And verily, if thou shouldst ask them: Who created
the heavens and the earth? they will say: Allah. Say: Bethink you then of those ye worship
beside Allah, if Allah willed some hurt for me, could they remove from me His
hurt; or if He willed some mercy for me, could they restrain His mercy? Say: Allah is my
all. In Him do (all) the trusting put their trust.
First, here is a more accurate translation:
And verily, if you ask them: "Who created the heavens and the earth?" Surely,
they will say: "Allah (has created them)." Say: "Tell me then, the things
that you invoke besides Allah, if Allah intended some harm for me, could
they remove His harm, or if He (Allah) intended some mercy for me, could they withhold
His Mercy?" Say: "Sufficient for me is Allah; in Him those who trust (i.e.
believers) must put their trust." S. 39:38 Hilali-Khan
The Quran discourages people from praying or invoking any one or thing else besides
Allah, which is quite relevant in exposing the true teachings of Islam as we shall see.
Second, the Quran doesnt simply say that Muslims are not to worship any
one else, but that they are not to serve anyone but Allah. The primary word which
the Quran uses for worshiping Allah is ibaadah and a person who worships is called
an abd (slave).
O My servants ('ibadi) who believe! surely My earth is vast,
therefore Me alone should you serve (fa'budun). S. 29:56 Shakir
Behold, the apostles came to them, from before them and behind them, (preaching):
"Serve (tabuduu) none but God." They said,
"If our Lord had so pleased, He would certainly have sent down angels (to preach).
Now we reject your mission (altogether)." S. 41:14 Y. Ali
Say: 'O unbelievers, I serve (abudu) not what you serve
(tabudun) and you are not serving (abiduna) what I
serve (abud), nor am I serving (abidum) what you
have served (abattum), neither are you serving (abiduna)
what I serve (abud). To you your religion, and to me my religion!'
S. 109:1-6 Arberry
This is precisely why Tawhid al-Uluhiyya is also called Tawhid al-Ibaadah.
Moreover, bowing down (sujud) and invoking/praying to Allah are acts which are
directly connected with the service that must be rendered only to Allah:
Surely those who are with thy Lord wax not too proud to serve Him
(ibadatihi); they chant His praise, and to Him they bow
(yasjudoona). S. 7:206 Arberry
And your Lord says: "Call on Me; I will answer your (Prayer): but
those who are too arrogant to serve Me (ibadati) will surely
find themselves in Hell - in humiliation!" S. 40:60
And who is more astray than one who calls (invokes) besides God, such as will not
answer him till the Day of Resurrection, and who are (even) unaware of their calls
(invocations) to them? And when mankind are gathered (on the Day of Resurrection), they
(false deities) will become enemies for them and will deny their
worshipping/serving (biibadatihim). S. 46:5-6 Hilali-Khan
Muhammad even forbad people to call their slaves abdi:
Narrated AbuHurayrah:
The Prophet (peace_be_upon_him) said: None of you must say: "My slave"
(abdi) and "My slave-woman" (amati), and a slave must not say: "My
lord" (rabbi or rabbati). The master (of a slave) should say: "My young
man" (fataya) and "My young woman" (fatati), and a slave should say
"My master" (sayyidi) and "My mistress" (sayyidati), for you are all
(Allahs slave and the Lord is Allah, Most High. (Sunan Abu Dawud, Book 41,
Number 4957)
Here is where the problem lies for Zawadi. Not only does the Quran allow Muslims
to own slaves who will serve them:
O believers, prescribed for you is retaliation, touching the slain; freeman for
freeman, slave for slave (wal-abdu bilabdi), female for
female. But if aught is pardoned a man by his brother, let the pursuing be honourable, and
let the payment be with kindliness. That is a lightening granted you by your Lord, and a
mercy; and for him who commits aggression after that -- for him there awaits a painful
chastisement. S. 2:178
And do not marry the idolatresses until they believe, and certainly a believing maid is
better than an idolatress woman, even though she should please you; and do not give
(believing women) in marriage to idolaters until they believe, and certainly a
believing servant (laabdum-muminun) is better than an idolater,
even though he should please you; these invite to the fire, and Allah invites to the
garden and to forgiveness by His will, and makes clear His communications to men, that
they may be mindful. S. 2:221 Arberry
And marry those among you who are single and those who are fit among your male
slaves (ibadikum) and your female slaves; if they are needy, Allah will
make them free from want out of His grace; and Allah is Ample-giving, Knowing. S. 24:32
Arberry
It even claims that Allah permitted the angels and certain prophets to bow down (sujud)
to other creatures!
