-last modf 1446 AH, 2025-05-09 21:00 +0200, bit.ly/_1br [506] index 4min read
From: The Oneness of Being, by Rosabel Ansari
This is an edited summary of the original text by Rosabel Ansari with subtitles and edited quotes including in the footnotes.
What can we say exists in the world? What is there? When we look around and perceive the world with our senses, it seems self-evident that multiple things are in existence.[1]
But it is equally true that none of these things have to be there. Islamic theology teaches us that our own being, and the being of all of creation, is contingent. We do not have to exist; our existence depends on God.
On the other hand, God is the Necessary Being whose essence is to be.
However, if it is the essential nature of God to be (i.e., God cannot not be), can other things also be said “to be”? Can we attribute being to both God and creation?
And if so, how can we do so without reifying[2] being?
“This doctrine, known in Arabic as waĥdat al-wujūd (the oneness of being)… claims that God is the only being, and there is nothing else besides Him.”[3]
If we say that anything else exists besides God, we are saying so … metaphorically, because otherwise we would devolve into pantheism, whereby God is in things or is a part of things.[4]
True existence is for God alone, … and this is the true meaning of divine oneness (tawĥīd).
What is this thing called being that we attribute to both God and creation?[5] Would being not become prior to and above God, with God and creation different species of the greater category of being?
To avoid making being into a thing or category greater than God—and to avoid pantheism by making creation a part of God’s being, adherents of waĥdat al-wujūd taught that God is the only true Being.[6]
Do the objects of our sense perception (i.e., the things we can see, touch, hear, taste, and smell) exist simply because we perceive them?[7]
Comment: yes, these objects exist, but their existence is contingent, fleeting and volatile.
Figures such as Qūnawī and Qayśarī considered that “creation does not have an independent existence, but only has a relation (nisbah) to the Being that is God.”[8].
There is another way to describe the presence of creation around us, even if it cannot be truly said to be. In response to this problem, advocates of waĥdat al-wujūd qualify created[9] things as fixed[10] entities (al-a¢yān al-thābitah) in God’s knowledge. Their existence is not a real existence; rather, they are constrained within divine knowing, possessing a mere relation to divine being through God’s knowledge of them.
Therefore “we can say that through your sense perception, you are not perceiving anything real. The existence of creation, and indeed your own existence, is simply that God has knowledge of you, and this divine knowledge is what constitutes creation, as opposed to any sort of real existence.”[11]
What purpose does it serve to say that nothing really exists except God, and that all the things we perceive (including our own selves) are just items of divine knowledge?[12]
With the advent of the clear monotheism of Islam, it became crucially important to understand what it means to attribute being to anything other than God. To say that something is (existing), is to make a serious metaphysical claim about that thing.[13]
One way to account for a multiplicity of things that exist, while still maintaining a distinction between the being of God and the being of creation, is through the theory of the rankings of being (marātib al-wujūd). This theory … gives us a layered, gradated way to attribute being and existence to created things.
According to this theory, there are three rankings to existence:
(1) actual, extra-mental existence, which is attributed to things that are real;
(2) mental existence, which is attributed to things that exist only in the mind; and
(3) linguistic existence, which is attributed to things we speak or write about.
The theory of marātib al-wujūd does not solve the problem we have been discussing, as it still remains to be seen what is truly real and existent outside the mind, but this theory does add another dimension to the solution. By affirming multiple levels (multiplexity) to being, Islamic scholars rejected the flattening of being and the notion that a thing either is or is not. There are different dimensions to being, and their different rankings mean that our answers to philosophical questions may differ according to what realm or ranking of being we are functioning on.[14]
We are convinced Islam is the answer and the way - and there is no god except Allah (God), the Lord of the universe - no reality, but the reality of the Real (Allah), and Mohammad is certainly His Messenger (may His blessings & peace be upon him).
- Islam - The Way of the Prophets
- Islam the Natural, Easy Religion
- The Sum Of Islam
Related
Other Texts in This Series
Footnotes