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Is it permissible for a Muslim to believe that Allah is in the Sky in Literal sense?
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Is it permissible for a Muslim to believe that Allah is in the sky in literal sense?
©Nuh Ha Mim Keller 1995
No. The literal sense of being "in the sky" would mean that Allah is actually
in one of His creatures, for the sky is something created. It is not permissible
to believe that Allah indwells or occupies (in Arabic, hulul) any
of His creatures, as the Christians believe about Jesus, or the Hindus about
their avatars.
What is obligatory
for a human being to know is that Allah is ghaniyy or "absolutely
free from need" of anything He has created. He explicitly says in surat
al-Ankabut of the Qur'an,
"Verily
Allah is absolutely free of need of anything in the worlds" (Qur'an
29:6).
Allah mentions
this attribute of ghina or "freedom of need for anything whatsoever"
in some seventeen verses in the Qur'an. It is a central point of Islamic
`aqida or faith, and is the reason why it is impossible that Allah
could be Jesus (upon whom be peace) or be anyone else with a body and form:
because bodies need space and time, while Allah has absolutely no need for
anything. This is the `aqida of the Qur'an, and Muslim scholars have
kept it in view in understanding other Qur'anic verses or hadiths.
Muslims lift
their hands toward the sky when they make supplications (du'a)
to Allah because the sky is the qibla for du'a, not that
Allah occupies that particular direction--just as the Kaaba is the qibla
of the prayer (salat), without Muslims believing that Allah is
in that direction. Rather, Allah in His wisdom has made the qibla
a sign (ayah) of Muslim unity, just as He has made the sky the
sign of His exaltedness and His infinitude, meanings which come to the
heart of every believer merely by facing the sky and supplicating Allah.
It was part
of the divine wisdom to incorporate these meanings into the prophetic
sunna to uplift the hearts of the people who first heard them, and to
direct them to the exaltedness and infinitude of Allah through the greatest
and most palpable physical sign of them: the visible sky that Allah had
raised above them. Many of them, especially when newly from the Jahiliyya
or "pre-Islamic Period of Ignorance", were extremely close to physical,
perceptible realities and had little conception of anything besides--as
is attested to by their idols, which were images set up on the ground.
Umar ibn al-Khattab mentions, for example, that in the Jahiliyya, they
might make their idols out of dates, and if they later grew hungry, they
would simply eat them. The language of the Messenger of Allah (Allah bless
him and give him peace) in conveying the exaltedness of Allah Most High
to such people was of course in terms they could understand without difficulty,
and used the imagery of the sky above them. Imam al-Qurtubi, the famous
Qur'anic exegete of the seventh/thirteenth century, says:
The
hadiths on this subject are numerous, rigorously authenticated (sahih),
and widely known, and indicate the exaltedness of Allah, being undeniable
by anyone except an atheist or obstinate ignoramus. Their meaning is to
dignify Allah and exalt Him above all that is base and low, to characterize
Him by exaltedness and greatness, not by being in places, particular directions,
or within limits, for these are the qualities of physical bodies (al-Jami
li ahkam al-Qur'an. 20 vols. Cairo 1387/1967. Reprint (20 vols in
10). Beirut: Dar Ihya al-Turath al-Arabi, n.d.,18.216).
In this connection,
a hadith has been related by Malik in his Muwatta' and by Muslim
in his Sahih, that Muawiya ibn al-Hakam came to the Prophet (Allah
bless him and give him peace) and told him, "I am very newly from the Jahiliyya,
and now Allah has brought Islam," and he proceeded to ask about various
Jahiliyya practices, until at last he said that he had slapped his slave
girl, and asked if he should free her, as was obligatory if she was a believer.
The Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace) requested that she be brought,
and then asked her, "Where is Allah?" and she said, "In the sky (Fi al-sama)";
whereupon he asked her, "Who am I?" and she said, "You are the Messenger
of Allah"; at which he said, Free her, "for she is a believer" (Sahih
Muslim, 5 vols. Cairo 1376/1956. Reprint. Beirut: Dar al-Fikr, 1403/1983,
1.382: 538). Imam Nawawi says of this hadith:
This
is one of the "hadiths of the attributes," about which scholars have two
positions. The first is to have faith in it without discussing its meaning,
while believing of Allah Most High that "there is nothing whatsoever
like unto Him" (Qur'an 42:11), and that He is exalted above having
any of the attributes of His creatures. The second is to figuratively
explain it in a fitting way, scholars who hold this position adducing
that the point of the hadith was to test the slave girl: Was she a monotheist,
who affirmed that the Creator, the Disposer, the Doer, is Allah alone
and that He is the one called upon when a person making supplication (du'a)
faces the sky--just as those performing the prayer (salat) face
the Kaaba, since the sky is the qibla of those who supplicate,
as the Kaaba is the qibla of those who perform the prayer--or was
she a worshipper of the idols which they placed in front of themselves?