And when We said to the angels, 'Bow yourselves to Adam'; so they bowed
themselves (osjudoo li-adama fasajadoo), save Iblis; he was one of the jinn, and
committed ungodliness against his Lord's command. What, and do you take him and his seed
to be your friends, apart from Me, and they an enemy to you? How evil is that exchange for
the evildoers! S. 18:50 Arberry
Behold! Joseph said to his father: "O my father! I did see eleven stars and the
sun and the moon: I saw them prostrate (sajideena) themselves to me!"
S. 12:4 Y. Ali
And he raised his parents upon the throne and they fell down in prostration
(sujjadan) before him, and he said: O my father! this is the significance of my
vision of old; my Lord has indeed made it to be true; and He was indeed kind to me when He
brought me forth from the prison and brought you from the desert after the Shaitan had
sown dissensions between me and my brothers, surely my Lord is benignant to whom He
pleases; surely He is the Knowing, the Wise. S. 12:100 Shakir
If this werent bad enough, there are certain reports where Muslims are invoking
and praying to others besides Allah:
Tirmidhi relates, through his chain of narrators from 'Uthman ibn Hunayf, that a blind
man came to the Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace) and said, "I've been
afflicted in my eyesight, so please pray to Allah for me." The Prophet (Allah bless
him and grant him peace) said: "Go make ablution (wudu), perform two rak'as of
prayer, and then say:
"Oh Allah, I ask You and turn to You through my Prophet Muhammad, the Prophet of
mercy; O MUHAMMAD (YA MUHAMMAD), I SEEK YOUR INTERCESSION with my Lord for the return
of my eyesight [and in another version: "for my need, that it may be fulfilled.
O Allah, grant him intercession for me"]."
The Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace) added, "And if there is some
need, do the same." (Ahmad ibn Naqib al-Misri, Reliance of the Traveller: The
Classic Manual of Islamic Sacred Law (Umdat Al-Salik) in Arabic with facing English
text, Commentary and Appendices, edited and translated by Nuh Hah Mim Keller [Amana
Corporation; Revised edition , July 1, 1997], w40.3, p. 935; bold and capital emphasis ours)
And:
Moreover, Tabarani, in his "al-Mu'jam al saghir," reports a hadith from
'Uthman ibn Hunayf that a man repeatedly visited Uthman ibn Affan (Allah be pleased with
him) concerning something he needed, but Uthman paid no attention to him or his need. The
man met Ibn Hunayf and complained to him about the matter - this being after the death
(wisal) of the Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace) and after the caliphates of
Abu Bakr and Umar - so Uthman ibn Hunayf, who was one of the Companions who collected
hadiths and was learned in the religion of Allah, said: "Go to the place of ablution
and perform ablution (wudu), then come to the mosque, perform two rak'as of prayer
therein, and say:
'O Allah, I ask You and turn to You through our Prophet Muhammad, the Prophet of mercy;
O MUHAMMAD (YA MUHAMMAD), I TURN THROUGH YOU to my Lord, that He may fulfill my need,'
and mention your need. Then come so that I can go with you [to the caliph Uthman]."
So the man left and did as he had been told, then went to the door of Uthman ibn Affan
(Allah be pleased with him), and the doorman came, took him by the hand, brought him to
Uthman ibn Affan, and seated him next to him on a cushion. 'Uthman asked, "What do
you need?" and the man mentioned what he wanted, and Uthman accomplished it for him,
then he said, "I hadn't remembered your need until just now," adding,
"Whenever you need something, just mention it." Then, the man departed, met
Uthman ibn Hunayf, and said to him, "May Allah reward you! He didn't see to my need
or pay any attention to me until you spoke with him." Uthman ibn Hunayf replied,
"By Allah, I didn't speak to him, but I have seen a blind man come to the Messenger
of Allah (Allah bless him and give him peace) and complain to him of the loss of his
eyesight. The Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace) said, "Can you not bear
it?' and the man replied, 'O Messenger of Allah, I do not have anyone to lead me around,
and it is a great hardship for me.' The Prophet (Allah bless him and grant him peace) told
him, 'Go to the place of ablution and perform ablution (wudu), then pray two rak'as of
prayer and make the supplications.'" Ibn Hunayf went on, "By Allah, we didn't
part company or speak long before the man returned to us as if nothing had ever been wrong
with him."
