Bi ismillahir rahmanir raheem
assalamu alaikum
IMAM AL-MATURIDI
by Dr. G. F. Haddad
Muhammad ibn Muhammad ibn Mahmud Abu Mansur al-Samarqandi
al-Maturidi al-Hanafi (d. 333) of Maturid in Samarqand, Shaykh al-Islam,
one of the two foremost Imams of the mutakallim�n of Ahl al-Sunna,
known in his time as the Imam of Guidance (Im�m al-Hud�), he studied
under Abu Nasr al-`Ayadi and Abu Bakr Ahmad al-Jawzajani. Among his senior
students were `Ali ibn Sa`id Abu al-Hasan al-Rustughfani,1 Abu Muhammad `Abd
al-Karim ibn Musa ibn `Isa al-Bazdawi, and Abu al-Qasim Ishaq ibn Muhammad
al-Hakim al-Samarqandi. He excelled in refuting the Mu`tazila in
Transoxiana while his contemporary Abu al-Hasan al-Ash`ari did the same in
Basra and Baghdad. He died in Samarqand where he lived most of his life.
The founder of the Egyptian Muniriyya Salafiyya Press, Munir `Abduh Agha
wrote:
"There is not much [doctrinal] difference
between Ash`aris and Maturidis, hence both groups are now called Ahl
al-Sunna wa al-Jama`a."2
Al-Maturidi surpasses Imam al-Tahawi as a transmitter
and commentator of Imam Abu Hanifa's legacy in kal�m. Both al-Maturidi
and al-Tahawi followed Abu Hanifa and his companions in the position that
belief (al-�m�n) consists in "conviction in the heart and
affirmation by the tongue," without adding, as do Malik, al-Shafi`i,
Ahmad ibn Hanbal and their schools, "practice with the limbs."
Al-Maturidi, as also related from Abu Hanifa, went so far as to declare
that the foundation of belief consisted only in conviction in the heart,
the tongue's affirmation being a supplementary integral or pillar (rukn
z�'id).3
Among al-Maturidi's works:
* Kitab al-Tawhid on the doctrine of Ahl al-Sunna.
In it he states the following:
"The Muslims differ concerning Allah's place.
Some have claimed that Allah is described as being 'established over the
Throne' (`al� al-`arshi mustawin), and the Throne for them is a
dais (sar�r) carried by the angels and surrounded by them [as in
the verses]: {And eight will uphold the Throne of their Lord that
day, above them} (69:17) and {And you see the angels thronging
round the Throne} (39:75) and {Those who bear the Throne, and all
who are round about it} (40:7). They adduced as a proof for that
position His saying: {The Merciful established Himself over the
Throne} (20:5) and the fact that people raise their hands toward the
heaven in their supplications and whatever graces they are hoping for.
They also say that He moved there after not being there at first, on the
basis of the verse {Then He established Himself over the Throne}
(57:4).
"Others say that He is in every place because
He said {There is no secret conference of three but He is their
fourth, nor of five but He is their sixth, nor of less than that or more
but He is with them wheresoever they may be} (58:7), and {We are
nearer to him than his jugular vein} (50:16) and {And We are
nearer unto him than ye are, but ye see not} (56:85) and {And He
it is Who in the heaven is God, and in the earth God} (43:84). This
group consider that to say that He is in one place at the exclusion of
another necessitate a limit for Him, and that every limited object comes
short of whatever is greater than it, which would constitute a
disgraceful defect. Further, they consider that to be in one place
necessitates need to that place together with the necessity of
boundaries....
"Others deny the ascription of place to Allah,
whether one place or every place, except in the metaphorical senses that
He preserves them and causes them to exist.
