5.Doctrine of Belief in Allah
We believe that Allah is One (wahid), Alone (ahad),
Peerless (laysa kamithlihu shay'), Eternal (qadim),without Beginning
or End; He is the First and the Last (al-awwal wa al-akhir). He is
the All-Knowing (al-alim), the Wise (al-hakim), the Just (al-'adil),
the Living (al-hayy), the Omnipotent (al-qadir), Independent of all
things (al-ghaniy), the All-Hearing (as-sami'), the All-Seeing (al-basir).
He is not to be likened to His creatures, therefore He has neither
body nor appearance nor substance nor form; He is neither heavy nor
light, neither moving nor motionless; He has no place nor any time,
and no-one can point to Him as there is no-thing like Him. Nothing
is equal to Him, nor has He any opposite. He has no wife, no child,
no partner and there is none comparable to Him. Vision does not
perceive Him, yet He perceives everything. Anyone who likens Him to
His creatures, for example one who supposes that Allah has a face,
hands and eyes, or says that He comes down to the lowest heaven, or
that He will appear to the people of paradise like a moon, and so
forth, he is as one who does not believe in Allah and is ignorant of
the true nature of Allah, Who is above all deficiency. Yet
everything we imagine will be a creature like ourselves. As Imam
Baqir (A.S.) said:
He is far greater than the explanation of the
wise, and far beyond
the reach of discriminative knowledge ('ilm daqiq).
Similarly, one who believes that He will be seen
by His creatures on the Day of Judgement is an unbeliever. even
though he does not liken Allah to anyone in appearance. Such
pretenders have merely accepted the letter of the Qur'an and the
hadith without using their intelligence. Indeed, they have chosen to
ignore their intelligence, for they have not taken note of the use
of figures of speech which the nature of language necessitates. Thus
they have misunderstood the true meaning of the Quar'an and the
hadith.
6. Doctrine of Divine
Unity (tawhid)
We believe that the Unity of Allah (tawhid) must
be in all respects, just as for His Unity of Essence (tawhid dhati)
we believe that Allah must be One in His Essence and in the
.Necessity of His Existence (wujub alwujud). Secondly, His Essence
must be one with His various attributes, as we shall explain below.
Likewise, nothing is similar in its attributes to Him. His Knowledge
and Ability are unparalleled and He has no partner in Creation nor
in Providing for His creatures; therefore none is like Him in any of
His Perfections. Thirdly, His Unity must exist in the worship of
Him, and worship of any other than Him is not permitted. Nothing
must be made a partner to Him in worship, whether the worship be
obligatory (e.g. salat) or not (e.g. du'a'). One who ascribes a
partner to Him in worship is a polytheist, like one who pretends to
be worshipping for the sake of Allah but is in fact worshipping for
the sake of some other being. In the eyes of Islam he is akin to an
idolator, and both of them are polytheists.
However, pilgrimages to sacred place, such as the
graves of the Holy Prophet (S.A.) or the Imams (A.S.), and mourning
are not kinds of polytheism, as some people who have attacked the
Shi'a have alleged.
These people have not looked to the reason behind the pilgrimages,
for they are a way of approaching near to Allah through good deeds,
in the same way as we can approach near to Allah by the performance
of such good acts as visiting the sick, escorting a funeral,
visiting our brothers in Islam and helping poor Muslims. For
example, visiting a sick person is a good act through which a
believer obtains nearness to Allah. It is not for the glorification
of the sick person himself; therefore it is not an act of
polytheism. In the same way, other good acts, such as pilgrimage,
mourning, attending a funeral and meeting with our brothers are not
kinds of polytheism. Moreover, it is known from religious
jurisprudence ('ilm al-fiqh) that pilgrimage and mourning are among
the good deeds of the religion, but this is not a place to go into
an exposition of this. In brief, these actions are not a kind of
polytheism as some people suppose, neither is the intention behind
them that of worshipping the Imams (A.S.). Rather, their meaning is
to bring the deeds of the Imams (A.S.) to life again, to renew their
memory in the minds of the people and to glorify the rites of the
religion.
And whosoever venerates the rites of the
religion, that is of the godliness of their hearts. (22;32)
It has been shown in the law (shar') that these
acts are mustahabb. If a man performs these actions with the
intention of pleasing Allah, he deserves to be rewarded for them.
7. Doctrine of the Attributes of Allah
We believe that Allah's primary, positive
attributes (as-sifat ath thubutiyyah al-haqiqiyyah), which we call
the attributes of Beauty and Perfection (al-jamal wa al-kamal), such
as Omniscience ('ilm), Omnipotence (qudrah), Self-Sufficiency
(ghina), Divine Will (iradah), Everlasting Life (hay'ah), are
identical with His Being and are not in addition to Him, and that
His attributes are not apart from His Being.
