Tuesday, June 21, 2022

The early years of Islam


When the first revelation was inspired to Muhammad, he, unlike Jeremiah or Isaiah had no established prophetic tradition to console or support him so as to understand the reality of his experience, and its implications. It came on a blessed night 44:3 also referred to as lailatul qadr 97:1, during the month of Ramadan 2:185. The exact date when the night occurs hasnt been specified by the prophet. He purposefully said it is on one of the last 5 odd nights of Ramadan. He could have specified a day but chose not to. The Quran itself does not prescribe the believers to seek that night as a means of getting a "shortcut" to salvation. This creates a yearning in the believers in seeking it, given its spiritual, metaphysical importance. Each one seeks it according to his desire for it, thereby testing his level of spiritual thirst. It is in this test that the blessings of this night are concealed 
"Whoever establishes the prayers on the night of Qadr out of sincere faith and hoping to attain Allah's rewards (not to show off) then all his past sins will be forgiven".

Muhammad went back to Khadija to whom he recounted what had happened. She immediately trusted him and accepted Islam. A slight nuance between Muhammad and Jesus is that while Jesus was opposed by his closest relatives, Muhammad was first and foremost recognized and accepted by his own bosom friends and people of his household. They knew him intimately and would have detected the inconsistent actions and thoughts of a deceiver abroad and at home. This is strongly corroborative of his sincerity. Khadija also appeased his fears for the consequences of having accepted the burden of prophecy with all the religious, social and political changes it implied in this environment of the Age of Ignorance, the Jahiliyya. As the prophet Ezekiel sat bewildered for 7 days among the people without uttering a word Ezek3:15 following a similar shocking first encounter with the revelational experience, so did the prophet Muhammad seek to recuperate ahead of his mission. 

Against all political and economical wisdom, his wife Khadija decided to fully support him and relinquish her prestigious status and successful commerce. Muhammad was given the Kawthar 108:1; the term covers the abundance of grace, wisdom and knowledge, mercy and goodness, spiritual power and insight. Through these faculties he was able to achieve, through his works, dignity in this world and in the hereafter, and was able to lead and establish a nation that would bear the torch of truth to the world. Muhammad would receive clear revelations from on high through dreams 8:43, wakefulness 17:1, through the holyspirit 26:193-4.  

He then taught Khadija the way to pray until one day his cousin Ali ibn Abu Talib, whose father (Abu Talib, Muhammad's paternal uncle) was poor and thus gave his son to Muhammad's household for better care, saw the Prophet and his wife praying so he learned and became the 2nd Muslim. Then came Zayd, the Prophet's adopted son. 

Muhammad went on with his life of solitude not talking about these events outside his household until came to him 
26:214"And warn your nearest relations" 
just like Ezekiel was pulled out of his silence and told to initiate transmitting God's warnings Ezek3:16-7. 

Knowing the magnitude, and implications of the message he had to convey to a wretched nation, Muhammad delayed its delivery until Gabriel came to him again, and this time he gathered 40 of the sons of Abdul Muttalib, among them were his uncles: Abu Talib, Hamza, 'Abbas and Abu Lahab. The latter interrupted Muhammad's speech so he did not get a chance to speak to them. He gathered them again the second day, gave them the good tidings of Allah's blessings to those who would believe in, and help him in his cause. The first to respond and rise his hand was Ali ibn Abu Talib.

Slowly the message spread. During the first three years, he gained only 30 followers so Allah called him to rise and augment his warnings to his whole nation, as his predecessors did 
15:94"declare openly what you are bidden and turn aside from the polytheists" 
and the method to be employed was 
16:125"Call to the way of thy Lord with wisdom and goodly exhortation, and dispute with them in the best way". 
This empathetic manner in which the call to religion is to be done has always been the method the prophets were commanded to transmit the message in its first phases 
20:43-4"Go both to Firon, surely he has become inordinate; Then speak to him a gentle word haply he may mind or fear".
The prophet stood up on the Hijr, a rock next to the Kaaba where he admonished the Meccans, as well as the foreign pilgrims, calling them to believe in the Oneness of Allah 38:65-8 and hasten to moral righteousness before the ushering of a Day of Resurrection from which none can escape. A lengthy and painful process had begun, which would ultimately lead to the restoration of Islam, the way of Ibrahim, the upright one 2:135-136. Muhammad was reviving the true definition of religion; a way of life which contains the good of this world in a manner that ensures perfection of the next life ‑ the life that is the real and eternal one near to Allah.

His uncle and protector, the well respected Abu Talib, was asked by a delegation from the Quraysh to either persuade his nephew to desist from his mission or hand him over to suffer the extreme penalty or be prepared to fight the whole tribe. The pressure was such, Abu Talib asked Muhammad to desist but upon his refusal and determination, he empathised further with his nephew, pledging to keep him under his protection. 

So the Prophet kept calling the people to the worship of one God, a request they continuously mocked "Shall we then abandon three hundred and sixty gods and worship only one God?" accusing him of sorcery, among many things 38:4. Though the Meccans objected the idea of a Unique God it was the concept of Resurrection that was totally unacceptable to them, mainly the wealthy men of the Quraysh who clinged desperately to a morally deprived financial and spiritual way of life. They resented the prophet's calls to reform, as it entailed dismantling their worldview entirely 
23:70"he has brought them the truth, and most of them are averse from the truth..And should the truth follow their low desires, surely the heavens and the earth and all those who are therein would have perished". 
This made them even more resolved in their will to denigrate, corrupt or attempt to make the prophet compromise some of his message with theirs, and hide behind their idols and the traditions of their forefathers. Prior to him, Nuh was rejected on no better grounds than that, what he brought conflicted with his people's inherited habits and ways of life 23:24. 

The words of the prophet were not only threatening their life after death, but also their life in this world as he was calling them to stop the oppression of the poor and low classes by the elite. But there was not a day where people did not come to the call of Islam, a call of freedom, freeing men from the bondage of intercession, destroying all obstacles between men and God 
2:186"And when My servants ask you concerning Me, then verily I am near, I answer the prayer of the supplicant when he calls on Me, so they should answer My call and believe in Me, so that they may walk in the right way". 
As a linguistic observation, this verse has the unique feature that it repeats the first person singular pronoun seven times. It conveys a sense of closeness between Allah and His creatures, and that nothing comes between Him and them 
50:16"We created man..and We are nearer to him than his life-vein" 
8:24"and know that Allah intervenes between man and his heart".
Until Muhammad did not openly attack the idols, he wasnt viewed as a real threat by the Quraysh but when he severely started to condemn Hubal, Lat, Uzza and other idols of the pantheon the matter became different. The Prophet's teachings of equality of man and constant stressing the point that in righteousness alone lay the superiority of one over the other meant the end of the Quraysh's authority and privileges as the guardians of the Kaaba, of their political and social hegemony, and of their vested interests at large.

In this environement where tribal institutions exercised great influence and idols were counted as the most sacred objects, such words attracted much attention, curiosity and hostily. Especially considering that without it being the center of pilgrimage of the idol worshipers of the Arabian Peninsula, attracting trade and wealth, Mecca would be meaningless and the Quraysh would lose their fortune and privileges among the Arabs 
28:57"And they say: If we follow the guidance with you, we shall be carried off from our country. What! have We not settled them in a safe, sacred territory to which fruits of every kind shall be drawn?-- a sustenance from Us; but most of them do not know".

Following the event of the israa/mi'raj the Quraysh increased in their opposition and desire to kill Muhammad. But in order to reach him, they had first to get rid of his protectors whose retaliation they feared. Remarkably the prophet, instead of using that factor as a leverage by which to increase his opposition and boldness would tell them that their considerations were mislplaced. Through several stories such as that of the prophet Shuayb whose bloodthirsty enemies feared killing him because of a possible retaliation from his family 11:91, the prophet redirected their attention on what they should truly fear 
11:92"He said: O my people! is my family more esteemed by you than Allah? And you neglect Him as a thing cast behind your back; surely my Lord encompasses what you do". 
The prophet Shuayb in demonstration of his integrity and selflessness, as well as genuine concern for his addressees, told his opponents, that the correct attitude should be to focus on the far-reaching message, not on the messenger, and avoid turning the issue into a personal dispute 
11:89"O my people! let not opposition to me make you guilty so that there may befall you the like of what befell the people of Nuh, or the people of Hud, or the people of Salih, nor are the people of Lut far off from you". 
That fear of direct confrontation with the prophet's clan, and the apprehension of igniting intertribal feud that would last for years, did not mean that the Quraysh's desire to end the prophet's preaching by any other mean was over. Instead of attacking him upfront they agreed to ostracise completely the Bani Hashim and Muttalib by organizing a severe social and economic blockade on them, until they hand them over Muhammad. 

They also commissioned the most eloquent of their poets to ridicule him, his followers and his message and propagate false rumours on him to all pilgrims coming in and out of the city who were his main audience, as well as in the markets. They maintained that the reason why the Quran appealed to people was not that it was revealed by God but because Muhammad possessed such a strong eloquent expression he could charm the people 21:3. They held that he fabricated the verses of the Quran with the help of some Satanic Jinn and presented these before the people in the garb of divine inspirations. The Quran mentions these charges at various places and then answers them 
26:210-212"And the Shaitans have not come down with it. And it behoves them not, and they have not the power to do (it). Most surely they are far removed from the hearing of it". 
The words "it behoves them not" imply that Satan would not do something against his own mission. This is the same kind of argument, as was adopted by Jesus in response to the Pharisees in Lk11. Evil forces have no power over it and it shows from the idolators and their jinns' failure to the Quran's repeated challenges to come up with 3 sentences like it. And on the accusations of him being an eloquent and demon possessed poet, the Quran would use simple observation to refute their claims, firstly by pointing to the well known and undisputed upright character of Muhammad 
36:69-70"And We have not taught him poetry, nor is it meet for him; it is nothing but a reminder and a plain Quran. That it may warn him who would have life, and (that) the word may prove true against the unbelievers". 
The Quran would also contrast those who followed the prophet and those who listened to and followed these kinds of mad, demon possessed poets 
26:224-226"And those who are strayed follow the poets. Did you not notice that they wander everywhere? And they say what they practice not". 
Not every poet is condemned in this passage. A group is singled out, those who use such powerful media as an instruments of evil and wickedness. Before and during the advent if Islam some of them posted their sexually explicit verses on the walls of the Kaaba. They were highly revered and believed to be under the power of jinns. This type of poetry darkened the people's emotions and intellects, instigated hatred and wars among different parties that had no, to very little points of conflict among eachother. During Islam's early battles, these blood thirsty propaganda machines were rightfully considered combattants like any soldier in a time where threats and treason were coming from all side against the nascent Muslim community, aiming at its extinction. The verse raises also the point that those who followed these poets had a sinful nature, because of the nature of the poems the likes of those of Imrul-Qays, and what these poems incited in their hearts. Those who were captivated by the Quran's eloquence on the other hand, were a different kind of people. What the prophet recited was more than poetic lofty thoughts, or some predictions like those of the sooth-sayers, but none could perceive its wisdom other than those who opened their hearts to it 10:1-2. 

