This is an account
of the Imam who was in charge (al-qai'im) after Abu Ja'far
Muhammad b. Ali, peace be on them, (including) who his mother
was, the date of his birth, evidence for his Imamate, his
age, the period of his succession (to the Imamate), the time
of his death, the place of his grave, the number of his children,
and a brief outline of the reports about him.
Al-Sadiq
Ja'far b. Muhammad b. Ali b. al-Husayn, peace be on them,
was out of all his brothers (the one who was) the successor
(khailfa) of his father, Muhammad b. Ali, peace be on them,
his testamentary trustee (was'i), who was in charge of the
Imamate (al- qa'im bi-al-imama) after him. He stood out among
their group for his great merit (fadl); he was the most celebrated,
the greatest in rank and the most illustrious of them in (the
eyes) of both the non-Shia (al-amma) and the Shi'a (al-khassa).
The people transmitted on his authority the religious sciences
which travellers carried with them (around many countries)
and thus his fame was spread throughout the lands. The learned
scholars have transmitted on the authority of no other member
of the House (ahl al-bayt) as much as they have transmitted
on his authority. None of them met as many of the reporters
of traditions (ahl al-athar wa-naqalat al-akhbar) as he did,
nor did the latter transmit on their authority to the same
extent as they transmitted on the authority of Ab-u Abd Allah
(Ja'far b. Muhammad), peace be on him. The specialists in
tradition (ashab al- hadith) have gathered together the names
of those who narrated on his authority, who were reliable
despite differences in views and doctrines and they were four
thousand men. The clear evidence for his Imamate, peace be
on him, was such that it overcame (men's) hearts and silenced
(the attempts of) an opponent to denigrate it with doubts.
He
was born in Medina in the year 83 A.H. (702) and he, peace
be on him, died in (the month of) Shawwal in the year 148
A.H. (765) at the age of sixty-five. He was buried in (the
cemetery of) al-Baqi' alongside his father, his grandfather
and his (great-great) uncle, al- Hasan, peace be on them.
His mother was Umm Farwa, the daughter of al-Qasim b. Muhammad
b. Abi Bakr. His Imamate, peace be on him, lasted for thirty-four
years. His father, Abu Jafar (Muhammad b. Ali), peace be on
him, clearly gave him the trusteeship (of the Imamate) and
gave him an explicit designation (nass jali) for the Imamate.
[Muhammad
b. Abi Umayr reported on the authority of Hisham b. Salim
on the authority of Abu Abd Allah, Jafar' b. Muhammad, peace
be on them, who said:]'
When
my father was near to death he said: "Jafar I give testamentary
enjoinment to you (to treat) my followers well."
"May
I be your ransom," I replied, "by God, I will make them (know
their religion so well) that any man among them in the country
will not (have to) ask anyone (for advice)."
[Aban
b. 'Uthman reported on the authority of Abu-al-Sabbah al-
Kinam, who said:]
Abu
Jafar Muhammad, peace be on him, looked towards his son, Abu
Abd Allah Ja'far, peace be on him, and said (to us): "Do you
see that man? He is one of those of whom God, the Mighty and
High, said: We wish to grant a favour to those who have been
humiliated in the land and we will make them Imams and inheritors
[XXVIII 5].
[Hisham
b. Salim reported on the authority of Jabir b. Yazid al Jufi:]
Abu
Jafar Muhammad, peace be on him, was asked about the one who
would take charge (al-qa'im) (of the Imamate) after him. He
tapped Abu Abd Allah Jafar, peace be on him, with his hand
and said: "By God, this is the man among the family of Muhammad,
peace be on them, who will take charge (al-qa'im) (of the
Imamate)."
[Ali
b. al-Hakam reported on the authority of Tahir, a follower
of Abu Jafar Muhammad, peace be on him, who said:]
I
was with (Abu Jafar Muhammad), peace be on him, when Jafars
peace be on him approached, Abu Ja'far, peace be on him, said,
" Here is the best of creatures."
[Yunus
b. Abd al-Rahman reported on the authority of Abd al-Ala,
a retainer of the family of Sam, on the authority of Abu Abd
Allah Jafar, peace be on him, who said:]
My
father, peace be on him, entrusted to me (everything) which
was there. When he was near to death, he said: "Call witnesses
for me." I summoned four men from Quraysh, among them Nafi',
retainer of Abd Allah b. Umar. (My father said:) "Write this
testimony which I bequeath (like) Jacob did to his sons: My
sons, God has chosen the religion foryou. So do not die except
as Muslims. [II 132] Muhammad b. Ali; makes this last testimony
to Ja'far b. Muhammad. He orders him to shroud him in the
cloak in which he used to perform the Friday prayer, to put
on him his turban, to make his grave a square, to raise it
the height of four fingers above the ground and to take his
shabby clothes away from him at his burial.
Then
he said to the witnesses: "Depart, may God have mercy on you.
"Father"
I said to him (after they had gone), "what was in this that
there had to be witnesses for it?"
"My
son," he answered, "I was unwilling for you to be overcome
and for it to be said that no testimony had been made for
him. I wanted you to have proof."
Reports
with the same meaning as this account are numerous. The narration
of the report of the tablet (lawh) with the designation of
him, peace be upon him, for the Imamate has already been mentioned.
