(Iq‘âd
al-Nabî (s) ‘alâ
al-‘Arsh)
Dr.
G. F. Haddad
“Muhammad the
Messenger of Allah (s) will be seated
by His Lord on the
Throne next to Him.”
– Ibn Taymiyya.
“Whoever imagines that
our Lord sits on the Throne and leaves space at His side for His Prophet to
sit, has followed the Christians who hold that ‘Isa was raised to heaven and
sat next to his Father – Allah (swt) is clear of the partnership they ascribe
to Him!”
– Al-Kawthari.
Allah Most High said, as rendered in the translations of His meanings
in the Qur’an (17:79):
And some part of the night
awake for it, a largess for thee.
It may be that thy Lord will
raise thee to a praised estate. [Pickthall]
And pray in the small watches
of the morning: (it would be) an additional prayer (or spiritual profit) for
thee : soon will thy Lord raise thee to a station of praise and Glory.
[Yusuf Ali]
It is known that the meaning of the Exalted
Station (al-maqâm al-mahmûd)
mentioned in the above verse is the granting of the Major Intercession (al-shafâ‘a al-kubrâ) to the Prophet (s)
on the Day of Judgment, at which time “people shall surge like the waves of the
sea,” each community begging its Prophet for intercession but only the Prophet (s)
shall accept to undertake it,
as expressed in al-Busiri’s poetry:
yâ akrama
al-khalqi mâ lî man alûdhu bihi
siwâka
‘inda hulûli al-hâdithi al-‘amami
O noblest of creatures! I
have none with whom to seek refuge
other than you when the Universal Event befalls.
Furthermore, Ibn ‘Abbas explained that the formula of likelihood ‘asâ – “It may be” – when attributed to Allah
(swt), denotes certainty, as related by al-Bayhaqi and reiterated by the
commentators.
However, several narrations are also
adduced whereby the Exalted Station is the seating of the Prophet (s) by Allah
(swt) on the Throne. The school of Imam Ahmad gave precedence to the latter
view as the definitive explanation of the verse, despite the overall weakness
of the narrations supporting it.
|
"the scholars of hadith
agree that none of the narrations that mention the groaning is
authentic."
|
Ibn Mas‘ud (r) related that the Prophet (s) said: “Verily I shall
occupy the Exalted Station.” It was asked: “What is the Exalted Station?” He
said: “It is on the day you will be brought barefoot, naked, and uncircumcised;
the first to be given a garment will be Ibrahim, when Allah says: ‘Cover my
Close Friend.’ He will be presented with two soft, fine garments which he shall
wear, and he will be seated opposite the Throne. Then I will be given a garment
which I shall wear, after which I shall stand at the right of the Throne. Mine
will be station which no one else will share. It will be the ardent desire of
the first and the last to share it with me. Then a river will be caused to flow
from the Kawthar to my Pond.”
It is narrated with weak chains by
Ahmad in his Musnad, al-Tabari in his
Tafsir, al-Hakim in al-Mustadrak, al-Darimi in his Sunan (book of Riqaq), Abu al-Shaykh in al-‘Azama,
and Ibn al-Mundhir. Ahmad and al-Hakim’s narrations begin with the words: Ummukuma fi al-nar – “Your mother
[speaking to two brothers] is in the Fire” – while al-Darimi’s narration begins
with the words: Dhâka yawmun yanzilu
Allâhu ta‘âlâ ‘alâ kursiyyihi ya’itu kama ya’itu al-rahlu al-jadîdu min
tadâyuqihi bih – “On that day, Allah shall descend on His Throne which
shall groan the way a new saddle does, due to the pressure it will feel from
Him.”
Al-Darimi’s narration is highly
questionable from another perspective, namely the anthropomorphism of the
explicit attribution of the Throne’s groaning to the pressure of Allah (swt) on
it. It is known that all the narrations that mention this “groaning of the
Throne” are also weak. They are narrated from five Companions:
-
Abu Umama;
-
Abu Musa al-Ash‘ari;
-
‘Umar ibn al-Khattab;
-
Ibn Mas‘ud, as narrated by the hadith masters already
mentioned;
-
Jubayr ibn Mut‘am from his father from his grandfather.
All the above are narrated with weak
or highly problematic chains as shown by Ibn al-Jawzi,
al-Dhahabi, and the editors of al-Bayhaqi’s and Ibn Abi ‘Asim’s books although
Ibn Taymiyya typically tries to defend the authenticity of the narration of
‘Umar which contains an explicit ascription of sitting to the Creator (swt).
The hadith master Ibn ‘Asakir wrote an entire monograph entitled Bayan al-Wahm wa al-Takhlit fi Hadith
al-Atit (“The Exposition of Error and Confusion in the Narration of the
[Throne’s] Groaning”) as indicated by Ibn Kathir.
The narration of Abu Umama states
that the Prophet (s) said: “Ask Allah for al-Firdaws for it is the center of
Paradise, and in it is heard the groaning of the Throne (atît al-‘arsh).” Al-Hakim did not claim that it was sound (sahîh) and al-Dhahabi further stated
that one of its sub-narrators, Ja‘far ibn al-Zubayr, was “destroyed” (hâlik) as a narrator; al-Tabarani’s
chain also contains him as stated by al-Haythami in Majma‘ al-Zawa’id, who called him “fatally weak” (matrûk).
The narration of Abu Musa al-Ash‘ari
states: “The kursî is the footstool
and it groans like a new saddle.” Its chain is weak (da‘îf) as stated by the editor of
al-Bayhaqi’s al-Asma’ wa al-Sifat.
