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Allah
Al (the) + ilah
(divinity/God) = Allah
means "The
God" or
"The (only) Divinity" in
Arabic.
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El, Elohim (sing. Eloh)
are used as the word for God in the Old
Testament. Aramaic, Hebrew
and Arabic are all Semitic languages with
common origins. "Allah"
is used by Christians Arabs as well as
Muslim Arabs as the word for God.
In
the name of Allah, the Beneficent, the
Merciful.
Some
of the biggest misconceptions that many
non-Muslims have about Islam have to do with
the word "Allah". For
various reasons, many people have come to
believe that Muslims worship a different God
than Christians and Jews. This is totally
false, since "Allah" is
simply the Arabic word for "God"
- and there is only One God. Let there be no
doubt - Muslims worship the God of Noah,
Abraham, Moses, David and Jesus - peace be
upon them all. However, it is
certainly true that Jews, Christians and
Muslims all have different concepts of
Almighty God. For example, Muslims - like
Jews - reject the Christian beliefs of the
Trinity and the Divine Incarnation. This,
however, doesn't mean that each of these
three religions worships a different
God - because, as we have already said,
there is only One True God. Judaism,
Christianity and Islam all claim to be "Abrahamic
Faiths", and all of them are also
classified as "monotheistic".
However, Islam teaches that other religions
have, in one way or another, distorted and
nullified a pure and proper belief in
Almighty God by neglecting His true
teachings and mixing them with man-made
ideas.
First
of all, it is important to note that "Allah"
is the same word that Arabic-speaking
Christians and Jews use for God. If you pick
up an Arabic Bible, you will see the word "Allah"
being used where "God" is
used in English. This is because "Allah"
is the only word in the Arabic language
equivalent to the English word "God"
with a capital "G".
Additionally, the word "Allah"
cannot be made plural or given gender (i.e.
masculine or feminine), which goes
hand-in-hand with the Islamic concept of
God. Because of this, and also because the
Qur'an, which is the holy scripture of
Muslims, was revealed in the Arabic
language, some Muslims use the word "Allah"
for "God", even when they
are speaking other languages. This is not
unique to the word "Allah",
since many Muslims tend to use Arabic words
when discussing Islamic issues, regardless
of the language which they speak. This is
because the universal teachings of
Islam - even though they have been
translated in every major language - have
been preserved in the Arabic
language.
It
is interesting to note that the Aramaic word
"El", which is the word for
God in the language that Jesus spoke, is
certainly more similar in sound to the word "Allah"
than the English word "God".
This also holds true for the various Hebrew
words for God, which are "El"
and "Elah", and the
plural form "Elohim".
The reason for these similarities is that
Aramaic, Hebrew and Arabic are all Semitic
languages with common origins. It should
also be noted that in translating the Bible
into English, the Hebrew word "El"
is translated variously as "God", "god" and
"angel"!
This imprecise language allows different
translators, based on their preconceived
notions, to translate the word to fit their
own views. The Arabic word "Allah"
presents no such difficulty or ambiguity,
since it is only used for Almighty God
alone. Additionally, in English, the only
difference between "god",
meaning a false god, and "God",
meaning the One True God, is the capital "G".
In the Arabic alphabet, since it does not
have capital letters, the word for God (i.e.
Allah) is formed by adding the
equivalent to the English word "the"
(Al-) to the Arabic word for "god/God"
(ilah). So the Arabic word "Allah"
literally it means "The God"
- the "Al-" in Arabic
basically serving the same function as the
capital "G" in English. Due
to the above mentioned facts, a more
accurate translation of the word "Allah"
into English might be "The One
-and-Only God" or "The One
True God".
More
importantly, it should also be noted that
the Arabic word "Allah"
contains a deep religious message due to its
root meaning and origin. This is because it
stems from the Arabic verb ta'allaha
(or alaha), which means "to
be worshipped". Thus in Arabic, the
word "Allah" means "The
One who deserves all worship".
This, in a nutshell, is the Pure
Monotheistic message of Islam. You see,
according to Islam, "monotheism"
is much more than simply believing in the existence
of "only One God" - as
seemingly opposed to two, three or more. If
one understands the root meaning of the word
"Allah", this point should
become clear. One should understand that
Islam's criticism of the other religions
that claim to be "monotheistic"
is not because they are "polytheistic"
in the classic sense, but because they
direct various forms of worship to
other than Almighty God. We will discuss the
meaning of worship in Islam below, however,
before moving on it should be noted that
many non-Muslims are unaware of the
distinction between simply believing in the existence
of only One God and reserving all worship
for Him alone. Many Christians are painfully
unaware of this point, and thus you often
find them asking how Muslims can accuse the
followers of Jesus, peace be upon him, of
being "polytheists" when
they were all "monotheistic
Jews". First of all, it should be
clarified that the word "polytheist"
doesn't really sound right in this context,
since to many it implies simply believing in
the existence of more than one God.
