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faith in islam
Tawhid: Faith in the Unity of God
Abul A'La Mawdudi, Towards Understanding Islam
The most fundamental and the most important teaching
of Prophet Muhammad (blessings of Allah and peace be
upon him) is faith in the unity of God. This is
expressed in the primary Kalimah of Islam as "There
is no deity but Allah" (La ilaha illallah). This
beautiful phrase is the bedrock of Islam, its
foundation and its essence. It is the expression of
this belief which differentiates a true Muslim from
a kafir (unbeliever), mushrik (one who associates
others with God in His Divinity) or dahriyah (an
atheist).
The acceptance or denial of this phrase produces a
world of difference between man and man. The
believers in it become one single community and
those who do not believe in it form an opposing
group. For the believers there is unhampered
progress and success in this world and in the
hereafter, while failure and ignominy are the
ultimate lot of those who refuse to believe in it.
But the difference between the believers and the
unbelievers does not result from the mere chanting
of a few words. Obviously, the mere utterance of a
phrase or two is not in itself important. The real
difference lies in the conscious acceptance of this
doctrine and complete adherence to it in practical
life. Mere repetition of the word 'food' cannot dull
hunger; mere chanting of a medical prescription
cannot heal the disease.
In the same way, if the Kalimah is repeated without
any understanding, it cannot work the revolution
which it is meant to bring about. This can occur
only if a person grasps the full meaning of the
doctrine and accepts and follows it in letter and
spirit. We avoid fire because we know that it burns;
we keep away from poison because we know that it can
kill. Similarly, if the real meanings of Tawhid are
fully grasped, we avoid, in belief as well as in
action, every form of disbelief, atheism and
polytheism. This is the natural consequence of
belief in the Unity of God.
The Meaning of the Kalimah
In Arabic the word ilah means 'one who is
worshipped', that is, a being which on account of
its greatness and power is considered worthy to be
worshipped: to be bowed to in humility and
submission. Anything or any being possessing power
too great to be comprehended by man is also called
ilah. The concept ilah also includes the possession
of infinite powers and conveys the sense that others
are dependent on ilah and that he is not dependent
on anyone else. The word ilah carries, too, a sense
of concealment and mystery. The word Khuda in
Persian, Deva in Hindi and God in English have
similar connotations. Other languages also contain
words with a similar meaning.1
The word Allah, on the other hand, is the essential
personal name of God. La ilaha illallah literally
means "There is no ilah other than the One Great
Being known by the name Allah." It means that in the
whole of the universe, there is absolutely no being
worthy to be worshipped other than Allah, that it is
only to Him that heads should bow in submission and
adoration, that He is the only Being possessing all
powers, that we are all in need of His favour, and
that we are all obliged to seek His help. He is
concealed from our senses, and our intellect cannot
perceive what He is.
Now we know the meaning of these words, let us look
more closely at their real significance.
From the earliest known history of man as well as
from the oldest relics of antiquity that we have
been able to obtain, it appears that in every age
man recognised some deity or deities and worshipped
them. Even today every nation, from the most
primitive to the most advanced, believes in and
worships some deity. Having a deity and worshipping
him is ingrained in human nature. There is something
within man's soul which forces him to do so.
But the question is: what is that thing and why does
man feel impelled to do so? The answer to this
question can be discovered if we look at the
position of man in this huge universe. Neither man
nor his nature is omnipotent. He is neither
self-sufficient nor self-existing; nor are his
powers limitless. In fact, he is weak, frail, needy
and destitute.
He is dependent on a multitude of forces to maintain
his existence, but all of them are not essentially
and totally within his powers. Sometimes they come
into his possession in a simple and natural way, and
at times he finds himself deprived of them. There
are many important and valuable things which he
endeavours to get, but sometimes he succeeds in
getting them, while sometimes he does not, for it is
not completely in his own power to obtain them.
There are many things injurious to him; accidents
destroy his life's work in a single moment; chance
brings his hopes to a sudden end; illness, worries
and calamities are always threatening him and
marring his way to happiness. He attempts to get rid
of them, and meets with both success and failure.
There are many things whose greatness and grandeur
overawe him: mountains and rivers, gigantic animals
and ferocious beasts. He experiences earthquakes,
storms and other natural disasters. He observes
clouds over his head and sees them becoming thick
and dark, with peals of thunder, flashes of
lightning and heavy rain. He sees the sun, the moon
and the stars in their constant motions. He reflects
how great, powerful and grand these bodies are, and,
in contrast to them, how frail and insignificant he
himself is!