Even if it were sound, is not traced back to the Prophet (s) but would be a mawqûf narration halted at Abu Musa (r)
furthermore it is cut up (munqati‘),
as the Tâbi‘î who relates it, ‘Umara
ibn ‘Umayr, did not meet Abu Musa al-Ash‘ari. Finally, the scholars of hadith
agree that none of the narrations that mention the groaning is authentic.
The narration of ‘Umar states that a
woman came to the Prophet (s) and said: “Supplicate Allah so that He cause me
to enter Paradise.” The Prophet (s) then glorified Allah and said: “Verily, His
Seat of Authority (kursî) encompasses
the heavens and the earth, and it groans like the sound of the new saddle
when one mounts it, due to the weight pressing down on it.” Al-Haythami’s
claim that its sub-narrators are all trustworthy is incorrect, as the
sub-narrator ‘Abd Allah ibn Khalifa is merely “acceptable” (maqbûl) according to Ibn Hajar, and Ma‘ruf and al-Arna’ut consider
him majhûl al-hâl, which further
weakens the narration.
This means that his narration is not retained except for the purpose of
confirming an identical narration with a stronger chain. Furthermore, Ibn
Kathir stated there is doubt whether he actually narrated from ‘Umar and the
hadith would then be narrated with a “cut-up” (munqati‘) chain.
As for the text of the hadith itself
(matn), it is considered by Ibn
Kathir in his Tafsir (1:31, 2:14) as
a “strange” or one-chained (gharîb)
narration. Ibn Kathir also states that Abu Dawud’s narration from Jabir ibn
Mut‘am is “stranger yet.”
The narration of Abu Dawud from
Jubayr ibn Mut‘am, from his father, from his grandfather, states:
An Arab came to the Messenger of Allah (s) and
said: “O Messenger of Allah, people are in distress, the children are hungry,
the crops are withered, and the animals are perishing, so Ask Allah to grant us
rain, for we seek you as our intercessor with Allah, and Allah as our
intercessor with you.” The Prophet (s) said: “Woe to you! Do you know what you
are saying?” Then the Prophet (s) glorified Allah and he went on until the
effect of his speech showed on the faces of his Companions. He then said: “Woe
to you! Allah is not to be sought as intercessor with anyone. His state is
greater than that. Woe to you!
Do you know the greatness of Allah? Truly, His Throne (‘arsh) is on His Heavens like this” – and he formed with his
fingers something like a dome over him – “and it groans on account of Him like
a saddle groans because of its rider.” Ibn Bashshar added in his version: “Allah
(swt) is above His Throne, and His Throne is above His Heavens.”
The hadith is graded weak by the
author of ‘Awn al-Ma‘bud. Al-Dhahabi
terms it an “extremely strange” one-chained narration (gharîb jiddan) and says: “Allah knows best if the Prophet (s) ever
said such a thing or not; Allah – (there is
nothing whatsoever like unto Him)
(42:11)!”
We have already mentioned Ibn Kathir’s similar opinion of the hadith. As for its
chain of narration, it is declared weak by the editors of Ibn Abi ‘Asim’s al-Sunna and al-Ajurri’s al-Shari‘a. This is due to the concealment (tadlîs) of the mode of transmission
through ‘an‘ana or undecisive
transmission terminology by one of its narrators, Muhammad ibn Ishaq ibn Yasar
al-Muttalibi while another narrator, Jubayr ibn Muhammad ibn Jubayr ibn Mut‘am,
is merely “acceptable” (maqbûl),
which makes him unreliable in a narration that is not independently
verifiable. There are other problems with the chain and the text, which Ibn
‘Asakir addresses in Bayan al-Wahm.
Ibn al-Qayyim alone claimed that the least grading of this narration was hasan.
|
“The import of the hadith 'and it groans... like a saddle'
...consists in a metaphor to give an idea of the greatness of Allah and make
understandable to the questioner...”
Abu Sulayman al-Khattabi
|
The hadith master Abu Sulayman
al-Khattabi (d. 386) states in his commentary on Abu Dawud:
If this discourse is taken in its outward sense,
then it suggests modality (kayfiyya),
which does not apply to Allah and His Attributes. It is therefore understood
that the import of the hadith is not to attribute modality to Him or suggest
boundaries to Him in this manner. Rather, it consists in a metaphor (kalâm taqrîb) to give an idea of the
greatness of Allah and make understandable to the questioner what is beyond his
level of understanding, for he was an uneducated Bedouin unversed in the minutiae
of language and the sutbleties of speech which elude the mind. In this discourse,
we find ellipsis and allusiveness. Thus the meaning of his saying: “Do you know
what Allah is?” means: Do you know the greatness of Allah? and his saying: “It
groans under him” means that it is unable to carry His Majesty and Greatness.
Thus it groans under him for it is known that the reason a camel saddle groans
under the rider is because of the weight of what is on it and its inability to
carry it. By drawing this kind of similitude he illustrates the meaning of the
Greatness and Might of Allah and the height of His Throne in order for it to be
known that the holder of lofty rank, mighty status, and exalted name, is not to
be made an intercessor with one who is lesser in position and below Him in
degree.
|
“The meaning of the groaning of the kursî is its impotence before the majesty and greatness of Allah”
Ibn Jawzi
|
A similar mode of interpretation was
adopted by later scholars. Ibn al-Athir (d. 630) in his Nihaya fi Gharîb al-Hadith under the entry “a-t-t” said: “There is no actual groaning, it is only a
metaphorical expression in order to confirm Divine magnificence” (wa in lam yakun thamma atît wa innamâ huwa
kalâmu taqrîb urîda bihi taqrîru ‘azamat Allâh ta‘âlâ). Ibn al-Jawzi (d.
