Altercations
On various occasions, al-Mamoon tried to force Imam al-Rida (A.S.) into
the arena of complex debates with various groups and creeds. He used to
conduct scientific and intellectual sessions to which he invited giant
thinkers, leading scientists, the atheists of the century, and debaters
whose scientific might was feared and before the stubbornness of whose
complex arguments the evidence was muted and due to the fierceness of whose
doubt the proof was weakened. In all such debates, the Imam would come
out victorious over his opponents due to the tremendous power of knowledge
he possessed without forcing himself into the sophistry of arguments to
which some might have resorted in order to demolish the structure of his
opponent's argument and weaken his ability to provide evidence. Rather,
he depended in his debate upon honest arguments in order to prove right
to be right, his miraculous ability of conviction, and his calm stylistic
method.
Al-Nawfali Warns the Imam
Al-Nawfali tried to warn the Imam against attempting to deal with the
debates of such people when the Imam asked him why al-Mamoon had invited
him to debate them, for al-Mamoon had asked the Catholic archbishop, the
High Rabbi, leading Sabians, the Hindu high priest, followers of Zoroaster,
Nestus the Roman medical scientist, and a group of orators, to enter into
a scientific debate with Imam al-Rida (A.S.). He sent Yasir the servant
to the Imam to tell him about the time when the debate would start, requesting
him to attend. When Yasir went out and al-Nawfali was alone with the Imam,
the Imam (A.S.) turned to him and asked him in the form of a dialogue,
"O Nawfali! You are an Iraqi, and the heart of an Iraqi is not severe;
so, what can you gain from causing your cousin to require us to meet with
disbelievers and rhetoricians?" Al-Nawfali answered, "May my life be sacrificed
for yours! He wants to put you to test, and he loves to know how much knowledge
you possess. He has, indeed, built his assumption on a shaky foundation,
and doomed, by God, what he has built." He asked, "And what has he built?"
He answered, "Scholars of kalam and innovators are opposite of the
scholars. A scholar does not deny the undeniable, whereas rhetoricians
and polytheists are people who deny and try to prove what is not true.
If you argue with them and tell them that God is One, they would say, `Prove
His Oneness,' and if you say that Muhammad (S.A.W.) is the Messenger of
God, they would say, `Confirm his Message,' then they would press their
lies on a person while he tries to disprove their lies, and they would
continue to prove that he is mistaken till he abandons his argument; so,
beware of them, may my life be sacrificed for you." He smiled and asked,
"O Nawfali! Do you fear that they will disprove my argument?" He answered,
"No, by God! I have never worried about you, and I hope God will enable
you to have the upper hand over them." The Imam asked again, "O Nawfali!
Would you like to know when al-Mamoon will feel regretful?" He answered,
"Yes." He said, "When he hears me argue with the people of the Torah quoting
their own Torah, with the people of the Gospel (Bible) quoting their own
Gospel, with the people of the Psalms quoting their own Psalms, with Zoroastrians
arguing in their Persian language, with the Romans in their own Latin,
and with rhetoricians using their very rhetoric. So, if I closed all the
avenues of argument in the face of each arguing party and disproved his
claim, making him renounce his statement from its onset and referring to
my own statement, then al-Mamoon would know that he would not achieve what
he aspires. It is then that he will feel regretful; We are God's, and
Unto Him is our return."
Thus does the Imam show that he was taking lightly and was not concerned
about such persons whom al-Mamoon wished to gather together against him
trying to embarrass him with their falsification and arguments which he
hoped might close for the Imam (A.S.) all the avenues of argument. When
the session starts and the Imam (A.S.) is invited to join it, discussion
starts and the Imam (A.S.) starts his debate with the Catholics, making
the Bible his reference to prove his own defense of the Unity of God and
disprove the Godhead of Christ (A.S.) by those who regarded him as a god
besides God. Then he follows with a magnificent discussion proving that
the Bible in circulation today is not the same which God had revealed to
Christ (A.S.) and that it is authored by some of the disciples of Jesus
(A.S.) who are the authors of the four gospels, depending in his argument
on the fact that the details presented by each one of them stand in flagrant
contradiction with those of the other. The Catholic archbishop slipped
into an obvious self-contradiction; for he on one hand sanctified the authors
of the four gospels and held them above lying while, on the other hand,
he admitted to the Imam that they did tell lies about Christ (A.S.).