The rational proofs which have been mentioned earlier that
the Imam can only be the most outstanding person in merit
(al- afdal) also indicate his Imamate, peace be on him, because
of the clear demonstration of his outstanding merit in religious
knowledge (ilm), in asceticism, and in practice above all
his brothers, the members of his uncle's family and the rest
of the people of his time. The evidence for the invalidity
of the Imamate of those who were not protected (from error)
like the prophets (were protected) and the clear demonstration
of the lack of protection of those others who claimed the
Imamate during his lifetime, together with their deficiency
in (attaining) complete knowledge of religion, clearly indicates
his Imamate. For there must be an Imam who is protected (from
error) at all times as we have mentioned before. The people
tell of the clear signs from God which were performed by him,
peace be on him, which indicate his Imamate, his true right
and the invalidity of the statements of those who claimed
the Imamate on behalf of others.
Among
those is the report about him which the reporters of history
(naqalat al-athar) recount about him with al-Mansur. Al-Mansur
ordered Rabi to bring Abu Abd Allah Ja'far, peace be on him,
to him. He brought him. When al-Mansar saw him, he said: "May
God kill me, if I don't kill you. You are attempting to harm
my authority and you are seeking treachery against me."
"By
God, I am not," retorted Abu Abd Allah (Jafar), peace
be on him, "Nor do I want to. If you have been told so,
then it is by a liar. However, even if I had done so, then
Joseph was treated badly and he forgave, Job suffered tribulation
and he was patient, and Solomon received gifts and he gave
thanks. These men were prophets and your lineage goes back
to them."
"Indeed,"
replied al-Mansur, "Come up here." He went up and then
(al-Mansar) continued: "So-and-so has informed me about
what you have been saying."
"Bring
him, Commander of the faithful," he replied,."so that
he may confront me with that."
He
had the man whom he had mentioned brought and asked him:
"Did
you (really) hear what you reported about Jaefar, peace be
on him?"
"Yes,"
he replied.
"Make
him swear to that," said Abu Abd Allah (Jafar), peace
be on him.
"Do
you swear to that?" demanded al-Mansur.
"I
do," he replied.
"Say:
May I be outside God's power and strength and may I seek refuge
in my own power and strength (if I lie that) Jafars peace
be on him, did such and such and said such and such,"
said Abu Abd Allah (Jafar), peace be on him.
(The
man) paused for a moment and then made the oath. It was only
a moment later that his leg was struck.
"Drag
him by his leg and take him out, may God curse him," ordered
Abu Jafar (al-Mansur).
Al-Rabi
reported: When Jafar b. Muhammad, peace be on them, went in
to see al-Mansur, I saw his lips moving. As he moved them,
al- Mansur's anger (gradually) became quietened, so that when
he approached him, he was pleased with him. When Abu Abd Allah
(Jafar) peace be on him, came out from Abu Jafar (al-Mansur)
I followed him and said to him: "This man was the angriest
of men towards you. When you went in, you were moving your
lips as you went in and when you moved them his anger quietened.
With what (words) were you moving them?"
"The
prayer of my (great) grandfather, al-Husayn b. Ali peace be
on them," he replied.
"May
I be your ransom," I said, "what is this prayer?"
He
told him: "O my Provision in time of hardship, O my Help
in the face of disaster, guard me with Your Eye Which never
sleeps, surround me with Your impenetrable fortress."
He
told him: "O my Provision in time of hardship, O my Help
in the face of disaster, guard me with Your Eye Which never
sleeps, surround me with Your impenetrable fortress."
(At
that time) I said to Jafar b. Muhammad, peace be on them:
"Why
did you stop the slanderer from (merely) swearing by God?"
"I
was reluctant that God should see him praising His unity and
glorifying Him," he answered, "for then He would show forebearance
towards Him and delay his punishment. Therefore I made him
swear in the way you heard and God struck him fiercely."
It
is reported that Dawud b. Ali b. Abd Allah b. Abbas killed
al- Mualla b. Khunays, a retainer of Jafar b. Muhammad, peace
be on them, and took his property. Ja'far, peace be on him,
went to him while he was pulling at his cloak.
"You
have killed my retainer and taken his property," (Jafar)
said to him. "Do you know that a man may sleep when he
has suffered the loss of a child but he may not sleep when
he is at war? I will pray to God against you."
"Do
you threaten us with your prayer?" he retorted as if he
was ridiculing his words.
Abu
Abd Allah (Jafar), peace be on him, went back to his house
and spent the whole night standing and sitting. Then, at dawn
he was heard saying in his private prayer: "O Possessor
of mighty strength, O Possessor of fierce enmity, O Possessor
of power before which all Your creatures are humble, give
me satisfaction against this tyrant and take vengeance on
him for me." It was not an hour before voices were raised
in screeching (lamentation) and it was announced that Dawud
b. Ali had just died. '—
Abu
Basir reported: I visited Medina and I had a young slave-girl
with me. I had intercourse with her and then I went to the
baths. But I met some of our colleagues of the Shia who were
heading towards Jaefar b. Sadiq, peace be on them. I was afraid
that they would get there before me and I would miss visiting
him so I went with them to the house. When I stood before
Abu Abd Allah (Jafar), peace be on him, he looked at me and
said: "Abu Basir, don't you know that the houses of prophets
and the children of prophets are not suitable places to enter
for those who are ritually impure?"
