to create even a mosquito, they will not be able
to bring it into being nor understand the means to its creation. Their
wits are bewildered and they are aimlessly wandering. Their powers fall
short and they fail, returning disappointed and worn out, realizing that
they are defeated, admitting their inability to produce it. They will also
realize that they are too weak (even) to destroy it. Surely, after the
extinction of the world, Allah the Glorified will remain alone with nothing
else besides Him. He will be, after its extinction, as He was before then:
without time or place, a moment or a period. Age and time will not then
exist, and years and hours will disappear. There will be nothing except
Allah, the One, the Omnipotent. To Him is the return of all matters. The
initial creation of all matters was never within the power of the latter,
and the prevention of their own extinction was never within their reach.
Had they had the power to prevent such an extinction, they would have existed
forever. When He created any part of this world, its making did not cause
Him any difficulty, and the creation of anything which He created and formed
did not exhaust Him. He did not create it to enhance His authority, nor
did He do so for fear of any loss or harm, nor to seek help against an
overwhelming foe, nor to guard against any avenging opponent, nor for the
extension of His domain, nor for boasting of it before a partner, nor because
of His feeling of loneliness and desire to seek company. Then, after its
creation, He will destroy it not because of any worry that overcomes Him
in maintaining and administering it, nor for any pleasure that will accrue
to Him, nor for the cumbersomeness of anything over Him. The prolongation
of its existence does not wear Him out to induce Him to its quick destruction.
But Allah, the Glorified One, has maintained it with His kindness, kept
it intact with His command, and perfected it with His might. Then, after
its destruction, He will bring it back to being again not for any need
of His own for it, nor to seek the assistance of anything in it, nor to
change the condition of loneliness to that of company, nor from ignorance
to knowledge, nor from want and need to independence and plentitude, nor
from disgrace and lowliness to honour and prestige.
In another sermon, wherein he discusses the beginning of the creation
of the heavens and the earth, the Imam says,
Praise is due to Allah Whose worth cannot be described by orators, Whose
bounties cannot be counted by those who compute, the obedience to Whom
cannot be satisfied by those who strive to do so, Whom the height of intellectual
endeavor cannot appreciate, and the depths of understanding cannot reach,
for Whose description no limit can ever be set, nor praise satisfies, nor
time suffices, and no duration is fixed. He brought forth creation through
His might, dispersed the winds as an act of His mercy, and He firmed the
earth with the mountains. The foremost in religious obligation is to acknowledge
Him, the perfection of acknowledging Him is to achieve His Pleasure, the
perfection of achieving His Pleasure is to believe in His Oneness, the
perfection of believing in His Oneness is to regard Him as the Pure, and
the perfection of His purity is not to attach adjectives to Him because
every adjective is an indication that it is different from that to which
it is best named, and everything to which something is best named is different
from the Best Name itself. Thus, whoever attaches adjectives to Allah recognizes
a peer like Him, and whoever recognizes His peer regards two gods; and
whoever regards Him as One of two associate-partners with Him, and whoever
associates partners with Him errs in His regard and does Him injustice,
and whoever errs in His regard points out at Him, and whoever points out
at Him admits limitations for Him, and whoever admits limitations for Him
numbers Him. Whoever wonders where He is maintains that He is confined
to a place, and whoever wonders above what He is maintains that He is not
above something else. He is a Being but not through phenomenon of coming
into being. He exists but not from non-existence. He is with everything
but not in physical proximity. He is different from everything but not
in any physical way. He acts but without connotations of movement or means.
He sees yet none among His creation can see Him. He is One and Only, so
there is none with whom He keeps company or whom He misses when absent.
THE ATTRIBUTES OF ALLAH
Now let us discuss His Attributes in more details:
1. "Allah"
The proper noun "Allah" solely belongs to The Almighty God, the Truth.
Anything succeeding it is regarded as an adjective describing it, while
it remains a noun indicative of the True God. It combines all His Attributes,
and it needs no introduction from others, whereas the other Attributes
attain recognition when added thereto. "Allah" is not given to anyone other
than Him, nor should it ever be used for anyone besides Him.
"Allah" is the ever-Existent, the One Who causes existence, Who maintains
existence, Who creates everything that exists. Whatever He creates shall
perish; He never will: "... say: `Allah!' then leave them sporting in their
vain discourses" (Qura'n, 6:91).
2. "Al-Rahman"
Allah has said, "All those in the heavens and the earth will come to
the Beneficent God obediently" (Qura'n, 19:93).
"Al-Rahman al-Rahim" are two of the Attributes of Allah which remind
people of His mercy, of the fact that His act of affecting goodness and
rewards reach whomsoever He pleases, thus warding off evil from them. "Al-Rahman"
and "al-Rahim" are two concurrent Attributes of His each conveying more
meanings of mercy than the other.
"Al-Rahman" is an Attribute specifically relevant to Allah; none besides
Him can be called or referred to as such, whereas "al-rahim" can
be applied to people: One may be described as "rahim," merciful or kind,
but a human cannot be "rahman".
In the Holy Qura'n, we read: "In the Name of Allah, the Most Beneficent,
the Most Merciful" (Qura'n, 1:1); "The beneficent God is firm in power"
(Qura'n, 20:5). It is an Attribute demonstrating that mercy can be possible
only through Him. It means "the One Who grants mercy beyond which there
is no other mercy at all and the like of which does not at all exist."
Though derived from mercy, "al-Rahman" is both a noun and an adjective.
Neither contradicts the other.
It is commonly known that mercy means: one's desire or power of will
to bring goodness to one who is much less than him in status.
3. "Al-Rahim"
Allah, Praise and Glory to Him, has said, "Inform My servants that I
am the Forgiving, the Merciful" (Qura'n, 15:49).
"Al-Rahim" is derived from "rahmah," mercy or compassion.
"Rahmah" implies the salvation of those who receive it from harm
and loss, and their being blessed with guidance, forgiveness and sound
conviction. Al-Rahim, i.e. the One Who grants rahmah, is
a superlative. It is the highest derivative form of rahmah. Allah
has said, "He it is Who sends His blessings on you, and (so do) His angels,
so that He may bring you out of utter darkness into the light, and He is
Merciful to the believers" (Qura'n, 33:43).
Al-Rahim is the One Who bestows countless blessings. Some say
that this word is derived from "Rahim," and we have already come
to know that the root word for it is "rahmah," that is, favours
from Allah and blessings; surely His blessings cannot be counted, nor can
they ever be exhausted.
The Messenger of Allah has said, "One who has no compassion towards
people is deprived from Allah's Compassion." He has also said, "One who
does not respect the seniors among us, nor shows compassion towards our
young, nor safeguards the rights of the scholars among us, is surely none
of us." Compassion among the servants of Allah is a sure path to achieving
the mercy of Allah. The Messenger of Allah has said, "Be merciful unto
those on earth so that those in the heavens may be merciful unto you."
4. "Al-Malik"
God has said, "So exalted be Allah, the True King" (Qura'n, 23:116).
"Al-Malik" conveys the meaning of "One Who is free, by virtue
of His Own merits and characteristics, from depending on anything in existence,
while everything in existence depends on Him." Nothing in existence can
do without Him, whereas everything that exists derives its existence from
Him or because of Him. Everything/everyone is His.
Al-Malik occurs in: "Master of the Day of Judgment" (Qura'n,
1:4). Another method of recitation: Melik, King of the Day of Judgment.
Al-Maleek exists in this verse: "In the seat of honour with a most
Powerful King" (Qura'n, 54:55). "Malikul-Mulk" exists in: "O Allah, Master
of the Kingdom!" (Qura'n, 3:26). "Al-Malakoot" exists in: "Therefore glory
to the One in Whose hand is the kingdom of all things" (Qura'n, 36:83).
The Almighty has described Himself as being "Malikul-Mulk," the Owner
of everything, of the whole domain, saying, "Say: O Allah, Master of the
Kingdom!" (Qura'n, 3:26), and "Master of the Day of Judgment" (Qura'n,
1:4), which is one of the first verses of the Holy Qura'n.
A land's owner is its "malik," one legally bound to obey the king, the
"malik," with regard to land-related laws issued by the latter, whereas
the opposite is not possible.
Among the Attributes of Allah Almighty, the word "al-Malik" has occurred
independently, whereas the word "Malik" is always added to something else,
such as "Maliki yawmid-Deen," Master of the Day of Judgment; therefore,
the first Attribute has to be more revered.
5. "Al-Quddoos"
Allah has said, "Whatever in the heavens and in the earth declares the
glory of Allah, the King, the Holy" (Qura'n, 62:1).
"Al-Qudoos" means: the One Whose characteristics cannot be conceived
by the senses, nor can He be conceived by imagination, nor can He be realized
by any mind or reason or judged by any intellect. Linguistically, it is
derived from "quds," purity or cleanness. "Al-bayt al-muqaddas"
means the Purified House, the one in which people purify themselves from
the filth of sins. Paradise is also called the place of quds because
it is free from the ills of the life of this world. Arch-angel Gabriel
is called in Islam "al-ruh al-quds," the Holy Spirit, because he
is free from any fault in delivering divine inspiration to the messengers
of Allah. Allah has described Himself as "... the King, the Holy" (Qura'n,
59:23), and He has also said, "Whatever in the heavens and in the earth
declares the glory of Allah, the King, the Holy" (Qura'n, 62:1).
Al-Qudds is the One Who is above need and Whose Attributes are
above being deficient. He is the One Who purifies the souls against sinning,
Who takes the wicked by their forelocks, Who is above being limited to
space or time.
The Messenger of Allah once sent one of his companions to teach Islam
to a group of new converts and to lead them in congregational prayers.
That companion used not to recite any chapter of the Holy Qura'n (besides,
of course, the Fatiha) other than Surat al-Tawhid (or al-Ikhlas), so those
believers went back once to the Prophet and told him about it. The Prophet
said to them, "Go back and ask him why he does so." Upon asking him, the
companion answered them by saying, "... because it contains the Attribute
of al-Rahman, and this is why I love to recite it so often!" When
they told the Prophet this answer, he said to them, "Go back and tell him
that the Praised and Glorified One loves him too."
Ibn `Abbas spent a night once with his cousin the Messenger of Allah.
When the Messenger of Allah woke up and stood up on his bed, he raised
his head towards the heavens and thrice repeated the following statement:
"Subhanal Malik al-Qudds!" (Glory to the King, the Holy!) Then he
recited the last verses of Surat Ali-`Imran starting with the verse: "Surely
in the creation of the heavens and the earth..., etc."
6. "Al-Salam"
Allah Almighty has said that He is "... the King, the Holy" (Qura'n,
59:23).
"Al-Salam" means: the One Who is free from defect and shortcoming,
Whose qualities are above deficiency, Whose deeds are free from evil. Since
He is as such, there can be neither peace nor security in existence without
Him.
"Salam" means peace. Allah Almighty has said, "... and Allah
invites to the abode of peace" (Qura'n, 10:25), meaning Paradise: anyone
who abides therein will have been saved from agony and perdition. Allah
has said, "And if he is one of those on the right hand, then peace to you
from those on the right hand" (Qura'n, 56:90-91), that is, rest assured
that they are enjoying peace and tranquility. "Salam!" is a greeting;
if a Muslim tells another Muslim "As-Salamu Alaikum!" he will have
assured him of safety and security, granting him immunity against his evil
or ill intentions. Allah Almighty praises Yahya, John the Baptist, by saying,
"And peace be on him on the day he was born..." (Qura'n, 19:15).
The most precarious situations to which human beings are exposed are
three: The time of birth, the time of death, and the time of resurrection.
So Allah honoured Yahya in all these three situations, granting him peace,
safety and security against their woes. He saved him from the perils of
all these three situations and granted him security against fear.
Muslims are repeatedly enjoined by the Holy Qura'n to disseminate peace
and to be receptive to those who offer it:
O you who believe! Enter into peace one and all... (2:208) And if they
incline to peace, do incline to it too and trust in Allah. (8:61) And the
servants of al-Rahman are the ones who walk on earth humbly, and
when the ignorant ones address them, they say: Salam (Peace)! (25:63)
And when those who believe in Our Signs come to you, say: Peace be on you!
Your Lord has ordained mercy on Himself... (6:54) So turn away from them
and say, Peace! For they shall soon come to know. (43:89)
Allah's Salam is His speech. Likewise, the Messenger of Islam
used to quite often enjoin the believers to disseminate the greeting of
peace among them. There are numerous traditions testifying to this fact;
among them are the following:
Assalamu minal Islam: The greeting of peace is an integral part
of the creed of Islam.
Afshu al Salama taslamu: Disseminate the greeting of peace among
you so you may achieve peace and security.
Whoever upholds three things will have combined in him the meaning of
conviction: 1) fairness to his own self, 2) disseminating of the greeting
of peace to everyone, and 3) spending wisely out of what he saves.
Afshu al Salama baynakum: Disseminate the greeting of peace among
you.
In one of his supplications, the Messenger of Allah used to say, "Lord!
Make us harbingers of peace to Your friends!" The Holy Qura'n tells us
that the name of Paradise is "Dar al Salam," the abode of peace; He, Glory
and Exaltation to Him, says, "They shall have the abode of peace with their
Lord, and He is their guardian because of what they did" (Qura'n, 6:127).
Allah will make the greeting of the believers, when they meet Him, "Peace!"
He says, "Their salutation on the Day they meet Him shall be: Salam!
(Peace!)" (Qura'n, 33:44). Referring to the believers, He says the following
in Surat al-Ra`d, "... the gardens of perpetual abode which they will enter
along with those who do good deeds from among their parents and spouses
and offspring, and the angels will enter upon them from every gate (saying):
Peace be on you because you were constant! How excellent, then, is the
issue of the abode!" (Qura'n, 13:23-24).
Thawban, servant of the Messenger of Allah, has said, "Whenever the
Messenger of Allah finished his prayers, he would seek forgiveness of Allah
thrice, saying, `Lord! You are the Peace; from You is the Peace; Glory
to You! Greatness and Honour are in You!'"
7. "Al-Mu'min"
Allah has described Himself as al-Mu'min: "... the One Who gives
peace, Who grants security" (Qura'n, 59:23).
"Al-Mu'min" means: the One to Whom peace and security are rendered:
He provides the means of their attainment, blocking all the avenues of
fear. There is no peace nor security in this life against the causes of
disease and perdition, nor in the life hereafter against the torment and
the Wrath, except that He provides the means to attain it.
"Iman," linguistically speaking, is an infinitive (to believe)
derived from two verbs: tasdeeq, testimony for the truth of something
or someone, as in 12:17: "... and you will not believe us though we are
truthful" (Qura'n, 12:17), and aman, asylum or a peaceful haven
as in 106:4: "... and gave them security against fear" (Qura'n, 106:4).
Some linguists are of the view that the derivation of iman is from
this second verb.
If we say that the Almighty grants His servants security against anything
they dread, we must be understood in the light of the circumstances of
the life in this world and in the hereafter. As regarding the life in this
world, the removal of the cause of fear is not reasonably accepted except
when a precarious situation has actually taken place. Fear cannot be removed
when the possibility of loss of life is present, and nobody can remove
such a possibility except Allah. Nobody can bring about peace and security
other than He. A blind person is apprehensive of perishing on account of
his inability to see the area from which death may overtake him. Sound
vision grants him security against being annihilated. One whose arm is
amputated fears the situation when he cannot defend himself except through
the use of his arm. His healthy arm, then, is the cause of his feeling
of security. The same can be said about all our senses and bodily parts.
The One Who created all these parts is the same One Who has removed from
man the causes of fear by granting him such parts. The One Who has created
delicious food for man as well as good medicines and taught him how to
make useful tools, thus sparing himself a lot of trouble, is surely the
same One Who grants him security against all such dangers. The Messenger
of Allah has said, "Anyone who believes in Allah and the Last Day should
bring security to his neighbor against his own misdeeds." [1]
8. "Al-Muhaimin"
In 59:23, we read: "He is Allah besides Whom there is no other god,
the King, the Holy, the One Who grants peace, the One Who grants security,
the Guardian over all, the Mighty, the Supreme, the One Who possesses greatness;
Glory to Allah from whatever they set up (with Him)."
When applied to the Almighty, "al-Muhaimin" means that He is
the One Who oversees His servants' actions, Who provides them with sustenance,
and decrees their life-spans. He does so through His knowledge, control,
and protection. Anyone who oversees something is its guardian; so he has
full power over it. These Attributes can never be present in their absolute
meaning except in Allah.
This Attribute describes in 10:61 the One Who testifies for or against
His servants who enter into mutual transactions: "... We are witnesses
over you when you enter into it." Allah is al-Muhaimin, the One
Who witnesses all what His servants do, be it a speech or an action. The
meaning of this verse incorporates the meaning of the word "muhaimin"
thus: the One Who knows everything and from Whose knowledge nothing at
all can escape, not even the weight of an atom in the earth or in the heavens.
Al-Khalil ibn Ahmed al-Farahidi says that "al-Mu'min" means:
the One Who ever watches, Who ever protects. It is common in Arabic to
describe someone as "muhaimin" if he protects someone else or is
his guardian.
Al-Mibrad explains its meaning as: the One Who is most kind and
compassionate. Arabs describe the bird that stretches its wings to protect
its young as being "muhaimin" over them.
Al-Hassan al-Basri says it means the Guardian Who testifies to one's
truth. Applied to the Almighty, it may carry one of two meanings: His testimony
by word, hence His testimony informing us about His messengers being truthful,
and His empowering those messengers to produce miracles, thus testifying
to their truthfulness.
Al-Muhaimin is the One Who encompasses in His knowledge the management
of the affairs of all His creation from the smallest atom to the largest
planet in the cosmos.
9. "Al-`Aziz"
The Almighty has said, "O Moses! Surely I am Allah, the Omnipotent,
the Wise" (Qura'n, 27:9).
The root word of this Attribute is `izz, might, power, strength,
victory, elevation, non-submission. Its verb means: to strengthen or to
support as in: "We sent them two [messengers] but they called them liars,
so We strengthened them with a third," (Qura'n, 36:14) that is, supported
them and their argument with a third messenger. Linguistically, its verb
means: to overcome, to gain the upper hand, to subdue...
Al-`Aziz is the One Who Alone has all honour; He is never humiliated,
nor is He ever wronged; neither imagination nor intellect can ever conceive
Him. He is the One Who cannot be overcome or in any way harmed, the One
Who has no peer nor a similitude, Who is very much needed, Who is victorious
and is never vanquished, the Mighty, the Omnipotent Who can never be reached.
The Almighty has described Himself as al-`Aziz, narrating in
His Book, the Holy Qura'n, an anecdote about Jesus pleading to Him thus
"... if You forgive them, surely You are the Mighty, the Wise" (Qura'n,
5:118). He has also said, "And to Him belongs greatness in the heavens
and in the earth, and He is the Mighty, the Wise" (Qura'n, 45:37). He has
proven that He has in Him all the Attributes of Greatness, saying, "To
Allah belongs the might, and to His Prophet, and to the believers" (Qura'n,
63:8), and also, "Glory to your Lord, the Lord of Honour, above what they
describe" (Qura'n, 37:180). While discussing Iblis, He quotes him saying,
"... by Your Might I will surely make them live an evil life, all of them"
(Qura'n, 38:82).
The Messenger of Allah used to say, "I seek refuge with Your Honour,
for You are the One Who is the One and Only God Who never dies, while the
jinns and men die."
10. "Al-Jabbar"
Allah has said, "He is Allah besides Whom there is no other god, the
Sovereign, the Holy, the Source of peace (and perfection), the Guardian
of Faith, the Preserver of safety, the One Exalted in Might, the Irresistible,
the Supreme; Glory to Allah! (High is He) above the partners they attribute
to (Him)" (Qura'n, 59:23).
Linguistically, "al-Jabbar" is derived from jabr, the
opposite of breaking. It suggests the forceful mending of something broken,
fractured, shattered, crushed..., etc. It is also said that the adjective
jabbar means great, huge, inaccessible. Linguists say that al-Jabbar
is the Most Great. It is a superlative adjective derived from jabr;
He is the One Who not only mends what is broken but also enriches the one
who is incapacitated by poverty and want. In short, He is the One Who repairs
everything broken or impaired.
Abdullah ibn `Abbas says that al-Jabbar is the Great King, while
Ibn al-Anbari says that al-Jabbar is the One Who is beyond anyone's
reach. Others have said that "al-Jabbar" means the One Who cannot
be harmed by any mighty oppressor, and nobody can dispute with Him about
anything. It is said that "al-Jabbar" conveys the same meaning conveyed
by the Attribute "al-Mutakabbir," the Proud or the Supreme One.
Pride and Supremacy are commendable Attributes only when applied to Allah.
If applied to anyone else, on the other hand, they become abominable qualities.
It is also said that the meaning of "al-Jabbar" connotes: the One
Who forces His will on others. Nothing can happen in His domain except
whatever He pleases, whether His beings like it or not. Or it may mean
the One Who repairs, improves, or reforms, as is the analogy with one who
mends, say, a broken limb.
One of its derivatives is jabaroot, supremacy or greatness. According
to one tradition, the Messenger of Allah has supplicated thus, "Glory to
the One Who has all the jabaroot and all the domain." In one of
his statements, Imam `Ali ibn Abu Talib has said, "He is the One Whose
will has manifested itself on the nature of hearts," that is, He firmed
the hearts according to the way He created them and according to their
level of knowing Him; those who know Him are the happy ones, while those
who do not are the wretches.
"Al-Jabbar" connotes forcefulness and forcibleness. We can find
out that all parts of the body have been driven to perform their functions
without any will of their own. Cast a look at the sun as it moves in its
orbit without deviating from it as little as an inch, whether it likes
it or not. Man has no control over the time when Allah chooses his life
to begin, or how he is born, or when he dies, or the family in which he
is to be born. All these are predestined for him, and he has no control
over them. So is the case with all other beings on the face of earth. They
all have been created with the ability to adapt to life on earth, and nobody
has any choice in this matter: "It is He Who has spread out the earth for
(His) creatures; therein are fruits and date-palms, producing spathes (containing
dates)" (Qura'n, 55:10-11). All of these things are created without the
choice of any human being.
11. "Al-Mutakabbir"
Allah has said, "He is Allah besides Whom there is no other god, the
Sovereign, the Holy, the Source of peace (and perfection), the Guardian
of the Faith, the Preserver of safety, the One Exalted in Might, the Irresistible,
the Supreme; Glory to Allah! (High is He) above the partners they attribute
to (Him)" (Qura'n, 59:23).
Understanding "al-Mutakabbir" requires a good deal of reasoning
and insight. Its root word "kibriya'" means greatness and sovereignty,
and it incorporates the meanings of the perfection of one's self and existence;
nobody can be described as such except Allah. Greatness, as far as Allah
Almighty is concerned, is the loftiness of status: "By His command does
He send the spirit (of inspiration) to any of His servants He pleases so
that it may warn (men) of the Day of mutual meeting" (Qura'n, 40:15). Al-Mutakabbir
is the One Who possesses all greatness, Who is above having any of the
qualities of His creatures, Who is above being harmed by the oppressors
among His creation, Whose greatness and pride are the super-most. He is
too great to be deficient in anything or in need for anyone or anything,
the One Who is above having any of the characteristics and attributes of
His creatures, the One Who Alone has all greatness and pride. None besides
Him is justified to conceive himself as great, or as mighty, or as the
sovereign. He is the One Who is too Holy to be afflicted by any calamity;
so, no greatness is justified for anyone besides Him; He is the One Who
has all might and kingdom. This Attribute means: the One Who has combined
in Him, and Who rightly deserves so, all the attributes of greatness, perfection,
pride and glory, all at the same time.
He is too Great to submit to others; rather, submission is due to Him,
and only to Him. The Holy Qura'n bestows the Attribute of greatness upon
the Almighty in Surat al-Jathiya: "To Him be Glory throughout the heavens
and the earth, and He is Exalted in Power, full of Wisdom" (Qura'n, 45:37).
Pride due to the sense of being great is of two kinds:
One is when actions of such a person are indeed great and better than
those of anyone else's; He is "... the Source of peace (and perfection),
the Guardian of Faith, the Preserver of security, the One Exalted in Might,
the Irresistible, the Supreme" (Qura'n, 59:23).
The other is that one conceives himself artificially to be as such,
and this applies to most people:
Thus does Allah set a seal over the heart of everyone who is proud,
haughty. (40:35) Surely evil is the dwelling place of those who are proud.
(16:29) Isn't there in hell an abode for those who are proud? (39:60)
Quoting the Lord of Greatness, the Almighty God, the Messenger of Allah
has said, "Pride is My cloak; Greatness is My garment; whoever disputes
with Me regarding either, I shall surely hurl him into the fire." Here
the Almighty informs and admonishes us that greatness, might and pride
are all His prerogatives, that none among His servants is worthy of claiming
any of them for himself.
In one of his supplications, the Messenger of Allah says, "I seek refuge
with You, Lord, against the evil of pride." He is also quoted as saying
that pride is an indication of ingratitude towards the Truth, the Almighty;
he has said, "Pride is ingratitude towards the Truth." Imam `Ali has said,
"The son of Adam is truly amazing! A wound can end his life, a bug can
cause him a pain, his sweat can make him stink, so how can he ever feel
proud?"
The Messenger of Allah has warned us against pride and of being proud
of ourselves, saying, "Nobody will enter Paradise if he has even the weight
of a mustard seed of pride, and nobody will enter the fire if there is
a likewise weight of conviction in his heart." As the lucky [2]
ones enter Paradise, their hearts will be purged of any pride and jealousy:
"And we will root out whatever rancor there is in their hearts" (Qura'n,
15:47).
The Attribute "al-Mutakabbir" is mentioned only once in the text
of the Holy Qura'n in 59:23, and Allah knows best.
12. "Al-Khaliq"
Allah has said, "He is Allah the Creator..." (Qura'n, 59:24).
"Al-Khaliq" is derived from khalq, creating. Allah, al-Khaliq,
the Creator, is the One Who brings things into existence after their non-existence,
Who invents and innovates without a prior model. Some scholars say that
al-Khaliq is the One Who creates things out of naught then bestows
upon them their characteristics of movement and other qualities. Others
say that He is the One Who invents whatever the eyes can see, Who perfects
their creation. Still others say that He is the One Who determined the
measure of all things when they were enshrouded by void, perfecting them
by His bounties and goodness, bringing them into existence according to
His will, desire and wisdom. Anyone who thinks that there is anyone else
besides Him who creates is indeed one who commits kufr, apostasy,
blasphemy, disbelief. Allah Almighty has said the following:
... the Creator of everything; therefore, worship Him. (6:102)... is
there any creator besides Allah...? (35:3) Yea, indeed! For He is the Supreme
Creator, of (infinite) skill and knowledge. (36:81) ... so blessed is Allah,
the best of creators. (23:14) Is it not His to create and to govern? Blessed
is Allah, the Cherisher and Sustainer of the worlds. (7:54)
Ibn `Abbas is reported as saying that whenever the Messenger of Allah
looked in the mirror, he would say, "Praise to Allah Who has made both
my creation and my manners good, Who beautified in me what He has not done
in others." According to a narration by our master Imam `Ali ibn Abu Talib,
the Messenger of Allah used to say the following whenever he looked in
the mirror, "Praise is due to Allah! Lord! Just as You have made my form
good, I implore You to make my manners, too, good." [3]
13. "Al-Bari"
Allah has said, "He is Allah the Creator, the Evolver, the One Who bestows
forms (or colors) upon what He creates. To Him belong the Attributes" (Qura'n,
59:24).
There are viewpoints regarding the explanation of "al-Bari": One
says it refers to the One Who brings about something out of nothing, the
One Who creates something which was never there before. It is said that
Allah is al-Bari of creation, the One Who brought about all things
into existence out of non-existence.
The other meaning conveys the cutting off or severing of something.
The root verb of this word means cutting and shaping something such as
a twig or a pencil. One may say that illness has parted from him, or that
he is free of a claim put forth by another. It can also be applied metaphorically
such as one person severing his partnership with another, or a woman separating
from her husband. Allah has bara'a, created or initiated, the creation
without a model; bariyyah means those whom He has created. Another
meaning is curing or healing. A wise saying states that one who is cured
should express gratitude to the One Who cured him.
Ja`fer ibn Sulayman is quoted as having said that he passed once by
a blind old woman grieving over herself and wailing, so he asked her, "What
does it take to sustain you?" She answered him saying, "Stop sticking your
nose where it does not belong; I have reached this stage of life without
needing you or others." Then she added, "Have you not heard the statement
made by the Friend of Allah who said, `[Allah] Who created me then showed
me the way, and He provides me with food to eat and with water to drink,
and when I am sick, He restores my health to me' (26:78-80)?"
One who knows the real meaning of "al-Bari", therefore, is one
whose heart is not affected by events, nor can momentous events overtake
him by surprise. It is also said that anyone who comes to know Who al-Bari
really is will dissociate himself from claiming to have anything to do
with his own form or shape, fearing his Creator's Might, knowing that he
is not doing Him a favour by worshipping and obeying Him. It is also said
that He is the One Who has dissociated Himself from everyone else, the
One Who is never surprised by whatever events take place. It is also said
that anyone who recognizes Him as al-Bari will dissociate himself
from committing anything prohibitive, seeking refuge with the King, the
Most Forgiving One.
14. "Al-Musawwir"
Allah has said, "He is Allah the Creator, the Evolver, the Bestower
of forms (or colors). To Him belong the Attributes" (Qura'n, 59:24).
Al-Musawwir is the One Who fashions, Who gives something its
distinctive form and shape. The general human form is distinguished from
that of non-humans. Allah says, "... and He formed you and made your forms
good" (Qura'n, 40:64), "Into whatever form He pleased He shaped you" (Qura'n,
82:8), and "He it is Who shapes you in the wombs as He pleases (3:6)."
Al-Musawwir means: the One Who invents the forms and shapes of
whatever He creates, Who beautifies them according to His wisdom, giving
everything its own distinctive shape and form. He creates humans in different
forms and shapes, making some of them different from others in physique,
size, complexion, etc. This may be the meaning of the verse saying, "And
among His signs is the creation of the heavens and the earth and the diversity
of your tongues and colors; most surely there are signs in this for those
who have knowledge" (Qura'n, 30:22). "He it is Who shapes you in the wombs
as He pleases; there is no god but He, the Mighty, the Wise" (Qura'n, 3:6);
"And certainly We created man of an extract of clay, then We made him a
small seed in a firm resting-place, then We made the seed a clot, then
We made the clot a lump of flesh, then We made in the lump of flesh bones,
then We clothed the bones with flesh, then We caused it to grow into another
creation; so, blessed be Allah, the best of creators" (Qura'n, 23:12-14).
Whenever the Messenger of Allah prostrated, he used to say, "Lord! To
You have I prostrated, in You have I believed, and to You have I submitted!
My countenance has prostrated to the One Who created it and shaped it,
Who created hearing and vision for it; so, blessed is Allah, the best of
creators!"
Among the supplications of the Messenger of Allah when he prostrated
is this one: "My face has submitted to the One Who created and formed it
and Who made its form good." The Holy Qura'n has informed us a good deal
about al-Musawwir, Allah. In Surat al-A`raf, for example, we read
the following: "And certainly We created you then fashioned you" (Qura'n,
7:11). In Surat al-Taghabun, we read, "He has created the heavens and the
earth in just proportions, and He has given you shape and made your shapes
beautiful, and to Him is the final resort" (Qura'n, 64:3). In Surat Ghafir,
we read, "Allah is He Who made the earth a resting-place for you and the
heavens a canopy, and He formed you then made your forms good, and He provided
you with good things; that is Allah, your Lord; blessed then is Allah,
the Lord of the worlds" (Qura'n, 40:64). In Surat Ali-`Imran, we read,
"He it is Who shapes you in the wombs as He pleases; there is no god but
He, the Mighty, the Wise" (Qura'n, 3:6). In Surat al-Infitar, we read,
"O man! What has beguiled you from your Lord, the Gracious One Who created
you then made you complete, then He made you symmetrical? Into whatever
form He pleased He constituted you" (Qura'n, 82:6-8). And in Surat al-Hashr
we read, "He is Allah the Creator, the Evolver, the Bestower of forms (or
colors). To Him belong the Attributes; all those in the heavens and on
earth declare His Praises and Glory, and He is Exalted in Might, Wise"
(Qura'n, 59:24).
Allah Almighty has said, "And He created pairs, the male and the female,
from the small seed when it is adapted, and upon Him is its bringing forth
a second time" (Qura'n, 53:45-47).
15. "Al-Ghaffar"
Allah has said, "Surely I am most Forgiving to whoever repents and believes
and does good deeds" (Qura'n, 20:82).
Al-Ghaffar is one of Allah's Attributes derived from ghufr
and ghufran, both nouns which convey the meaning of: veiling, hiding,
concealing. Allah's maghifra, forgiveness, is His veiling of one's
sins, and His forgiveness by granting him His favour and mercy. Al-Ghaffar
is the One Who has manifested what is beautiful and veiled what is ugly
in the life of this world and Who does not inflict His penalty on him in
the life hereafter. He is the One Who forgives sins, veils the shortcomings,
wipes out the sins by accepting one's repentance. He accepts His servants'
repentance and is pleased thereby, and the One Who forgives the sins and
turns them into good deeds by His great favour. He is the One Who forgives
the sins though they may be great, and He veils them though they may be
numerous.
The words derived from forgiveness have mostly been associated with
Allah. One of them is al-Ghafir as in this verse: "The One Who forgives
the sins" (Qura'n, 40:3). The second is al-Ghafur; He has said,
"... then [if he] asks forgiveness of Allah, he shall find Allah Forgiving,
Merciful" (Qura'n, 4:110). A third is al-Ghaffar as in: "And surely
I am most Forgiving to one who repents and believes and does good deeds"
(Qura'n, 20:82), "... seek forgiveness of your Lord; surely He is the most
Forgiving" (Qura'n, 71:10), and "... surely He is the Mighty, the great
Forgiver" (Qura'n, 39:5). It is proven, by making a reference to the Holy
Qura'n, that all these Attributes, which are derived from forgiveness,
are applied only to Allah, the Most Exalted One. Having killed a Copt,
Moses implored his Lord thus: "Lord! Surely I have harmed my own self;
so, forgive me" (Qura'n, 28:16). He first admitted his sin then sought
His forgiveness. Allah also revealed the fault of David then said, "So
We forgave him this (lapse)" (Qura'n, 38:25). He addressed Muhammed saying,
"So that Allah may forgive your past and future faults" (Qura'n, 48:2).