This is an explicit, unequivocal text from a prophetic Companion proving the legal
validity of tawassul through the dead. The account has been classified AS RIGOROUSLY
AUTHENTICATED (SAHIH) by Baihaqi, Mundhiri, and Haythami. (Ibid., w40.4, pp. 936-937;
source;
bold and capital emphasis ours)
In the above so-called sound narrations we find Muslims praying directly to Muhammad!
This isnt the only example of Muslims praying to or through someone besides Allah:
III: People asking the Imam to ask for rain when there is a drought
963. It is related that the father of 'Abdullah ibn Dinar said, "I heard Ibn
'Umar reciting the poem of Abu Talib:
Faultless, he is asked, by his noble face, to pray for rain,
A support for the orphans, a defence for the widows."
It is related that Salim said that his father (Ibn 'Umar) said, "Sometimes I
remembered the words of the poet while looking at the face of the Prophet, may Allah bless
him and grant him peace, when he was praying for rain. He did not get down until the rain
was flowing in every gutter:
Faultless, he is asked, by his noble face, to pray for rain,
A support for the orphans, a defence for the widows.
Those were the words of Abu Talib."
964. It is related from Anas, "If there was a drought, 'Umar ibn al-Khattab would
ask al-'Abbas ibn 'Abdu'l-Muttalib to do the rain prayer. He would say, 'O Allah, we seek
intercession with You by Your Prophet and we ask You for rain. We seek
intercession with You by the uncle of our Prophet, so give us rain!'"
He added, "And they were given rain." (Aisha Bewley, Sahih of al-Bukhari
Collection, Chapter 21. The Rain Prayer; source;
bold and underline emphasis ours)
Finally:
Abdullah bin Qurt narrates
I then departed from the Masjid via Ethiopia Gate and said to myself, "I will
commit a grave error if I fail to make salam at the tomb of Rasulullah, for I do not know
whether or not I will see it again."
So I went to the room where Aishah was sitting at the grave. Ali and
al-Abbas were also present with al-Husayn sitting in Alis lap and
al-Hasan in al-Abbass lap. They were reciting Suratul-Anam while
Ali was reciting Surah Hud. I made salam to Rasulullah.
Ali: O Ibn Qurt, are you going to Syria?
Ibn Qurt: Yes, O cousin of Rasulullah. I think that once I reach there the two
armies will already be deeply embroiled in fighting. They will see me coming without help
or reinforcements. I really fear that they will become weak and frightened. I wish that I
could reach them before they fight so that I can at least advise them and counsel them
with patience.
Ali: So what is stopping you from asking Umar to make dua for
you?
Ibn Qurt: I am well aware of all these virtues of Umar which you have
mentioned, but in addition I would like your dua and the dua of
al-Abbas, the paternal uncle of Rasulullah, especially here at the noble tomb of
Rasulullah.
Al-Abbas raised his hand in supplication. Ali, al-Hasan, al-Husayn,
Aishah (and Hafsah and Umm Salamah who had also arrived) joined them. He prayed, "O
Allah, we seek intercession THROUGH THIS CHOSEN PROPHET AND SELECTED MESSENGER THROUGH
WHOM ADAM ALSO SOUGHT INTERCERSSION and then You forgave his error. O Allah, make the
road easy for Abdullah and fold up the long distances for him. Help the Sahabah of
Your Prophet with victory. You are the Hearer of Dua."
He then said, "Go Abdullah, for it is unlikely that Allah will reject the dua
of Umar, Abbas, Ali, al-Hasan, and the wives of Rasulullah, especially
when they have interceded through the best of all creation." (Al-Imam al-Waqidi,
The Islamic Conquest of Syria, A Translation of Futuhusham: The Inspiring History of the
Sahabahs Conquest of Syria, translated by Mawlana Sulayman al-Kindi [Ta-Ha
Publishers Ltd., London 2005], Part 3: Al-Yarmuk, pp. 287-288; capital and underline
emphasis ours)
All of these examples conclusively refute the assertion that Islam does not tolerate or
allow Muslims to pray, serve and/or bow to anyone other than Allah.