597) stated something identical in his Daf‘
Shubah al-Tashbih:
The meaning of the groaning of the kursî is its impotence before the
majesty and greatness of Allah, as it is known that the groaning of the camel
saddle under its rider is a indication of the power of what sits on top of it,
or its impotence to bear it. The Prophet (s) drew this kind of simile for
Divine greatness and majesty in order to teach the Arab who had sought the
intercession of Allah (swt) with the Prophet (s) that the One whose greatness
is overwhelming is not to be sought as an intercessor with those under His
station. As for al-Qadi Abu Ya‘la’s words: “The groaning is because of the
pressure of the Essence of Allah on it” – this is overt anthropomorphism.
Al-Dhahabi eludes the issue by
stating that the groaning of the Throne is unrelated to the Divine Names and
Attributes but would be similar to the shaking of the Throne at the death of
Sa‘d ibn Mu‘adh (as narrated by al-Bukhari and Muslim) and the cleaving of the
heaven on the Day of Resurrection.
Al-Suyuti mentioned Abu Musa al-Ash‘ari’s narration in al-Durr al-Manthur and said: “This is a
metaphor (hâdha ‘alâ sabîl al-isti‘âra).
This [metaphorical] meaning is made clear by Ibn Jarir’s narration from
al-Dahhak whereby ‘The kursî is
placed below the Throne and is where the angels stand.’”
Al-Suyuti’s elucidation is confirmed by what al-Qurtubi quoted from
Ibn ‘Atiyya in his Tafsir of the
Verse of the Throne whereby the meaning was that the kursî was placed in front of the ‘arsh “just like” the footstool is placed in front of a high chair,
indicating that it did not necessitate reference to an actual footstool but
referred, for example, to a seat or station. Al-Bayhaqi states the same.
|
“As for al-Qadi Abu Ya‘la’s words: ‘The groaning is because of the
pressure of the Essence of Allah on it’ – this is overt anthropomorphism” Ibn
Jawzi
|
It is evident that the authorities
considered the narrations of the groaning of the Throne as weak and their texts
as “strange” and one-chained in their transmission. They held that even if such
narrations were to be accepted, nevertheless their meaning would be understood
as metaphorical in order to preclude anthropomorphism. The meaning of the
Throne’s groaning would then be its impotence before Divine Majesty and
Greatness or its submission to its Creator.
A further problem of some of these
narrations, such as those cited in al-‘Ilal
al-Mutanahiya by Ibn al-Jawzi from his shaykh Ibn al-Zaghuni, is their
mention that Allah (swt) “sits on the kursî
so that only four spans of it remain vacant” (ma yafdalu minhu illâ qadaru arba‘i asâbi‘). This is a commonplace
of anthropomorphism.
The earliest compiler of Ahmad ibn Hanbal’s jurisprudence, al-Khallal, in his
book al-Sunna, after stating that Allah
(swt) sits on the kursî and there
remains only four spans vacant, goes on to narrate over a hundred pages of weak
and forged reports to that effect, finally claiming that whoever denies
Mujahid’s report is a follower of Jahm ibn Safwan! This is an extremely grave
charge in view of the status of Jahmis as apostates in the eyes of Imam Ahmad
and his school.
2. An
Unverified Narration From Ibn ‘Umar
Ibn ‘Umar related that the Prophet (s) recited: “It may be that your
Lord shall raise you to an Exalted Station” and that [it meant] Allah would
seat him on the dais (yujlisuhu ‘alâ
al-sarîr).
It is narrated by Ibn Marduyah in
his Tafsir as stated by al-Suyuti in
his commentary on the verse in al-Durr
al-Manthur. The authenticity of this narration is not known and its wording
departs from all the other narrations, though not its meaning.
3. Another
Unverified Narration From Ibn ‘Umar
The same as above is also narrated from Ibn ‘Umar, but with the
wording: “Allah shall seat me with Him on the Throne (al-sarîr).”
Al-Suyuti cited it in al-Durr al-Manthur and said: “Narrated
by al-Daylami.” The authenticity of this narration is not known, and Daylami
(d. 509) did not give his chain when citing the hadith.
In such cases the rule is to consider the narration weak, as stated by
al-Suyuti in his introduction to Jam‘
al-Jawami‘, also known as al-Jami‘
al-Kabir, as quoted by Muttaqi al-Hindi at the opening of Kanz al-‘Ummal:
Everything that I reference to these four
[al-‘Uqayli in al-Du‘afa’, Ibn ‘Adi
in al-Kamil fi al-Du‘afa’, al-Khatib
al-Baghdadi, and Ibn ‘Asakir], or to al-Hakim al-Tirmidhi in Nawadir al-Usul, or to al-Hakim in his Tarikh, or to al-Daylami in Musnad al-Firdaws: all that is weak (fa huwa da‘îf), and it is therefore
unnecessary, when referencing a narration back to one of them, to state
explicitly that that narration is weak.
4. A
Narration From Ibn ‘Abbas
From Ibn ‘Abbas: “[The meaning of] the verse [of the Exalted Station]
is that Allah shall seat the Prophet (s) between Him and Gibrîl (as), and he will
intercede for his Community. That is the Praiseworthy Station.”
Al-Suyuti cited it in al-Durr al-Manthur and said: “Narrated
by al-Tabarani.” Al-Haythami said in Majma‘
al-Zawa’id (book of Tafsir on
Surat al-Isra’): “Al-Tabarani narrated it with a chain containing Ibn Lahi‘a
who is weak if no-one else narrated the same hadith at his level of the chain (idhâ lam yutâba‘). As for [one of its
sub-narrators, the Tâbi‘î] ‘Ata’ ibn
Dinar (d. 126), it is said he did not actually hear narrations from [the next
link in the chain, the Tâbi‘î] Sa‘id
ibn Jubayr (d. 94).” Ibn Hajar specifies that ‘Ata’s narrations from Sa‘id are
from reading rather than hearing.