These vast phenomena, on the one hand, and the
consciousness of his own frailty, on the other,
impress him with a deep sense of his own weakness,
humbleness and helplessness. And it is quite natural
that a primitive idea of divinity should coincide
with this sense. He thinks of the hands which are
wielding these great forces. The sense of their
greatness makes him bow in humility. The sense of
their powerfulness makes him seek their help. He
tries to please them so that they may be beneficial
to him, and he fears them and tries to escape their
wrath so that he may not be destroyed by them.
In the most primitive stage of ignorance, man thinks
that the great objects of nature whose grandeur and
glory are visible, and which appear to be injurious
or beneficial to him, hold in themselves the real
power and authority, and, therefore, are divine.
Thus he worships trees, animals, rivers, mountains,
fire, rain, air, heavenly bodies and numerous other
objects. This is the worst form of ignorance.
When his ignorance dissipates to some extent and
some glimmers of light and knowledge appear on his
intellectual horizon, he comes to know that these
great and powerful objects are in themselves as
helpless and dependent, or rather, they are still
more dependent and helpless. The biggest and the
strongest animal dies like a tiny germ, and loses
all his power; great rivers rise and fall and become
dry; the highest mountains are blasted and shattered
by man himself; the productiveness of the earth is
not under the earth's control - water makes it
prosperous and lack of water makes it barren. Even
water is not independent. It depends on air which
brings the clouds. Air, too, is powerless and its
usefulness depends on other causes. The moon, the
sun, and the stars are also bound by a powerful law
outside whose dictates they cannot make the
slightest movement.
After these considerations man's mind turns to the
possibility of some great mysterious power of divine
nature which controls the objects he sees and which
may be the repository of all authority. These
reflections give rise to belief in mysterious powers
behind natural phenomena, with innumerable gods
governing various parts and aspects of nature such
as air, light and water. Material forms or symbols
are constructed to represent them and man begins to
worship these forms and symbols. This, too, is a
form of ignorance, and reality remains hidden to the
human eye even at this stage of man's intellectual
and cultural pilgrimage.
As man progresses still further in knowledge and
learning, and as he reflects more and more deeply on
the fundamental problems of existence, he finds an
all-powerful law and all-encompassing control in the
universe. What a complete regularity is observed in
sunrise and sunset, in winds and rains, in the
motions of stars and the changes of seasons! With
what a wonderful harmony countless different forces
are working jointly. And what a highly effective and
supremely wise law it is according to which all the
various causes in the universe are made to work
together at an appointed time to produce an
appointed event! Observing this uniformity,
regularity and complete obedience to one great law
in all fields of Nature, even a polytheist finds
himself obliged to believe that there must be a
deity greater than all the others, exercising
supreme authority. For, if there were separate,
independent deities, the whole machinery of the
universe would be upset.
He calls this greatest deity by different names,
such as Allah, Permeshwar, God, Khuda-i-Khuda'igan.
But as the darkness of ignorance still persists, he
continues worshipping minor deities along with the
Supreme One. He imagines that the Divine Kingdom of
God may not be different from earthly kingdoms. Just
as a ruler has many ministers, trusted associates,
governors and other responsible officers, so the
minor deities are like so many responsible officers
under the Great God Who cannot be approached without
winning the favour of the officers under Him. So
they must also be worshipped and appealed to for
help, and should in no case be offended. They are
taken as agents through whom an approach can be made
to the Great God.
The more a man increases his knowledge, the greater
becomes his dissatisfaction with the multiplicity of
deities. So the number of minor deities begins to
decrease. More enlightened men bring each one of
them under the searchlight of scrutiny and
ultimately find that none of these man-made deities
has any divine character; they themselves are
creatures like man, though rather more helpless.
They are thus eliminated one by one until only one
God remains.
But the concept of one God still contains some
remnants of the elements of ignorance. Some people
imagine that He has a body as men have, and is in a
particular place. Some believe that God came down to
earth in human form; others think that God, after
settling the affairs of the universe, retired and is
now resting. Some believe that it is necessary to
approach God through the media of saints and
spirits, and that nothing can be achieved without
their intercession. Some imagine God to have a
certain form or image, and they believe it necessary
to keep that image before them for the purposes of
worship.
Such distorted notions of godhead have persisted and
lingered, and many of them are prevalent among
different people even today.
Tawhid is the highest conception of godhead, the
knowledge of which God has sent mankind in all ages
through His Prophets. It was this knowledge with
which, in the beginning, Adam was sent down to
earth; it was the same knowledge that was revealed
to Noah, Abraham, Moses and Jesus (God's blessings
be upon them all). It was this knowledge which
Muhammad (blessings of Allah and peace be upon him)
brought to mankind. It is Knowledge, pure and
absolute, without the least shade of ignorance. Man
became guilty of shirk, idol-worship and kufr only
because he turned away from the teachings of the
Prophets and depended on his own faulty reasoning,
false perceptions or biased interpretations. Tawhid
dispels all the clouds of ignorance and illuminates
the horizon with the light of reality.
