Where is Allah?
The Importance of the Issue
1.The Quran
2.The Sunnah
3.The Ijma' of the Sahaba
and their sayings
4.The sayings of the
Tabiyeen and Tabe-tabiyeen
5.The sayings of the
Imams (including Abul Hasan al-Ashari)
6.Logical reasoning.
7.Conclusion
Importance of the
Topic
The importance of this
topic is directly related to the importance of Tawheed (Islamic monotheism) and
the perfection of Tawheed in one's life and actions. As a scholar of old said
that whoever does not know where His Creator is does not worship Him.
Another importance reason
for this topic is to refute the groups of innovation who have distorted the
teachings of Islam and distorted the words and attributes of Allah. Among them,
the Sufis for instance, claim that Allah is everywhere. They keep harping on this
same tone until they make people believe that what they claim is truth and
undisputed truth. However, despite their unfounded contention, the books of
hadith and scholars, nay the book of Quran-the actual speech of Allah is itself
filled with verse upon verse refuting the heretic concept of Allah, the
Omniscient, the Omnipotent being everywhere in His Glorified Essence. Rather
this heresy is nothing but disbelief as will be explicitly proven in this short
treatise, and this belief amounts to no less than pantheism-the belief that God
is everywhere, in everything.
The main sources of Islam
will be touched upon, gathering proof after proof to the answer to the question
of where Allah is. The last topic of discussion-logical reasoning is the
weakest proof in Islam but for those out there, who find it hard to accept the
word of Allah, the words of Rasul, the Sahaba, the Imams, then they can not
even rely upon their minds to proof their claims of Allah being everywhere. In
order, this article will intend to prove beyond the shadow of a doubt that
Allah is above the Heavens, separate from the creation but among his creation
by His Hearing (as-Samiy), His Seeing (al-Baseer) and His Knowledge (al-Aleem).
Evidences from the
Qur'an
As mentioned earlier, the
Qur'an is full of both explicit and implicit proofs. Among the implicit proofs
are the several verses that mention of deeds and Jesus being raised to Allah.
Obviously, only what is below is raised or ascends. As Allah says, the meaning
of which is:
"And when Allah
said: 'O Jesus! I will take you and raise you to Myself'."[3:55]
"To Him ascend (all)
the goodly words, and the righteous deeds lift them."[35:10]
"From Allah, the
Lord of the Places of Ascent, the angels and the Ruh (Gabriel) ascend to Him in
a day the measure whereof is of fifty thousand years."[70:3-4]
And there are many other
verses of similar nature but the above should suffice in making the point.
Among the explicit verses, there are several other verses that mention clearly
that their Lord is above them
"And He is the
Subduer, above His slaves, and He is the All-Wise, Well Acquainted with all
things."[6:18]
And even more clearer:
"Do you feel secure
that He, Who is fis-sama (above the heavens), will not cause the earth to
sink…Or do you feel secure that He, Who is fis-sama (above the heavens) will
not send against you a violent whirlwind?" [67:16-17]
It is important to point
out here that the literal translation of 'fis-sama' is 'in' the heavens. The
scholars of tafseer have explained it according to the Arabic language for 'fi'
in this context to have the meaning of above as it is not possible for Allah to
be surrounded by His creation i.e. the heavens. Also, sometimes the word 'fi'
is used in the meaning of 'ala' (on) as mentioned in another verse:
"I will surely
crucify you 'fi' (on) the trunks of palm-trees."[20:71]
Now, obviously the 'fi'
in this verse refers not to 'in' but to 'on' as one cannot be crucified within
a trunk!
The other interpretation
is based on the variant meanings of the word 'Sama' which in Arabic can refers
to that which is elevated-the higher, or uppermost of anything (the Muhkam). It
can also refer to the ceiling of a house, to the sky, to the heavens and to
elevation and transcendence. The meaning should not be, hence, confused with
its predominant acceptation, a word of well-known meaning: the sky-the canopy
of the earth (taj al-aroos). Hence, the verse could be translated as the one
Who is in transcendence to all creation which in essence, has the same meaning
of being above the heavens.