The chain of this hadith would then be weak and cut-up (da‘îf munqati‘) as confirmed by Ma‘ruf and al-Arna’ut’s comments.
|
“One of the most reprehensible matters that came from Mujahid . . . [is]:
‘He will seat the Prophet (s) with Him on the Throne’” Al-Dhahabi
|
5. Mujahid’s
Controverted Narration
From Mujahid:
“The saying of Allah: [It may be that your Lord will raise you to
an Exalted Station]
(17:79) means: He will seat the Prophet (s) with Him on His Throne (yujlisuhu ma‘ahu ‘alâ ‘arshihi).”
Al-Dhahabi cited the above in his
notice on Mujahid with dismay: “One of the most reprehensible matters that came
from Mujahid in his commentary of the Qur’an is what he said concerning the
verse [It may be that thy Lord will raise you to
an Exalted Station]
– he said: ‘He will seat the Prophet (s) with Him on the Throne’ (wa min ankari mâ jâ’a ‘an mujâhidin fî
al-tafsîri fî qawlihi ‘asâ an yab‘athaka rabbuka maqâman mahmûdan – qâla: yujlisuhu ma‘ahu ‘alâ al-‘arsh!).”
Ibn Abi ‘Asim (d. 287) narrated
Mujahid’s hadith in his book al-Sunna,
edited by M. Nasir al-Albani who said: “Its chain is weak and severed (maqtû‘).”
This chain is as follows: Ibn Abi ‘Asim said: < Abu Bakr ibn Abi Shayba narrated
to us: < Ibn Fudayl narrated to us, < From Layth,<
From Mujahid.
Al-Suyuti also cited Mujahid’s
report in al-Durr al-Manthur and said
that it was narrated by Ibn Jarir al-Tabari. We cite al-Tabari’s narration and
his commentary further below.
|
“This [groaning of the Throne] is a metaphor” Al-Suyuti
|
6. A
Narration From ‘A’isha
Ibn al-Jawzi in the thirthy-ninth
hadith of his Daf‘ Shubah al-Tashbih
mentions that ‘A’isha asked the Prophet (s) about the Exalted Station and he
replied: “My Lord promised to seat me on the Throne.” Ibn al-Jawzi said: “This
narration is not authentic from the Prophet (s).”
Ibn Abi ‘Asim said:
Muhammad ibn Abi Safwan al-Thaqafi
narrated to us:
Yahya ibn Kathir Abu Ghassan
al-‘Anbari narrated to us:
Salm ibn Ja‘far narrated to us:
From [Abu Mas‘ud] Sa‘id al-Jariri
who said:
Sayf al-Sadusi
narrated to us:
From ‘Abd Allah ibn Salam who said:
“On the Day of Resurrection your Prophet shall be brought and he shall be made
to sit in front of Allah the Almighty, on His Throne” (yuq‘adu bayna yaday Allâhi ‘alâ kursiyyihi). One of the
sub-narrators, Salm ibn Ja‘far, said to the one previous to him in the chain of
transmission, Abu Mas‘ud al-Jariri: “If he is on His kursî, then, surely, he is with Him [rather than in front of Him]?”
(idhâ kâna ‘alâ kursiyyihi fa huwa
ma‘ahu?). Abu Mas‘ud replied: “Woe to you all! This is the dearest of all
hadiths in my sight.”
The narration reports Salm ibn
Ja‘far’s distinction between the terms “in front of Allah” and “on His Throne”
which seems to presuppose that Allah (swt) is on the Throne in the
anthropomorphist sense. To Salm, the Prophet (s) is either “in front of Allah”
or “on His Throne,” but he cannot be both at the same time. Abu Mas‘ud’s curt
reply shows that Salm was not alone in observing this. However, there is no
discrepancy, as the Prophet (s) can be both on the Throne of Allah (swt) and in
front of Him at one and the same time; Salm ibn Ja‘far’s premise is far from
necessary, hence Abu Mas‘ud’s displeasure. The apparent confusion is lifted
even further if one remembers that kursî
in the narrations either means the Throne, or another throne next to it, or the
Footstool or Station which is in front of the Throne. An example of the first
meaning is al-Darimi’s narration mentioned in Section 1; an example of the
second, al-Hakim’s authentic narration in Section 7; an example of the third,
the narration of Ibn ‘Abbas: “The kursî
is the footstool.”
8. Another
Narration From ‘Abd Allah ibn Salam
From ‘Abd Allahbn Salam, in a long hadith on the Day of Judgment: “A
seat (kursî) will be placed for the
Prophet (s) on the right of Allah (swt).”
This narration from the same Companion as the previous one is therefore clearer
with respect to meaning and more reliable with respect to transmission. Both
this and the previous narration, although stopped at a Companion (mawqûf), would normally have the status
of narrations traced back to the Prophet (s) (marfû‘) since they give depictions of the unseen which are not
subject to a Companion’s opinion but necessarily come from him as a transmitted
report. Yet the hadith scholars have drawn attention to ‘Abd Allahbn Salam as
one of the Companions who frequently report narrations from the People of the
Book (isrâ’îliyyât). Because of this,
they have refrained from giving his mawqûf
reports – and those of ‘Abd Allah ibn ‘Amr ibn al-‘As – the status of marfû‘ unless independently confirmed. Similar caution applies to the Successors Ka‘b al-Ahbar
and Wahb ibn Munabbih.
These narrations bring to three the
reported positions of the Prophet (s) in the different versions of the hadith
of the seating: On the Throne, in front of the Throne, and to the right of the
Throne. The first is itself divided into two versions: alone, or “with Allah.”
The latter is obviously the most controverted version.