As a side note, demon possession, a calumny among many others that the prophet Muhammad and prophets before him, including Jesus, were charged with was unrelated to the satanic verses polemic. It was in relation to what his opponents perceived as the Quran's supernatural eloquence. They werent ready to accept that it could come from a human, much less from God, so they settled for demonic agents.

Seeing that their smearing campaign was failing, the Quraysh appealed to the services of Nadr ibn al Harith. He did not rise up by himself and begin his public defamation. He was learned in the history, religion, wisdom, theories of good and evil, cosmology, and other literature of the Persians. He would stand up after Muhammad's speeches, calling the people to the Persian religions. He convinced the Quraysh this was the only way they could try defeating his purpose in public. Just as with Moses before, their vilification campaign stood no ground considering the nature of the message and the message bearer himself, him being known for his moral integrity prior to beginning his mission. That factor alone gave him an immesurable advantage from the point of view of credibility, over anyone else who would try competing with him and pass off his speeches as genuine divine teachings. 

The poets of Quraysh, failing to classify Muhammad and what he was reciting in any of the known mystical, demonic or oral phenomena, thus agreed on calling him a magician whose craft was eloquence that by means of eloquent words he was capable of dividing the man against his father, his brother, his spouse and his own tribe 46:7,21:3,34:43,54:2,74:24,10:76,11:7,37:15. The fact is that truth always causes a separation ultimately as seen in the nations and families of the prophets of old, from Nuh who had to abandon his own disbelieving son to be taken by the deluge, to Ibrahim who left his disbelieving father, Lut who left his wife behind him as the town was about to be destroyed etc, and the same is related in the scriptures of old, from the HB to the NT 
Micah7:6,Matt30:21-36"Brother will betray brother to death, and a father his child; children will rebel against their parents and have them put to death. You will be hated by everyone because of me, but the one who stands firm to the end will be saved..Do not suppose that I have come to bring peace to the earth. I did not come to bring peace, but a sword. For I have come to turn a man against his father, a daughter against her mother, a daughter-in-law against her mother-in-law a man's enemies will be the members of his own household". 
Just as the moral reforms brought by Jesus and Muhammad were met with the staunchest opposition, so was the Book given to Musa 
11:110-112"And certainly We gave the book to Musa, but it was gone against; and had not a word gone forth from your Lord, the matter would surely have been decided between them; and surely they are in a disquieting doubt about it. And your Lord will most surely pay back to all their deeds in full; surely He is aware of what they do. Continue then in the right way as you are commanded.."
Reciting and listening to the Quran became forbidden but nonetheless, many Quraysh would listen to it in secret, captured by the vivid imagery, metaphors, parables and appeal to the emotions which rendered the realm of the Unseen such as the Hereafter or the Resurrection recognizable to the senses. The impact on their psyche was such, that it moved them internally to listen further, giving their full attention, and eventually convert. This growing popularity added to the deeply rooted sentiment of jealousy so common among the desert Arabs of the time. Some of their most influential men found themselves listening for 3 nights in a row to the recitation of the Quran. 

But these Qurayshi elite, like most corrupt leaders in a society, were instinctively distrustful of all things human. Further, they neglected the dual aspect of their own nature, one that is worldly, and the other connected to the divine, placed into every human being by God "and breathed into him of His spirit". It is therefore natural that God would maintain and nurture that connection with Him, by making His will known to mankind. But due to their skepticism of human nature, they resisted the notion of God, the master of all things, connecting with a mere human being from their midst, who walks the markets, eats food, mingles with the poor, lives the simplest life, and yet is tasked with guiding mankind. Instead such messenger should be a more noble creation, which to them were angels 
10:2,12:109,14:10,21:7-8,23:33,47,25:7,20,64:6,41:14"If our Lord had pleased He would certainly have sent down angels, so we are surely unbelievers in that with which you are sent". 
Ironically, the Quran states that mankind was honoured above the angels and is thus certainly elligible to be connected to the divine realm, as pledged to Adam 20:123,38:71-2. Besides pointing to their humanity, the "walking in the market places" highlights that such individuals are warners to large communities, not to isolated people. When messengers are selected to reform a community, they always are from the same nature and general experience as that community. This helps prevent idolizing the messengers, as occurred with a single one of them, Jesus. And thus we find that when non-human messengers are sent among the humans, it is either to a select few individuals, or to execute God's punishment on a nation. 

In denial of these realities known long before Muhammad was sent among them 21:7, the Arabs would request from their prophet, who never claimed to be anything more than a mortal 11:31, that he should be able to bend the forces of nature at will and upon request. What they were asking was irrelevant to the purpose of an envoy from God, which is to convey what he is inspired of warnings and glad tidings 
17:90-3"Glory be to my Lord; am I aught but a mortal apostle?" 
This line of reasoning is common among most people of every age. It is the most prominent objection levelled against a human being claiming to be God's messenger. Such scepticism is so prevalent that even those who become these prophets' followers often end up over-exalting and idolizing them  
17:94"And nothing prevented people from believing when the guidance came to them except that they said: What! has Allah raised up a mortal to be an apostle?". 
A message of deep social reform and introspection cannot come to a community other than through someone from their midst to whom they can relate to and trust, one that can transmit the message in a manner they can understand 
"Had there been in the earth angels walking about as settlers, We would certainly have sent down to them from the heaven an angel as an apostle". 
That is why had God sent angels among the humans as prophets, He would have made them appear as human beings 6:9 and had angels been settled on the earth instead of humans, then angelic prophets would have been sent to them from among themselves, like what has been done with the humans 17:95. This way the addressees' focus remains on the message itself rather than the message bearer.
 
The humanity of the messenger is proof of God's honouring mankind, which is a way of removing the negative outlook of many cultures and religions on human nature. God chooses those He deems fit to be in contact with the Source of creation. It gives hope to the remaining ones who believe, that they can emulate that selected human being who is of the same essence as themselves, and rise to high stations of spiritual eminence 
2:151-2,3:164"Certainly Allah conferred a benefit upon the believers when He raised among them a Messenger from among themselves, reciting to them His communications and purifying them, and teaching them the Book and the wisdom, although before that they were surely in manifest error".
If the messenger couldnt be a supernatural being, they began arguing from the angle of political and social eminence; why didnt God send His revelation to the noblest of men among them or those of great standing? Why were they, the people of influence, at least not informed personally by God that a prophet would be raised among them or given a share in this revelation 6:124,17:93,43:31,74:52? Those objections were meant at excusing their rejection of the reforming system brought by the prophets 6:7. As the rejecters of old, even if every one of their requests were granted they would still deny, as Jesus laments in the NT Mk8:11-13. 

They would further object, how can one sent by the Lord of the universe present himself in such humble fashion instead of displaying all the signs of grandeur ambassadors of great personalities and kingdoms are usually sent with 43:51-3? In their limited and materialistic mindframe they associated worldly riches with wisdom and being approved by the divine 
43:31"And they say: Why was not this Quran revealed to a man of importance in the two towns?". 
It was the same objection levelled against Nuh, Hud, Salih, Moses 
23:24,33-34,14:10-11,43:53,64:6,13:38"And certainly We sent messengers before you and gave them wives and children, and it is not in (the power of) an messenger to bring a sign except by Allah's permission; for every term there is an appointment". 
Similarly the NT in Matt13 reports the Pharisees' amazement upon seeing wisdom and miracles bestowed upon someone of such humble origins as Jesus. They rejected his prophethood out of jealousy and pride at the idea of being taught by someone of humble origins "And they took offense at him". Jesus answers them with the universal truth that a prophet is generally honoured everywhere but in his hometown, as was the case with the prophet Muhammad 50:2.

The prophet's unabated opposition to this corrupt thought system added greatly to the anxiety and despair of the Quraysh. Their life of privileges blinded their judgement, they could not accept the principle that God is not bound to any group, does not belong to the east or west, does not close His bounties to anyone and does not define the people's merit based on gender, race or social achievements, but on fulfilment of duties towards their fellow men, sincerity in thought and action, uprightness and God-consciousness 
43:32"and the mercy of your Lord is better than what they amass".
Despite his uncle Abu Talib's protection many converts were tortured or killed. History has recorded several examples of early Muslim martyrs and victims of tortures. Yasir and his wife Sumayyah were laid down naked on the burning desert sand, with ironnail on their body. The heat made the nails burn their skins until they were murdered by Abu Jahl. Fearing for his life, their son Ammar denied being a Muslim in front of the pagans but expressed great remorse to the Prophet. It was the first instance of "taqiya", sanctioned by the verse 16:106. Abu Bakr was tied up and emprisonned under the eyes of his tribe of Taym when he accepted Islam. Bilal, the Ethiopian slave, was tortured and burdened with heavy stones on his chest, in the desert by his master because of his conversion. Abdullah ibn Masud, the known companion, was beaten until he could not stand, because of reciting the Quran close to the pagans at the Kaaba. There is a mass of historical data recorded in original sources about the names and numbers of persons put to physical torture, the names of their tormentors and the manner of their physical torture and persecution. The extent of the suffering endured by the Muslims during this period was such that even some idol worshipers Meccans would try and help the Muslims, out of pitty such was the case of Hisham ibn Amr who would go secretly to the quarter where the Muslims were isolated at night, with a camel loaded with food and release it there. 

The main problem the Meccans had, as stated earlier, was that they saw in this new monotheistic religion a profound challenge to their religious, economic and political power. Islam meant the end of trade, which depended on the pilgrims’ visits, and this in turn would lead to the Meccans loosing the honour they held among the Arab tribes. The Quran reflects that reality by alluding to the elite of past nations to whom prophets were sent and who always resisted any change so as to maintain the established order they benefited from. The Quran plainly states that spiritual reform inevitably involves economic sacrifices. During the advent of Islam, the new converts were reassured that these sacrifices due to the temporary loss of trade and prestige of Mecca would be restored.

In response to such persecutions, the Prophet remained steadfast and persevered, urging his companions to emulate his forbearance as commanded by God 
16:125"Invite (all) to the Way of thy Lord with wisdom and beautiful preaching; and argue with them in ways that are best and most gracious.." 
6:108"And do not abuse those whom they call upon besides Allah, lest exceeding the limits they should abuse Allah out of ignorance". 
He did not even label his people as unbelievers until sura Kafirun which signalled that the truth had been communicated to an extent that his addressees were left with no excuse to deny it.

At the peak of Muslim persecution, Abu Talib had no alternative but to make his nephew Muhammad, along with his followers, retreat into a ravine belonging to him, in a montain trail adjacent to Jannatul Maala. They were made to undergo the most acute hardships and privations for 3 years so much so that at times they had nothing but tree leaves to eat and stop hunger. They came out twice a year from that ravine: in the months of Rajab and Dhul-Hijjah, when every type of violence was taboo according to the Arabian custom. If any relative sent them any food, and the news leaked out, that relative was exposed and insulted by the Quraysh. Thanks to her business connections, Khadija managed to smuggle food sometimes but that source soon tarried out as she became more isolated. 

