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(mu'min), he taught, was a term of praise, and an evildoer was not worthy of
praise and could not have that name applied to him. But he was not an unbeliever, either,
for he assented to the faith. If he, then, died unrepentant, he must abide forever in the
Firefor there are only two divisions in the next world, heaven and hellbut his
torments would be mitigated on account of his faith. The position to which orthodox Islam
eventually came was that a believer could commit a great sin. If he did so, and died
unrepentant, he went to hell; but after a time would be permitted to enter heaven. Thus,
hell became for believers a sort of purgatory. On this secession, al-Hasan only said
"I'tazala anna"He has seceded from us. So the new party was called the
Mu'tazila, the Secession. That, at least, is the story, which may be taken for what it is
worth. The fixed facts are the rise at the beginning of the second century after the Hijra
of a tolerably definite school of dissenters from the traditional ideas, and their
application of reason to the dogmas of the Qur'an.
We have noted already the influence of Christianity on Muhammad through the hermits of
the desert. From it sprang the asceticism of Islam and that asceticism grew and developed
into quietism and thence into mysticism. The last step was still in the future, but
already at this time there were wandering monks who imitated their Christian brethren in
the wearing of a coarse woollen frock and were thence called Sufis, from suf, wool.
It was not long before Sufi came to mean mystic, and the third of the
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INFLUENCE OF JOHN OF DAMASCUS
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three great threads was definitely woven into the fabric of Muslim thought. But that
was not the limit of Christian influence. Those anchorites in their caves and huts had
little training in the theology of the schools; the dogmas of their faith were of a
practical simplicity. But in the development of the Murji'ites and Qadarites it is
impossible to mistake the workings of the dialectic refinements of Greek theology as
developed in the Byzantine and Syrian schools. It is worth notice, too, that, while the
political heresies of the Shi'ites and Kharijites held sway mostly in Arabia, Mesopotamia,
and Persia, these more religious heresies seem to have arisen in Syria first and
especially at Damascus, the seat of the Umayyads.
The Umayyad dynasty, we should remember, was in many ways a return to pre-Muslim times
and to an easy enjoyment of worldly things; it was a rejection of the yoke of Muhammad in
all but form and name. The fear of the wrath of God had small part with the most of them;
sometimes it appeared in the form of an insane rebellion and defiance. Further, as Muslim
governments always have done, they sought aid in their task of governing from their
non-Muslim subjects. So it came about that Sergius, the father of Johannes Damascenus, was
treasurer under them and that after his death, this John of Damascus himself, the last
great doctor of the Greek Church and the man under whose hands its theology assumed final
form, became wazir and held that post until he withdrew from the world and turned to the
contemplative life. In his writings and in those of
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