The Concept of God in Islam
The Concept of God in Islam
The Concept of God in Islam
GOD IN ISLAM
There is no God but Allah
THE ISLAMIC CONCEPT OF GOD
The first part of the Muslim confession of faith (the shahada) is the
basis for the concept of God in Islam. The Muslim bears witness that:
"There is no god but God", or "no divinity but the (one) Divinity". The
revealed Scripture of Islam, the Qur'an, is like a vast commentary on this
simple statement, drawing from it all its implications for human life and
thought.
The Qur'an tells us: "Say: He is Allah. One, the utterly Self-
sufficient: He begets not neither is He begotten, and there is nothing that is
like unto Him". It tells us also that: "When He wills a thing to be. He but
says unto it - Be!; and it is".
A further implication of the first part of the shahada is that there can
be no power, force or agency in the heavens or on earth which is
independent of God. Everything that exists -and everything that happens-is
subject to His control; there is nothing that can compete with Him or that
escapes His grasp, nothing that does not bear witness to His creative
power and majesty.
"The seven heavens and the earth and all that is therein praise Him",
says the Qur'an. "and there is not a tiling that does not hymn His praise,
though ye understand not their praise".
But Islam does not demand blind belief. The Qur'an tells us a great
deal about the nature of the Divine, and it describes God by a number of
terms called "the most beautiful Names" which help us to understand Him.
The Qur'an tells us: "Allah, there is no god but He. the Living, (the
eternally Self subsistent. Slumber overtakes Him not, nor sleep. To Him
belong all that is in the heavens and all that is upon earth. Who is there
than (can) intercede with Him except by His leave? He knows what is
before them and what is behind them, and they comprehend naught of His
knowledge save what He pleases. His Throne extends over the heavens
and the earth, and He is not wearied by preserving them; and He is the
Most High, the Immense".
The Qur'an describes Him also as al-Ala. "the Most High", totally
transcendent in relation to His own creations and therefore infinitely
beyond all that we might attempt to associate with Him. He is al-Aziz. "the
Almighty", and al-Jabbar", for there is no one and nothing that could
possibly resist His power, which governs and regulates all existence in
accordance with a predetermined measure. It follows that there is no
earthly power that is not derived from Him, no strength nor any virtue that
is not loaned to us by Him: and no one can help us except by His will, nor
can anyone harm us unless He permits them to do so ( in which case this
harm is a trial to be horne with patience).
He is called ul-Haqq, "the Truth" (or "the Reality"), and to deny
Him's to be far distant from truth at every level of experience. The Arabic
word al-kafirun, and this word suggests a deliberate act of "covering", in
other words, those who deny Him whose name is "the Truth" have
"covered" their own understanding with an opaque covering so as not to
see what is ultimately self-evident, in so doing they have shut out the light,
for another of His names is al-Nur "Light" These are they whom the
Qur'an describes as the "blind". For "Allah is the Light of the heavens and
the earth". In Islam everything is derived from the divine nature and
therefore from the "names" by which God has made Himself known, and it
He were not "Light" there could be no light any where, whether
intellectual or physical.
Nothing escapes His knowledge, not even our most secret thoughts,
for He is al-Alim. "the Omniscient" who knows every thing in the heavens
and the earth, and al-Khabir. "the All-Aware" from whom nothing is
hidden. He is al- Shahid, "the Witness" and. as such. He is described also
as al-Basir. "the Seer", and al-Sami'. "the Hearer". "Who is the Owner of
hearing and of sight'.'" asks the Qur'an. and it answers: "Allah!" We see
only what is before our eyes, with their very limited range, hut no limit is
set to His vision; we hear only sounds that are either very loud or very
close to us, but He hears everything.
"And with Him are the keys of the Invisible", says the Qur'an. "None but
He knoweth them. and He knoweth what is in the land and the sea. Not a
leaf falls but He knoweth it, nor a grain amidst the darkness of the earth .
Inspite of their clarity, these "messages" have again and again been
rejected by many of those to whom they were addressed, and it is precisely
this freedom to reject the truth that distinguishes man from the other
creatures who share the earth with us - the animals, the birds and the
fishes. They follow by instinct the way set before Them, the law of their
species, but mankind has the unique freedom either to follow the "straight
path" consciously and deliberately or to turn away from it and follow the
dictates of self-will. Man alone has been given a mind capable of
understanding the truth, a will capable of choosing the path of truth, and a
heart inclined by its very nature to love the truth.
To sum up: the God of Islam is transcendent, the all-powerful and all
knowing Creator and Lawgiver, though at the same time infinitely
merciful, generous and forgiving. Man, His creature and His servant into
whom He has breathed something of His spirit, stands before Him without
intermediary or intercessor, meeting Him through prayer during this brief
life on earth and meeting Him face-to-face when life is over. In Islam,
God does not embody Himself in any human being or make Himself
accessible through idols and images. He is what He is, absolute and
eternal, and it is as such that the Muslim worships Him.
"@ABCDت اGCH IJ نLMNOPD اQRDن أوLOMGUDن اLOMGUD"وا
( VBWاLDرة اLZ )
This prayer is for our brothers who contributed in printing this book.
Conveying Islamic Message Society (CIMS) is an extension for the
activity of Conveying Islam Center, which was established in 1929 by
Eng. Mohamed Tawfik Ahmed (May Allah have mercy upon him).