The only thing that still prevented the die-hard disbelievers from the Quraysh to wage a full scale war on Muhammad and his followers was the honour and dignity of his protector Abu Talib. For this reason he kept the Quraysh in suspense about his true belief in order not to undermine his status. He invited all his clan to follow Muhammad and constantly praised his trustfulness but always refrained from openly declaring his Islam. Even on his death-bed, he announced his faith in such a way that the Quraysh could not understand what he meant. When they asked him on which religion he was dying, he replied 
"On the religion of my forefathers". 
His forefathers being, Ibrahim and Ismail.

In these circumstances, it was very improbable that the Messenger would one day prevail over his enemies; however, the Quran in every situation assured him that he is the messenger of God, guided in every step like the prophets of old as they were sent to confront powerful transgressors with the Truth 40:53 and, in spite of all this antagonism, God will have him prevail over his enemies 
61:8-9"They desire to put out the light of Allah with their mouths but Allah will perfect His light, though the unbelievers may be averse. He it is Who sent His Messenger with the guidance and the true religion, that He may make it overcome the religions, all of them, though the polytheists may be averse". 
In a universe created with Truth, falsehood is ultimately bound to vanish and only true light remain, as reflected in the Hebrew Bible in 
Prov13:9"The light of the righteous will rejoice, but the candle of the wicked will ebb away".  
The days of the messengers are a demonstration of this higher reality. Allah calls it His sunna/way that His word through His messengers/rusul must prevail over falsehood 
40:51,58:20-21"Surely (as for) those who are in opposition to Allah and His Messenger; they shall be among the most abased. Allah has written down: I will most certainly prevail, I and My messengers; surely Allah is Strong, Mighty". 
That abasement and destruction must be inflicted in this world as well as the next on the rejecters and violent opponents of divinely appointed messengers 58:5. It might occur through natural calamities as with Nuh, Hud, Saleh or Shuayb, or by delivering a nation to the mercy of foreign assailants as was the case with the Israelites who were destroyed by pagans and then subjugated to Jesus' followers. It may be done through the believers themselves as under Musa or Muhammad 9:14. In all cases, the righteous in a nation, those that chose to stand by their prophets, are spared this fate and made to rise high above their enemies 
3:137-9,10:103,11:58,117,20:77,21:71-7,27:48-58,30:47"and helping the believers is ever incumbent on Us" 
6:65"He has the power that He should send on you a chastisement from above you or from beneath your feet, or that He should throw you into confusion, (making you) of different parties; and make some of you taste the fighting of others. See how We repeat the communications that they may understand". 
Nobody thought that one day, all these warnings would come to fruition, that Muhammad would remove the Quraysh's grip from the custodianship of the Kaaba and Mecca. However, when they drove him out of Mecca, the Quran prophecied in no uncertain terms, the imminent fall of these unworthy custodians of the universal House of monotheism, not only because of having failed in their responsibility by polluting it with polytheism but also because of hindering those who desire to worship the One God on its soil, residents and alien alike 22:25,108:1-3. The Quran mentioned each and every phase of the prophet's mission with great clarity: Mecca will be conquered and he will see from his very eyes his people entering the folds of Islam in multitudes 110:1-3. These were not the words of a human being which had all the chances of not materializing. They were the words of God which were spoken by His messenger and they became part of history.

So the Prophet continued his preaching during the months of pilgrimage, where fighting was forbidden. After spending 3 years in the ravine, Muhammad was told by Gabriel that the document containing the will of the 40 leading men of Quraysh, regarding the sanctions imposed on the Muslims, as well as their respective seals and which was hanged on the side of the Kaaba had its contents erased. Abu Talib took Muhammad out of the ravine and they confronted the Quraysh who were astonished at seeing their words erased and their seals intact. It was the custom to place all treaties or pacts in the Kaaba so that the gods be taken as witnesses and might punish those covenanters who violated their promises. Some of them dispersed without saying a word and others accepted to lift the sanctions. Thus, the Muslims left the ravine at once. 

A few months later, Abu Talib died. His testimony in his last moments revealed the reason why he would never give up supporting his nephew. As a noble man of high character, he could not give up on someone who was persecuted for standing up for the weakest, truthful, steadfast on the virtuous principles he was expressing, and just in all circumstances whether before or after his mission 
"I advise that you treat Muhammad well, because amongst you, he is a man of the highest morals. He possesses distinction among the Arabs on account of his truthfulness and straightforwardness. If you ask the truth, he has brought a message to us which the tongue rejects but the heart accepts.  I have stood by Muhammad a lifetime and have stepped forward to protect him in all times of difficulty, and if I receive more time, I shall continue to do so in the future as well. And O Quraish! I also advise you not to insist upon causing him grief, but help him and support him, for your betterment lies in this". 
The sufferings and privations of those three years had taken their toll. Khadijah also died soon after in the same year, it was "the year of sorrow" (aam ulhuzn) with two grave occurrences which the Messenger of Allah had to endure. He was now left with no helpers and protectors, and would seek refuge from those trying to kill him among the Arab tribes coming to Mecca for their pilgrimage but none accepted, seeing how his own people of Quraysh abandoned him. The tribe of Banu Amir imagined that they could assume a position of leadership should the cause of Muhammad triumph. But when he told them, against all political wisdom that the matter is wholly in Allah's hands, they turned away and repudiated his call like the rest. 

Stripped of his protection and seeing how the Meccans remained heedless, Muhammad undertook a trip to the tribe of Thaqif from the city of Ta'if but there too, the notables after hearing him, rejected him, in addition inciting their people to stone and shun him. He went away and sat under a tree, in a garden nearby. There he saw 2 men from Thaqif. Fearing they will aggress him, he got ready to leave but they sent him their servant, a man from Nineveh to give him food. 
"So you are from the city of the righteous man Yunus (Jonah) son of Mitts (Matthew)" 
the Prophet said. 

Muhammad went on telling this servant of his prophethood and message, until he kneeled before him and accepted Islam. His masters confronted him "Let him not tempt you away from your Christianity, for he is a deceitful man". When Muhammad went back to Mecca, the news of his expedition to Thaqif increased the hostility of the Quraysh, sending him hiding again to nearby ravine, waiting for the pilgrimage. From there, he sent messengers in search of a protector who would allow him performing the rites. Mut`im responded, giving him an escort of 10 armed men, although he was not a Muslim. After a day he lifted his protection at the Prophet's request who could not bear depending on a polytheist. In the mean time, the Meccan pagans kept stirring up the ignorant against him and his followers through a smearing campaign, saying he is a magician, a sorcerer, a madman, a forger, a bewitched poet or demon possessed. Anything that could falsely discredit him was unashamadely propagated.
  
With the new converts devoid of protection, many faced extermination or apostasy. Their endurance reached its limits and persecution became unbearable. In the year 614 the Prophet sent a small group of Muslims escorted by Ja'far son of Abu Talib to Abyssinia to live under the protection of the Negus. This was the first Hijrah (Migration) in Islam and fifteen people took part in it, they are referred to in 16:41. Further migrations led to intensified persecution of those left behind. To further thwart that regroupement, the Quraysh sent a delegation with gifts to the Abyssinian King, asking for the deportation of the Muslim migrants. They were not even ready let them live in peace in other lands.

The Christian King asked the reason for this relentless persecution, the Quraysh answered 
"They have opposed us in our religion and the religion of our forefathers and insulted our gods" 
Ja'far ibn Abu Talib, the brother of Ali replied that all Muhammad was asking his people was abandoning the worship of other gods than Allah, stop all kinds of immoral acts and traditions, including chance games, abusing the weak, senseless cycles of revenge and infanticide, adultery, usury, that he enjoined decency and good works, including kindness to relatives and neighbours, prayers and almsgiving. The King recognized the essence of Jesus' teachings and asked Ja'far to recite a passage from the Quran. He recited sura Maryam, which impacted the King that he honoured the Muslims with increased hospitality. 

The emigrants later returned due to local instability of the Negus' kingdom, heavily criticized for his closeness to foreigners of another faith. The Muslims judged it more appropriate to leave and avoid causing their noble host more problems. Their decision was facilitated by more favourable conditions in Mecca, following Umar alKhattab's conversion.

The complete refusal of the Meccans to heed the calls of the prophet made him turn more and more to the passing tribes, and pilgrims therefore spreading his word to the four corners of the Peninsula. Delegations were sent to inquire about the rise of a prophet. Whether they returned convinced or not, they contributed to spreading the prophet's fame. In the year 622, 6 men from the Khazraj tribe of Yathrib (former name of Medina) came to Mecca for their pilgrimage and to seek an alliance against their ennemies of the tribe of Aws. The Quraysh refused allying with them explaining they had to take care first of the rise of Islam which was breaking their unity. The men of Khazraj inquired further on this movement led by Muhammad. What they heard convinced them that he was the awaited prophet of the Jews, living among them in Medina, who would make them prevail over both their tribe of Khazraj and their ennemies of Aws. They decided to wait for him when he would come out of the ravine to perform the pilgrimage. The Quraysh tried discrediting him, telling them to ignore his preaching and recital of the Quran. But as they met him and heard him recite, they became convinced of what the Jews of an-Nadir, Qurayzah and Qaynuqa used to tell them 
"this is that very Prophet about whose prophethood the Jews used to warn us. All relations between us and our brothers of the Aws tribe are cut off. If Allah were to re-establish them by means of you, we would find no one more honoured than you". 
They met with the Prophet at the `Aqabah (a mountain pass outside Mecca) where they embraced Islam and swore allegiance to him. This was the First Pledge of 'Aqabah. Upon their return to Yathrib, they invited the rest of their tribe to Islam as well as their brothers from the tribe of Aws. And so these 2 tribes accepted to grant protection to the Muslims of Mecca against the persecution of the Quraysh. 

Muslims had to gradually flee Mecca for Yathrib, where their community was growing. The Quraysh tried to prevent this regroupement by all means, as they did for the first migration, even taking their wives hostage. 

Later, a large group of people from the Khazraj and Aws tribes came to Mecca for their pilgrimage, some of them had accepted Islam and others kept their old religion. They met with the Prophet at the `Aqabah, and under the exhortation of 'Abbas the prophet's uncle who was not a Muslim yet, they pledged him full allegiance against the Quraysh. This pledge is known as the Second Pledge of 'Aqabah and the Yathribites present became known as the Ansar. The Ansar immediately proposed to launch a surprise assault on the Quraysh and avenge the Prophet's long years of persecution but he refused, as his mission was not to conquer or for personal vengeance and gains. This is the time, as a side note, around which the city of Yathrib was renamed by the growing Muslim community as Madinatul nabi/the city of the prophet (later only Madina/Medina was retained). In the course of prophetic history, there is at least one other such recorded occurrence of a city being renamed after that of a prophet following his success in it; Jerusalem was nicknamed the city of David 1Chr11:5-7.

The Quraysh learned about the alliance the next morning, as well as of the spread of Islam in Medina. They assembled their notables, among them Abu Jahl, Abu Lahab, Abu Sufyan, and 'Utbah in the House of Assembly (Daru'n-Nadwah). They concluded they had to kill the prophet in his sleep before he could migrate and join the Muslims of Medina that eagerly awaited his arrival. 

Although it is to be noted the success of a prophet's preaching or the small number of his followers is irrelevant to his truthfulness, Noah or Jesus being prime examples of limited success, the prophet nevertheless did gain an exponential following prior to his migration. As already mentioned this was the reason his opponents wanted him dead and the reason he had no choice but make the painful decision to leave his homeland.