3. Tawheed Al-Asmaa' wa As-Sifaat. The exclusiveness uniqueness of Allah with
regard to His names and attributes as He told us in the Qur'an or commanded his Prophet
(peace be upon him) to tell us in the hadith. Stated another way: this form of tawheed
pertains to complete acceptance of Allah's attributes and names as they have been given to
us.
Zawadi forgets to mention the following important piece of information:
The Essence of Shirk in Tawheed al-Asma wa-Sifaat:
Shirk in Tawheed al-Asma wa-Sifaat is to
give other than Allah, the qualities (Attributes), which are specific of Allah Alone.
For example, amongst the Attributes of Allah is that He is the Knower of the Unseen (Ghayb)
and He alone knows what the heart conceals. Allah says: "Say,
None in the Heavens and the earth know the Ghayb (Unseen) except Allah, nor can they
perceive when they shall be resurrected."
Therefore, to consider someone other than Allah to have the knowledge of the past,
future or the Unseen is Shirk (associating partners with Allah).
This concept of Tawheed distinguishes Islam from many other religions. Those who have
studied comparative religion can very easily realize that, while the Jews made their
Creator like the creation, the Christians make the creation like the Creator.
(Sajid Abdul Kayum, The Jamaa'at Tableegh and the Deobandis, Chapter 2:
The Islamic Concept of Tawheed (Monotheism); source;
bold emphasis ours)
And:
Ibn al-Qayyim has listed some of the types of ilhad to include:
- To deny (tatil) or distort (tawil) their meanings, or claim that they have no meaning
(tafwid)
- To consider them as human attributes (anthropomorphism)
- To derive names for Allah that are not befitting Him (e.g. Father)
- To name idols or other beings with the names of Allah or their derivates (e.g. al-Uzza,
al-Manat)
May Allah (SWT) guide us all. Ameen. (What is Tawheed Asma wa al-Siffat?
July, 2007: source;
bold emphasis ours)
Pay careful attention to the bold parts naming any being with the names of Allah
or their derivatives is a clear violation of this category of Tawhid.(1)
And yet even here Zawadi runs into problems since the Quran ascribes certain divine
characteristics to other beings. For instance, Allahs Spirit is a divine person who
shares Gods essential attributes such as giving life, being omnipotent and
omnipresent etc.
And mention in the Book Mary when she withdrew from her people to an eastern place, and
she took a veil apart from them; then We sent unto her Our Spirit that presented
himself to her a man without fault. She said, 'I take refuge in the All-merciful
from thee! If thou fearest God ... He said, 'I am but a messenger come from thy Lord, to
give thee a boy most pure. She said, 'How shall I have a son whom no mortal has
touched, neither have I been unchaste?' He said, 'Even so thy Lord has said: "Easy is
that for Me; and that We may appoint him a sign unto men and a mercy from Us; it is a
thing decreed."' S. 19:16-21
And Mary, Imran's daughter, who guarded her virginity, so We breathed into her of
Our Spirit, and she confirmed the Words of her Lord and His Books, and became one
of the obedient. S. 66:12
What we understand by interpreting these verses in light of one another is that Allah
sent forth his Spirit to cause Mary to conceive Jesus Christ. Hence, the Spirit is the
Creator.