"Shaykh Abu Mansur [al-Maturidi] - may Allah
have mercy on him - says: The sum of all this is that the predication of
all things to Him and His predication - may He be exalted! - to them is
along the lines of His description in terms of exaltation (`uluw)
and loftiness (rif`a), and in terms of extolment (ta`z�m)
and majesty (jal�l), as in His saying: {the Sovereignty of
the heavens and the earth} (2:107, 3:189, 5:17-18, 5:40 etc.) {Lord
of the heavens and the earth} (13:16, 17:102, 18:14, 19:65, etc.),
"God of all creation" (il�h al-khalq), Lord of the
worlds (1:2, 5:28, 6:45, 6:162, 7:54, etc.), "above
everything" (fawqa kulli shay') and so forth. As for the
predication of specific objects to Him, it is along the lines of His
specific attribution with generosity (al-kar�ma), high rank (al-manzila),
and immense favor (al-tafd�l) for what is essentially meant to
refer to Him, as in His sayings {Lo! Allah is with those who keep
their duty unto Him} (16:128), {And the places of worship are
only for Allah} (72:18), {The she-camel of Allah} (7:73,
11:64, 91:13), "The House of Allah" (bayt All�h), and
other similar instances. None of these examples is understood in the
same way as the predication of created object to one another....
"Abu Mansur - may Allah have mercy on him! -
further says: The foundation of this issue is that Allah Almighty was
when there was no place, then locations were raised while He remains
exactly as He ever was. Therefore, He is as He ever was and He ever was
as He is now. Exalted is He beyond any change or transition or movement
or cessation! For all these are portents of contingency (hudth)
by which the contingent nature of the world can be known, and the proofs
of its eventual passing away....
"Furthermore [concerning the claim that Allah
is on the Throne], there is not, in the context of spatial elevation,
any particular merit to sitting or standing, nor exaltation, nor any
quality of magnificence and splendor. For example, someone standing
higher than roofs or mountains does not deservedly acquire loftiness
over someone who is below him spatially when their essence is identical.
Therefore, it is not permissible to interpret away the verse [20:5] in
that sense, when it is actually pointing to magnificence and majesty.
For He has said {Verily, it is your Lord Who created the heavens and
the earth} (7:54, 10:3, 21:56) thereby pointing to the extolment of
the Throne, which is something created of light, or a substance [or
jewel] the reality of which is beyond the knowledge of creatures. It was
narrated that the Prophet - Allah bless and greet him - while describing
the sun, said: "Gibr�l brings it, in his hand, some of the light
of the Throne with which he clothes it just as one of you wears his
clothes, and so every day that it rises"; he also mentioned that
the moon receives a handful of the light of the Throne.4 Therefore, the
predication of istiw�' to the Throne is along two lines: first,
its extolment in the light of all that He said concerning His authority
in Lordship and over creatures; second, its specific mention as the
greatest and loftiest of all objects in creation, in keeping with the
customary predication of magnificent matters to magnificent objects,
just as it is said: "So-and-so has achieved sovereignty over
such-and-such a country, and has established himself over such-and-such
a region." This is not to restrict the meaning of this sovereignty
literally, but only to say that it is well-known that whoever owns
sovereignty over this, then whatever lies below it is meant a
fortiori."5
* Kitab Radd Awa'il al-Adilla, a refutation of
the Mu`tazili al-Ka`bi's book entitled Awa'il al-Adilla;
* Radd al-Tahdhib fi al-Jadal, another
refutation of al-Ka`bi;6
* Kitab Bayan Awham al-Mu`tazila;
* Kitab Ta'wilat al-Qur'an ("Book of the
Interpretations of the Qur'an"), of which Ibn Abi al-Wafa' said:
"No book rivals it, indeed no book even comes near it among those who
preceded him in this discipline."7 Hajji Khalifa cites it as Ta'wilat
Ahl al-Sunna and quotes as follows al-Maturidi's definition of the
difference between "explanation" (tafs�r) and
"interpretation" (ta'w�l):
"Tafs�r is the categorical conclusion
(al-qat`) that the meaning of the term in question is this, and
the testimony before Allah Almighty that this is what He meant by the
term in question; while ta'w�l is the preferment (tarj�h)
of one of several possibilities without categorical conclusion nor
testimony."8
* Kitab al-Maqalat;
* Ma'akhidh al-Shara'i` in Usul al-Fiqh;
* Al-Jadal fi Usul al-Fiqh;
* Radd al-Usul al-Khamsa, a refutation of Abu
Muhammad al-Bahili's exposition of the Five Principles of the Mu`tazila;9
* Radd al-Imama, a refutation of the Shi`i
conception of the office of Imam;
* Al-Radd `ala Usul al-Qaramita;
* Radd Wa`id al-Fussaq, a refutation of the
Mu`tazili doctrine that all grave sinners among the Muslims are doomed to
eternal Hellfire.