Thus His Omnipotence is dependent on His Everlasting Life, and His
Everlasting Life is dependent on His Omnipotence. He is Powerful
because He is Living, and He is Living because He is Powerful. In
fact, there is no duality either between Him and His attributes, or
between the attributes of perfection themselves; they must be
considered as a unity. They differ in their meaning and their sense,
but not in their substance and existence. For, if they differed in
their substance, and given that they are eternal in the same way as
is His Essence, it would become necessary to assume that the
Self-Existence of Allah had number, and the very foundation of
tawhid would be destroyed.
However, the positive attributes other than the
attributes of perfection (the secondary, positive attributes,
as-sifat ath-thubutiyyah al idafyyah), such as those of being the
Creator (khaliqiyyah), the Provider (raziqiyyah), being Without
Beginning (taqaddum) and being the First Cause ('illiyyah), are all
contained within one attribute which is His Self-Subsistence
(qayyumiyyah), and we extract these other attributes from the
central attribute when we observe the several effects (at har) of
its manifestation (e.g. when we observe His Self-Subsistence in its
Creating aspect, we call Him the Creator).
In contrast to this, negative attributes, which
are called attributes of Majesty (jalal), are contained in only one
negative attribute which is the negation of the possibility (imkan)
of these things. This means that He has no body, no appearance, no
movement, nor is He motionless; He has no heaviness, nor any
lightness, etc.; in reality He has no imperfection. The result of
the negation of these possibilities is a return to the Necessity of
His Being (wujub al-wujud), which is one of the positive attributes
of perfection. So the negative attributes of Majesty ultimately
refer back to the positive attributes of perfection, and Allah is
One in all respects; there is no number in His Holy Existence, and
there is nothing compound in His Essence.
It is not surprising that some persons, accepting
that the positive attributes are, as it were, reflected in the
negative attributes, but failing to understand that Allah's
attributes are One with His Essence, have imagined, in order to
reassure themselves of the Unity of Allah, that the positive
attributes depend on the negative ones. However, in this they have
committed a great wrong, for they suppose that Allah's Essence,
which is Absolute Being without the possibility of imperfection, is
complete negation and therefore non-existence.
Neither is it surprising that some persons say
that His positive attributes are in addition to (idafah) His
Essence, therefore saying that His attributes are pre-existent like
His Essence, the result being that they are partners of His Being.
Similarly, others say that Allah is a compound of His attributes,
but Allah is far above these things. As the first Imam, Amir
al-Mu'minin, 'Ali (A.S.) said:
The perfection of His purity is to deny Him
attributes, because every attribute is a proof that it is
different from that to which it is attributed, and everything to
which something is attributed is different from the attribute.
Thus, whoever attaches attributes to Allah recognises His like,
and whoever recognises His like regards Him as two, and whoever
regards Him as two recognises parts for Him, and whoever
recognises parts for Him has mistaken Him. (Nahj al-Balaghah,
Khutbah 1)
8. Doctrine of the Justice of Allah
We believe that one of Allah's positive
attributes is that He is Just beyond all injustice ('adil ghayr
zalim). He does not treat His creatures without justice, nor does He
rule them unfairly or cruelly, He rewards His obedient servants and
punishes those who fall into sin. He does not compel His servants to
do things which are not within their capabilities, nor does he
punish them for more than the sins they have committed.
We believe that He does not omit to do any good
act, nor does He perform an evil one, because it is 1 -n His power
to do every good act and to abstain from every evil one. For, since
He knows the excellence of good and the badness of evil, He is not
constrained to leave what is good and to do what is evil. Again,
since doing good cannot harm Him, there is no reason for Him not to
do it. Moreover, since evil is not constrained upon Him, He is not
forced to do evil. But Allah is Wise and His works must display His
Wisdom, and they must be arranged in the best possible way.
Now, suppose that He treats a creature with
cruelty or commits an evil, then it must be because of one of four
reasons. (1) He is ignorant of the action, and does not know that it
is evil; (2) He knows what He does, but He has been compelled to do
it, and is unable to desist from it; (3) it is necessary for Him to
do it, although He is aware that it is evil, but He is not compelled
to do it; (4) He does it at His pleasure, without cause, or as an
amusement, although He is neither ignorant of it, nor constrained to
do it, and neither is it necessary for Him to do it.
Each of these is an impossibility for Allah, as
each one entails a deficiency in Him. But He is Absolute Perfection;
therefore we must say that He is glorified from oppression and from
doing what is evil.