So when she said, In the sky, it was plain that she was not an
idol worshipper (Sahih Muslim bi Sharh al-Nawawi. 18 vols. Cairo
1349/1930. Reprint (18 vols. in 9). Beirut: Dar al-Fikr, 1401/1981, 5.24).
It is noteworthy
that Imam Nawawi does not mention understanding the hadith literally as
a possible scholarly position at all. This occasions surprise today among
some Muslims, who imagine that what is at stake is the principle of accepting
a single rigorously authenticated (sahih) hadith as evidence in Islamic
faith (`aqida), for this hadith is such a single hadith, of those
termed in Arabic ahad, or "conveyed by a single chain of transmission",
as opposed to being mutawatir or "conveyed by so many chains of transmission
that it is impossible it could have been forged".
Yet this
is not what is at stake, because hadiths of its type are only considered
acceptable as evidence by traditional scholars of Islamic `aqida
if one condition can be met: that the tenet of faith mentioned in the
hadith is salimun min al-muarada or "free of conflicting evidence".
This condition is not met by this particular hadith for a number of reasons.
First, the story described in the hadith has come to us in a number of
other well-authenticated versions that vary a great deal from the "Where
is Allah?--In the sky" version. One of these is related by Ibn Hibban
in his Sahih with a well-authenticated (hasan) chain of transmission,
in which the Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace) asked the slave
girl, "'Who is your Lord?' and she said, 'Allah'; whereupon he asked her,
'Who am I?' and she said, 'You are the Messenger of Allah'; at which he
said, 'Free her, for she is a believer'" (al-Ihsan fi taqrib Sahih
Ibn Hibban, 18 vols. Beirut: Muassasa al-Risala, 1408/1988, 1.419:
189).
In another
version, related by Abd al-Razzaq with a rigorously authenticated (sahih)
chain of transmission, the Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace)
said to her, "Do you testify that there is no god but Allah?" and she
said yes. He said, "Do you testify that I am the Messenger of Allah?"
and she said yes. He said, "Do you believe in resurrection after death?"
and she said yes. He said, "Free her" (al-Musannaf, 11 vols. Beirut:
al-Majlis al-Ilmi, 1390/1970, 9.175: 16814).
In other
versions, the slave girl cannot speak, but merely points to the sky in
answer. Ibn Hajar al-Asqalani has said of the various versions of this
hadith, "There is great contradiction in the wording" (Talkhis
al-habir, 4 vols. in 2. Cairo: Maktaba al-Kulliyat al-Azhariyya, 1399/1979,
3.250). When a hadith has numerous conflicting versions, there is a strong
possibility that it has been related merely in terms of what one or more
narrators understood (riwaya bi al-ma'na), and hence one of the
versions is not adequate to establish a point of `aqida.
Second, this
latter consideration is especially applicable to the point in question
because the Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace) explicitly detailed
the pillars of Islamic faith (iman) in a hadith related in Sahih
Muslim when he answered the questions of the angel Gabriel, saying, True
faith (iman) is to believe in Allah, His angels, His Books, His
messengers, the Last Day, and to believe destiny (qadr), its good
and evil (Sahih Muslim, 1.37: 8)--and he did not mention anything
about Allah being "in the sky". If it had been the decisive test
of a Muslims belief or unbelief (as in the "in the sky" hadith seems to
imply), it would have been obligatory for the Prophet (Allah bless him
and give him peace) to mention it in this hadith, the whole point of which
is to say precisely what "iman is".
Third, if
one takes the hadith as meaning that Allah is literally "in the sky",
it conflicts with other equally sahih hadiths that have presumably equal
right to be taken literally--such as the hadith qudsi related by
al-Hakim that Allah Most High says, "I am with My servant when he makes
remembrance of Me and his lips move with Me" (al-Mustadrak ala al-Sahihayn.
