ISLAMIC BELIEFS FROM THE SHIITE POINT OF VIEW [Electronic resources] نسخه متنی

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ISLAMIC BELIEFS FROM THE SHIITE POINT OF VIEW [Electronic resources] - نسخه متنی

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except in the well known saying which Abu Dharr Ghifari has recited from the
Holy Prophet, according to which their number has been set at 124,000.

The
Prophets Who are Bringers of Divine Law


From what can be deduced from the Quran, it can be concluded that all the
prophets of God did not bring a Shari'ah. Rather, five of them - Noah, Abraham,
Moses, Jesus, and the Prophet Muhammad - are "possessors of
determination" (ulu'l-'azim), those who have brought a Shari'ah.
Other prophets follow the Shari'ah of those who "possess
determination." God has said in the Quran, "He hath ordained for you
that religion which He commended unto Noah, and that which We inspire in thee
(Muhammad), and that which We commended unto Abraham and Moses and Jesus"
(Quran, XLII, 13). He has also said, "And when We exacted a covenant from
the Prophets, and from thee (O Muhammad) and from Noah and Abraham and Moses and
Jesus son of Mary, We took from them a solemn covenant" (Quran, XXXIII,7 ).

The Prophecy
of Muhammad


The last prophet of God is Hadrat-i Muhammad - upon whom be blessings and
peace - who possesses a book and a Shari'ah and in whom Muslims have placed
their faith. The Prophet was born fifty three years before the beginning if the
hegira calendar in Mecca in the Hijaz amidst the family of Bany Hashim of the
Tribe of Quraysh, who were considered the most honored of the Arab families.

His father was called 'Abdallah and his mother, Aminah. He lost both parents
at the beginning of childhood and was placed under the care of his paternal
grandfather, 'Abd al-Muttalib, who also soon passed away. At this time the
Prophet's uncle, Abu Talib, took charge of him and became his guardian, taking
him into his own house. The Prophet grew up in his uncle's house and even before
reaching the age of adolescence used to accompany his uncle on journeys by
caravan.

The Prophet had not received any schooling and therefore did not know how to
read and write. Yet, after reaching the age of maturity he became famous for his
wisdom, courtesy, and trustworthiness. As a result of his sagacity and
trustworthiness, one of the women of the tribe of Quraysh, well-known for her
wealth, appointed him as the custodian of her possessions and left in his hands
the task of conducting her commercial affairs.

The Prophet once journeyed to Damascus with her merchandise and as a result
of the ability he displayed was able to make an outstanding profit. Before long
she asked to become his wife and the Prophet accepted her proposal. After the
marriage, which occurred when he was twenty-five years old, the Prophet began
the life of a manager of his wife's fortunes, until the age of forty, gaining
meanwhile a widespread reputation for wisdom and trustworthiness. He refused,
however, to worship idols, as was the common religious practice of the Arabs of
the Hijaz. And occasionally he would make spiritual retreats (khalwah) in
which he prayed and discoursed secretly with God.

At the age of forty, in the cave of Hira', in the mountains of the Tihamah
region near Mecca, when he was in spiritual retreat, he was chosen by God to
become a prophet and was given the mission of propagating the new religion. At
that moment the first chapter of the Quran ("The Blood-Clot" [Surah-i
'alaq] ) was revealed to him. That very day he returned to his house and on
the way met his cousin, Ali ibn Abi Talib, who after hearing the account of what
had occurred declared his acceptance of the faith. After the Prophet entered the
house and told his wife of the revelation, she likewise accepted Islam.

The first time the Prophet invited people to accept his message he was faced
with a distressing and painful reaction. Of necessity he was forced henceforth
to propagate his message in secret for some time until he was ordered again by
God to invite his very close relatives to accept his message. But this call was
also fruitless and no one heeded it except Ali ibn Abi Talib, who in any case
had already accepted the faith. (But in accordance with documents transmitted
from the Household of the Prophet and extant poems composed by Abu Talib,
Shi'ites believe that Abu Talib had also embraced Islam ; however, because he
was the sole protector of the Prophet, he hid his faith from the people in order
to preserve the outward power he had with the Quraysh.)