Has He not in these examples exposed a sin then forgiven it? In one of
his supplications, Prophet Muhammed says, "Lord! I implore You to forgive
me an apparent forgiveness and a concealed one, and to forgive open and
secret sins."
The meanings of maghfira, the root word of al-Ghaffar, al-Ghaafir,
and al-Ghafur are clear in the verse saying: "The One Who forgives
the sins and accepts the repentance, the One Who is severe in punishment,
the Lord of bounty; there is no god but He; to Him is the eventual return"
(Qura'n, 40:3).
Al-Ghaffar is the One Who very often veils [the sins and faults
of His servants], so much so that He does not propagate one's sins in the
life of this world nor in the life hereafter. One of the companions of
the Messenger of Allah was asked once, "What did you hear the Messenger
of Allah say with regard to one's silent supplication?" He answered by
saying that he had heard the Messenger of Allah say, "Allah, the most Honoured,
the Most Great, will touch His servant who believes in Him with His mercy
by veiling his sin from the public in the life of this world, and in the
life hereafter He will ask him about each and every sin and fault he had
committed. Once he admits all of them and realizes that he is going to
perish on their account, the Almighty will say, `I have veiled your sins
in the past short life, and in this one I am going to forgive them.' Then
he will be handed the book of his good deeds." All this happens to those
who believe in Him; as regarding those who do not, and the hypocrites,
He will deal with them quite differently.
16. "Al-Qahhar"
Allah has said, "Say: Allah is the Creator of all things, and He is
the One, the Supreme" (Qura'n, 13:16).
Linguistically, "al-Qahhar" is derived from qahr, conquest,
subduing, vanquishing, winning a victory. It means the overtaking of something
or someone with the intention to humiliate him. One who takes another by
way of qahr is one who takes him against his will. "Al-Qahhar"
is a superlative of "al-Qahir", the Victor or Subduer. Allah, indeed,
is the One Who, by His Might, has subdued everything He created to His
Authority and Power, using His creatures as He pleases, whether they like
it or not. Al-Qahir is the One Who has the upper hand over all creation;
"... and Allah is the master of His affair" (Qura'n, 12:21).
Al-Qahhar is the One Whose vengeance nobody can withstand. He
humiliates oppressors, splits the spine of kings and emperors. He is the
One besides Whose Might all creation is powerless, without Whose Power
all beings are helpless. If we submit to Him, He will satisfy our needs,
but if we do not, He will make us suffer as we try to achieve our objectives.
He is the One Who splits the spine of the tyrants and oppressors from among
His foes, subduing them by taking their lives away, and by humiliating
them, while there is nothing in existence that can escape His Might and
Power: everyone and everything is helpless in His grip.
Al-Qahhar effects His will with regard to His creatures, whether
they like it or not, whether they are willing or unwilling. He has subdued
the souls of the worshippers by instilling in the hearts the fear of His
retribution, and the hearts of those who are endowed with knowledge with
the Might of nearness to Him, and the souls of those who love Him by unveiling
the truth about Him to them. He has subdued all beings by death, so none
is safe from Him, not even an angel who enjoys a special status with Him,
nor a prophet, nor a messenger. Allah will make even the angel of death,
Israel, taste of death; so, when his soul is taken out, the angel of death
will say, "By Your Honour do I swear that had I known the taste of death
to be like this, I would never have taken away anyone's soul at all!" It
is to such a meaning that the word qahr, upon the taking of the
souls of all beings, conveys as implied in the verse saying, "To whom does
the kingdom belong this day? To Allah, the One, the Subduer (of all)" (Qura'n,
40:16).
If one who believes in Allah desires to personify within him the meanings
embedded in this Attribute, he has to subdue his own self, his nafs,
and control his evil desires, by not plotting in cooperation with Satan,
and by returning to Allah, submitting to His will in all matters. The path
whereby man derives light from the Attribute "al-Qahhar" is that
one should view his nafs, which is ever present within him, as the
worst of his enemies, so he subdues it and strangles it, doing exactly
the opposite of what it tells him to do, so much so that it will have no
choice except to submit to divine commandments. Then he will have to subdue
his stubborn opponent, i.e. Satan, staying on his guard against his evil
suggestions, blocking his avenues. Then he will have to subdue his carnal
desires and insinuations by not following what they inspire him to do.
17. "Al-Wahhab"
Allah, the Most Exalted, the Most High, has said, "Lord! Do not let
our hearts deviate after having guided us, but grant us mercy from Your
own Presence, for You are the Grantor of bounties without measure" (Qura'n,
3:8).
"Al-Wahhab" is derived from the proper noun hibah the
verb of which, yahib, means: to make someone else the owner of what
the giver, the first party (the doer), rightfully owns without asking the
second party for any compensation in return. It is the gift which is free
from any recompense or gain for the giver. If someone gives out such gifts
quite often, he will earn the titles of jawad and wahhab,
the generous one, the oft-giving, respectively. Allah Almighty is described
as the Most Generous, the Most Giving, i.e. al-Wahhab,
simply because He gives everyone according to his means. Among Allah's
Attributes are al-Wahhab and al-Wahib. The latter Attribute
means: the giver, whereas the first is a superlative of the latter. One
who is wahab is one who grants many gifts.
Al-Wahhab is the One Who gives away without a compensation; He
bestows His favours upon His servants without a selfish end; He grants
even without being asked; He is the One Who initiates giving, and He is
the oft-Giver. Allah is surely al-Wahhab because He is the
Most Munificent, the Most Giving, the One Who ever tries
to get closer to His servants, Who graciously bestows His favours upon
them, Who gives them even before they ask Him, the ever-Giver Who gives
everyone what he needs. Al-Wahhab bestows His blessings upon His
servants, and this indicates His inclusion of everyone as He continuously
gives. He does not give painstakingly, nor does He seek a benefit, or an
advantage, for Himself by doing so. Al-Wahhab showers you with His
blessings without having to have a reason or a means to do so. Al-Wahhab
gives away without being compensated for what He gives, and He causes all
beings to die without a particular purpose He seeks to achieve for Himself.
According to Surat al-Shura, "He bestows (children), male or female, according
to His Will (and Plan)" (Qura'n, 42:49).
Whenever the Messenger of Allah used to wake up during the night, he
would supplicate thus: "Lord! There is no god but You! Glory to You! Lord!
I seek Your forgiveness for my sins, and I plead to You, by Your mercy,
O Lord, to increase my share of knowledge, not to permit my heart to deviate
after having guided it, and to grant me, from You, a mercy, for surely
You are al-Wahhab..." [4]
18. "Al-Razzaq"
"Al-Razzaq" is derived from rizq, sustenance, or anything
of any benefit to man, animals, plants, etc., whereby the latter are sustained
or are helped in their growth. Rain is also called rizq; it helps
sustain every living being on our planet. In 51:58, we read: "Surely Allah
is the One Who bestows sustenance, the Lord of Power, the Strong One."
Another verse referring to our sustenance is this: "And in the heavens
is your sustenance and what you are threatened with" (Qura'n, 51:22). "In
the heavens is your sustenance" may be a reference to the rain that descends
from the heavens, the sky [5].
As to the phrase "and what you are threatened with," this may be a clue
that the end of life on this earth will be terminated by a collision of
an asteroid or a large size cosmic debri with the earth, but this is not
the place to discuss such interpretations or speculations. If Allah so
wills, I intend to write a complete tafsr, an exegesis, of the Holy
Qura'n that will contain such interpretations and speculations the like
of which has never been written in English before. If the reader wishes
to see such a book published, he is requested to pray the Almighty to make
it happen. Prayers go a long way, had people only known. Allah listens
to each and every supplication no matter who the supplicant is so long
as the latter is a true believer in Him.
The word rizq may be used for means of income, livelihood, sustenance,
money, wealth..., or for the earning of something good, be it during the
life of this world or in the life to come, or it may be applied to one's
lot or fortune, or even to anything eaten. "Al-Razzaq" is a superlative
of "al-Raziq," the One Who provides rizq. Al-Razzaq
is applied to none other than Allah. There are two types of rizq:
one sustains the body, such as food and drink, while the other sustains
the soul, which is knowledge and true inspiration. The latter is the best
type of sustenance simply because what sustains the soul lasts forever,
while what sustains the body has a temporary duration.
Al-Razzaq is the One Who creates all types of sustenance, Who
extends His favour to cover making such sustenance attainable to His creatures,
Who provides means for getting them to attain their sustenance. He sustains
all His creation by whatever means needed to keep them alive. He sustains
the minds with knowledge, the hearts with understanding, the souls with
manifestations, the bodies with food, and so on. Only He can do so. Anyone
who realizes this fact will recognize the fact that his own sustenance,
and that of everyone and everything else, is controlled by none other than
Allah.
References to rizq have been made in several Qura'nic verses
such as these:
... Allah provides means of subsistence to whomsoever He pleases without
a measure. (2:212) Allah is Benignant to His servants; He gives sustenance
to whomsoever He pleases, and He is the Strong, the Mighty One. (42:19)
... and whoever fears Allah, He will make an outlet for him and give him
sustenance from whence he does not expect. (65:2-3) ... these are the believers
truly; they shall have forgiveness and an honourable provision. (8:74)
... and the sustenance (provided) by your Lord is better and more abiding.
(20:131) Most surely this is Our sustenance: it shall never deplete. (38:54)
Say: The (blessing) from the presence of Allah is better than any amusement
or bargain. (62:11) ... surely the things you worship besides Allah cannot
sustain you. (29:17)
There is no creature moving on earth except that its sustenance depends
on Allah. (11:6)
One of the Islamic manners inspired by the Attribute "al-Razzaq"
is that a servant of Allah becomes convinced that there is no partner with
his Lord in providing sustenance, just as He has no partner in creating
everything. He, therefore, pleads to Him for anything small or big. He
also feels satisfied with what al-Razzaq has allotted for him, just
as He has said, "And they are the ones who, when spending, are neither
extravagant nor parsimonious but keep the just means between these [extremes]"
(Qura'n, 25:67), and also, "Those who, when spending, are neither extravagant
nor niggardly but hold a just (balance) between these (extremes)" (Qura'n,
17:29).
The abundance of Allah's sustenance is without a limit. He is the One
Who says the following in Surat Hud: "There is no creature moving on earth
except that its sustenance depends on Allah: He knows the time and place
of its definite abode and its temporary deposit: all is in a clear record"
(Qura'n, 11:6).
19. "Al-Fattah"
The Almighty has said, "Say: Our Lord will gather us together and will
in the end decide the matter between us (and you) in truth and justice,
and He is the One to decide, the One Who knows everything" (Qura'n, 34:26).
In Arabic, fataha, the verb, means "opened," and muftah
means key, whereas fath means victory or conquest. Fath also
means flowing water, a creak, or a river. It also means: to arbitrate between
two opponents. "Istiftah" means: seeking help or achieving victory.
Both al-Fatih and al-Fattah are among the Attributes of Allah.
They exist within the text of the Holy Qura'n. "Al-Fattah" is a
superlative of al-fath. To say that Allah is al-Fattah is
to say that He is the One Who judges between those whom He creates, His
servants, the obedient ones and the rebellious. It is derived from fath
which means, in such usage, arbitration or decision-making. It exists in
this meaning in the verse saying, "Lord! Decide between us and our people
with truth, and You are the best of those who decide" (Qura'n, 7:89). It
also means: the One Who grants victory as in this verse of Surat al-Anfal:
"If you pray for victory, then indeed victory has come to you" (Qura'n,
8:19).
Al-Fattah is the One Who opens deadlocked matters and issues,
Who reveals the truth, Who simplifies whatever seems to be complicated,
Who controls the affairs of the heavens and the earth: "And with Him are
the keys of the unseen treasures: none knows them but He, and He knows
what is in the land and in the sea" (Qura'n, 6:59). So He is the One Who
opens what is closed and Who has the keys to everything, Who widely opens
the gates of sustenance and brings down rain whereby He brings life back
to dead lands, Who grants victory and support for His prophets whom He
sends to various lands so that the light of the truth may shine therein,
and so that He may purge their souls from evil intentions. He opens the
closed hearts and fills them with His light, so they become tranquil, and
they enjoy the feeling of success.
The Attribute "al-Fattah" inspires good manners which ought to
be followed by anyone who correctly grasps the meanings it implies, who
deeply contemplates upon it, who sincerely desires to be blessed by it.
Among such manners is that one should maintain an attitude of beautiful
anticipation of the Grace of Allah, continuously expecting to receive His
favours, always looking forward to earning His blessings. He abandons haste,
feels satisfied with his lot and with whatever his Lord has decreed for
him. "Contentment is a treasure that never depletes," says an Arabic axiom.
How true!
20. "Al-`Aleem"
Allah has said, "... and trust in Allah; surely He is the Hearing, the
Knowing" (Qura'n, 8:61).
"Al-`Aleem" is derived from `ilm, knowledge, which results
from comprehending the truth about something and from the sure conviction
which agrees with reality. "Al-`Aleem," when applied to the Almighty,
is the One Who is most Knowing; surely His knowledge encompasses everything
in existence even before anything begins to exist. Nothing at all can escape
His knowledge. He is the One Whose knowledge is inclusive, be it apparent
or hidden, minute or magnanimous. He knows its beginning and its end, what
is above or underneath it, and what results therefrom. Al-`Aleem
is also the One Who knows what has happened and what will. The knowledge
of the unknown is with Him, and so is the knowledge of the Hour; He knows
what the wombs bear, when the rain falls, what every soul earns, what evil
intentions one harbors, what worldly desires he/she conceals, when and
where anyone will die. Al-`Aleem is the One Who knows the details
of all things, the particulars of things, what one's conscience and soul
hide. Nothing at all, not even the weight of an atom in the earth or in
the heavens, can ever escape His knowledge. From the word `ilm have
many other words been derived. Al-`lim is one. It occurs in Surat
al-Ma'ida in this verse: "... surely You are the great One Who knows the
unseen" (Qura'n, 5:109). Another is al-A`lam which occurs in Surat
al-Ana`m: "Allah best knows where He places His message" (Qura'n, 6:124).
Al-`Aleem is a superlative of al-`alim.
The Holy Qura'n contains the following verses which demonstrate the
various meanings and types of knowledge:
He knows that there is weakness in you. (8:66) He knows that there will
be sick ones among you. (73:20) And surely We know that your breast straitens
at what they say. (15:97) Allah knows what every female bears. (13:8)
"Al-`Aleem," one of the ninety-nine Attributes of Allah, occurs
in many Qura'nic verses such as:
... that is the ordinance of the Mighty, the Knowing. (36:38) The revelation
of the Book is from Allah, the Mighty, the Knowing. (40:2) ... surely He
knows what is in the breasts. (11:5) ... We have no knowledge except what
You have taught us; surely You are the Knowing, the Wise. (2:32) And the
sun runs [its course] to a term appointed for it; that is the ordinance
of the Mighty, the Knowing. (36:38)
This word is coined as a superlative derived from a verb meaning: "to
know or to be familiar with." The Messenger of Allah is quoted saying that
one who supplicates in the morning by thrice repeating, "In the Name of
Allah with Whose Name nothing at all, be it in the earth or in the heavens,
can ever harm, and He is the Hearing, the Knowing," will not be afflicted
by any sudden calamity till evening time, and if he says so in the evening,
he will not be afflicted by any sudden calamity till daybreak.
21. "Al-Qabid"
Allah has said the following in the Holy Qura'n: "... and Allah straitens
and amplifies..." (Qura'n, 2:245).
Linguistically, qabd, root verb of "al-Qabid," means:
to take, hold, seize, grip, catch, handle, and the like. It is the holding
of something with the hand such as a sword's handle, etc. It is meant as
a way to forcefully take control of something or someone. Allah Almighty
has said the following in this sense: "... and Allah straitens and amplifies..."
(Qura'n, 2:245), meaning He straitens, withholds, His sustenance of some
while amplifying it for others.
"Al-Qabid" means: "the One Who takes hold of the souls by subduing
them, the spirits by effecting justice in their regard, the means of sustenance
by His wisdom, and the hearts by making them fear His Glory." Al-Qabid
is the One Who causes the souls to be taken away from their bodies, their
temporary homes, at the time of death. The angel who takes the souls away
(i.e. the qabid) is called in Islam "Israel." Al-Qabid is
the One Who takes hold of the hearts, Who controls them, Who isolates them
through their lack of knowledge, through their own oversights. He takes
hold of some hearts, so He unveils to them His Greatness and Glory. He
pleases other hearts through the means whereby He gets closer to them out
of His own Kindness, Munificence, and Beauty. Al-Qabid is the One
Who unveils His Glory to you, so He protects you; He is the One Who makes
you dread being distanced from Him.
Al-Qabid is the One Who controls the entire cosmos; in the following
verse, He makes a reference to His control over the earth: "... and the
whole earth shall be in His grip on the Day of Resurrection and the heavens
rolled up in His right hand" (Qura'n, 39:67). The Almighty has neither
a right nor a left hand; He has no hands at all; this is only a figure
of speech denoting His total control over the heavens and the earth and
everything in them. The expansion of the earth is done by Him during the
life of this world; says He, "Have We not made the earth an even expanse?"
(Qura'n, 78:6) meaning spread like a carpet. On the Day of Judgment, the
earth shall also be there, but it will look quite different from its present
appearance...; everything about how it will look and what will happen above
and underneath it is detailed in books of hadith, in traditions
that will, God willing, see the light for the first time in English...,
but let us not digress here by borrowing from another book of mine soon,
Insha-Allah, to be written!
Al-Qabid receives the knowledge of and appreciates acts of charity;
to be charitable is to be a true servant of His, a blessed one. He says,
"... Allah accepts repentance from His servants and takes the alms" (Qura'n,
9:104). He straitens the hearts, that is, places heavy burdens on them,
burdens of woes and worries, of fears or of aspiration, and He also eases
them.
22. "Al-Basit"
Linguistically, "al-Basit" means: one who stretches his hand,
be it as a gesture of good will (in order to shake hands with someone else),
or otherwise (to harm someone else, be it by inflicting a physical harm
on it, or by causing damage to his property or his own self). It may be
applied literally or metaphorically. The Almighty, for example, has quoted
Cain son of Adam saying the following to his brother Able: "If you stretch
forth your hand towards me to slay me..., etc." (Qura'n, 5:28). It also
means: to please. According to one tradition, the Messenger of Allah has
said, "Fatima is part of me; whatever pleases her pleases me, and whatever
displeases her displeases me, too." Literally, it means: to relax the facial
muscles in order to express pleasure and happiness, elation or excitement;
all other meanings branch out of that. Inbisat, its noun, means,
among other things, abandoning modesty. "Al-baseeta" is the outstretched
tract of land, and "bast" is: expansion or propagation.
Al-Basit is the One Who pleases the souls by making them happy
and delighted. He is the One Who plants the seeds of life in the bodies
to signal the beginning of life therein. He, at the advent of resurrection,
brings life back to them in order to show people, in the life hereafter,
what they used to do during their temporary life in this world.
The Attribute "al-Basit" does not exist in the text of the Holy
Qura'n, yet its derivatives certainly do; these are examples where such
derivatives exist:
Nay! His hands are spread out; He expends as He pleases. (5:64) Allah
has made for you the earth a wide expanse. (71:19) Allah is the One Who
sends forth the winds, so they raise a cloud, then He spreads it forth
in the sky as He pleases, and He breaks it up, so you see rain coming forth
from it; when He causes it to pour upon whomsoever He pleases of His servants,
lo, they rejoice! (30:48)
The Holy Qura'n speaks of decorating the bodies with strength: "...
and increased you in excellence in respect of physique" (Qura'n, 7:69).
And it speaks of pleasing through both knowledge and excellence of physique
when it says, "... and He has increased him abundantly in knowledge and
in physique" (Qura'n, 2:247).
We have to point out here that we ought to mention both divine Attributes
of al-Qabid and al-Basit together in order to convey the
meanings of might and wisdom. The Almighty is al-Qabid just as He
is al-Basit.
23. "Al-Khafid"
Some scholars say that both Attributes al-Khafid and al-Rafi`
ought to be used simultaneously. If applied to our Islamic creed, both
Attributes connote misguidance and guidance respectively. If applied to
knowledge or obedience to Allah, they imply the highest and the lowest
of ranks respectively; it is in this sense that they occur in this verse:
"Abasing (one party), exalting (the other)" (Qura'n, 56:3), meaning abasing
the unbelievers who occupy the lowest ranks of hell while exalting the
believers to the highest ranks of Paradise.
Allah has said, "And be kind to him who follows you from among the believers"
(Qura'n, 26:215). Khafd is the opposite of raf`: the first
implies vanquishing, lowering the status of, abasing, insulting, humiliating.
The Hour is sometimes described as such in 56:3: "Abasing (one party),
exalting (the other)" (Qura'n, 56:3), meaning abasing some people because
of their transgression, hurling them into the pit of hellfire. In Surat
al-Hijr, we read more about the khafd: "... be kind to the believers"
(Qura'n, 15:88), and in Surat al-Isra' we read: "Be submissively gentle
to them, compassionate" (Qura'n, 17:24).
Al-Khafid is the One Who humiliates the oppressors and tyrants,
lowering their ranks and insulting them. He abases at will. Al-Khafid
is the One Who lowers, through humiliation, all those who think of themselves
as being great, the arrogant and the conceited. He lowers entire nations.
He lowers falsehood. Al-Khafid is the One Who lowers the rank of
all those who disobey Him, Who humiliates those upon whom His wrath descends,
Who lowers the ranks of those who deserve to be treated as such. He humiliates
the unbelievers by exposing them to misery, His foes by distancing them
from Him, and by exposing them to perdition.
Al-Khafid is the One Who has lowered the status of those who
do not believe in Him, of those who are arrogant, of the liars, and of
those who swerve away from His Path, the Path of Islam, His final Word
of truth.
24. "Al-Rafi`"
The Holy Qura'n states the following: "Allah will exalt those of you
who believe, and those who are granted knowledge, to high degrees" (Qura'n,
58:11).
Al-Rafi` is one of the Attributes of Allah whose root word is
raf`, lifting, raising, exalting, elevating, and the like. It can
be used for objects as in 2:63: "... and lifted the mountain over you,"
and in 13:2: "Allah is the One Who raised the heavens without any pillars
so that you may see [His might] and He is firm in power." It can also be
used for raising the structure of a building as is the case in the verse
saying, "And when Abraham and Ishmael raised the foundations of the House..."
(Qura'n, 2:127). It is also used for exalting or revering someone's status
as in this verse: "... and exalted your esteem" (Qura'n, 94:4). It is also
used to exalt the status or degree of someone honoured as in the verse
saying, "... and We have exalted some of them above others in degrees"
(Qura'n, 43:32), and also, "... and exalted thrones..." (Qura'n, 56:34),
that is, thrones the status of which is exalted by nearness to Him.
Al-Rafi` is Allah Who exalts the status of His friends, granting
them victory over their foes and His, and that of the righteous, to the
highest degrees. He exalts the truth; He exalts the believers by granting
them happiness; He exalts His friends from among the believers by getting
closer to them; He exalts the status of His friends by granting them the
upper hand, and He exalts the status of those who befriend Him in truth
and in equity. Al-Rafi' raised the heavens without pillars, raised
the clouds over the winds, raised the birds in the air: "Have they not
seen the birds above them expanding (their wings) and contracting (them)?
Who withholds them save the Beneficent God? Surely He sees everything"
(Qura'n, 67:19).
Al-Rafi` has raised the status of His friends in the life of
this world by making the believers humble themselves before them, and by
making people pay homage and respect to them even if they do not wield
any power, even if they have no wealth at all: "Now surely the friends
of Allah shall have no fear, nor shall they grieve. Those who believed
and guarded (themselves against evil) shall have glad tidings in the life
of this world as well as in the life hereafter; there is no alteration
to the words of Allah; that is the mighty achievement" (10:62-65). Al-Rafi`
exalts the reputation of those who are regarded as weaklings among their
own people, supporting the wronged against those who wrong them.
In Surat al-Baqarah, the Almighty says, "We have made some prophets
excel over others; among them are those to whom Allah spoke, and some of
them He exalted by (many degrees of) rank" (Qura'n, 2:253). In Surat al-Ana`m,
He says, "And this was Our argument which We gave to Abraham against his
people; We exalt in dignity whomsoever We please; surely your Lord is Wise,
Knowing" (Qura'n, 6:83). In the same chapter, the Almighty tells us that
"He it is Who has made you successors in the land and raised some of you
above others by (various) degrees so that He may try you by what He gives
you; surely your Lord is quick to requite (evil), and He is most surely
the Forgiving, the Merciful" (Qura'n, 6:165). Other references occur in
the following verses:
Allah said: O Jesus! I am going to terminate the period of your stay
(on earth) and cause you to ascend to Me, to purify you from those who
disbelieve, and to make those who follow you above those who disbelieve
till the Day of Resurrection; then to Me shall be your return, so I will
decide among you concerning that in which you differed. (3:55)
And mention Idris (Enoch) in the Book; surely he was a truthful man,
a prophet, and We raised him high in heaven. (19:56-57) And the heavens
He raised and established the balance. (55:7)
One who is granted a blessing through the inspiration of this Attribute
of Allah is one who rises above his abominable desires and inclinations;
such a person will be exalted by Allah to a status as high as that enjoyed
by the angels with Him or even higher...
25. "Al-Mu`izz"
Allah has said, Whoever desires honour, to Allah belongs the honour
all of it. To Him do the good words ascend, and the good deeds He raises;
(as for) those who plan an evil plan, they shall have a severe chastisement,
(as for) their plan, it shall surely perish. (35:10)
He has also said in Surat Ali-`Imran:
Say: O Allah, Master of the kingdom! You bestow the kingdom upon whomsoever
You please and take the kingdom away from whomsoever You please, and You
exalt whomsoever You please and abase whomsoever You please; in Your hand
is the good (all of it); surely You have power over all things. (3:26)
Allah has said, "Those who take the unbelievers for guardians rather
than the believers: do they seek honour from them? Surely all honour is
Allah's" (Qura'n, 4:139).
"Al-Mu`izz" conveys the meaning of: the One Who honours whomsoever
He pleases from among His servants. Linguistically, ma`azza, the
noun derived from the verb yu`izz, means power, strength, might.
Allah is surely al-`Aziz, the Mighty One Who subdues and is never
subdued, Who strengthens His friends by His favour, protecting them against
sinning, forgiving their faults, permitting them to reside in Paradise,
the abode of His Munificence. Then He honours them by permitting them to
witness His manifestations and see His signs. He is the One Who empowers
His prophets by protecting them against erring, granting them victory,
protecting them, raising their status among their people. He honours one
who obeys Him even if poverty is his lot, and He raises the status of a
pious servant of His even if he were an Abyssinian slave. Allah, God, The
Truth, Praised and Glorified is His Name, is referred to as such in various
verses of His Book, the Holy Qura'n. Among such references are the following:
Do not let their speech grieve you; surely might is wholly Allah's;
He is the Hearing, the Knowing. (10:65) Glory to your Lord, the Lord of
Honour, above what they describe. (37:180) To Allah belongs the might,
and to His Prophet, and the believers, but the hypocrites do not know.
(63:8)
Imam `Ali ibn al-Husain Zayn al-`abidin is quoted saying, "If one desires
to be honoured even though his tribe is not distinguished, or to be held
in high esteem even though he has no authority, or to be a man whose wealth
does not diminish, he should get out of the humiliation of disobedience
and enter into the honour of obeying his Lord."
Essentially, the way how God honours His servants is by making them
feel satisfied, contented, for humiliation lies in one being greedy. Had
it not been for false hopes, no free man would have ever been enslaved
by anything which, in all truth, is insignificant. The Almighty places
one who persists in praising His Name in the center of honour, instilling
love and respect for him in people's hearts. A servant of Allah who aspires
to earn a good share of personifying this Glorified Name has to honour
the Messenger of Allah and those who are knowledgeable among his own contemporaries,
showing respect and humility to them.
26. "Al-Muthill"
The Almighty has said, "Those who oppose Allah and His Prophet shall
be (herded) among the most abased" (Qura'n, 58:20). "Al-Muthill"
is one of the Attributes of Allah derived from the noun thull, whatever
results from subduing, vanquishing, overcoming, conquering, someone. The
Almighty says, "... walk in the ways of your Lord submissively," (Qura'n,
16:69), that is, freely. He has also said, "... its fruits shall be made
accessible (to them), always easy to reach" (Qura'n, 76:14). Al-Muthill
is the One Who abases or humiliates whomsoever He pleases, depriving them
of all prestige. He is the One Who justly abases His foes when they disobey
Him and rebel against His commandments. He insults them and dismisses them,
causing them to be hurled into the abode of His chastisement, the inferno
of hell. Al-Muthill is the One Who abases His foes by depriving
them of knowing Him, enabling them to have their way and to go against
His injunctions. He will then have them transported to the abode of His
chastisement, insulting them by dismissing and cursing them.
Al-Muthill is the One Who abases the unbelievers through the
power of the truth, Who subdues whomsoever He pleases. Allah has not honoured
any servant of His more than He has to one who abases his own evil-insinuating
self, his nafs, and He has not abased any servant of His more than
one who is preoccupied with trying to earn distinction, prominence, and
prestige for himself. In Surat al-A`raf we read the following verse: "(As
for) those who took the calf (for a god), surely wrath from their Lord
and disgrace in the life of this world shall overtake them" (Qura'n, 7:152).
Anyone who looks niggardly at people to see how he can take advantage of
them, who is never satisfied with what he has had, one who is dragged by
his own schemes to elevate himself to prominence while keeping himself
in the darkness of ignorance..., is one whom Allah has surely disgraced
and deprived. Such an individual is implied in verses such as this: "But
you caused yourselves to fall into temptation, and you waited and doubted,
and vain desires deceived you, till the threatened punishment of Allah
came while the arch-deceiver [Satan] deceived you about Allah, so today
ransom shall not be accepted from you" (Qura'n, 57:14). This is the lowest
degree of humiliation.
Thull, or bringing it about, that is, ithll, comes in
many types, shapes and sizes. Allah abases an oppressor by making him fall
a prey to disease, or to his lust for women, or to his greed for wealth,
or by making him in dire need of others. Let us supplicate thus: "Lord!
Take us out of the humiliation of disobedience to the honour of obedience
to You, and do not permit any of those whom You created to disgrace us,
and crown us with the crown of Your honour." Honour is in needing nobody.
The absolutely perfect degree of such honour, to be sure, belongs to none
other than Allah Who has said, "Surely all honour is Allah's" (Qura'n,
4:139). Next in degree of being honoured is one who is closest to the Almighty:
"... to Allah belongs the honour, to His Prophet, and to the believers"
(Qura'n, 63:8).
27. "Al-Samee`"
Allah has said, "And to Him belongs whatever dwells in the night and
in the day, and He is the Hearing, the Knowing" (Qura'n, 6:13).
Al-Samee' is the One__and Only One__Who
listens to everything in existence without the use of a faculty for hearing
or a hearing aid. Allah hears each and every sound and voice even if it
is hidden from us. His hearing encompasses everything: He hears the pleas
of those who are in distress; He responds to the supplications of those
in need; He helps those who are desperate for help; He hears the praising
of those who praise Him, so He rewards them for it, and the supplication
of those who plead to Him, so He responds to them. He hears the sound of
the black ant walking on a solid rock in the darkest night; and He hears
what the hearts contemplate and what scruples penetrate the conscience.
His response to the supplication of one person does not distract Him from
responding to another; He knows where the vision trespasses and what the
breasts conceal; He hears every silent plea; He hears you and me. Nothing
on earth or in the heavens can ever be hidden from Him.
"Al-Samee`" is derived from "sam`". It conveys the fact
that Allah, the Most High, realizes the truth about each and every sound
even if it is, to our limited ability, quite silent. He, Glory to Him,
realizes and distinguishes sounds as well as colors just as He realizes
and distinguishes everything else.
"Sam`" may mean: acceptance of and a favourable response to.
It exists, for example, in a tradition wherein the Messenger of Allah says,
"Lord! I seek refuge with You against a statement which is not heard,"
meaning a supplication which does not receive His favourable response.
It is also similar to one Muslims pronounce during their obligatory daily
prayers: "Sami`a Allahu liman amidah," that is, Allah responds favourably
to the pleas of those who praise Him.
The Almighty has said,
Surely I am with you both: I do hear and see. (20:46) Or do they think
that We do not hear what they conceal and their secret discourses? Aye!
And Our messengers (angels) are with them writing (everything) down. (43:80)
Allah has indeed heard the plea of the [woman] who pleads to you about
her husband. (58:1) And if they resolve to divorce, Allah is surely Hearing,
Knowing. (2:227)
One who comes to realize that Allah knows everything will safeguard
his tongue against uttering falsehood. He will always say what is right.
One who realizes that Allah hears even our thoughts will adopt the manners
of one who watches over his conduct and who always holds himself accountable
for what he contemplates, says, or does. A servant of Allah ought to know
that Allah did not create the hearing faculty for him except so that he
would listen to the speech of Allah which He revealed unto His Prophet
in order to benefit from it and to be guided by it. If a servant of Allah
seeks to be close to his Lord by offering nawfil (optional acts
of adoration), he will be loved by Allah Who will then pour over his hearing
of His divine light, thus making his insight very sharp, so much so that
such a person will be able to see beyond the world of matter. If a servant
of Allah remains straightforward in his worship of Allah, continuously
seeking to please Him, Allah will surely provide him with goodness from
Him and with divine light.
28. "Al-Baseer"
Allah has said, "He is with you wherever you are, and Allah sees whatever
you do" (Qura'n, 57:4). In language, seeing is achieved through the faculty
of vision; it is the reflection of light on what can be seen and its impression
on the eyes. Seeing is also an insight, a discretion, an innermost conviction.