4 vols. Hyderabad, 1334/1916. Reprint (with index vol. 5). Beirut: Dar
al-Marifa, n.d., 1.496), a hadith that al- Hakim said was rigorously authenticated
(sahih), which al-Dhahabi confirmed. Or such as the hadith related
by al-Nasai, Abu Dawud, and Muslim that "the closest a servant is to his
Lord is while prostrating" (Sahih Muslim, 1.350: 482)--whereas
if Allah were literally "in the sky", the closest one would be to Him
would be while standing upright. Or such as the hadith related by al-Bukhari
in his Sahih, in which the Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace)
forbade spitting during prayer ahead of one, because when a person prays,
"his Lord is in front of him" (Sahih al-Bukhari, 1.112: 406). Finally,
in the hadiths of the Mir'aj or "Nocturnal Ascent", the Prophet
(Allah bless him and give him peace) was shown all of the seven heavens
(samawat) by Gabriel, and Allah was not mentioned as being in any
of them.
Fourth, the
literal interpretation of Allah being "in the sky" contradicts two fundamentals
of Islamic `aqida established by the Qur'an. The first of these
is Allah's attribute of mukhalafa li al- hawadith or "not resembling
created things in any way", as Allah says in surat al-Shura, "There
is nothing whatsoever like unto Him" (Qur'an 42:11), whereas if He
were literally "in the sky", there would be innumerable things
like unto Him in such respects as having altitude, position, direction,
and so forth. The second fundamental that it contradicts, as mentioned
above, is Allah's attribute of ghina or "being absolutely free
of need for anything created" that He affirms in numerous verses in the
Qur'an. It is impossible that Allah could be a corporeal entity because
bodies need space and time, while Allah has absolutely no need for anything.
Fifth, the
literalist interpretation of "in the sky" entails that the sky encompasses
Allah on all sides, such that He would be smaller than it, and it would
thus be greater than Allah, which is patently false.
For these
reasons and others, Islamic scholars have viewed it obligatory to figuratively
interpret the above hadith and other texts containing similar figures
of speech, in ways consonant with how the Arabic language is used. Consider
the Qur'anic verse "Do you feel safe that He who is in the sky will
not make the earth swallow you while it quakes" (Qur'an 67:16), for
which the following examples of traditional tafsir or "Qur'anic
commentary" can be offered:
(al-Qurtubi:)
The more exacting scholars hold that it ["in the sky"] means, "Do
you feel secure from Him who is over the sky"--just as Allah says,
"Journey in the earth" (Qur'an 9:2), meaning journey over it--not over
the sky by way of physical contact or spatialization, but by way of omnipotent
power and control. Another position is that it means "Do you feel secure
from Him who is over ('ala) the sky," just as it is said, "So-and-so
is over Iraq and the Hijaz", meaning that he is the governor and commander
of them (al-Jami li ahkam al-Qur'an, 18.216).
(al-Shirbini
al-Khatib:) There are various interpretive aspects to "He who is
in the sky," one of which is that it means "He whose dominion is in
the sky," because it is the dwelling place of the angels, and there
are His Throne, His Kursi, the Guarded Tablet; and from it are made
to descend His decrees, His Books, His commands, and His prohibitions.
A second interpretive possibility is that "He who is in the sky" omits
the first term of an ascriptive construction (idafa)--in other
words, "Do you feel safe from the Creator of him who is in the sky";
meaning the angels who dwell in the sky, for they are the ones who are
commanded to dispense the divine mercy or divine vengeance (al-Siraj
al-Munir. 4 vols. Bulaq 1285/1886. Reprint. Beirut: Dar al-Marifa,
n.d., 4.344).
(Fakhr
al-Din al-Razi:) "He who is in the sky" may mean the angel who is
authorized to inflict divine punishments; that is, Gabriel (upon whom
be peace); the words "cause the earth to swallow you" meaning "by Allah's
command and leave" (Tafsir al-Fakhr al-Razi. 32 vols. Beirut
1401/1981. Reprint (32 vols. in 16). Beirut: Dar al-Fikr, 1405/1985,
30.70).
(Abu
Hayyan al-Nahwi:) Or the context of these words may be according
to the convictions of those being addressed [the unbelievers], for they
were anthropomorphists. So that the meaning would be, "Do you feel safe
from Him whom you claim is in the sky?--while He is exalted above all
place" (Tafsir al-nahr al-madd min al-Bahr al-muhit. 2 vols.
in 3. Beirut: Dar al-Janan and Muassasa al-Kutub al-Thaqafiyya, 1407/1987,
2.1132).