Thou shalt not find any people who believe in God and the Last Day who are loving to
anyone who opposes. God and His Messenger, not though they were their fathers, or their
sons, or their brothers, or their clan. Those -- He has written faith upon their hearts,
and He has confirmed them with a Spirit from Himself; and He shall admit them
into gardens underneath which rivers flow, therein to dwell forever, God being well-pleased
with them, and they well-pleased with Him. Those are God's party; why, surely God's party
-- they are the prosperers. S. 58:22
In order for the Spirit to be able to confirm, or strengthen, all the believers
wherever they maybe he must be omnipresent and omnipotent, attributes which belong only to
God. It is little wonder that the late Muslim translator Abdullah Yusuf Ali believed that
this Spirit from Allah is actually an incomprehensible Divine entity:
Cf. ii 87 and 253, where it is said that God strengthened the Prophet Jesus with the
holy spirit. Here we learn that all good and righteous men are strengthened by God with
the holy spirit. If anything, the phrase used here is stronger, a spirit from
Himself'. Whenever any one offers his heart in faith and purity to God, God accepts
it, engraves that faith on the seeker's heart, and further fortifies him with the
Divine Spirit, which we can no more define adequately than we can define in human language
the nature of God. (Ali, The Meaning of the Holy Quran, p. 1518, f. 5365; bold
emphasis ours)
Moreover, specific names of Allah such as al-Aziz (the (al)Mighty):
Allah made it not but as a message of good news for you and as an assurance to your
hearts. And there is no victory except from Allah, the All-Mighty (al-Aziz),
the All-Wise. S. 3:126 Hilali-Khan
He is Allah than Whom there is La ilaha illa Huwa (none has the right to be
worshipped but He) the King, the Holy, the One Free from all defects, the Giver of
security, the Watcher over His creatures, the All-Mighty (al-Aziz), the
Compeller, the Supreme. Glory be to Allah! (High is He) above all that they associate
as partners with Him. S. 59:23 Hilali-Khan
Whatsoever is in the heavens and whatsoever is on the earth glorifies Allah, the King
(of everything), the Holy, the All-Mighty (al-Aziz), the All-Wise. S. 62:1
Hilali-Khan
And Rabb (Lord):
Truly! Allah is my Lord and your Lord, so worship Him (Alone).
This is the Straight Path. S. 3:51 Hilali-Khan
He [Musa (Moses)] said: "O my Lord!
I have power only over myself and my brother, so separate us from the people
who are the Fasiqun (rebellious and disobedient to Allah)!"
S. 5:25 Hilali-Khan
Are even applied to human beings:
And women in the city said: "The wife of Al-'Aziz is seeking to
seduce her (slave) young man, indeed she loves him violently; verily we see her in plain
error." S. 12:30 Hilali-Khan
(The King) said (to the women): "What was your affair when you did seek to seduce
Yusuf (Joseph)?" The women said: "Allah forbid! No evil know we against
him!" The wife of Al-'Aziz said: "Now the truth is manifest (to
all), it was I who sought to seduce him, and he is surely of the truthful." S. 12:51
Hilali-Khan
What makes this example rather interesting is that it erroneously applies an Arabic
title to an Egyptian who lived before the time of Moses! (*)
And:
There did Zakariya PRAY TO HIS LORD: 'O MY LORD! Grant unto me from Thee a
progeny that is pure: for Thou art He that heareth prayer!' While he was standing in
prayer in the chamber, THE ANGELS CALLED UNTO HIM: 'Allah doth give thee glad
tidings of Yahyá (John) witnessing the truth of a Word from Allah, and (be besides)
noble, chaste, and a prophet,- of the (goodly) company of the righteous.' HE SAID: 'O
MY LORD! How shall I have a son, seeing I am very old, and my wife is barren?' 'Thus,'
was the answer, 'Doth Allah accomplish what He willeth.' HE SAID: 'O MY LORD! Give
me a Sign!' 'Thy Sign,' was the answer, 'Shall be that thou shalt speak to no man for
three days but with signals. Then celebrate the praises of thy Lord again and again, and
glorify Him in the evening and in the morning.' S. 3:38-41 Shakir
When he called upon his Lord in a low voice, He said: MY LORD! surely my bones
are weakened and my head flares with hoariness, and, my Lord! I have never been
unsuccessful in my prayer to Thee: And surely I fear my cousins after me, and my wife is
barren, therefore grant me from Thyself an heir, Who should inherit me and inherit from
the children of Yaqoub, and make him, my Lord, one in whom Thou art well pleased. O
Zakariya! surely We give you good news of a boy whose name shall be Yahya: We have not
made before anyone his equal. He said: O MY LORD! when shall I have a son, and my wife
is barren, and I myself have reached indeed the extreme degree of old age? HE SAID: So
shall it be, YOUR LORD SAYS: It is easy to Me, and indeed I created you before, when
you were nothing. He said: My Lord! give me a sign. He said: Your sign is that you will
not be able to speak to the people three nights while in sound health. S. 19:3-10 Shakir
Note the following points from the foregoing references:
- Zechariah prays to God for a son.