Most of the Hanafi school follows al-Maturidi in
doctrine, but he evidently achieved lesser fame than al-Ash`ari because
the latter entered into countless debates to defeat the opponents of Ahl
al-Sunna while al-Maturidi, as Imam al-Kawthari said, "lived in
an environment in which innovators had no power." The absence of a
notice on Imam Abu Mansur al-Maturidi in al-Dhahabi's Siyar is a
major omission in that masterpiece of biographical history.
NOTES
1He narrated from Imam Abu Hanifa the
saying: kullu mujtahidin mus�bun wa al-haqqu `inda All�hi w�hid
which means "Every scholar who strives [towards truth] is correct
[whatever his finding], even if the truth in Allah's presence is
one." Accordingly, al-Rustughfani differed with al-Maturidi who
considered that the mujtahid is wrong in his ijtih�d if his finding
differs from the truth. Ibn Abi al-Wafa', Tabaqat al-Hanafiyya (p.
310, 362-363).
2In Namudhaj min al-A`mal al-Khayriyya
(p. 134).
3Al-Tahawi, `Aqida �62:
"Belief consists in affirmation by the tongue and acceptance by the
heart." See "Ibn Abi al-`Izz," Sharh al-`Aqida al-Tahawiyya
(4th ed. p. 373-374, 9th ed. p. 332). See also Risala Abi Hanifa ila `Uthman
al-Batti in `Abd al-Fattah Abu Ghudda, Namadhij (p. 21-28).
4Something similar is narrated -
without naming the angel - as part of a very long hadith from Ibn `Abbas
by Abu al-Shaykh with a very weak chain in al-`Azama (4:1163-1179).
Another hadith states: "The Messenger of Allah - Allah bless and
greet him - told me that the sun, the moon, and the stars were created
from the light of the Throne." Narrated from Anas by Abu al-Shaykh in
al-`Azama (4:1140). See also al-Suyuti's al-Haba'ik fi Akhbar
al-Mala'ik.
5Al-Maturidi, Kitab al-Tawhid (p.
72).
6Cf. Hajji Khalifa, Kashf al-Zunun
(1:518).
7Ibn Abi al-Wafa', al-Jawahir al-Mudiyya
(p. 130).
8In Hajji Khalifa, Kashf al-Zunun
(1:334-335).
9The "Five Principles" of
the Mu`tazila are:
-
Tawh�d entailing a denial
of the Divine "Attributes of Meanings" (sif�t al-ma'�n�)
and of the vision of Allah Most High by the believers in the next
world - although both tenets are mentioned in the Qur'an;
-
'Adl or Divine Justice,
entailing the position that Allah Most High cannot possibly create the
evil deeds of His servants, therefore they are in charge of their own
destinies and create the latter themselves through a power which Allah
deposited in them - a denial of the verse {Allah creates you and what
you do} (37:95);
-
Reward and Punishment, entailing
the belief that Allah Most High, of necessity, rewards those who do
good and punishes those who do evil, and He does not forgive grave
sinners unless they repent before death, even if they are Muslims - a
denial of the verses that state explicitly that Allah forgives whom He
wills and punishes whom He wills and a denial of the intercession of
the Prophet - Allah bless and greet him - for grave sinners among the
Muslims;
-
Belief, whereby they held that
grave sinners were considered neither believers nor disbelievers and
so construed for them a "half-way status" between the two (al-manzila
bayn al-manzilatayn) in Hellfire;
-
Commanding good and forbidding
evil is obligatory upon the believers, and this is the sole principle
in which they are in agreement with the majority of Muslims.
Wallahu ta`ala a`lam wa ahkam.
Main sources:
Al-Lacknawi, al-Fawa'id al-Bahiyya fi Tarajim al-Hanafiyya
p. 319-320 #412; Ibn Abi al-Wafa', al-Jawahir al-Mudiyya fi Tabaqat al-Hanafiyya
p. 130, 310, 362-363; Al-Kawthari, introduction to al-Bayadi's Isharat
al-Maram.
Allah
bless and greet our Master Muhammad, his Family, and all his Companions.