Talk:Encyclopædia of Religion and Ethics
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Public domain text
editThis encyclopedia edited by James Hastings is now in the public domain and could be put online. A site that was putting it online but only had a few articles up, is now gone. I saved the following articles from the encyclopedia and believe that they should be incorporated into Wikipedia, somehow and if possible. No, I did not have a a GFDL-compatible license (whatever that is) but the website is now gone and has been gone for years, and the work is in the public domain since it dates to 1908.
QUOTE (2 articles from the Encyclopedia):
ISLAM by Edward Sell
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Islam is the name peculiar to the religion founded by Muhammad, and embraces all the different sects which are now found among his followers. Thus, a Shi'ite and a Sunnite are both Muslims. Islam is the infinitive form of aslama, and means 'to resign oneself,' to profess Islam. It is sometimes looked upon by European writers as expressing complete resignation to the will of God in all matters of faith and duty; but this seems to be too wide an extension of the term, for Syed Amir 'Ali says: 'The word does not imply, as is commonly supposed, absolute submission to God's will, but means, on the contrary, striving after righteousness' (Spirit of Islam, ed. 1891, p. 226). But what is the idea of righteousness which the term 'Islam' expresses? It is given in the verse, 'Whoso is a Muslim, he seeketh after the right way' (Qur. lxxii. 14). Here, again, we need a definition of the words 'Muslim' and 'right way.' Muhammadan commentators explain them thus: the former means 'one who places his neck under the order of God,' 'one who comes under the order,' 'one who sincerely accepts the dogma of the Unity of God'; the other, the rashad, or 'right way,' is the 'finding of the reward of good works,' the 'desire of goodness.' The term 'Islam' occurs twice in late Meccan suras, but not in the earlier ones. 'That man's breast will be open to Islam' (vi. 125). 'Whose breast God has opened to Islam' (xxxix. 23). In MedInite suras it occurs in the following places: 'The true religion (din) with God is Islam' (iii. 17). 'Whoso desireth any other religion (din) than Islam, that religion shall not be accepted from him' (iii. 79). 'It is my pleasure that Islam be your religion' (v. 5). 'Who is more impious than he who, when called to Islim, deviseth a falsehood concerning God?' (lxi. 7). 'We profess Islim '(xlix. 14). 'They taunt thee with having embraced Islam ' (xlix. 17). Some parts of the verb express the sense of embracing Islam, but they are chiefly found in late suras: xlix. 17, ix. 75, iii. 60, xii. 101, xxxiii. 35. It is very important to bear this fact in mind. In a few places a more general idea of resignation seems to be referred to, as: 'They who set their faces with resignation Godward (man aslama wajhahu lilliahi), and do that which is right, their reward is with their Lord' (ii. 106), and 'I resign myself to the Lord of the worlds' (aslamtu lirabbi-l-alamina) (ii. 125). But these have to be interpreted in accordance with the meaning attached by Muslim commentators to the more definite ones. Muhammadan theologians draw a sharp distinction between iman ('faith') and Islam, and base it on the following verse: 'The Arabs say, "We believe." Say thou, "Ye believe not"; say rather, "We profess Islam (aslamna)," for the faith (iman) hath not yet found its way into your hearts' (xlix. 14). Belief with the heart is one thing; the profession of Islam is another. It is outward obedience to certain rules, and it is only when sincerity (tasdiq) is joined to it, as shown in the belief in God, angels, divine books, prophets, predestination, and the last day, that a man becomes a true believer. Shahrastani, in the Milal wa'n-Nihal (ed. London, 1846, p. 27), draws a distinction between Islam, iman ('faith'), and ihsan ('devotion,' 'benevolence') in the following tradition: 'Gabriel one day came in the form of an Arab and sat near the Prophet and said: 'O Messenger of God, what is Islam?' The Prophet replied: 'Islam is to believe in God and His Prophet, to say the prescribed prayers, to give alms, to observe the fast of Ramadan, and to make the pilgrimage to Mecca.' Gabriel replied that he had spoken truth, and then asked the Prophet what iman was. He replied that it was to believe in God, angels, books, prophets, the last day, and predestination. Again, Gabriel admitted the correctness of the definition, and inquired what ihsan meant. The Prophet replied: 'To worship God as if thou seest Him, for if thou seest Him not He sees thee.' This is borne out by the meaning assigned in Persian commentaries to the term 'Muslim,' which is said to designate a man who is a munqad and a hukmbardar, words which mean 'submissive' or 'obedient to orders.' A Muslim, then, is one who carefully keeps the outward works of the law, but, when he adds to it ihsan, or devotion, he is a muhsin, a man who does good works as well as pays attention to ceremonial observances; when to these he adds sincerity of heart and exercises faith (iman), he becomes a mu'min, or 'believer.' 