13.
Doctrine of Prophethood
We believe that prophethood is a Divine duty and
a mission from Allah; He appoints to it those whom He selects from
among His good servants, from those who are exalted among mankind.
He sends them to the rest of humanity to be a guide to what is of
benefit to them and is in their interest in this world and the next;
to purify them from immorality, evil deeds and harmful customs, and
also to teach people wisdom and knowledge and the ways of happiness
and goodness until they attain to the perfection for which they were
created, and reach the highest position in both worlds.
We believe that the Grace of Allah (lutf)
requires that He send His messengers to His servants to guide them,
to carry out reforming work, and to be intermediaries (sufara',
pl. of safir) between Allah and his gerents (khulafa',
pl. of khalifah). For we believe that Allah does not allow
mankind to appoint, nominate or select a person as a prophet; indeed
only Allah can choose and appoint someone as a prophet, because:
Allah knoweth best with whom to place His
message. (6;125)
It follows that people have no right to dispute
over those whom Allah sends as guides, bringers of good tidings and
warners of what is to come, nor over that which they bring, i.e. the
commandments and religious laws.
14. Prophecy is from
Divine Grace (lutf)
Man is a changeable creature, a complex structure
containing his being, his nature, soul and intelligence. Every
individual personality is similarly of a complex nature, in which
there are causes of good and evil. On the one hand, man has been
created with emotions and instincts, such as self-love, desire and
pride; he obeys the call of his desires, has a natural disposition
to show his superiority over others, to own things, and to take for
himself that which belongs to others; he rushes recklessly at the
objects and ornaments of this world. As Allah has said:
Lo! Man is in the way of loss. (103;2)
and:
Surely man waxes insolent, for he thinks himself
self-sufficient. (96;6&7)
and also:
Surely the soul of man incites to evil. (12;53)
There are other verses which clearly talk about
and point to the desires and feelings of the human soul which was
created with man.
On the other hand, Allah has given intelligence (aql)
to man to guide him to what is in his interest and to the way of
goodness, and He has also bestowed on him a conscience which
prevents him from doing evil and oppressing others, and which also
upbraids him when he has sinned.
There is continual enmity and struggle between
man's desires and his intelligence. One whose intelligence overcomes
his desires will attain the highest position among mankind and a
perfect spirituality, but one whose desires to conquer his
intelligence will be among the great losers, the lowest of mankind
and comparable in nature to the beasts.
The desires and their legions are stronger than
intelligence and its armies, and this is why most people go astray
and wander far from the straight path of guidance, through obeying
their desires and answering the call of their emotions. As is said
in the Qur'an:
And though thou try much, most men will not
believe. (12;103)
Besides, man is reluctant and unaware of all the
facts and secrets of the world around him, and since he is also
ignorant of his own self, how can he know all that will make him
prosperous and what will make him suffer. how can he know everything
that is in his own interest or in the interests of mankind as a
whole? Whenever he advances with a new discovery, he sees his own
ignorance and realises that he knows nothing. It is because of this
that Man has an insistent need for someone to show him the clear,
straight path to prosperity and to give support to his intelligence,
so that it may overcome its unruly, persistent enemy, and so that he
may prepare to fight his emotions.
Man is desperately in need of someone to help him
to the path of goodness and happiness, especially when his emotions
deceive him, disguising his bad actions as good and his good actions
as bad, as a result of which his intelligence is confused and cannot
find the right path to prosperity and distinguish between the real
good and the real evil.
Everyone of us has succumbed on this battlefield, either consciously
or unconsciously. except the man whom Allah protects. It is
difficult for an enlightened, civilised man to attain the way of
goodness and happiness, so how much more difficult is it for an
ignorant, unschooled man!
When all people co-operate and consult with one
another and deliberate together they are still unable to understand
what is useful and what is harmful for themselves and for society.
So Allah through His Grace and Mercy for mankind sends them a
messenger. The Qur'an says:
He it is who sent among the unlettered ones a
messenger of their own, to recite unto them His signs, and to purify
them and to teach them the Book and Wisdom. (62;2)
and he (the messenger) warns them concerning what
is evil and gives glad tidings to them about what is good for their
welfare.