One who is baseer is one who sees deeply, who is knowledgeable,
who is an expert. Also, to "see" means not to rush, but to contemplate,
to be acquainted with things, and to be firm in adhering to the creed.
Al-Baseer sees everything, the apparent and the hidden, without
using the faculty of vision. When applied to the Almighty, Glory to Him,
vision receives the perfection whereby the qualities of anything that can
be seen are realized. Al-Baseer fully knows every visible thing,
and to Him the truth in their regard is apparent, evident. He knows where
vision trespasses and what the breasts conceal. He sees and oversees; nothing
in the high heavens nor in the earth, nor in what is between them both,
nor what is under the ground, can ever be concealed from His vision, and
He is the ever-Present Who is never absent.
One who realizes that Allah has such an attribute will be disciplined
by constantly keeping a vigil on his conduct, by being precise when holding
his soul to account. One who safeguards his hearing and vision against
incurring the wrath of the Almighty, not committing anything that does
not beseem him or is not commendable, is loved by Allah, and he will be
blessed with hearing and vision as indicated in sacred traditions.
29. "Al-Hakam"
The Almighty has said, "The judgment is only Allah's; He relates the
truth and He is the best of those who decide" (Qura'n, 6:57).
Both "al-Hakam" and "al-Hakim" convey the same meaning;
the origin of the first means the same as that of man`, prohibition,
from which a word such as hakama, an iron rein piece used to restrain
horses, is derived.
"Al-Hakam" means: the One Whose word is final in determining
what is right and what is wrong, in distinguishing between acts of righteousness
and those of sinning. He rewards each soul according to what it earns,
Who decides between His servants as He pleases, Who distinguishes between
the wretch and the lucky, tormenting the first and rewarding the latter.
Al-Hakam is the precise Arbitrator, the absolutely correct Judge
Whose decision none can overturn, nor can anyone repeal His decree.
Al-Hakam is the One in Whose promise there should be no doubt
at all, in Whose action there is no fault at all; He has decreed that the
hearts must be contented and pleased with Him, that the souls must be submissive,
obedient, to Him. He separates the truth from falsehood. In Surat al-Ana`m,
we read: "Shall I then seek a judge other than Allah? He it is Who has
revealed to you the Book (which is) made clear" (Qura'n, 6:114). In Surat
Younus we read: "Follow what is revealed to you and persevere till Allah
gives His judgment, and He is the best of judges" (Qura'n, 10:109). Other
such references are:
Then who calls you a liar with regard to the judgment after this? Is
not Allah the best of judges? (95:7-8) Judgment is only Allah's; on Him
do I rely, and on Him let those who are reliant rely. (12:67)
There are many derivations from this word in various places throughout
the Holy Qura'n. Among Allah's judgment with regard to His servants is
that everyone will receive the rewards of what he earns, and that his endeavor
will be witnessed, noted, recorded, preserved; those who do good deeds
will receive eternal bliss, whereas those who sin will receive eternal
damnation. He makes righteousness the path to heaven and sinning the path
to hell. Shurayh ibn Hani has said that his father Hani ibn Yazid said,
"I came to see the Messenger of Allah once and he heard people calling
me `Abu [father of] al-Hakam.' He said to them, `Al-Hakam is Allah! Why
are you named like that?!' I said to him, `Whenever my people dispute with
one another, I judge between them to the satisfaction of both disputing
parties.' The Prophet then asked me if I had any sons. `Yes. They are:
Shuray, Abdullh and Muslim, sons of Hani.' `Who is their oldest?' the Messenger
of Allah asked me. I told him it was Shuray. He then said, `You are Abu
Shuray,' then he invoked Allah to bless me and my sons." [6]
30. "Al-`Adl"
Allah has said, "Surely Allah enjoins the doing of justice and of good
deeds (to others) and the giving to the kindred, and He forbids indecency,
evil, and rebellion; He admonishes you so that you may be mindful" (Qura'n,
16:90).
`Adl means moderation; al-`adl is above oppressing or
being inequitable to anyone in His decrees and actions. Rather, He grants
everyone what is due to him; He puts everything in its right place; nothing
ensues from Him except justice. He does whatever He pleases, and His decree
regarding His servants is carried out.
In Surat al-Ana`m, the Almighty says, "And the word of your Lord has
been accomplished truly and justly; none can change His words, and He is
the Hearing, the Knowing" (Qura'n, 6:115). He enjoins justice and equity
and says the following in Surat al-Nisa' (Women): "When you judge between
people, you should judge with justice; surely Allah admonishes you with
what is excellent; surely Allah is Seeing, Hearing" (Qura'n, 4:58).
There are many traditions narrated about the Messenger of Allah pointing
out to `adl and highlighting the status of those who act upon it.
One of them is his saying, "There are seven types of people whom Allah
will shade on a Day when there will be no shade except His: a just imam,
a young man who grows up adoring Allah, a man whose heart is always attached
to mosques, two men who love one another for the sake of Allah: they meet
and they part only accordingly, a man sought by a woman of prominence and
beauty [for illicit sex] and to whom he says, `I fear Allah,' a man who
pays charity and hides his action, so much so that his left hand does not
know what his right hand gives away, and a man who mentions the Name of
Allah for the sake of remembering Him while his tears overflow." This tradition
is recorded by al-Bukhari and Muslim and is quoted on pp. 164-165, Vol.
3, of Al Targheeb wal tarheeb, and on p. 30 of Qabasat min hadi
al nubuwwah.
31. "Al-Lateef"
Allah has said, "... surely my Lord is benignant to whomsoever He pleases;
surely He is the Knowing, the Wise" (Qura'n, 12:100).
"Al-Lateef" is one of Allah's Attributes derived from extreme
kindness and compassion in a way which no human faculty can ever fathom.
Al-Lateef continuously pours His blessings unto His servants; His
actions are good and beautiful. This Attribute also means: the One Who
cannot be sensed by human senses or those of all other beings, Who knows
hidden and minute matters. Al-Lateef has combined in Him terse and
wise compassion as well as minute and detailed knowledge of all affairs
and of the means to make them reach whomsoever He pleases from among His
creation.
Al-Lateef pleases His servants when He removes the clouds of
His wrath away from them, the One Who is compassionate towards His servants
even in matters related to His decree; He knows all hidden matters. He
is the One Whose knowledge encompasses everything minute regarding all
facts. His will is carried out, the will whereby He protects His creatures.
He knows the most intricate of details relevant to interests and their
obscurities; He gently makes them reach their destinations. He is Most
Kind and Compassionate to His servants even when they are not aware of
it; He manages their affairs and wishes everything good for His servants.
He desires their ease and makes for them the means of righteousness and
goodness attainable. He eases everything difficult, Who joins everything
broken. Allah has said, "Does He not know, being the One Who created (everything
and everyone)?! He knows the subtleties, the One Who is ever-Aware (of
everything)" (Qura'n, 67:14).
One of the signs of His kindness towards His servants is that He has
given them more than enough and required them to do less than what they
can, thus making the achievement of eternal happiness attainable by easy
endeavor during a short period of time, i.e. one's life-span, which is
too short to be compared with the eternity of the hereafter.
Al-Lateef has conceived everything within the framework of its
own antithesis. Allah, for example, hid for prophet Joseph the prominence
of authority in the garb of slavery till he himself eventually came to
say: "... surely my Lord is benignant to whomsoever He pleases; surely
He is the Knowing, the Wise" (Qura'n, 12:100). A man was taken once to
prison although he was innocent of the charge, so he kept repeating Joseph's
invocation saying, "... surely my Lord is benignant to whomsoever He pleases;
surely He is the Knowing, the Wise" (Qura'n, 12:100). A young man came
to him during one night and said to him, "Stand up so that I may get you
out of your jail." The man asked the youth how he could get out since the
doors were all locked, but the youth ordered him for the second time to
stand up. He walked with the young man till he got out of town, then he
said to him, "Recite: `Surely my Lord is benignant to whomsoever He pleases;
surely He is the Knowing, the Wise" (Qura'n, 12:100).
32. "Al-Khabeer"
The Most Exalted One has said, "Vision does not comprehend Him, while
He comprehends all vision, and He knows the subtleties, and He is the Aware"
(Qura'n, 6:103).
Al-Khabeer is one of the Attributes of Allah, and it means: the
One Who knows everything and from Whose knowledge nothing at all escapes.
He knows the essence of everything and is acquainted with the truth in
its regard. Al-Khabeer is familiar with the most intricate matters;
He knows the ailment and its remedy.
Al-Khabeer knows the innermost of everything; nothing takes place
in His domain without His knowledge; no atom moves nor stands still, nor
a soul is upset or eased, except that He knows about it. He is the One
from Whose knowledge nothing in the earth or in the heavens is hidden;
nothing moves in the heavens or in the earth except that He knows about
its final resting point or destination.
Scholars have distinguished between al-Khabeer and al-`Aleem.
The first connotes knowledge, but when knowledge is applied to hidden matters,
it is then called khibra, and the One Who knows it is called al-Khabeer.
The Almighty has said, "What?! Do you think that you will be left alone
while Allah has not yet ascertained those of you who have struggled hard
and have not taken anyone as an adherent besides Allah and His Prophet
and the believers?! Allah is Aware of all what you do" (Qura'n, 9:16).
Anyone who has a certain need about which he likes to ask Allah for something
should recite the verse saying "Does He not know, the One Who created?!
He knows the subtleties, and He is the Aware" (Qura'n, 67:14) repeatedly
till he falls asleep.
33. "Al-Haleem"
Allah has said, "... certainly Allah has pardoned them; surely Allah
is Forgiving, Forbearing" (Qura'n, 3:155).
"Al-Haleem" is an Attribute of the Almighty derived from the
root word hilm which means: taking the time to do something. It
also means care, attention, and sensibility. Allah's hilm is His
postponement of chastising those who deserve to be chastised, so He delays
the penalty of some of those who deserve it. After that, He may penalize
them or overlook their faults. Or He may swiftly penalize some of them.
He witnesses the transgression of transgressors and the disobedience of
those who disobey Him without being provoked by anger or overwhelmed by
wrath, and He does not rush to penalize despite His ability to do so. Allah
has said, "Had Allah destroyed men on account of their iniquity, He would
not have left on earth a single creature" (Qura'n, 16:61).
Al-Haleem does not bring about a swift vengeance; had He intended
to effect revenge at a later time, He would have been called spiteful,
vengeful, and if He does not intend to seek revenge at all, then surely
He is Forgiving. He can also be called al-Haleem if He does not
intend to seek revenge at all provided He does not declare His intention.
If He does declare it, He then is called Forgiving. Al-Haleem quite
often overlooks sins and covers up shortcomings. He forgives after having
covered up. He safeguards His affection for His servants. His promise is
good. He fulfills His promise. Al-Haleem shields those who indulge
in sins with His forgiveness, Who pardons those who violate His laws, Who
is not slighted by the rebellion of the rebellious, and no oppression of
any oppressor can ever provoke Him.
The Holy Qura'n has described some of Allah's messengers as Haleem;
for example, Abraham, the Friend of Allah, is described as, "... most surely
Abraham was very tender-hearted, forbearing" (Qura'n, 9:114), and in Surat
Hud, he is praised likewise: "Most surely Abraham was forbearing, tender-hearted,
oft-returning (to Allah)" (Qura'n, 11:75). The Holy Qura'n states the following
in Surat al-Saffat about Ishmael "So We gave him the glad tidings of a
boy [Ishmael] possessing forbearance" (Qura'n, 3:101). ilm is a
gracious and a noble attribute, so much so that one tradition recorded
in Al-Athir cites the Messenger of Allah saying, "Hilm is
the master of all good conduct." It also records another such tradition
saying, "One who is Haleem is almost on the same footing with Allah's
prophets." Hilm enjoys a high status and esteem despite the abundance
of one's sins and the repetition of one's repentance.
Allah has said, "Allah does not call you to account for what is vain
of your oaths, but He will call you to account for what your hearts have
earned, and Allah is Forgiving, Forbearing" (Qura'n, 2:225). He has also
said, "The seven heavens declare His glory and the earth, too, and those
who are in them, and there is not a single thing but glorifies and praises
Him, but you do not understand their glorifying; surely He is Forbearing,
Forgiving" (Qura'n, 17:44).
A forbearing and munificent person, then, is one who often forgives
the sins and conceals the shortcomings. He is the one who forgives after
shielding one's sins, who safeguards his compassion, who is true to his
word, who forgives those who break his law, who is not stirred by the rebellion
of transgressors, nor is he provoked by oppression. Allah's Munificence
regarding the sinners is great: "... and He is the Most High, the Great"
(Qura'n, 2:255).
It is narrated that Abraham saw a man committing a sin, so he prayed
Allah to cause him to perish, and so it happened. He saw a second and a
third, and he repeated his plea, and they, too, perished. Then he saw a
fourth and invoked Allah likewise to annihilate him. It was then that Allah
inspired him, "O Abraham! Stop! If We were to annihilate each one of Our
servants who commits a sin, then only a small number will survive; but
if one sins, We give him a respite; if he repents, We accept his repentance,
and if he persists, We postpone his penalty knowing that he cannot escape
from Our domain."
It is also narrated that a young man used to commit many sins, and he
used to persist in sinning; nay, he even used to repent and immediately
go back to sinning. Having done so quite often, he was addressed by Satan
thus, "For how long will you keep sinning and repenting?" Satan wished
that Allah would cause that man to lose hope in His mercy and become despondent.
When night came, the man performed his ablution and offered two reka`ts,
then he raised his eyes to the heavens and said, "O You Who protects the
righteous against sinning, Who safeguards those who are protected from
sinning, Who makes the righteous what they are! If You neglect me, You
will find me losing heart; my forelock is in Your hand; my debts are before
You! O You Who changes the hearts! I invoke You to keep my heart firm on
following Your creed!" Allah, thereupon, said to His angels, "O angels
of Mine! Have you all heard his statement? Bear witness, then, that I have
forgiven all his past sins and safeguarded him against sinning for the
rest of his life."
34. "Al-`Azeem"
The Almighty has said, "So glorify the Name of your Lord, the Great"
(Qura'n, 56:96). "Al-`Azeem" is a superlative derived from the noun `izam,
greatness, magnanimity, dignity, honour, esteem, pride... The Absolute
Azeem is the One Whose greatness cannot be grasped by vision; it
is beyond all limits, so much so that no human intellect can ever absorb
it. Allah has said, "He is the Most High, the Great" (Qura'n, 2:255).
The most prominent person in a town is called its greatest. This is
the meaning of what the unbelievers say as the Holy Qura'n quotes them:
"... to a man great in both towns..." (Qura'n, 43:31). Allah has said,
"... and the great Qura'n" (Qura'n, 15:87). When the Messenger of Allah
wrote a letter to Heraclius (which will be discussed later in this book
Insha-Allah), he addressed him as "the azeem man of Rome,"
that is, the greatest dignitary in Rome. Heraclius, who ruled from 610
- 641 A.D., was a Byzantine emperor, ruler of the Eastern Roman empire.
was involved in many wars with the Persians from 634 - 642 A.D. He did
not accept Islam; his armies were eventually conquered by Islamic troops,
so he lost Syria, Palestine and Mesopotamia (upper Iraq) as well as Egypt,
one after the other.
If you consider the greatness of al-Az`eem, you will come to know that
anyone besides Him is insignificant. The human being, no matter how knowledgeable,
is limited in the scope and content of his knowledge. How can you compare
such a limited amount of knowledge with that of the Almighty? An example
of His might exists in 31:28: "Neither your creation nor your raising (bai`th,
the reunion between the soul and the recreated body) is only like (that
of) a single soul" (Qura'n, 31:28). To the Almighty, the creation of the
entire cosmos is as easy as the creation of one single soul: "Our word
for a thing when We intend it is only to say to it: Be, and it is" (Qura'n,
16:40). Allah has required us to revere His signs; He says, "That (shall
be so), and whoever respects the signs of Allah, it surely is (the sign)
of the piety of the hearts" (Qura'n, 22:32). One who highly regards the
signs of Allah, respects religious rites, holds in high esteem anything
related to Allah, is surely held in high esteem by both Allah and His servants.
The Messenger of Allah, Muhammed, has conveyed the following glad tidings:
"One who learns then becomes fully knowledgeable then acts upon what he
has learned is called great in the kingdom of the heavens."
Ibn `Abbas quotes the Messenger of Allah saying, "If someone enters
a room to visit a sick person on the brink of death and he repeats seven
times the saying of: `I plead to Allah the Great, Lord of the Great Throne,
to heal you,' that sick person will be healed by the Will of Allah."
35. "Al-Ghafoor"
Allah has said, "... surely Allah forgives the faults all of them; surely
He is the Forgiving, the Merciful" (Qura'n, 39:53).
"Al-Ghafoor" is derived from the root word ghafr, veiling
or covering. He is al-Ghafoor because He quite often veils the sins
and forgives those who commit them. He does not dispute about them with
His servants. Maghfira means the covering and the forgiving of sins.
Allah's forgiveness means His protection of a servant of His against His
torment. Its verb means: to openly overlook his sins.
Al-Ghafoor is the Master Whose power is perfect; He may unconditionally
forgive due to the favours He bestows upon His servants, and to His benevolence.
The Holy Qura'n has referred quite often to forgiveness, and Allah has
diversified it so that the hearts of those who disobey Him may not lose
hope of His mercy, and so that no criminal will despond of the mercy of
Allah. He forgives the sins and accepts the repentance. In Surat Ghfir,
we recite this verse: "The One Who forgives the faults and Who accepts
repentance, Who is Severe in punishing, the Lord of bounty" (Qura'n, 40:3).
Other such references are as follows:
... so forgive us and have mercy on us; You are the best of those who
forgive. (7:155) Most surely I am the most Forgiving to one who repents
and believes and does good deeds then continues to follow the right guidance.
(20:82) He has created the heavens and the earth with the truth; He makes
the night cover the day and the day overtake the night, and He has made
the sun and the moon subservient (to His will): each runs to an assigned
term; surely He is the Mighty, the oft-Forgiving. (39:5)
As regarding the verse saying, "Inform My servants that I am the Forgiving,
the Merciful" (Qura'n, 15:49), some companions of the Prophet were once
indulged in laughter as the Messenger of Allah passed by. He greeted them
then said to them, "Do you laugh while the fire is before you?" They regretted
and felt extremely depressed. He soon went back to them and said, "Gabriel
has just come to me and said that Allah asked why I caused some of His
servants to lose hope in His mercy," then he repeated 39:5 quoted above.
The lot of one who wishes to personify the Attribute "al-Ghafoor"
is that he constantly seeks His forgiveness; he forgives His servants time
and over again. This is the key to obtaining the forgiveness of Allah as
referred to in 24:22: "Do not let those among you who possess grace and
abundance swear against giving to the near of kin and the poor and those
who have fled in Allah's way; they should pardon and overlook. Do not you
love that Allah would forgive you? Allah is Forgiving, Merciful."
36. "Al-Shakoor"
Allah has said, "So that He may pay them back their rewards in full
and give them more out of His grace: surely He is the Forgiving, the One
Who multiplies the rewards" (Qura'n, 35:30). Linguistically, "al-Shakoor"
is derived from the root word shukr which conveys the meaning of:
an increase. Arabs describe a land as such if its plants are abundant.
They describe an animal as such if it is fattened. Plants sustained by
a little amount of water are called shakoor. Al-Shakoor thanks quite
often, Who appreciates acts of righteousness, charity and kindness. A servant
of Allah who is shakoor is one who perseveres to thank his Lord
by obeying Him and by carrying out the obligations which He has mandated
on him. Shukr is recognition and propagation of goodness.
Al-Shakoor, Allah, appreciates even the few good deeds His servants
do, doubling His rewards for them. His way of thanking them is by giving
them of His bounties though He was the One Who enabled them to do such
good deeds in the first place. He planted in their hearts the desire to
do them, then He provided for them all the means to carry them out. He
enables His servants to be grateful for the blessings which He bestows
upon them, so He rewards them even for small acts of obedience to Him with
an abundance of His good things. He grants for a few days' endeavor a bliss
in the hereafter that never ends.
Al-Shakoor accepts the little and Who gives a lot. Allah has
called Himself al-Shakoor in order to tell us that He rewards His
servants for thanking Him; hence, the reward for such gratitude is called
shukr, just as the penalty for a bad deed is called bad; He has
said, "And the recompense of evil is a like punishment" (Qura'n, 42:40).
One of the tokens of accepting one's expression of appreciation is that
he receives an increase of Allah's blessings according to 14:7: "If you
are grateful, I will certainly give you more, and if you are ungrateful,
My chastisement is truly severe." The truth about appreciation is not related
to the qualities of Allah: appreciation comes from people; it is simply
the expending of the blessings granted by Allah in the way for which He
created them. Linguistically, appreciation is coupled with blessing, grace,
gratitude. Nobody can do Allah a favour for which He has to thank him;
therefore, His appreciation must be understood metaphorically according
to Tafsir al-Manar. Allah's gratitude means that He is capable of
rewarding the doers of good, that He does not permit the deeds of such
doers to be wasted or unrewarded. It is in this sense that rewarding the
doer of good with what he deserves is called appreciation, and Allah has
thus called Himself appreciative. Allah has also promised those who appreciate
His blessings to increase His blessings upon them; so, such gratitude also
falls under the same type of appreciation. The most Appreciative One has
said, "... and whoever does good spontaneously, surely Allah is Grateful,
Knowing" (Qura'n, 2:158). Thus do we come to know that Allah, Glory to
Him, has a conduct which is surely the most perfect one when He called
Himself appreciative of the worlds although whatever good they do neither
benefits Him nor harms Him in the least; rather, its benefit is surely
for our own good. It is, in reality, a sign of His own blessings upon us
that He guides and enables us to do it; so, it does not beseem any sensible
person to observe the great favour bestowed upon him by Allah without thanking
Him for it, or without obeying Him.
Allah also says, "Therefore remember Me, so I will remember you, too,
and be thankful to Me, and do not be ungrateful to Me" (Qura'n, 2:152).
In this verse, Allah teaches His servants to be appreciative, ordering
them to remember the blessings which He has bestowed upon them by their
hearts, tongues and senses. Their reward for it is that He reminds them
of His permission to continue to enjoy such blessings, and to increase
them, ordering them to praise Him by His Attributes, to discuss His countless
blessings, to glorify Him openly and secretly, so that He may mention them
in His high company and mention His being pleased with them. In a qudsi
tradition, the Messenger of Allah quotes the Almighty saying, "I am as
My servant thinks of Me: I am with him; if he mentions Me silently, I shall
mention him likewise, and if He mentions My Name before a crowd of people,
I shall mention him before a better crowd; if he gets closer to Me as much
as a span, I shall get closer to him as much as a yard; if he gets closer
to Me as much as a yard, I will get closer to him more than twice that
much. If he comes to Me walking, I shall come to him running." Allah commands
His servants to be grateful to Him and not to deny the blessings which
He has bestowed upon them. This is a warning for this nation against that
wherein previous nations had fallen due to the latter's denial of the blessings
which the Almighty had showered upon them. He granted them the powers of
reason, emotion, judgment, and other such blessings.
A servant of Allah should never tire of thanking and praising Him, incessantly
and unhesitatingly. In a supplications by the Messenger of Allah, he says,
"Lord! I am incapable of praising You enough; You are as You have praised
Yourself." Praising Allah and thanking Him as He really deserves is not
within the human capacity. A servant of Allah, therefore, must leave it
to the One Who can do so: Allah, Praise is due to Him, and ONLY to Him.
How can man acquire perfection in such an area while he contemplates upon
some blessings bestowed upon him by Allah and says to himself: "I was mere
naught and Allah caused me to be, then He granted me the beautiful outward
appearance, and the power of reason which is the very best of my inner
qualities, then He granted me hearing and vision and guided me to know
Him, then He made His great rewards attainable and even praised me in his
Great Book"? If you move your tongue and say: Alamdu-lillh (Praise
to Allah), thinking that mere saying so is sufficient to express gratitude
for all the great favours He has bestowed upon you, then you surely have
taken leave of absence from your sanity, for you surely will not have thanked
Him at all. "Talk is cheap," says an axiom, whereas "actions speak louder
than words." Express your gratitude towards your Maker by actions, not
only by words. A servant's true expression of gratitude is his own admission
that he simply is incapable of sufficiently express his gratitude to His
Maker, Sustainer, and Benefactor.
Jabir ibn Abdullah al-Ansari has quoted the Messenger of Allah saying,
"If one is given something while being capable of finding a way to likewise
give, let him do so, but if he is not, then let him praise the giver, for
one who remains silent and says nothing commits kufr, apostasy.
And if one were to put on clothes which he was not given, he would then
be like one who wears two outfits of forgery." [7]
37. "Al-`Aliyy"
Allah has said, "... what they call upon besides Him is falsehood; Allah
is the High, the Great" (Qura'n, 22:61).
"Al-`Aliyy" is one of Allah's Attributes, and it is derived from
uluww, height, sublimity, or loftiness versus lowliness. The height
referred to here is that of status. Al-`Aliyy is High, so High that
He can never be conceived nor visualized. Minds are at a loss regarding
His Greatness; intellects are incapable of conceiving His perfection. According
to Al-Mufradat, one who is `aliyy is a prominent person,
a man of distinction. When applied to the Almighty, as in 22:61 cited above,
the implied meaning is that He is above being described by anyone or truly
known by anyone, and He is above what anyone says about Him.
He is the One above Whose status there is none at all, and everything
in existence is under His control. Allah has said, "He is the Most High,
the Great" (Qura'n, 2:255), "... judgment belongs to Allah, the High, the
Great" (Qura'n, 40:12), and, "... the Great, the Most High" (Qura'n, 13:9).
"High" and "low" may be applied both to tangible as well as intangible
things. As regarding the tangible ones, the `Arsh (Throne) is said
to be higher than the Kursi (the Seat of Authority), and the heavens
is higher than the earth. Such words are applied only to tangible things,
things which have dimensions. Since the Almighty is above having dimensions,
His being al-`Aliyy is above being as such.
The One Who is al-`Aliyy is above being conceived by any intellect,
and Whose Attributes are too great to be described. He is the One in Whose
Greatness minds are puzzled, and in trying to realize His Essence the intellects
fall short.
Among the good manners adorning a believer are: humbleness and submissiveness
before the Glory of the Almighty. It is only then that He exalts his status.
Al-Qushayri has reported saying that Allah inspired Moses to go near a
mountain so that He would address him. Every mountain there vied with the
others in the hope of being the one near which such a divine address would
take place. Mount Sinai thought very humbly of itself saying, "Since when
do I deserve the honour of being the site worthy of the status of Moses
when addressed by his Lord?" For this reason, Allah inspired Moses to go
near Mount Sinai due to the latter's humility.
According to Al-Asma' wal sifat, where a qudsi tradition
is quoted, the Messenger of Allah heard during the Night of Isra (the night
journey to Jerusalem) a praising in the high heavens saying: Subhan
al-`Aliyy al-A`la, Subnahu wa Ta`ala, that is, "Glory to the Most High,
Glory to Him and Exaltation." Iyas ibn Salmah has quoted his father saying
that he had heard the Messenger of Allah starting every supplication by
saying, "Subhana al-A`la al-Wahhab," "Glory to the Most High, the
ever-Giving."
38. "Al-Kabeer"
We read the following in the Holy Qura'n: "They shall say: What is it
that your Lord said? They shall say: The truth. And He is the Most High,
the Great" (Qura'n, 34:23).
Linguistically, one who is kabeer is a great person, a dignitary,
a distinguished personality. Allah, Glorified and Exalted is His Name,
is greater than everything and everyone, and He is the Absolutely Great
One, the One Who is Great on His own merits, in His qualities and Essence,
above being in any way like any of His creatures; "There is nothing like
Him," the One Who is superior to the praise of any of those who praise,
glorify, or attempt to describe Him. He is the most perfect of anything
in existence, the One Who has all the Glory, the Greatness, the Honour
and the Sublimity. He is above what the beings He has created conceive
Him to be. He is too Great to be described or His actions to be comprehended.
The Almighty has said,
He is the High, the Great. (40:12)Proclaim His greatness magnifying
(Him). (17:111) And your Lord do magnify. (74:3). To Him belongs greatness
in the heavens and the earth. (45:37)
The Almighty has been lauded with characteristics of this sort:
One is al-Kabeer. The other is al-Mutakabbir, the explanation
of which has already been dealt with. The third is al-Akbar as in
9:72: "... and best of all is Allah's goodly pleasure" (Qura'n, 9:72),
and in 29:45: "... certainly the remembrance of Allah is the greatest."
But it has not been used in the Holy Qura'n as a reference to the Almighty,
yet it occurs as an Attribute of His in the Sunnah such as our saying:
Allahu Akbar! The fourth is al-Kibriya'; Allah has said,
"And to Him belongs greatness..." (Qura'n, 45:37). So, let us discuss these
Attributes:
As regarding al-Akbar, there are two ways to look at it: First,
He is greater than anything else in existence. It is possible to view the
"Allahu Akbar!" which Muslims pronounce audibly when saying their prayers
in the same light, meaning that Allah is greater than anyone or anything
else; hence, one's mind will not be occupied by anyone or anything else
besides Him, nor is his heart attached to anyone or anything else besides
Him.
"Allahu Akbar!" is a statement derived from "al-Kabeer" and is
pronounced to initiate the obligatory prayers, during the time of rukoo`,
sujood or qiyam, that is, when bowing, prostrating or standing
during the performance of obligatory prayers. It is called takbeer,
Glorification of al-Kabeer, the Great One, the Most Great. Takbeer
is required on several occasions such as the athan, iqama,
prayers, both feasts, funeral prayers, upon seeing the Ka`ba, throwing
the stones [during the pilgrimage], and announcing the time for jihad,
holy war. The Messenger of Allah is said to initiate anything of significance
with "Allahu Akbar!"
Ibn `Abbas is quoted saying that the Messenger of Allah used to teach
his companions a supplication whereby they could shun all ailments and
types of fever which said, "In the Name of Allah al-Kabeer; we seek
refuge with Allah al-Azeem from the evil of any feverish vein, and from
the inferno of hellfire."
The Attribute "al-Kabeer" is repeated five times throughout the
text of the Holy Qura'n.
39. "Al-Hafeez"
The Almighty has said in the Holy Qura'n, "And he has no authority over
them, but so that We may distinguish the one who believes in the hereafter
from the one who is in doubt concerning it, and your Lord preserves all
things" (Qura'n, 34:21).
"Al-Hafeez" is derived from the root word if, safeguarding
something or someone. Its antithesis is sahu, forgetfulness, negligence,
inattentiveness. Women who safeguard the property of their husbands when
the latter are absent are described in the Holy Qura'n as fhafizatin
lil ghayb. A book is called afee because its contents safeguard
records of actions and statements from being lost (from people's memory,
etc.).
Al-Hafeez very much maintains the existence of everything that
exists, Who safeguards contradictory elements against overwhelming one
another such as what is hot and what is cold, what is moist and what is
dry, qualities which Allah has created, making them inherent in our creation
as well as in that of all animals and plants. Had He not thus safeguarded
them, by neutralizing them once and by increasing the amount of what diminishes
thereof another, they would not have coexisted with one another, their
mixing would have been annulled, their composition would have diminished,
and their ability to be composed or amalgamated would have disappeared.
Al-Hafeez carries a stronger meaning than that of al-Hafiz.
Al-Hafeez has two meanings: One is the opposite of oversight or
forgetfulness, and its meaning is derived from knowing. When we say that
the Almighty safeguards things, we mean that He knows them in all their
quantities and intricacies, and that such knowledge is not altered by diminution,
oversight, negligence, or forgetfulness. The other is that al-Hafeez
safeguards things against loss: He guards them, and all His characteristics
and perfection are above extinction. He has also said: "Attend constantly
to prayers and to the middle prayers, and stand up truly obedient to Allah"
(Qura'n, 2:238), and, "... the preservation of them both does not tire
Him" (Qura'n, 2:255). He protects His Divine statements, i.e. the Holy
Qura'n, hence the verse, "We have revealed the Reminder, and We are its
Guardian" (Qura'n, 15:9), meaning Protectors against alteration, distortion,
or any tampering with its sacred text, applied here particularly to the
text of the Holy Qura'n.
Despite the greatness of his status, the Friend of Allah Abraham supplicated
thus: "Lord! Grant me wisdom and join me with the righteous" (Qura'n, 26:83),
and, "Lord! Make us both submitting to You" (Qura'n, 2:128). Moses, who
spoke to the Almighty, also supplicated saying, "Lord! Expand my breast
for me" (Qura'n, 20:25). The Almighty has said the following to His Prophet
and Messenger Muhammed: "... had it not been that We had already established
you..." (Qura'n, 17:74), and, "... Allah will protect you from people"
(Qura'n, 5:67). He admonished the believers to pray by saying, "Lord! Do
not make our hearts deviate after You have guided us aright" (Qura'n, 3:8).
One who contemplates on the meanings of al-Hafeez and eagerly
longs for Him with all his heart is one in whose heart the love for His
Lord is borne, the Lord Who protects His servant even when the latter is
disobedient to Him, falling short of worshipping Him, lagging behind in
adoring Him. He reawakens his heart from its inattentiveness. It is then
that Allah makes his heart like a preserved treasure of secrets, so he
takes courageous stands, safeguarding his senses against committing sins,
protecting his heart against spiritually harmful insinuations.
40. "Al-Muqeet"
In the Holy Qura'n, we read: "Whoever joins himself (to another) in
a good cause shall have a share thereof, and whoever joins himself (to
another) in an evil cause shall be responsible for it, and Allah controls
all things" (Qura'n, 4:85).
"Al-Muqeet" is derived from the root noun qoot, sustenance,
the food that sustains the human body. Ibn `Abbas has said that al-Muqeet
is al-Muqtadir, the Omnipotent. Al-Muqeet creates all beings,
creating likewise the means for their sustenance. He provides ways for
them to have access to such means of sustenance; He has made accessible
to them what is necessary and what is a luxury. He sustains the bodies
and the souls. He has taken upon Himself to sustain His creation. Al-Muqeet
hears the silent supplication and responds to it and knows the affliction
and removes it. "Al-Muqeet" conveys the same meaning as that of
"al-Hafeez," the Protector; so, He protects and sustains the living
beings.