So in an Islamic context, "associators",
"man-worshippers" or "creature
worshippers" might be more accurate
and appropriate terms - especially since
Christians believe Jesus to be both "100%
God and 100% man", while still
paying lip-service to God's "Oneness".
However, as we're previously touched upon,
what is really at the root of this problem
is the fact that Christians - as well as the
members of other religions - don't really
know what "monotheism"
means - especially in the Islamic sense. All
of the books, articles and papers that I've
read which were written by Christians
invariably limit "monotheism"
to believing in the existence of "One
Sovereign and Creator God". Islam,
however, teaches much more than this.
Suffice
it to say that just because someone claims
to be a "monotheistic" Jew,
Christian or Muslim, that doesn't keep them
from falling into corrupt beliefs and
idolatrous practices. Many people, including
some Muslims, claim belief in "One
God" even though they've fallen
into acts of idolatry. Certainly, many
Protestants accuse Roman Catholics of
idolatrous practices in regards to the
saints and the Virgin Mary. Likewise, the
Greek Orthodox Church is considered "idolatrous"
by many other Christians because in much of
their worship they use icons. However, if
you ask a Roman Catholic or a Greek Orthodox
person if God is "One",
they will invariably answer: "Yes!".
This lip-service, however, does not stop
them from being "creature
worshipping" idolaters. The same
goes for Hindus, who just consider their
gods to be "manifestations"
or "incarnations" of the
One Supreme God.
Everyone
should be aware of the fact that throughout
the long history of the "Abrahamic
Faiths", there have people who,
while believing in "One God",
have adopted beliefs and practices that
completely nullify their claim to "monotheism".
This is the Muslim view of Christians. We're
well aware of the fact that they claim
belief in "One God" with
their lips, but this doesn't mean that they
don't nullify their claim in other ways.
This is because many people simply haven't
been taught everything that Pure Monotheism
entails. From an Islamic point of view, "monotheism"
can be nullified in many ways. For example,
simply believing that it is permissible to
rule by Western "liberal"
and "democratic" laws in
lieu of the Divinely Revealed Law of
Almighty God makes one a "polytheist".
Certainly, a person who does such a thing,
whether Jewish, Christian or Muslim, doesn't
ever believe that there is another Almighty
Creator and Sovereign Lord. However, for all
practical purposes, such a person has take
another "god", whether they
choose to admit it or not. In this way they
are associating partners with Almighty God
(Arabic: shirk), and thus become a "polytheist"
in a practical sense, regardless of their
lip-service to "monotheism".
This holds true even if the person doesn't
believe what they are doing is "worship".
For example, Roman Catholics who pray to the
Virgin Mary will staunchly deny that they
are "worshipping" her. They
instead call it "adoration"
or some other watered-down term. However,
from an Islamic point of view, what is
worship if not this? Islam teaches that
prayer and supplication are the marrow of
worship, so if one directs their prayers to
an intermediary (even if the pray is "ultimately"
meant for God), then what is left of
worship? Additionally, how can someone who
believes in Almighty God follow man-made
laws instead of God's Law, without admitting
that they've begun worshipping other than
God? Do they know better than God?
Additionally,
the Old Testament makes it perfectly clear
that making a "graven image"
of any created thing (not to mention ones
which are supposed to "represent"
Almighty God) is prohibited. Please see
Exodus 20:4-6, Leviticus 26:1 and
Deuteronomy 4:16, 23, 25, 5:8 and Nehemiah
9:6 for some statements in regards to this
point. Without addressing the issue that
Christians commonly violate the unambiguous
commandment not to even "make"
representations of anything that is in the "heavens
above or on the earth beneath",
these verses not only teach that worshipping
idols is prohibited, but also that Almighty
God is eternally distinct from His creation
and thus nothing in His creation can
represent Him. To believe otherwise is to be
a de facto idol worshipper - even if
one claims belief in one, and only one, "True
God". In Exodus 20:4-6 and
Deuteronomy 4:16, Almighty God - who is a "Jealous
God" - makes it perfectly clear
that He is distinct from His creation.