(The giving of) this Grace is necessary for
Allah, because it is a sign of His Perfection, and He is Kind and
Generous to His servants. When a man deserves His Mercy and Grace,
Allah must grant it to him, because there is no deficiency or
withholding in the Being of Allah. The meaning of "necessary for
Allah" is not that anyone forces Him to act in this way and that it
is necessary for Him to obey, but it means that this is an
inseparable attribute of Allah, i.e. Mercy and Grace cannot be
separated from Him, in the same way as we say that His Existence is
inherent in Him, or that He is Necessarily Existent, i.e. His
Existence is co-existent (with Him) and cannot be separated (from
Him).
15. Doctrine of
Prophetic Miracles
We believe that when Allah appoints someone as a
leader and a messenger for His creatures, He must point him out to
them. In the perfection of His Grace and Bounty, He must give His
prophet some evidence and a testimony for His message to show to the
people, and this must be of a kind that is only within the
capability of the Creator of all beings and Provider for all
creatures, and beyond the ability of man.
This evidence He hands through His messenger, so that He may
introduce him to humanity, and this evidence we call a miracle. It
is also necessary that the prophet should manifest his miracle to
people when he calls them to his prophecy, and similarly it should
be clear (i.e. all people should know that it is beyond the ability
of man), and such that all men of knowledge and all the experts of
his time are unable to perform anything like it, much less the
ordinary people. Also, the miracle must coincide with the time of
his claim to prophecy so as to constitute evidence of his calling.
When the men of knowledge and the experts are
unable to repeat the miracle, people can understand that it is
beyond human ability and that it is 'supernatural', and thus that
the prophet, through a spiritual relationship with the Provider of
all beings, is above mankind. Consequently, when such a prophet
brings his miracle and calls people to his prophecy, it is incumbent
upon all to accept his call, believe in his message, and obey his
command; but some shall believe and some shall deny him.
We therefore see that the miracles of each
prophet are in accordance with the important arts and sciences of
his time. For example, the miracle of Musa (A.S.) was a rod which
swallowed up the lies of the magicians, for magic was the most
popular art of his time. His rod destroyed what the magicians had
done, and they understood that it was beyond their ability and their
skill, and humanly impossible, and that science and art were
worthless in comparison with it. Also the miracle of 'Isa (A.S.) was
his curing of those born blind and leprous and his restoring to life
the dead, because he lived in times when medical science was well
thought of among the people, and scientists and physicians held high
esteem in society. But all their science could not equal his
miracle.
The miracle of our Prophet, Muhammad (S.A.), is
the glorious Qur'an, which silenced by its eloquence and fluency all
those who were eloquent, at a time when rhetoric was the art of the
day and orators were held in high esteem. The Qur'an humiliated and
astonished them, warning them that they were unable to produce
anything like it, and they surrendered to it. The occasion for their
inability was when the Qur'an challenged them to produce ten
comparable surahs, but they could not; then it challenged them to
produce one such surah, and they could not. We know that they failed
the challenge to produce a surah like those contained in the Qur'an,
and we know that they took refuge in fighting with the sword instead
of the tongue. We understand that the Qur'an is a miracle and that
Muhammad (S.A.) brought it with him calling the people to his
message. So we know that he is Allah's messenger, and that he
brought the truth.
16. Doctrine of the
Infallibility of the Prophets
We believe that all the prophets are infallible,
and also that the Imams (A.S.) (the successors to the Prophet of
Islam) are infallible, but some non-Shi'a Muslims do not believe in
the infallibility of the prophets, let alone of the Imams.
Infallibility means purity from all sins, both major and minor
ones[1], and from mistakes and forgetfulness. It is necessary that a
prophet should not even do what is contrary to good manners.
that is, he should not behave vulgarly, for
example by eating in the street, by laughing aloud, or by doing
anything which may be unacceptable to public opinion.
The reason for the necessity of the infallibility
of a prophet is that if he commits a sin or mistake, or is forgetful
or something similar, we have to choose between two alternatives:
either we obey his sins and mistakes, in which case, in the view of
Islam, we do wrong, or we must not obey his sins and mistakes, which
too is wrong, because this is contrary to the idea of prophethood
where obedience is necessary; besides, if everything he says or does
has the possibility of being either right or wrong, then it is
impossible for us to follow him. The result is that the benefit of
his mission is lost; it becomes unnecessary, and the prophet becomes
like ordinary people whose acts and speech do not have the excellent
worth that we seek, with the result that there will be no obedience
and his actions will be unreliable.
The same reason is adduced for the infallibility
of the Imams (A.S.), because we believe that the Imam is appointed
by Allah as the Prophet's representative (khalifah) to guide
mankind. This will be explained in the section on the Imamate.