Evidences from the
Sunnah (the Way) of the Prophet
The sunnah of the Prophet
is the explanation of the Quran. One cannot take the Quran alone without
letting the sunnah tag along. Like the Quran, the Prophet made it extremely
clear the truth on this matter of where Allah is. Some of the ahadith on this
matter are quoted next:
Abu Hurairah narrates
that the Messenger said, "Whoever donates the equal of a date from
whatever was collected righteously, and only good is ascended to Allah, then, He
will accept it (the charity) with His Right and raise it for its giver till it
becomes like a mountain." [Bukhari]
More clear:
Abdullah ibn Amr ibn
Al-As related that the Messenger said, "Allah grants mercy to the
merciful. Be merciful to those who are on the earth, (then) He Who is fis-Sama
(above the heavens) will be merciful to you." [Abu Dawood &
At-Tirmidhi]
Even more clearer:
Jabir ibn Abdillah said:
"The Messenger of Allah said in his speech on the day of Arafah: 'Did I
convey (the Message).' They said: 'Yes.' While raising his finger to the sky
and then pointing at them, he said: 'O my Lord, be a witness." [Muslim]
And the Muslims of today
have the audacity to say that Allah is everywhere when their own Messenger
pointed nowhere except to the sky above him in this clear hadith. I ask you, O
Muslims, if you were to sit in front of me and I were to refer to you, would
not I point directly to you and NOT the ground or to the sky to do so? So, why
is it then when the Prophet points to the sky above him to refer to Allah we do
not understand from this that Allah was above him, is above you and all his
creations? Why do we wonder any more?
Finally, justice cannot
be done to this topic without mentioning the hadith about the slave-girl, whose
faith was affirmed by just two questions, one being 'Where is Allah?':
Muawiyah bin Al-Hakam
As-Salmi said:
"I had a slave-girl
who used to herd sheep for me. One day I discovered that a wolf had killed one
of her sheep, and I'm a man from the children of Adam, I get upset like they
get upset, and I slapped her in the face. Then I went to the Prophet who
impressed upon me the seriousness of my act. I said, 'O Messenger of Allah,
should I not set her free?' He said, 'Bring her to me.' He asked her, 'Where is
Allah', She said, 'He is above the heavens.' He said, 'Who am I?' She said,
'You are the Messenger of Allah.' He said, 'Free her, for she is a believer.'
(Muslim and Abu Dawud)
Among the benefits inherent
to this hadith (as mentioned by Muhammad bin Jamil Zeno in 'The Pillars of
Islam and Iman'- pub. Maktaba Dar-as-Salaam) are:
1. The Companions of
the Prophet used to refer to him all of their problems, whether minor or major.
Hence, all issues for judgment should be referred to Allah and His Messenger,
acting upon the Statement of Allah :
"But
no, by your Lord, they can have no Faith, until they make you (O Mohammed) a
judge in all disputes between them, and find in themselves no resistance
against your decisions, and accept (them) with full submission." (V.4: 65)
2. The Prophet
reproached the Companion for slapping the slave-girl and considered it a
serious matter.
3. Belief is a condition
for freeing a slave and since the Prophet allowed her to be free, she had to be
judged a believer by the Prophet otherwise she would continue to be a slave.
4. The necessity of
asking about Tawheed (Islamic Monotheism); and part of it is the belief that
Allah is above His Throne, knowledge of this being mandatory.
5. The legitimacy of
asking "Where is Allah?"; the fact that asking such is actually
Sunnah, since the Prophet himself did not hesitate asking about it.
6. The obligation of
replying that Allah is above the heavens, since the Prophet affirmed the reply
of the slave girl and it also goes along with the Statement of Allah in the
Quran:
"Do
you feel secure that He, Who is over the heaven (Allah), will not cause the
earth to sink with you?" (V. 67: 16)
7. The correctness of
Belief includes the testimony that Muhammad is the Messenger of Allah.
8. The belief that
Allah is above the heaven indicates soundness of one's Belief, and it is
mandatory on every believer to accept this position.
9. The refutation of
the erroneous belief that Allah is in every place by His Essence. The truth is
that Allah is with us by His Knowledge not by His Supreme Self.
10.
The fact that the Prophet ordered for the slave-girl to be
brought to her to allow him to test her shows that he did not possess the
knowledge of the unseen [except of what Allah informed him. This refutes the
claim of many Sufis and other Muslims that the Prophet had complete knowledge
of the unseen].
The Ijma of the Sahaba
and Their Sayings
As Muslims, we have three
main sources of our deen. Two have already been mentioned. The third is Ijma'
of the Sahaba because the Sahaba would never agree on falsehood. Let us examine
some statements from this generation:
From the first Khalifa:
Abu Bakr As-Sideeq said:
"Whoever worshipped Mohammed, Mohammed has died. Whoever worshipped
Allah, Allah is Alive fis-Sama (above the heavens), and death does not touch
Him." [Ad-Darimi in Ar-Radd 'Alal-Jahmiyyah].