(Qadi
Iyad:) There is no disagreement among Muslims, one and all--their
legal scholars, their hadith scholars, their scholars of theology, both
those of them capable of expert scholarly reasoning and those who merely
follow the scholarship of others--that the textual evidences that mention
Allah Most High being "in the sky", such as His words, "Do you feel
safe that He who is in the sky will not make the earth swallow you,"
and so forth, are not as their literal sense (dhahir) seems to
imply, but rather, all scholars interpret them in other than their ostensive
sense (Sahih Muslim bi Sharh al-Nawawi, 5.24).
We now turn
to a final example, the hadith related by Muslim that the Prophet (Allah
bless him and give him peace) said:
Your
Lord Blessed and Exalted descends each night to the sky of this world,
when the last third of the night remains, and says: "Who supplicates Me,
that I may answer him? Who asks Me, that I may give to him? Who seeks
My forgiveness, that I may forgive him?" (Sahih Muslim, 1.521:
758).
This hadith,
if we reflect for a moment, is not about `aqida, but rather has a quite
practical point to establish; namely, that we are supposed to do something
in the last third of the night, to rise and pray. This is why Imam al-Nawawi,
when he gave the present chapter names to the headings of Sahih Muslim,
put this hadith under "Instilling Desire to Supplicate and Make Remembrance
of Allah (dhikr) in the Last of the Night, and the Answering Therein".
As for the meaning of "descends" in the hadith, al-Nawawi says:
This
is one of the "hadiths of the Attributes", and there are two positions
about it, as previously mentioned in the "Book of Iman". To summarize,
the first position, which is the school of the majority of early Muslims
and some theologians, is that one should believe that the hadith is true
in a way befitting Allah Most High, while the literal meaning of it as
known to us and applicable to ourselves is not what is intended, without
discussing the figurative meaning, though we believe that Allah is transcendently
above all attributes of createdness, of change of position, of motion,
and all other attributes of created things.
The second
position, the school of most theologians, of whole groups of the early
Muslims (salaf), and reported from Malik and al-Awzai, is that
such hadiths should be figuratively interpreted in a way appropriate
to them in their contexts. According to this school of thought, they
interpret the hadith in two ways. The first is the interpretation of
Malik ibn Anas and others, that it ["your Lord descends"] means "His
mercy, command, and angels descend," just as it is said, "The sultan
did such-and-such," when his followers did it at his command. The second
is that it is a metaphor signifying [Allah's] concern for those making
supplication, by answering them and kindness toward them (Sahih Muslim
bi Sharh al-Nawawi, 6.3637).
The hadith scholar
Ali al-Qari says about the above hadith of Allah's "descending":
You
know that Malik and al-Awazai, who are among the greatest of the early
Muslims, both gave detailed figurative interpretations to the hadith.
. . . Another of them was Jafar al-Sadiq. Indeed a whole group of them
[the early Muslims], as well as later scholars, said that whoever believes
Allah to be in a particular physical direction is an unbeliever, as al-Iraqi
has explicitly stated, saying that this was the position of Abu Hanifa,
Malik, al-Shafi'i, al-Ashari, and al- Baqillani (Mirqat al-mafatih:
sharh Mishkat al-masabih. 5 vols. Cairo 1309/1892. Reprint. Beirut:
Dar Ihya al-Turath al-Arabi, n.d., 2.137).
It is worth
remembering that al-Iraqi was a hafiz or "hadith master", someone with over
100,000 hadiths by memory, while Ali al-Qari was a hadith authority who
produced reference works still in use today on forged hadiths. In other
words, each had the highest credentials for verifying the chains of transmission
of the positions they relate. For this reason, their transmission of the
position of the unbelief of whoever ascribes a direction to Allah carries
its weight.
But perhaps
it is fitter today to say that Muslims who believe that Allah is somehow
"up there" are not unbelievers. For they have the shubha or "extenuating
circumstance" that moneyed quarters in our times are aggressively pushing
the bid'a of anthropomorphism. This bid'a was confined in previous
centuries to a small handful of Hanbalis, who were rebutted time and again
by ulama of Ahl al-Sunna like Abd al-Rahman ibn al-Jawzi (d. 597/1201),
who addressed his fellow Hanbalis in his Daf shubah al-tashbih bi akaff
al-tanzih [Rebuttal of the insinuations of anthropomorphism at the
hands of divine transcendence] with the words:
If
you had said, "We but read the hadiths and remain silent," no one would
have condemned you. What is shameful is that you interpret them literally.
Do not surrreptiously introduce into the madhhab of this righteous, early
Muslim man [Ahmad ibn Hanbal] that which is not of it. You have clothed
this madhhab in shameful disgrace, until it can hardly be said "Hanbali"
any more without saying anthropomorphist (Daf shubah al-tashbih bi
akaff al-tanzih. Cairo n.d. Reprint. Cairo: al-Maktaba al-Tawfiqiyya,
1396/1976, 2829).