Reference to qoot exists throughout the Holy Qura'n. For example,
Allah has said the following in Surat Fussilat: "And He made in it mountains
above its surface, and He blessed therein and made therein its foods, in
four periods: alike for the seekers" (Qura'n, 41:10). He sustains the hearts
through knowledge, so He is al-Razzaq but in a more specific way,
for sustenance includes both food and non-food items. Qoot is food
sufficient to keep someone's body alive. It may also mean the One Who takes
full control over something or someone, Who is Capable of managing his/her
affairs. Al-Muqeet Alone is Capable and Knowledgeable of everything.
One of the good manners inspired by this Attribute is that when food is
brought to you, you must recognize al-Muqeet Whose sustenance is
quite spacious and encompassing, through Whose Grace are you provided with
food. Such a recognition will cause the light of this Attribute to lift
you spiritually. God will then make you the treasure-house for His servants,
enabling you to sustain others, teach them knowledge, and lead them to
the ever-Living, the Sustainer.
Do not seek the achievement of all your wishes and desires except from
Allah, for He surely holds the keys to the treasures of His sustenance.
According to one qudsi tradition, Allah said to Moses, "O Moses!
Ask Me with regard to everything, including your shoe strings and the salt
for your pot."
41. "Al-Haseeb"
Allah has said in the Holy Qura'n, "... those who deliver the messages
of Allah and fear Him and not fear anyone save Allah, and Allah suffices
for taking account (of everything)" (Qura'n, 33:39).
Al-Haseeb is one of Allah's Attributes, and it is often explained
as the One Who rewards. Its meaning may also be understood as the One Who
provides sufficiently, Who grants whatever His servants need; He is the
Master upon Whom all rely; there is no haseeb besides Him, and all
His creation are in need of His help and support. It is also said that
al-haseeb is the One to Whom everything honourable is referred,
and with Him does every glory end. He calls His servants to account for
their deeds, Who tries those who obey Him and rewards them for such obedience,
Who calls those who disobey Him to account and penalizes them for their
disobedience; He, and only He, tries everyone.
Things are connected to one another, and in the end they are connected
to Allah Who has said, "O Prophet! Allah suffices you and the believers
who follow you" (Qura'n, 8:64). If we look at this great cosmos, which
is fixed and unaffected by external effects since millions of years, we
will conclude that there is a complex accounting system for it which is
spontaneous. It makes cosmic criteria fixed in order to guarantee the preservation
of human life on earth in the best way so that man may be able to perform
the function for which Allah created him, that is, to worship Him. The
number of computations required to run such a tremendous cosmos can never
be conceived by any human mind; so, how can one imagine the spontaneous
alterations of some while the rest remain the same?! It is the Great al-haseeb,
the computing One, the Great, the most swift of all those who compute.
It truly is an Attribute which deserves a close look. If a thinking person
were to remain thinking all life, he will never be able to compute except
very, very little indeed. Yet I like through these simple statements to
give the reader an idea that may provide him with a glimpse of the greatness
of this miraculous Attribute:
The verb "hasaba" means: counted, computed, calculated, deducted
a total, etc. "hisab" means: counting, computing, calculating, or
accounting, and it is accomplished by adding, subtracting, and such related
steps. The science of hisab is arithmetics from which more advanced
sciences: algebra, mathematics, and calculus, are derived. The Holy Qura'n
contains references to al-haseeb and the derivatives of its root
word in verses such as these:
... and though there may be the weight of a grain of mustard seed, We
will (still) bring it, and sufficient are We to take account. (21:47) Then
are they sent back to Allah, their Master, the True One; now surely His
is the judgment, and He is the swiftest in taking account. (6:62) They
shall have (their) portion of what they have earned, and Allah is swift
in reckoning. (2:202) There is none to repeal His decree, and He is swift
to take account. (13:41) ... there he finds Allah, so He pays him back
his reckoning in full, and Allah is swift in reckoning. (24:39)
In order to be acquainted with the secret of Allah's Power as embedded
in His Attribute "al-haseeb", as it manifests itself upon His creation,
let us take a look at the chemical, physiological and astronomical balance
existing in the cosmos. We will see that there is a high computing power
too great to be conceived, one capable of conducting such computations
and controlled by One Who is fully knowledgeable of the cosmos in its entirety,
of the smallest atom in it up to the largest planet. Had it not been so,
its cosmic computations would not have remained fixed. In order to form
an idea about the complexity of such computations, we have to provide an
example:
Were we to think for one moment about the number of computations which
take place inside our bodies, we will surely be unable to calculate them.
So, how can man conceive the number of computations in the whole cosmos
from the smallest atom to the largest planet in their various types, orbits,
and environments? The mind, no matter how great, can never do so, and it
will definitely recognize Allah and His Absolute Power, and that He is
the only capable al-haseeb Who can make such computations; so, let
us contemplate on this Attribute so that we may honour and thank Him. Allah
has pointed out in the text of the Holy Qura'n the calculation according
to which the cosmos is arranged in accordance with places very well computed
in their locations, orbits and speeds: "Surely We have created everything
according to a measure. And Our command is but one, as (swift as) the twinkling
of an eye" (Qura'n, 54:49-50). He has also said,
But nay! I swear by the falling of the stars, and most surely it is
a very great oath, if you only know... (56:75-76) The sun and the moon
follow a reckoning. (55:5) (As for) the moon, We have ordained for it stages
till it becomes again like an old dry palm branch. (36:39) ... and ordained
for it mansions so that you may know the computation of years and the reckoning.
(10:5) He causes the dawn to break, and he has made the night for (you
to) rest, and the sun and the moon for reckoning. (6:96)
As a matter of fact, there is hardly any verse which does not contain
one indication or more about the computed system of the cosmos or of the
human body, but the Holy Qura'n highlights a specific significance for
a different type of calculations: the calculations of the sustenance of
Allah's servants according to the wisdom of Allah, some of which are according
to a measure, and some coming from whence a servant of Allah does not know:
"... and Allah gives means of subsistence to whomsoever He pleases without
measure" (Qura'n, 2:212). Such is usually the sustenance of the righteous
whom Allah sustains from whence they do not know or expect: "... and whoever
is careful of (his duty to) Allah, He will make an outlet for him and give
him sustenance from whence he does not expect" (Qura'n, 65:2-3). Also,
Allah's giving is great, so great that its true value can never be conceived
or computed. There is still a greater calculation: the calculation of the
deeds and the intentions behind them, their recording as well as the rewards
for them in the life of this world or in the one to come, or in both, for
the Almighty says the following in this regard:
... only the delivery of the message is (incumbent) on you, while calling
(them) to account is Ours. (13:40) So that Allah may requite each soul
(according to) what it has earned; surely Allah is swift in reckoning.
(14:51) ... so We called it to account severely and We chastised it with
a stern chastisement. (65:8) Surely to Us is their return, then surely
upon Us is the taking of their account. (88:25-26) ... surely Allah takes
account of all things. (4:86) "Whoever brings a good deed," says the Almighty
in the Holy Qura'n as He refers to the Day of Judgment, "he shall have
ten like it, and whoever brings an evil deed, he shall be recompensed only
with the like thereof, and they shall not be dealt with unjustly" (Qura'n,
6:160). People on the Day of Judgment will be simultaneously judged just
as they are being judged in the life of this world. Their sustenance will
be forwarded to them at once, and Allah is never diverted by anything from
another: "So that Allah may requite each soul (according to) what it has
earned; surely Allah is swift in reckoning" (Qura'n, 14:51). Those who
are endowed with understanding know the precision of the Divine computation
from their own dealing with Him, for He has said, "... and whether you
manifest what is in your minds or hide it, Allah will call you to account
according to it, then He will forgive whomsoever He pleases and chastise
whomsoever He pleases, and Allah has power over all things" (Qura'n, 2:284).
God's management of the affairs goes on forever and ever. Our master Muhammed
has said, "Call your own selves to account before you yourselves are called
upon to account for them."
42. "Al-Jaleel"
Allah has said, "And the person of your Lord will forever endure, the
Lord of glory and honour" (Qura'n, 55:27), and also, "Blessed be the Name
of your Lord, the Lord of Glory and Honour" (Qura'n, 55:78)!
Linguistically, the verb "yujill" means: to magnify or glorify
someone or deem him great. The Attribute "al-Jaleel" is derived
from honour, dignity, and greatness. He is too Great to do anything which
does not fit His Honour, Who purifies the heart by manifesting the qualities
of His Glory to it, Who reveals what is hidden by the attributes of His
beauty and what is in the world, all of it, of glory, perfection, goodness
and magnificence by the lights of His Essence and the effects of His qualities.
Al-Jaleel is worthy of bidding and forbidding; besides Him, every
great person is not great at all, and every gigantic thing is dwarfed.
He grants glory to those who approach Him and humiliation to those whom
He dismisses from His presence.
The Absolute al-Jaleel is Allah. The Attribute "al-Kabeer"
describes the perfection of the Self, whereas "al-Jaleel" describes
the perfection of His qualities. "Al-`Azeem" refers to the perfection
of the Self. All qualities of His are referred to according to the extent
one can conceive; so, He exhausts the mind and is not exhausted; He can
never be seen by anyone, yet He sees everyone. When the qualities of glory
are attributed to a reasoning mind capable of conceiving them, they are
called beauty, and the one they describe is called beautiful. Originally,
the Attribute "al-Jameel" was linguistically applied to a picture
which can be discerned by the eyes no matter what it represents, one which
suits and agrees with the vision. Then it was applied to an inner picture
which may be conceived by the mind such as one may talk about "a beautiful
conduct," for it is conceived by the mind rather than the eyesight. Inner
pictures, then, if harmonious and combining the qualities of perfection
that suit them, just as they ought to be, convey an inner beauty just as
they convey to whoever discerns and conceives them a visual pleasure, and
their inner beauty is more intense than their outward one.
The share a servant of Allah may derive from the inspiration of this
Attribute is that he adorns himself with beauty and bears in mind that
it is He Who has bestowed upon him the blessings of beauty, be it the beauty
of a visible image or of the inner self. The inner beauty of the soul is
surely higher and greater than that of the beauty of the body. The Messenger
of Allah used to thus supplicate after his prayers: "Allahomma anta
as-Salam wa minka as-salam; tabrakta wa ta`alayta ya thal jalali wal ikram,"
that is, "Lord! You are the Peace and the source of peace; Glory to You,
You are the One with all the Greatness and Honour!"
The Messenger of Allah has also said, "Hold Allah in high esteem so
that He may forgive you," that is to say, Glorify Him by obeying Him and
by distancing yourselves from committing any disobedience of Him, and seek
nearness to Him, Glory to Him, by performing what He has enjoined you to
perform.
43. "Al-Kareem"
Allah has said, "... whoever is grateful, he is grateful only for (the
good of) his own soul, and whoever is ungrateful, surely my Lord is self-Sufficient,
Honoured" (Qura'n, 27:40). Scholars say that anything regarded as good,
precious, of great importance, is kareem. Linguistically, a person
who is out-giving is also called kareem, generous. Anything held
in its own category in high esteem is called kareem. Allah is called
"al-Kareem," an Attribute that describes His benevolence and beneficence.
Allah has always been Generous, and He will always be so. He is high above
any lowliness; He gives abundantly, and He gives beautifully.
Al-Kareem forgives though He is capable of inflicting the most
severe of punishment; He fulfills His promise; He gives more than what
one pleads to Him for; He does not mind how much He gives and to whom;
He does not permit anyone who seeks refuge with Him to suffer loss; He
does not need means to do what He does. One Who can combine in Him all
these qualities is the Absolute al-Kareem; none other than Allah
is as such.
The Almighty has said, "O man! What has beguiled you from your Lord,
the Gracious One...?" (Qura'n, 82:6), and, "Read and your Lord is the Most
Honourable" (Qura'n, 96:3).
Arabs are used to calling anything kareem if it has a commendable
merit or quality. Muhammed, the Messenger of Allah, has said, "Yousuf is
the most kareem of people," meaning in lineage and descent. They
may describe something the presence of which can be identified by one of
the physical senses as kareem. For example, the Egyptian women,
upon seeing Yousuf said, "... this is but a noble angel" (Qura'n, 12:31).
Describing Paradise, the Almighty says it is a "... noble place" (Qura'n,
44:26). This word may also be applied to anything honourable; the Almighty
has said, "... surely the most honourable of you with Allah is the one
who is most careful (of his duty towards Allah)" (Qura'n, 49:13).
Arabs may also apply it to something that has many benefits or advantages,
such as what is implied in this verse which narrates the story of prophet
Solomon: "Surely an honourable letter has been delivered to me" (Qura'n,
27:29). According to exegesis, kareem in this verse means quite
significant and weighty, containing very good statements.
One of the signs of His greatness and generosity is that He provides
His bounties even to those who do not deserve them. He doles out His benevolence
even without being asked. If a suppliant prays Him for forgiveness, one
of the signs of His greatness is that He will erase that suppliant's sin
if he truly repents, and He records a good deed for him in its place. Allah
has said, "The parable of those who spend their wealth in the way of Allah
is like the parable of a grain growing seven ears (with) a hundred grains
in each, and Allah multiplies for whomsoever he pleases, and Allah is ample-Giving,
Knowing" (Qura'n, 2:261). Among the signs of His greatness is that in the
life of this world He covers the sins of the sinners and hide their shortcomings.
In one incident, the Messenger of Allah has narrated a story about the
forgiveness of the Almighty which is thought-provoking. He said, "I know
the last person who will enter Paradise and the last one to get out of
hellfire. He is a man who will be approached and it will be said, `Show
him his minor sins and suspend the major ones,' whereupon he will be shown
his minor sins. He will then be asked if on such-and-such a day he did
such-and-such, and he will answer in the affirmative, fearing the penalty
from his major sins. He will be told, `In place of each of your sins, you
will be granted a good deed,' whereupon he will say, `Lord! But... I have
committed other sins which I do not see here among them!'" The narrator
of the anecdote says that he saw the Messenger of Allah smile at that juncture
of the story till his front teeth became visible.
Allah is "al-Kareem mutaghafil," that is, the Great One Who deliberately
and quite often overlooks. One of the signs of His Greatness is that He
forgives whenever He is prayed for forgiveness; Allah has said, "Ask forgiveness
of your Lord; surely He is the most Forgiving" (Qura'n, 71:10). And among
the signs of His Greatness is that He forgives without reminding those
whom He forgives of the types of sins and ugly things they had committed.
And among the signs of His Greatness is that if they come to Him after
having obeyed Him only a little, He will grant them quite a generous reward
and will honour them by praising them beautifully. Among the signs of His
Greatness is that He includes them in His Covenant; He has said, "... fulfill
(your) covenant with Me, I will fulfill (My) covenant with you" (Qura'n,
2:40). He even makes them worthy of His love: "... He shall love them and
they shall love Him" (Qura'n, 5:54).
Among the other signs of His Greatness is that He has made this world
the loaned property of His servants saying, "He it is Who created for you
all that is in the earth" (Qura'n, 2:29), and the hereafter as well, "...
and a Garden, the extensiveness of which is like the heavens and the earth,
prepared for those who guard (themselves against evil)" (Qura'n, 3:133).
Also among the signs of His Greatness and generosity is that He has
made everything in the heavens and the earth subservient to man: "And He
has made whatever in the heavens and in the earth, all of it, subservient
to you, [a gift] from Him" (Qura'n, 45:13). One of the signs of a believer's
good conduct in as far as the Attribute "al-Kareem" is concerned
is that he directs himself wholeheartedly towards His Lord. He makes it
his habit to feed and clothe the orphans and be good to his kith and kin.
In order to attract the attention of the Muslims to this weighty matter,
Prophet Muhammed has said, "If someone held in high esteem by his folks
comes to you, be generous to him." He has also said, "Your Lord, Honour
and Glory belong to Him, is ever-Living, Generous, too shy to disappoint
any of His servants who plead to Him."
It is a sign of good manners to habitually forgive the doers of evil
deeds, including repeated offenders, and to cover the faults of your brethren
in all circumstances. Such generosity of manners is surely more precious
than any materialistic generosity, for the latter preserves the body whereas
the first sustains the soul. The Messenger of Allah has said, "You will
not be able to please all people with your wealth; so, do please them with
your good manners." He has also said, "Allah, Honoured is His Name, is
Generous, and He loves good manners and hates a lowly conduct." The Messenger
of Allah has said, "The generous one is close to Allah, close to [the hearts
of] people, close to Paradise, distant from the fire. A miser is distant
from Allah, distant from people, distant from Paradise, close to the fire."
As for "al-Akram," i.e. the most Generous, surely it is Allah,
the Most Generous of all those who are generous. This Attribute may also
bear the same meaning embedded in that of "al-Kareem."
44. "Al-Raqeeb"
Allah has said, "... and be careful of (your duty to) Allah through
Whom you demand (your rights of) one another, and to the ties of kinship;
surely Allah ever watches over you" (Qura'n, 4:1).
"Al-Raqeeb" is one of Allah's Attributes, and He is the Witness
Who is never absent from the scene. In language, a raqeeb is a vigilante,
a watchman who stands to protect and guard. In the army, the raqeeb
is the one in the vanguard. Al-Raqeeb is Allah Who safeguards everyone
and everything, the One from Whose knowledge nothing at all can escape.
According to one sacred tradition, the Messenger of Allah has said, "Safeguard
Muhammed in his household," meaning safeguard his name and honour it. "Raqeeb"
also means offspring. The angel who writes down whatever we do and say
is also called "raqeeb": "He does not utter a word except that there
is by him someone watching at hand" (Qura'n, 50:18). Al-Raqeeb,
that is, the One Who truly ever watches over us, is, of course,
Allah. One Who is raqeeb regarding Allah is one who acknowledges
that He oversees whatever we do and say, so he observes his duties towards
Him.
Allah, al-Raqeeb, knows our conditions and counts our breath.
Al-Raqeeb never laxes nor forgets, Who is always present and is
never absent, Who knows everything and nothing regarding the conditions
of His creation can ever escape His knowledge. He manages the affairs of
His servants, Who knows what they say, Who watches over His servants, Who
observes what they do, Who is familiar with their innermost thoughts.
Narrating the story of Jesus son of Mary, the Almighty quotes Jesus
saying, "... but when You caused me to die, You were the Watcher over them,
and You witness all things" (Qura'n, 5:117). He has also said, "... and
Allah is Watchful over all things" (Qura'n, 33:52). There are two viewpoints
that explain the meaning of "al-Raqeeb":
One: Linguistically, He safeguards things, Who watches over everyone,
Who guards everyone, Who is free of any oversight or negligence. He takes
care of and safeguards everything. The Almighty has said, "He does not
utter a word except that there is by him a watcher at hand" (Qura'n, 50:18),
meaning an angel who records his deeds and takes note of everything he
contemplates, says, or does, while Allah is al-Raqeeb Who looks
after His servants, knows their conditions and whatever they utter.
As regarding observation, it is His saying: "... surely I (Allah) am
with you both: I hear, and I see" (Qura'n, 20:46). Regarding knowledge,
it is His saying: "Allah knows what every female bears, and that of which
the wombs fall short of completion, and that in which they increase" (Qura'n,
13:8). Other such references include:
... and He knows what is in the land and the sea. (6:59) He knows what
goes deep down into the earth and what comes forth out of it. (57:4)
The other viewpoint says that this word is derived from irtiqab,
waiting. Allah has said, "Wait, therefore; surely they (too) are waiting"
(Qura'n, 44:59). Such a viewpoint is impossible to accept; therefore, it
is rejected on the ground that one who waits for something needs to reach
its commencement, desiring to find out its outcome. The correct meaning
of this latter verse is that Allah wants His servants to reach out to Him,
to make Him the goal of their adoration, submission and humility.
Al-Raqeeb, then, is the Witness Who is never absent. The virtues
of one who watches himself is implied in a tradition wherein the Messenger
of Allah Muhammed says, "Ihsan (goodness) is that you worship Allah
as though you see Him, for if you do not see Him, He surely sees you."
It is narrated that a man once passed by a young slave tending sheep
and pointed to an ewe and said, "Sell me this ewe, young shepherd!" The
young slave told him that it was not his; therefore, he could not sell
it, whereupon the man said, "Where is your brilliance?! Can't you tell
its owner that a wolf ate one of his sheep?" He answered him by saying,
"Then where is Allah?!" The man was very impressed by his answer, so he
bought the young slave and set him free, then he bought the herd and gave
it to him as a gift. Since then, that man kept repeating "Then where is
Allah?!" quite often. It is, therefore, one of the good manners of a believer
towards Allah, al-Raqeeb, to keep in mind that Allah ever watches
over him and sees whatever he does. He knows that his self, that is, his
nafs, is his enemy, and that the accursed Satan, too, is another,
and that they both seize every opportunity to make him lax and disobey
his Lord; therefore, he must always be on his guard. He must close all
the pitfalls in which he may fall and block all the avenues from which
Satan may approach him. It is also one of the signs of good manners of
a believer in this regard to watch himself and his senses, to keep vigil,
and to make whatever he does solely for the achievement of the Pleasure
of his Lord in a pure intention, to observe his obligations towards his
Muslim brother, and not to expose the latter's faults to others.
45. "Al-Mujeeb"
Allah has said, "And to Thamud (We sent) their brother Salih. He said:
O my people! Worship Allah; you have no other god besides Him; He brought
you into being from the earth and made you dwell in it; therefore, ask
forgiveness of Him, then turn to Him; surely my Lord is Nigh; he ever answers"
(Qura'n, 11:61).
Linguistically speaking, both nouns ijaba and istijaba
mean basically the same, and "al-Mujeeb" has two meanings: One is:
the One Who answers the pleas. The other is: the One Who grants what He
is pleaded for.
Al-Mujeeb, Allah, responds to the plea of those who plead to
Him and helps them, Who favourably answers the supplication of those who
supplicate to Him, Who removes the need of those in need and gives them
sufficiently. He even gives prior to being asked and accepts even prior
to being pleaded. He knows the need of those who are in need before they
pray Him, and He since eternity knows all their needs, so He has provided
them with means to satisfy all their needs: He creates foods and all types
of sustenance for them; He creates the tools and the means to get such
tools to the hands of those who need them. Al-Mujeeb responds to
the pleas of those who plead to Him. Since time immemorial, He knew in
advance what they needed. He goes to the rescue of those who are in dire
need of help, and He does not disappoint anyone who pleads to Him.
This theme recurs quite often throughout the Holy Qura'n. Examples are:
And Noah called upon Us, and most excellent are We to answer the prayer.
(37:75)
So their Lord accepted their prayer: That I will not waste the deed
of one who does a good deed among you, whether male or female, each one
of you being from the other. (3:195) And Job (Ayyub) cried out to his Lord:
Harm has afflicted me, and You are the most Merciful of the merciful. So
We responded to him and removed the harm from him, and We gave him his
family and the like (number) of them in addition: a mercy from Us and a
reminder to the worshippers. (21:83-84) Or Who answers the [prayer of]
the distressed one when he calls upon Him and removes the evil, and Who
will make you successors in the earth? Is there a god with Allah? Little
is it that you mind! (27:62) ... you sought aid from your Lord, so He answered
you: I will assist you with a thousand of the angels following one another.
(8:9) When My servants ask you concerning Me, then surely I am very near;
I answer the prayer of the suppliant when he calls on Me. (2:186)
And your Lord says: Call upon Me, I will answer you; surely those who
are too proud to worship Me shall soon enter hell abased. (40:60) For those
who respond to their Lord there is goodness, and those who do not respond
to Him, had they had all that is in the earth and the like thereof with
it, they would certainly have offered it for a ransom. (As for) those (latter
ones), an evil reckoning shall be theirs, and their abode is hell, and
evil, indeed, is the resting-place. (13:18) O you who believe! Answer (the
call of) Allah and His Prophet when he invites you to that which gives
you life, and be informed that Allah intervenes between man and his heart,
and that to Him you shall be gathered. (8:24)
Allah is capable of responding in various ways. When some of His friends
are in need of something, He satisfies their need, and He may even make
some circumstances deliberately hard for them only to test them and raise
their status due to their perseverance, and to their thanking Him during
the time of ease as well as the time of hardship. So when they almost lose
hope, He comes to their rescue with beautiful rewards and with indications
of His being pleased with them. Allah guarantees for His servant that He
will respond favourably to his supplication in the way which He knows to
be in his best interest, and at the time He chooses, rather than the time
chosen by His servant; so, do not lose hope because of His delay in answering
your plea, for such a delay may prove to be better for you. Allah May even
opt to grant you better than what you ask Him for; so, plead to Him as
one convinced of His favourable response.
The Messenger of Allah used to say, "Plead to Allah, being convinced
of His answer to your pleas, and be advised that Allah does not respond
to the pleas of one who is inattentive, indifferent." This tradition has
been recorded by al-Tirmithi. He has also said, "No Muslim pleads to Allah
a plea wherein there is no desire for committing a sin nor the severing
of the ties of kinship except that Allah will grant him one of three good
rewards: He will either grant him an immediate response, or He may save
the rewards for him in the life hereafter, or He may keep its equivalent
of evil away from him." His companions said, "Then we will plead to Him
a great deal, indeed." He said, "Surely Allah is greater still!"
The Messenger of Allah has said, "When you have a plea, plead to Allah,
and whenever you need help, seek help from Allah." In another tradition,
he says, "Allah is too shy to disappoint any of His servants who pleads
to Him for something good."
46. "Al-Wasi`"
The Most Exalted and Glorified One has said, "... whither you turn,
there is Allah's purpose; surely Allah is Ample-giving, Knowing" (Qura'n,
2:115).
"Al-Wasi`" is one of Allah's Attributes, and its root word is
derived from si`a, spaciousness, expanse, capacity, abundance, plentitude,
etc. One may have an abundance of knowledge if he is acquainted with a
good deal of it, or he may have an abundance of means. In his book Al-Nihaya,
Ibn al-Atheer, who discusses Allah's Attributes, says that al-Wasi`
can enrich everyone who is indigent, Whose mercy encompasses everything.
His authority never ends; His benevolence is unlimited; His domain is endless.
He never stops giving; He is never distracted by knowing something from
knowing another, nor by one issue from taking care of another. His knowledge
encompasses everything. His knowledge encompasses everything; His might
suffices everything. His mercy is spacious; He is independent; His authority
is above everything; His knowledge, might, and benevolence are the greatest.
He is the One for the meanings of Whose Attributes there can be no limit,
Whose knowledge is spacious, and so are His mercy and forgiveness; His
domain is tremendous.
The Absolute al-Wasi` is Allah, Glorified and Exalted is He.
There is no shore for the spacious ocean of His knowledge. Had the seas
been ink, they would have been consumed before His words can ever be exhausted.
There is no end for what He is capable of giving and blessing.
The Holy Qura'n has indicated that Allah's knowledge is vast and endless;
in Surat al-Ana`m, the Almighty says, "And his people disputed with him.
He said: Do you dispute with me regarding Allah, and He has, indeed, guided
me? And I do not fear in any way those that you set up with Him unless
my Lord pleases; my Lord comprehends all things in His knowledge; will
you not then mind" (Qura'n, 6:80)? The Holy Qura'n has described Allah's
mercy as vast; in Surat al-A`raf it is stated that, "And ordain for us
good in this world's life and in the life hereafter, for surely we turn
to You. He said: (As for) My chastisement, I will afflict with it whomsoever
I please, and My mercy encompasses all things; so I will ordain it (especially)
for those who guard (themselves against evil) and pay the zakat
and those who believe in Our signs" (Qura'n, 7:156). In Surat Taha, His
knowledge is described as vast: "Your only God is Allah; there is no god
but He; He comprehends all things in (His) knowledge" (Qura'n, 20:98).
Other references to the vastness of His knowledge, to His mercy and might,
are as follows:
Our Lord comprehends all things in His knowledge; in Allah do we trust:
Lord! Decide between us and our people with the truth, and You are the
best of those who decide. (7:89) Those who bear the Throne and those around
Him celebrate the praise of their Lord and believe in Him and ask protection
for those who believe (saying): Lord! You encompass all things in mercy
and knowledge; therefore, grant protection to those who turn (to You) and
follow Your way, and save them from the punishment of hell. (40:7) And
the heavens We raised high with power, and most surely We make things ample.
(51:47)
We ought to ponder on Allah's vast knowledge, for He is the Absolute
al-Wasi` Whose Grace has encompassed everything in existence, in
fact, even prior to their existence, and even before the existence of time
itself, since He has always been for all eternity. His knowledge encompasses
everything. Nothing He knows distracts Him from knowing something else.
His might overwhelms everything; no issue distracts Him from another. His
Hearing encompasses everything; no person's supplication can distract Him
from hearing the supplication of another. His benevolence includes all
His creation; His helping one particular needy person does not prohibit
Him from helping another.
One of the ways for learning a code of ethics derived from this Attribute,
"al-Wasi`," is that you should include all servants of Allah in
your good treatment and kindness at all times; be gracious to all people.
Help them when they seek your help, and treat all of them with the best
treatment. A servant of Allah ought to remember and seek wisdom from the
conduct of the Messenger of Allah who was saying his prayers once when
he overheard a bedouin supplicating to his Lord saying, "O Allah! Have
mercy on me and on Muhammed, and do not be merciful to anyone else besides
us." The Prophet said to him, "You have prayed Him to limit what is limitless,"
meaning the mercy of Allah. The Messenger of Allah has also said, "If Allah
grants you an increase [of His blessings], do give your own self an increase."
47. "Al-Hakeem"
Allah has said, "... and if You forgive them, then surely You are the
Mighty, the Wise" (Qura'n, 5:118).
"Hakeem" is a superlative form, a form for the glorification of the
One Who has all the wisdom; hence, al-Hakeem is the very greatest
in His wisdom. Allah is the most wise in creating everything and in perfecting
such a creation. His wisdom means His prior knowledge of everything and
His bringing everything into existence most wisely and most perfectly.
Wisdom means: the best way of knowing something utilizing the very best
of means. "Al-Hakeem" carries the same meaning as that of "al-`Aleem."
Nobody knows Allah except Allah; therefore, al-Hakeem cannot be
anyone but Allah: He knows the origins of all things through His eternal
and perpetual knowledge which nobody can ever conceive as being liable
to extinction.
"Al-Hakeem" may also mean His being Holy, too Holy to do anything
which does not beseem Him. In Surat al-Mominoon, Allah says, "What?! Did
you then think that We had created you in vain and that you will not be
returned to Us?!" (Qura'n, 23:115). Some scholars have said that al-Hakeem
is equitable in His assessment, benevolent in His management of affairs,
the One Who has determined the measure of everything, the One Whose wisdom
is the very ultimate end, the One Who places everything in its right place.
Nobody can really appreciate Allah's wisdom other than Allah Himself.
Al-Hakeem is free from seeking any self-interest, nor can anyone
object to anything He does. Al-Hakeem is adorned with wisdom, and
wisdom is knowing the best of things through the best means. The best of
everything is Allah; so, He is the Absolute al-Hakeem; He knows
everything by the very best means of eternal and everlasting knowledge,
the knowledge which nobody can conceive as ever coming to naught, nor can
there be any doubt about it, and nobody can be described as such except
Allah.
Some scholars say that wisdom means getting to know the truth for its
own sake, and to know goodness in order to act upon it. A servant of Allah,
though his portion of knowledge and potential may be little, such a shortcoming
is evident in him when compared to Allah's knowledge and might and to the
knowledge and ability of the angels. Yet whatever amount human beings have
been given is quite significant by the token that Allah Himself has deemed
it great when he said, "... and whoever is granted wisdom is indeed granted
a great deal of goodness" (Qura'n, 2:269). Abraham prayed his Lord for
wisdom saying, "Lord! Grant me wisdom" (Qura'n, 26:83). Allah said the
following about David (prophet David): "We granted him wisdom and a clear
judgment" (Qura'n, 38:20). Scholars have said that wisdom means knowledge.
Knowledge may either be knowing what can exist without our choice or
doing, which is theoretical knowledge, or it may be knowledge of what can
happen by our choice and doing, which is practical knowledge. Theoretical
knowledge may either be the means towards an end, or it may be an end by
itself. The means, for example, may be the science of logic the deduction
of which is determined by what concepts and assertions mankind can conceive
in a way which does not permit except a very rare margin of error.
As regarding what is considered as the ultimate end, be informed that
things may be classified into three categories: They may either comprise
a form, or they actually are not supposed to exist in a certain form, or
either case may be applicable to them. What is supposed to be in a form
should either be in a particular one, and the science which researches
such portion of what exists is called natural science or physics. What
ought not be a particular form and ought to be in some other form, the
science that researches it is called the science of mathematics. As regarding
the other category which is not supposed to be in a particular form at
all, the science that researches it is called theology.
As regarding the third kind, the one which may be in a particular form
or may not, the science researching it is called the inclusive science,
and it is like the knowledge of the unit, the multiplicity, the causation,
the deduction, the completion or the deficiency. All of this falls under
the category of theoretical knowledge.
Practical knowledge may either be the researching of the conditions
of man regarding his own body, which is called the science of physiology,
or his conditions with members of his household, which is called the science
of domestic management, or his conditions (ties to, relationship...) with
the rest of the world, which is called political science.
The person who personified wisdom in his everyday conduct among people
is the Messenger of Allah by the token of this verse of Surat Ali-`Imran:
"Certainly Allah conferred a benefit upon the believers when He raised
among them a Messenger from among themselves reciting to them His signs
and purifying them and teaching them the Book and the wisdom although before
then they were surely in manifest error" (Qura'n, 3:164).
The wisdom in as far as the servants of Allah are concerned is to say
and to do what is right as much as it is humanly possible. Allah says in
Surat al-Baqarah, "He grants wisdom to whomsoever He pleases, and whoever
is granted wisdom is indeed granted a great deal of good and none but men
of understanding mind" (Qura'n, 2:269). A wise person among people is one
who precisely calculates intricate things; he masters them and skillfully
executes them. Wisdom is the greatest knowledge, and its greatness depends
on the greatness of what is known, and surely there is nothing greater
than Allah. Anyone who gets to know Allah is wise even if his share of
all other secular branches of knowledge is most modest. The ratio of the
wisdom of any of Allah's servants to that of Allah is like the ratio of
such servant's knowledge to that of Allah, and what a vast difference it
is! And what a vast distance it is between both norms of knowledge! Yet
despite the huge gap between both matters, wisdom is regarded as the most
precious of all types of knowledge and the most fruitful, and anyone who
is endowed with wisdom is surely granted a great deal of good.