Imam al-Tabari said in his Tafsir:
Others said [concerning the verse of the Exalted
Station]: “Rather [than meaning Intercession], that Praiseworthy Station to
which Allah has promised to raise His Prophet is the fact that He shall seat
him with Him on His Throne!”
Following is the
mention of those who said this:
‘Abbad ibn Ya‘qub
al-Asadi
said to us:
Ibn Fudayl
said to us:
From Layth:
From Mujahid:
“Concerning the
saying of Allah: [It may be that you Lord will raise you to
an Exalted Station]
– He shall make him sit with Him on His Throne (yujlisuhu ma‘ahu ‘alâ ‘arshihi).”
But of the two
explanations concerning this question the likelier to be correct is that
supported by the authentic report from the Prophet (s) such as the following
from Abu Hurayra:
Abu Kurayb
said to us:
Waki‘
said to us:
From Dawud ibn Yazid:
From his father
[Yazid ibn ‘Abd al-Rahman]:
From Abu Hurayra:
The Prophet (s) was
asked about the verse: “It may be that thy Lord will raise you to an Exalted
Station” and he said: “That is intercession” (hiya al-shafâ‘a).
Al-Tabari then goes on to mention nine
more narrations supporting the latter interpretation of the verse. However, far
from rejecting Mujahid’s narration, he returns to discuss it and defends its
authenticity:
Even if [the meaning of Intercession] is
the sound position (al-sahîh min al-qawl)
in the interpretation [of the Exalted Station] due to what we mentioned from
the Prophet (s), the Companions, and the Successors – nevertheless, what
Mujahid said to the effect that Allah shall seat Muhammad (s) on His Throne is
a position that is by no means unsound whether from the perspective of narration
or from that of reason. For there is no report from the Prophet (s) nor from
any of the Companions nor Successors precluding it. As for the perspective of
reason, those who profess (yantahil)
Islam differ on its meaning in only three ways:
·
One group said: “Allah (swt) is separate (bâ’in) from His creation. He was before
He created things; then He created them without entering into contact with
them; and He is exactly as He ever was. However, with regard to the things He
created, since He is not in contact (mumâss)
with them, it is obligatory that He be separate from them. For there is no
effecter (fa‘‘âl) upon things but he
is either in contact with them or separate from them.”
According to that
group, since Allah (swt)s the effecter of things, and since they say that it is
impermissible to describe Him as being in contact with them, it is therefore
incumbent – so they claim – that He be separate from them. According to their
school, it follows that it is the same whether He seats Muhammad (s) on His
Throne or on the ground. For it results from their position that His
“separateness” (baynûna) from His
Throne and “separateness” from the ground are one and the same in meaning: He
is equally separate from both, equally in contact with neither.
·
Another group said: “Allah Almighty was, before He
created things, in contact with nothing and separate from nothing. Then He
created things and brought them into existence through His power, remaining exactly
as He ever was before He created things, in contact with nothing, separate (bâ’in) from nothing.”
According to that
group’s position also, it is equally the same whether He seats Muhammad (s) on
His Throne or on His ground. For, according to them, it is the
same regarding His Throne or His ground in that He is in contact with neither,
and He is separate from neither (la
mumâss wa la mubâyin).
·
A third group
said: “Allah Almighty was, before He created things, in contact with nothing
and separate from nothing. Then He brought things into being and created them.
At that time He created for Himself a Throne over which He established Himself
by sitting (istawâ ‘alayhi jâlisan),
and He entered into contact with it (sâra
lahu mumâssan). This is just as, before He created things, there was
nothing to which He granted sustenance and nothing of which He deprived it;
then He created things and gave this one sustenance and deprived that one of
it, giving to this one and withholding from that one. Similarly He was, before
creating things, in contact with nothing and separate from nothing, then He
created things and became in contact with the Throne by sitting on it as
opposed to the remainder of creation.
Therefore, He is in contact with whatever He wishes from His creation, and He
is separate from whatever He wishes from His creation.”
According to the
school of that group also, it is the same whether He seats Muhammad (s) on His
Throne or on a pulpit of light, for they also say that “the Lord’s sitting on
the Throne does not occupy the entirety of the Throne;”
and [they say], similarly, that the seating of Muhammad (s) does not
necessitate for him the attribute of lordship, nor does it bring him out of
that of servanthood; just as the separateness of Muhammad (s) from whatever is
separate from him, neither necessitates lordship for him nor brings him out of
servanthood on the sole grounds that he is separate from it.
According to that line of thinking, just as Allah (swt) is described as separate
from things, similarly, the Prophet (s) is described as separate from the
Throne. They arrive at the conclusion that since the meaning of “being
separate” does not necessarily preclude from the Prophet (s) the attribute of
servanthood nor impose lordship upon him, similarly, his seating on the Throne
of the Merciful does not necessitate either of the above for him.
In conclusion, it is
clear that, as we said before, what Mujahid said is not impossible, according
to all those who profess Islam, namely: that Allah (swt) shall seat the Prophet
(s) on His Throne.
Now if someone should
say: “We do not deny the seating of the Prophet (s) by Allah (swt) on His
Throne [since it is related]… from ‘Abd Allah ibn Salam: ‘Verily, on the Day of
Resurrection, Muhammad (s) shall be on the Lord’s Throne (kursî al-Rabb), in front of the Lord (bayna yaday al-Rabb).’
All that we deny is that He seat him with
Him.” We can reply to him: “Do you allow that He seats him on it but not with
Him?” If he allows that, then he also concurs that either he is with Him [on
the Throne], or that He seats him while being separate from [the Throne], or
not in contact with it, or neither in contact nor separate. Whichever of these
alternatives he concedes he will have accepted part of what he previously
denied.
But if he disallows it then he will be diverging from all the different groups
whose positions we mentioned, and that is a divergence from all those that
profess Islam; for there is no other position than the three we have cited
– none of them considering what Mujahid said to be impossible.