Then the Imam (A.S.) goes to debate the High Rabbi, scholar of the Jews,
to prove the prophethood of Prophet Muhammad (S.A.W.) from the previously
revealed divine testaments, after which he follows with a very logical
debate. Having argued with him that one of the requirements of a Prophet
was to perform something all other creation are unable to perform, he asked
him about the reason why they, the Jews, refrained from believing into
the miracles of all prophets other than Moses (A.S.) son of Imran (Amram),
and the High Rabbi answered him saying, "We cannot admit the prophethood
of any who professes prophethood except after bringing us knowledge similar
to that brought by Moses." Al-Rida (A.S.) said to him, "Then how come you
admitted the prophethood of other prophets who preceded Moses (A.S.) who
did not split the sea, nor cleave the stones so that twelve springs would
gush forth from it, nor took their hands out shining white as Moses did,
nor did they turn a cane into a snake?!" It was then that the High Rabbi
overcame his stubbornness, submitted to the argument, and admitted that
any supernatural act beyond human capacity was indeed a proof of prophethood.
The Imam (A.S.) asked him then about the reason why they did not believe
in the prophethood of Jesus (A.S.) despite the fact that he brought forth
miracles beyond human capacity such as bringing the dead back to life,
healing those who were born blind and the lepers, and about the reason
why they did not believe in the prophethood of Muhammad (S.A.W.) despite
his bringing an extra-ordinary miracle, that is, the Holy Qur'an while
he was neither a scholar nor a writer. The High Rabbi had no answer at
all.
Then came the turn of the Zoroastrian high priest whom the Imam debated
depending on the priest's belief in the prophethood of Zoroaster. The Zoroastrian
tells the Imam that Zoroaster brought them what no other man had ever brought
them before. "We did not see him," he continues, "but the stories of our
ancestors told us that he legalized for us what no other person before
made legal; so, we followed him." The Imam asked, "You believed in the
stories which came to you about him, so you followed him, didn't you?"
"Yes," he answered. The Imam (A.S.) said, "This is the case with all other
nations. Stories came to them about what the prophets had accomplished,
what Moses (A.S.), Jesus (A.S.), and Muhammad (S.A.W.) had all brought
them, so why did you not believe in any of these prophets, having believed
in Zoroaster through the stories that came to you about him saying that
he brought forth what others did not?"
Imam's Debate With the Sabian
The Zoroastrian high priest had no more to say. The Imam then turned
to the debate's witnesses, having finished debating with the chief representatives
of those creeds, asking anyone else to go ahead and put forth any question
he had, everyone abstained from doing so. It was then that Imran the Sabian,
who was one of the most distinguished scholars of the science of kalam
of his time, approached the Imam (A.S.) and asked him how he could prove
the existence of the Creator, and the discussion between them delved into
the deepest depths of this complex question, while the Imam answered the
man's questions through obvious scientific facts in a gloriously simple
way. Among the questions Imran asked was: "Master! Was the Being known
to Himself by His Own Self?" The Imam said, "Knowledge is acquired by something
which would negate its opposite, and so that the thing itself would be
existing through what it is negated about it, without the existence of
anything which contradicts its existence so that a need arises to negate
that thing about itself by defining what is known about it. Do you understand,
O Imran?" He said, "Yes, by God, master! Tell me, then, by what means did
He come to know what He knew, by a pronoun or by something else?" The Imam
(A.S.) said, "If it had been by a pronoun, would He then find anyway not
to establish for that pronoun a limit where knowledge ends?" Imran answered,
"Yes, He will have to find such way." The Imam then asked him, "Then what
is that pronoun?" Imran could not provide any answer. The Imam (A.S.) said,
"Is it alright if I ask you about the pronoun and you define it by another
pronoun? If you answer in the affirmative, then you would make both your
claim and statement void. O Imran! Ought you not come to know that the
One cannot be described by a pronoun, and would not be described except
by a verb, by deed, by action, and He cannot be expected to be parts and
kinds like human beings?"