Nevertheless, there are Muslims who say that
Allah can do evil. They say that Allah can punish the obedient and
bring the evildoers and the unbelievers into paradise. They also say
that Allah can order His servants to perform actions which are
beyond their capabilities and endurance, and, at the same time, that
He can punish them for not doing those things. In short, they say
that Allah can be an oppressor, can do what is in error, can deceive
His servants, and do things which are without interest, purpose or
benefit, because
He is not asked about that which He has done, but
they will be asked. (21;23)
Let it be known that this is blasphemy concerning
Allah for He has said in His Book, the Qur'an:
Allah does not desire injustice for (His)
servants. (40;31)
and
Allah does not love corruption. (2;205)
and
We did not create the heavens and the earth and
all that is between them in jest. (21;16)
and
I have not created the jinn and mankind except to
serve Me. (51;56)
and He has said similar things in other verses.
Glory be to Thee Who did not create without aim.
(3;190)
9. Doctrine of the
Commands of Allah
We believe that Allah does not command His
servants without there being evidence for the command, nor does He
require them to do that which they cannot endure or which they do
not understand, because it would be an injustice to give a command
to somebody who is unable to do it or who has not been warned even
though he had previously carried out his duties. However, somebody
who is ignorant and has failed to carry out his obligations to Allah
is in error for his omission and he will be punished, for it is
incumbent on all mankind to learn the necessary duties of his din.
We believe that Allah has commanded his servants
and given them laws for all that is in their interest to know, and
that He guides them to the ways of everlasting goodness and
prosperity, and that He similarly makes them tremble before that
which is against their interest and that which is harmful to them.
This is an example of His Grace and Mercy (lutf wa rahmah) towards
His servants, who are unaware of most of what is in their interest,
and do not know what is harmful for them.
Allah is the Beneficent, the Merciful in His
Essence. His Mercy and His Grace are of His Absolute Perfection and
One with His Essence, and it is impossible for them to be separated
from Him. The disobedience of the disobedient does not cause Him to
withhold His Mercy and Grace from His creatures.
10. Doctrine of al-qada' (Predetermination) and al-qadar (Divine Decree)
The sect of the Mujabbirah maintained that Allah
was entirely responsible for the actions of His creatures; that he
forced them to do evil and then punished them for it, and forced
them to do good and then rewarded them for it. They maintained that
the actions of people were really His actions, but that they were
figuratively attributed to people because humans are the locus of
Allah's activity. The reason fur this view was that the Mujabbirah
denied natural causes (as-sababiyyah at- tabi'iyyah) between things,
and said that Allah was the real cause (as-sabab al-haqiqi). there
being no other cause besides Him.
They denied natural causes between things because
they supposed that this followed from the necessity of believing
that Allah is the Creator without any partner. But one who has made
such a claim has in truth attributed injustice to Allah.
Another sect, the Mufawwidah, maintained that
Allah had given full power to His creatures for their actions, and
that the power, foreordaining and decree of Allah had no part to
play. The reason they held this belief was because they considered
that the attribution of man's actions to Allah necessitates
attributing imperfection to Him, and that all existing things have
particular causes (asbab al-khasah), and that this can be traced
back to the cause of causes, the first cause, which is Allah.
However, those who made this claim had separated Allah from His
Power, and had given Him partners in His Creation.
Now our belief in this matter follows the
teachings of our Imams, that the reality is between these two
extremes, a middle way between the two opinions, something which
cannot be understood by these disputants in theology (ahl al-kalam)
who have gone some to one extreme, some to the other. Knowledge and
philosophy were unable to clarify this matter until after many
centuries, so it is not surprising that those who are not familiar
with the wisdom of our' Imams (A.S.) and their sayings suppose that
our belief comes from an investigation of the most recent western
philosophers, whereas the truth is that our Imams were ahead of them
by ten centuries in this matter.
Imam Sadiq (A.S.) truly said in clarifying the
middle way that:
There is no compulsion (jabr) (from Allah), nor
is there absolute delegation of power (tafwid) (from Allah to man),
but the real position is between the two extremes.
What marvellous significance lies in this saying,
and how exact is its meaning! It points out that our actions are,
from one angle, really our own actions, and we are the natural cause
so that they are under our control and subject to our free choice;
and from another angle they are decreed by Allah and are subject to
His Power, because it is He Who gives existence. He does not compel
us in our actions in such a way that He wrongs us by punishing us
for evil deeds, for we have the power and the choice in what we do.
But He has not delegated to us the creation of our actions so that
they become beyond His Power, for to Him belongs Creation, Judgement
and Command. He is Powerful over all things, and He has complete
authority over people.
