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venerators of the canon law, to whom all the Khalifas, after the first four, were an
abomination, and the purely worldly lawyers of the court party, there came a group of
pious theologians who taught that the good of the Muslim community required of obedience
to the ruler of the time, even though his personal unworthiness were plain. As a
consequence, success can legitimate anything in the Muslim state.
But with the passing away of the situation which gave rise to Murji'ism, it itself
changed from politics to theology. As a political party it had opposed the political
puritanism of the Kharijites; it now came to oppose the uncompromising spirit in which
these damned all who differed from them even in details and brandished the terrors of the
wrath of God over their opponents. It is true that this came natural to Islam. The earlier
Muslims seem in general to have been oppressed by a singularly gloomy fatalism. To use
modern theological language, they labored under a terrible consciousness of sin. They
viewed the world as an evil temptress, seducing men from heavenly things. Their lives were
hedged about with sins, great and little, and each deserved the eternal wrath of God. The
recollection of their latter end they kept ever before them and the terrors that it would
bring, for they felt that no amount of faith in God and His Prophet could save them in the
judgment to come. The roots of this run far back. Before the time of Muhammad and at his
time there were among the Arab tribes, scattered here and there, many men who felt a
profound dissatisfaction with heathenism, its doctrines and religious rites. The
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THE WRATH OF GOD IN ISLAM
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conception of God and the burden of life pressed heavily upon them. They saw men pass
away and descend into the grave, and they asked whither they had gone and what had become
of them. The thought of this fleeting, transitory life and of the ocean of darkness and
mystery that lies around it, drove them away to seek truth in solitude and the deserts.
They were called Hanifsthe word is of very doubtful derivationand Muhammad
himself, in the early part of his career, reckoned himself one of them. But we have
evidence from heathen Arab poetry that these Hanifs were regarded as much the same
as Christian monks, and that the term hanif was used as a synonym for rahib,
monk.
And, in truth, the very soul of Islam sprang from these solitary hermits, scattered
here and there throughout the desert, consecrating their lives to God, and fleeing from
the wrath to come. Even in pre-Islamic Arabic poetry we feel how strong was the impression
made on the Arab mind by the gaunt, weird men with their endless watchings and night
prayers. Again and again there is allusion to the lamp of the hermit shining through the
darkness, and we have pictures of the caravan or of the solitary traveller on the night
journey cheered and guided by its glimmer. These Christian hermits and the long deserted
ruins telling of old, forgotten tribesjudged and overthrown by God, as the Arabs held
and holdthat lie throughout the Syrian waste and along the caravan routes were the two
things that most stirred the imagination of Muhammad and went to form his faith. To
Muhammad, and to the Semite always, the
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