Then Imran asked him, "Master! The knowledge I have says that the being
is changed in his essence by his action of creating..." The Imam (A.S.)
said, "Does your statement, O Imran, mean that the being does not in any
way change its essence except when it affects its own essence in a way
which changes it? O Imran! Can you say that the fire changes its own self,
or that the heat burns itself, or have you seen anyone seeing his own vision?"
Imran said, "No, I have not seen that; could you please tell me, master,
is it in that in the creation, or is it the nature of creation in it?"
The Imam (A.S.) said, "Yes, O Imran, He is above all of that; He is not
in the creation, nor is the creation in Him; He is elevated above that,
and bad indeed is your knowledge about Him, and no might except in God.
Tell me about the mirror: are you in it or is it in you? If neither one
of you is in the other, then how did you come to see your own self's reflection
in it?" Imran said, "Through the light between myself and itself." The
Imam (A.S.) said, "Can you see of that light more than what you can see
with your own eyes?" He answered, "Yes." The Imam (A.S.) said to him, "Then
show it to us..." It was then that the man was too baffled to say a word.
The Imam (A.S.) said, "I do not see the light except leading you and the
mirror to come to know each without being in either one of you. There are
many such examples which the ignorant simply cannot observe, and God Has
the greatest example."
Thus did the Imam face the challenge of Imran the Sabian's doubting
method, demolishing its structure and dispelling the ambiguity of the complex
doubts which he could not understand till vision became clear to him. The
Imam (A.S.) did not determine an evidence except after building it with
simple easy to understand proofs out of the everyday life of man in order
not to leave any way for the opponent to doubt after transforming a most
complex theory into an easy and commonsense idea, all of that by employing
a very beautiful and miraculous style.
Debating al-Maroozi
In another session, al-Mamoon invited him to debate Sulayman al-Maroozi,
Khurasan's scientist in kalam, and the debate between them dealt
with some significant topics which were being debated then by scholars
of the science of kalam, and the starting-point of the discussion
was the issue of badaa. The Imam (A.S.) explained its sound meaning,
indicating that the Sublime and Dear God had innermost knowledge which
nobody but He knew, and that was the source of badaa and knowledge
which He taught His angels and Prophets.
To explain it in a way which would remove all confusion and ambiguity,
we can say about badaa is that God makes manifest that His Will
is linked to an advantage which necessitates it, and the apparent reality
is that His Will is hinging on what is opposite to it. Then He after that
makes manifest His actual Will when the advantage is satisfied from all
aspects and the reasons for which it was not previously manifested are
removed, and it appears to the creation as if God willed to abandon His
first Will, hence it is in the view of creation, not in the reality of
Will, badaa. This is the theory of badaa in its simple logical
context which Imamis (Shi'as) uphold and which some people misunderstood
and misinterpreted, giving it a wrong meaning which necessitated attributing
ignorance (!!!) to the Almighty God and an excuse to wage an unfair campaign
of defamation against Imami Shi'as by their opponents from among the followers
of other sects.
Imam Proves Badaa
The Imam (A.S.) has proven the accuracy of badaa in which Ahl
al-Bayt (A.S.) believe by first quoting the Holy Qur'an, for God Almighty
said, "So leave them alone, for you shall not be blamed for that,"153
meaning thereby that He intends to annihilate them, then the Almighty,
according to the badaa theory, He has said, "So remind, for reminding
may avail the believers,"154
which indicates a shift from the first decision as observed from studying
the context of both verses.
Second, he tries to prove it by traditions narrated from his forefathers
from the Messenger of God (S.A.W.) who said: "God sent his wahi
to one of His prophets to inform him that he would die on a particular
day, and when that prophet was told so, he pleaded God, the King, while
on his bed, saying, `Lord! Postpone my demise till I see my son growing
up to carry out my will,' till he fell from his bed, whereupon God sent
his wahi again to the same prophet to inform him that He decided
to postpone it."
It is apparent that badaa in the meaning which we indicated requires
no alarm whatsoever and it does not justify waging a campaign of defamation
to those who believe in it.