17. Doctrine of the
Attributes of the Prophet
Just as we believe in a prophet's infallibility,
so also we believe that he must be endowed with the most perfect
human attributes - bravery (ash-shaja'ah), diplomacy (as-siyasah).
sagacity (at-tadbir), patience (as-sabr), intelligence
(al-fitnah) and quick-wittedness (adh-dhaka'), so that
there is no-one who excels him in such qualities. Otherwise, it is
not fit th at he should lead people and administer the affairs of
the whole world.
He must also be of good descendency, honest, truthful and free from
all vices, from before the beginning of his prophecy as well, so
that people can trust in him and so that he may deserves this great,
Divinely-given position.
18. Doctrine of the
Prophets and their Books
We believe, in general, that all prophets follow
the right path, are infallible and pure, and that to deny their
prophecy, to revile or deride them, results in a loss of faith and
insincerity in belief For the denial of them entails the denial of
our Prophet Muhammad (S.A.) who spoke concerning them and confirmed
them.
As for the prophets whose names and shara'i'
(pl. of shari'ah) are well-known, i.e. Adam, Nuh, Ibrahim,
Dawud, Sulayman, Musa, 'Isa and others that are mentioned in the
Qur'an, we must believe in each of them. In truth, one who denies
one of them has denied them all, and he has especially denied the
prophethood of our own Prophet.
Likewise, we must believe in their books and in
what has been revealed to them. But the Torah ( Turah - the
Book of Musa (A.S.)) and the Gospels such as we have them in our
hands now have been proved not to be what was revealed to Musa and
'Isa (A.S.). some persons who were confused by their own desires and
by covetousness have changed them by adding to them, so that most of
them, or all of them, were compiled after their time by some of the
followers of the prophets Musa and 'Isa (A.S.).
19. Doctrine of Belief
In Islam
We believe that:
The true religion with Allah as Islam. (3;18)
and that it is the true. Divine shari'ah
that has abrogated all previous shara'i'. It is the most
perfect shari'ah, according with man's happiness and
containing all that is in his interest, in this world and in the
next. It call never become obsolete. and will last for ever; it is
not changeable and will not be transformed in any way; it contains
all that mankind needs: individual, social and political rules. For
it is the last shari'ah, and there is no hope for another
religion to come and reform humanity, which is sinking into
oppression and corruption. Therefore the day must come when the
Islamic religion will become strong and its justice and laws will be
spread over the entire world. When all the people of the world act
correctly in accordance with all the laws of Islam. peace and
prosperity will increase and spread among mankind, and man will
attain the highest peak which he can imagine: well-being, dignity,
plenitude, contentment and ideal morality will arise, and
oppression. poverty and indigence will disappear from the surface of
the earth to be replaced by love and brotherhood among men.
The reason that at the present time we see such a
shameful condition among the people who call themselves Muslims is
that their behaviour, from the very beginning, has not been truly in
accordance with Islamic law. This dishonourable state has continued
and has become worse and worse. The acceptance of Islam has not been
the cause of this disgraceful situation of backwardness among
Muslims. On the contrary, it has been caused by their disobedience
of its teachings, their negligence of Islamic laws, the prevalence
of oppression and the enmity of their rulers towards the poor and of
certain groups towards the common people, and this it is that has
paralysed their progress, weakened them, broken their spirit and
brought calamity and tragedy upon them. Allah has destroyed them by
their sins:
That is because Allah never changes the Grace He
has bestowed on any people until they first change what is in
themselves. (8;53)
Thus does Allah treat His creatures.
Lo! the guilty never are successful. (10;17)
In truth, thy Lord would never destroy their
cities unjustly while as yet their folk were doing right. (11;117)
Even thus is the grasp of the Lord when He grasps
the cities while they are doing evil. Lo! His grasp is painful,
terrible. (11;102)
How can we expect the religion to save the
community from the depths of perdition, when the teachings of the
religion are just ink on paper and people do not act one little bit
in accordance with them?
The basic foundations of Islam are: faith in
Allah, honesty, truthful ness, sincerity. good behaviour and
generosity, and a Muslim must want for his brother what he wants for
himself But Muslims left this all behind them a long time ago.