Now it became obvious that the people of Mecca were refusing the Prophet's call out of sheer obstinacy. Truth had been unveiled to them in its ultimate form and all objections were answered with sense and reason by the revelations. Muhammad was ordered to leave the city and openly declare his renunciation and dissociation from the idolators' fate 
109:1-6"Say: O unbelievers! I do not serve that which you serve, Nor do you serve Him Whom I serve: Nor am I going to serve that which you serve, Nor are you going to serve Him Whom I serve: You shall have your religion and I shall have my religion". 
Muhammad did not get frustrated at his people's obstinacy. The more they evaded his calls, the more he persevered until it became clear that any further insistance would lead to him being seriously harmed. Consequently, the Prophet at this stage addressed them by a name which aptly described their deeds, and on divine bidding, he declared complete and utter dissociation from them.

The assembly of Quraysh notables decided to attack the prophet collectively in order to escape the vendetta of Banu Hashim. 15 men from various clans were chosen, among whom was Abu Lahab, the Prophet's uncle. They all surrounded the Prophet's house, at night
 8:30"And remember when the unbelievers plotted against you to imprison you, or to kill you, or to drive you out, they plotted and planned and Allah, too, planned". 
The prophecy of their stratagem, their failure and subsequent divine punishment are paralleled with the story of Salih whose people plotted to kill him. God destroyed those that plotted against him, as well as the remaining disbelievers, while he and his followers were kept safe from harm 27:45-51. The treacherousness of a people, including a prophet's own family and close circle, their plans to murder him or sabotage his mission, is the kind of opposition prophets often faced, Jeremiah being a prime biblical precedent Jer11:18-23,12:6etc.

Muhammad asked Ali to sleep in his bed and cover himself with his mantle. Gabriel ordered Muhammad to depart while reciting from sura Yasin 
36:9"And We have made before them a barrier and a barrier behind them, then We have covered them over so that they do not see". 
The prophet was sorely distressed on leaving Mecca where the temple built by his forefather Ibrahim was standing, but at every step, he was assured of the way of Allah as regards the prevailing of the messengers 
47:13"And how many a town which was far more powerful than the town of yours which has driven you out: We destroyed them so there was no helper for them". 
He was guided to Mount Thawr on the way to Mina, where he met Abu Bakr and hid in a cave. At the break of dawn, the Quraysh entered his home and found Ali sleeping in his bed, so they rushed towards the mountain, following his tracks. As they reached the cave where he was hiding, all they found was the entrance blocked with a spider web. They concluded that he must have gone another way. 

The Quraysh had announced a prize of 100 camels to whosoever would bring back Muhammad to Mecca
8:30"And when those who disbelieved devised plans against you that they might confine you or slay you or drive you away; and they devised plans and Allah too had arranged a plan; and Allah is the best of planners" 
9:40"If you will not aid him, Allah certainly aided him when those who disbelieved expelled him, he being the second of the two, when they were both in the cave, when he said to his companion: Grieve not, surely Allah is with us. So Allah sent down His tranquillity upon him and strengthened him with hosts which you did not see, and made lowest the word of those who disbelieved; and the word of Allah, that is the highest; and Allah is Mighty, Wise."

After 3 days, God permitted him to come out. He met a shepherd who knew the terrain and could take him and Abu Bakr to Medina where the Muslims were eagerly awaiting him. But the news of his escape and the consequent reward for his capture had widely spread. Prize hunters went after him, among them Suraqah who almost captured the Prophet. But when he reach him, his horses' legs sank in the sand. Suraqah interpreted this as a Divine Sign and pledged allegiance to Muhammad. He went to the Quraysh and covered Muhammad's tracks by saying he couldnt find him. After a while on the torturous road, walking on the burning desert sand they stopped at Qudayd where they were sheltered by a woman called Umm Ma'bad. She had no food to offer them, and the only goat she had could not produce milk. The Prophet insisted on milking it and the milk flowed copiously. He gave the woman to drink, then his companions and finally he had his share "The one who gives others to drink, must himself be the last to drink" he said. 

Eventually the prophet made it to Medina, where he was cheerfully received. This is the Hijra, a common pattern among God's greatest prophets who fled their homes for the sake of their faith 29:26. 13 years after the 1st revelation, 13 years of enduring all type of emotional and physical oppression at the hands of the rejecters of faith
 28:85"Most surely He Who has made the Quran binding on you will bring you back to the destination". 
During these years Muhammad succeeded in forming a group of around 200 Meccan followers, who firmly believed in the new message and rejected everything which was connected with the pre-islamic era of the Jahiliyya. To this small group, as well as the early Medinite converts, the Quran caused such intense spiritual revival that, those who had to leave their lives behind for the sake of their new faith did not hesitate following the footsteps of Ibrahim or Lut 19:48-49,29:26 while those who already lived in the safety of Medina transformed their inherited ways so as to follow the new code of life in all of its aspects. 

As alluded to earlier, exile from the homeland for spiritual reasons is the pattern of the greatest names among the prophets. Abraham left idolatrous Iraq and his hometown of Ur that opposed his preaching, for Canaan. Moses left Egypt with the enslaved Israelites who could not freely worship, for Canaan so as to establish their religion. Jesus, whose preaching was repeatedly rejected in his hometown of Nazareth, did not cease traveling from town to town as an itinerant preacher, with very little success. Finally Muhammad, who gained a considerable following in his hometown of Mecca but could not root out sinfulness and idolatry in it, and thus had to emigrate to neighbouring Medina before his triumphant return and establishment of Islam at the holy city. On a more general note, believers of all times are obliged to forsake the domain of evil and to "migrate unto God", to a place where it is possible to live in accordance with one's faith 29:56.

Several years after the passing away of the Prophet, that hijra would be marked as the start of the Islamic calendar by the second caliph.

The city was now called Medina-tul-nabi. The arrival of the prophet marked the true beginning of the spreading of Islam throughout Arabia. Now the outnumbered Muslim community had to remain patient and united and get ready to defend their religion with all their might and resources against internal sabotage planned by the pagan tribes allied with the Jews and the Christians; the believers had not only to refute their arguments, but also to neutralize their subterfuges, as well as those of their spies that infiltrated the community, and the half-hearted Muslims, aiming at demoralizing them. If they stood firm by their faith and encouraged one another to righteousness, they would succeed. The threat was constant, day and night that the early Muslim community never lay down to sleep except with their weapons with them.

The inhabitants of the city which was now called Medina, some of them having never seen the Prophet, started breaking the idols they had in their houses. There, the Prophet implemented the teachings of Islam practically and the number of converts increased rapidly 
"And you see people entering the religion of Allah in troops". 
It was a natural outcome resulting from the perfect combination of Islamic principles and politics.

The Prophet laid the foundation of Islamic brotherhood in Medina 49:10, uniting all rival clans and tribes 3:103That achievement in the context of ancient Arabian tribal life, was nothing short of miraculous 
8:62-3"..It is He who supported you with His help and with the believers. And brought together their hearts. If you had spent all that is in the earth, you could not have brought their hearts together; but Allah brought them together. Indeed, He is Exalted in Might and Wise". 
Anyone familiar with the culture of pride, honor and vendetta of the Arabs understands the force of that statement; the manner in which deeply ingrained hatred and hostility were replaced by a bond of common interest, love and spirituality is proof of the transforming power of the message of Islam. That achievement allowed an atmosphere of hospitality and comfort to be extended to the new converts who fled to the city for refuge and who had lost relatives at the hands of the Meccans, as well as their wealth and property, for what they believed to be the Supreme Truth. The Quran strengthened this bond between the Meccan Muhajirun and the Medinite Ansar by calling them to be patient and help each other in patience. In this way, their strength is enhanced, their resolve doubled  
3:200"be patient and help each other in patience and remain lined up/raabitu". 
The term implies linking up with one another in all affairs, in time of ease as well as in difficulties. 

Based on the Quran's repeated stress on indiscriminate worldly and heavenly justice, the prophet was able to establish a strong bond between the Muslims regardless of their social status, gender, race or kinship, on the reality that only righteousness in deeds and God-consciousness/taqwa are of lasting value 2:221,4:1,135,5:48,25:77,34:37,42:23,49:13. The distinctive Islamic greeting became a  symbol of that reciprocal sense of good will 4:86. The prophet embodied what he preached when he refused to adopt any of the appearances of power, authority or kingship 6:50. Abundant examples are found in the ahadith. His relationship with his addressees was that of a compassionate brother, in the manner of prophets gone before him the likes of Hud, Saleh or Shuayb 11:50,61,84. He brought down the class system, as echoed in the Quran's condemnation of Firon's oppression of the Israelites, tormented and deprived of their rights 28:4.

That notion extended beyond the regular members of society, with the Quran underlining that Muhammad was no more than a messenger, the seal in a long line 33:40, sent with the truth of clear warnings and glad tidings, like the messengers of old 35:24,53:56. He is solely responsible to deliver the message 27:92, not seeking any worldly reward for it 38:86. He does not master divine knowledge except as Allah pleases 7:188. The believers are reminded it was not a favour from Muhammad that they found the straight path for he is nothing more than a vessel out of whom revelation could be taken away at anytime 17:86-7,49:17. This religion is a favour from their God who 
62:2,3:164"conferred a benefit upon the believers when He raised among them a Messenger from among themselves, reciting to them His communications and purifying them, and teaching them the Book and the wisdom, although before that they were surely in manifest error". 
It materialized Ibrahim and Ismail's prayers after passing their trials and raising the foundations of the Kaaba 2:129. It is a pure favour, done for the sole benefit of mankind and the manner in which it is received does not in the least add or demote from God's glory 
4:170"O' mankind! the Messenger has came to you with the truth from your Lord; then believe (in him), it is good for you And if you disbelieve, still, to Allah belongs whatever is in the heavens and the earth, and Allah is All-Knowing, All-Wise".
Contrary to Christians who went to such extent in their over-exaltation of their prophet that, in the absence of a birthday for Jesus went searching in the pagan calendar for a date to artificially ascribe as Jesus' birthday, the Muslims do not celebrate their prophet's birth or death. The importance is focused on the message and this is why we celebrate the only month mentioned by name in the Quran, that of Ramadan. We gratefully fast, which is a symbol of self sacrifice, in remembrance of God's sending in this month, a guiding light for all of mankind, to the heart of His prophet on a night of Ramadan, the Night of Destiny/laylatul Qadr.


Further reading:

Sunday, June 19, 2022

Divine transcendence and descriptions of God



God's essence is one that can never be perceived, whether in this world or the next. We cannot speak of Him in terms of any point of reference, including spatio-temporal. However, nothing is more evident than His attributes, manifesting themselves like the smoke of the fire. He, through His attributes, is everywhere in the heavens and earth 
57:4,58:7,12:105,31:20,2:115"so whichever way you turn, there is the Face of Allah". 
These attributes manifest in every aspect of creation, down to our 
45:3-4,51:21"own souls (too); will you not then see?". 
It is a continuously unfolding phenomenon as denoted with the present progressive tense in 41:53. As also denoted with "musiun" 51:47 which carries the meaning of expanding, the universe is not a finished work, but in continuous expansion, with new manifestations of God's creation 
87:2"Who creates, then makes complete". 
Musiun stems from W-S-Ayn meaning wide or to encompass something. It is often used in the Quran to imply both meanings 4:97,130,7:156,20:98,29:56. Musiun is a noun describing the subject doing the widening or the encompassing. Here the meaning that fits better the context is widening or expanding. 