'The true believers (al-Mu'minun) are only those who believe in Allah and His Apostle, and afterwards doubt not' (xlix. 15). The term 'Islam' emphasizes the Rabbinical precept that it is not the 'study of the law which is most important, but the practice thereof,' and connotes the formal performance of certain outward duties. It is doubtful whether it ever had a ethical meaning attached to it. The commentators seem to be unanimous in using it in a mechanical sense. That agrees with the omission of the term in the earlier suras; for it was not till Muhammad formulated his religion at Medina that the Arkan-ad-din ('pillars of religion ), the five obligatory duties of religion, came to be a formal part therein. Earlier, the word Islam does not appear to have been in common use. Thus, Islam, when looked at from the Muhammadan standpoint, loses much of the beauty which has gathered round the ethical idea of complete submission to the will of God, and really emphasizes the external and legal side of religion. James Hastings, ed. Encyclopaedia of Religion and Ethics. Volume VII. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1915. Pages 437-438a |
ALLAH by Duncan B. Macdonald
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ALLAH is the proper name of God among Muslims, corresponding in usage to Jehovah (Jahweh) among the Hebrews. Thus it is not to be regarded as a common noun meaning 'Gods' (or 'god'), and the Muslim must use another word or form if he wishes to indicate any other than his own peculiar deity. Similarly, no plural can be formed from it, and though the liberal Muslim may admit that Christians or Jews call upon Allah, he could never speak of the Allah of the Christians or the Allah of the Jews. Among Christians, too, a similar usage holds. In the current Arabic Bible versions, 'God' (myhla) is uniformly rendered Allah, but when 'the Lord God' (myhla hA'hy.) occurs, it is rendered ar-rabbu-l-ilahu, 'the Lord, the Ilah,' where 'the Ilah' is an uncontracted form, retaining its force of a common noun with the article, from which Allah has been shortened through usage. The Muslim, too, who usually derives and explains Ilah as meaning 'worshipped,' uses it and its plural Aliha in the broadest way, of any god, explaining that such is possible because worshippers believe that their god has a claim to worship, and 'names follow beliefs; not what the thing is in itself' (Lisan, xvii. 358). But more ordinarily, in referring to the gods of the heathen, a Muslim speaks simply of their images or idols, asnam, authan. The origin of this goes back to pre-Muslim times, as Prof. Noldeke has shown below (art. ARABS [RELIGION OF THE ANCIENT]). Muhammad found the Meccans believing in a supreme God whom they called Allah, thus already contracted. With Allah, however, they associated other minor deities, some evidently tribal, others called daughters of Allah. Muhammad's reform was to assert the solitary existence of Allah. The first article of the Muslim creed, therefore, La iliha illa-llahu, means only, as addressed by him to the Meccans, 'There exists no God except the one whom you already call Allah.' Naturally, this precise historical origin is not clear to the Muslim exegetes and theologians. But that Allah is a proper name, applicable only to their peculiar God, they are certain, and they mostly recognize that its force as a proper name has arisen through contraction in form and limitation in usage. At-Tabari (d. A.H. 310=A.D. 923), the greatest commentator on the Qur'an of the old traditional school, seems to have very little on the word. He gives only one derivation, namely, that it means 'the worshipped, the served,' and contents himself with proving the existence of such a root in Arabic and the possibility of the contraction of al-ilah to Allah (Tafsir, i. 40). Apparently neither the etymological nor the metaphysical question had become important for his time. It is very different in the next greatest Qur'an commentary which we have, that by ar-Razi, the great systematic theologian, who died in A.H. 608 (=A.D. 1209). He deals with it twice, in one passage considering whether God can have a known proper name (Mafatih al-ghaib, i. 61), and in another, the meaning, derivation, etc., of Allah (i. 83 ff.). The first position, he says, the earlier philosophers denied. The object of a name was to distinguish the thing named from other things; but if the thing named could not be known, as in the case of the peculiar essence of God, there was no use for the