Daily we see them (the Muslims) dispersing into
various sects and groups. competing for the things of this world,
each one attacking and accusing the other of impiety for unknown or
imaginary reasons, or for useless purposes, ignoring Islam and the
interests of both themselves and society. Thus do they dispute: Is
the Qur'an created or not? Have paradise and hell been created or
will they be created (in the future)? and so on. The nature of these
disputes shows that they have deviated from the right path which
they have been shown, and are heading towards ruin and destruction,
and day by day they deviate further. Ignorance and perversion
surround them, but they Occupy themselves with useless and
superficial matters, superstitious and imaginary things. Fighting,
bickering and boasting cause them to descend further into the
bottomless abyss. At the same time, the West, ever vigilant, but a
persistent enemy of Islam, has become powerful and colonised Islamic
territory, while Muslims remain unaware and half asleep. Only Allah
can know the extent and the end of these misfortunes.
In truth the Lord would never destroy their
cities unjustly while as yet their folk were doing right. (11;117)
There is no alternative for assuring the Success
of the Muslims either today or tomorrow, but for them to wake up,
consider well what they do, educate themselves and their generation
by correct Islamic teachings and thus remove the oppression and
cruelty. Inn this way can they save . It is their responsibility to
establish themselves from this great calamity, justice throughout
the world, after having done away with oppression and cruelty, just
as was affirmed by Allah and His Messenger. For their religion is
the last religion, and the world can not be set right again without
it. Of course, people are in need of an Imam to erase imaginings,
innovations and deviations from Islam, and to save mankind and
rescue them from complete corruption, continual oppression and
enmity, and contempt for morality and human life. May Allah hasten
his reappearance.
20. Doctrine of the
Lawgiver of Islam
We believe that the message of Islam is contained
in the person of Muhammad ibn 'Abdillah (S.A.), and that he is the
last prophet, the Seal of the Prophets, the Chief among messengers,
and the best of them, just as he is at the apex of all humanity, and
none can compare with him in excellence and grace, generosity and
intellect, and no-one can approach him in his virtuousness. Verily
he has a lofty moral behaviour, and no-one will be like him up to
the Day of Judgement
21. Belief in the Qur'an
We believe that the Qur'an was Divinely inspired,
and revealed by Allah on the tongue of His honourable Prophet,
making clear everything, an everlasting miracle. Man is unable to
write anything like it because of its eloquence, clarity, truth and
knowledge, and no alteration can be made to it. The Qur'an we have
now is exactly what was sent to the Prophet, and anyone who claims
otherwise is either an evil-doer, a mere sophist or else a person in
error, and all of them have gone astray, because it is the speech of
Allah, and:
Falsehood cannot come at it from before it or
from behind. (41;42)
One of the testimonies to the miraculous nature
of the Qur'an is that. as time moves on and the arts and sciences
advance, it remains as fresh and harmonious as ever, its supreme
aims and ideals preserved. There can be no grounds for dispute with
it, nor does it contradict true scientific facts, and there is
nothing in it contrary to positive philosophical thinking. On the
contrary, it is the books of scientists and even the greatest of
philosophers, at the pinnacle of learning, which contain at least a
few trivialities and contradictions and even incorrect assertions.
Moreover, with advances in scientific research and with modern
scientific theories, even the greatest philosophers of Greece, such
as Socrates, Plato and Aristotle, whom all those who have come after
have recognised as the fathers of science and the masters of
thought, have been shown to have made some errors.
We also believe that we must respect and give
dignity to the Glorious Qur'an, and this both in word and in deed.
Therefore, it must not be defiled intentionally, not even one of its
letters, and it must not be touched by one who is not tahir.
It is said in the Qur'an:
None can touch it save the purified. (56;79)
This subject is dealt with in books of Islamic
law.
Neither is it permitted to burn it or to be
impious towards it by any behaviour which is deemed to be insulting,
such as throwing it, making it unclean, or putting one's foot on it;
nor is it permitted to put it in a filthy place. If someone
intentionally does any of these things or anything similar, he is
not a believer in the Qur'an and its sanctity, and he is considered
to be an unbeliever. In fact he has rejected the Lord of all the
worlds.
22. The Proof of Islam
and the Previous Religions
If someone (a non-Muslim) should argue with us
and ask us for reasons to demonstrate the truth of Islam, we could
prove it through the eternal miracle of the Qur'an, and by reference
to its miraculous nature, as we have explained before.
Here, however, it is our intention to satisfy our
own minds, in the event that we should wish to find assurance
concerning the truth of Islam; for sometimes it happens that such a
question arises on the mind of a liberal-thinking man, when he
desires to strengthen his faith.