The passage turns the audience's attention to the sky whose primary characteristics they know and see, obviously is its vastness. It first says God built it with power, because something that vast could only have been done with immesurable might. This verse is part of a group of verses arguing for the resurrection by pointing to mankind's creation as insignificant in terms of complexity and strength needed to achieve it, compared to the heavens above 40:57. The idea of making the heavens vast thus then naturally follows the initial description of the creation from the perspective of the strength needed. Strength however does not necessarily imply exertion and effort. And this is where the eloquence of the Quran manifests. The statement "musiun" is a noun denoting a state, not a temporary action. It also implies ease. The Quran could have used here other words to derive the same meaning of expanding, but without that nuance of ease. Muwassi3 for instance carries the same meaning but with an emphasis on effort because of the shadda. Ibn Abbas comments 
"(We have built) created (the heaven with might, and We it is who make the vast extent (thereof)) as We will; it is also said that this means: we expand the provision thereof". 
He understood musiun as implying vastness, and as reflected in the view he reports, musiun is a constant action. Ancient people did not know the universe is in expansion and in a constant state of creation, so they connected musiun to the provision from the heaven, ie the rain. Here is a typical case of Quranic eloquence, allowing its words not to violently disturb nor confirm its audience's understanding of nature, so as to not deflect the attention from the spiritual portents of the verse. This is because the Quran's objective isnt to cause scientific, but spiritual reform. 

The Quran has pointed and explained the implications of many signs which exist in the world around and within man calling, him to ponder on every aspect of existence. These are in fact the true miracles happening everyday and only the one with an open heart is able to derive the higher realities from them. This is the particularity of the Quranic argument, to grasp things, concepts, phenomena which the human sees and experiences on a near daily basis, and teaches him the right angle from which to perceive them. The Quran uses simple scenes long familiar to man to attract attention to the higher realities and build profound faith. From a spiritual point of view, the same miraculous complexity applies to the building blocks of life as to gigantic structures and the universe. These scenes are used by the Quran because it addresses every human being, at all times and conditions. It does not seek to accommodate the philosophical and scientific intellectual elite while disregarding less educated people. The observations to which it points can be utilized by anyone so as to derive spiritual benefits. Through this approach among others, including a balance of warnings and glad tidings, as well as prophecies progressively unfolding, history attests that the prophet Muhammad, although often denigrated by Judeo-Christian critics who are ignorant of their own books, this prophet was in fact the most successful in implementing the will of God on an unprecedented scope and scale. Every time the prophet's opponents asked him for a miracle on demand, he was told to point them to ta similar phenomena occurring daily under their eyes as evidence of a wise Creator 
45:25-6"And when Our verses are recited to them as clear evidences, their argument is only that they say, "Bring [back] our forefathers, if you should be truthful". Say, "Allah causes you to live, then causes you to die; then He will assemble you for the Day of Resurrection, about which there is no doubt, but most of the people do not know". 
How will they admit to a miraculous sign the like of which they are demanding, if they arent able to see the imprint of a Creator in everyday causality? That is why we find that even those prophets that did perform miracles on demand to those kinds of obdurate people, were accused of sorcery and had in fact very little following
45:23"Have you seen he who has taken as his god his [own] desire, and Allah has sent him astray due to knowledge and has set a seal upon his hearing and his heart and put over his vision a veil? So who will guide him after Allah? Then will you not be reminded?"

The human mind has been designed so as to observe and meditate upon the creation, not the Creator. Our minds cannot and will not ever be able to absorb Allah's infinite essence. Once, the prophet said to his companions who were in deep contemplation; 
"Contemplate and reflect on Allah's creation, and not on the Creator for you will never be able to understand Allah in measures or quantum". 
The Quran embraces all scientific endeavor that does not reject the spiritual dimension, which is present in all things, in and outside of man 
3:190-1"Most surely in the creation of the heavens and the earth and the alternation of the night and the day there are signs for men who understand. Those who remember Allah standing and sitting and lying on their sides and reflect on the creation of the heavens and the earth". 
The Quran guides and imparts knowledge regarding the unseen realm, which is beyond our reach. But the material world is available for anyone to explore. That is why the Quran doesnt impart new knowledge in relation to our world but rather seeks to purge the scientist's intention and attitude when exploring it. 

These passages lay the ground for the proper understanding of many verses that mention God's attributes. For instance, looking towards Allah in the Hereafter 75:23 is the same as seeing His face in this world 2:115 except that the perception and experience will be far more intense. This is because the believers will literally be 3:107"in Allah's mercy" and are repeatedly described as meeting Him 76:11. This meeting, translates into experiences of bliss and relief 
"and (Allah) has met them with freshness and joy". 
Looking towards Allah 75:23 is the most suited expression to convey the idea of the very strong perception of God's manifestation through His attributes. The Quran averts any possible misuse of such verses through its explicit statements 
6:103"Visions comprehends Him not, and He comprehends (all) vision". 
To leave no room for ambiguity, the verse actually says alabsar/visions in the plural. This covers any type of physical vision, even including the impossibility to imagine God. Allah's mathal or example, is therefore unimaginable, incomparable 
30:27"and His is the most exalted essence/mathal in the heavens and the earth, and He is the Mighty, the Wise". 
The statement that He "comprehends all visions" is quite powerful as it entails God not only seeing but encompassing the entity He sees. Creatures with vision are limited to the physical sight of things, without always seeing its inner reality. That is how precise and complete the Quran is in its monotheistic approach to the divine essence. He does not need to be detached from the creation to remain beyond all perception. He is fully present and aware of the reality of all things. 

Similarly to seeing their Lord, the believers meeting Him in the Hereafter is equal to an intense perception of the way in which He manifests His attributes 2:46. In fact it clearly says, that in the Hereafter, the successful will meet God's good promise 28:61. Another aspect through which the Quran places the divine reality beyond human perception is the statement 
112:4,42:11"there is nothing like a likeness of Him" 
This is the Quran axiom as regards the manner by which God manifests in this world, He does so through His attributes, but never through His imperceptible essence. 42:11 literally says "like a likeness of Him" meaning His reality is not only above all material limitations, but even above the limitation of metaphor. This also carries the meaning that even the "how" of His being is beyond the category of human thought. There is no reason to assume that this reality will cease in the hereafter, with Allah's essence being brought to the realm of physical perception. 

"Like a likeness" can be both taken as nothing similar to Allah or nothing identical to Allah. Scholars have taken different positions on the matter, with the most logical being that there is similarity but nothing identical to Him. For example humans can hear but nothing like the perfect hearing of Allah. Whatever similitude is given to Him, it always is better than the thing or concept used to illustrate
 16:60"and for Allah is the highest likeness. And He is Exalted in Might, the Wise".
Whatever symmetry is used with creation, to illustrate something about Allah, must end up exalting Him rather than diminishing from His majesty 16:74,36:77-8.

Trinitarians on the other hand have completely identified God with creation as symbolized in the mysterious hypostatic union in Jesus; fully man and fully God. Every atom composing the incarnate son of God, contain this full characteristic of divinity and humanity. Where are now the pieces of skin, hair, excrements, or even the foreskin of the circumcised son of God while he walked this earth? Have they disintegrated and merged into other worldly entities, like plants, animals or humans, which in turn contain atoms of divinity within them? Trinity is impossible to logically deduce, reasonably arrive to through the mind and senses; humans naturally, as contingent beings seek the intrinsically different, non-contingent, necessary being that transcends all things as the origin of creation. Christians, and more particularly Catholics and Orthodox, cannot derive their ultimate beliefs from reason alone, they are forced to operate with the presupposition that the Bible and church tradition are true for the Trinity to be the correct notion of God yet the consensus on the canon of the scripture as well as the creed of Christianity werent agreed upon for 300 years. The epistemology of Christianity, moreso that of Catholicism and Orthodoxy, is not only presuppositional which is poor philosophically as it entails circular reasoning based on writings of highly disputed authenticity, but ultimately leads to mysterianism which negates reason and logic entirely. It is a religion of blind faith with no place for reason outside revelation to corroborate independently that revelation. This entails that either one is born into it, or forcefully converted and brainwashed into it. One cannot come from the outside and start with the presupposition that it is the truth without a process of reasonable deductions. And if one does so, then one cancels the central requirement of that belief system even before embracing it. This demonstrates that, contrary to the demand of the Church, human nature needs logical, reasonable premises to accept a spiritual proposition as potentially true.

Among the scholars and commentators of the past, a terminology was coined whenever they had to interpret such verses "bi-la kayfa"/without how. The scholars of Islam are therefore not arbitrarily delimitating human understanding in light of statements about God. The notorious "divine mystery" cop out term of Trinitarian scholars on the other hand is arbitrary and not based on anything other than 2000 years of fruitless efforts in trying to make sense of irrational doctrines. 

The prophet said 
“Allah laughs for the despair of His servant, as He will soon relieve him.” I said, “O Messenger of Allah, does the Lord laugh?” The Prophet said, “Yes.” I said, “We will never be deprived of goodness by a Lord who laughs!”
Here the prophet demonstrates that principle of interpretation; maintaining a balance between Allah’s absolute transcendence and the affirmation of His attributes. Despite the person's desire for more details, the prophet doesnt describe the "how" and "why" of Allah laughing but only confirms it as fact. This means the similitude of Allah's laugh with that of creation stops at the level of the effect which is entailed by such an attribute. How it manifests in God is unknown. 

The same principle, as taught by the prophet and the Quran, is adopted whenever one comes across other references to God's attributes including mercy, love, wrath, dislike, mockery, pleasure etc. Mercy for example, is caused by an emotion of compassion, leading to favourable actions. It is from our own experience that we associate a merciful action with compassionate feelings, but such experience doesnt apply to God as we do not know how any attribute manifests within His infinite essence. The "How" of things is always excluded for Allah. The Quran in countless instances explains, explicitly and implicitly, that Allah is self-sufficient, beyond the need of anything outside of Himself. Emotions therefore, which are contingent on need, cannot be what drives Allah's category of attributes which we perceive as emotional. 
 
The prophet once recounted an intense revelational dream in which he experienced something of the realm of the unseen. At no point does he speak of seeing Allah. He says he was in Allah's presence 
"ana bi rabbi". 
God's presence manifests through His attributes as is amply demonstrated in the Quran. In that dream the prophet knew He was in Allah's presence when he perceived something that represented Allah. In the abstract, metaphysical realm, as in a dream, things are experienced differently than with the physical senses. All aspects of Allah which he saw and interacted with were visions of the spirit, of the heart 
"I saw Him place His Palm between my shoulders, and I sensed the coolness of His Fingertips between my breast. Then everything was disclosed for me, and I became aware". 
Even in this world, references in the Quran and ahadith to attributes of Allah such as His Hands, manifest in a non-material, metaphysical sense 
48:10"Surely those who swear allegiance to you do but swear allegiance to Allah; the hand of Allah is above their hands". 
Just like Allah's face is everywhere one looks 2:115 His presence with each and everyone at all moments 57:4,58:7 closer than the jugular vein 50:16 anytime we read of other attributes of Allah, including His eyes, fingers, foot, shin etc, we understand them in light of the supreme and firm Quranic axioms of divine transcendence spoken of earlier. This is further borne out by the repeated notion of there being spiritual senses by which the God-conscious experiences the unseen, whether in this world or in the hereafter.  Allah, the necessary being, has the attribute of mercy or wrath, just as He has the attribute of foot, shin, eyes or hands. We know those attributes not by the description of their reality, or their essence, but by the way they interact with creation. God in His revelation told us how in some cases His mercy, wrath or His hand or foot affect us and this is the extent to which we understand His attributes.

