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active in their claim to be possessors of an infallible Imam; Zaydites and Qarmatians
were in revolt; the decree of 234 that the Qur'an was uncreated had had little effect, so
far, in silencing the Mu'tazilites; in 261 the Sufi pantheist, Abu Yazid, died. Al-Ash'ari
himself was of the best blood of the desert and of a highly orthodox family which had
borne a distinguished part in Muslim history. Through some accident he came in early youth
into the care of al-Jubba'i, the Mu'tazilite, who, according to one story, had married al-Ash'ari's
mother; was brought up by him and remained a stanch Mu'tazilite, writing and speaking on
that side, till he was forty years old.
Then a strange thing happened. One day he mounted the pulpit of the mosque in al-Basra
and cried aloud, "He who knows me, knows me; and he who knows me not, let him know
that I am so and so, the son of so and so. I have maintained the creation of the Qur'an
and that God will not be seen in the world to come with the eyes, and that the creatures
create their actions. Lo, I repent that I have been a Mu'tazilite and turn to opposition
to them." It was a voice full of omen. It told that the intellectual supremacy of the
Mu'tazilites had publicly passed and that, hereafter, they would be met with their own
weapons. What led to this change of mind is strictly unknown; only legends have reached
us. One, full of psychological truth, runs that one Ramadan, the fasting month, when he
was worn with prayer and hunger, the Prophet appeared to him three times in his sleep, and
commanded him to turn from his vain kalam and seek certainty in the traditions and
the Qur'an. If
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he would but give himself to that study, God would make clear the difficulties and
enable him to solve all the puzzles. He did so, and his mind seemed to be opened; the old
contradictions and absurdities had fled, and he cursed the Mu'tazilites and all their
works.
It can easily be seen that in some such way as this the blood of the race may have led
him back to the God of his fathers, the God of the desert, whose word must be accepted as
its own proof. The gossips of the time told strange tales of rich relatives and family
pressure; we can leave these aside. When he had changed he was terribly in earnest. He met
his old teacher, al-Jubba'i, in public discussions again and again till the old man
withdrew. One of these discussions legend has handed down in varying forms. None of them
may be exactly true, but they are significant of the change of attitude. He came to
al-Jubba'i and said, "Suppose the case of three brothers; one being God-fearing,
another godless and a third dies as a child. What of them in the world to come?" Al-Jabba'i
replied, "The first will be rewarded in Paradise; the second punished in Hell, and
the third will be neither rewarded nor punished." Al-Ash'ari continued, "But if
the third said, 'Lord, Thou mightest have granted me life, and then I would have been
pious and entered Paradise like my brother,' what then?" Al-Jubba'i replied,
"God would say, 'I knew that if thou wert granted life thou wouldst be godless and
unbelieving and enter Hell.'" Then al-Ash'ari drew his noose, "But what if the
second said, 'Lord, why didst Thou not. make me die as a
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