I
was ashamed and said: "Son of the Apostle of God, I met
out companions and I was afraid that I would miss visiting
you with them. I will never do the same thing again,"
and I left.
There
are innumerable reports about him concerning signs and revealing
the unknown similar to those which we have mentioned, which
would take too long to recount.
He,
peace be on him, used to say: "Our knowledge is of what
will be (ghabir), of what is past (mazbur), of what is marked
in hearts (nakt fi al-qulub), and of what is tapped into ears
(naqr fi al-asma). We have the red case (jafr), the white
case, and the scroll of Fatima, peace be on her, and we have
(the document called) al-jami'a in which is everything the
people need."
He
was asked to explain these words and he said: "Ghabir is
knowledge of what will be; mazbur is knowledge of what was;
what is marked in the hearts (nakt fi al-qulub) is inspiration;
and what is tapped into the ears (naqr fi al-asma) are words
of angels; we hear their speech but we do not see their forms.
The red case (jafr) is a vessel in which are the weapons of
the Apostle of God, may God bless him and his family. It will
never leave us until the one (destined) among us members of
the House, to arise (qa'im), arises. The white case (jafr)
is a vessel in which are the Torah of Moses, the Gospels of
Jesus, the Psalms of David and the (other) Books of God. The
scroll of Fatima, peace be on her, has in it every event which
will take place and the names of all the rulers until the
(last) hour comes. (The document called) al-jami'a is a scroll
seventy yards long which the Apostle of God, may God bless
him and his family, dictated from his own mouth and Ali b.
Abi Talib, peace be on him, wrote in his own handwriting.
By God, in it is everything which people need until the end
of time, including even the blood-wit for wounding, and whether
a (full) flogging or half a flogging (is due).
He,
peace be on him, used to say: "My traditions are my father's
traditions; my father's traditions are my grandfather's traditions;
my grandfather's traditions are the traditions of Ali b. Abi
Talib, the Commander of the faithful; the traditions of Ali
the Commander of the faithful are the traditions of the Apostle
of God, may God bless him and his family; and the traditions
of the Apostle of God, may God bless him and his family, are
the word of God, the Mighty and High."
[Abu
Hamza al-Thumal; has reported on the authority of Abu 'Abd
Allah (Jafar), peace be on him:]
I
heard Abu Abd Allah Jafar say: "We have the tablets of
Moses, peace be on him, and we have the rod of Moses, peace
be on him. We are the heirs of prophets."
[Mu'awiya
b. Wahb. reported on the authority of Said al- Simman:]
I
was with Abu 'Abd Allah Ja'far b. Muhammad, peace be on them,
when two of the Zaydis visited him. They asked him: "Is
there among you an Imam whom it is a duty to obey?"
"No,"
he replied.
"Reliable
men have told us on your authority that you claim to be him,"
they retorted. They named some people and said: "These
are men of piety and distinction. They are among those who
do not lie."
Abu
'Abd Allah, peace be on him. became angry and said: "I
have not told them that."
When
the two men saw the anger on his face, they left.
"Do
you know those two?" he asked me.
"Yes,"
I replied, "they are from the people of our market.
They are Zaydis and they claim that Abd Allah b. al-Hasan
has the sword of Apostle of God, may God bless him and his
family."
"They
are liars, may God curse them," he said. "By God, Abd
Allah b. al-Hasan has never seen it either with both his eyes
or even with one of them. O God, not even his father has seen
it unless he saw it with Ali b. al-Husayn, peace be on him.
If they are truthful, (ask them) what is the sign in the hilt
and what is the mark on its blade. I have the sword of the
Apostle of God, may God bless him and his family. I have the
standard of the Apostle of God, may God bless him and his
family, and his breast-plate, his armour and his helmet. If
they are truthful (ask them) what is the mark on the breast-plate
of the Apostle of God, may God bless him and grant him peace.
Indeed the victorious standard of the Apostle of God is with
me, as are the tablets and rod of Moses. I have the ring of
Solomon, the son of David, and the tray on which Moses used
to offer sacrifice and I have (knowledge) of the (greatest)
name (of God) which when the Apostle of God, may God bless
him and his family, used to put it between the Muslims and
the polytheists no arrow from the polytheists could reach
the Muslims. I have the same as what the angels brought. We
have the weapons in the same way that the Banu Isra'll had
the ark of the covenant. Prophecy was brought to any house
in which the ark of the covenant was present; the Imamate
will be brought to which ever of us receives the weapons.
My father dressed in the armour of the Apostle of God, may
God bless him and grant him peace, and it made marks on the
ground. I put it on and it was (like) it was (for my father).
The one (destined to) rise up (qa'im) from among us, will
fill it (so that it fits him exactly) when he puts it on,
if God wishes."
['Abd
Al-Ala b. Ayan reported:]
I
heard Abu Abd Allah (Jafar) peace be on him, say: "I have
the weapons of the Apostle of God, may God bless him and his
family, but I will never fight with them." Then he said:
"These weapons are protected, for if they were entrusted
to the wickedest of God's creatures, he would become the best
of them." Then he said, "This matter (i.e. the carrying
of the Prophet's arms in war) belongs to the man, for whom
(horses') reins will be twisted (as men ride in support of
him). When God wills it, he will be brought out (into the
open). Then people will say: 'Who is this who has appeared?'
God will give him support (to have power) over his subjects."