After this period, according to Divine instruction, the Prophet began to
propagate his mission openly. With the beginning of open propagation the people
of Mecca reacted most severely and inflicted the most painful afflictions and
tortures upon the Prophet and the people who had become newly converted to
Islam. The severe treatment dealt out by the Quraysh reached such a degree that
a group of Muslims left their homes and belongings and migrated to Abyssinia.
The Prophet and his uncle, Abu Talib, along with their relatives from the Banu
Hashim, took refuge for three years in the "mountain pass of Abu
Talib," a fort in one of the valleys of Mecca. No one had any dealings or
transactions with them and they did not dare to leave their place of refuge.

The idol-worshippers of Mecca, although at the beginning they considered
inflicting all kinds of pressures and tortures such as striking and beating,
insult, ridicule and defamation on the Prophet, occasionally would also show
kindness and courtesy toward him in order to have him turn away from his
mission. They would promise him great sums of money or leadership and the rule
of the tribe. But for the Prophet their promises and their threats only resulted
in the intensification of his will and determination to carry out his mission.
Once, when they came to the Prophet promising him wealth and power, the Prophet
told them, using metaphorical language, that if they were to put the sun in the
palm of his right hand and the moon in the palm of his left hand he would not
turn away from obeying the unique God or refrain from performing his mission.

About the tenth year of his prophecy, when the Prophet left the
"mountain pass of Abu Talib," his uncle Abu Talib, who was also his
sole protector, died as did also his devoted wife. Henceforth there was no
protection for his life nor any place of refuge. Finally the idol-worshippers of
Mecca devised a secret plan to kill him. At night they surrounded his house from
all sides with the aim of forcing themselves in at the end of the night and
cutting him to pieces while he was in bed. But God, the Exalted, informed him of
the plan and commanded him to leave for Yathrib. The Prophet placed Ali in place
of himself in his bed and at night left the house under the Divine protection,
passing amidst his enemies, and taking refuge in a cave near Mecca. After three
days when his enemies, having looked everywhere, gave up hope of capturing him
and returned to Mecca, he left the cave and set out for Yathrib.

The people of Yathrib, whose leaders had already accepted the message of the
Prophet and sworn allegiance to him, accepted him with open arms and placed
their lives and property at his disposal. In Yathrib for the first time the
Prophet formed a small Islamic community and signed treaties with the Jewish
tribes in and around the city as well as with the powerful Arab tribes of the
region. He undertook the task of propagating the Islamic message and Yathrib
became famous as "Madinat al-rasul" (the city of the Prophet).

Islam began to grow and expand from day to day. The Muslims, who in Mecca
were caught in the mesh of the injustice and inequity of the Quraysh, gradually
left their homes and property and migrated to Medina, revolving around the
Prophet like moths around a candle. This group became known as the
"immigrants" (muhajirun) in the same way that those who aided the
Prophet in Yathrib gained the name of "helpers" (ansar).

Islam was advancing rapidly but at the same time the idol-worshippers of
Quraysh, as well as the Jewish tribes of the Hejaz, were unrestrained in their
harassment of the Muslims. With the help of the "hypocrites" (munafiqun)
of Medina who were amidst the community of Muslims and who were not known for
their holding any particular positions, they created new misfortunes for the
Muslims every day until finally the matter led to war. Many battles took place
between the Muslims and the Arab polytheists and Jews, in most of which the
Muslims were victorious. There were altogether over eighty major and minor
battles. In all the major conflicts such as the battles of Badr, Uhud, Khandaq,
Khaybar, Hunayn, etc., the Prophet was personally present on the battle scene.
Also in all the major battles and many minor ones, victory was gained especially
through the efforts of Ali. He was the only person who never turned away from
any of these battles. In all the wars that occurred during the ten years after
the migration from Mecca to Medina less than two hundred Muslims and less than a
thousand infidels were killed.

As a result of the activity of the Prophet and the selfless effort of the
muhajirun and ansar during this ten-year period, Islam spread through the
Arabian peninsula. There were also letters written to kings of other countries
such as Persia, Byzantinum and Abyssinia inviting them to accept Islam. During
this time the Prophet lived in poverty and was proud of it. He never spent a
moment of his time in vain. Rather, his time was divided into three parts: one
spent for God, in worshipping and remembering Him ; a part of himself and his
household and domestic needs ; and a part for the people. During this part of
his time he was engaged in spreading and teaching Islam and its sciences,
administrating to the needs of Islamic society and removing whatever evils
existed, providing for the needs of the Muslims, strengthening domestic and
foreign bonds, and similar matters.