As for the previous religions such as Judaism and
Christianity, there is no way to prove the truth of them or to
satisfy ourselves or anyone else who doubts them, without there
being faith in Islam; for they have no eternal miracle like the
Qur'an. And the miracles of the former prophets which their
followers bring forward as evidence are unacceptable, because the
verity of the narration is suspect. The books of the former prophets
which have been handed down to us, that is to say the books which
are related to these prophets such as the Torah and the Gospels, are
in no way an eternal miracle which can be put forward as a
convincing reason for the truth of their religions, which,
nevertheless, have been confirmed by Islam.
It is clear that when we accept and believe in
Islam, we must also believe in whatever it has brought and
confirmed, and one of its teachings is the prophethood of many
previous prophets, as we have described above. It therefore follows
that a Muslim, after he has accepted the teachings of Islam, is not
required to evaluate the truth of Christianity or Judaism or other
such religions, because belief in Islam necessarily entails belief
in the former religions and prophets. What is more, the Muslim does
not need to verify the truth of the miracles of the former prophets.
However, if someone investigates the Islamic
religion, but is not convinced of it, it is incumbent on him, as a
rational necessity, to evaluate the truth of Christianity, because
it is the last religion previous to Islam.
Then, if he is not convinced by Christianity he must consider
Judaism, because it is the religion previous to Christianity and
Islam, and he must continue in this way until he finds a religion
about whose truth he feels certain.
By similar reasoning, it is clear that someone
who has grown up believing in Judaism or Christianity must consider
other religions to which people have been called by a prophet who
came after their own prophet. For example, the Jews must evaluate
Islam and Christianity according to what was said previously about
the necessity to consider religions rationally, and Christians must
consider the truth of Islam. It follows that neither of them can be
excused for believing in their own religions while ignoring the
subsequent religions because there is nothing in Judaism or
Christianity which could contradict these religions, for neither
Musa (A.S.) nor 'Isa (A.S.) stated that no prophet would come after
them. It is surprising how Christians and Jews can be sure in their
belief and in their religions without considering the truth of the
subsequent and last religion.
Wisdom dictates that they weigh the truth of the
subsequent religion or religions. And if the truth is not
established, then they should continue with their original beliefs.
The Muslim, on the other hand, as we stated earlier, because of his
belief in Islam, has no need to consider the truth of the previous
religions or of any future ones. As for the previous religions.
Islam has confirmed them; however, the Muslim should not follow
their commandments or their books, because Islam has superseded
them. And as regards future religions, the Holy Prophet of Islam,
Muhammad (A.S.) said:
No prophet will come after me.
Since in the eyes of a Muslim the Prophet is
honest and truthful, and, as Allah has said:
Nor does he speak from his own desire. This is
nought but a revelation revealed. (53;3-4)
there is no need to prove the falsity of any new
religion.
Now it is the duty of a Muslim, when a long
period has elapsed since the time of the Prophet, and many opinions,
beliefs and sects have arisen, to choose the way which he can be
sure will guide him to the commandments of Allah as they were sent
to Muhammad (S.A.), because the Muslim must carry out all the
commandments as they were revealed to the Prophet. So how can he be
sure that these commandments are the same as were revealed to the
Prophet? Just as Muslims are divided into different sects on the
basis of their opinions, so their prayer, worship and behaviour
vary. What, then, should he do? What school should he follow in his
worship and in such matters as marriage, divorce, inheritance,
buying and selling, punishment, blood-money and the like?
It is not correct that he should follow his
father, family or friends, for he must be certain of what he
believes in. There can be no insincerity, partiality or fanaticism
in religion. He is obliged to select rationally the way he believes
to be the best, so as to be sure of his religious obligations and
his responsibility towards Allah, and so that Allah will not punish
him or reproach him for what he has done, believing it to be
correct. Also, he should no listen to those who deride him for
following the true path. Allah has said:
Does man think that he is to be left aimless.
(75;36)
Also he has said:
Nay, man shall be a clear proof against himself.
(75;14)
and
Lo! this is a reminder, that whosoever will, may
choose a way unto his Lord. (76;29)
The first question he must ask himself is whether
the way of the Household of the Prophet, or another way, should be
followed. Then if he chooses the way of the Household of the
Prophet, he must choose between the ithna 'ashariyyyah and
other sects. Or, if he choose the Sunni path, he must choose which
of the four madhahib (pl. of madhhab) he should
follow. All these questions arise for a liberal-minded person, so he
should keep a clear mind and not be confused.
Let us therefore consider the Imamate, on which
the beliefs of the ithna 'ashariyyah depend.