[Umar
b. Aban reported:]
I
asked Abu Abd Allah (Jafar) peace be on him, about what the
people were saying that Umm Salama, the mercy of God be on
her, had been handed a sealed scroll. He said: "When the
Apostle of God, may God bless him and grant him peace, died,
tAh, peace be on him, inherited his knowledge, his weapons
and what there was. Then that went to al-Hasan, peace be on
him, then to al-Husayn, peace be on him."
"Did
it go to Ali b. al-Husayn, peace be on them, after that, then
to his son and now has it come to you?" I asked.
"Yes,"
he replied.
The
reports with the same meaning are numerous. However, those
of them which we have given will be sufficient to indicate
what we are trying to show, God willing.
An
Extract from the Accounts of Abu Abd Allah Ja'far b. Muhammad
al-Sadiq, Peace be on them, and from his Words.
I
found (this written) in the handwriting of Abu al-Faraj 'Ali
b. al- Husayn b. Muhammad al-Isfahani, in the text of his
book known as Maqatil al-Talibiyin (the Martyrdoms of (the
family of Abu) Talib):
Umar
b. Abd Allah al-Atki informed me
Umar
b. Shabba told us: Al-Fadl b. 'Abd al-Rahman al-Hashim and
Ibn Daja told us:
Abu
Zayd (Umar b. Shabba) (also) told me: Abd al-Rahman b. b.
Amr b. Jabala told me: Al-Hasan b. Ayyub, retainer (mawla)
of the Banu Numayr told me, on the authority of Abd al-Ala
b. Ayan:
Ibrahlm
b. Muhammad b. Abl al-Kiram al-Jafari told me, on the authority
of his father:
Muhammad
b. Yahya told me on the authority of Abd Allah b. Yahya:
Isa
b. Abd Allah b. Muhammad b. Umar b. Ali told me on the authority
of his father:
The
account of some of them has been introduced into the account
of the rest (as follows):
A
group of the Banu Hashim met at al-Abwa'. Among them were
Ibrahim b. Muhammad b. Ali b. Abd Allah b. Abbas and Abu Jafar
al-Mansur, Salih. b. Ali, Abd Allah b. al-Hasan, with his
two sons Muhammad and Ibrahim, and Muhammad b. Abd Allah b.
'Amr b. 'Uthman.
Salih.
b. Ali addressed (them): "You know that you are the ones
towards whom the people turn their eyes and that God has brought
you together in this place. Therefore give a pledge of allegiance
to one from among you, which you should give to him with (genuine
dedication) of yourselves. Bind yourselves so that God may
bring victory, for He is the best bringer of victory."
'Abd
Allah b. al-Hasan praised and glorified God. Then he said:
"You know that this son of mine is the Mahdi Therefore
come, let us pledge allegiance to him."
"Why
are you deceiving yourselves?" demanded Abu- Ja'far. "By
God you know that there is no one else to whom the people
would take greater strides nor greater speed to answer than
they would to this man," meaning Muhammad b. Abd Allah.
"True,"
they said, "this is he whom we acknowledge." So they
all pledged allegiance to Muhammad and took him by the hand.
[Isa
reported:]
Abd
Allah b. al-Hasan's messenger came to my father, saying:
"Come
to us. We are gathered for an (important) affair." He
sent (information) about that to Jafar b. Muhammad, peace
be on them.
[Others,
not including Isa, reported:]
Abd
Allah b. al-Hasan said to those present: "You don't want
Jafar (here), for we fear that he would cause dissension among
you in your affair."
[Isa
b. Abd Allah b. Muhammad reported:]
My
father sent me to see what they had gathered for. So I went
to them. (Ja'far b. Muhammad, peace be on them, sent Muhammad
b. Abd Allah al-Arqat b. Ali b. al-Husayn. We went to them).
Muhammad b. Abd Allah (b. al-Hasan) was praying on a folded
carpet from a saddle.
"My
father has sent me to you," I told them, "to ask you
why you have gathered together."
"We
have gathered (here), " Abd Allah b. al-Hasan said,"to
pledge allegiance to the Mahdi, Muhammad b. Abd Allah."
[They
(i.e. the other authorities) reported:]
Jafar
b. Muhammad, peace be on them, arrived and 'Abd Allah b. al-Hasan
made room for him beside him. He repeated what he had said
before. However, Ja'far said: "Don't do it. The time (for
the Mahdi) has not yet arrived. If you - meaning Abd Allah
- consider that this son of yours is the Mahdi, he is not,
nor is this the time for him (i.e. the Mahdi). Because you
are one of our most revered elders we will not forsake you
in favour of pledging allegiance to your son, even if you
only intend him to rise in anger in God's cause, to command
the good and prohibit the evil."
Abd
Allah became angry and said: "I know that (the facts are)
the opposite of what you are saying. By God, God has not acquainted
you with (knowledge of) His unseen world. Rather it is envy
for my son which prompts you to this (attitude)."
"By
God, it is not that which prompts me," replied (Jafar)
"but this man, his brothers and his sons." Then he
tapped with his hand on the back of Abu al-Abbas and he tapped
with his hand on the shoulder of Abd Allah b. al-Hasan.
"By
God, it (i.e. the caliphate) is not for you nor for your two
sons," (Jafar) told him, "but it is for them (i.e.
the Abbasids). Your two sons will be killed." He got up
and leaning on the arm of Abd al-Aziz b. Imran al-Zuhri, he
continued, "Do you see the owner of the yellow cloak?"