After ten years of stay in Medina the Prophet fell ill and died after a few
days of illness. According to existing traditions the last words on his lips
were advice concerning slaves and women.

The Prophet
and the Quran


It was demanded of the Prophet, as it had been of other prophets, that he
produce a miracle. The Prophet himself also confirmed the power of prophets to
produce miracles as has been asserted clearly by the Quran. Many miracles by the
Prophet have been recounted, the transmission of some of which is certain and
can be accepted with confidence. But the enduring miracle of the Prophet, which
is still alive, is the sacred book of Islam, the Holy Quran. The Holy Quran is a
sacred text consisting of six thousand and several hundred verses (ayah)
divided into one hundred and fourteen large and small chapters (surah).
The verses of the Holy Quran were revealed gradually during the twenty-three
year period of prophecy and mission of the Prophet. From less than one verse to
a whole and complete chapter were revealed under different circumstances, both
at day and night, on journeys or at home, in war or peace, during days of
hardship or moments of rest.

The Holy Quran in many of its verses introduces itself in unambiguous
language as a miracle. It invited the Arabs of that day to rivalry and
competition in composing writings of comparable truth and beauty. The Arabs,
according to the testimony of history, had reached the highest stages of
eloquence and elegance of language, and in the sweetness of language and flow of
speech they ranked foremost among all people. The Holy Quran claims that if it
be thought of as human speech, created by the Prophet himself or learned through
instruction from someone else, then the Arabs should be able to produce its like
or ten chapters like it, or a single one of its verses, making use of whatever
means were at their disposal to achieve this end. The celebrated Aram men of
eloquence claimed that in answer to this request that the Quran was magic and it
was thus impossible for them to produce its like.

Not only does the Quran challenge and invite people to compete with its
eloquence and elegant language, but also it occasionally invites rivalry from
the point of view of its meaning and thus challenges all the mental powers of
men and jinn, for the Quran is a book containing the total program for
human life. If we investigate the matter carefully we will discover that God has
made this vast and extensive program which embraces every aspect of the
countless beliefs, ethical forms and actions of mankind and takes into account
all of their details and particularities to by the "Truth" (haqq) and
to be called the religion of the truth (din-i haqq). Islam is a religion whose
injunctions are based on the truth and the real welfare of mankind, not the
desires and inclinations of the majority of men or the whims of a single,
powerful ruler.

At the foundation of this vast program is placed the most cherished word of
God which is belief in His Unity. All the principles of the sciences are deduced
from the principle of Unity (tawhid). After that, the most praiseworthy human
ethical and moral virtues are deduced from the principles of the religious
sciences and included in the program. Then, the countless principles and details
of human action and individual and social conditions of man are investigated,
and the duties pertaining to them which originate from the worship of the One
are elaborated and organized. In Islam the relation and continuity between the
principles (usul) and their applications (furu') are such that each particular
application in whatever subject it may be, if it is brought back to its source,
returns to the principle of Unity or tawhid, and Unity if applied and analyzed
becomes the basis for the particular injunction and rule in question.

Of course, the final elaboration of such an extensive religion with such
unity and interconnection, or even the preparation of an elementary index for
it, is beyond the normal powers of the best authorities on law in the world. But
here we speak of a man who in a short span of time was placed amidst a thousand
difficulties concerning life and property, caught in bloody battles and faced
with internal and external obstacles and furthermore placed alone before the
whole world. Moreover, the Prophet had never received instruction nor learned
how to read and write. He had spent two-thirds of his life before becoming a
prophet among a people who possessed no learning and had had no taste of
civilization. He passed his life in a land without water or vegetation and with
burning air, among a people who lived in the lowest social conditions and were
dominated by neighboring political powers.

Besides the above, the Holy Quran challenges men in another way. This book
was revealed gradually, during a period of twenty-three years, under totally
different conditions in periods of difficulty or comfort, war or peace, power or
weakness, and the like. If it had not come from God but had been composed and
expounded by man, many contradictions and contrasts would be observed in it. Its
ending would of necessity be more perfect than its beginning, as is necessary in
the gradual perfection of the human individual. Instead, the first Meccan verses
are of the same quality as the Medinan verses and there is no difference between
the beginning and the end of the Quran. The Quran is a book whose parts resemble
each other and whose awe-inspiring power of expression is of the same style and
quality throughout.

