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Imam Ash'ari Repudiating Ash'arism

Nuh Ha Mim Keller

Question 2: The Salafis claim that Abul Hasan Ash‘ari formulated the Ash‘ari
tenets of Islamic faith (‘aqida) while he was between the Mu‘tazila and Ahl al-
Sunna, and that he later refuted his formulations and joined Ahl al-Sunna in the
Hanbali madhhab before he died. Is there any truth in this? They say his last
book, al-Ibana, contains the refutations. If not, how can I prove it to these
people? They also say that he had a second dream in which the Prophet (Allah
bless him and give him peace) appeared to him and told him that his Ash‘ari
positions were wrong!

Answer:

The Ash‘ari school and Maturidi schools have represented the ‘aqida or "tenets of
belief" of the majority of Sunni Muslims for more than a thousand years; just as
the Hanafi, Maliki, Shafi‘i, and Hanbali schools have represented the shari‘a or
"Sacred Law" for the majority of Sunni Muslims for this period. Those against
these two traditional schools of tenets of faith are people of bid‘a, defined in a
fatwa or formal legal opinion by Imam Ibn Hajar Haytami as "whoever is upon
other than the path of Ahl al-Sunna wa l-Jama‘a, Ahl al-Sunna wa l-Jama‘a
meaning the followers of Sheikh Abul Hasan Ash‘ari and Abu Mansur Maturidi,
the two Imams of Ahl al-Sunna" (Haytami, al-Fatawa al-hadithiyya, 280). In the
past, such contraventions, aside from Mu‘tazilites, Shiites, and purely sectarian
movements, were confined to a handful of mainly Hanbalis, whose bone of
contention with the two traditional schools was that neither had anything to do
with their literalist, anthropomorphic understanding of Allah Most High, which
they promoted by all means at their disposal.

In answer to your question, the claims that Imam Abul Hasan Ash‘ari (d.
324/936) repudiated his own positions are not new, but have been circulated by
these Hanbalis for a long time, a fact that compelled the hadith master (hafiz) Ibn
‘Asakir to carefully investigate this question, and the sanads (chains of narrators)
for the attribution of these repudiations to Ash‘ari. The results of his research
furnished probably the best intellectual biography of Ash‘ari ever done, a book
that rebuts these claims thoroughly and uniquivocally, called Tabyin kadhib al-
muftari fi ma nusiba ila al-Imam al-Ash‘ari [On showing the untruth of the liars,
concerning what has been ascribed to Imam Ash‘ari], that proves that there are
liars in all the sanads that impute this to Imam Ash‘ari. The book is in print, and
whoever would like the details should read it.

Imam Ash‘ari’s al-Ibana ‘an usul al-diyana [The clarification of the bases of the
religion] was not his last book, but rather among the first after he broke with
Mu‘tazilism. Imam Kawthari states:

The Ibana was authored at the first of his return from Mu‘tazilite thought, and
was by way of trying to induce [n: the Hanbali literalist] Barbahari (d. 328/940)
to embrace the tenets of faith of Ahl al-Sunna. Whoever believes it to be the last
of his books believes something that is patently false. Moreover, pen after pen of
the anthropomorphists has had free disposal of the text—particularly after the
strife (fitna) that took place in Baghdad [n: after A.H. 323, when Hanbalis ("the
disciples of Barbahari") gained the upper hand in Baghdad, Muslims of the Shafi‘i
madhhab were beaten, and anthropomorphism became the faith (‘aqida) of the
day (Ibn Athir: al-Kamal fi al-tarikh, 7.114)]—so that what is in the work that
contradicts the explicit positions transmitted from Ash‘ari by his own disciples,
and their disciples, cannot be relied upon (al-Sayf al-saqil, 108).

This is borne out by hadith master (hafiz) Dhahabi in his Siyar a‘lam al-nubala’
(15.90), as well as Ibn ‘Asakir’s Tabyin kadhib al-muftari. As for seeing dreams,
dreams may warm the heart, but they are not a proof for either Islamic law or
tenets of faith. In his introduction to Ibn ‘Asakir’s work, Kawthari notes that "the
anthropomorphists are the ones who seem to need this [relating of dreams]:
when unable to prove their point while awake, they go to sleep, to find the proofs
they are looking for while asleep, to fill their books with them" (Tabyin kadhib al-
muftari (21–22).

In relation to your questions in general, it is noteworthy that Saudi Arabia has


printed and distributed worldwide thousands of copies of a Salafi book called
Manhaj al-Asha‘ira fi al-‘aqida [The methodology of the Ash‘aris in tenets of
faith] by one Safar Hawali, a professor at Umm al-Qura University in Mecca. It
ascribes to the Ash‘ari school the misrepresentations typical of that part of the
world, identifying the school with the positions of heretical sects like the
Jahmiyya, the Qadriyya, Murjiites, and so on, and contains a number of the
things you asked about the Ash‘aris, so I would guess this is the misinformation
that your English Salafis are going upon. One can find the details in Hasan
Saqqaf’s recent rebuttal of the work entitled Tahni’a al-sadiq al-mahbub, wa nayl
al-surur al-matlub, bi maghazala Safar al-maghlub [The greeting of the beloved
friend, and attainment of happiness sought, in affectionate discourse with Safar
the defeated]. I have heard that Hawali has since moved on from his positions,
though I do not know the details.

Saqqaf also talks in his work about the bogus Hanbali "repentances" of various
Ash‘ari Imams such as Ash‘ari, Juwayni, and Ghazali, that don’t appear in their
books but have rather reached us by sanads each containing an anti-Ash‘ari or
two, as is also corroborated by Ibn Subki in his Tabaqat al-Shafi‘iyya al-kubra
[The greater compendium of the successive generations of Shafi‘i scholars] under
the biographical entries on each of these scholars.

From the wider perspective of Islamic law, these forgeries are rather
meaningless, since a Muslim may not believe in the Islamic faith (‘aqida) of Ahl
al-Sunna merely because his Imam has said it, but rather because he sincerely
believes it is the truth. Scholars say that it is not legally valid to follow qualified
scholarship (taqlid) in tenets of Islamic faith (as opposed to rulings of Islamic
law) unless one has full conviction of these tenets of faith from one’s own heart—
which is why they tell us that one’s faith (iman) by taqlid in such tenets is only
legally valid on condition that if one’s Imam were to cease believing something of
them, one would not. So the forgeries would seem to have little scholarly
relevance, other than to show the lengths to which their perpetrators were willing
to go.

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