God's attributes are distinct, but distinction of attributes within Allah's essence isnt analogous to distinction of persons (father-son-holyspirit) within the trinitarian godhead. In the trinitarian model, each person is distinct from the other but is of one divine essence. This results in 3 different gods as they instantiate different attributes, as classical identity suggests. Not only that, these "persons" cause oneanother to come to being, the Father "begets" the Son and the Holy Spirit "proceeds" from the Father. There is a hierarchy in time and rank, no matter the word contortions. That reality is more blatantly conveyed by the pre-Nicea Church Fathers who clearly saw the Son as subordinate in power, rank, knowledge to God the Father. In addition, these divine persons of the trinity must have different minds because the Father can never know that he is the Son and vice versa (logic of indexicals).

The attributes of Allah, although distinct, like human love or wrath, arent entities with an independent will nor are they divine. In the end, whatever the semantics and sophistries used, Muslims maintain strict monotheism by distinguishing the Creator from the created, and do not ascribe divinity to anything else than one entity.

This is where the fundamental Islamic principle that Allah is One, both numerically and in kind, eternally, serves as an anchor whenever the human mind ventures into exploring the divine reality. Muslims, no matter their philosophical background and musings in that area, will always remain anchored in their monotheism and will never declare more than one entity divine.

There is however a school of philosophical thought within branches of Islam that come close, by implication, to what trinitarians have explicitly done. It finds its source in Greek philosophy and is called the doctrine of Divine simplicity. It entails that the attributes spoken of separately in the Quran and traditions like creator, mercy, power, love, wrath, hand, eyes etc are all names of one and the same thing, that thing being God's very essence, eternally existing. This results in Allah continuously creating for instance, making the universe eternal along with Allah. It further makes the act of creation necessary, Allah had to be eternally creating from eternity past, regardless of His will. The Quran states otherwise, that Allah is free from all constraints, because He is the only necessary being. He creates, loves, destroys etc within time, and He existed by Himself, prior to all creation. Lastly, not only does the doctrine entail necessity beyond the necessary being in regards to creation, it also means that our particular universe was the only possible one God could have created from eternity past, thus constraining His power and will. The Muslim proponents of that doctrine, which is totally unnecessary if one takes the primary sources of Islam as basis, have different semantical ways to work around those problems so as to maintain divine transcendence. Mainstream Islam avoids such pitfalls by accepting what is plainly stated in the primary sources, the sacred text and traditions, namely that the attributes of Allah are real and distinct, that they manifest in time. In regards to the relation of the attributes to the divine essence, the stance adopted is one of neutrality as there are no guiding statements in the primary sources. The attributes subsist without being equal to the essence nor different parts of it.

Allah having attributes like the aforementioned ones, does not negate that certain literary contexts in which they appear may entail a metaphor. There are many examples of these expressions, well known in Arabic usage, both in the Quran and ahadith. For instance the statement 
51:47"And the heaven We constructed with strength/biaydin, and indeed, We are [its] expander". 
The use of "hands" denotes power, while the plain reading of constructing the universe with hands has no benefit nor bearing on the context of the verse. Elsewhere the Quran literally speaks of the hands of God's mercy 25:48. The idea of an attribute of Allah having hands is obviously misplaced; the meaning conveys a sense of care and sustenance 
25:48"And He is the One who sent the winds as glad tidings between the hands of His mercy. And We sent down from the sky water which is pure".
Similarly, the statement that both of Allah's hands are right hands conveys a sense of honour. The prophet, speaking of the first moments following Adam's completion said: 
"..Then Allah said to him – while His Two Hands were closed – ‘Choose which of them you wish.’ He said: ‘I chose the right My Lord and both of the Hands of my Lord are right, blessed..." 
Adam was given the choice between 2 hands, of which he chose the right one. His subsequent statement that both hands are right cannot be taken literally or else Adam could not have chosen THE right one when initially given the choice. The "right hand" in Arabic culture, and in most societies symbolizes honour, trust, authority, strength. Adam's statement was meant at glorifying Allah. In another report, mention is made of a "left hand". This part of the hadith however is a known anomaly/shaadh (al-Albani). As to what Adam saw and whether he saw a form, the whole incident could have occurred through inspiration, as the Quran clearly says whenever Allah communicates with someone.  Another instance is the statement 28:88"Everything will be destroyed except His Face". The face, as is amply used in classical Arabic, with examples from both the Quran and ahadith entails the essence of an entity. With this linguistic reality in mind, and the verses stating that Allah is the ever-living, Who precedes and outlasts all things, one applies the meaning of "face" here to Allah's essence, His self. This doesnt negate the Face as an attribute of Allah 2:115.

Sometimes, nothing can be derived from a statement other than a metaphorical meaning, without any indication of the imagery applying to God in a literal sense 
39:56"Lest a soul should say, "Oh [how great is] my regret over what I neglected the side/janb of Allah and that I was among the mockers". 
Janb is used for the side of the abdomen where the ribs are. It is also an everyday expression that indicates the side in the sense of what it represents. The English equivalent would be "to take the side of X" or "to be on the side of X". Obviously here a plain, literal reading brings nothing to the verse and is irrelevant to the message. This verse is similar in meaning to statements that Allah literally is "with" the righteous 29:69.

The prophet said, from ibn Abbas 
"The rahim (kinship ties, lit. "womb") is hanging on to the Hujzah of The Most Merciful; He maintains ties with whoever maintains it and severs ties with whoever severs it."
In another version through Abu Hurayra 
“Allah created the creation, and when He had finished it, the rahim got up and caught hold of the Haqw of Allah, whereupon, Allah said, ‘What is the matter?’ It said, ‘I seek refuge with You from those who sever the ties of kinship.’ Allah Said, ‘Will you be satisfied if I bestow My favors upon those who maintain your ties and withhold My favors from those who sever your ties?’ It said, ‘Yes, O my Lord!’ Then Allah said, ‘That is for you”.
Both Hujzah and Haqw mean the waist. In Arabic "holding on to the hujzah of another" means seeking his help, without entailing physical contact. Following the guidelines of interpretation Allah Himself has laid down in the book as regards His attributes and descriptions, the waist of Allah, like any other attribute is beyond comprehension. Only He knows its reality and implications. Just as Allah being nearer to us than the vein of the neck does not entail physical contact, the prophet here is using an expression in relation to the waist of Allah, to convey a message as regards the ties of kinship. The womb holding unto Allah's waist is another way of saying that it called upon Him for help. When something is depicted as being in contact with Allah, it is not a created, tangible thing, rather a concept
 "Glory is Allah’s izaar and pride is His cloak". 
The izaar is a traditional cloth that is wrapped around the waistline and that goes down until the ankles.



The throne of Allah
2:255"His chair (kursiyyahu) extends over the heavens and the earth"
20:5"The Beneficent One, Who is established (istawa) on the Throne (arsh)"
7:54"Surely your Lord is Allah, Who created the heavens and the earth in six periods of time, and He is firm in power (thumma istawa alal arsh)"

In all the seven instances where God is spoken of in the Quran as "istawa alal arsh/established on the throne" 7:54,10:3,13:2,20:5,25:59,32:4,57:4 this expression is connected with a declaration of His having created the universe. Nothing symbolizes dominion more in human psyche than the image of a powerful king sitting on his throne and ruling his kingdom. Allah however is not like any human king. He is the King of Kings Who not only possesses a mighty throne, but is the sustainer of that throne 
9:129,23:116"So exalted be Allah, the True King; no god is there but He, the Lord of the Throne/arsh".
This means, despite Him being the absolute ruler of all that exists, He stands by Himself and does not need the support of a throne. This is a major point in the Quran's depiction of creation. At no point is there any hint or reference to God needing a time of rest, or break from a tiresome endeavour. 

As to the statement "established over/on" that generally accompanies the mention of the throne, it does not entail "sitting". It is important to emphasize, whenever there is mention of Allah being in a location, the only understanding that is open to us is in terms of implication relevant to each context. The "how" is beyond any human being's grasp since outside our experience. This, again, is a principle of interpretation established in the Quran and the teachings of the prophet. 

For instance it says Allah is at all times nearer than one's jugular vein 50:16. The implication is that His knowledge and control encompass every aspect of every human being's life, at each instant of their existence. It also says Allah's face is visible wherever one looks 2:115. How is Allah's face simultaneously present in whatever direction one lays his eyes is beyond human understanding but the implications are clear; the spiritually aware perceives in all aspects of creation and at all moments the divine will and design. Interestingly, in the very verse talking of Allah's establishing Himself above the throne, it says 
57:4"He is with you wherever you are". 
Again, His simultaneous presence above the throne and with every human at all moment shows that He is absolutely transcendent, unbound by space and time, or any other type of restriction. This is an unfathomable notion to our minds, hence the uselessness of seeking the "how". The implications of that statement however are clear; God has unrestricted sway over all that exists, including the throne itself which is a creation. 

God's presence, not appearance, during His communion with Moses follows this exact pattern of religious terminology 27:7-9,28:29-30. The same understanding applies to the hadith describing Allah descending 
"every night to the lowest heaven when one-third of the night remains" 
so as to bless and forgive those that request it. Just as Allah is closer, at each instant, than the jugular vein, with all humans wherever they are, His face simultaneously visible all around us at all moments, all the while being established over the throne, His presence in the lowest heaven at a certain point in time is an unfathomable concept to the human mind. The implications of the statement however is understood by the information provided; such descent is accompanied by a manifestation of His attribute of mercy which is more prominent during that interval to those that seek it.  

The Quran, as well as the prophet, draw the boundaries of our understanding of those verses. What we can seek to understand, and what is a fruitless effort, as pointed to earlier. Him encompassing all of existence from close and far simultaneously, as well as being in a certain place at a certain time, is unlike any concept we can imagine. We can however understand the implications of those descriptions. 