Eternity Versus Transience of the Will
The same discussion led to discussing the will's eternity and transience,
and the Imam (A.S.) stood to disprove the theory which called for the eternity
of the will, proving its being transient by revealing its own self-contradiction,
removing the confusion which may occupy anyone's mind in its regard.
Will, as the Imam (A.S.) says, is one of the actions of the Almighty.
It is not one of His attributes; therefore, it is transient, not perpetual,
since an action is a form of event, and the deed cannot be identical to
the doer, so the will cannot be identical to the willing person. Will is
not like hearing or seeing or knowing as al-Maroozi tried to prove, because
it does not make sense, the Imam says, to say that He wanted Himself. Does
He want to be "something," or does He want to be Alive, Seeing, Hearing,
or Able? If this is according to His Will, it would require the impossible
which is the change occurring to the self, for the meaning then would be
that He wanted Himself to be something which was not... Sublime is God
greatly above all of this.
Thus did the debates between the Imam and al-Maroozi occur frequently
about the eternity of the will versus its transience about relevant matters.
Al-Maroozi's Argumentativeness
In his debates with the Imam, al-Maroozi kept arguing and coming back
to the same point from which he had started his argument in an inflexible
argumentative manner. While accepting that to desire something (to "will",
to wish) is a verb, he goes back to deny that and claim that it is an adjective,
and he may admit something and say something else.
The Imam asks him, "O Abu Sulayman! Can you tell me if the will is a
verb or not?" He says, "Yes, it is a verb." He asks, "Is it causative,
since verbs are?" "It is not a verb," comes the answer. The Imam (A.S.)
asks, "Is there any with Him who is eternal?" Sulayman answers, "Willing
is doing." He says, "O Sulayman! This is the same which you criticized
Dirar and his followers about for saying that everything God Almighty has
created in His heavens and earth, ocean or land, dog or pig, monkey, human,
or an animal, is God's will, and that God's will gives life and takes life
away, and it goes here or drinks from there, marries, enjoys food, commits
immoral acts, disbelieves and commits shirk..." Sulayman said, "It
is like hearing, seeing, or knowing; that is, it is an adjective, an attribute."
Having abstained from providing an answer to the Imam's question, Sulayman
goes back to the beginning of the argument regarding whether the will is
an adjective, an attribute, or a verb, but the Imam nevertheless repeats
his argument with him by following another route different from the one
he took first, which indicates how commonsense the idea seems to him and
his ability to prove it however he willed.
Imam's Style in Debating
The debate continues between them in the same calm manner in which
the Imam (A.S.) coins his questions, which is the most magnificent method
of debate. In his way of providing answers, the Imam never blocks the way
before his opponent to continue the debate; rather, he leaves him completely
free to debate in whatever manner he wishes through his questions till
he brings him to a dead-end where he cannot proceed anymore just to go
back seeking another route which the Imam himself wants him to seek out
of his own will and after his own conviction.
Al-Mamoon Rebukes al-Maroozi for Fumbling About
But Sulayman kept fumbling about in his answers to the Imam's questions
after the Imam had closed before him all avenues of his argument, and al-Mamoon
was quick to notice his fumbling about which indicated Sulayman's loss,
so he rebuked him and criticized him. It is reported that during the debate,
when al-Rida (A.S.) asked him to continue his questions, he said, "Will
is one of His attributes." The Imam said, "How many times has it been said
that it is one of His attributes, so is it a new attribute, or has it always
been so?" Sulayman said, "New." The Imam (A.S.) said, "Allahu Akbar!
You are telling me that His attribute is new! Had it been one of His attributes,
and an eternal one, then He willed and He created as long as His will and
His creation are eternal...! This means it is an attribute of someone who
did not know what he did! God is Elevated above this..." Sulayman said,
"Things are not a will, and He did not will anything." Here the Imam said,
"You have hissed, O Sulayman! He did and He created as long as His will
and His creation are eternal...?! This is the attribute of someone who
does not know what he did! Elevated is God above all of that." Sulayman,
turning to al-Mamoon, then said, "Master! I have already informed him that
it is like hearing and seeing and knowing." Al-Mamoon said, "Woe unto you,
Sulayman! How you have erred and how often you have repeated yourself!