For, after all, our belief is that
predetermination (qada') and Divine decree (qadar) are one of the
secrets of Allah, and if someone can understand them as they should
be understood, without going to either of the extremes, he is
correct. Otherwise, it is not necessary for him to force himself to
understand them exactly, for he may then be lead astray, and his
belief may be corrupted. It is one of the most difficult topics in
philosophy which can only be understood by a few people, and because
of this many theologians (mutakalimun) have been led astray.
The obligation to arrive at an understanding of this matter is an
obligation which is too great for the understanding of an ordinary
man. It is enough for someone to believe in this in a general way
following the sayings of our Imams (A.S.): that it is a reality
between the two extremes, i.e. that there is neither compulsion nor
absolute free-will. Anyway, this matter is not one in which it is
necessary to have faith based on investigation and profound
thinking.
11. Doctrine of bada'
The meaning of bada' for a man is this: the
appearance (bada' literally means 'appearance') of an idea about
some action which the man did not have previously, in such a way
that it changes his intention to do that action. That is to say that
something happens which alters his understanding and knowledge about
that action, so that he conceives the intention of leaving the work
after he had previously intended to do it. This is due to man's
ignorance concerning what is of benefit to him, and because he comes
to regret doing or having to do what he had intended to do.
Bada' in this sense is impossible for Allah,
because ignorance and imperfection are the cause of it, and this is
impossible for Allah. The Imamites do not believe in this. Imam
Sadiq (A.S.) said:
Someone who supposes that bada' occurs to Allah
about some matter, causing Him to regret, is considered by us to be
an unbeliever in Allah (kafir).
And he also said:
I will keep at a distance from me someone who
supposes that bada' occurs to Allah about some matter which He had
not realised previously.
Some traditions have been related from our Imams
which have caused people to suppose that we believe in bada' in the
sense described above. For example, Imam Sadiq (A.S.) Said:
There was no bada' for Allah like the bada' in
the case of my son Isma'il.
Because of such traditions, some writers of
certain Islamic sects have accused the Imamites of belief in bada',
attacking our group and the way of the Household of the Prophet (ahl
al-bayt), and using this supposed belief to denounce the Shi'a.
The correct aspect of this question is according
to what Allah revealed in His Book:
Allah blots out, and He establishes whatsoever He
will; and with Him is the Essence of the Book (13;39)
And the meaning of this is that Allah makes
something appear on the tongue of the Prophet or his wali or in some
other way according to the situation because of some benefit which
calls for this revelation, then he abolishes that revelation so that
it becomes other than what it was before, although Allah knew about
this from the beginning. We can see an example of this in the
incident of Isma'il when his father Ibrahim saw in his dream that he
was slaughtering his son. The meaning of the saying of Imam Sadiq is
that Allah has not revealed any matter as He had done in the case of
Isma'il (the son of Imam Sadiq), by taking his life before He took
his father's. This was so that people would understand that Isma'il
was not the Imam, although it had appeared in the situation as if he
were, because he was thc eldest son.
And similar to this meaning of bada' is the
abrogation of previous shara'i' (pl. of shari'ah) by the arrival of
the shari'ah of our Prophet (S.A.), and even the abrogation of some
of the commandments which were brought by Muhammad (S.A.)
12. Doctrine of
Religious Ordinances
We believe that Allah has sent His ordinances in
the interest of His servants: that whatever is greatly to our
advantage he has made incumbent upon us (wajib); that whatever is to
our disadvantage he has forbidden to us (haram); and that whatever
is to our advantage, but not greatly so, He has made mnustahabb, and
has recommended us to do it.
And this is of His Justice and Mercy.
It is clear that Allah must give His commandments
to coyer any eventuality, and that nothing can be found which is
outside the scope of His commandments, although we may not be in a
position to understand this.
We also say that it is impossible for Him to
order something of which a part is evil, or to prohibit something of
which a part is good. But some Muslims say that evil is what Allah
prohibits, and good is what He commands, and that therefore there is
no intrinsic good or evil in the acts themselves.
This is not in accord with reason, however, as
the same people also say that Allah can do things which are evil;
thus He can order what includes evil and prohibit what includes
good. It has previously been mentioned that this opinion is
erroneous, because it requires that Allah is ignorant and unable to
do certain things; far be He glorified and exalted above what they
say!
In short, the correct belief is that there is
neither interest nor benefit to Allah in His commandments to us, but
that the interest and benefit is entirely for ourselves. It is
impossible for Allah to command what is without interest or benefit,
or to forbid that which contains no evil, because none of His laws
are without aim, and He has no need of His servants.