Again, when Allah 87:1"the Most High" is 6:61,16:50"above" or in the heavens (which He created), the expression is understood as denoting his all encompassing sway and dominion, that there cannot be something higher than Him in the sense of perfection, exaltedness. Such verses cannot be taken in isolation of the principles of interpretation mentioned earlier, as well as the numerous statements of Allah's all encompassing presence unrestricted by time and space. In fact, in connection to Allah being "above", we read that He does not "reside" in a fixed place 
6:3"He is Allah in the heavens and in the earth". 
We find in certain passages of the HB principles that similarly protect divine transcendence despite descriptions of God acting within time and space. Among such restrictive verses we read that 
Isa33:5"The Lord is exalted, for He dwells on high". 
That dwelling place is somewhere in the 
Amos9:6"upper stories in Heaven" 
which He has built. These chambers are above the solid canopy of the earth upon which He sometimes sits Isa40:22,Ps104 in order to 
Ps33:13-14"oversees all the inhabitants of the earth". 
The heavens strictly belong to him, while humans were made for the earth Ps115:16. In a closer sense, in the context of the Temple of Jerusalem, God is said to dwell among His people 1kings8:27. This is where the prophet Solomon salvages divine transcendence and provides an axiom by which to understand such "restrictive" Biblical verses. He states here that no location on the earth and neither of "the heaven of heavens" can contain Him. By definition, infinity cannot be limited in quantity or quality. This passage, which is in congruence with the Islamic principles mentioned earlier, refute the Hellenistic misappropriation of the HB by the NT authors. Jesus being fully God limits the infinite to a location. If the divine essence was not limited to a location when Jesus walked the streets of Jerusalem, then it means Jesus was not fully God. Solomon's words are decisive and closed to any misinterpretation. God manifests His presence through His attributes, not by entering His creation. 

The Quran has also warned that these type of ambiguous verses are a test to those in whose heart there is perversity 3:7. They will deny the explicit verses that shed light on the right manner to approach these passages, preferring to apply their own desires and notions unto them. Trinitarians will often reply that God can do whatever He wishes. God surely has power over all things, but the contention here isnt about what God can or cannot do. God doesnt contradict Himself or negate His attributes, including Majesty and Self-sufficiency. Entering creation compromises both. This also opens the way for speculation, can God, for whatever theological construct, also incarnate into a worm? If not why not?

With those principles in mind we may further understand the implications of Allah "coming". We do not and cannot fathom how Allah can come within space and time, but we certainly can know the implications of that statement. Besides the hadith mentioned prior which entails mercy, in the Quran it means the execution of His command or of His threatened punishment. Similarly, the HB states in the context of divine chastisement visiting a wicked people, that God swiftly comes "riding" the clouds to destination Isa19:1,Ps104:3 or is transported by majestic angels Ps18:10. More in line with the Quranic imagery is God "descending" on the sinners for punishment or on a people for battle Isa31:4,Micah1:3 or "coming with a strong hand" to mete out retribution upon the heathens Isa40:10. 

The idea of tiredness is completely excluded from God's creative work 46:33. God's establishment over the throne, which is itself a creation sustained by Him, symbolises His constant dominion upon all that exists. He has not relinquished His rule in favour of others nor has He made the whole of His creation or any part of it independent like a clock running by itself. He has instead remained at all times the sole Sustainer upon Whom the functioning of all things depend. The ending of these verses with 
"surely His is the creation and the command" 
refer precisely to this; after creation comes the command, symbolized by the establishment on the throne 
32:5"He manages and regulates every affair from the heavens to the earth. Then, it will go up to him, in one Day, the space whereof is a thousand years of your reckoning". 
In fact the Quran is silent about a seventh day in the history of creation, where the Bible depicts God as seemingly collapsing on a throne following a tiresome task. Rather, God creates in six days only and then controls His creation, including the throne upon which He is established. Had His management abandoned the world of existence for one single moment, the organization of them all would have perished 22:65,35:41. 

In the HB, despite being One that Isa40:28"neither tires nor wearies", the crudely depicted Hebrew God is one that needed "resting" after "finishing" the monumental task of creating the universe, a pre-measured and finalized work 
Isa40:12"Who measured water with his gait, and measured the heavens with his span, and measured by thirds the dust of the earth, and weighed mountains with a scale and hills with a balance?" 
also Isa48:13. 

This concept borders with the polytheistic beliefs of many people around the world, including the Arabs of the Hijaz, who attributed the act of creation to the One God supreme, who then for many various reasons, left it either partially or completely, to the interceding deities or lesser gods to administrate the natural processes. The perfect monotheism of Islam is far detached from these incomplete and primitive depictions of God.

Ibrahim's discussion with the unnamed ruler of his nation (later Quran commentaries identify him with Namrud/Nimrod) was precisely about this notion of God's omnipresence in the created world. What transpires from the portion of the debate quoted in the Quran is that the point of contention was not God's existence, rather His presence in man's life. The ruler gave examples implying that God is not concerned with all worldly matters, is mostly absent from man's life. Ibrahim refuted that point by reminding him of God's constant command of the natural laws upon which all life depends. He did so after the king's heedlessness to the first argument; God is the origin of the mechanism of life and death which all organisms are subject to. The ruler used ridicule to maintain his position, in the manner that the arrogant possessors of power often do. Instead of considering the deeper meaning of Ibrahim's argument, he alluded to the giving of life and death in an indirect manner; as a worldly king, he also had the power to inflict death and give or allow life. This exposed his spiritual heedlessness. Ibrahim then dumbfounded him with an argument he could not, even with his spiritual shallowness and corrupt belief in God, dismiss as he had previously done. 

As has been made clear by now, God establishing Himself on the throne evokes dominion, and in the comprehensive language of the Quran conveys that Allah governs the whole of His creation, including the throne itself. He has kept all the powers by Himself, and whatever is taking place in each and every part of the universe is happening with His command and permission 
30:25"And one of His signs is that the heaven and the earth subsist by His command". 
Allah at no point becomes unconcerned with His creation, especially not man for whom he took the responsibility of making arrangements for his guidance, protection and fulfilment of his needs. This is done by providing means by which both aspects of the human being can thrive; the spiritual, through the innate perception of higher truths 23:78,46:26,67:23,76:2 as well as sending divine guidance 2:38-9,7:35-6,20:123 and the physical through the continuous maintenance of the universe and its laws 35:41. There is a reason why the Quran, in its surgical precision, describes Allah with His attribute of infinite mercy, when it mentions His establishment over the throne that encompasses all of creation
 20:5"The Beneficent One/al Rahman, Who is established on the Throne". 
No word enshrines the concept of constant care of every aspect of the functioning of the universe, more that the superlative Qayyum which reoccurs in the Quran, and no verse comprehensively explains it like ayat al kursi does 2:255. As denoted with "musiun" 51:47 which carries the meaning of expanding, the universe is not a finished work, but in continuous expansion, with new manifestations of God's creation
 87:2"Who creates, then makes complete". 
If creation in the universe is an ongoing phenomenon then how could one deem it far fetched and difficult to re-create the universe along with the humans after their destruction? These verses most often come in the context of providing proof for the resurrection. God has not just created this universe and left it alone after giving it the initial push. The same underlying notion is in 64:1. He isnt just the first cause after which He has no role in the affair. He is ruling over it and sustaining it at every moment 
35:13,7:54"Who created the heavens and the earth in six periods of time, and He is established on the Throne; He throws the veil of night over the day, which it pursues incessantly; and (He created) the sun and the moon and the stars, made subservient by His command; surely His is the creation and the command; blessed is Allah, the Lord of the worlds". 
Day and night are not following each other by themselves but by the Command of Allah Who could change the present system totally. But it is by His love and mercy that the system is maintained so as to allow life to thrive. God's love and mercy for His creation is a recurrent theme in the Quran and the idea of divine "detachment" from human destiny is in complete opposition to that concept. The combined statements that Allah is simultaneously above the throne as well as close to all things in existence, strikes the perfect balance between all encompassing transcendence and careful implication on an individual level. 

This negates the atheist world-view, our universe is not a closed, continuous and self-perpetuating material universe. Every part of every process is brought about by Allah, whether creation of rain, the development of seeds, rotation of planets, from the cosmic to the cellular, man doesnt stand alone. Material causality is thus treated as a delusion 40:62 while constant divine creation is a reality 87:1-3. 
40:7"Those who bear the throne and those around it celebrate the praise of their Lord and believe in Him and ask protection for those who believe.."
39:75"And you shall see the angels going round about the throne glorifying the praise of their Lord; and judgment shall be given between them with justice.."
69:16-7"And the heavens shall be rent asunder, for that Day it shall be frail and shall collapse. And the angels shall be on the sides thereof; and above them eight shall bear on that day your Lord's throne"
These verses speaking of the entities bearing the Throne and being near it on the Day of Judgement, do not say that God is or will be seated on this "Throne". As stated earlier, Allah is in no need of the throne for support, rather it is the throne that is constantly sustained by its Creator. Beyond its symbolism, the reality and function of the throne is something known to God only. 

In contrast, we read in the HB 
1Kings22:19"I saw the Lord seated on His throne, and all the host of heaven were standing by Him on His right and on His left" 
or also in Isa6:1,37:16,Ezek1,2,3 all picturing God carried by angelic creatures, seated on His throne. He is also pictured as accompanied by innumerable chariots and angels during certain "important" movements Ps68:18. Even the statement of ibn Abbas describing the kursi as Allah's footstool does not come close to the biblical depiction, neither does he state that Allah is seated on the throne 
"The Kursi is the place where the Qadamain (feet) of Allah rest and the Arsh, no one knows its extent except Allah". 
It is to be noted here that the statement is not attributed to the prophet. 

The picture painted in the Quran carefully preserves divine transcendence all the while taking human imagination as close as possible to the divine essence. When subjects look at their king, the closest thing to him is his throne. Yet here at no point is Allah seated on His throne. Instead, powerful and compassionate angels are bearing it, in complete submission to the will of the mighty King. Seeing those majestic entities submitted in this manner is awe inspiring, and the fact that the King Himself does not need to appear to create such an effect, increases the feeling of amazement.

Humans, like every creation, are a manifestation of God's attributes. They in turn are encouraged to try and emulate some of those attributes as best as possible, such as generosity, mercy and forgiveness. So they are in a sense in "God's image". Similarly, Man has the ability to create, like the Creator of all things does, but in reality he is only reshaping what God previously created. He can judge, be good, show mercy but not and never in an equal manner to God 
2:115"so whichever way you turn, there is the Face of Allah". 
So clearly one can see God's face in all of creation, because all things reflect His attributes to some degree. Humans, and more particularly their face, reflects God's image just as the rest of creation does 
“Do not say ‘May Allaah deform your face’, for the son of Adam was created in the image of the Most Merciful". 
The similitude does not pertain to physical resemblance but in the way the divine attributes manifests. The face contains the foremost elements that allow perception, reflexion and action. The Eyes for instance allow the brain to perceive and process the surrounding signs, shaping our thoughts that are then expressed with speech. Only God however is able to manifest these shared attributes, like the aforementioned sight and speech, to infinite perfection. The manner, the "how" in which this is done is unfathomable to our minds 
42:11"nothing like a likeness of Him". 
Just as the human face reflects God's image, the prophet said 
“The first group to enter Paradise will be in the image of the moon”. 
The intent is obviously that they will manifest some of the moon's attributes like radiance and glorious appearance, as the Quran describes them beaming with light. They will however retain their specific human form, which is completely different than that of the moon. The prophet even described the righteous as being the embodiment of Allah 
"Allah Almighty said: My servant continues to grow closer to me with extra good works until I love him. When I love him, I am his hearing with which he hears, his seeing with which he sees, his hand with which he strikes, and his foot with which he walks". 
The senses and limbs remain that of a human being but due to his righteousness and the ensuing divine guidance, each perception, expression and action is done with a level of spiritual awareness so high that it reflects God's attributes and will.