- meaning Abu Ja'far (al-Mansar).
"Yes,"
he replied.
"By
God," he said, "we have a foreboding that he (Abu Jafar)
will kill him (Muhammad b. Abd Allah)."
"Will
he kill Muhammad?" Abd al-Aziz asked him.
"Yes,"
he replied.
[Abd
al-Aziz reported:]
I
said to myself, "By the Lord of the Kaba, he is envious
of him." But then, by God, I had not left this world before
I saw him (Abu Jafar) kill both of them.
When
Jafar said that, the people arose and separated. Abd al- Samad
and Abu Jafar followed him and asked him, "Abu- Abd Allah,
do you really say this?"
"Yes,"
he replied, "by God I say it and I know it."
[Abu
al-Faraj reported: Ali b. al-Abbas al-Maqani told me: Bakkar
b. Ahmad informed us: al-Hasan b. al-Husayn, on the authority
of Anbasa b. Bijad' al-Abid told us:]
Whenever
Jafar b. Muhammad, peace be on them, saw Muhammad b. Abd Allah
b. al-Hasan, his eyes would flow with tears and then he would
say: "(I would sacrifice) my life for him. The people say
that (he is the Mahdl while) he is to be killed. He is not
in the Book of Ali, peace be on him, as one of the caliphs
of this community."
This
(second report) is a famous report just like the one before
it. The historians do not differ on the accuracy of both of
them. They both (clearly) give evidence for the Imamate of
Abu 'Abd Allah al- Sadiq, peace be on him. Indeed miracles
were performed by him in order that he might make known things
which were unknown and show the existence of things before
they came to be, just as prophets, peace be on them, used
to make (such things) known. That was one of their signs and
indications of their prophethood, and their truthfulness (in
speaking) about their Lord, the Mighty and Exalted.
[Abu
al-Qasim Ja'far b. Muhammad b. Qulawayh told me on the authority
of Muhammad b. Ya'qub al-Kulayni, on the authority of 'Ali
b. Ibrahim b. Hashim, on the authority of his father, on the
authority of a group of his men (i.e. teachers), on the authority
of Yunus b. Yaqub, who said:]
I
was with Abu Abd Allah (Ja'far), peace be on him, when a Syrian
came to him. He said: "I am a scholar (sahib) of theology,
jurisprudence, and the laws of inheritance. I have come to
dispute with your followers."
"Is
your theology from the Apostle of God, may god bless him and
his family, or from yourself?" Abu 'Abd Allah (Ja'far),
peace be on him, asked.
"Partly
from the Apostle of God, may God bless him and his family,
and partly from myself," replied (the other man).
"Then
are you a partner of the Apostle of God, may God bless him
and his family?" enquired Abu 'Abd Allah (Ja'far).
"No,"
he answered.
"Have
you heard inspiration (wahy) (direct) from God?"
"No,"
he replied.
"Is
obedience to you required as is obedience to the Apostle of
God, may God bless him and his family?"
"No,"
was the answer.
Abu
'Abd Allah, peace be on him, turned to me and said: "Yunus
b. Ya'qub, this man has contradicted himself before he has
begun (the real business) of discussing." Then he said:
"Yunus. if you were good at theology, you should speak
to him."
[Yunus
remarked:]
How
sad it was, for I said to him: "May I be your ransom, I
have heard you forbid (taking part in) theology and say: Woe
to the theologians who say that this follows and that this
does not follow; that this is entailed and that this is not
entailed; that this we accept as rational and this we do not
accept as rational."
"I
only said," Abu 'Abd Allah, peace be on him remarked,
"woe to them, if they abandon what I say and adopt their
own wishes." Then he told me: "Go out to the door and
look for any of the theologians you can see, and bring them
in."
I
went out and found Humran b. A'yan who was good at theology,
and Muhammad b. al-Numan al-Ahwal, who was a theologian, and
Hisham b. Salim and Qays b. al-Masir, both theologians. I
brought them (all) in to him. After he had settled us in the
assembly - we were in the tent of Abu Abd Allah at the top
of a mountain on the edge of the sanctuary (of Mecca) (haram)
and that was (a few) days before the days of the pilgrimage,
Abu Abd Allah, peace be on him, put his head out of the tent.
There appeared at that moment a camel dashing along. He cried
out: "Hisham, by the Lord of the Kaba!"
We
thought that it was Hisham, one of the sons of Aqil, who loved
him greatly. But behold, it was Hisham b. al-Hakam who came.
He still only had the first traces of his beard on his face.
All of us there were older than him. Abu Abd Allah, peace
be on him, made room for him and said: "(Here is) one who
helps us with his heart, his tongue and his hand."
He
told Humran: "Debate with the man" - meaning the Syrian.
Humran debated with him and overcame him. Then (Abu Abd Allah)
said: "O my Taq, debate with him." So Muhammad b. al-Numan
debated with him and overcame him. Next he said: "Hisham
b. Salim, debate with him." So they both argued together.
He then told Qays b. Masir to debate with him and he did so.
Abu Abd Allah, peace be on him, began to smile at their discussion
as the Syrian sought to escape in front of him. He told the
Syrian:
"Debate
with this lad" - meaning Hisham b. al-Hakam.