To derive a good conduct from the attribute al-Hakeem requires
a servant of Allah to be wise, that is, to do his best in whatever good
deeds he does, and that his condition is pleasing to others, that is, based
on following the commandments of Allah and distancing himself from whatever
He has enjoined us to be distant from. He takes extreme care in performing
his religious obligations, distancing himself from following his own whims
and desires, staying away from any doubtful matter.
The Messenger of Allah has said, "The apex of wisdom is fearing Allah."
A wise person is one who indicts his own self and who learns about what
will come after death. A feeble person is one who follows his own desires
and still wants even more from Allah. The Messenger of Allah has made many
wise statements in this regard. A bedouin once came to the Messenger of
Allah and asked him to teach him something good to say. He told him to
say, "There is no god except Allah, the One and only God Who has no partner;
Allah is Great, Greater than everything; Praise, a great deal indeed of
Praise, is due to Allah; Glory to Allah, Lord of the Worlds; there is no
power nor might except in Allah, the Honoured One, the Wise." The bedouin
said, "All this is for my Lord; what about something for my own self?!"
The Messenger of Allah taught him to say, "Lord! I invoke You to forgive
me, to have mercy on me, to grant me guidance, to grant me good health,
and to grant me an increase in sustenance." [8]
As regarding what some people consider as having "wisdom," anyone who
knows "everything" without knowing Allah is not worthy of being called
wise because he has missed the knowledge of the best and the most significant
of everything. One who knows Allah is a wise person even if his share of
all other branches of knowledge is very shallow, even if he stutters or
is unable to absorb them. One who knows Allah is one whose speech will
sound different from that of anyone else, one who seldom indulges in frivolous
matters. On the contrary, his speech will be inclusive, and he does not
seek any vanishing interest.
48. "Al-Wadood"
The Most Glorified and Exalted One has said, "And He is the Forgiving,
the Loving" (Qura'n, 85:14).
"Al-Wadood" is an Attribute derived from the Arabic word "wudd"
which conveys the meaning of love and friendship, and it applies to all
avenues of goodness. Allah is "al-Wadood" because He loves His servants
and they love Him; He says the following in Surat al-Ma'ida: "O you who
believe! Whoever among you turns back from his religion, Allah will bring
people whom He loves and who love Him, who are humble before the believers
and mighty against the unbelievers...." (Qura'n, 5:54).
The condition of true love is that it does not increase on account of
loyalty, nor does it decrease on account of aversion. Al-Wadood
ever tries to show His love for His friends by manifesting His knowledge
to them. The "wadood" person is one who prefers you over all others,
who removes from your heart any desire to notice or to love anyone else
but him. Al-Wadood very much loves His servants, Who tries to be
loved even by the sinners through His forgiveness, and by all His creation
by sustaining them and granting them sufficiently. Allah's righteous servants
love Him due to their knowledge of His perfection and the perfection of
His qualities, and due to His readiness to forgive.
For all these reasons, al-Wadood is the Loving and the Beloved
One. If a servant of Allah dives deeply into the depths of the knowledge
of Allah's perfection, the perfection which causes a servant of Allah to
love his Lord more and more, his knowledge will be crystallized, and he
will find a great deal of contentment while worshipping Him accordingly.
His knowledge of Him will then bear good fruits, and he, the servant of
Allah, will turn to be the one who loves Him. He may also be understood
to be the One Who loves His servants and the love for Whom bears good fruits
according to the degree of love in the heart of each one of those who love
Him. If someone sees through his heart his Lord to be self-Sufficient,
Gracious, Honoured, Omnipotent, everyone is in need of Him while He does
not need anyone or anything, yet He loves His servants and wishes the best
for them and even tries to get closer to them by granting them His favours...,
such a person will surely have been blessed with true vision and a clear
sight.
One who tries to fashion his conduct according to the inspiration of
this Attribute ought to know that he should love all those whom Allah loves
such as the prophets, successors of the prophets, and the scholars. He
should love everything Allah loves and with which He is pleased such as
acts of righteousness, piety, good deeds and exemplary conduct with others.
Such a person should be compassionate towards all people: He loves to
see the disobedient returning to their Lord obediently, the righteous remaining
firm in their righteousness. He becomes compassionate towards all servants
of Allah, forgiving those who abuse them, being kind to all people especially
his family and kin. It is recorded that the holy Prophet has said to Imam
`Ali, "If you wish to surpass those who are close to Allah, then join your
ties with those who have cut them off from you, grant those who deprived
you, and forgive those who wrong you." The attribute "al-Wadood"
deserves from the servants of Allah that they wish one another what they
wish for their own selves, and even more so! They should prefer others
over their own selves. A righteous man once said, "I wish to be a bridge
over the fire whereupon people pass [to heaven] unharmed."
The perfection of such following is that anger, grudge, or harm received
do not stop anyone who exemplifies this Attribute in his conduct from favouring
others over himself and from being good to them; thus are we taught by
our master the Messenger of Allah. Four of his teeth were once broken,
and his face was bleeding, yet all of that uncalled for abuse to which
he was exposed at the hands of the infidels did not stop him from praying
for them or from wishing them good. Ibn `Abbas is quoted saying that he
had heard the Messenger of Allah, who had just finished his prayers, supplicating
thus: "Lord! I plead to You for mercy from You whereby You guide my heart,
manage my affairs, unite my kinsfolk, and bring reform to those who are
absent from among my kin. I plead to You for security on the Promised Day,
for Paradise on the Day of Eternity, in the company of the witnesses who
are near to You, those who bow down and prostrate, who fulfill their promise...,
for surely You are the Most Merciful One, the Compassionate."
Regarding the explanation of the verse saying, "... for them will Allah
bring about love" (Qura'n, 19:96), the "love" referred to here means that
Allah will make His creation love them, that is, He will make His servants
experience love and affection on their own account. Supporting this explanation
is a tradition wherein the Messenger of Allah says, "If Allah loves one
of His servants, He calls upon Gabriel to tell him so, whereupon Gabriel
loves that person, so he calls upon the residents of the heavens saying,
`Allah loves so-and-so; therefore, you, too, should love him,' whereupon
the residents of the heavens respond to him in the affirmative. Love for
him will thus be disseminated among the residents of the earth."
49. "Al-Majeed"
Allah has said, "The mercy of Allah and His blessings be upon you, O
Ahl al-Bayt (People of the Prophet's House); surely He is Praised,
Glorified" (Qura'n, 11:73).
In language, majd is glory; when combined with good deeds, a
person's own prestige will be enhanced, so he will be called glorious.
It also conveys the meanings of manliness, generosity, open-handedness,
and gracious conduct.
"Al-Majeed" connotes general honour or abundance of wealth. A
man who is majeed is extremely generous. Al-Majeed is Glorified
to the utmost extent of Glorification due to His own merits, qualities,
and actions. He is also Great in His attributes, beautiful in His power
and authority. Al-Majeed has the utmost limit of glory; His benevolence
is great. Al-Majeed is the great One, the One Whose status is Sublime,
Who is most Benevolent. His status is tremendous, Whose Benevolence is
great. He is Honoured, Whose actions are beautiful, Who is generous in
giving. Al-Majeed grants His favours to all others, Who is Glorified
because of His actions, Who is Praised by His creation due to His greatness.
He alone has the perfect Honour, the vast kingdom since time immemorial,
the One Who does not disappoint anyone, Whose will is always carried out.
Whose Honour is not earned, Whose actions are never abhorred, Whose benevolence
is beautiful, Who gives most generously...
All meanings of perfect and inclusive glory are always rendered to Allah,
and all of them combined are but a drop in the ocean of His Glory. Glory
is also attached to His prophets, to the successors of the latter, and
to the mujahidin.
Allah has described the Holy Qura'n as majeed, saying, "Qaf.
I swear by al-Qura'n al-majeed..." (Qura'n, 50:1). The Holy Qura'n
is majeed because of the abundance of wealth of knowledge, ethics,
and sublime objectives it contains and due to the benefits it contains;
so, it is beneficial for man both in the life of this world and in the
life to come.
One who personifies in his conduct the essence of this attribute ought
to be gracious in all circumstances and most cultured.
50. "Al-Ba`ith"
Allah has said, "And the hour is coming; there is no doubt about it,
and Allah shall resurrect those who are in the graves" (Qura'n, 22:7).
"Al-Ba`ith" is an attributes linguistically derived from bai`th
which means: exciting or stimulating action, something stirring someone
to action, sending someone somewhere, going out seeking revenge, or simply
waking up someone. It also means sending a soldier to war: bai`th
means army. It also means to bring life back to the dead.
The word "al-Ba`ith" conveys more than one meaning: 1) the Almighty
will bring His creation back to life on the Day of Judgment as stated in
Surat al-Hajj quoted above. 2) He sends messengers to His servants: In
Surat al-Nahl, He says, "And certainly We raised in every nation an prophet"
(Qura'n, 16:36). 3) He commissions His servants to perform specific tasks
by creating the impulses and motivations in them. 4) He sends aid to His
servants who need it and helps the sinners by accepting their repentance.
Al-Ba`ith resurrects those in the graves, stirs things into motion,
causes determination, manifests the knowledge of the unknown, brings His
servants back to life, resurrects His creation on the Day of Judgment,
Who records what the breasts conceal. Ba`th is the life hereafter.
One who knows the real meaning of resurrection knows the real meaning of
this Attribute. Most people have numerous general misconceptions and ambiguous
presumptions about it. They imagine that death is the end of everything,
and that resurrection starts a new creation from nothing, just as the first
creation was started. Their belief that death is the end of everything
is surely erroneous, for we have come to learn from studying the Sunnah
that the grave is either a pit of fire or a piece of Paradise. The dead
are either happy or miserable. The happy ones, such as the martyrs, are
not dead; rather, Allah says the following about them in Surat Ali-`Imran
(the Family of Amram): "And do not reckon those who are killed in the way
of Allah as dead; nay! They are alive receiving sustenance from their Lord,
rejoicing in what Allah has given them out of His grace, and they rejoice
for the sake of those who, (being left) behind them, have not yet joined
them, that they shall have no fear, nor shall they grieve" (Qura'n, 3:169-170).
The miserable, too, are living, leading a miserable life. For this reason,
the Messenger of Allah once addressed the latter in the aftermath of the
Battle of Badr saying, "I have found what my Lord has promised me to be
the truth; so, have you found what your Lord promised you to be true?"
He was asked, "How can you address people who have turned into a stink?"
He answered by saying, "You do not hear me better than they, except that
they cannot answer me back."
Al-Ba`ith is also the One Who inspires determination in the heart
of people to undertake lofty objectives on the battlefields of jihad,
and to purify themselves. Al-Ba`ith plants the will to rise up to
lofty endeavors, Who removes from your heart the evil whisperings, Who
purges the innermost conscience from scruples and purifies the deeds from
filthiness. He sends His messengers to convey His commandments: "Allah
raised prophets as bearers of glad tidings and as warners" (Qura'n, 2:213).
He brings the dead back to life: "Then We resurrected you after your death..."
(Qura'n, 2:56). He wakes up those who sleep by reawakening their bodies:
"He it is Who takes your souls at night (while asleep), and He knows what
you acquire during the day, then He raises you up therein so that an appointed
term may be fulfilled, then to Him is your return, then will He inform
you of what you were doing" (Qura'n, 6:60). Glory, then, to Him for resurrecting
the dead and recording what the breasts conceal.
The subject of bai`th is referred to in numerous places of the
Holy Qura'n; these are some of them:
Certainly We raised in every nation an prophet saying: Worship Allah
and shun Satan. So there were some of them whom Allah guided, and there
were others against whom error was due; therefore, travel in the land and
witness what the end of those who rejected [Our signs] was. (16:36) And
during part of the night pray Tahajjud beyond what is incumbent
upon you so that your Lord may raise you to a position of great glory.
(17:79) Then We raised them up so that We might ascertain which of the
two parties was best able to compute the time during which they remained
(asleep). (18:12) Those who disbelieve think they shall never be resurrected.
Say: Aye! By my Lord! You shall most certainly be resurrected, then you
shall most certainly be informed of what you did, and that is easy for
Allah. (64:7)
The portion of inspiration a servant of Allah may be able to derive
from the attribute al-Ba`ith is his knowledge that a soul first
has no knowledge of anything, just like the body. Allah says the following
in Surat al-Ana`m: "Is he who was dead then We brought him back to life
and made for him a light whereby he walks among people like one who is
in utter darkness from which he can never come forth? Thus what they did
was made fair-seeming to the unbelievers" (Qura'n, 6:122), and in Surat
al-Nahl He says, "He sends the angels with the inspiration by His command
to whomsoever He pleases of His servants saying: Give the warning that
there is no god but I; therefore, be careful (of your duty) to Me" (Qura'n,
16:2). If a servant of Allah strives hard to learn, he will be as though
he has instilled a new life in his soul after its death, and if he strives
to teach the ignorant ones, he will be as though he brought their souls
back to life after their death.
51. "Al-Shaheed"
Allah has said, "Is it not sufficient as regarding your Lord that He
is Witness over all things?" (Qura'n, 41:53).
According to Mu`jam maqayees al lugha by Ibn Faris, the topic
of the verb shahida, saw, witnessed, or testified, indicates, linguistically,
presence, knowledge, and the dissemination of such knowledge. The attribute
"al-Shaheed" is derived from shuhood, [eye] witnesses, and
it requires knowledge by observation: Allah is al-Shaheed because
He is present and observes all beings whom He has created and whom He will
create at any time and in any place, and He is fully aware of such beings;
"... and He is with you wherever you may be." Al-Shaheed is a superlative
of al-Shahid, the Witness. In his work Taj al-Aroos, al-Zubaidi
has indicated that al-Shaheed is one of Allah's Attributes meaning:
"the One Who is faithful in His witness and from Whose knowledge nothing
at all escapes." His knowledge is the very ultimate regarding all apparent
matters, all things to observe and to witness. The Holy Qura'n states the
following in Surat Ali-`Imran: "Allah bears witness that there is no god
but He" (Qura'n, 3:18). Al-Shahid knows and manifests the knowledge
of what He knows to a select group from among His most sincere and loyal
servants. Allah has proven His being One through all what He has created.
Al-Shaheed is ever-present; from His kingdom nothing at all can
be absent; everything is included within the realm of His kingdom.
Addressing the Messenger, Allah says the following in Surat al-Nisa':
"... and We have sent you (O Muhammed!) to mankind as an Prophet, and Allah
suffices as Witness (to that)" (Qura'n, 4:79). That is, Allah suffices
as Witness to all people regarding the truth of your message: He testifies
that you are His Messenger who does not have full control over His servants.
In Surat al-Ana`m, He says, "Say: What is the weightiest in testimony?
Say: Allah is Witness between you and me" (Qura'n, 6:19), that is, were
we to paraphrase it, "Ask them: What is the greatest witness? Say: Allah
testifies with regard to you and to me." Allah ordered His Messenger to
ask the disbelievers, "Whose testimony is the greatest and the most accurate?"
Then He ordered him to tell them that the greatest is the testimony of
the One Whose statement does not permit any room for lying or erring. The
testimony, that is, shahada, of the Almighty is of three types:
1) His own telling people in His Book that He has sent the Prophet as His
Messenger; 2) His own support for His Messenger in numerous ways the greatest
of which is the Holy Qura'n, which is the everlasting scholarly and rational
miracle. It has been practically proven that all people put together are
incapable of producing a chapter or a verse like it; 3) the testimony of
previously revealed divine books and the fact that messengers before him
had already brought the glad tidings of his Prophethood.
In Surat Younus, the Great Qura'n says, "Allah, therefore, suffices
as Witness between us and you that we were quite unaware of your worship
(of us)" (Qura'n, 10:29). It may be paraphrased thus: Allah suffices as
Witness, O polytheists, and as Judge between us and you, for He is fully
knowledgeable of our condition and yours, and we were not happy with your
own associating partners with Him. In Surat al-Tawbah, the Almighty says,
"... Allah and His Prophet will witness your deeds, then you shall be brought
back to the One Who knows the unseen and the seen, then He will inform
you of what you did" (Qura'n, 9:94), that is, He knows what you hide or
manifest, what you conceal or reveal.
The Almighty has repeated the phrase "`Alim al ghayb wal shahada,"
the One Who knows the unseen and the seen, about ten times; among such
references are the following:
... His is the kingdom on the Day when the trumpet is blown, [and He
is] the One Who knows the unseen and the seen, and He is the Wise, the
Aware. (6:73) The One Who knows the unseen and the seen, the Great, the
Most High (is He). (13:9) The One Who knows the unseen and the seen, so
may He be exalted above what they associate (with Him). (23:92) Such knows
the unseen and the seen, the Mighty, the Merciful. (32:6) Say: O Allah!
Originator of the heavens and the earth Who knows the unseen and the seen!
You judge between Your servants as to that wherein they differ. (39:46)
He is Allah besides Whom there is no other god, the One Who knows the unseen
and the seen; He is the Beneficent, the Merciful. (59:22) Say: (As for)
the death from which you flee, it will surely overtake you, then you shall
be sent back to the One Who knows the unseen and the seen, and He will
(then) inform you of whatever you did. (62:8)
The believing nation, the nation that believes in Muhammed as the Messenger
of Allah, always remembers that its Lord, Allah, is the Witness over it,
and it is also the nation of testimony in every field. Its Lord has said
the following about it: "Thus have We made you a medium (just) nation so
that you may be the bearers of witness to people, and so that the Messenger
may be a bearer of witness to you" (Qura'n, 2:143).
52. "Al-Haqq"
Allah has said: Allah is the Truth, and He gives life to the dead, and
He has power over all things. (22:6)
One of the attributes Allah is "al-Haqq", the Truth. His existence
is proven to be true and so is His Divinity. He makes the truth manifest
by the power of His words, Who supports those whom He loves by His signs.
Allah is the Truth, al-Haqq, who is worthy of being adored, Who
is always there and Who never disappears, Whose presence is proven to have
always been, since time immemorial, and forever__even before
time and above time. His presence is a reality standing on its own merits,
and there is no existence except through Him, and by Him, and He never
moves and is above motion or anything physical or material. He permits
the truth to manifest itself. He creates everything as His wisdom dictates.
He is present in a way which permits no room for Him to be absent, nor
different, nor extinct. Everything that exists is from Him, and to Him
is its ultimate end.
"Al-Haqq" is the antithesis of falsehood. According to one tradition,
the Messenger of Allah has said, "Labbayka Haqqan Haqqa!" that is,
"Here I am, O Truth, O Truthful One, here I am, in obedience to You! Here
I am, O antithesis of falsehood!" Surely He is the truth beyond any doubt.
Allah has said, "Then are they sent back to Allah, their Master, the true
One" (Qura'n, 6:62). He has also said,
This is so because Allah is the Truth, and that which they call upon
besides Him is falsehood. (31:30) And Allah will show the truth to be true
by His words. (10:82)
His promise is the very truth; He has said in this regard: Surely the
promise of Allah is true. (31:33)
Whenever the Prophet made tahajjud during the night, he would
say, "Lord! All Praise is due to You! You are the Lord of the heavens and
the earth and everything in them! All Praise is due to You! You are the
One Who sustains the heavens and the earth and everything in them! You
are the Truth; Your speech is the truth; Your promise is the truth; meeting
with You is the truth; Paradise is the truth; Hell is the truth; the Hour
[of Judgment] is the truth! Lord! To You have I submitted myself; in You
have I believed; upon You have I relied; to You have I returned; for Your
sake have I disputed with others, based upon Your truth have I arbitrated;
so, I implore You to forgive my past faults and my future ones, what I
have concealed and what I have manifested! You are my Lord! There is no
god but You!"
53. "Al-Wakeel"
Allah has said, "... and trust in Allah, and Allah suffices as Protector"
(Qura'n, 4:81, 33:3).
"Al-Wakeel" is one of the Attributes of Allah, these Attributes
which link whoever repeats them quite often, being aware of their meanings,
to the gardens of Allah, the Truth, Who has all the beauty, perfection,
and glory. Al-Wakeel is the Sustainer, the One Who has taken upon
Himself to provide sustenance for His servants. He, and only He, takes
charge of all the affairs of those who are in His custody, under His care.
According to linguists, "al-Wakeel" is the One to Whom all affairs
are entrusted to manage, Who provides His servants with everything they
need. In other words, He takes charge of everything. Al-Wakeel benevolently
looks after His pious servants. He is the One to Whom all affairs are referred,
Who makes the truth manifest; so, whoever relies on Him will be self-sufficient,
and whoever seeks sufficiency from Him will be independent and pleased.
The servants of Allah have entrusted their affairs to Him and relied
on His benevolence due to their inability to attain what they wish to attain
versus His own ability to do so: He takes charge of the conditions of His
servants, Who manages them as He pleases. Those who recognize Him will
entrust Him to fare with their own affairs. He surely is the only One Who
truly fares with His servants as He pleases. If one of His servants entrusts
Him to fare with his own affairs, He will beautifully save him the hardship
of any task and will grant him more than He grants others; He gives sufficiently
to those who rely on Him. He takes care of the affairs of His servants.
He initiated the giving to man without the latter having asked Him, and
He gave man everything he needed. Whenever man pleads to Him, He directs
His attention to him and beautifully looks after him. If he remains on
the straight path, He will seal his deeds with the beauty of His guardianship.
Linguistically, a wakeel is one upon whom one relies; so, this
is why it is said that one who relies on Allah will come to know that Allah
suffices him in as far as his sustenance and affairs are concerned, so
he relies on Him and only Him and depends on none but Him. The wakeel
of someone else is the person who efficiently represents him or does on
his behalf what he is incapable of doing.
In Surat Hud, Allah addresses His Messenger Muhammed saying, "You are
only a warner, and Allah is Custodian over all things" (Qura'n, 11:12),
that is, "Your responsibility is simply to convey the Message, to warn
against the dire consequences of rejecting it, to invite people to accept
it, while Allah manages the affairs of His servants and watches over them,
something which you do not have to do, since it is the responsibility of
the Creator towards His creatures, and it is not a subject to be taught
or conveyed."
Narrating the tale of Ya`qoob (Jacob) and his sons, the Almighty says
in Surat Yousuf (Joseph), "And when they gave him their pledge, he said:
Allah is the One in Whom trust is placed as regarding what we say" (Qura'n,
12:66). In Surat al-Ahzab, the Almighty addresses His Messenger Muhammed
saying, "The Lord of the east and the west; there is no god but He; therefore,
take Him for Protector" (Qura'n, 73:9). The address here is repeated twice
to the Messenger of Allah; therefore, the Messenger of Allah used to quite
often remember his Lord, al-Wakeel al-Hafiz, reminding his companions
and followers never to neglect mentioning this Gracious Attribute during
the time of trouble, hardship and affliction. The Messenger of Allah once
said, "How can I feel happy knowing that the one charged with blowing the
horn (i.e. archangel Israfil) has picked the horn and bent his forehead
listening to the order to blow it?" His companions asked him, "Then what
are we supposed to say, O Messenger of Allah?" He said, "Say: `Hasbuna
Allah wa ni`mal-Wakeel (Allah suffices us, and Great is the Guardian)!'"
The Messenger of Allah used to plead to his Lord, al-Wakeel,
on every occasion, saying, "Lord! I implore You not to permit me to rely
on my own self even for the twinkling of an eye else I should surely perish."
According to one qudsi tradition, the Almighty, addressing His Messenger,
says, "You are My servant and Messenger, and I have named you al-Mutawakkil
[one who trusts in and relies on his Lord];" therefore, the Messenger of
Allah was ordered by his Lord to do so; i.e. to always rely on Him. In
Surat Ali-`Imran, He says, "... so once you have made up your mind, place
your trust in Allah; surely Allah loves those who trust (in Him)" (Qura'n,
3:159), that is, "Having consulted your companions regarding a matter,
you must rely on Allah in effecting it, and have confidence in His assistance
and help, for He is al-Wakeel, and He is your Guardian." Allah loves
His servants who turn to Him and rely on Him provided they exert some effort
and exhaust the means available to them.
Allah has made His Messenger a role model to emulate in the reliance
upon his Lord, for Allah has ordered His believing servants to be among
those who rely on Him. In Surat Yousuf, He says, "Judgment is only Allah's;
on Him do I rely, and on Him let those who are reliant rely" (Qura'n, 12:67).
In another verse of the same chapter, He says, "And what reason do we have
not to rely on Allah, and He has, indeed, guided us in our ways? And certainly
we would bear with patience your persecution of us, and on Allah should
the reliant rely" (Qura'n, 14:12). In 39:38 we read, "Say: Allah suffices
me; on Him do the reliant rely" (Qura'n, 39:38).
One who chooses Allah as his Guardian is one who has also to guard Allah's
interest in his own self by observing His rights and obligations and whatever
He has required him to do, so he should be the opponent of his own evil-insinuating
self day and night, without laxing for a moment, nor falling short even
for the twinkling of an eye.
54. "Al-Qawiyy" and 55. "Al-Mateen"
The Almighty has said, "Surely Allah bestows sustenance, the Lord of
Power, the Strong One" (Qura'n, 51:58).
"Al-Qawiyy" and "al-Mateen" are two of Allah's Attributes
and are mentioned in such an order. They share the same basic meaning.
Linguistically, "al-Qawiyy" is derived from quwwa, strength,
power, might, ability, etc. It is in lexicons indicative of strength versus
weakness. Strength in this sense describes a complete and perfect might.
Since He is very Strong, Allah has the most perfect and absolute might
and perfection; He has said, "... surely your Lord is the Strong, the Mighty"
(Qura'n, 11:66). "Al-Qawiyy" means: the One Whose strength is unlimited
and before Whom the strength of His foe dwarves, and so does the greatness
of anyone held as great. Allah has granted the angels a mighty power whereby
one angel, for example, can uproot a mountain or turn cities upside down.
Yet such an angel, or his like, fears Allah and His Might, shakes in awe
for fear of His Greatness. Al-Qawiyy is the One Whose Might and
Greatness are perfect: He subdues and is not subdued; He helps and is not
helped; His Might is superior to the might of anyone else. It is also said
that He never suffers any weakness in Himself, in His qualities, or in
His actions, and His strength is indicative of His complete Might.
There are many Qura'nic verses that describe Allah as the Strong One;
among them are the following,
O had only those who are unjust seen when they witness the chastisement
that power is wholly Allah's, and that Allah is severe in requiting (evil)!
(2:165) And wherefore did you not say, when you entered your garden: "It
is as Allah has pleased; there is no power save in Allah"? (18:39)
As regarding `Ad [9]
, they were unjustly proud in the land, and they said: "Who is mightier
than we are?" Did they not see that Allah Who created them is mightier
than them, and that they denied Our signs? (41:15)
When we discern the previously quoted glorious verses, we will find
the Attribute "al-Qawiyy" existing in 8:52 and 40:22 as the One
Who is severe in requiting evil. Seven times has the Attribute "al-Qawiyy"
been combined with the Attribute "al-`Azeez"; strength is not suited
except for those who are honourable. Might is accompanied by severity.
The root word, matana, connotes solidness with expansion and
extension. It may be applied to a solid rock, or to a distance traversed.
Al-Mateen is al-Qawiyy, the Strong One, Who can do whatever
He pleases, Who does not need an army to enforce His authority. He needs
no help, nor supporters, nor assistants. Rest your hope on none besides
Him. Al-Mateen is the One Whose Might is perfect; nothing in the
heavens nor on earth can stand in His way. He is Allah Who affects His
will, Whose Might is eternal; He affects everything yet nothing can affect
Him.
56. "Al-Waliyy"
Allah has said, "Allah is the Guardian (al-Waliyy) of those who
believe" (Qura'n, 2:257). Al-Waliyy connotes closeness, nearness,
one who may be an ally, a neighbor, a guardian, a relative, etc. It also
means the supporter, the beloved one.
Allah has said, "Allah is the Guardian of those who believe" (Qura'n,
2:257). Quoting Yousuf, He has said, "You are my Guardian in this life
and in the life hereafter" (Qura'n, 12:101). Quoting the believers, He
has said, "You are our Patron; so, help us against the unbelieving people"
(Qura'n, 2:286), and, "Then are they sent back to Allah, their Master,
the True One" (Qura'n, 6:62). He has also said, "That is so because Allah
is the Protector of those who believe, and because the unbelievers shall
have no protector" (Qura'n, 47:11).
Allah is the Guardian of His servants. A good servant of Allah is also
a friend of His. The Exalted One has said, "Surely the friends of Allah
shall have no fear, nor shall they grieve" (Qura'n, 10:62). The word "waliyy"
simultaneously conveys the meanings of a master and a slave, a supporter,
a neighbor, a cousin, an ally, a guardian... The common denominator in
the meaning of all these connotations is nearness. A "waliyy" is
one who is near to someone else physically and figuratively. The Almighty
has said, "Awla laka fa awla" (Qura'n, 75:34): Nearer to you (is
the destruction) and nearer, a clear warning meaning: "It (destruction)
has come close to you, and that against which I have warned you has almost
reached you; therefore, beware!"
This proves that the root word of this Attribute is derived from nearness,
and this meaning is met in the case of a slave, a supporter, a cousin,
an ally, or a guardian. In all these cases, there are situations which
necessitate nearness required for proximity and communication. If this
is proven, His being al-Waliyy of His servants is indicative of
His being near to them. The Almighty has said, "... and He is with you
wherever you are" (Qura'n, 57:4). He has also said,
... and We are nearer to him than his life-vein. (50:16) Nowhere is
there a secret counsel between three persons except that He is their fourth.
(58:7)
Whoever repeats this Attribute, realizing its great meanings, must be
a friend of Allah. Any friend of Allah is also a friend of people, Allah's
servants. He looks after them, managing their affairs, and so on. Allah
says, "Believing men and women are guardians of one another" (Qura'n, 9:71).
Whoever aspires to be close to the Almighty will find Him willing to be
his friend too, and whoever turns away from Allah, Allah will turn away
from him, and Satan will welcome him with open arms.
57. "Al-Hameed"
The Almighty has said, "O people! You are the ones who stand in need
of Allah, while Allah is the self-Sufficient, the Praised One" (Qura'n,
35:15).
The root word of "al-Hameed" is hamd which means: praise,
something more general than thanking. Al-Hameed is also al-Mamood,
the Praised One. Allah is al-Hameed due to praising His own Self
since time immemorial, and also due to His servants praising Him. His qualities,
such as His being Glorified and Exalted, are due to the fact that those
who mention His Attribute glorify and exalt it. Hamd in this context
means enumerating or the attempt to enumerate the qualities of perfection
conceived by those who praise Him. Al-Hameed grants you success
and compliments you for it; He wipes out your sins and does not embarrass
you by exposing them. He is Praised due to His merits.
One whose beliefs, conduct, speech and action are praiseworthy is called
hameed. Such a description fits only the Messenger of Allah and
those whose ranks are close to his from among Allah's prophets as well
as others such as the friends of Allah, and the scholars. Each one of these
is hameed with regard to his beliefs, conduct, deeds and statements.
58. "Al-Muhsi"
Allah has said, "So that He may ascertain that they have truly delivered
the messages of their Lord, and He encompasses what is with them, and He
records the number of all things" (Qura'n, 72:28).
The root word of "Al-Muhsi" is ihsa' which means: counting
or computing. Linguistically, it also means to tolerate or to be able to
handle. It is also used to describe a tract of land where there is a large
quantity of pebbles or stones.
Allah is al-Muhsi Who counts what we do and readies it for the
Day when we meet Him, that is, the Day of Judgment, the day of hisab,
accounting or reckoning, the day of reward or punishment. Al-Muhsi
knows all precise and minute matters, the secrets of what is decreed; He
sees what is apparent and is fully knowledgeable of what is hidden. He
counts the acts of obedience to Him, knows everything, counts our breath,
and is acquainted with our insinuations. His knowledgeable of all beings
in existence, when they move around or when they are still, and with all
their affairs and deeds.
This Attribute's meaning and derivations exist in several places; here
are some examples:
Certainly He has a comprehensive knowledge of them, and He has numbered
them a (comprehensive) numbering. (19:94) Surely We shall give life (back)
to the dead, and We record what they have sent forth before and what they
leave behind, and of all things have We taken account in a clear Book.
(36:12) And We have recorded everything in a book. (78:29)
59. "Al-Mubdi"
Allah, Glory and Exaltation are His, has said, "... as We originated
the first creation, so shall We reproduce it, a promise (binding on Us);
We shall surely bring it about" (Qura'n, 21:104). Both "al-Mubdi"
and "al-Mu`eed" are among Allah's Attributes, and most of those
who have discussed them have dealt with them jointly.
In Surat al-A`raf, we read the following: "Say: My Lord has enjoined
justice, and set your faces upright at every time of the prayers and call
upon Him, being sincere to Him in obedience; just as He brought you forth
in the beginning, so shall you also return (to Us)" (Qura'n, 7:29). And
in Surat al-Naml, we read: "Or Who originates the creation then reproduces
it, and Who gives you sustenance from the heavens and from the earth? Is
there a god with Allah? Say: Bring your proof if you are truthful" (Qura'n,
27:64). In Surat al-`Ankabut, we read this verse: "Say: Traverse the earth
and see how He makes the first creation, then Allah creates the latter
creation; surely Allah has power over all things" (Qura'n, 29:20). Surat
al-Room mentions these Attributes in two places:
Allah originates creation, then He reproduces it, then to Him you shall
be brought back. (30:11) He it is Who originates the creation then reproduces
it, and it is easy for Him, and His are the most exalted Attributes in
the heavens and the earth, and He is the Mighty, the Wise. (30:27)
In Surat al-Buruj, we read: "Surely He it is Who originates and reproduces"
(Qura'n, 85:13).
