WAP Groups
Download Free Apps & Games @ PHONEKY.com

Kawakib - Topics
Create Your Own App Store

* Kawakib > Topics


Subject: shi'a and Verse 33:33
Replies: 3 Views: 328

mohsin11 29.11.10 - 12:36pm
Allah (SWT) says:

''And Allah wishes only to remove all abomination from you, you Ahlel Bayt, and to make you pure and spotless.'' (Quran, 33:33)


The Shia claim that this verse makes the Ahlel Bayt infallible; the Shia believe that here Allah (SWT) made the Ahlel Bayt perfect in the sense that they cannot make any mistakes, nor forget anything, nor commit any sins whatsoever. Based on this interpretation, the Shia claim that the Prophet (SAW), Ali (RA), Fatima (RA), Hasan (RA), Hussain (RA), and the other nine Imams are the infallibles.

But does this verse actually make anyone infallible? First off, if we say that this verse makes people infallible, then we must say that it makes the Prophets wives (RA) to be infallible, since Allah (SWT) addresses the Prophets wives. Let us an*lyze the entire verse

''O wives of the Prophet! You are not like any other of the women; If you will be on your guard, then be not soft in your speech, lest he in whose heart is a disease yearn; and speak a good word. And stay quietly in your houses, and make not a dazzling display, like that of the former Times of Ignorance; and establish regular Prayer, and give regular Charity; and obey Allah and His Messenger. And Allah only wishes to remove all abomination from you, you Ahlel Bayt (People of the House), and to make you pure and spotless. And recite what is rehearsed to you in your homes, of the Signs of Allah and His Wisdom: for Allah understands the finest mysteries and is well-acquainted (with them).'' (Quran, 33:32-34)

*

mohsin11 29.11.10 - 12:45pm
But the truth is that nobody was made infallible by this verse. Allahs (SWT) statement was not to assure the Prophets wives (RA) that they had already been purified, but rather to stipulate a condition that if they obeyed Him, He would remove all abomination from them and thus purify them. He only wished to purify them if they met this condition, namely that they wear Hijab when they are out of the house (i.e. not making a dazzling display) and establish regular prayer as well as charity. If we an*lyze the context, we find that Allah Almighty (SWT) was giving the Prophets wives some divine directions to do all what He commanded them and to abstain from what He forbade. He thus informed them that if they conformed to His commands and abstained from what He forbade, He would reward them by removing all abomination from them and make them pure and stainless.


It should be noted that Allah Almighty (SWT) has used this pattern of speech to address many people. Consider the following verse

''Allah does not wish to place you in a difficulty, but to make you clean , and to complete His favor upon you, that you may be grateful.'' (Quran, 5:6)


In this verse, Allah (SWT) is talking about the believer; should we really conclude that that Allah (SWT) has now made the person completely clean and purified based on this? That is indeed missing the important conditional statement that Allah (SWT) is making
In another verse, Allah Almighty (SWT) says:

''Allah does wish to make clear to you and to show you the ordinances of those before you.'' (Quran, 4:26 )


He also says:

''Allah does wish to lighten your (difficulties): For man was created weak (in flesh).'' (Quran, 4:28)

The wish of Allah (SWT) expressed in the above mentioned verses comes as a condition of being loyal to His commands, to love Him and make Him pleased. Otherwise, without fulfilling this condition, His wish will not come into reality, (i.e the purification will not occur).

In another verse, Allah Almighty (SWT) says:

''For Allah loves those who turn to Him constantly in repentance and loves also those who keep themselves pure and clean.'' (Quran, 2:222)



*

mohsin11 29.11.10 - 12:53pm
Allah (SWT) so addresses His servants in many other Quranic verses in a similar vein. Therefore, if we claim that the aim of Allah Almighty (SWT) in purifying the Ahlel Bayt was to make them infallible, it would necessitate us to say that all the believers are infallible, following the Quranic verse which states that Allah Almighty (SWT) so wills to purify them.

As Allah Almighty (SWT) told us of His wish to purify members of the Prophets family, He similarly informed us of His wish to purify the believers as well. Therefore, if we suppose that the wish of Allah (SWT) to purify the believers was meant to make them infallible, then all sincere pious believers are infallible and impervious to sin. (Of course, this is incorrect and we find that none of these verses make anyone infallible.)