"Yes,"
replied the Syrian and said, "lad, ask me about the
Imamate of this man" - meaning Abu Abd Allah, peace be
on him.
Hisham
was so angry that he trembled but then he said: "Fellow,
does your Lord look after His creatures or do they look after
themselves?"
"Indeed,"
replied the Syrian, "my Lord looks atter His creatures."
"What
does He do to look after their religion for them?"
"He
gives them duties and provides them with proof (hujja) and
evidence for the things which He has required of them. He
removes any weaknesses they might have about that."
"What
is the evidence which He has established for them?" Hisham
asked him.
"It
is the Apostle of God, may God bless him and his family,"
the Syrian answered.
"What
after the Apostle of God?" enquired Hisham.
"The
Book and the sunna."
"Do
the Book and the sunna benefit us today in our differences
so that the differences are removed from us and we are able
to agree?" asked Hisham.
"Yes,"
replied the Syrian.
"Then
do we differ from you," retorted Hisham, "so that you
have come to us from Syria to dispute with us? You claim that
personal judgement (ra'y) is the method (of establishing the
practices) of religion while you acknowledge that personal
judgement does not bring people who differ together in one
doctrine."
The
Syrian was silent as if he was thinking. So Abu Abd Allah,
peace be on him, asked him: "Why aren't you debating?"
"If
I say: We do not differ," he answered, "I would be
(merely) being obstinate. If I say: the Book and the sunna
remove our differences, I would be wrong because the two bear
(different) interpretations. However, I could use the same
argument against him."
"Ask
him, then," Abu Abd Allah, peace be on him, told him.
"You
will find him competent."
So
the Syrian asked Hisham: "Who looks after His creatures,
their Lord or themselves?"
"Indeed
their Lord looks after them," replied Hisham.
"Does
He establish for them someone who will harmonise their doctrine,
remove their differences and explain the true from the false
to them?" demanded the Syrian.
"Yes,"
replied Hisham.
"Who
is that?" asked the Syrian.
"At
the beginning of the sharia, it was the Apostle of God but
after the Prophet, blessings and peace be on him, it was someone
else."
"Who
is it other than the Prophet, may God bless him and his family,
who takes his place (al-qa'im maqamahu) in being His (i.e.
God's) proof?" the Syrian asked.
"Now
or before?" Hisham responded.
"At
the present time," answered the Syrian.
"This
man who is sitting here," said Hisham - meaning Abu 'Abd
Allah. "He is the one to whom you travelled; he is the
one who tells us about heaven and is the inheritor from father
and grandfather."
"How
would I have knowledge of (the truth of) that?" asked
the Syrian.
"Ask
him about anything which occurs to you," Hisham told him.
"You
have stopped (any) excuse of mine but I do have a question,"
the Syrian declared.
"I
will dispense with your questioning," Abu Abd Allah, peace
be on him, told him. "I will tell you about your travel
and your journey. You left on such and such a day. Your road
was such and such. You passed so and so and such and such
(a man) passed you."
Every
time he told him anything about his affair, the Syrian would
say: "True, by God." Then the Syrian said to him: "At
this moment I have submitted (aslamtu) to God."
"Rather
at this moment you have faith famanta) in God," said Abu
Abd Allah, peace be on him. "Islam (submission to God)
is before lman (faith in God). On the basis of the former
(Islam) they arrange inheritance and marriage: on the basis
of faith (iman) men are rewarded."
"True,"
replied the Syrian, "at this moment I testify that there
is no god but God, that Muhammad is the Apostle of God, may
God bless him and his family, and that you are the (present)
trustee (wasz) (of God) among the trustees (appointed by God)."
Abu
Abd Allah approached Humran and said: "Humran, conduct
theology on the basis of traditional knowledge (athar) and
you will be correct." He turned to Hisham b. Salim and
said: "You want to use traditional knowledge but you don't
know it" Then he turned to al-Ahwal and said: "You
are a man who uses qiyas and is evasive, a man who refutes
falsehood with falsehood, even though your false argument
is stronger." Then he turned to Qays b. Masir and said:
"When you debate, the nearer you are to truth and traditions
(khabar) on the authority of the Prophet, the further you
are from it: you mix up the truth with what is false. A little
truth suffices for much which is false. You and al-Ahwal are
skilful (verbal) gymnasts."
[Yunus
b. Ya'qub remarked:] By God, I thought he would say to
Hisham something close to what he had said to them.
Then
he said: "Hisham, you are hardly likely to fall, for you
tuck in your legs (like a bird): when you are about to fall
to the earth, you fly. Therefore a person like you should
debate with the people. Guard against slipping and intercession
will be behind you."
[Abu
al-Qasim Jafar b. Muhammad al-Qummi informed me on the authority
of Muhammad b. Yaqub al-Kulayni, on the authority of Ali b.
Ibrahim b. Hashim, on the authority of his father on the authority
of 'Abbas Amr al-Faqimi:]
Ibn
Abi al-Awja', Ibn Talut, Ibn al-Ama and Ibn al-Muqaffa with
a group of Zindiqs were gathered in the Sacred Mosque during
the season of the pilgrimage. Abu Abd Allah Jacfar b. Muhammad,
peace be on them, was there giving legal decisions to the
people, explaining the Qur'an to them and answering their
questions with arguments and proofs. The group said to Ibn
Ab, al-Awja': "Can you induce this man sitting here to
make a mistake and question him about what would disgrace
him in front of those who are gathered around him? For you
can see the fascination of the people for him; he is (supposed
to be) the great scholar of his time."