Al-Tabari’s view that both
interpretations stand is confirmed by Mujahid himself, from whom is also
reported the exegesis narrated by Abu Hurayra, as found in Tafsir Mujahid:
‘Abd al-Rahman [ibn
al-Hasan al-Hamadhani]
told us:
Ibrahim [ibn
al-Husayn al-Hamadhani]
narrated to us:
Adam [ibn Abi Iyas]
narrated to us:
Warqa’ [ibn ‘Umar]
narrated to us,
From [‘Abd Allah] Ibn
Abi Najih,
From Mujahid:
[Concerning the
verse] “It may be that your Lord shall raise you to an Exalted Station” Mujahid
said: “The Exalted Station is the intercession of Muhammad (s).”
9a. Another Position Related from al-Tabari
An
incident was related to have taken place between al-Tabari and some Hanbalis in
Baghdad over the explanation of the verse of the Exalted Station whereby
al-Tabari reportedly recited:
subhana man laysa lahu anisun wa ma lahu fi
‘arshihi jalisu
Glory
to Him Who has no comrade
nor companion sitting with Him on His Throne!
Hearing this, the account goes, the
irate Hanbalis pelted al-Tabari with their inkwells and he sought shelter in
his house.
The report seems dubious in light of the above-cited defense by al-Tabari, in his
Tafsir, of Mujahid’s narration
Furthermore, al-Suyuti’s report is not found anywhere else. What is
well-established is that the Hanbalis persecuted al-Tabari for failing to
mention Imam Ahmad in his book Ikhtilaf
al-Fuqaha’. Another reason mentioned by al-Dhahabi, was the antagonism
between al-Tabari and the Hanbali Abu Bakr ibn Abi Dawud, who falsely accused
him of being a Râfidî.
10.
Al-Qurtubi’s Commentary
|
‘As for the term “with Him” used in Mujahid’s [first] report,
it is in the same category as the saying of Allah: (Verily, those that are with your Lord) (7:206), or: (O my Lord! Build for me with You a house in Paradise) (66:11) and similar
statements. All of these signify rank, status, pre-eminence, and an exalted
station – not a location’
Imam al-Qurtubi
|
Imam al-Qurtubi commented thus on the verse of the Exalted Station in
his Tafsir:
The third explanation of this verse is what
al-Tabari reported from a party of scholars – among them Mujahid – whereby “the
Exalted Station is the seating by Allah (swt) of the Prophet (s) with Him on
His Throne (kursiyyih).” They
narrated a hadith to that effect, and al-Tabari backed up the possibility (jawâz) of such a thing with some
extravagant statements (shatatin min
al-qawl). However, what he said cannot be inferred [from the verse] except
with over-subtlety as to meaning (al-talattuf
bi al-ma‘nâ), and it is far-fetched (fîhi
bu‘d). This is not to say that there is no such narration; only that [one
endowed with] knowledge interprets it figuratively (al-‘ilmu yata’awwaluhu).
Abu Sa‘id al-Naqqash
mentioned from Abu Dawud al-Sijistani:
“Whoever denies this hadith, we strongly condemn him. The scholars of knowledge
never stopped narrating this hadith. Who among them ever denied its
possibility, even as he interpreted it?”
Abu ‘Umar [Ibn ‘Abd
al-Barr] said: “Concerning Mujahid – although he is one of the major scholars,
nevertheless he interprets away the Qur’an. There are two sayings of his which
the people of knowledge have strongly rejected: one of them is this saying; the
other is his interpretation of the verses:
(On that day will faces be resplendent,
looking towards their Lord)
(75:22-23) as meaning: waiting for their reward, not actually looking.”
He [Abu ‘Umar] mentioned that in his chapter on Ibn Shihab in the discussion of
the hadith of “descent” (nuzûl).
Also narrated from
Mujahid in explanation of the verse [of the Exalted Station] is his saying:
“Allah will seat him on the Throne” (yujlisuhu
‘alâ al-‘arsh). This is not an impossible interpretation.
For Allah (swt) existed and was Self-Sufficient (qâ’im bi dhâtihi) before He created any object, including the
Throne. Then He created objects, not out of need for them, but to show His
power and wisdom, and in order that His existence be known as well as His Oneness,
absolute might, and all-encompassing knowledge in all the acts He decrees. [Among
these objects] He created for Himself a Throne over which He elevated Himself
in the way that He wished, without contact with the Throne (min ghayri an sâra lahu mumâssan) and without the Throne becoming
a place (makân) for Him. In this respect
it is also said: “He is now exactly as He was before He created place and
time.”
On that basis it is
the same, with respect to possibility, whether Allah seats the Prophet (s) on
the Throne or on the ground.
For His elevation over the Throne is not in the sense of displacement (intiqâl), removal (zawâl), nor change of position from standing to sitting, nor any
state or condition to which the Throne itself is subject. Rather, He is
elevated over the Throne in the way He has stated concerning Himself, without
saying how. Nor does His seating of the Prophet (s) on the Throne impose upon
the Prophet (s) the attribute of Lordship or move him out of that of
servanthood. Rather, it consists in an elevation because of his status, and an
honor bestowed upon him because of his sublime character.
As for the term “with
Him” used in Mujahid’s [first] report,
it is in the same category as the saying of Allah: (Verily, those that are with your Lord) (7:206), or: (O my Lord! Build for me with You a house in
Paradise)
(66:11) and similar statements. All of these signify rank, status,
pre-eminence, and an exalted station – not a location.
11.
Al-Ash‘ari’s Dismissal
Imam Al-Ash‘ari stated the following in the chapter on anthropomorphists
(al-Mujassima) in his book Maqalat al-Islamiyyin: “Some of those
who profess (yantahil) the science of
hadith said: ‘The Throne is not filled by Allah, because He makes His Prophet
sit with him on the Throne.’”