Linguistically, the root word of this Attribute means to start, begin,
initiate, and the like. Allah starts, begins, initiates, the creation of
all beings and Who brings them into existence. In Surat Saba', we read
the following: "... falsehood shall vanish and shall not come back" (Qura'n,
34:49). This verse may be paraphrased thus: "What can falsehood initiate,
and what can it bring back?"
Al-Mubdi has brought the cosmos into being without a prior model,
Who created all the worlds in a perfect manner, Who initiates the giving
to and the assistance of His servants, proving Himself as the best to rely
on.
One who remembers the Attribute "al-Mubdi" ought to seek His
forgiveness whenever he remembers it and to always stay attentive while
supplicating to Him.
60. "Al-Mu`eed"
Allah has said, "Surely He it is Who originates and reproduces, and
He is the Forgiving, the Loving" (Qura'n, 85:13-14).
Linguistically, the root word of this Attribute means: to return, to
go back. We supplicate thus: "Lord! We plead to You to grant us a return
to Your House," that is, to go back to the Ka`ba after having visited it
or after having been there. A man who is mu`eed is one who is knowledgeable
of certain issues/topics, etc. Al-ma`d means: the Day of Judgment.
According to one particular tradition, the Messenger of Allah has supplicated
saying, "... and make my abode in the hereafter good, for to it shall I
return." It is narrated that Gabriel asked the Messenger of Allah once,
"O Muhammed! Do you have a nostalgic feeling for your place of birth, to
your homeland?!" He answered him in the affirmative, whereupon Gabriel
quoted the Qura'nic verse saying, "Most surely He Who has made the Qura'n
binding on you will bring you back to the destination" (Qura'n, 28:85).
Al-Mu`eed brings life back to the dead. He gathers all beings
for the Judgment Day together, lifting the veils from them and rewarding
or punishing them, each according to what he/she had said and done. He
tries them about how they fared with the blessings He bestowed upon them.
Allah will cause all things (beings as well as inanimate objects) to come
to naught, then He will bring them back again into existence: "Say: The
One Who brought them into existence at first will give life [back] to them,
and He is Cognizant of all creation" (Qura'n, 36:79).
We ought to return to Allah regarding everything, and we have to bear
in mind that Allah created us when we were nothing at all; He determines
our destiny.
61. "Al-Muhyi"
Allah has said, "Allah gives life and causes death, and Allah witnesses
whatever you do" (Qura'n, 3:156).
Allah surely brings life to the bodies when He rejoins their souls to
them. Al-Muhyi creates life and grants it to whomsoever He pleases.
He creates people out of nothing, then He brings them back to life when
the Day of Judgment approaches after their death. He brings life into the
heart of those who know through the light of His knowledge: "Is he who
was dead then We raised him to life and made for him a light whereby he
walks among people like him whose likeness is that of one who is in utter
darkness from which he cannot come out?" (Qura'n, 6:122). Allah gives life
to the sperm and to the leech-like clot. He causes rain to pour out of
the clouds in order to bring life thereby to a dead land.
References to Allah bringing life back to the dead are numerous throughout
the Holy Qura'n; here are some of them:
So We said: Strike him (the dead corpse) with part of it (the sacrificed
cow); thus does Allah bring the dead to life, and He shows you His signs
so that you may understand. (2:73) Allah gives life and causes death, and
Allah sees whatever you do. (3:156) Say: O people! Surely I am the Messenger
of Allah to you all, [the Messenger] of Him to Whom the kingdom of the
heavens and the earth belongs; there is no god but He; He brings (beings/things)
to life and causes death; therefore, believe in Allah and in His Messenger,
the ummi Prophet who believes in Allah and in His words, and follow
him, so that you may walk in the right way" (Qura'n, 7:158). Allah's is
the kingdom of the heavens and the earth; besides Allah you have no guardian
nor helper. (2:107) He gives life and causes death, and to Him you shall
be brought back. (10:56) He it is Who gives life and causes death, and
in His (control) is the alternation of the night and the day; do you not
then understand? (3:80) He brings forth the living from the dead and the
dead from the living and gives life to the earth after its death; thus
shall you be brought forth. (30:19) One of His signs is that He shows you
the lightning for fear and for hope and sends down water from the clouds,
then He gives life therewith to a land after its death (barrenness); most
surely there are signs in this for people who understand" (Qura'n, 30:24).
He it is Who gives life and causes death; so, when He decrees an affair,
He only says to it: Be, and it is. (40:68) Or have they taken guardians
besides Him? But Allah is the Guardian, and He gives life to the dead,
and He has power over all things. (42:9) There is no god but He; it is
He Who gives life and causes death, the Lord and Cherisher of yourselves
and of your earlier ancestors. (44:8)
A believer ought to adorn his conduct by remembering this Attribute
quite often so that Allah may bring light into his heart through knowledge.
His soul will then glow with the mysteries of manifestation. He should
particularly remember Him as such in the depth of the night.
62. "Al-Mumeet"
Allah has said, "He it is Who makes (men) laugh and makes (them) weep,
and He it is Who causes death and gives life" (Qura'n, 53:43-44).
Death is the antithesis of life. A wind dies when it stands still. A
human dies when he sleeps; sleep is called death by way of analogy: it
causes the faculties of reason and almost all other bodily movements to
stop. The mawt is the land which was never tilled. One whose heart
dies is dumb, stupid, idiotic, the warmth of his reason cooled down and
died out.
Al-Mumeet, the Almighty, decrees death for whomsoever He pleases;
none causes death except He. He has subdued His servants by death, causing
them to go back to the earth from which He had created them and to be covered
with dust...
Al-Mumeet has caused the heart of sinners to die because of going
against His will. He is the Creator of death. He has caused the tyrants
to die out of His mercy for the living. He causes the oppressors to die
on account of their disrespect for Him. He causes the land to die, rendering
it barren, free from vegetation, then He brings it back to life when it
produces. He brings to life His Sunnah by causing His prophets to inherit
it from their predecessors, and He causes the death of innovations through
the life of knowledge.
Once the Messenger of Allah performed the hajj then stood over
the safa, overlooking the House, the Ka`ba. Then he made three takbeers
saying, "There is no god except Allah, the One and only God; there is no
partner with Him; His is the kingdom; to Him is all Praise due; He brings
to life and causes death; in His hand is all goodness, and He can do anything
at all."
Abu Tharr al-Ghifari, may Allah be pleased with him, is quoted as saying
that whenever the Messenger of Allah was ready to go to bed at night, he
would say, "In Your Name do we die and live," and whenever he woke up,
he would say, "All Praise is due to Allah Who has brought us back to life
after having caused us to die, and to Him is our final return."
63. "Al-Hayy"
The Almighty has said, "... as for the next abode, that most surely
is the (real) life, had they only known!" (Qura'n, 29:64). He has also
said, "And rely on the ever-Living Who never dies" (Qura'n, 25:58).
Life is the antithesis of death. Allah brings life back to a "dead"
land: He causes vegetation to grow in it; He brings it life through rain.
When we discuss it as an Attribute of the Almighty, it means that He is
the ever-Living Who is self-Sustaining since time immemorial and will continue
to be so forever. Every living being besides Him is not alive on its own;
it does not by itself sustain its life; rather, its life is sustained by
al-Hayy. Al-Hayy never dies. The Holy Qura'n states the following
in Surat al-Zumar: "Surely you shall die, and so shall they" (Qura'n, 39:30).
Al-Hayy is the Doer, the Aware; any deed without an origin or
an awareness is dead. The least degrees of awareness is awareness of one's
own self. Anything which is not aware by itself is a dead inanimate object.
Allah is the Absolute Living One, and everyone and everything that live
besides Him is alive according to the extent of its awareness.
Anas ibn Malik has said, "I was once sitting with the Messenger of Allah
in our circle when a man was still performing his prayers. After having
bowed down, prostrated and made the tashahhud, he supplicated to
his Lord saying, `Lord! I plead to You by the very fact that to You is
all Praise due; there is no god but You; You are the One Who gives without
reminding the takers, Who created the heavens and the earth; O You Who
has all the Honour and all the Glory! O ever-Living One, O Sustainer! I
plead to You...' whereupon the Prophet said, `He surely has invoked Allah
by His Greatest Attribute: He answers favourably when He is asked thereby,
and He gives when invoked.'"
Al-Mumeet causes your heart to die when you fail to remember
Him, and your soul to die when you continuously permit yourself to slip
away from His right path, and your mind to die when you permit your desires
to take control of you. Al-Muhyi brings life to the hearts of those
who know and who willingly submit to Him, while al-Mumeet causes
the [spiritual] death of those who go against His will.
64. "Al-Qayyum"
Allah has said, "Alif, Lam, Mim. Allah, (there is) no god but He, the
ever-Living, the self-Subsisting, the One through Whom all things subsist"
(Qura'n, 3:1-2).
One who is qayyim is a master and organizer of affairs. The "qayyim
creed" is the Hanafi faith. The day of qiyama is the Day when everyone
will stand before Allah, Lord of the Worlds, for judgment. Al-Qayyum
is never created, Who manages all affairs.
Al-Qayyum exists absolutely on His own, not through others, while
every being exists through Him and because of Him. Nothing, no life whatever,
can ever be sustained without Him. Al-Qayyum is the ever-Lasting,
the Eternal Who never suffers extinction. He effects justice and equity,
Who is self-Sustaining, Who never sleeps.
According to Abdullah ibn `Abbas, whenever the Messenger of Allah used
to stand up to perform his night prayers, he would say, "Lord! All Praise
is due to You! You are the Lord of the heavens and the earth! All Praise
is due to You! You are the Qayyum of the heavens and the earth and
everything in them; all Praise is due to You! You are the Light of the
heavens and the earth; all Praise is due to You! You are the King in the
heavens and the earth; all Praise is due to You! You are the Truth; Your
promise is true, the meeting with You is true, Your speech is the truth;
Paradise is true; the fire is true; the prophets are truthful; Muhammed
is truthful, and the Hour is true! Lord! To You have I submitted; in You
have I believed; upon You have I relied; to You is my return; for Your
sake do I dispute; Your judgment do I seek; so, I implore You to forgive
my sins, the ones I have committed and the ones I may commit in the future,
what I have concealed and what I have declared, for You are the One Who
advances and Who postpones; there is no god but You, and there is no strength
nor might except in Allah."
According to another tradition, he has invoked His Maker saying, "O
Hayy! O Qayyum! We solicit Your help by Your mercy! Lord!
I invoke You to mend my affairs, all of them, and not to permit me to rely
on my own self even for a twinkling of the eye, nor for a shorter time,
nor on anyone from among Your creation."
Imam `Ali has said, "During the Battle of Badr, I participated in the
battle for some time, then I came to the Messenger of Allah to see what
he was doing, and I found him making sajdah while repeating, `O
Hayy! O Qayyum!' So I went back to the battle-field, then
I came back to him and I saw that he was still repeating the same words.
I kept going there and coming back to him, and he was still doing exactly
the same thing till Allah granted us victory."
Abdullah ibn `Abbas is quoted as saying that the Greatest of all Attributes
of Allah is al-Hayy al-Qayyum. Anyone who truly realizes that He,
Glory to Him, is the Qa'im, Qayyim, Qiyam and Qayyum will
never detach his heart from loving the Creator.
Al-Qayyum connotes His independence and the dependence of all
others on Him, that He does not need anyone while everyone is in need of
Him.
Allah, Glory to Him, is the Only al-Hayy al-Qayyum: He exists
on His own, whereas everything that exists depends on Him to continue existing.
So rely on al-Qayyum besides Whom you need no other supporter, nor
is there anyone else besides Him who can sustain you, nor can anyone else
teach you whatever you need to know.
65. "Al-Wajid"
Allah has said, "And whoever does evil or acts unjustly against his
own soul then asks forgiveness of Allah, he shall find Allah Forgiving,
Merciful" (Qura'n, 4:110). The root word of "al-Wajid" is "jidda,"
abundance and independence. Al-Wajid is the most Knowing: "And [did
He not] find you lost and guide you?" (Qura'n, 93:7); "... and there he
finds Allah, so He pays him back his reckoning in full" (Qura'n, 24:39).
The phrase "he finds Allah" means "he finds out that Allah..." Al-Wajid
has everything; He lacks nothing; He is never incapable of doing whatever
He pleases. Al-Wajid is the One from Whose knowledge nothing at
all escapes; He does not overlook anything at all. He is the opposite of
one who has lost everything. Al-Wajid lacks neither necessary things
nor any of the requirements related to Divinity and its perfection; He
is none but Allah, the Most Exalted One. In such sense, He, and He alone,
is the Absolute al-Wajid. Anyone besides Him who may have some of
the attributes of perfection while still lacking a few things is not called
wajid at all.
Al-Wajid has with Him everything He wants and desires; He can
affect His decree; He knows everything and He determines everything; He
is capable of doing everything; nothing is beyond His reach or might; His
status is Sublime. He is the Most Honoured; His Might is the most perfect;
He gives abundantly and generously.
The root word of this Attribute has many other meanings such as: finding
out something through the power of the senses, the reaching of a point
or a goal, the existence of something, the mental realization.
66. "Al-Majid"
The Almighty has said, "... the handiwork of Allah Who has made everything
thoroughly" (Qura'n, 27:88).
The root word of this Attribute is "majd," a noun meaning glory
and honours. A man may be said to be majid if he has descended from
parents known to have established a deeply rooted reputation of glory and
honours. A majid person is very highly distinguished; he quite often
showers others with his favours.
The Attribute "al-Majid" means absolute perfection and dazzling
glory; He is Beautiful in His qualities and actions, Who treats His servants
most graciously, most generously, manifesting His Greatness to them through
the light of His compassion for them. Among our supplications is this one:
Lord! You are al-Majid al-Majid, the Doer of whatever pleases
You! We plead to You to grant us security on the Promised Day; Glory to
the One Who has been Gracious unto His servants through His Glory and Honours
and is distinguished thereby! Glory to the One Who is Great, Whose Honour
is Great, Whose Generosity is vast!
The Attribute "al-Majid" underscores the meaning of the Attribute
"al-Wajid", thus stressing their common meaning of independence.
Abu Tharr al-Ghifari, may Allah be pleased with him, has quoted the Messenger
of Allah quoting, in turn, his Lord saying, "O servants of Mine! You are
all sinners except those whom I have healed from sinning; therefore, seek
My forgiveness so that I may forgive you by My might. Whoever among you
comes to know that I am capable of forgiving, and he seeks My forgiveness,
I shall forgive his sins and overlook them. You are all to perish except
those whom I guide; therefore, seek My guidance so that I may guide you.
You are all poor except those whom I enrich; therefore, ask Me so that
I may grant you sustenance. O servants of Mine! If the first of you and
the last, whatever is moist with you and whatever is dry, the living among
you and the dead, should ever unanimously become as pious as the most pious
person among My servants, it will not increase My domain as much as the
wing of a mosquito. And if they all become as wretched as the worst wretch
among My servants, it will not decrease My domain as much as the wing of
a mosquito. If the first of you and the last, the moist with you and the
dry, the living and the dead, were to ask Me, it will not decrease what
is with Me in anything at all just as any of you may pass by a sea shore
and immerse a needle therein then takes it out. This is so because I am
al-Majid; I do whatever I please; My giving is only a word: Whenever
I desire something, I say to it `Be!' and it is."
This Attribute instills in the hearts of the faithful the sincere desire
to treat others with forgiveness, clemency, and patience. One should speak
kindly to them, smile to them, and remove the dissension from among them.
He should spend his wealth for the good of the poor, and he should be humble
and kind to the weak among them. He should treat all people as though they
were his own family members and brethren.
67. "Al-Wahid"
Allah has said, "And your Lord is One (and Only) Lord! There is no god
but He" (Qura'n, 2:163). He has also said, "Say: He, Allah, is One" (Qura'n,
112:1).
Linguistically, "al-Wahid" means: the One Who does not socialize
with people nor keeps them company. To believe in Tahweed is to
believe that there is no partner at all with Allah in His authority, and
that being One is a quality of His which nobody else shares with Him.
Tahweed means recognition of the Unity of the One Who alone manages
the affairs of His servants. None creates, nor sustains, nor grants, nor
withholds, nor brings back to life, nor causes death, nor manages the affairs
of the domain outwardly or inwardly, except Allah. Whatever He wills comes
to be, and whatever He does not never will. Not even an atom moves without
His knowledge; nothing takes place without His will. No leaf falls down
without His knowledge. Nothing escapes His knowledge, not even as much
as the weight of an atom in the heavens or the earth, nor smaller than
that nor bigger: His knowledge encompasses everything. His might overwhelms
everything. His will is effected regarding everything. His wisdom dominates
everything.
Tawhid, then, means that whatever comes to your mind of how He
may be or anything which you think is appropriate for Him..., He is contrary
to and above it, Glory to Him.
The subject of Tawhid is beyond anyone's description, for if
you discuss the Almighty, there are too many views about Him to discuss,
and there are too many ways to discuss Him through Him [i.e. through His
statements]. Reason recognizes Him, yet the tongue can never describe Him.
Tawhid's meaning shatters any image and confuses all branches
of knowledge, while Allah remains just as He has always been and will always
be. Glory to the One Who has made no means for His creatures to really
know Him except by proving to them that they can never know Him. One who
falls into the seas of Tawhid will day after day feel more and more
thirsty. Tawd is a prerogative, a privilege, of the Truth (the Almighty),
yet His creatures are simply curious. Among people are those whose actions
portray their belief in Tawhid; they look at everything that happens
through Him. And there are those who, when the truth is unveiled before
their eyes, feel less and less concerned about anyone besides Him; they
see everyone to be as one secret within another...
Muhammed, the Messenger of Allah, has said, "Allah is One, and He loves
oneness." This tradition indicates that He loves the heart that is solely
dedicated to Him, Glory and Exaltation are His.
Al-Wahid, the One and Only God, protects you, the individual
that you are, against the group, a number of individuals, whereas the latter
cannot protect you against Him. Al-Wahid cannot be counted. He Alone
is the source of all knowledge, the Only One Who reveals what is hidden.
His existence has neither a duration nor a limit, nor can anyone carry
out a decision against Him, nor can His Essence ever suffer any decrease
or increase whatever.
68. "Al-Samad"
Allah, Glory and Exaltation are His, has said, "Say: He, Allah, is One.
Allah is He on Whom all depend" (Qura'n, 112:1-2).
Al-Samad is an Attribute of Allah whose linguistic meanings include
the following: the ultimate goal, the obeyed Master without Whose command
nothing can happen, the Support of those who need to be supported, the
One to Whom all matters are referred, the One to Whom all issues are rendered
and regarding which nobody else decides, the One to Whom pleas are directed.
A-Samad is approached to grant the pleas and is pleaded to make
wishes come true. He is the Master sought during the time of need. Arabs
describe a household as Samad if people go there in the hope of
fulfilling their worldly needs. God is the final destination, the ultimate
goal. The one whom Allah enables to be sought to satisfy people's needs,
particularly those relevant to their creed, as well as those of every day
life, the one who serves their interests by word and by means is truly
one upon whom Allah has bestowed a great deal of goodness. It is goodness
inspired by this Attribute.
Whoever recognizes Allah as the ever-Lasting Who never dies will turn
away from the adornments of this fleeting life and will have no desire
for its material things... One of the good manners of a believer inspired
by this Attribute is that he does not seek help from anyone besides Allah
to help him meet his worldly needs, nor does he rely on anyone else besides
Him. He fashions his conduct after Him and becomes the one sought by people
for the fulfillment of their needs. According to one hadith, the
Messenger of Allah has said, "One who is most loved among people is the
one who benefits them most."
69. "Al-Qadir"
In the Holy Qura'n, we read, "Say: He has the power to send on you a
chastisement from above you, or from beneath your feet, or throw you into
confusion, (making you) different parties, and making some of you taste
the fighting of others. See how We repeat the signs so that they may understand"
(Qura'n, 6:65).
Both al-Qadeer and al-Qadir are among Allah's characteristics.
They may be derived from taqdeer, estimation or assessment, or from
qudra, might, power, or ability. Al-Qadeer does whatever
He does according to the requirement of wisdom, no more, nor less. Al-Qadeer
is not among Allah's ninety-nine Attributes although it is repeated more
than thirty times throughout the text of the Holy Qura'n.
The root word of "al-Qadir" is the noun "qudra", might,
power, prowess, ability, etc. Laylat al-Qadr, the Night of Power
or of Destiny, is surely the Night of the great honour. In the Holy Qura'n,
we read the following verse in Surat al-Ana`m: "And they do not honour
Allah the Great Honour due to Him" (Qura'n, 6:91), that is, they do not
honour Him as He ought to be honoured. The word "qadr" means that
Allah is capable of doing anything without tackling it or using any means,
etc.; therefore, it does not exert or exhaust Him to do whatever He wants.
It means authority and power, that is, the complete dealing with the entire
universe, the cosmos, without being opposed by an opponent. Who can oppose
Him or escape His grip? His command is that whenever He decrees anything,
he says to it: "Be!" and it is. It means the One Who has the Complete power,
Who is not frustrated by anything at all, He needs no means to do anything.
He measures His decree, Who manages the universe with might and wisdom:
"So We proportion it: how well We are at proportioning (things)!" (Qura'n,
77:23) and also, "Surely We have created everything according to a measure"
(Qura'n, 54:49). The qadar is what Allah, the Most Honoured and
Glorified, decrees and decides.
A servant of Allah has a measure of power to do a number of things,
but it is deficient, for his ability is limited. Allah, on the other hand,
makes His servants capable of doing what they do through His might. A servant
of Allah has power to do a number of things, but he cannot do everything.
He cannot create things out of nothing. Only Allah can.
70. "Al-Muqtadir"
As regarding the Attribute "al-Muqtadir", the Almighty has said,
"They rejected all Our signs, so We overtook them after the manner of a
Mighty, Powerful One" (Qura'n, 54:42).
"Al-Muqtadir" is a superlative of "al-Qadir" which enhances
the prestige and awe inspired by the latter. Al-Muqtadir controls
everything through His might which encompasses all His creation. His might
is endless, Who manages all affairs, Who manifests His might to the souls
through the light of His Attribute al-Muqtadir and thus grants them
serenity and security. They recognize and venerate His might in the late
hours of the night and at both ends of the day. The meaning it suggests
is: "the One Whose Might is Great, Who, through His overwhelming Power,
controls all His creatures; He subdues everyone and everything in His domain.
He decreed, so existence came to be as a manifestation of His might: `...
and Allah holds power over all things'" (Qura'n, 18:45).
One of the signs of the good manners of a believer in as far as al-Muqtadir
is concerned is that this Attribute will always fill his heart, and he
always remembers it, so much so that a glimpse of its light will shine
upon him and will always surround him. The following is a tradition related
by Jabir ibn Abdullah al-Salami:
The Messenger of Allah used to teach his companions to follow istikhara
in all matters just as he used to teach them the text of the Holy Qura'n.
He used to always repeat saying, "If one of you decides to do something,
let him prostrate twice besides what is incumbent upon him then say: `Lord!
I seek Your istikhara and Your help to enable me to achieve what
I aspire to achieve! I plead to You to grant me of Your favours, for You
can and I cannot, and You know and I do not, and You know the unknown.
Lord! If You know that this matter (and here you indicate what it is) is
good for me sooner or later, or good for my creed or sustenance, or for
the ultimately good end of my affairs, then decree it for me and ease it
for me, then bless it for me. Lord! If You know that it is evil for me
regarding my creed or the ultimate end of my affairs, or regarding my matter
sooner or later, then take me away from it and enable me to acquire goodness
wherever it may be, then make me pleased therewith.'"
The Attribute "al-Muqtadir", Praised and Glorified is He, is
mentioned verbatim in two verses of the Holy Qura'n: in verses 42
and 55 of Surat al-Qamar, and once in verse 45 of Surat al-Kahaf.
71. "Al-Muqaddim"
Allah has said, "... so that Allah may forgive your past faults and
your faults to come, to complete His favour unto you, and to guide you
on the right path" (Qura'n, 48:2).
Linguistically, taqdeem, the root word of this Attribute, means
advancing, promoting, or preferring; "al-Muqaddim" means: the One
Who presents things and places them in their right place. Whoever deserves
to be advanced, preferred or favoured over others, the Almighty, al-Muqaddim,
advances his rank or status. And He advances the living, each according
to his sincerity of worshipping Him, protecting them against falling into
disobedience of Him. Al-Muqaddim since the beginning of time advanced
those whom He loves and made them happy through accurate comprehension
and sound judgment. He prefers those who know over those who do not. He
opens the gates of true conviction (iman) for everyone. He prefers
humans over all others, making them Imams. And He advances, prefers, favours
scholars over ignorant folks, making the first party like stars guiding
others to righteousness. He has advanced the Messenger of Allah from the
very beginning and will advance him at the very end, in the Hereafter.
He took a covenant from all those whom He sent into this world that: "...
when a Messenger comes to you verifying that which is with you, you must
believe in him, and you must support him" (Qura'n, 3:81). He also advanced
him on Laylatul-Isra', the Night Journey. Muhammed led all other Prophets
in congregational prayers.
The Holy Qura'n states the following: "Do not dispute in My presence,
and indeed I warned you beforehand" (Qura'n, 50:28). Muhammed, the most
honoured of all prophets, as Muslims regard him, enjoys a status that tops
all those of other "Ulul-`Azm" prophets[10],
peace be upon all of them. Next in status are awliya', the friends
of Allah, whose status is less only than that of the prophets.
Al-Muqaddim, therefore, advances whoever He pleases on account
of one's piety and frequency of returning to Him, to His path, making them
truthful; He responds favourably to their pleas. And al-Muqaddim
advances the living who worship Him in ranks (in this life as well as in
the one to come), protecting them against disobeying or displeasing Him.
72. "Al-Mu'akhkhir"
The Almighty has said, "Man shall on that Day be informed of what he
had sent forth before and of what he had put off" (Qura'n, 75:13).
Al-Mu'akhkhir causes the polytheists to lag behind while raising
the ranks of the believers. He delays the disobedient ones and grants His
guidance to those who obey Him. He postpones the penalty of the oppressor
because He is Compassionate and Merciful. Whenever your heart is exposed
to a glimpse of the light of His Attribute "al-Mu'akhkhir," you
will be managing your affairs very well, postponing what the Legislator
has decided must be postponed, and looking down at what the Wise Lord has
Himself looked down upon. In Surat Ibrahim (Abraham), we read the following
verse: "And do not think that Allah is heedless of what the unjust ones
do; He only grants them a respite till a Day on which the eyes shall be
fixedly staring (being horrified)" (Qura'n, 14:42). He has forewarned people
regarding the Day when His chastisement will approach them, so those who
have wronged their own souls will plead to thus: "Lord! Grant us a respite
till a near term so that we may answer Your call and follow the messengers"
(Qura'n, 14:44) but they will be told: "Did you not swear before now that
there would be no passing away for you?!" (Qura'n, 14:44).
The Messenger of Allah used to supplicate by saying, "Lord! I plead
to You to forgive my sins, my ignorance, my extravagance, and to grant
me that which You know to be better for me. Lord! I plead to You to forgive
my (unintentional) sins, my deliberate sins, my ignorance, when I am serious
and when I am not, and I am guilty of all of that. Lord! I plead to You
to forgive what I have advanced and what I have postponed, what I have
revealed and what I have declared, for You are al-Muqaddim, and
You are al-Mu'akhkhir, and surely You can do whatever You please."
Both Attributes "al-Muqaddim" and "al-Mu'akhkhir" are not
mentioned in the text of the Holy. The discussion of advancing something
and postponing something else has been dealt with in the Holy Qura'n with
reference to mankind in verses such as these:
Man shall on that Day be informed of what he sent forth before and what
he put off. (75:13) Surely We know those of you who have gone before and
We certainly know those who shall come later. (15:24) And We do not delay
it except till an appointed term (11:104).
One of the signs of a believer's good conduct with regard to both of
these Attributes is that he should take a middle course between fear and
excessive hope, and to always be on his alert.
73. "Al-Awwal"
Allah has said, "He is the First (al-Awwal) and the Last (al-Akhir)
and the Ascendant (over all) and the One Who knows hidden things, and He
is Cognizant of all things" (Qura'n, 57:3).
The Attribute "al-Awwal" means: the One upon Whom all others
rely, the One Who advances all others. Applied to the Almighty, it means:
He was never preceded in existence by anyone at all; He does not need anyone
else at all; He is Independent of everything and everyone.
A bedouin once asked the Messenger of Allah, "Where was Allah before
creation?" He answered him by saying, "Allah was and there was nothing
with Him." The bedouin asked him again, "How about now?" He answered him
by saying, "He is now just as He has always been." The Attribute "al-Awwal"
exists in Surat al-adeed: "He is the First and the Last, the Ascendant
(over all), the One Who knows hidden things, and He is Cognizant of all
things" (Qura'n, 57:3). And He is referred to by implication in this verse:
"We have ordained death among you and We are not preceded in doing so by
anyone else" (Qura'n, 56:60).
"Al-Awwal" is the first of anything different from Him. He has
the upper hand over His foes, an advancement due neither to time nor to
place nor to anything else that can be conceived by mind nor acquired by
knowledge. "Al-Awwal" means the timeless, the perpetual, the One
Who has neither a beginning nor an end. He is the First without a beginning;
He exists on His own even before His creatures were ever there.
He is the Eternal One Who has always been and Who is never preceded
by anyone at all. Allah has said, "We have ordained death among you, and
We are not preceded in doing so by anyone else" (Qura'n, 56:60). This verse
indicates that He, and Only He, has such power to effect death upon His
servants, and He is the First to do so without anyone preceding Him.
74. "Al-Akhir"
Allah Almighty has said, "He is the First and the Last, the Ascendant
(over all), the One Who knows all hidden things, and He is Cognizant of
all things" (Qura'n, 57:3).
Al-Akhir is the Last without having to have a first, the Last
in His Attribute of eternity and perpetuity; He postpones anything that
is to come later. He is the Last by virtue of being above any adjectives
whereby He may be described, the Last above extinction. He is the Last
without anyone having delayed Him and made Him so, and He is the Last due
to His sustaining us. He is the Last according to the rule of necessity:
He is the First to grant guidance; He is the Last to look after those whom
He guides.
Allah permits the rewards to reach those who earn them and the penalty
to afflict those who deserve it; so, just as He was the first since time
immemorial, when there was nothing with Him at all, so will He remain the
Last One and nothing will be with Him at all.
Among the good manners of a believer with respect to this Attribute
is that he keeps remembering it quite often so that its light may manifest
itself unto his heart, and so that he should escape this vanishing abode
and look forward for the lasting one; he flees from his own self seeking
Allah, the Lord of the heavens and the earth.
75. "Al-Zahir"
Allah has said, "... the One Who knows the unseen! So He does not reveal
His secrets to any..." (Qura'n, 72:26).
Linguistically speaking, "al-Zahir" is derived from "zuhoor,"
manifestation, appearance, sighting, etc. It means something hidden coming
to appearance. It also conveys the meaning of "victor." This meaning occurs
in this verse: "... and they became the uppermost" (Qura'n, 61:14), that
is, in a higher status and rank. "zahr" also means back, the opposite
of "ban," stomach or belly; so, what is zahir is the opposite
of what is batin. It also means: animals used to transport people
and luggage on their backs, their hrs, that is, beasts of burden, whether
it is used as a figure of speech or literally. Something zaheer
is very strong. According to hadith, "There is no verse in the Holy
Qura'n except that it has an apparent meaning and a hidden one." What is
apparent may be the wording, and what is hidden may is the meaning, or
it may mean recitation or reading versus comprehension and learning.
The meaning of the Attribute of the Almighty "al-Zahir" permits
more than one interpretation:
1) He subdues His creation. 2) He knows everything apparent, just as
the Attribute "al-Batin" means He knows everything hidden. 3) He
is al-Zahir due to the abundance of dazzling proofs and the enlightening
evidence testifying to His Glory.
Suppose someone says that if He is al-Zahir, the Apparent or
the Evident One, the One about Whom there can be no doubt entertained,
well, most people seem to doubt His existence nevertheless; so, how can
He still be Apparent or Evident?
Allah is al-Batin, the Obscure, if sought through the senses
and the imagination. He is al-Zahir, the Apparent One, if sought
by the treasure of reason by way of deduction. His being obscure to many
minds, despite His being so Apparent, is due to the intensity of such evidence.
His being Evident is the reason why He is Obscure, and His light is the
same that obscures His glow: whatever exceeds its limit turns into its
own antithesis. He is Obscure if one seeks to know Him by applying his
own physical senses. The senses are related to what is apparent, such as
one's complexion, physique, etc.. In fact, a person is a human being not
only on account of his complexion, for even if such complexion or the rest
of his parts are altered, he still remains one and the same. Actually,
a person's parts at the time when he ages are not the same when he was
young. They would have suffered a great deal of change due to the passage
of time and were replaced by ones similar to them through food intake.
His identity, nevertheless, has not changed. Such an identity is obscure
from the senses, quite clear to the mind by way of deduction.
76. "Al-Batin"
Allah has said, "He is the First and the Last and the Ascendant (over
all) and the One Who knows all hidden things, and He is Cognizant of all
things" (Qura'n, 57:3).
"Al-Batin" means: the One Who is obscured from the eyes of His
creatures due to the intensity of His appearance, the Hidden One due to
His Essence that defies the minds and intellects.
The Messenger of Allah has supplicated thus:
Lord! O God of the heavens and of the great Throne! Our Lord and the
Lord of everything! The One Who splits the seed and the date-stone! The
one Who has revealed the Torah, the Gospel, and the Holy Qura'n! I seek
refuge with You against the evil of every being whose forelock is in Your
Hands! Lord! You are the First; there is nothing before You! And You are
the Last; there is nothing after You. You are the Apparent; there is nothing
beyond You, and You are the Hidden One; there is nothing that can reach
You! I plead to You to pay our debts on our behalf, and to save us from
[the humiliation of] want.
He is al-Zahir through sufficiency, al-Batin by objectivity,
al-Zahir due to His bounties, al-Batin through His mercy. He is
the Apparent One Who subdues everything, the Hidden One Who knows the truth
about everything, the One Who is Apparent for everything by way of convincing
proofs, the One Who is Hidden from any physical appearance. Glory, then,
to the One Who has obscured Himself from all creation by His light, Who
is Hidden from them because of the intensity of His appearance.
