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God not only gives, but also takes, not only communicates with but is
communicated with, not only knows but is known, not only speaks but hearsall
of which is a species of passivity and contradicts tanzih. Or you must
say that man's intelligence is as mechanical and as illusory as his will: he
seems to hear, but it is only God hearing Himself; he seems to speak but it is
only God speaking to Himself; he seems to know, but really he only dreams. His
individual consciousness is an illusionhis very individuality and selfhood
vanishes, and he becomes like a character in a novel, a thing that seems to
act and think and speak, but really only exists in the mind of its writer. So
that if tanzih is incapable of being harmonized with the creation of
nature, it is doubly incapable of being harmonized with the creation of any
spiritual being such as man.
And in fact we often see, in the history of Islamic thought, men who have
in their very insistence on absolute tanzih positively asserted this
very thing, namely, that only Allah exists, and that all other existence is
illusory, a semblance. This is the thought that underlies their name for
GodAl Haqq. They mean that no other being has reality or existence. These
men, whether they know it or not, are pure pantheists, their belief resembling
the Indian philosophic pantheism, whereby all that we see is Maya (illusion).
Thus easily does pure tanzih fall to its extreme opposite. In the
language of these men, tawhid did not merely mean calling God the One,
but calling Him the Onlythat is, |
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CREATOR, INCARNATE, ATONER |
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denying reality or even existence to all phenomena whatsoever. Such are the
terrible difficulties, intellectual and moral, into which the Islamic doctrine
of God falls, especially in relation to the creation of man.
But the difficulties seem almost to vanish when we conceive of God by the
aid of the mind of Christ, and know Him as Father, Son and Spirit. We have
already seen how this trinitarian conception as Love facilitates the
conception of Him as Creator of the world generally. How much more then of
man, particularlyman, who alone of all creation has, decisively, the power of
memory and forethought, of self-consciousness and of other-consciousness, of
conscience, rational thoughtin one word, who alone of all created things (as
far as we know) has spirit, and is capable of prayer, gratitude, and love; who
is like unto God, 'in His image' in these respects. We note the following
considerations:
1. If God created a being capable of love, while He Himself is incapable of
real love, He created a being greater than Himself; for 'love is the greatest
thing in the world.' But we have seen God has loveis love; therefore the
creation of a loving creature occasions no surprise but the reverse.
2. For creation, if it has any significance, must have for its end the
manifestation of the glory of Godby which we do not mean His power, for that
were by itself and in itself a barren displaybut His love and His power in
His love. Therefore |
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