http://islamichotline.com/who-is-allah/
Allah,
one and only
“Say, He
is Allah, [Who is] One,
Allah, the Eternal Refuge,
He neither begets nor is begotten,
There is none like unto Him.”
(Holy Qur’an 112: 1-4)
Allah, the Eternal Refuge,
He neither begets nor is begotten,
There is none like unto Him.”
(Holy Qur’an 112: 1-4)
06
Oct 2010 • Who is
Allah?
The name Allah
(God) in Islam is the personal name of God. The most concise definition of God
in Islam is given in four verses in the Holy Qur’an:
“Say, He is
Allah, [Who is] One,
Allah, the Eternal Refuge,
He neither begets nor is begotten,
There is none like unto Him.”
(Holy Qur’an 112: 1-4)
Allah, the Eternal Refuge,
He neither begets nor is begotten,
There is none like unto Him.”
(Holy Qur’an 112: 1-4)
To Muslims, this
four-line definition of Almighty God serves as the touchstone of the study of
God. Any candidate to divinity must be subjected to this ‘acid test’ and since
the attributes of The Creator given in this chapter are unique, false gods and
pretenders to divinity can be easily dismissed using these verses.
i) The first criterion is «”Say,
He is Allah, one and only”».
Can there be
more than one god? This verse tells us that The Creator is the only one who has
total and absolute power, unique in His names and attributes.
ii) The second criterion is, «’Allah is absolute and
eternal’».
The word that
is translated as “The Eternal, Absolute” from Arabic is something that can be
attributed only to The Creator as all the other existent beings temporal or
conditional? It also means that Allah is not dependant on any person or thing,
but all persons and things are dependant on Him.
iii) The third criterion
is «‘He begets not, nor is He begotten’».
This means God
was not born, nor does He give birth and share his divinity with others. Nor
does He have a family or relationship with another being.
iv) The fourth test – which is
the most stringent – is, «”There is none like unto Him”».
The moment you
can imagine or compare ‘God’ to anything, then he (the candidate to divinity)
is not God. It is not possible to conjure up a mental picture of the One True
God because of the simple fact, as creation, we only know creation.
The Muslims
prefer calling the Supreme Creator, ‘Allah’, instead of the English word ‘God’.
The Arabic word, ‘Allah’, is pure and unique, unlike the English word ‘God’,
which can be played around with. For example, If you add ‘s’ to the word God,
it becomes ‘Gods’, that is the plural of God. Allah is one and singular, there
is no plural of Allah. If you add the word ‘father’ to ‘God’ it becomes
‘God-father’. God-father means someone who is a guardian. There is no word like
‘Allah-father’. If you add the word ‘mother’ to ‘God’, it becomes ‘God-mother’.
There is nothing like ‘Allah-mother’ in Islam. Allah is a unique word, which
does not conjure up any mental picture nor can it be played around with.
Therefore, the Muslims prefer using the Arabic word ‘Allah’ for the Almighty.
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