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dust and taught Moses thereby that he could not see Him in this world (Qur. 7, 139). We
are of the opinion that we may not accuse anyone of unbelief (kufr), who prays
towards Mecca, on account of sin committed by him, such as unchastity, theft, wine
drinking, as the Kharijites believe, who judge that these thereby become unbelievers. We
teach that whoever commits a great sin (kabira), or anything like it, holding it to
be allowed, is an unbeliever, since he does not believe in its prohibition. We teach that
Islam is a wider idea than Faith (iman), so that not every Islam is Faith. We
believe that God turns the hearts upside down, and holds them between two of His fingers,
that He lays the heavens upon a finger and the earth upon a finger, according to the
tradition from the Prophet. We believe that God will not leave in Hell any of those who
confess His Unity (muwahhid) and hold fast to the Faith, and that there is no Hell
for him whom the Prophet has by his witness appointed to Paradise. We hope for Paradise
for sinners and fear on their account, that they will be punished in Hell. We teach that
God will release a few out of Hell, on account of Muhammad's intercession (shafa'a)
after they have been scorched there. We believe in the punishment of the grave. We believe
that the Tank (hawd) and the Balance are Verities: that the Bridge as-Sirat
is a Verity; that the Arousing (ba'th) after death is a Verity; that God will set
up His creatures in a place (mawqif) and will hold a reckoning with the Believers.1
We believe that Faith (iman) consists in word (qawl) and in work (amal)
and that it increases and diminishes. We trust in the sound Traditions handed down from
the Apostle of God, which trustworthy people (thiqat), just man from just man, up
to the Apostle, have transmitted. We hold by the love of the early
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Believers (salaf), whom God chose to be Companions to the Prophet, and we praise
them with the praise with which God praised them, and we carry on their succession. We
assert that the Imam succeeding the Apostle of God was Abu Bakr; that God through him made
the Religion (din) mighty, and caused him to conquer the Apostates (murtadds).
The Muslims made him their Imam, just as Muhammad had made him Imam at prayers. Then
followed [as legal Imam] Umar ibn al-Khattab; then Uthman ibn Affan; his murderers killed
him out of wickedness and enmity; then Ali ibn Abi Talib. These are the Imams after the
Apostle, and their Khalifate is that of the Prophetic office [i.e., they are,
though not prophets, successors of the Prophet). We bear witness of Paradise for the Ten (al-asharatu-l-mubashshara),
to whom the Apostle bore witness of it, and we carry on the succession of the other
Companions of the Prophet and hold ourselves far from that which was in dispute between
them. We hold that the four Imams were in the true way, were rightly guided and excellent,
so that no one equals them in excellence. We hold as true the traditions which the People
of Tradition (naql) have established, concerning the descent of God to the lowest
heaven (sama ad-dunya), and that the Lord will say, "Is there a supplicant? Is
there a seeker for forgiveness? " and the rest of that which they have handed down
and established, contrary to that which the mistaken and misled opine. We ground ourselves
in our opposition on the Qur'an, the Sunna of the Prophet, the agreement of the Muslims
and what is in accordance therewith, but put forth no novelty (bid'a) not
sanctioned by God, and opine of God nothing that we have not been taught. We teach that
God will come on the Day of Resurrection, as He has said, (Qur. 89, 23) ; "When the
earth shall be turned to dust, and the Lord shall appear and the angels, rank on
rank," and that God is near to His servants, in what way (kayfa) He wills, as
He has said, (Qur. 50, 15) ; "and We are nearer to him than the artery in his
neck;" and (Qur. 53, 8); "Then He approached and came near and was two bows'
length distant or even nearer." To our Religion
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