ESCHATOLOGY


Man
is Composed of Spirit and Body


Those who are acquainted to a certain extent with the Islamic sciences know
that within the teachings of the Holy Book and the traditions of the Prophet
there are many references to spirit and corpus, or soul and body. Although it is
relatively easy to conceive of the body and what is corporeal, or that which can
be known through the senses, to conceive of spirit and soul is difficult and
complicated.

People given to intellectual discussions, such as the theologians and
philosophers, Shi'ite and Sunni alike, have presented different views concerning
the reality of the spirit (ruh). Yet, what is to some extent certain is
that Islam considers spirit and body to be two realities opposed to each other.
The body through death loses the characteristics of life and gradually
disintegrates, but it is not so with the spirit. When the spirit is joined to
the body, the body also derives life from it, and when the spirit separates from
the body and cuts its bond to the body - the event that is called death - the
body ceases to function while the spirit continues to live.

From what can be learned through deliberation upon the verses of the Holy
Quran and the sayings of the Imams of the Household of the Prophet, the spirit
of man is something immaterial which has some kind of relation and connection
with the material body. God the Almighty in His Book says, "Verily We
created man from a product of wet earth ; Then placed him as a drop (of seed) in
a safe lodging ; Then fashioned We the drop a clot, then fashioned We the clot a
little lump, then fashioned We the little lump bones, Then clothed the bones
with flesh, and then produced it as another creation" (Quran, XXIII,
12-14). From the order of these verses it is clear that at the beginning the
gradual creation of matter is described and then, when reference is made to the
appearance of the spirit, consciousness, and will, another kind of creation is
mentioned which is different from the previous form of creation.

In another place it is said, in answer to skeptics who ask how it is possible
for the body of man, which after death becomes disintegrated and whose elements
become dispersed and lost, to have a new creation and become the original man,
"Say : The angel of death, who hath charge concerning you, will gather you,
and afterwards unto your Lord ye will be returned" (Quran, XXXII, 11). This
means that your bodies disintegrate after death and are lost amidst the
particles of the earth, but you yourselves, namely your spirits, have been taken
from your bodies by the angel of death and remain protected with Us.

Besides such verses the Holy Quran in a comprehensive explanation expresses
the immateriality of the spirit in itself when it asserts, "They will ask
thee concerning the Spirit. Say : The Spirit is by command of my Lord"
(Quran, XVII, 85).

In another place in explaining His command (amr) He says, "But
His command, when He intendeth a thing, is only that He saith unto it : Be! and
it is. Therefore glory be to Him in Whose hand is the dominion over all
things!" (Quran, XXXVI, 81-82). The meaning of these verses is that the
command of God in the creation of things is not gradual nor is it bound to the
conditions of time and space. Therefore, the spirit which has no reality other
than the command of God is not material and in its being does not have material
characteristics ; that is, it does not have the characteristics of divisibility,
change, and situation in time and space.

A
Discussion of Spirit from Another Perspective


Intellectual investigation confirms the view of the Holy Quran about the
spirit. Each of us is aware of a reality within himself which he interprets as
"I" and this awareness exists continuously within man. Sometimes man
even forgets his head, hands, feet and other members or the whole body. But as
long as his self exists, the consciousness of "I" does not leave his
awareness. This perception cannot be divided or analyzed. Although the body of
man is continuously undergoing change and transformation and chooses different
locations in space for itself and passes through different moments of time, the
reality of "I" remains fixed. It does not undergo any change or
transformation. It is clear that if the "I" were material it would
accept the characteristics of matter which are divisibility, change, and
situation in time and space.

The body accepts all the characteristics of matter and, because of the
relation of the spirit and the body, these characteristics are also considered
to belong to the spirit. But if we pay the least attention, it becomes evident
to man that this moment in time and the next, this point in space or another,
this shape or another shape, this direction of motion or any other, are all
characteristics of the body. The spirit is free from them; rather each of these
determinations reaches the spirit through the body. This same reasoning can be
applied in reverse to the power of consciousness and apprehension or knowledge
which is one of the characteristics of the spirit. Obviously if knowledge were a
material quality, according to the conditions of matter it would accept
divisibility and analysis, and be determined by time and space.

Needless to say, this intellectual discussion could go on at length and there
are many questions and answers related to it which cannot be considered in the
present context. The brief discussion presented here is only an indication of
the Islamic belief concerning body and spirit. A complete discussion will be
found in works of Islamic philosophy.

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