The purification mentioned in the aforementioned verse (33:33) was not meant to make anyone infallible, but rather simply to expiate them for past sins like we get expiation for our sins when we go for Hajj. This style is widely used in the Quran. We read in the Quran:

''Of their goods take alms, so that you might purify them and sanctify them'' (Quran, 9:103)

We will never find anybody who says that the purification mentioned in the afore-mentioned verses was meant to make the Prophets family members or the believers into infallibles.


Furthermore, and this cannot be stressed enough, the Shia are exaggerating on the meaning of the word ''pure.'' Allah (SWT) desired to make them pure and spotless, but this does not mean that they are infallible! The words ''pure'' and infallible are not interchangeable. Surely, the Shia would have to agree that Salman al-Farsi (RA) and other great heroes of Islam are considered to be pure, but we do not say that they are infallible. The Shia would say that their Ayatollahs are pure, but few would say that they are infallible. Likewise, this verse in the Quran is addressing the Prophets wives (RA), promising them to be pure, but it does not in any way confer to them infallibility. This would be reading into the text of an otherwise straight-forward Quranic verse


Another inconsistency in Shia theology is the fact that the Shia adamantly claim that their Imams are born as Imams. They are pure from birth and can never sin in their lives. This is a central part of Shia belief, and one reason they claim that a little boy in a cave is to be the Imam Mehdi, since he is born pure. Why then would the verse 33:33 be revealed, clearly indicating that Ali was being cleansed by Allah (SWT) for his sins; what sins, we ask, if he was born an Infallible Imam? We ask the Christians why Jesus (AS) asks Allah (SWT) for forgiveness in the Bible if he is infallible; there are many such Biblical verses in which Jesus (AS) is praying to the ''Father'' for forgiveness. Surely infallibles have no sins to ask for forgiveness or purification for since they do not sin in the first place!


The verse 33:33 does not mean that purification has already taken place, but it rather asserts explicitly the will of Allah Almighty (SWT) to purify the sincere wives of the Prophet (SAW). The Prophet (SAW) was eager to pray for his immediate and other relatives to be included in the verse of purification, in order to achieve the same as his spouses (RA) were promised. Likewise, he even included Salman al-Farsi (RA) in his Ahlel Bayt.

*

mohsin11 29.11.10 - 12:58pm
And we ask the Shia: how many times did the Prophet (SAW) invoke Allah (SWT) to make Alis family pure and spotless? The Shia will proudly show multiple times, citing many examples from the Hadith of the Ahlus Sunnah; and we, the Ahlus Sunnah, acknowledge that the Prophet (SAW) did ask Allah (SWT) multiple times to make Alis family pure and spotless. However, we wonder why there would be a need for the Prophet (SAW) to keep asking for purification of his family? He asked again and again. If they were infallible and did not have any sins to begin with, then there would be no need to ask Allah (SWT) again and again for this purification. Indeed, the Prophet (SAW) asking for his relatives to become ''pure and spotless'' was just one of the many duas that he would make to Allah (SWT). It is what we would call an ''every day dua'' much like our local Imam prays for the forgiveness and purification of all his congregation, or how a mother prays for the forgiveness and purification of her children. How many of us have asked Allah (SWT): ''O Allah, purify me of my sins and purify my family from sins.'' Each and every one of us should ask Allah (SWT) this. How many of us make this same dua day after day, obviously indicating that we need Allahs mercy, not that we are infallible.

In any case, even if the Shia were to somehow convince us that verse 33:33 makes someone infallible, the first to be made infallible by this verse would have to be the Prophets wives (RA) since they are the ones that verse 33:33 is addressed to. The Shia are thus faced with two options: they can accept Aisha (RA) as infallible. In this case, they must accept her statement that the Prophet (SWT) appointed Abu Bakr (RA) to be the Imam of the prayers while he was sick; this would mean that Abu Bakr (RA) was the rightful first Caliph and not Ali (RA). Such a concession by the Shia would topple a very important foundation of Shiism which is rooted in the succession of Ali (RA). The second option for the Shia is to say that Aisha (RA) and the Ahlel Bayt were not made infallible by this verse, and this too topples the entire Shia doctrine of Infallible Imamah, a corner-stone of their belief. Either way, the Shia is in a predicament. *


* Reply
* Kawakib Forum


Search:
topics replies


* Kawakib

Create Your Own App Store

topTop
groupsGroups
mainProdigits

Custom Search


Create Your Own App Store