Other than stating that
Allah is indeed above the Heavens, Abu Bakr made another important refutation
here. And that is to refute all those who say that Mohammed is actually alive
and we can direct our dua' to him or that he can become a source of shifa'
(intercession) or wasila (nearness to Allah) in this life. Indeed, the Prophet
will be a shifa' for the Muslims on the Day of Judgment and indeed following
the sunnah of Allah and His Rasul will be a source of wasila in this life but
asking the Prophet for intercession in this life or seeking his help in
nearness to Allah by saying 'O Mohammed, bring us nearer to Allah' or 'O
Mohammed, we ask Allah to grant so and so for your sake' is nothing but
falsehood and goes against Tawheed.
From the second Khalifa:
Umar ibn al-Khattab
visited Syria riding on his camel. The companions said to him: "O leader
of the believers, will you not ride a Birthoun (a jade, horse of mean, non Arab
breed) so you may be intercepted by the great and noted people." Umar
replied: "Do I not see you from here? Verily the matter comes from
here" (and he pointed with his hand to the sky). [Ibn Qayyim in Ijtima
al-Joyush al-Islamiyyah]
The Sayings of the
Tabiyeen and the Tabe-Tabiyeen
The second generation
after the companions (tabiyeen) continued the firmness in matters of Aqeedah.
There are too many to enumerate. A few examples include Marwan, Qatadah,
Sulayman, Al-Taymi, Muqatil and so on. [Al-Uluw by At-Thahabee]
And we continue to see
the same thinking in the next generation (the tabe-tabiyeen). As narrated by
Al-Bayhaqi:
"We used to say,
while at-Tabiyeen were still many, that Allah, all praise to Him, is upon His
Throne. We believe in what the Sunnah has told us of His Attributes."
[Al-Uluw by At-Thahabee].
And as Muslims we know
that the throne of Allah is above the heavens and the earth.
The Sayings of the
Imam (including Abul Hasan al-Ashari)
The Imams of the four
famous madhabs were not fearful of making the truth known. Nay, they would
never be afraid of spreading the true knowledge. We start by the saying of Imam
Abu-Haneefa which in itself sums up the importance of this whole treatise:
"Whoever says
that he does not know whether His Lord is above the heavens or on earth is a
disbeliever (kafir!), because Allah has said (meaning): 'The Ever-Merciful
Istawa (rose) upon His Throne' [20-5]. And His Throne is above the seven
heavens." Abu Muti al-Balkhi asked him: "What if says that yes Allah
is upon His Throne but he does not know whether the throne is above the earth
or on earth itself?" To which Abu Haneefa replied, "He is (still) a
disbeliever (kafir), because he rejected that Allah is above the heavens , and
that the creation make supplications above to their Lord and not
downward." [At-Thahabee in Al-Uluw]
Is there need to say
more? But let us continue with Imam Shafi (who mentions about what Imam Malik
too believed) who said:
"The sunnah that we
follow along with our companions, followers of hadith whom I met and took
knowledge from, like Sufiyan, Imam Malik, and others, is that we believe that
there is no god except Allah and that Mohammed is His Messenger. And that Allah
, the Praised One, is upon His Throne fis-sama (above the heavens). He comes
closer to His slaves as He wills. Allah descends to the lower heaven as He
wills." [At-Thahabee in Al-Uluw]
No other Imam has sayings
about Istawa than Imam of As-Sunnah Ahmad ibn Hanbal. He wrote his famous book,
Ar-Radd ala al-Jahmiyyah. Please refer to this book for countless arguments on
this issue.
It is benefit to mention
the sayings of Imam Abul Hasan al-Ashari quite prominently as he was unjustly accused
of sayings which he later refuted and disowned, while adhering to the belief of
the righteous group of ahl-Sunnah wal Jamah. In his book 'Ibanah' (the
Clarification), al-Ashari clearly refutes many of the sayings of the
'followers' of the Imam. What strangeness then, that the leader of the Asha'ris
denies himself most of this group's sayings and beliefs? How even more strange
that Imam al-Ashari recanted all his false beliefs while his 'followers' wish
to still hold fast onto these? Imam Abul Hasan al-Ashari says in 'Ibanah':
"If one asks me what
I say about al-Istawa (Allah's rising upon the throne)? We say to him: 'Allah
Istawa ala (rose upon) His Throne. Allah said so meaning of which is: The
Ever-Merciful Istawa (rose) upon His Throne' [20-5]. Some of the Mu'tazilah,
al-jahmiyyah and Khawarij said about this verse that it means He captured,
overpowered and owned (the Throne), and that Allah is everywhere; they denied
the possibility that Allah is upon His Throne as the righteous people affirm Him
to be; and they took the 'Istawa' (the settling) to symbolize power. If it were
as they asserted, then what difference would there be between the Throne and
the earth?"