Stop it and take another route, for you seem to be unable to provide any
answer better than that."
The debate continues after that till Sulayman's tongue is tied, whereupon
al-Mamoon says, "O Sulayman! This is the most learned descendant of Hashim,"
and the session disperses.
Imam Debates Ali ibn al-Jahm
The Imam (A.S.) conducted a very magnificent debate with Ali al-Jahm
dealing with the infallibility of prophets in which he explained in a very
beautiful way the actual meaning of some verses which may on the surface
give the impression to the contrary.
Interpreting the Holy Qur'an According to One's Opinion
The Imam (A.S.) started his discussion with Ali ibn al-Jahm by criticizing
him and those who interpreted the Book of God according to their own viewpoint,
stating that he and those have to refer to those whom God endowed with
the faculty of knowledge and understanding in order to learn the actual
and accurate interpretation of its verses according to the sacred verse
which says, "And none knows its interpretation except God and those deeply
grounded in knowledge."155.
Interpreting Verses Whose Superficial Meaning Suggests
Prophet's Fallibility
Then the Imam (A.S.) started explaining the verses whose superficial
meaning indicates the fallibility of and possibility of sinning by prophets.
He indicated that Adam's transgression took place while he was in Paradise,
not on earth, and the infallibility in question is earthly, and that he
did not commit any act as long as he lived on earth which contradicted
his infallibility as proven by the sacred verse: "God did indeed choose
Adam and Noah, the family of Abraham, and the family of Imran above all
people."156
As regarding the verse which states: "And remember Zun-nun when he departed
in wrath; he imagined that We had no power over him, but he cried through
the depths of darkness, `There is no god but Thou! Glory to Thee; I was
indeed wrong,'"157
what is meant by "he imagined that We had no power over him" is that he
realized that God was not going to sustain him." Had he thought that God
was unable to overpower him, he would have then committed kufr (disbelief)
and he would have also committed 'isyan, transgression.
As regarding the verse "And (with passion) did she desire him, and he
would have desired her,"158
the case regarding what the wife of al-'Aziz wanted, and what Yousuf (A.S.)
desired to do, are two different things, for she wanted to commit a sin
while he desired to kill her if she forced him; therefore, God saved him
from the deed of killing her and its terrible consequences, and saved her
from her own wishful desire to commit a sin.
As regarding David, his statement that the defendant had committed injustice
by asking for the goat, it was an error only within the framework of the
case, and it took place before he had asked the defendant about his defense
against the plaintiff's claim, and it is not a transgression, for God corrected
for him his decision by bringing him the example of the two kings. As regarding
his marriage with the widow of Oorya, which was regarded by people at that
time as a sin and criticized him for it, it was done for the sake of effecting
a legislative interest whereby David wanted to shatter the then prevalent
custom of a widow not getting married after the death of her husband. It
is similar to what happened to the Prophet with Zainab daughter of Jahsh,
wife of Zayd ibn Haritha who had been adopted by the Prophet (S.A.W.),
for the Prophet, by marrying Zainab after granting her divorce from Zayd,
wanted to shatter the pre-Islamic custom whereby a man would not be permitted
to marry the former wife of someone he had adopted as is clear in the text
of the Holy Qur'an. The Prophet (S.A.W.) was apprehensive of the criticism
of the hypocrites of his action, so the Almighty addressed him by saying,
"Do not fear people; it is more fitting that you should fear God,"159
since it was God Who ordered him to marry her as we understand from the
verse, "Then when Zayd had dissolved (his marriage) with her, with the
necessary (formality), We joined her in marriage to thee in order that
(henceforth) there may be no difficulty to the believers in (the matter
of) marrying the wives of their adopted sons, when the latter have dissolved
with the necessary (formality, their marriage) with them, and God's command
must be fulfilled."160.
By providing such glorious knowledge of the exegesis of sacred Qur'anic
verses, and by giving such honest interpretations which safeguard the integrity
of the context, the Imam (A.S.) used to dispel the unusual confusion of
those who did not have a deep actual understanding of the Glorious Book
of God.