Similar principles are stated in the Hebrew Bible by the prophets Jeremiah and Isaiah Jer10:6,Isa40:18. Being in God's image simply means in the HB to reflect God's attributes in some way. The HB states that when man "became like one of us" he had gained knowledge of good and evil (after eating from the tree). This means that humans being "like God" or in His image is about knowledge, which the Quran explicitly states was mercifully ingrained in man from the beginning, not hidden from him in a forbidden tree. As the "serpent" says in Genesis 
"For God knows that when you eat from it your eyes will be opened, and you will be like God, knowing good and evil".
During his communion with his Creator, Moses who sought to comfort his faith, humbly asking his Sustainer to 
7:143"make me see so I can look at You" 
to which God answered 
"you will never/LAN see Me..". 
LAN is a forceful negation unrestricted by time. Moses knew that humans cannot see God, as is clear from the wording in his request. Moses asked God to make him able to see God fully manifested. He thought that God would accede to his supplication and remove that barrier momentarily. Moses' demand was not because of his lack of faith but out of curiosity as to God's appearance. God followed by demonstrating why this is an impossibility. The physical realm from which humans cannot be extracted from, in its entirety, cannot bear God's presence without a barrier. 

Interestingly, Jesus himself whom some have unfortunately idolized, reflected that reality when he stated that none has ever seen God Jn1:18,5:37. It is a well established Biblical belief that none can see God and live Gen32:30,Ex33:20. 

The mountain, which is the most massive and stable entity found in nature was used to demonstrate the point to Moses 
"but look at the mountain, if it should remain stable in its place, then you will see Me. And when his Lord revealed Himself to the mountain, He made it crumble and Musa fell down unconscious". 
A similar incident re-occurred later in the times of the prophet Elijah, as reported in 1kings19:11. The Hebrew bible in Judges5:5 speaks of the mountains literally melting from God's presence and Isaiah states that should God manifest Himself 
Isa63:19"mountains would have dripped from before You". 
Moses could not see Allah but did see the mountain being destroyed. This caused him to faint, and as he woke back up he began glorifying God and stating his deep belief in Him. 

Contrary to Moses' humble request, the Israelites' demand to see God stemmed out of disbelief. We are here speaking of the elders of the community who had accompanied Moses for his first meeting with God. They began taunting Musa that they will not believe in him unless they see God face to face. They made that demand after receiving many miraculous favours, including their liberation from bondage 2:55,7:155. But Allah, as He explained and demonstrated to Moses, does not speak directly to any mortal 42:51. He only addresses them from behind a veil meaning the only thing that would transpire to the receiver would be the essence of what Allah wishes to convey. That intent is transmitted through inspiration/wahy 42:1 or by sending an angelic messenger in a familiar shape 11:69,17:95,22:75 to convey to a nation or a particular person a certain message. Musa was spoken to from behind a barrier 4:164,7:143,19:50-53,20:9-48,27:7-12,28:29-35 and the Israelites at Mt Sinai too 2:63,7:171. God spoke directly to other people in that same veiled manner too 2:253-254. The manner by which God makes the listener understand the intended message, without compromising His non corporeality is a process beyond our understanding 17:85. Just like a toddler does not understand how an individual speaking through a phone is separate from it. A believer accepts the limits of his perception of the unseen. 

After describing the most vivid manner in which divine communication occurred between Himself and Moses, God proceeds with a statement most often used throughout the Quran in order to elevate Himself above any imperfection, which includes material representation and limitations 27:7-9. It is particularly relevant in the context of God's communication with Moses at the burning bush, as there was a risk that the medium of revelation, the fire through which Allah spoke, could be taken as divine in essence. A fine point to note is the manner in which the Quran describes God's calling Moses 
20:11"a voice called out to him". 
The passive form is used to keep ambiguous the manner, source, form of the address.

This demand of the Israelites to see God was not meant to obtain inner satisfaction, did not spring from a believing heart zealous to know the hidden realities, but came from a disbelieving heart and reflected their denial and scepticism. They werent content with having Moses being their intermediary with God, they needed special proof. Despite all they had seen and made to experience, they requested something that is not only an affront to God's glory, but also revealing of an ungrateful heart. Nothing was good enough to make them believe that the Almighty spoke and communicated to Moses. The prophets of all ages were confronted to such demands of having direct communication with God and seeing Him, including the nation of the prophet Muhammad 2:118,25:21,74:52. The Quran relates how even prior to that incident, during their exodus and while Moses was still in their midst, they requested to have a god made for them just as the idol worshipping nations 7:138. Their primitive mindset and years of bondage under a polytheistic people had such a strong grip on them, despite their monotheistic legacy, that they were not spiritually satisfied by the worship of an all encompassing, intangible Being. They needed the realm of the unseen to be brought to the seen to have their hearts appeased 
7:140"Shall I find you a god other than Allah, while He has graced you above the nations?" 
Moses' subtle answer was that nothing he could fashion with his hands would be a representation of the true God. But they can still find their God and worship Him through His attributes which they saw manifest in the strongest of ways until now. 

This eagerness, described in their own books, to literally see God reflects in the crude and primitive anthropomorphic expressions that abound in the Hebrew writings. At times it would ironically appear that what we have in front of us is man creating God in his own image, likeness and form rather than the other way around Gen1:26. God for example would speak face to face with Moses Ex33:11,Numbers12:6-8. But knowing the difficulty and incompatibility of promoting monotheism while at the same time having a God incarnate, Jewish scribes have injected the text with many explicit passages in light of which one can interpret the ambiguous ones so as to safeguard the notion of pure monotheism. So although Moses spoke to God face to face, in reality no one can see God's Face Ex33:20, not even Moses who had to be covered and stand away until God passed so he could have a glimpse of God's "back" Ex33:22-23. "panim el panim", which literally means 'face-to-face' becomes an idiom to convey the exclusive closeness and intimate relation Moses had with God with whom he communicated directly, not through dreams, visions or through an angel as He did with all other Israelite prophets. With those explicit axioms in mind, one can begin understanding why God had to appear to the Israelites through a dark cloud Ex19:9. The purpose was to strengthen the Israelites' trust in Moses by overawing them with this experience 
Ex20:20"in order that His awe shall be upon your faces, so that you shall not sin". 
The Torah reports the traumatic experience 
Ex19:16"thunder claps and lightning flashes, and a thick cloud was upon the mountain, and a very powerful blast of a shofar, and the entire nation that was in the camp shuddered". 
The phenomenon of God manifesting Himself in this world clearly is in a non-incarnate sense, rather through actions and at most, dramatic occurrences. This dreadful "representation" of God began to instruct the terrified Israelites. But they could not bare seeing and hearing God. Had they be seeing a human incarnation of God, they wouldnt have had any problem. Instead they begged Moses to be their sole intermediary with God, fearing that if the manifestation continued, they would die Ex20:15-21,Deut4:12-13,5:1-5,23-27. The fear of death for seeing God was apparently deeply instilled into the hearts of the pious Israelites, who knew by experience what had befallen their forefathers who had even so much as asked for it. Gideon thought he would die simply for having seen an angelic messenger in human form Judges6:22-3. Same for Samson's father Judges13:21-22.

Moses thus drew nearer to the dark smoke where he alone continued receiving revelation Ex20:21. For the first communion with God to receive the tablets, Moses 
"Aaron, Nadab and Abihu, and seventy of the elders of Israel" 
were summoned to worship God at a distance, with only Moses allowed to draw nearer to God's presence Ex24:1-2. Those that accompanied him however disobeyed and "saw God" who nevertheless 
"did not raise his hand against these leaders of the Israelites". 
This "seeing" of God is no different than the Israelites' seeing God earlier. They saw a type of manifestation that doesnt even hint to human incarnation, much less to Jesus, as some zealous trinitarians deceptively imply. So when Moses had a glimpse of God's back, the Hebrew word for "back" can also be rendered as "what comes after". Ex16:6-7 has Moses and Aaron telling the children of Israel they will see God's glory. Yet we know that the Torah constantly tells us they did not see a form. Ex14:31 says the Israelites saw 
"the great hand, which the Lord had used upon the Egyptians, and the people feared the Lord, and they believed in the Lord and in Moses, His servant". 
This again points to the metaphorical usage of these words when applied to God. 

Other Biblical anthropomorphisms are the references to YHWH's eyes, face, nose, mouth, lips, tongue, breath, loins, heart, etc Jer16:17,Ps18:8,Isa30:27-33,Ezek1:27,1Kings9:3,2Kings10. YHWH also regrets, grieves, forgets, is jealous, has knowledge and physical limitations and needs resting Jonah3:10,Gen2:2,6:6,35:10,46:2,Ex20:5,Hosea8:4,Judges1:19. 

Even the idea of a "loving" God is but an anthropomorphic depiction. Love is a human emotion, like hate or fear, denoting change and mutability. As can be seen, anthropomorphism is pervasive in the HB, side by side with transcendental monotheism but due to the lack of systematic elaboration and complete safeguard against possible misconceptions, one has to sift through many statements before deriving a concept of a transcendental God. These crude and naive descriptions of the attributes, qualities, emotions and portrayals of God, may confuse a reader approaching the text with a certain paradigm in mind, namely the Christian one. Hence leaving him with the superficial impression of the God of the Hebrew Bible as being like a human being but of a higher rank or gigantic proportions.  

Christianity’s dogma of incarnation, a theology resulting from centuries of later reflections, is the climax of anthropomorphism. The NT is far removed from the Hebraic universe and closer to the Hellenestic world view. It isnt theocentric but christocentric. 

Islam emphasizes God’s transcendence, protecting it from any shades of corporealism. Countless verses substantiate this principle, without resorting to textual contortions or external help to safeguard this paradigm. The Quran makes it clear, God is unknown in His essence, but is known through His signs, attributes, qualities and actions. 

All religious scriptures, as is clear by now, have 2 kinds of verses; explicit and others open to interpretation. The second ones allow a range of understandings, obviously because they relate information about a realm of which we still have no experience. These ranges of meanings however may not contradict the explicit verses. These verses that are open to interpretation reveal what we should understand and set the limit of our knowledge. We are able to understand them to the extent we need to understand them, and this increases our faith but if we go beyond this and start to seek their full reality, then this will only lead us astray 
2:1,9:124-125"And whenever a chapter is revealed, there are some of them who say: Which of you has it strengthened in faith? Then as for those who believe, it strengthens them in faith and they rejoice. And as for those in whose hearts is a disease, it adds uncleanness to their uncleanness and they die while they are unbelievers".  
For these reasons, the Quran repeatedly says, one should not be hasty upon approaching it 75:16, should ponder and meditate on its verse before forming any adverse opinion against its ayat. This is what a religion based on solid explicit tenets is supposed to do, we do not seek ambiguous verses and try to derive isolated meanings upon which to build an entire belief system. Whenever confronted to those kind of verses, we consider the context, the words used and cross reference them with other similar verses. More importantly, whatever the conclusion we come up with, the interpretation may never contradict the explicit, firm, decisive verses.


Further reading;