Let us see what significant realities the concept of
Tawhid - this little phrase: la ilaha illallah -
embraces: what truth it conveys and what beliefs it
fosters.
First, we are faced with the question of the
universe. We are face to face with a grand,
limitless universe. Man's mind cannot discern its
beginning or visualise its end. It has been moving
along its chartered course from time immemorial and
is continuing its journey in the vast vista of the
future. Creatures beyond number have appeared in it
- and go on appearing every day. It is so
bewildering that a thinking mind finds itself
wonderstruck. Man is unable to understand and grasp
its reality by his unaided vision. He cannot believe
that all this has appeared just by chance or
accident. The universe is not a fortuitous mass of
matter. It is not a jumble of unco-ordinated
objects. It is not a conglomeration of chaotic and
meaningless things. All this cannot be without a
Creator, a Designer, a Controller, a Governor.
But who can create and control this majestic
universe? Only He can do so Who is Master of all;
Who is Infinite and Eternal; Who is All-Powerful,
All- Wise, Omnipotent and Omniscient; Who is
All-Knowing and All-Seeing. He must have supreme
authority over all that exists in the universe. He
must possess limitless powers, must be Lord of the
universe and all that it contains, must be free from
every flaw and weakness and none may have the power
to interfere with His work. Only such a Being can be
the Creator, the Controller and the Governor of the
universe.
Second, it is essential that all these divine
attributes and powers must be vested in One Being:
it is impossible for two or more personalities
having equal powers and attributes to co-exist. They
are bound to collide. Therefore, there must be one
and only one Supreme Being having control over all
others. You cannot think of two governors for the
same province or two supreme commanders of the army!
Similarly, the distribution of these powers among
different deities, so that, for instance, one of
them is all- knowledge, the other all-providence and
still another life-giver - and each having an
independent domain - is also unthinkable. The
universe is an indivisible whole and each one of
such deities will be dependent upon others in the
execution of his task. Lack of co-ordination is
bound to occur. And if this happened, the world
would fall to pieces. These attributes are also
untransferable. It is not possible that a certain
attribute might be present in a certain deity at one
time and at another time be found in another deity.
A divine being who is incapable of remaining alive
himself cannot give life to others. The one who
cannot protect his own divine power cannot be suited
to govern the vast limitless universe.
The more you reflect on the problem, the firmer must
your conviction be that all these divine powers and
attributes must exist in one and the same Being
alone. Thus, polytheism is a form of ignorance that
cannot stand rational scrutiny. It is a practical
impossibility. The facts of life and nature do not
fit in with it. They automatically bring men to
Reality, that is Tawhid, the Unity of God.
Now, keeping in mind this concept of God, look
closely at this vast universe. Exert yourself to the
utmost and say if you find among all the objects
that you see, among all the things that you
perceive, among all that you can think, feel or
imagine - all that your knowledge can comprehend -
anyone possessing these attributes. The sun, the
moon, the stars, animals, birds or fishes, matter,
money, any man or a group of men - does any of them
possess these attributes? Most certainly not! For
everything in the universe is created, controlled
and regulated, is dependent on others, is mortal and
transitory; its slightest movements are controlled
by an inexorable law from which there can be no
deviation. Their helpless condition proves that the
attire of divinity cannot fit their body. They do
not possess the slightest trace of divinity and have
absolutely nothing to do with it. It is a travesty
of truth and a folly of the highest magnitude to
attribute divine status to them.
This is the meaning of La ilaha, (i.e. there is no
god) no human and material object possesses the
divine power and authority deserving worship and
obedience.
But this is not the end of our quest. We have found
that divinity is not vested in any material or human
element of the universe, and that none of them
possesses even the slightest trace of it. This leads
us to the conclusion that there is a Supreme Being,
over and above all that our eyes see in the
universe, Who possesses Divine attributes, Who is
the Will behind all phenomena, the Creator of this
grand universe, the Controller of its superb Law,
the Governor of its serene rhythm, the Administrator
of all its workings: He is Allah, the Lord of the
Universe and no one and nothing is associated in His
Divinity. This is what illallah (but Allah) means.
This knowledge is superior to all other kinds of
knowledge and the greater you exert yourself, the
deeper will be your conviction that this is the
starting-point of all knowledge. In every field of
inquiry - be it that of physics, chemistry,
astronomy, geology, biology, zoology, economics,
politics, sociology or the humanities, you will find
that the deeper you probe, the clearer become the
indications of the truth of La ilaha illallah. It is
this concept which opens up the doors of inquiry and
investigation and illumines the pathways of
knowledge with the light of reality. And if you deny
or disregard this reality, you will find that at
every step you meet disillusionment, for the denial
of this primary truth robs everything in the
universe of its meaning and significance.
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