These beliefs
apparently survived for some centuries in Khorasan, Afghanistan, and elsewhere
in the East, for Imam al-Kawthari notes that the Hanbali Ibn Taymiya (d.
728/1328) picked up the details of them from manuscripts on sects (nihal)
when the libraries of scholars poured into Damascus with caravans fleeing
from the Mongols farther east. He read them without a perspicacious teacher
to guide him, came to believe what he understood from them, and went on
to become an advocate for them in his own works (al-Kawthari, al-Sayf
al-saqil fi al-radd ala Ibn Zafil. Cairo 1356/ 1937. Reprint. Cairo:
Maktaba al-Zahran, n.d. 56).
He was imprisoned
for these ideas numerous times before his death, the ulama of Damascus
accusing him of anthropomorphism (al-Asqalani, al-Durar al-kamina fi
ayan al-mia al-thamina. 4 vols. Hyderabad 134950/193031. Reprint.
Beirut: Dar Ihya al-Turath al-Arabi, n.d., 1.155).
Writings
were authored by scholars like Abu Hayyan al-Nahwi (d. 745/ 1344), Taqi
al-Din Subki (756/1355), Badr al-Din ibn Jamaa (d. 733/ 1333), al-Amir
al-Sanani, author of Subul al-salam (d. 1182/1768), Taqi al-Din
al-Hisni, author of Kifayat al-akhyar, (d. 829/1426), and Ibn Hajar
al-Haytami (d. 974/1567) in rebuttal of his `aqida, and it remained
without acceptance by Muslims for another four hundred years, until the
eighteenth-century Wahhabi movement, which followed Ibn Taymiya on points
of `aqida, and made him its "Sheikh of Islam." But was not until
with the advent of printing in the Arab world that Ibn Taymiya's books
(and the tenets of this sect) really saw the light of day, when a wealthy
merchant from Jedda commissioned the printing of his Minhaj al-sunna
and other works on `aqida in Egypt at the end of the last century,
resurrected this time as Salafism or "return to early Islam." They have
since been carried to all parts of the Islamic world, borne upon a flood
of copious funding from one or two modern Muslim countries, whose efforts
have filled mosques with books, pamphlets, and young men who push these
ideas and even ascribe them (with Ibn Taymiya's questionable chains of
transmission, or none at all) to the Imams of the earliest Muslims. My
point, as regards considering Muslims believers or unbelievers, is that
this kind of money can buy the influence and propaganda that turn night
into day; so perhaps contemporary Muslims have some excuse for these ideas--until
they have had a chance to learn that the God of Islam is transcendently
above being a large man, just as He is transcendently above being subject
to time or to space, which are but two of His creatures.
To summarize
what I have said in answer to your question above, scholars take the primary
texts of the Qur'an and sunna literally unless there is some cogent reason
for them not to. In the case of Allah "descending" or being "in the sky",
there are many such reasons. First, a literal interpretation of these
texts makes it impossible to join between them and the many other rigorously
authenticated texts about Allah being "with" a servant when he does dhikr,
"closer to him than the jugular vein" (Qur'an 50:16), "in front of him"
when he prays, "closest" to him when he is prostrating, "in the sky" when
a slave girl was asked; "with you wherever you are" (Qur'an 58:4), and
so on. These are incoherent when taken together literally, and only become
free of contradictions when they are understood figuratively, as Malik,
al-Awzai, and al-
Nawawi
have done above. Second, the Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace)
detailed the beliefs that every Muslim must have in the Gabriel Hadith
in Sahih Muslim and others, and did not mention Allah being "in the sky"
(or anywhere else) in any of them. Third, Allah's being "in the sky" as
birds, clouds, and so on are in the sky in a literal sense contradicts
the `aqida of the Qur'an that there is "nothing whatsoever like
unto Him" (Qur'an 42:11). Fourth, the notion of Allah's being in particular
places contradicts the `aqida expressed in seventeen verses of
the Qur'an that Allah is free of need of anything, while things that occupy
places need both space and time.
These reasons
are not exhaustive, but are intended to answer your question by illustrating
the `aqida and principles of traditional ulama in interpreting
the kind of texts we are talking about. They show just how far from traditional
Islam is the belief that Allah is "in the sky" in a literal sense, and
why it is not permissible for any Muslim to believe this. And Allah alone
gives success.
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