The Almighty has said, "... and made His favours to you complete outwardly
and inwardly" (Qura'n, 31:20). Apparent are the ones we can observe, see,
witness, notice, while hidden are the things with which we are not familiar.
He has also pointed out to the fact that "And if you were to count Allah's
favours, you will not be able to count them" (Qura'n, 16:18 and 14:34).
They are apparent to the senses, defying our intellect.
Man is a manifestation of the Attribute "al-Zahir" and, at the
same time, is also a manifestation of the other Attribute "al-Batin."
Man, physically, is a manifestation of the Apparent Light, and spiritually
a manifestation of the Hidden One, al-Batin. Whenever a servant
of Allah repeats the Attribute "al-Batin", his soul will feel submissive
to its Creator, and he will realize that he on his own is really incapable
of doing anything at all; so, it is then that the Truth will be Merciful
unto him and will grant him purity of both body and soul.
77. "Al-Wali"
Allah has said, "For his sake there are angels following one another,
before him and behind him, who guard him by Allah's commandment; surely
Allah does not change the condition of people until they change their own
conditions, and if Allah intends evil to anyone, there is none to avert
it, and besides Him they have no protector" (Qura'n, 13:11).
Al-Wali is the Owner of everything; He deals with everything
as He pleases. The mawla is also a supporter or a helper.
Al-Wali manages the affairs of all creation. He initiates whatever
improves the condition of His creatures. In other words, He is the Absolute
and undisputed Ruler. Al-Wali is the One and only One Who manages
all affairs, Who does everything, and there is no continuity nor existence
without His permission; everything happens according to His judgment and
by His command. Al-Wali gives graciously by halting the advent of
mishaps and calamities.
Among the characteristics of al-Wali is that He manages, is capable
and is the doer of whatever He pleases. Unless all these attributes are
found in someone, he will not be called wali, and there is no wali
for our affairs except Allah. He, and only He, single-handedly manages
them first and foremost and safeguards their continuity and existence.
It is also possible to attach to the wali the meaning of: One Who
gives abundantly, Who wards off evil.
78. "Al-Muta`ali"
Allah has said, "[He is] the One Who knows the unseen and the seen,
the Great, the Most High" (Qura'n, 13:9).
The root word of "al-Muta`ali" is `uluww, height, sublimity,
loftiness. Its verb also means one who feels proud, or even arrogant, with
regard to someone else, and this usage is for humans. We have already discussed
the Attribute "al-`Aliyy", which is also derived from the same root
word. Al-Muta`ali is Exalted in His Greatness and Honours, an Exaltation
which nobody reaches besides Him. His Honour is above what any of His creation
can conceive or comprehend, above what His creation describe, measure,
compute, or define. Al-Muta`ali is Sublime and is above everything
due to His might or perfection. He, Glory to Him, is Most High due to His
Greatness. It also means He is high above deficiencies or shortcomings,
or above being conceived by anyone's imagination. He is very, very High
above all His creatures. He does not need any of what He creates or what
He did not create; He created them out of His Munificence. His Compassionate
Attribute is surely gloriously manifesting itself to all what He has created.
He does not need the worship of those who worship Him; He makes His grace
available to all those who strive to attain it.
Al-Muta`ali is above the falsehood of the conceited, by necessity
is Lofty and Sublime. His rank is the Most High; He has the authority all
of it. He is Proud and Great. His Glory is too High to be comprehended
or conceived by His creation.
One who keeps remembering the Attribute "al-Muta`ali" ought to
fashion his conduct according to it by his determination to worship none
but Allah. One who adorns his manners as such will then remember the persecuted
and the downtrodden and does his best to help them, so their condition
will hopefully improve. According to one tradition, "A wretch indeed is
a servant of Allah who fancied himself and became conceited, forgetting
the Great One, al-Muta`ali."
Our second Imam, al-Hasan ibn `Ali, says that his grandfather, the Messenger
of Allah, had taught him a few supplications to recite during his witr
prayers such as this one:
Lord! I plead to You to guide me among those whom You have guided,
to grant me good health among those whom You have granted, to befriend
me among those whom You have befriended! I further implore You to bless
what You have granted me, to shun from me the evil of what You have decreed
in my regard, for You decree while none can force his decree on You! Surely
none can humiliate those whom You have befriended; Blessed, Lord, are You
and Exalted exceedingly.
79. "Al-Barr"
Allah has said, "Surely He is the Benign One, the Merciful" (Qura'n,
52:28).
Al-Barr is one of Allah's Attributes derived from barr,
the doer of goodness; birr means the doing of benevolent deeds.
"Al-Barr," then, is an inclusive word containing all attributes
of goodness, benevolence and charity. One who is barr to his parents
is very gracious and benevolent to them. Those who are barr are
those from whom deeds of goodness are expected. Birr also means
ties, links, or connections. A person who is barr regarding his
kin means he maintains good ties with them. The Holy Qura'n states this
verse in Surat al-Mumtaana: "Allah does not forbid you regarding those
who have not made war against you on account of (your) religion and have
not driven you out of your homes that you show them kindness and deal with
them justly; surely Allah loves the doers of justice" (Qura'n, 60:8). And
in Surat Ali-`Imran, we read, "By no means shall you attain righteousness
until you spend (benevolently) out of what you love" (Qura'n, 3:92). A
pilgrimage that is blessed and free of any prohibited acts is called "hajj
mabroor" the reward for which is no less than Paradise according to
hadith. Birr also means piety, which in turn means the doing
of whatever brings one closer to Allah, a word that combines qualities
very highly commendable and praiseworthy.
The birr is the best of what is in the life of this world and
that of the hereafter. The best of this life is whatever Allah makes available
to any of His servants such as guidance, bounties, and enjoyable things.
The best of the life to come is the eternal bliss which is residence in
Paradise; may Allah enable us to enjoy both blessings by His mercy and
grace, Allahomma ameen. The Messenger of Allah has said, "Uphold
telling the truth, for it shall lead you to birr."
Birr means goodness, a word which combines all good attributes.
It implies whatever good deeds bring one closer to Allah, the Honoured
One, the Most Exalted. The well of Zamzam is called barra due to
the abundance of its benefits and of its water.
Al-Barr does not do anything ugly or abominable. He has been
Gracious unto those who seek His pleasure by showing them the way how to,
and unto the worshippers by His Favours and the granting of success to
them. Al-Barr is kind unto those who seek His benevolence and His
giving, unto the worshippers by beautifully rewarding them. He never ceases
giving benevolently because of one's disobedience to Him.
A servant of Allah may be described as barr. A servant of Allah
can be barr according to the extent of his deeds of righteousness,
to his being the first and the foremost to observe the right of his parents,
teachers, and mentors.
One of the ways wherein a servant of Allah can fashion his conduct after
following the light of this Attribute is to befriend the believers who
are sincere in their belief, who are acquainted with the secrets of belief.
When someone mentions this Attribute quite often, his conduct will then
personify it, and love for all servants of Allah will then be planted in
his heart, and all people will love him with sincerity.
Allah has combined all the aspects of birr in one of the verses
of Surat al-Baqarah when He said:
It is not righteousness that you turn your faces towards the east and
the west, but righteousness is this: that one should believe in Allah and
the last day and the angels and the book and the prophets and give away
wealth out of love for His sake to those near in kin, to the orphans, the
needy, the wayfarer, the beggars, and for (the emancipation of) the slaves,
and keep up prayers and pay the zakat, and those who fulfill their
promise when they promise, and those who persevere when in distress and
affliction and during the time of conflict: these are they who are true
(to themselves), and these are they who guard (themselves against evil)
(2:177).
One to whom Allah is barr will be protected from committing what
displeases Allah, and He, in turn, will please him with many beautiful
things; He will make his path in life full of success; He will make his
objectives always good. He will make him independent through Favours from
Him, and He will protect him against committing anything which He deems
unlawful.
80. "Al-Tawwab"
The Glorified and Exalted One has said, ... except those who repent
and amend and make (the truth) manifest: to these do I turn (mercifully),
and I am the oft-Returning (to mercy), the Most Merciful. (2:160)
"Al-Tawwab" is an Attribute whose root word is tawbah,
repentance, which means: returning to Allah. It means that He accepts His
servants' repentance, that is, He resumes bestowing His grace upon them,
enabling them to repent, making it easy for them to do so. Al-Tawwab,
then, accepts repentance. He says in the Holy Qura'n, "... then He turned
to them (mercifully) so that they might turn (to Him); surely Allah is
oft-Returning (to mercy), the Most Merciful" (Qura'n, 9:118). It is known,
hence, that if Allah does not accept the repentance of one of His servants,
the latter is not considered repentant, for the initiation of repentance
in all reality is from Allah Who concludes it with His acceptance thereof.
Al-Tawwab facilitates repentance for His servants, time and over
again, by the Signs which He manifests for them, and the warning whereby
He warns them; so, when they become familiar with the penalty of their
sins, they become frightened, and they return to repentance, and Allah's
favour returns to them when He accepts their repentance.
Al-Tawwab accepts the repentance of His servants and forgives
their sins. He accepts the repentance of one who disobeys Him then returns
to obeying Him. And if he commits a sin then returns to Him, He welcomes
him back. He forgives the one who slips from the right path then apologizes
to Him and overlooks his sin. As long as the servant of Allah seeks tawbah,
the Lord remains Forgiving.
The light inspired by this Attribute is that one who accepts the apologies
of criminals as well as friends and relatives time and over again derives
his conduct from this Attribute. So that we may model our conduct after
it, we ought to repent and seek His acceptance of our repentance; we should
go to Him in every circumstance. Also, repetition of repentance prepares
a servant of Allah for Allah's love for him, which is the greatest honour
and status, for repentance is admission of one's deficiency and shortcoming,
and the standing at the threshold of the Most Knowing most humbly. For
this reason, the Messenger of Allah used to repent quite often in order
to show us the path to happiness. It is also one of the good manners of
a believer who repeats this Attribute quite often to forgive those who
wrong him, to be benevolent to those who mistreat him, and to accept the
apologies of others.
The Messenger of Allah has desired very much that those who believe
in him should always seek Allah's forgiveness. He once said, "By Allah!
I seek forgiveness of Allah, and I repent to Him, every day more than seventy
times." Allah has forgiven all the faults of our master Muhammed, yet he
seeks His forgiveness and repents to Him more than seventy times a day,
nay, even a hundred times a day! So, what can we say about how often should
Muslims repent to Him and seek His forgiveness?
Anas ibn Malik has said that he had heard the Messenger of Allah quoting
his Lord saying, "O son of Adam! So long as you invoke Me and place all
your hope on Me, I shall forgive you, and I do not mind. O son of Adam!
Even if your sins were to pile up and reach the skies, then you seek My
forgiveness, I shall forgive you. O son of Adam! If you come to Me after
having committed as many sins as would fill the earth, believing in Me,
associating no partners with Me, I shall grant you their equal in forgiveness."
81. "Al-Muntaqim"
Allah, subhanahu wa ta`ala, has said, "Therefore do not think
Allah (to be One) failing in His promise to His prophets; surely Allah
is Mighty, Lord of retribution" (Qura'n, 14:47).
Al-Muntaqim, the Avenger, splits the spines of those who deviate
from His path, Who increases the penalty of those who oppress in the land,
after alerting them and repeatedly warning them, and after enabling them
to amend, giving them a respite. It implies a much more severe penalty
than merely an immediate one.
The word "al-Muntaqim" is derived from the noun intiqam,
avenging or seeking revenge against someone. A penalty is not called as
such unless the following conditions are met:
1. Clemency reaches the limit of extreme outrage. Allah has said, "On
the Day when We seize them with the most violent of seizing; surely We
will (then) inflict retribution" (Qura'n, 44:16).
2. A punishment is affected after a period of respite. The Glorified
and Exalted One has said, "... and whoever returns to (committing) it,
Allah will inflict retribution on him, and Allah is the Mighty, the Lord
of Retribution" (Qura'n, 5:95).
3. Such a punishment must require a sort of feeling of spiteful gratification
upon seeing one being hurt, something which never happens in the case of
the Creator, but it does happen in the case of vicious and spiteful humans.
The intiqam, revenge, of a servant of Allah is held commendable
only if it is inflicted on His foes (those who deny or disbelieve in Him).
The worst of all foes of mankind are their own insinuating selves, the
nafs, which is within each and every one of us. There is no doubt
that he has to seek revenge against such nafs.
The Attribute "al-Muntaqim" manifests itself in the body: in
the means for its natural defense system when a germ violates the sanctity
of the body. These means will then kill the germ as a penalty for such
a violation, and they will then purge the body from it. Al-Muntaqim,
then, facilitates getting rid of what is bad, harmful, or dangerous.
The discussion of "revenge" occurs in the Holy Qura'n: In Surat al-Ma'ida
we read: "O you who believe! Do not kill (any) game while you are on pilgrimage,
and whoever among you kills it unintentionally, the compensation (for it)
is the like of what he killed from the cattle, as two just persons among
you shall judge, as an offering to be brought to the Ka`ba, or the expiation
(of it) is the feeding of the poor or the equivalent in fasting, so that
he may taste the unwholesome result of his deed; Allah has pardoned what
is gone by, and whoever returns (to it), Allah will inflict retribution
on him, and Allah is the Mighty, the Lord of Retribution" (Qura'n, 5:95).
The "We" in the phrase "We inflicted retribution" is meant, of course,
as a reference to Allah Almighty. It also occurs in several other places
throughout the text of the Holy Qura'n such as the following:
We, therefore, inflicted retribution on them and drowned them in the
sea... (7:136) So We inflicted retribution on them, and they are both,
indeed, on an open road (still) pursued. (15:79) ... then We punished those
who were guilty, and helping the believers is ever incumbent upon Us. (30:47)
So We inflicted retribution on them, then see how the end of those who
rejected was. (43:25) Then when they displeased Us, We inflicted retribution
on them. (43:55) He has revealed to you the Book with the truth, verifying
what is before it, and He revealed the Torah and the Gospel aforetime,
a guidance for people, and He sent the Furqan (Qura'n). Surely those who
disbelieve in the signs of Allah shall have a severe chastisement, and
Allah is the Mighty, the Lord of retribution. (3:3-4) ... and Allah is
the Mighty, the Lord of retribution. (5:95) Do not, therefore, think Allah
(to be) failing in His promise to His Messengers; surely Allah is the Mighty,
the Lord of Retribution. (14:47) And whoever Allah guides, there is none
that can lead him astray; is not Allah the Mighty, the Lord of Retribution?
(39:37) And who is more unjust than one who is reminded of the signs of
his Lord then he turns away from them? Surely We will punish the guilty.
(32:22) But if We should take you away, still We shall inflict retribution
on them. (43:41) On the Day when We seize them with the most violent of
seizing, surely We will (then) inflict retribution. (44:16)
Al-Muntaqim intensifies His penalty against the oppressors, causing
the criminals to be subjected to His retribution. He sends His messengers
supported by His signs and miracles to warn people; so, if warning does
not benefit someone, He will surely then inflict His penalty and revenge
against him.
Once a person comes to realize that there is nothing small nor big except
that there is a penalty for it equal in size and kind, he will certainly
fear his Lord and remain alert regarding his wishes and desires for fear
of falling into transgression.
82. "Al-`Afuww"
Allah has said, It may be that Allah will pardon them, and Allah is
Pardoning, Forgiving. (4:99)
"Al-`Afuww" is derived from the root word "`afuw" and
permits several meanings: When used as a verb, it means to go somewhere
to receive something, to give without being asked, to increase, to wipe
out something. As a noun, it means the wiping out of sins in their entirety.
One may supplicate and say, "Lord! I implore You to grant me `afuw
and `fiya," that is, not to punish me for my sins, and to make me
safe and secure with regard to Your torment. As an adjective, it means
what is halal, lawful.
Al-`Afuww has removed, by His Mercy, from the souls the darkness
of slipping away from the right path, and of the loneliness of forgetfulness
from the hearts through His Greatness. It is also said that He removes
the sins from the records and replaces loneliness with beautiful things
from Him.
Al-`Afuww wipes out the traces of sins, removing them by the
winds of His forgiveness. He wipes out the sins from the records kept by
His guardian angels. He even wipes them out from their (angels') memory
and the memory of those who committed them. He abandons punishing the sinners,
Who does not remind you of your shortcomings; He is Gracious when He forgives.
He protects the heart of the doer of evil against loneliness, sparing him
the feeling of shame, and He does not remind him of the evil of what he
had done.
We notice that in the text of the Holy Qura'n, the Attribute [indeed
a Most Beautiful one] al-`Afuww occurs side by side with another
Attribute which is al-Ghafoor as many as four times, and once side
by side with the Attribute "al-Qadeer" as the following verses demonstrate:
... surely Allah is Pardoning, Forgiving. (4:43) It may be that Allah
will pardon them, and Allah is Pardoning, Forgiving. (4:99) ... most surely
Allah is Pardoning, Forgiving. (22:60, 58:2) If you do good openly or secretly
or pardon an evil act, then surely Allah is Pardoning, Powerful. (4:149)
The Messenger of Allah has always enjoined us to wipe out our evil deeds
with good ones, saying, "Fear Allah wherever you may be, and follow your
evil deed with a good one in order to wipe out the first, and treat people
in the best conduct." He addressed one of his uncles once saying, "O `Abbas,
uncle of the Messenger of Allah! Plead to Allah for `afuw and `fiya
in the life of this world and in the life to come." The Commander of the
Faithful Imam `Ali ibn Abu Talib called upon one of his slaves once but
he did not respond. He repeated his call, and the slave again neglected
to respond. Then he repeated it a third time, and no response was there
either, so he stood up and looked for him and found him lying down. He
asked him, "Did you hear me calling you?" He answered, "Yes, I did." The
Imam asked him, "Then what stopped you from responding?" He answered, "My
confidence in your clemency and my reliance on your forgiveness," whereupon
the Imam said, "Then I set you free seeking the Pleasure of Allah." The
Imam did so on account of the firm conviction on the part of that slave.
One who wishes to receive a glimpse of the light inspired by this Attribute
should first forgive those who have committed a wrong deed against him
or dealt with him unjustly. One who remembers this Attribute ought to wipe
out from his heart any ill feeling towards anyone who has wronged him,
and to treat beautifully those who mistreated him.
83. "Al-Ra'oof"
Allah, the Glorified and the Exalted One, has said, ... so that He may
bring you out of utter darkness and into the light. (57:9)
Linguistically, this Attribute is derived from ra'fa, intense
mercy or compassion which is the ultimate limit of rahma. When applied
to the Almighty, it means His warding off all types of evil.
The Attribute "al-Ra'oof" refers to the One Who does not cease
being kind and compassionate to the sinners by accepting their repentance,
and to His friends by protecting them from committing sins. It conveys
the same meaning conveyed by the Attribute "al-Rahim" with an intensification
of the meaning embedded in the latter. Among the manifestations of His
mercy towards His servants is that He protects them against committing
what incurs His penalty. Such a protection from slipping from the right
path carries a stronger sense of mercy than His forgiveness for sins already
committed. He may be Merciful unto one of His servants by outwardly exposing
him to hardship, but inwardly there may be a great deal of bliss and blessing
hidden for him in such hardship, while he does not know it. How often has
a servant of Allah been pitied by people for the harm from which he suffers,
the harm of poverty, want, and misery, while in reality he is enjoying
a blessing for which the angels envy him?
The Most Exalted One has advanced the Attribute "al-Ra'oof" over
that of "al-Rahim," preferring "ra'fah" over "rahmah"
and giving precedence to the first over the latter in the following glorious
verses:
Most surely Allah is Affectionate, Merciful, to people. (2:143) ...
and We put in the hearts of those who followed him kindness and mercy.
(57:27) ... to the believers he is compassionate, merciful. (9:128)
This Attribute is derived from "mercy" and "compassion." This requires
us to distinguish between both of these words. Also, whenever the Almighty
uses both of these words, He mentions the Attribute "al-Ra'oof"
before "al-Rahim;" therefore, we have to explain the difference
between both of them and the reason for such a preference.
The Messenger of Allah was travelling once as he happened to pass by
a woman baking bread. Her young son was with her. She was told that the
Messenger of Allah was passing by, so she came to him and said, "O Messenger
of Allah! It has come to my knowledge that you have said, `Allah is more
Compassionate towards His servants than a mother towards her son.' Is this
the correct statement which you have spoken?" He answered her in the affirmative,
whereupon she said, "A mother does not hurl her son in an oven like this
one." Having heard her say so, the Messenger of Allah wept, then he said,
"Allah does not torment anyone by the fire [of hell] except one who is
too arrogant to bear witness that there is no god but He."
If a servant of Allah wishes to model his conduct after the inspiration
of this Attribute, he has first to remember and mention it quite often,
hence the light of al-Ra'oof will manifest itself to his heart,
so much so that he will become compassionate towards all people, the commoners
as well as the elite, always remembering the saying of the Messenger of
Allah, "Be merciful unto the people of the earth so that the people of
the heavens may be merciful to you."
84. "Malikul-Mulk"
Allah has said: Say: O Allah, Master of the Kingdom! You give the kingdom
to whomsoever You please and take the kingdom away from whomsoever You
please, and You exalt whomsoever You please and abase whomsoever You please;
in Your hand is goodness; surely You have power over all things. (3:26)
Malikul-Mulk affects His will in His kingdom however He pleases,
letting some live and others perish. The mulk in this context means
the kingdom, and the Malik is the Omnipotent, the Most Powerful.
All things in existence are included in His kingdom, so His is one kingdom
because all things in it are somehow connected to one another. Although
they may be regarded as many, they constitute one entity, one kingdom.
Malikul-Mulk fares with His kingdom as He pleases, and none can
revoke His judgment, nor can anyone appeal or repeal it. All things in
existence, in all their degrees and levels, constitute one kingdom owned
by One: Allah, the Most Exalted.
Malikul-Mulk is the true King Who deals with His kingdom as He
pleases, bringing things into existence in it or ending the existence of
some of its beings, chastising some and accepting the repentance of others,
without anyone sharing the authority with Him or prohibiting Him from doing
whatever He pleases.
"Malikul-Mulk" occurs in the original Arabic text of this verse:
"Say: O Allah, Master of the Kingdom!" (Qura'n, 3:26). Another derivative
is "al-malakoot" which exists in "Glory to the One in Whose hand
is the kingdom of all things, and to Him you shall be brought back" (Qura'n,
36:83).
... and a hard Day shall it be for the unbelievers. (25:26) To Whom
does the kingdom belong this Day? To Allah, the One, the One Who subdues
(all). (40:16) And Allah's is the kingdom of the heavens and the earth,
and to Allah is the eventual return. (24:42)
The Messenger of Allah is quoted saying that Allah's Greatest Name,
the one because of which He will respond if thereby invoked, exists in
the verse saying, "Say: O Allah, Master of the Kingdom!" (Qura'n, 3:26).
The Commander of the Faithful Imam `Ali ibn Abu lib was asked once by
Ababah ibn Rab`i al-Asdi about "ability." The Commander of the Faithful
asked Abadah, "Do you have it without Allah or with Him?" Ababah could
not answer, so he told him to say something. "What shall I say, O Commander
of the Faithful?!" asked Ababah. He answered, "You should say that you
have it by permission of Allah Who has full control over it without your
help. If He opts to grant it to you, then it is a boon which He gives you.
And if He takes it away, it is a trial from Him. He is the real Owner of
what you own, and the One Who owns what He enables you to possess. Have
you not heard about seeking His help and might by saying, `Surely there
is no help nor might except through Allah'?" The man asked him, "And what
does it mean, O Commander of the faithful?" He said, "It means: We do not
stay away from committing acts of disobedience to Allah except if He protects
us against disobeying Him, and we have no strength to obey Him except if
He grants us His help," whereupon the man leaped and kissed his hands and
feet.
The kingdom of each and every servant of Allah is his own body. If it
affects his will regarding his heart and senses, he will then be the owner
of his kingdom according to the extent of his control over it.
85. "Thul-Jalali wal Ikram"
Allah has said: Blessed is the name of your Lord, the Lord of Glory
and Honour! (55:78)
Thul-Jalali wal Ikram is a glorious Attribute that combines
glory and beauty, for there is an awesome Glory and Beauty of the Almighty;
no servant of Allah can achieve knowledge except if he becomes familiar
with Thul-Jalali wal Ikram. This Attribute surely combines in it
anticipation, awe, hope and fear.
The Almighty monopolizes the qualities of jall, greatness, and
ikrm, honour. All greatness is His, and honour is from Him; Glory
to Him; there is no glory except that He is its fountainhead, while honour
is always His. Glory has originated from Him and overwhelmed His creation,
and the norms of His honouring His creation are countless, immeasurable;
therefore, He, and only He, is worthy of being Glorified by His creatures.
They should express their respect for His Greatness, show appreciation
for His favours and grace, and recognize His signs and bounties.
"Thul-Jalali wal Ikram" means: the One Who has all Greatness.
There is no distinction, nor glory, nor prominence, except if Allah permits
it; in all reality, it is His, from Him, and by Him. Glory and Exaltation
are His, the One Who is the source and fountainhead of all glory, perfection,
honour, dignity and greatness. There is neither greatness nor favour nor
bliss nor goodness except that it springs from His ocean.
Ma`ath ibn Jabal is quoted saying that the Messenger of Allah once passed
by a man who was repeating "O One with the Glory and Honours!" so he said
to him, "Your plea will be honoured; so, proceed and state it."
The Messenger of Allah has said, "Uphold Thul-Jalali wal Ikram,"
that is: "follow His path and remain steadfast in doing so and repeat this
Attribute of His in your supplications." If a servant of Allah keeps repeating
this Attribute, and its light will eventually shine in his innermost, he
will become highly regarded among the nations. Whoever realizes the Greatness
of Allah will become very humble before Him.
One of the signs of the good conduct of a servant of Allah is that he
seeks nearness to Him by attaching himself to Him, by becoming very humble,
by expressing his humility before Allah. He must realize that all Greatness
and perfection belong to Him, and that He honours His servants by granting
them His favours.
86. "Al-Muqsit"
Allah, Glory and Exaltation are due to Him, has said, Allah testifies
that there is no god but He, and (so do) the angels and those who have
knowledge, maintaining His creation with justice. (3:18)
Meanings of variations of this Attribute's root word is qist,
equity or fairness, are as follows: qasata means implemented justice;
qasata means became inequitable or unfair; qasit is an unfair
or inequitable person, an oppressor; muqsit is one who is fair in
his judgment or decision, and qist means share, lot, or portion
of something. Qasitoon is plural: they are those who deviate from
justice and about whom the Almighty says, "As to the deviators, they are
the fuel of hell" (Qura'n, 72:15).
Qist means the implementing of justice by taking what one unlawfully
has acquired and giving it back to its lawful owner. Iqsat means
that one is given his own lawful share which someone else has unlawfully
taken [forcefully or otherwise]; it is also called insaf, carrying
out equity. Qasata means someone became inequitable, and aqsata
means that he became fair and just. Al-Muqsit is the Almighty Who
is fair and equitable in all His decisions and decrees, Who deals with
everyone according to a system. Al-Muqsit comes to the rescue of
the oppressed and brings about justice. The perfection in His doing so
is the fact that He adds to pleasing the oppressed His own pleasing of
the oppressors as well, which is the ultimate end of equity, something
which nobody can do other than Allah, Glory to Him, Who has said, "...
and if you judge, then judge between them with equity; surely Allah loves
those who judge equitably" (Qura'n, 5:42).
According to a Qudsi tradition, while the Prophet was sitting
once, he smiled to the extent that his molar teeth showed. One of his companions
said to him, "May both my parents be sacrificed for your sake, O Messenger
of Allah! What has made you smile like that?!" He answered, "Two men of
my nation were brought before the judgment of the Lord of Dignity. One
of them said, `Lord! I plead to You to effect justice on my behalf from
this man.' Allah, the Honoured and the Great, said, `Be fair to your brother
and give him what is his.' The man said, `Lord! None of my good deeds is
left to effect it thereby.' The Glorified and the Honoured One said to
the first man, `What are you going to do to your brother since he has none
of his good deeds left with him?' The man answered, `Then, Lord, let him
bear some of my own burdens.'" It was then that the eyes of the Messenger
of Allah over-flooded with tears. "That, indeed," he continued, "is a momentous
Day when men will need others to bear their own burdens." After a pause,
the Messenger of Allah continued to say, "Allah, the Honoured and the Glorified
One, said to the wronged one, `Raise your eyes and cast a look at the Gardens
of Bliss.' The man said, `Lord! I see whole cities made of silver and huge
houses of gold bedecked with pearls; for which siddeeq or martyr
are they?' The Almighty said, `They are for the one who pays the price.'
The man said, `Lord! Who can have their price?' He said, `You can.' `For
what, Lord?' he asked the Almighty. `For forgiving your brother,' the Lord
said. The man said, `Lord! I do forgive him.' The Almighty then said, `Take
your brother by the hand and lead him the way to Paradise.'" Then the Messenger
of Allah said, "Fear Allah; fear Allah, and mend your relations, for Allah
will implement justice on the Day of Judgment among the believers."
87. "Al-Jami`"
Allah has said, Lord! Surely You are the One Who gathers men on a Day
about which there is no doubt; surely Allah will not fail His promise.
(3:9)
Al-Jami` is an Attribute of Allah derived from jami`,
its root word, which means: to gather, assemble, horde, or combine. The
Day of Gathering is the Day of Judgment. It is called so because Allah
will gather on it the early generations of His creation and the last ones,
the jinns and mankind, all the residents of the heavens and the earth,
each and every servant of Allah and his deeds, every oppressor and those
whom he oppressed, and every prophet and those to whom he was sent. He
will also combine between the rewards of those who obeyed Him and the penalty
of those who disobeyed Him.
The subject of jami`, gathering or combining, is referred to
in several verses of the Holy Qura'n such as the following:
Allah: there is no god but He; He will most certainly gather you together
on the Resurrection Day; there is no doubt about it. (4:87) He has ordained
mercy on Himself; most surely He will gather you on the Day of Resurrection,
there is no doubt about it. (6:12) And on that Day, We will leave some
of them in conflict with others, and the trumpet will be blown, so We will
gather them all together. (18:99) Say: Our Lord will gather us together,
then will He judge between us with the truth, and He is the greatest Judge,
the all-Knowing. (34:26) Say: Allah gives you life, then He causes you
to die, then He will gather you to the Day of Resurrection wherein there
is no doubt... (45:26)
And one of His signs is the creation of the heavens and the earth and
what He has spread forth in both of them of living beings, and when He
pleases, He is all-Powerful to gather them together. (42:29) On the Day
when He gathers you for the Day of Gathering, that is the Day of loss and
gain: whoever believes in Allah and does good, He will remove from him
his evil and cause him to enter gardens beneath which rivers flow to abide
therein forever; that is the great achievement. (64:9)
One whose knowledge is perfected and whose conduct is good deserves
to be called jami`. For this reason, a perfect person is one who
does not put out the light of his piety by the light of his knowledge;
so is one who combines perfect vision with foresight.
88. "Al-Ghaniyy"
Allah has said, O men! You are the ones who stand in need of Allah while
Allah is self-Sufficient, Praiseworthy. (35:15)
Both "al-Ghaniyy" and "al-Mughni" are among the Attributes
of Allah.
Linguistically, ghina, the root word of "al-Ghaniyy",
means: independence by virtue of having self-sufficiency. It is the opposite
of faqr, poverty, want, indigence, need, and the like. Independence
or self-sufficiency is of various types: one is the absence of need, and
none is independent of needing anyone or anything other than Allah. This
meaning is implied in the verse saying, "His is whatever in the heavens
and in the earth, and most surely Allah is the self-Sufficient, the Praised"
(Qura'n, 22:64). The other is the small or limited number of one's needs,
which is pointed out in this verse: "And found you in want and made you
free from want" (Qura'n, 93:8). A third is what is mentioned by a few ignorant
folks among the unbelievers who claimed that Allah was poor while they
were rich, whereupon the One Who has all the Glory and Honours responded
by telling them that "Allah has certainly heard the statement of those
who said: Allah is poor and we are rich" (Qura'n, 3:181). They had said
so upon hearing the verse saying, "Who will loan Allah a beautiful loan...?"
The Almighty answered them by saying, "O men! You are the ones who stand
in need of Allah while Allah is self-Sufficient, Praiseworthy" (Qura'n,
35:15). The Almighty emphasized the same fact in another verse: "... and
whoever disbelieves, then surely Allah is self-Sufficient, above any need
of the worlds" (Qura'n, 3:97).
Al-Ghaniyy has no need, within Himself or in His Attributes or
deeds, for anything or anyone at all. He needs none while everything and
everyone need Him. Al-Ghaniyy is the Perfect One due to what He
has and what is with Him. Our Lord, the Most Praiseworthy, is referred
to as such because need is a deficiency, and the needy person is incapable
of attaining what he desires or aspires for. The one who is needed has
an advantage, because of what he has, over the one who is in need of him.
Deficiency is out of the question in the case of the Absolute al-Ghaniyy,
and incapacitation cannot be attributed to Him, Praise to Him, nor can
anyone do Him a favour, for everything is His own creation and invention;
He formed and created it, and it is totally dependent on Him in everything.
Everything is exactly what the Creator wants it to be.
Everyone else besides Allah is needy while He, al-Ghaniyy, does
not need anyone. The Holy Prophet is quoted saying, "Wealth is not abundance
of availability; rather, it is the richness of one's own soul." The highest
degree of wealth is satisfaction, contentment, with what is available with
you; therefore, there is, indeed, no wealth like the feeling of contentment.
A man may be very poor, yet he tries his best to look good in the eyes
of the people. Notice what the Almighty says about such persons: "... the
ignorant man perceives them rich on account of their abstaining (from begging)"
(Qura'n, 2:273).
The Almighty exists by virtue of the necessity for His existence, on
His own merits; therefore, He needs none besides Himself. Everything and
everyone besides Him may exist, yet its existence comes about when He creates
it; so, He, and He alone, Praise to Him, is al-Ghaniyy.