The word “profess” constitutes a tacit
dismissal of those who used Mujahid’s narration to support the concept of the
physical togetherness (ma‘iyya) of
the Prophet (s) with Allah (swt) on the Throne, particularly those in the
Hanbali school, where some scholars have turned this position into a lithmus-test
of belief, as shown by al-Khallal’s al-Sunna
and in the following sections.
12.
Ibn al-Qayyim’s List of Supporters
Ibn Qayyim al-Jawziyya
said in his Bada’i‘ al-Fawa’id:
Al-Qadi [Ibn Abi Ya‘la]
said: “Al-Marwazi
compiled a book on the superlative merits of the Prophet (s) in which he
mentioned his seating (iq‘âduhu) on
the Throne (al-‘arsh).”
Al-Qadi further said: “This is the position of
Abu Dawud, Ahmad ibn Asram,
Yahya ibn Abi Talib,
Abu Bakr ibn Hammad,
Abu Ja‘far al-Dimashqi,
‘Abbas al-Duri,
Ishaq ibn Rahuyah (or Rahawayh),
‘Abd al-Wahhab al-Warraq,
Ibrahim al-Asbahani, Ibrahim al-Harbi,
Harun ibn Ma‘ruf,
Muhammad ibn Isma‘il al-Sulami,
Muhammad ibn Mus‘ab al-‘Abid,
Abu Bakr ibn Sadaqa,
Muhammad ibn Bishr ibn Sharik,
Abu Qilaba, ‘Ali ibn Sahl,
Abu ‘Abd Allahbn ‘Abd al-Nur,
Abu ‘Ubayd,
al-Husayn ibn Fadl,
Harun ibn al-‘Abbas al-Hashimi,
Isma‘il ibn Ibrahim al-Hashimi,
Muhammad ibn ‘Imran al-Farisi al-Zahid,
Muhammad ibn Yunus al-Basri,
‘Abd Allahbn Ahmad ibn Hanbal,
al-Marwazi, and Bishr al-Hafi.”
I say: It is also the
position of Ibn Jarir al-Tabari,
and the leader of all the above in this is Mujahid, the imam of Qur’anic commentary.
It is also Abu al-Hasan al-Daraqutni’s
who said:
The hadith of Intercession narrated by Ahmad
Is
traced back to the Elect, Ahmad.
Also
known to us is the hadith of his seating
On
the Throne, therefore do not deny it.
Let
the hadith pass exactly as narrated,
And
do not enter into false notions.
Neither
deny that the Prophet sits on the Throne,
Nor
deny that Allah makes him sit there!
The book of al-Marwazi mentioned by
Ibn Abi Ya‘la gave rise to serious confrontations in Baghdad around the
question of the Prophet’s (s) seating on the Throne. Ibn al-Athir relates:
That year, a terrible dissension took place in
Baghdad between the followers of the Hanbali Abu Bakr al-Marwazi and others of
the common folk, and the police had to intervene in large numbers. The reason
was that al-Marwazi’s followers said, in explanation of the verse: “It may be
that thy Lord will raise you to an Exalted Station,” that it meant Allah would
seat the Prophet (s) with Him on the Throne. The other group said that it only
meant the Intercession. Dissension ensued and they fell upon one another, and
there were many dead.
Ibn al-Qayyim’s report that this was
the position of al-Tabari suggests that he and al-Qurtubi’s were looking at a
common source and that al-Tabari held two opinions on the question, one in
support of Mujahid’s narration, as mentioned by Qurtubi, Ibn al-Qayyim, and Ibn
Taymiyya, the other opposing it, as mentioned by al-Birzali and al-Suyuti.
It is evident that Ibn al-Qayyim
collects as many Hanbali authorities as he can find in support of the narration
of the seating. Yet he omits to mention Abu Muhammad al-Barbahari,
Abu Bakr al-Najjad,
Ibn Batta
– although Ibn Abi Ya‘la mentions all three supported it in his Tabaqat – and his own teacher Ibn
Taymiyya.
Ibn al-Qayyim also avoids the
distinction between Mujahid’s version mentioning “sitting with Allah” and other
versions mentioning simply “sitting.” He merely wishes to show that all these
authorities supported the latter, and cautiously sidesteps the thorny issue raised
by al-Qurtubi in his discussion of the verse of the Exalted Station.
13.
Al-Barbahari’s Idée Fixe
Ibn Abi Ya‘la relates in his Tabaqat that the Hanbali shaykh Abu
Muhammad al-Barbahari never sat to teach except he mentioned that the Prophet (s)
sits next to Allah on the Throne.
14.
Al-Najjad’s Attack on “Anyone That Contradicts Us”
Ibn Abi Ya‘la wrote the following in his chapter on Abu Bakr al-Najjad
in Tabaqat al-Hanabila:
‘Ali
narrated to me from Ibn Batta:
Abu Bakr al-Najjad told us:
(1) Harun ibn al-‘Abbas
told us:
Muhammad ibn Bishr
told us:
‘Abd al-Rahman ibn
Sharik
told us:
My father
told me:
Abu Yahya al-Qattat
told us,
From Mujahid:
– Also –
(2) Mu‘adh ibn al-Muthanna told us:
Khallad ibn Aslam
said:
Muhammad ibn Fadl
told us,
From Layth,
From Mujahid:
Concerning the verse:
“It may be that thy Lord will raise you to an Exalted Station”: “He will seat
him with Him on the Throne” (yujlisuhu
ma‘ahu ‘alâ al-‘arsh).