How true are these
statements. Yet we continue to find in many of today's translations of the
Quran the same disease of mistranslation and denying the attributes of Allah.
How many of us would continue to say confidently that Allah is everywhere
making nothing but a statement of pantheism and shirk (polytheism).
And At-Tirmidhi, the
great muhaditheen said: "He is above the Throne as He described in His
Book. His Knowledge, Power, and Lordship are everywhere." [Al-fatawa by
Ibn Taymeeah]
And behold, think about
the following statement from the great scholar Ibn Khuzaymah:
"Whoever does not
affirm that Allah is above His heavens, upon His Throne and that He is distinct
from His creation; must be forced to repent. If he does not repent, then he
must be beheaded and then thrown into a garbage dump, so that the Muslims and
the Ahl-Dhimma (the Christians and the Jew) will not suffer from his stinking
smell." [Al-Hakim in Al-Marifah].
Logical Reasoning
Some people who are
devoid of the light of faith in their hearts, those who still yearn to follow
their aql (intellect) in matters of deen will perhaps understand this concept
through their own medicine, i.e., logical reasoning through aql. The following
should be enough to close all questions about this topic if one can be so proud
to reject the previous proofs. After having exposed this group's refutation of
what the best generations of Islam believed in, we will now expose even the
logic of the deniers of truth:
The evidence mentioned in
the previous chapter either indicates, or does not indicate that Allah is
everywhere .
(a) If it does not indicate
that Allah is everywhere, then they can no longer use it for argument.
(b) If it does indicate
(that Allah is everywhere), then logical evidence, or discerned evidence (from
ayat or ahadeeth) will either emerge to indicate, or not to indicate the conspicuous
falseness (of claiming that Allah is everywhere).
(c) If (a) is true, then
this is our proof that their claim, that Allah is everywhere, is false.
(d) If(b) is true, then
[we tell them]: you are, therefore, obliged to say that Allah is everywhere; and
you are further obliged to say that Allah is in garbage dumps, people's
stomachs, and in rest rooms. May Allah be highly exalted above that, and may
Allah curse him who has drawn us to have to write this.
(e) If you say that Allah
is not in these dirty places because He is praised from such, then we say:
"Where is your proof?" If via the discerned evidence it becomes
apparent to you that He is every place, and these dirty places are places, then
He must be there. And you cannot exclude places without textual proof
(discerned evidence), and that is not to be found; therefore, these texts must
imply one meaning which is that it is with His knowledge that Allah is with us,
wherever we are.
Conclusion
Many a ayat in the Quran
are used by the liars and heretics to prove their claim that Allah is
everywhere. Among them are the verses pointing to Allah's closeness to His
Creation to the point of being closer than the jugular vein. But how then, if
one accepts that this is proof that Allah is everywhere, will one refute all
the countless arguments/verses/ahadith that were presented here. Is it then
that there is contradiction in the Book of Allah, the Sunnah and that all the
Imams and the scholars have preached falsehood? No rather the claim that Allah
is everywhere is misinterpretation to the point of being disbelief. These
verses merely point to the fact that Allah is everywhere but only by His
Knowledge, His Seeing, His Hearing and His Power. Only this explanation will
allow one to be in compliance with all the other proofs from the Quran, the
Sunnah and the Ijma of the companions.
There are numerous
evidences to prove our belief, (that Allah is upon the Throne). We end this
discussion with what Imam Ahmad bin Hanbal said to a Jahmi: "On the Day of
Resurrection, Won't there be Paradise, Hell-fire, the Throne, and the
Air?" The Jahmi replied: "Yes." Ahmad said: "Then where
will our Lord be?" The Jahmi replied: "He will be everywhere and in
everything as He was in this life ..." Ahmad said: "Then, according
to you: that of Allah which was upon the Throne, will be upon the Throne, and
that of Allah which was in Paradise, will be in Paradise, and that of Allah
which was in Hell-fire, will be in Hell-fire, and that of Allah which was in
the Air, will be in the Air? It was at that point that their lying about Allah,
whose praise is exalted became clear." [Ar-Radd 'Ala Az-Zanadiqah].