89. "Al-Mughni"
Allah, al-Mughni, has said, ... and if you fear poverty, Allah
will enrich you out of His grace if He pleases; surely Allah is Knowing,
Wise. (9:28)
Al-Mughni has granted His favours to His servants abundantly
and facilitated for them the achievement of their goals and objectives,
and the meeting of their everyday needs. There is no independence nor self-sufficiency
except that He caused it to exist. He enriches His friends from the treasures
of His lights, facilitates for those who live in the universe to access
the means of their livelihood and sustenance by His decree. He enriches
every truth which He provides in a measure, for He, and only He, knows
its secrets, what is hidden of it and what is apparent.
Allah is the Enricher, yet a servant of His whom He has enriched cannot
be thought at all as being absolutely independent. The least of his affairs
proves that he needs al-Mughni; therefore, he is never independent;
rather, he may be independent of anyone except Allah Who provides him with
what he needs while not jeopardizing the causes for his needs. The true
independent person is one who does not need anyone at all. One who needs
and finds what he needs is independent only by way of analogy, which is
the most that can be said about anyone besides Allah. As regarding the
lack of need, this is out of the question for anyone besides Him. But if
one needs none save Allah, then he will be called ghaniyy. Had he
had no need at all, the verse saying "... and Allah is self-Sufficient
while you have need (of Him)" (Qura'n, 47:38) would not have been accurate.
Had there been any possibility at all that Allah could in any way be regarded
as in need of anything, there would have been no need for the Almighty
to be al-Mughni, the Enricher.
Al-Mughni makes whomsoever from among His servants self-sufficient.
He grants independence and self-sufficiency to His servants, and He can
be regarded as granting them self-sufficiency. And Allah also makes some
of His servants independent of others, for all needs are in reality met
by Him: His creatures cannot do anything for themselves without His help;
so, how can they be thought to help others when they themselves need to
be helped? He grants independence and self-sufficiency to whomsoever He
pleases from among His servants according to His wisdom and will; He says
the following in Surat h: "... Our Lord gave everything its creation then
guided" (Qura'n, 20:50).
About Himself, al-Mughni has said,
... if they are needy, Allah will make them free from want by His grace.
(24:32) And that He enriches and Who withholds. (53:48) And He found you
in want and made you free from want. (93:8)
One of the ways to derive a code of ethics from al-Ghaniyy and
al-Mughni is that one realizes that he needs Him constantly, and
that he trusts in what Allah has more than he does in what he himself has,
and to be good in conducting generosity and benevolence towards other servants
of Allah. One of the norms of conduct of a believer with regard to the
Attribute "al-Mughni" is that once he realizes Him to be the One
and only One Who is Independent of any need, the One Who satisfies all
the needs of His servants, he will rely on Him in everything and refer
to Him in every matter.
90. "Al-Mani`"
Allah, Glory and Praise are due to Him, and only to Him, has said, Or
do they have gods who can defend them against Us? (21:43)
Al-Mani` is one of Allah's Attributes and is derived from man`,
the opposite of giving or granting. It also means: to protect, to stop
one thing from harming another or one group of people from annihilating
another. It is used to describe the defense of a house, a fortified fortress,
etc, against an enemy. It means: to protect and support. It means He has
the power to stop the causes of annihilation or deficiency in both creeds
and bodies. He wards off evil to protect and safeguard; He stops giving
to whomsoever He pleases in order to try or to protect them. He gives life
to whomsoever He loves or does not love, but He does not grant the bliss
of the hereafter except to those whom He loves.
Al-Mani` protects and supports those who obey Him, and He stops
some of His servants from doing what He does not want them to do while
giving them what they want. He wards off the causes of perdition and diminution
in matters related to creeds and nations due to what He creates of causes
prepared for their preservation. Obstruction from the causes of annihilation,
and the preservation of what is guarded against extinction, are the objectives
of man` and are the ultimate goal. If man`, prohibition,
is needed for the purpose of preservation, and the latter is not needed
for the sake of the first, then every protector defends and protects. Not
everyone who prohibits protects except that he prohibits the causes of
annihilation and diminution.
Al-Mani` prohibits affliction from reaching His friends, or the
complete abstention from giving to whomsoever He pleases. If He prohibits
affliction from reaching His friends, this is due to His beautiful Grace,
and if He stops giving to them, it will still be a great favour from Him.
Allah grants the pleasures of the life in this world to those whom He
loves and to those whom He does not, but He does not protect the heart
of a servant of His except when the latter is one of His close friends.
Al-Mani` wards off the causes of annihilation and diminution
of creed and body by creating the means which protect it against annihilation
and diminution. So, He creates some causes and prohibits others; He gives
everything what serves its interests and prohibits what causes its damage.
He makes some wealthy by giving them, and He stops giving to whomsoever
He pleases to try them by affliction. He enriches and impoverishes; He
makes some happy and some miserable; He grants some and withholds from
others; He grants some and deprives others; so, He is both al-Mu`ti,
the Giver, and al-Mani`, the One Who withholds. And He withholds
giving from whomsoever He pleases, and His withholding may contain giving
in disguise. He may withhold giving one of His servants abundant wealth
and instead give him accomplishments and beauty. He may deprive one of
His servants from enjoying good health and make him pleased with His decree.
Al-Mani` is also al-Mut'i: for within the withholding there
may be giving, and within the giving there may be withholding.
The Messenger of Allah used to say the following after finishing each
of the prescribed daily prayers: "There is no god but Allah, the One and
only God; His is the Kingdom; His is the Praise, and He can do everything.
Lord! None can prohibit what You grant, nor can anyone grant what You withhold,
and none is capable of stopping the implementation of Your will."
91. "Al-Darr"
Allah has said, Say: I do not control for myself any harm, nor can I
benefit myself in aught except what Allah pleases. (10:49)
Both al-Darr and al-Nafi` are among the Attributes of
Allah.
Most references wherein these Attributes are discussed have combined
both Attributes together. Combining both of these Attributes is better:
it conveys a stronger meaning of the Almighty's Power to do whatever He
wills, however He wills; none benefits nor harms others besides Him.
Language says that darr, harm, is the opposite of nafi`,
benefit or advantage. Allah is al-Darr, that is, the One Who can
harm anyone He wants in any way He wishes; He impoverishes some of His
servants or causes them to fall prey to sickness according to His wisdom;
so, He determines everything, and He alone facilitates the means of harm
as a trial from Him whereby He purges the sins or subjects one of His servants
to a test in order to raise his status. He decrees harm to some of His
servants and effects His decree through certain means. He is the Wise One
in whatever He does, the most Merciful in His judgment. If He decrees some
harm, it is only for the sake of the general good, and if He decrees an
ailment, it is but the useful medicine in the life of this world and the
life hereafter.
Allah has said, "If Allah touches you with affliction, there is none
to remove it but He..." (Qura'n, 6:17).
Prophet Moses once complained to his Lord about a tooth-ache, so the
Almighty instructed him to apply a certain type of herb on the area of
his pain, which he did, and the aching stopped. A few days later, the same
pain came back to him, so he went and took the same herb and applied it,
but this time his pain intensified many times more. He complained to Allah
saying, "Lord! Did You not order me to apply this type of herb and tell
me where I could find it?" The Almighty inspired him, "O Moses! I am the
One Who heals and Who grants good health; I am the One Who causes harm
and Who benefits. You came to Me the first time, so I removed the cause
of your ailment, whereas this time you went to the plant (on their own)
instead and did not come to Me."
The Messenger of Allah has said, "Anyone who claims that Allah commends
the doing of wrong deeds and of sins tells lies about Allah. And anyone
who claims that goodness and evil are possible without the will of Allah
strips Allah of His Authority. And anyone who claims that sins are committed
without Allah's Might tells a lie about Allah, and whoever tells lies about
Allah, He will lodge him into the fire." In this tradition, by goodness
and evil he means health and sickness respectively due to this verse: "...
and We try you by evil and by good by way of probation" (Qura'n, 21:35).
Imam al-Baqir is quoted saying, "Allah, the Exalted and the Great, is
more compassionate towards His creation than forcing them to commit sins
then penalizing them for doing so, and Allah is more Mighty than willing
to do something and it does not take place." He was asked once whether
there was a distance between compulsion and destiny, and his answer was,
"Yes! One more spacious than that between the heavens and the earth!" He
has also said, "There should neither be compulsion nor an unrestricted
freedom; the best course is a middle one." When he was asked about the
middle course, he said, "Let me give you an example: You may see a man
committing a sin, and you may try to stop him from doing so but he refuses
to desist, whereupon you leave him to commit that sin. When he does not
listen to you but insists on sinning, it does not mean that you yourself
have encouraged him to commit that sin."
92. "Al-Nafi`"
As regarding the Attribute "al-Nafi'", Allah subhanahu wa
ta`la has said, "Whatever benefit comes to you (O man!), it is from
Allah, and whatever misfortune befalls you, it is from your own self" (Qura'n,
4:79).
Al-Nafi` is the source of any benefit and goodness for the life
in this world and for the creed. He alone grants good health, wealth, happiness,
authority, guidance and piety. He enables all His creatures to receive
the benefits He creates for them. He has facilitated the path leading to
Him for those who aspire to tread it, Who benefitted the souls through
His prophets, Who nourished the bodies through food, Who warded off disease
through medicine, Who kept affliction away through favours and goodness,
and Who has benefitted everyone, be he an angel, a human, or a jinn.
Ibn `Abbas says, "I was sitting once behind the Messenger of Allah so
he said to me, `Young man! I would like to teach you a few words [of wisdom]:
If you safeguard your rights towards Allah, He will protect you. If you
remain mindful of Allah's rights on you, you will find Him looking after
you. If you have a plea, then plead to Him; if you seek help, seek it from
Him, and bear in mind that if all people gather to benefit you in anything,
they will not be able to do so except in what He has already allotted for
you, and if they all gather together to harm you in any way, they will
never be able to do so except if He has already decreed it on you; the
ink has dried, and the tablets have been removed.'"
Al-Darr al-Nafi` is the One from Whom everything good or bad
ensues; all is attributed to Allah and is affected either through the angels,
mankind, inanimate objects, or by other means; so, do not think that poison,
for example, kills by itself, or that food by itself satisfies hunger.
Angels, mankind, demons, or anything else in existence, such as planets,
stars, or other things, are all under His control; they do not do anything
except what He has made them do. Their totality, in addition to the eternal
Power, is like a pen in the hand of the writer as conceived by an illiterate.
If a ruler signs the order to penalize or reward someone, the pen whereby
he signs such an order cannot tell the difference between one order and
another, or between what harm it is causing or what benefit, or even the
difference between one of its users and the other. This is the case with
all means and causes.
Both al-Darr and al-Nafi` are referred to in various places
in the Holy Qura'n; among them are:
Say: I do not control any benefit nor any harm for my own soul except
as Allah pleases; had I known the unknown, I would have had much of good
and no harm would have touched me; I am only a warner and giver of glad
tidings to people who believe. (7:188) Say: I do not control for myself
any harm, nor any benefit, except whatever Allah pleases; every nation
has a term; when their term comes, they shall not remain behind for an
hour, nor can they go before (their time). (10:49) Yet when He removes
the evil from you, lo! A party from among you associates others with their
Lord. (16:54) And when We make people taste of mercy, they rejoice in it,
and if evil befalls them for what their hands have done, lo! They despair.
(30:36)
The portion a servant of Allah may obtain of the inspiration of these
Attributes is that he becomes "harmful" towards the enemies of Allah while
benefitting the friends of Allah. In Surat al-Ma'ida, the Almighty describes
the faithful as "... lowly before the believers, mighty against the unbelievers"
(Qura'n, 5:54). Such a believer does not plead to anyone, nor does he fear
anyone except his Lord; he relies wholly on Allah. One who fully realizes
that his Lord, the Most Exalted One, is the One and only Who creates and
makes things available, Who alone brings new things into existence, he
will then submit to Him and rely on Him regarding all his affairs; he will
then live enjoying a peaceful mind; he will be secure from people, and
he will provide counsel for everyone. His heart will have no room for deception
nor treachery.
It is good to combine both of these Attributes, al-Darr and al-Nafi`,
together, for at them it is said that all Attributes end; He, Glory to
Him, controls the means for people's harm and benefit, and none can harm
anyone nor benefit anyone besides Him; "... and suffices your Lord for
a Guide and a Helper" (Qura'n, 25:31). One who remembers both of these
Attributes will submit totally to Allah and will always feel that everything
is from Him and returns to Him.
93. "Al-Noor"
The Almighty has said, Allah is the light of the heavens and the earth;
a likeness of His light is a niche wherein there is a lamp; the lamp is
in a glass, and the glass is as if it were a brightly shining star lit
from a blessed olive-tree, neither eastern nor western, the oil whereof
almost emanates light though fire does not touch it: light upon light;
Allah guides whomsoever He pleases to His light, and Allah sets forth parables
for men, and Allah is Cognizant of all things. (24:35)
In language, noor is light, whatever its glow, rays, or reflection
may be. It aids vision. There are two kinds of light: a light related to
the life of this world, and a light related to the life hereafter. The
first, let us say the secular, is also of two types: one is what the mind,
the intellect, can see; it is a Divine light, the light of reason, of the
Holy Qura'n. The other is related to the physical one, that of things which
emit or reflect light such as the sun and the moon. An example for the
Divine light is implied in a verse such as this: "... there has come to
you light and a clear Book from Allah" (Qura'n, 5:15). Reference to the
physical light exists in the verse saying, "He it is Who made the sun a
shining brightness and the moon a light (a reflection)" (Qura'n, 10:5).
Here, the sun is mentioned before the moon because its light is more commonly
associated with what we can see than the moon.
Al-Noor is the Apparent One Who has manifested Himself fully.
The One Who is apparent on His own and Who makes everything else apparent
and visible is called al-Noor Who takes things out of non-existence
and brings them into the world of existence. Al-Noor, Glory to Him,
has filled our world with light and brought it into existence, Who determined
it since time immemorial, Who has illuminated the apparent existence through
the sun and the stars, Who illuminated the world of spirits through the
Messenger of Allah, the master of the first generations and of the last,
and He illuminated the hearts through the light of His Divinely revealed
Books. He illuminated those endowed with knowledge with the light of Divine
manifestations. Al-Noor has illuminated the hearts of the truthful
through His Unity, and the conscience of those who love Him by His support
for them. He beautified the complexions and brought life to the souls of
the pious through their adoration. He guides the hearts to prefer and opt
for what is right, Who guides the innermost conscience to silently address
Him.
Noor, light, then, has many meanings. One of them is the light
of knowledge and scholarship, which is the dawn of the truth as seen by
the heart of a knowledgeable believer. The Attribute "al-Noor" has
been mentioned in the text of the Holy Qura'n and is attributed to Allah
in many places the best known of which is 24:35 cited above.
Ibn `Abbas says that the meaning of this verse is that Allah is the
Guide of the residents of the heavens and of the earth; the similitude
of His guidance in the heart of a believer is like pure oil which shines
even before fire touches it; therefore, when fire does touch it, it intensifies
its light, so it intensifies and adds light to its light. The Attribute
"al-Noor" is indicative of the fact that Allah is the Light of the
heavens and the earth.
There are many other verses wherein reference to Allah's light is made;
among them are the following:
They desire to put out the light of Allah with their mouths, and Allah
insists on perfecting His light though the unbelievers are averse thereto.
(9:32) What?! Is he whose heart Allah has opened for Islam, so he is in
a light from his Lord (like the hard-hearted one)? Nay! Woe unto those
whose hearts are hard against the remembrance of Allah; surely they are
in clear error. (39:22) And the earth shall beam with the light of its
Lord, and the Book shall be laid down, and the prophets and the witnesses
shall be brought forth, and judgment shall be issued between them with
equity, and they shall not be dealt with unjustly. (39:69)
There are more than forty references to light in the text of the Holy
Qura'n. Some scholars are of the view that the Attribute "al-Noor"
is Allah's Greatest Name. They say that they cannot see anything in existence
without seeing the meaning of this Attribute manifested in it.
The Messenger of Allah used to supplicate to his Lord in the morning
saying, "Lord! I invoke You to create light in my heart, light in all parts
of my body, light in my hearing, light in my sight, light in my hair, light
in my complexion, light in my flesh, light in my blood, light in my bones,
light before me, light behind me, light on my right, light on my left,
light above me, light underneath me! Lord! I implore You to increase my
light, to grant me light, and to create light for me."
94. "Al-Hadi"
The Most Glorified and Exalted One has said, ... and sufficient is your
Lord as a Guide and a Helper. (25:31)
"Al-Hadi" is an Attribute derived, linguistically, from hidya,
guidance, which means: to attract someone to something, such as attracting
the heart of a believer to al-Hadi, to the One Who provides such
guidance. Guidance means bringing the hearts closer to the Almighty.
Guidance is the following of one's sound reason and common sense and
the graceful way of bringing someone to the anticipated goal. He guides
the elite from among His servants whom He has chosen to know His Essence,
so much so that they see things through Him, and He guides the commoners
among them to witness His creatures, so much so that they have seen them
as signs of His being their Creator and Sustainer. He has guided everything
He created to whatever means whereby it can satisfy its needs. He has guided
the baby to suck the breast of its mother, the young birds to pick the
seeds, and the bees to build their honey-combs in hexagonal shapes which
are the best to suit the forms of their bodies, and such examples are quite
lengthy indeed.
Al-Hadi guides the guilty to repentance, and those blessed with
knowledge to the facts regarding nearness to Him. Al-Hadi occupies
the hearts by truthfulness and equity, the bodies by life and death. Al-Hadi
has given everything He has created its shape and characteristics, and
He guides whom He creates to the goals behind His creating them, to issues
related to their life in this world and to those related to their creed,
in addition to everything else related to them. He guides the hearts to
know Him and the souls to obey Him; He guides the guilty to the path of
repentance, the sincere ones to nearness to Him after being far from it.
He keeps the hearts filled with love for equity and truth; He enables them
to treat people justly. Al-Hadi is in all reality Allah. Al-Hadi
has guided the elite from among His servants to wisdom and knowledge.
Whenever the Messenger of Allah woke up during the night for prayers,
he would supplicate to his Lord saying, "Lord! God of Gabriel, Michael
and Israfil, Originator of the heavens and the earth, Knower of the unknown
and the Witness! You judge between Your servants regarding that wherein
they dispute! I plead to You to guide me to that wherein they have differed,
by Your will, for You guide whomsoever You please to a straight path."
95. "Al-Badee`"
Allah, Glory and Exaltation are His, has said, Wonderful Originator
of the heavens and the earth! When He decrees an affair, He only says to
it "Be!" and it is. (2:117)
In language, to originate is to bring about something without following
a model or an example. Al-Badee` is the Unique One; there is nothing
similar to Him in His essence, qualities, or whatever He does; He has manifested
the wonders that He has created as the most beautiful indications of His
wisdom. He has created all cosmic worlds without a prior model. He, Exalted
is His Name, has said, "Wonderful Originator of the heavens and the earth!
How could He have a son when He has no consort, and He (Himself) created
everything, and He knows all things?" (Qura'n, 6:101).
"Badee`" means: originator; one who does something new, originating
its existence. "Bid'a" means something new, an innovation, simply
because nobody before had said or advocated it. Allah is the Originator
of all things without following a prior model. He did not learn their creation
from anyone else; rather, He initiated the creation of all beings, so He
is their Maker, the One Who started their existence. The Almighty, al-Badee`,
has brought everything into existence without the use of a tool or any
material, without being limited to time or space in order to be able to
do that.
Al-Badee` has manifested the wonderful things of what He has
done and the extra-ordinary proofs of His wisdom. He is the Absolute One
Who has no peer similar to Him in His qualities, wisdom, or anything related
to Him; He, and only He, is the Absolute al-Badee` Who has created
everything without following a prior model.
Since there is none like Him in His essence, characteristics, actions,
or anything related to Him, that makes Him the Absolute Originator. If
such a thing is known commonly, it cannot be called badee' at all;
so, this Attribute does not fit anyone besides Allah. None was ever like
Him nor ever will; therefore, His example never existed at all and never
will, and whatever exists besides Him exists because of Him; He, and He
alone, is the Originator since time immemorial and forever.
Anas ibn Malik is quoted saying that the Messenger of Allah once heard
a man supplicating thus, "Lord! I plead to You by the fact that to You
is all Praise due; there is no god but You; You are the One Who never stops
giving, Who originated the heavens and the earth, the One to Whom all Glory
and Honour belong! I plead to You to grant me a place in Your Paradise,
and I seek refuge with You against the fire," whereupon the Prophet said,
"He surely has pleaded to Allah by His Attribute which, if one pleads to
Him by it, He grants the plea and gives what He is asked."
A believer's share of this Glorious Attribute is that if he repeats
it quite often, Allah will cause the springs of wisdom to flow from his
tongue; he will be wise in his intentions, for intention is the bedrock
of action. A servant of Allah who remembers and repeats this Attribute
quite often, being fully aware of its meanings, will be exposed to the
beauty of its light. Allah, the Truth, Exalted and Blessed is He, will
permit him to enter into the circle of invention; He will make him a master
obeyed by others. One of the norms of conduct of whoever mentions this
Attribute quite often is the avoiding of innovations in the creed and full
adherence to the Sunnah.
96. "Al-Baqi"
Allah, Glory and Exaltation are His, has said, "... and Allah is better
and more abiding" (Qura'n, 20:73).
"Al-Baqi" is one of Allah's Attributes the root word of which
is baqa': the opposite of extinction. It also means: obedience to
Allah and awaiting His rewards, or the lingering status of goodness.
The reality of al-Baqi, Glory to Him, is in His ever-enduring
existence; endurance is one of His characteristics. Al-Baqi, Glory
to Him, always exists and Whose existence is necessitated by virtue of
His own merits. He is ever-Present, Who remains existing forever, from
the beginning of any beginning and for eternity. The Absolute al-Baqi
is the One the duration of Whom never ends, and such a duration is
described as abadi, perpetual, eternal, endless. The Absolute al-Qadeem
is the One the time of Whose beginning, if there is such a thing, goes
back to the very beginning of time, and such a duration is called azali,
eternal. When you say that His existence depends on His own merits, this
Attribute will then include both meanings.
What affects the determining of the "past" and the "present" are certain
variables; both words describe time, and nothing measures time other than
change. One Who is above change by virtue of motion is above being affected
by time; therefore, neither "past" nor "future" can apply to Him. The Truth,
Exalted is He, is before time, since He Himself created time, and nothing
in Him changed, and He was before time, and He remains after His creation
of time just as He has always been and will always be. Those who have claimed
that duration is a characteristic added to the essence of al-Baqi
are far from the truth, and still further from the truth than them are
those who claim that time is an additional quality in as far as the Eternal
One is concerned. There is no need to bother the reader with details about
such confusion regarding existence, duration, and which qualities endure.
Allah's existence stands on its own merits and is self-necessitating,
that is, it does not accept extinction in any way. The duration of anything
which is self-sustaining during the past and will remain so in the future
as well as it did in the past is called old, and its duration in the future
is called existence.
The subject of enduring and duration attributed to Allah has been referred
to in the text of the Holy Qura'n in more than one place. Examples are
the following:
... and the sustenance of your Lord is better and more abiding. (20:131)
And there will endure forever the person of your Lord, the Lord of glory
and honour. (55:27) ... what is with Allah is better and more lasting for
those who believe and rely on their Lord. (42:36)
... ever-abiding good deeds are with your Lord best in recompense and
best in yielding fruit. (19:76)
The good fortune a servant of Allah may receive if he remembers this
Attribute quite often is that the Almighty will reveal to him enduring
facts and will make him observe the perishing trails, so he will flee eagerly
to al-Baqi and decorate his conduct with the meanings its qualities
and moral code suggest.
97. "Al-Warith"
Allah has said, ... Allah's is the heritage of the heavens and the earth,
and Allah is aware of everything you do. (3:180)
Al-Warith, Glory to Him, remains after the extinction of all
beings. He inherits everything after the extinction of everyone and everything.
He is the Heir: on the Day of Judgment, it will be loudly called out, "To
whom does the kingdom belong this Day? To Allah, the One, The Subduer (of
all)" (Qura'n, 40:16).
The root word of the Attribute "al-Warith" is "waratha,"
inherited: He will inherit all beings after their extinction. He is the
only One Who remains after those who used to think that they possessed
wares and items, the things which He had given them, will be gone; their
existence, as well as that of what He has given them, is dependent on Him,
and on none else. He has said, "And most surely We bring to life, and We
cause death, and We are the heirs" (Qura'n, 15:23).
What Allah's servants used to own will go back to Him; there is no partner
with Him. Al-Warith is the One to Whom all possessions will go back
after the death of their "owners." He will be the One Who will call on
that Day, the Day of Judgment, as in 40:16, "To whom does the kingdom belong
this Day?" and He will be the One Who will answer by saying, "To Allah,
the One, The Subduer (of all)" (Qura'n, 40:16)." Most people mistakenly
think that they have possessions which are their own, but the reality of
the matter will be unfolded before their eyes on that Day. This call represents
a fact which will then be revealed to everyone.
Reference to the subject of heritage as applied to the Almighty occurs
in some Qura'nic verses such as the following:
And most surely We bring to life and cause death, and We are the heirs.
(15:23) Surely We inherit the earth and all those on it and to Us shall
they all be returned. (19:40) And We desired to bestow a favour upon those
who were deemed weak in the land and make them the Imams and make them
the heirs. (28:5) Lord! Do not leave me alone, and You are the best of
inheritors. (21:89)
The Messenger of Allah used to supplicate saying, "Lord! I plead to
You to grant me the enjoyment of my hearing and vision, and to make them
my heirs."
98. "Al-Rasheed"
Allah subhanahu wa ta`ala has said, And when My servants ask
you concerning Me, then surely I am very near: I answer the prayer of the
suppliant when he calls on Me; therefore, they should answer My call and
believe in Me so that they will be rightly guided. (2:186)
The Attribute "al-Rasheed" is derived from Rushd, its
root word, which means: guidance, righteousness, and uprightness, the antithesis
of straying and crookedness. Its derivation accepts two possibilities:
one is al-Rasheed, which means the same as al-Rashid, the
Wise One, so Wise is He that there is nothing among His deeds that can
be regarded as wasteful or wrong. The other is that it may mean the same
as al-Badee`, and Allah's irshad, that is, His leading His
servants to the right path, is due to His hidaya, guidance. Al-Rasheed
is the One Whose management of all affairs achieves its objectives without
anyone else besides Him directing or assisting it, Who is none but Allah,
Glory to Him. Al-Rasheed pleases whoever He wills by providing him
with His guidance, making whoever He wills miserable by distancing him
from His guidance. He is the One in Whose management there is no lapse,
and in Whose assessment there is no fault.
Al-Rasheed is characterized by complete perfection, great wisdom,
ultimate guidance. He is the One Whose management of all affairs reaches
its ultimate goal and success. He guides His creatures and leads them to
what is best for them. He guides them through His wisdom towards the attainment
of their well-being in the life of this world and in the life to come.
Al-Rasheed has made those with whom He is pleased happy, Who guided
His friends to Him; there is no negligence in His management of the affairs
nor in His assessment, and He is known for His justice and favours.
Al-Rasheed is al-Murshid, the One Who inspires right guidance
for those who obey Him, and He has led all beings to His guidance, the
One Whose rope is strong, Whose command is wise. In Surat al-Kahaf, we
read the following verse, "Lord! Grant us mercy from You, and provide for
us a right course in our affairs" (Qura'n, 18:10), and, "... whomsoever
He causes to err, you shall not find for him any friend to lead (him) rightly"
(Qura'n, 18:17).
If a servant of Allah wishes to be on the right track, his guidance
will be proportionate with his terse management in the attainment of his
secular and religious objectives. One must deal with his Lord, al-Rasheed,
in a way whereby he properly relies on his Lord to guide him. His Lord
will then lead him to reform his own self first, to refer all his affairs
to Him, and to seek refuge with Him whenever evil touches him and pray
for His help whenever he is afflicted, just as Allah has told Moses to
do: "And when he (Moses) turned his face towards Midyan, he said: Maybe
my Lord will guide me to a course nearer to the right path than this" (Qura'n,
18:24). Thus ought a servant of Allah behave: when he wakes up, he should
rely on his Lord, and whatever matter faces him, he should seek Allah's
help in its regard then await what signal his heart will respond thereto.
He will then help him do whatever he needs to do and will suffice him regarding
all his affairs. If he does contrary to what Allah guides him, He will
then reprimand him so that he would know that his Lord found him to be
insolent, hence he abandons his self-reliance and forsakes following his
own mind and trickery. A servant of Allah ought to quite often remember
the Attribute "al-Rasheed" and cling to its meaning so that he may
be led to the commendable conduct, and Allah will then grant him wisdom
and bestow His blessings upon him.
99. "Al-Saboor"
The Praised and Glorified One has said, ... nor did they weaken, nor
did they abase themselves, and Allah loves those who are patient. (3:146)
"Al-Saboor" is an Attribute of Allah linguistically derived from
the noun sabr which means: withholding one's self from expressing
its overwhelming grief. Al-Saboor is most patient, Whose patience
is greater than anyone else's. The month of Raman is called the month of
patience and perseverance: during its days, the believer withholds himself/herself
from yielding to the desires.
Al-Saboor, Glory to Him, is the Clement One Who does not surprise
those who disobey Him by suddenly inflicting His penalty on them; rather,
He forgives and postpones His carrying out of such a penalty. Al-Saboor
does not rush to do anything too early; rather, He manages the affairs
according to a measure; He conducts them according to a well-defined plan
of His; He does not delay them from reaching their destined courses out
of laziness or laxation, nor does He advance their execution. Rather, He
does everything exactly at its right time, in the best way, as it ought
to be. All of this He does without facing hardship which may frustrate
His will. Al-Saboor gives you and is true to you even when you are
rude to Him. He comes to you forgiving even when you shun Him and revolt
against Him.
Al-Saboor does not rush to penalize those who disobey Him or
to chastise those who sin. He does not do anything except when it is most
opportune due to His wisdom, honour, and sublimity. He is not harmed by
those who commit sins. He takes the guilty by the forelocks. Al-Saboor
commands and respites those to whom He issues His command; He observes
and does not rush, nor does He do anything prematurely. He commands and
His command is according to a certain measure. He cancels the penalty even
after it becomes due. Al-Saboor inspires patience and perseverance
for all His creatures. The meaning of the Attribute "al-Saboor"
is very close to that of the other Attribute "al-aleem". The difference
between the first and the latter is that with al-Saboor, nobody
can feel safe against His penalty, as is the case with al-aleem.
In Surat Ali-`Imran, the Almighty says, "O you who believe! Be patient,
excel in patience, and remain steadfast" (Qura'n, 3:200), that is, be patient
while obeying Allah, make your hearts accustomed tolerating affliction
in the cause of Allah, and train your innermost conscience to be eager
for Allah. It also means: Be patient for the sake of Allah; persevere while
seeking Allah's Pleasure; remain in Allah's camp. Patience regarding what
Allah decrees is a trial, and patience for the sake of Allah is a hardship,
while patience with Allah is loyalty [to Him]. The Messenger of
Allah has said, "None is more patient regarding the pain of what he hears
than Allah: they ascribe sons to Him even as He grants them good health
and sustenance." [11]
One of the manifestations of a believer's good conduct in deriving a
moral code from the inspiration of the Attribute "al-Saboor" is
that he keeps in mind its beautiful meanings, so he is patient under all
circumstances. One who examines how Allah treats His servants, how He is
patient in the face of their rudeness and disobedience, while He keeps
giving them one respite after another, will learn how to treat people applying
Allah's manners to the best of his ability. Whenever patience is repeated
by a servant of Allah, it becomes a habit, and he will then be following
its guiding light. Such is the status of those who persevere in the sight
of Allah, Glory and Praise to Him, as explained in the text of the Holy
Qura'n. We are told that the group of those who were patient will be advanced
before others by the token of the verse saying, "Those who are patient,
and the truthful, and the obedient, and those who spend (benevolently)
and those who ask forgiveness in the morning..." (Qura'n, 3:17). Thus,
such a group will have a higher status than that of other groups of His
servants. The Praised One has said, "If there are twenty patient ones among
you, they shall overcome two hundred, and if there are a hundred, they
shall overcome a thousand of those who disbelieve" (Qura'n, 8:65). This
is victory with regard to prowess and number granted by Allah whereby He
blesses those from among His servants who persevere. "Lord! Pour down upon
us patience, and make our steps firm, and assist us against the unbelieving
people" (Qura'n, 2:250), "Lord! Pour upon us patience and cause us to die
as Muslims" (Qura'n, 7:126).
[1]
This tradition is recorded on p. 12, "Kitab al-Adab," Vol. 8 of al-Bukhari's
Sahih.
[2]
The word "lucky" is used here only because the Holy Qura'n states in 41:35
that the residents of Paradise will surely be the very lucky ones. The
Almighty's use of this word is quite different from that of humans. It
is humans' use of this word that we reject.
[3]
Muslim, Sahih. It also is stated on page 260 of his "Book of Athkar."
[4]
Abu Dawud, Al-Athkar, p. 81.
[5]
Notice that the word "heavens" is used throughout this book as singular
due to its reference to one: the sky. If it is at all used in the plural,
it will then be referring to the seven layers or spheres of the sky. As
for the word "heaven," it is often used by non-Muslims to refer to Paradise.
Non-Muslims' concept of Paradise is certainly different from that of Muslims.
[6]
Abu Dawud, Jami` al-Fawa'id, Vol. 2, p. 410.
[7]
al-Tirmithi, Sunan, Vol. 4, p. 379.
[8]
Muslim, sahih, Vol. 4, traditions 33 and 35.
[9]
The people of `Ad were Arabs who lived in upper Hijaz near the area where
the people of Thamud, also Arabs, used to live. Prophet Hud was sent to
them; they did not heed his warning, so they were annihilated. As for the
people of Thamud, these used to live in Wadi al-Qura in the 8th century
B.C.
[10]
These are: Noah, Abraham, Moses, Jesus, and Muhammed.
[11]
al-Bukhari, Sahih, Vol. 9, p. 206.