Al-Najjad said: “I
also asked [about it] Abu Yahya al-Naqid,
Ya‘qub al-Mutawwa‘i,
‘Abd Allah ibn Ahmad ibn Hanbal, and a group of our shaykhs, and they narrated
to me the hadith of Muhammad ibn Fudayl from Layth from Mujahid.
“I also asked Abu
al-Hasan al-‘Attar
about it, and he narrated to me the hadith of Mujahid. Then he said: ‘I heard
Muhammad ibn Mus‘ab al-‘Abid say: “[The Prophet’s (s) seating on the Throne
will take place] in order for all creation to see his station before his Lord,
and his Lord’s generosity towards him. Then the Prophet (s) shall retire to his
apartments and gardens and wives, and alone shall remain Allah in His Lordship (yanfaridu ‘azza wa jalla bi rubûbiyyatihi).”’
“I also looked into
the book of Ahmad ibn al-Hajjaj al-Marwazi, who is our imam and guide and proof
in this. In that book I found what he mentioned concerning the rejection of the
hadiths of ‘Abd Allah ibn Salam
and Mujahid, and he listed the names of the shaykhs who criticized those who
rejected these hadiths or objected to them.
“Therefore, what we
declare and believe before Allah Almighty is what we have just described and
made clear concerning the meanings of the hadiths quoted from the Prophet (s)
with an uninterrupted chain (al-ahadith
al-musnada ‘an rasul Allah),
and what was said by ‘Abd Allah ibn ‘Abbas
and the scholars after him, which was handed down from elder to elder and from
age to age until our shaykhs’ time concerning the saying of Allah: [It may be that your Lord will raise you to
an Exalted Station]:
the Exalted Station consists in the seating of the Prophet (s) with his Lord
on the Throne. Whoever denies
this or contradicts it is only attempting to promote the sayings of the Jahmis.
He should be avoided, exposed, and warned against.
“Similarly, I was
told by Abu Bakr the writer,
from Abu Dawud al-Sijistani, that the latter said: ‘Whoever rejects the hadith
of Mujahid is a Jahmi.’
“Furthermore,
Muhammad ibn Suhayb
and a group of our shaykhs narrated to us from Muhammad ibn ‘Abd al-Malik
al-Daqiqi
that he said: ‘I first heard this hadith fifty years ago, and I never heard
anyone deny it. Only Jahmi heretics reject it.’
“Abu Isma‘il
al-Sulami
mentioned to us the case of al-Tirmidhi who rejected the pre-eminence of the
Prophet (s) and belittled him.
Of such a man he said: ‘He does not believe in the Day of Judgment.’ I have
seen our shaykhs among the friends of Ahmad ibn Muhammad ibn Hanbal give the
same verdict. They condemned whoever rejected such pre-eminence. Allah has made
this condemnation clear in the words of the scholars as far back as one can
see. The people have all met this with approval, and no-one denies this nor
disputes it.
“Such is also my
position. And should one swear a triple divorce by the seating by Allah (swt)
of the Prophet (s) on the Throne with Him, then consult me on the validity of
his oath, I would say: Your words are true, your oath binding, and the divorce
stands.
“That is our
doctrine, our religion, our belief upon which we were raised and upon which we
shall die if Allah wills. We categorically condemn whoever rejects this
pre-eminence to which the scholars referred and which they met with acceptance.
Whoever rejects it is from the sects that are bound for destruction.”
15.
Ibn Batta’s Doctrine
Ibn Batta stated in his book al-Sharh
wa al-Ibana ‘ala Usul al-Sunna wa al-Diyana (“Elaboration of the Principles
of Sunni Doctrine”):
The Prophet (s) shall be seated on the Throne
with his Lord (yujlas ma‘a rabbihi ‘alâ
al-‘arsh), and this privilege belongs to no-one else. Thus did Nafi‘
narrate it from Ibn ‘Umar
from the Prophet (s) concerning the verse: “It may be that thy Lord will raise
you to an Exalted Station” – he said that He shall seat him with Him on the
Throne. Thus also did Mujahid explain it, as narrated by Muhammad ibn Fudayl,
from al-Layth, from Mujahid.
16.
Ibn Taymiyya’s Inheritance
Ibn Taymiyya wrote:
The scholars recognized by Allah and His accepted
Friends have narrated that Muhammad the Messenger of Allah (s) will be seated
by His Lord on the Throne next to Him.
Muhammad ibn Fudayl
narrated this from Layth from Mujahid in the commentary of the verse: “It may
be that your Lord will raise you to an Exalted Station.” This was also
mentioned through other chains, some traced back to the Prophet (s) and some
not.
Ibn Jarir [al-Tabari]
said: “This does not contradict the nearly-mass-narrated narrations (ma istafâdat bihi al-ahâdith) whereby
the Exalted Station is the Intercession as agreed upon by the Imams of all
Muslims.” He does not say that the Prophet’s (s) seating on the Throne is
denounced as false; only some Jahmis held it so. Nor is it objectionable to
mention it in the context of a commentary on the verse.
As we have mentioned before, Ibn
Taymiyya’s student al-Dhahabi dismissed the report as “condemned” (munkar). It is also remarkable that Ibn
Taymiyya, like his Hanbali predecessors, refuses to acknowledge the inauthenticity
of the chains of the narrations he refers to, especially those he says are
traced back to the Prophet (s).
Hajji Khalifa said: “Ibn Taymiyya
authored a book entitled al-‘Arsh in
which he stated that Allah sits on the kursî
and leaves some space vacant for the Prophet (s) to sit next to him. Abu Hayyan
al-Andalusi mentioned it in [his Qur’anic commentary entitled] al-Nahr and said that he read it in Ibn
Taymiyya’s own handwriting.”
And
Allah Most High knows best.
Blessings
and greetings of Allah on the Prophet, his Family and Companions.