"Yes,"
replied Ibn Abi al-Awja'. He went forward and the people moved
aside. He said: "Abu Abd Allah, gatherings for discussion
are things to be taken care of. Everyone who has a cough must
cough, so will you permit me to ask a question?"
"Ask,
if you want to," Abu Abd Allah, peace be on him, answered
him.
The
Ibn Abi al-Awja' asked him: "For how long will you tread
on this threshing-floor and go round this stone? For how long
will you worship this house made of bricks and mud and amble
around it like a camel when it is scared? Whoever thinks about
this and considers it, realises that it is the action of an
unintelligent and unthinking man, so explain (it) as you are
the principal exponent (lit. head and hump) of this affair,
and your father was its founder and suppport."
"Those
whom God leads astray and whose hearts He blinds find the
truth unwholesome and will never taste its sweetness,"
retorted al-Sadiq, peace be on him. "The devil is the friend
and lord of such a man. He will lead him to the watering places
of destruction and never let him come from them. This is a
house where God's creatures seek to worship Him in order that
their obedience in coming to it may be well known. Therefore
He has urged them to magnify it and to visit it and He has
made it the place of His prophets and the direcw prayer for
those who pray to Him. It is a part of Paradise and a path
which leads to His forgiveness. It is set up at the seat of
perfection and at the meeting point of majesty and glory.
God created it over two thousand years before the earth was
laid out. The most worthy to be obeyed in what He orders and
to have His prohibitions refrained from is God the Creator
of souls and forms."
"You
have only spoken and referred (me) to someone who is not present,
Abu Abd Allah," retorted Ibn Abi al-Awja.
"Shame
on you," retorted al-Sadiq, peace be on him. "How could
One Who is present with His creatures and closer to them than
a vein in the neck, Who hears their words and knows their
secrets, be someone who is not present."
"Is
He in every place or isn't He?" asked Ibn Abl al-CAwja'.
"If He is in Heaven, how can He be on earth? And if He
is on earth, how can He be in Heaven?"
"You
described something which is created," retorted Abu Abd
Allah, peace be on him, "which when it moves from one place,
and when another place is occupied by it, and when (the former)
place is without it, then, in the place which it has come
to, it does not know what happens in the place in which it
was. As for God, the Mighty, the Dignified, the Ruler, the
Judge,) there is no place without Him and no place occupied
by Him. He is not nearer to one place than He is to another.
In that way the traces of Himself (which He gives) bear witness
to Him and His actions give evidence for Him. He whom He has
sent with precise signs and clear proofs, Muhammad, may God
bless him and his family, has brought us this (form of) worship.
If you have any doubts about any of His commandments, ask
about it and I will explain it to you."
Ibn
Abi al-Awja' became stupified and did not know what to say.
He left his presence and said to his companions: "I asked
you to find me some wine (to enjoy myself with) and you threw
me on to a burning coal."
"Shut
up," they told him. "You have disgraced us by your
bewilderment. We saw no one today more humiliated than you
in his discussion."
"Are
you saying this to me?" he replied. "He is (only) the
son of a man who shaved the heads of those whom you see."
He indicated with his hand towards the people gathered for
the pilgrimage.
[It
is reported:]
One
day Abu Shakir al-Daysam stood in a discussion group of Abu
Abd Allah, peace be on him, and said: "You are one of the
shining stars, your fathers were wonderful full moons and
your mothers were graceful discreet women. Your lineage is
the most noble of lineages. When learned men are mentioned,
it is for you that the little finger is bent (i.e. he is the
first to be counted). So tell me, O bountiful sea, what is
the evidence for the creation of the world?"
"The
easiest evidence for that is what I will show you (now),"
answered Abu- Abd Allah, peace be on him. Then he called for
an egg and put it in the palm of his hand. "This is a compact
protective container; inside it is the thin (substance of
an) egg which is surrounded by what could be compared with
fluid silver and melted gold. Do you doubt that?"
"There
can be no doubt about that," replied Abu Shakir.
"Then
it splits open showing a form like (for example) a peacock,"
continued Abu 'Abd Allah, peace be on him. "Has anything
entered into it other than what you knew (to be there already)?"
"No,"
he replied.
"This
is the evidence for the creation of the world."
"You
have explained, Abu Abd Allah," he said, "and you have
made it clear. You have spoken and brought improvement. You
have described it and spoken concisely. You knew that we would
not accept anything which we could not realise with our eyes,
or hear with our ears, or taste with our mouths, or smell
with our noses, or touch with our skin."
"You
have mentioned the five senses," said Abu Abd Allah, peace
be on him, "but they will not bring any benefit in rational
deduction except as evidence, just as darkness cannot be removed
without light."
He,
peace be on him, means by that that the senses without reason
will never lead to the understanding of things which are not
present, and that what he had shown with regard to the creation
of the form was a concept whose recognition (ilm) was based
on sense- perception.
(The
following is an example) of what has been recorded on his
authority, peace be on him, concerning the necessity of knowing
God the Most High and His religion.
He
said: "I have found the knowledge of all the people (encompassed)
by four things:
You should know your Lord;
You
should know what He has done for you;
You
should know what He wants from you;
You
should know what would make you abandon your religion.