By
giving such clear and merciful guidance to
human beings, God is establishing a
universal and eternal Truth for the benefit
of mankind. This eternal Truth is the
bedrock of religious guidance, since once
people begin to believe that Almighty God
mixes with or can be represented by His
creation, they can be duped into believing
almost anything. Once someone accepts that
God has become "incarnate"
in His creation, or that someone or
something is a "manifestation"
- and thus representation - of Him, the
floodgates are open and "Truth"
becomes a matter of subjective guesswork.
Once the first and most basic concept is
violated - regardless of how complicated and
sophisticated the rationale for it might be
- it is very easy to fall further and
further away from the Eternal Truth of Pure
Monotheism. In the final analysis, it is not
a question of whether God is capable of
becoming a man, but rather a question of
whether one bases their beliefs about God on
clear, unambiguous and authentic guidance.
Once it is left up to the human mind to
decide what Almighty God can and cannot do,
the stage is set for misguidance to take
root. Human speculation about God only ends
up leading to misguidance and despair, since
no clear conclusions can ever be reached.
For example, is God capable of creating an
object so heavy that He is incapable of
moving it? If not, does that mean that He is
incapable? It is because of misguided
questions like this that Islam clearly
teaches that mankind should only say about
God what He has said about Himself. This
means all of our ideas about God must be
based on Revelation - not human
speculation. In short, the final prophet of
Islam - Muhammad - was sent by Almighty God
to preach the same Pure Monotheism that was
practiced by Noah, Abraham, Moses, David and
Jesus - peace be upon them all. This Pure
Monotheism means not only believing that
there is only One God in existence, but
realizing that He is transcendent above His
creation and that all worship is due to Him
alone.
Before
concluding, we should probably address the
practice of those Muslims who insist
on using the Arabic word "Allah"
even when speaking English. Even though this
practice certainly is not to be
condemned when it is done around those who
understand the meaning of the Arabic word "Allah",
it is my experience - both during my years
as a non-Muslim and my years as a Muslim -
that such a practice can (and usually does)
breed misunderstanding. It seems that often
times, many of the Muslims who use the word "Allah"
in lieu of the word "God",
even when trying to attract people to
Islam, are unaware of the severe
misunderstandings that many non-Muslims have
about Islam (and the distorted way which
Islam has been portrayed in the West).
Insisting on using the word "Allah"
only fuels the flames of misunderstanding -
so there's no good reason to do it. I've
often wondered what value some
Muslims think that using the word "Allah"
adds to the Pure Message that they are
trying to convey. ( . . . and I'm still
waiting for an answer!) Unfortunately, those
Muslims who insist on using the word "Allah"
even when addressing non-Muslims who are
unfamiliar with Islam and the Arabic
language, do both a disservice to themselves
and their religion. Unfortunately, this
practice is usually based on the false
assumption - by a non-native speaker of
English - that the word "God"
in English is incapable of expressing a pure
and proper belief in Almighty God. This is
certainly false. If someone says that the
English word "God" cannot
be used to express the Pure Islamic Belief
in Tawhid, they are wrong not
because they don't understand Tawhid,
but simply because they don't understand the
English language. Many people who insist on
using the Arabic word "Allah"
usually don't realize this, because in
reality, they are not so much affirming the
word "Allah" as they are
rejecting the word "God" as
unsuitable - based on incorrect assumptions.
For someone to assume that the word "God"
presupposes a certain theological
point-of-view (such as the Trinity) is
simply Wrong - and that's Wrong with a
capital "W". To say the word "God"
should be rejected because it can be changed
into "god", "gods"
or "goddess" is illogical
because each of these words has a distinctive
meaning and a distinctive spelling
- at least to someone who knows how to speak
English correctly. Using the same logic, I
can demonstrate that the root letters "ktb"
can be used to form the Arabic words "kitab"
(book), "maktabah"
(library), "maktab"
(office) and "kaatib"
(writer), but does that mean that these
words have the same meaning? Do
Arabic-speaking people go through life
confusing libraries with writers and offices
with books (both in conversation and in
reality)? I think not! This is not to
mention the fact that if the Arabic "Al-"
was put in front of these words in order to
make them definite, confusion would be even
less likely! So the logic in both cases is
the same, and this is because even though
the same letters are used in "God"
and "god", these two words
have two different meanings in the English
language. The capital "G"
implies something different than the small "g"
- and anyone who denies this simply doesn't
know how to speak the English language.
In
concluding this point, it should be
mentioned that Arabic-speaking Muslims who
believe in Pure Tawhid,
Arabic-speaking Christians and the idol
worshippers of Mecca all use the word "Allah".
However, does this guarantee all of them
proper belief in "Allah"?