name. Certainly, if God gave knowledge of Himself to some particulary chosen beings, He might have a name for them. As this name, then, would be the greatest of all names, he who knew it could control all things and beings, material and spiritual. It would be, in fact, the Most Great Name of God, the ineffable name of the Jews, by which miracles could be wrought, and of which Muhammad had evidently heard. That such a name exists ar-Razi believes; traditions from Muhammad assert its existence among the names given in the Qur'an, but are vague and contradictory as to which it is; and as it cannot be a name involving a quality, but must be the name of God's essence, it can be nothing else than Allah, God's proper name. His consideration, then, of Allah he divides into five sections (i. 83ff.). 1. The preferable view is that Allah is a proper name of God, and has no derivation; this he defends with arguments based on the undoubted usage of the Qur'an and the impossibility of making a common noun apply to an individual only. 2. The various derivations alleged by those who hold that it comes from a common noun. Eight of these are given, with theological and metaphysical refutations of an a priori kind; the facts of the language have little consideration. 3. The linguistic possibility of derivation. Some held that it was from Hebrew or Syriac; but it was known by the Arabs in the time of Muhammad as a plain Arabic word, and as such most accept it. Of the others, those who say it is a name need no derivation, and those who derive it are of two schools, on which a reference to Lane, Lexicon, pp. 82bff., will suffice. 4. Broadly, Allah is used of the true God only, as also, in the first instance, al-ilah; but the latter can by extension be applied to any god, as Allah Himself applies it in the Qur'an. [This, of course, is a complete reversal of the historical fact.] 5. Certain peculiarities of this Divine Name which distinguish it from all other names of God; e.g. as letter by letter is cut from it, the remainder continues significant for God, and the formal confession of the Muslim faith can take place only through this name, and not through any of the descriptive epithets, such as 'the Merciful One, 'the Holy One, etc. With the Qur'an commentary of Baidawi (d. A.H. 685=A.D. 1286) we reach, again, saner air. Modelled on that of az-Zamakhshari (d. A.H. 588=A.D. 1143) - a combination of rationalism and precise grammatical and lexicographical interpretation - it has no room for a priori theories or dreams of a wonder-working Name. Allah is a contraction of al-ilah, and has come to be used as a proper name, though a common noun in origin. A number of possible derivations are given with examples of such transformation. It is shown that God's essence in itself, taken without reference to some other thing, real or imagined, is unintelligible to mankind, and so cannot be indicated by a separate word, even though especially revealed to His saints, as ar-Razi suggests; nor does derivation from a root involve shirk in the theological sense, one thing having part in another; it means only that the two expressions have part in a common idea and formation. The Syriac derivation is mentioned without criticism. Other commentaries give modifications only of the two attitudes of ar-Razi and al-Baidawi. Thus Abu-s-Su'ud (d. A.H. 982=A.D. 1574) paraphrases and elucidates al-Baidawi. The following statement from him (margin of Mafatih al-ghaib, i. 19) shows how far this interpretation could attain: 'Know that what is meant by the negation in the first article of the creed, La ilaha illa-llahu, is that He is the rightfully worshipped One, and the sense of that article of the creed is, "No rightfully worshipped individual exists except that rightfully worshipped One." Similarly, Nizam ad-Din al-Naisaburi (d. circ. A.H. 710=A.D. 1310) abbreviates from ar-Razi, but is disposed to regard the difference as verbal (lafzi) only, a hard saying (margin of at-Tabari's Tafsir, i. 53 ff. and 63 ff.). All these are generally accepted and respected commentaries. See art. GOD (Muslim). LITERATURE. - There is little in western languages on this subject. Cf. Fleischer, Kleinere Schriften, i. 154, 170; Sprenger, Leben und Lehre des Mohammad, i. 286 ff., ii. 33; Palmer's Qur'an, i., xii. ff., lxvi.; Hughes, Dictionary of Islam, s.vv. 'God,' 'Da'wah; Grimme, Mohammed, ii. 36. D. B. MACDONALD rumjal 15:35, 15 September 2007 (UTC) |
Volumes of the encyclopaedia
editEncyclopædia of Religion and Ethics: Suffering-Zwingli By James Hastings
Encyclopædia of Religion and Ethics: Life and death-Mulla By James Hastings
Encyclopedia of Religion and Ethics Part 9, Part 9 By James Hastings
Encyclop dia of Religion and Ethics. Edited by James Hastings with the Assistance of John A. Selbie and Other Scholars. Volume 6. Fiction - Hyksos. Part 1. Fiction - Gobardhan