These
four divisions include (all) the requirement of things which
should be known because the first thing that a man should
do is to know his Lord, may His Majesty be exalted. When he
knows that he has a Lord, it is necessary that he must know
what He has done for him. When he knows what He has done for
him, he knows of His blessings. When he knows of His blessings,it
is necessary that he should thank Him. When he wants to carry
out his thanks, he must know what He wants so that he may
obey Him in his actions. Since obedience to Him is necessary,
it will be necessary for him to know what would cause him
to abandon his religion so that he might avoid it, and in
that way keep pure his obedience to his Lord and his thanks
for His blessings.
(This
is an example) of what was recorded on his authority peace
be on him, concerning the unity of God and the denial of anthropomorphism.
He
said to Hisham b. al-Hakam: "God, the Exalted, should not
be compared to anything, nor should anything be compared to
Him. Whatever comes to the imagination is other than God."
(The
following is an example) of what was recorded on his authority,
peace be on him, concerning his words on justice: He said
to Zurara b. Ayan: "Zurara, shall I give you a summary
of (the doctrine of) decree (qada) and destiny (qadar)?"
"Yes,
may I be your ransom," replied Zurara.
"When
it is the Day of Resurrection and God has gathered His creatures
together, He will ask them about what He enjoined upon them
but He will not ask them about what He had decreed for them."
(This
is an example) of what was recorded on his authority concerning
wisdom and exhortation.
He
said: "Not everyone who intends something is able to do
it. Not everyone who is able to do something will be granted
success in it. Not everyone who is granted success in something
will do it in the right place. When intention, ability, success
and correctness come together, there happiness is perfected."
(This
is an example) of what has been recorded of him, peace be
upon him, urging consideration of God's religion and the acquisition
of knowledge about the friends (awliya) of God.
He
said: "Give close consideration to things which you cannot
afford to ignore, be true to yourselves and fight against
your (inclinations) so that you may find out those things
which it is inexcusable not to know. These are the basic elements
of God's religion. If a man ignores them, he will gain no
benefit (no matter) how intense is his striving in pursuit
of the outward form of worship. On the other hand, no harm
will come to a man who knows them and abides by them with
moderation (in his behaviour). There is no way for anyone
except through the help of God, the Mighty and High."
(The
following is an example) of what has been recorded on his
authority, peace be on him, urging repentance:
He
said: "To delay repentance is to be heedless; to lengthen
the time of putting off (religious duties) is (to create)
confusion (in one's mind); to attempt to justify oneself before
God is (to bring about one's own) destruction; persisting
in sin makes (a person) feel secure from God's devising. Only
people who are lost feel secure from God's devising. [VII
99]"
The
reports about what has been recorded on his authority, peace
be on him, concerning knowledge, wisdom, asceticism, exhortation
and all the branches of learning are too numerous to be enumerated
in one speech or to be included in one book. What we have
set out is enough for the purpose of what we intended. God
is the bringer of success for what is right.
(The
poet) al-Sayyid Ismail b. Muhammad al-Himyari, may God have
mercy on him, withdrew from the doctrine of the Kaysaniyya
which he had professed, when he was informed of Abu CAbd Allah's
peace be on him, denial of this doctrine and of his prayers
for him and he (returned) to the system of the Imamate. He
said of him, peace be on him:
O
(you) who ride a tall, strong camel to Medina, on which (you)
cross every broad land,
If
God guides you, you will look to Jaffer. So speak to the friend
(wali) of God, the son of the man who was well-educated (in
the learning of God):
Friend
of God and son of the friend of God, I repent before the Merciful
and then I return
To
you from the wrong which I used to hold while I was constantly
striving against all who obviously expressed (the truth).
Yet
my words concerning the son of Khawla were not meant to be
rebellious against the offspring of the celebrated one.
Rather
they were spoken on the authority of the trustee (wasi) of
Muhammad - and he was not a liar when we said
That
the master of the affair (wali al-amr) would disappear without
being seen for years like a man afraid.
The
possessions of the missing man will be distributed as if his
concealment were in the high heaven.
Say,
"No," and the truth is what you say, and what you say is final
without me adding any fanaticism.
I
testify to my Lord that your words are a proof (hujja) to
all creatures, whether obedient or sinful,
That
the master of the affair (wali al-amr) and the one who will
arise (al-qa'im) whom my soul (now) looks towards and who
excites it to joy,
That
He will have concealment (Ghayba) where it is inevitable that
he will conceal himself. May God bless him as one who will
be concealed.
He
will delay for a time then his authority will come to dominate
and he will fill all (the lands) from East to West with Justice.
In
this poetry there is clear evidence for the withdrawal of
al-Sayyid, may God have mercy on him, from the beliefs of
the Kaysaniyya, and for his holding the doctrine of the Imamate
of al-Sadiq, peace be on him. (There is also evidence) for
the existence of a clear call on the part of the Shia during
the time of Abu 'Abd Allah to (accept) his Imamate and to
hold the doctrine of the concealment of the leader (for the
rest) of time (saihib al-zaman), the blessings and peace of
God be on him. This (poem) is a clear indication of (al-Sayyid's
belief) and it is a clear statement of (the doctrine of) the
Twelver-Imamites (Imamiyya Ithna Ashariyya).