Certainly not, because if they have a
corrupt concept of "Allah"
it doesn't matter what word they use!
This
brings us to a more important point: It
should be clearly understood that what Islam
is primarily concerned with is correcting
mankind's concept of Almighty God.
What we are ultimately going to be held
accountable at the end of our life is not
whether we prefer the word "Allah"
over the word "God", but
what our concept of God is. Language is only
a side issue. A person can have an incorrect
concept of God while using the word "Allah",
and likewise a person can have a correct
concept of God while using the word "God".
This is because both of these words are
equally capable of being misused and being
improperly defined. As we've already
mentioned, using the word "Allah"
no more insinuates belief in the Unity of
God than the use of the word "God"
insinuates belief in the Trinity - or any
other theological opinion. Naturally, when
God sends a revelation to mankind through a
prophet, He is going to send it in a
language that the people who receive it can
understand and relate to. Almighty God makes
this clear in the Qur'an, when He states:
"Never
did We send a Messenger except (to teach) in
the language of his (own) people in order to
make (things) clear to them."
(Qur'an,
Chapter 14 - "Abraham", Verse 4)
"Say:
He, Allah (God) is One. Allah (God) is He on Whom all
depend. He begets not, nor is He begotten.
And none is like Him (God)".
(Quran,
Chapter
112 - "The Purity")
As
Muslims, we think that it is unfortunate
that we have to go into details on such
seemingly minor issues, but so many
falsehoods have been heaped upon our
religion, that we feel that it is our duty
to try to break down the barriers of
falsehood. This isn't always easy, since
there is a lot of anti-Islamic literature in
existence which tries to make Islam look
like something strange and foreign to
Westerners. There are some people out there,
who are obviously not on the side of truth,
that want to get people to believe that "Allah"
is just some Arabian "god",
and that Islam is completely "other"
- meaning that it has no common roots with
the other Abrahamic religions (i.e.
Christianity and Judaism). To say that
Muslims worship a different "God"
because they say "Allah" is
just as illogical as saying that French
people worship another God because they use
the word "Dieu", that
Spanish-speaking people worship a different
God because they say "Dios"
or that the Hebrews worshipped a different
God because they sometimes call Him "Yahweh".
Certainly, reasoning like this is quite
ridiculous! It should also be mentioned,
that claiming that any one language uses the
only the correct word for God is tantamount
to denying the universality of God's message
to mankind, which was to all nations, tribes
and people through various prophets who
spoke different languages.
Before
closing, we would like everyone to be aware
of the fact that some Christian missionary
organizations print English literature
intended to teach Christians about Islam
which say such things as: "Allah is
the god of the Muslims" and that "Muhammad
came to get people to believe in the god
Allah" - implying that "Allah"
is some sort of false "god".
However, when these same organizations print
literature in the Arabic language, hoping to
lead Arabic-speaking Muslims "to
Christ", they use the word "Allah"
for God. It seems that if they were on the
side of truth, they would not have to resort
to such inconsistencies. And on an even more
ridiculous note . . . there are also
missionary organizations that exceed this in
ignorance (or deceit) by writing books that
call on Muslims to give up their belief in "Allah",
and instead worship the "Lord"
Jesus, "the Son of God".
Besides making it abundantly clear that they
are outside the community of Pure
Monotheism, the people who write such
material don't even realize that if they
wrote such a pamphlet in Arabic, it would be
self-contradictory. This is because in an
Arabic Bible Jesus is the "Son of
Allah"! If an Arabic-speaking
person gave up the worship of "Allah",
they would have no God to worship, since "Allah"
is simply the Arabic word for God!
Before
we conclude, however, we would like to ask
our readers to ask themselves what they
think the reasons are behind all of these
lies? If Islam was just some false religion
that didn't make any sense, would so many
people, from Western scholars to Christian
missionaries, have to tell so many lies
about it? The reason is that the Ultimate
Truth of Islam stands on solid ground and
its unshakable belief in the Unity of God is
above reproach. Due to this, Christians
can't criticize its doctrines directly, but
instead make up things about Islam that
aren't true so that people lose the desire
to learn more. If Muslims were able to
present Islam in the proper way to people in
the West, it surely might make many people
reconsider and re-evaluate their own
beliefs. It is quite likely that Christians,
when they find out that there is a universal
religion in the world that teaches people to
worship and love God, while also practicing
Pure Monotheism, would at least feel that
they should re-examine the basis for their
own beliefs and doctrines.
c.
to Abu Iman Abd ar-Rahman Robert Squires for
parts of the above article.
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