An Artificial Argument
In his book Al-'Iqd al-Farid, Ibn Abd Rabbih al-Andalusi recorded
a debate on the subject of Imamate between the Imam and the caliph al-Mamoon
which seems to be stamped with artificiality, and we think it is possible
that some fanatics among those who deviated from the line of the Ahl al-Bayt
(A.S.) had fabricated it, for he stated the following in his book:
"Al-Mamoon said to Ali ibn Mousa, `Why do you claim it (Imamate)
for your own selves?' He answered, `Due to Ali and Fatima (A.S.) being
near in kin to the Messenger of God (S.A.W.).' Al-Mamoon said, `If it is
only a matter of kinship, then the Messenger of God (S.A.W.) had left behind
him those who were closer in kinship to him than Ali or any of his relatives,
and if you mean the kinship of Fatima (A.S.) to the Messenger of God (S.A.W.),
then the matter (Imamate) after her should have belonged to al-Hassan and
al-Husayn (A.S.) whose right was confiscated by Ali even while they were
still alive, taking control of what was not his.' Ali ibn Mousa could not
provide an answer."161
Let us record the following regarding this quotation:
The Imam did not claim his right to caliphate only on account of his
kinship to the Prophet (S.A.W.) but rather on account of the clear statements
made by the Prophet (S.A.W.) emphasizing that he was to be the caliph after
him, in addition to the personal qualifications Imam Ali (A.S.) had had
which distinguished him above the rest of sahaba.
The concept of caliphate according to Ahl al-Bayt (A.S.) is that it
is decreed according to a divine text, not dictated due to factors of kinship,
politics, etc. God is the One Who chooses, and His choice is voiced by
His Prophet, whoever He sees to be most fit to safeguard the Message and
the interest of the nation, as we explained when we quoted Imam al-Rida
(A.S.) discussing the subject of Imamate. The claim of those who said that
they deserved caliphate due to their kinship to the Prophet (S.A.W.) is
similar to the claim of those who said that the muhajirun (immigrants)
were more qualified than the ansar (supporters of Medina) due to
the nearness of the first party to the Messenger of God (S.A.W.). The Imam,
if this story is true at all, would not have been unable, as the story
suggests, to answer al-Mamoon's objection that there are among the Ahl
al-Bayt (A.S.) those who have more priority than Ali (A.S.) or any of his
relative, an apparent reference to his grandfather al-Abbas ibn Abdul-Muttalib,
to it. It was al-Abbas himself who approached the Imam requesting him to
stretch his hand to him so that he would swear the oath of allegiance to
him when he felt that the fate looked ominous and that the environment
was threatening of a revolt, but the Imam refused to accept such an oath
privately; rather, he preferred that such an oath be sworn to him in public
and before eye witnesses after finishing the funeral rites of the corpse
of the Messenger of God (S.A.W.) which was still lying in state waiting
to be bathed. If you suppose that al-Abbas had any right to caliphate,
he would then have relinquished it.
As regarding al-Hassan and al-Husayn, they were then very young, and
neither wilayat nor wisayat can be enforced on caliphate
till they were old enough, for caliphate is a post which permits no wisayat
at all; therefore, the issue of caliphate was confined to Ali (A.S.) alone.
This is our argument if we suppose that caliphate is a matter decided
due to kinship to the Prophet (S.A.W.). But if we say that it is decreed
by a divine decree, these proofs will not be relevant.
But the fact that al-Mamoon's way of thinking regarding the issue of
caliphate, and his views with which he confronted the faqihs in
his debates with them, as the author of Al-'Iqd al-Farid himself
mentions, proving that caliphate was the legitimate right of only Ali rather
than anyone else among the sahaba, this fact itself convinces us
that this fabricated dialogue quoted above was written by some fanatic
followers of other sects.
These are some debates and discussions of Imam al-Rida (A.S.) which
were narrated about him in which he debated some scholars of kalam
of his time which we wanted to indicate here briefly in order to give the
reader a general idea about the style employed by the Imams among the Ahl
al-Bayt (A.S.) in their debates and discussions with others, so that the
reader may live the free democratic environment which dominated that period
of time in its intellectual and scientific spheres.