- The angels respond to his request.
- There is a subsequent discussion which allegedly takes place between the angels and
Zechariah.
What this means is that Zechariah was addressing the angels, or one specific angel,
as his lord! Here is a portion of the passage which highlights this point:
He said, 'O my Lord, how shall I have a son, seeing my wife is barren, and I have
attained to the declining of old age?' SAID HE, 'So it shall be; THY LORD SAYS,
"Easy is that for Me, seeing that I created thee aforetime, when thou wast
nothing."' S. 19:8-9 Arberry
The person speaking refers to what Zechariah's lord had said, which makes it obvious
that he could not be Allah. And yet it is this same entity who was speaking on
Allahs behalf that Zechariah addressed as his lord!
Mary is also depicted as addressing the angels or one of the angels as her lord:
Behold! THE ANGELS SAID: 'O Mary! Allah hath chosen thee and purified thee -
chosen thee above the women of all nations. O Mary! worship thy Lord devoutly: Prostrate
thyself, and bow down (in prayer) with those who bow down.' This is part of the tidings of
the things unseen, which We reveal unto thee (O Messenger) by inspiration: Thou wast not
with them when they cast lots with pens (or arrows), as to which of them should be charged
with the care of Mary: Nor wast thou with them when they disputed (the point). Behold! THE
ANGELS SAID: 'O Mary! Allah giveth thee glad tidings of a Word from Him: his name will
be Christ Jesus, the son of Mary, held in honor in this world and the Hereafter and of
(the company of) those nearest to Allah. He shall speak to the people in childhood and in
maturity. And he shall be (of the company) of the righteous.' She said: 'O MY LORD!
How shall I have a son when no man hath touched me?' HE SAID: 'Even so; Allah createth
what He willeth: When He hath decreed a plan, He but saith to it, "Be," and it
is! S. 3:42-47
Thus, the Quran portrays prophets and believers as violating another aspect of Islamic
monotheism!
It is not (possible) that a man, to whom is given the Book, and Wisdom, and the
Prophetic Office, should say to people: 'Be ye my worshippers rather than Allah's: On the
contrary (he would say) 'Be ye worshippers of Him (Who is truly the Cherisher of all): For
ye have taught the Book and ye have studied it earnestly.' Nor would he instruct you to
take angels and prophets for Lords and patrons. What! would he bid you to unbelief
after ye have bowed your will (to Allah in Islám)? S. 3:79-80
It does seem that Allah has bid some prophets and believers to unbelief after they had
bowed to him.
With the foregoing in perspective it is rather obvious that Zawadi couldnt
adequately refute my claims and therefore decided to throw out red herrings by bringing up
irrelevant issues. Unfortunately for Zawadi, he didnt realize that by raising the
topic of Tawhid he would only be helping us to expose the fact that the Quran does not
teach the type of monotheism that he and his Muslim cohorts erroneously believe.
We end our rebuttal by adopting Zawadis closing remarks.
Conclusion
The Quran and hadith literature are filled with contradictions since certain references
teach that the polytheists of Mecca believed that Allah was the supreme deity and the
creator of the heavens and the earth whereas other texts imply that they actually believed
that he was just one of many rival and competing gods/goddesses.
Moreover, Zawadis rebuttal only provided another example of his failure and
inability to pay close attention to what the Quran teaches and to what I actually wrote.
It has long been obvious to us that Zawadi cant help but to expose his gross
ignorance of basic kindergarten grade Islamic theology.
Further Reading
Here is a host of articles and rebuttals which deal with the issue of Islamic
monotheism more in depth, e.g. whether Allah is a singular consciousness or a
multi-personal Being, whether the Quran teaches the three classifications of Tawhid etc.,
http://answering-islam.org/Shamoun/idolatry.htm
http://answering-islam.org/Responses/Menj/idolatry1.htm
http://answering-islam.org/Shamoun/allah_swearing_by_idols.htm
http://answering-islam.org/Shamoun/allahs_oaths.htm