Jahmiyya

(Redirected from Jahmi)

Jahmi (Arabic: جهمي, romanizedJahmī) or Jahmiyya was a term used by Islamic scholars to refer to the followers of the doctrines of Jahm bin Safwan (d. 128/746).[1] Jahm and those associated with his school of thought appear as prominent heretics in Sunni heresiography, and to be called one of the Jahmiyya came to be used as an insult or polemic between some Sunni scholars.[2] The Jahmiyya themselves came to be remembered for spreading the doctrine of nafy or taʿṭīl, which refers to the denial of the attributes of God (among other criticisms).[3]

The views of Jahm, his followers, and those who were labelled by others as Jahmiyya, are rejected in all surviving sources[4] and across the spectrum of views in medieval Muslim theology, from the Hanbalites to the Mutazilites. At the same time, Jahm was also widely acknowledged as the figure who introduced the principle of intellect (ʿaql) into Islamic theological discourse, and the use of reasoning to derive opinions from propositions (raʾy).[5]

Main figures

The eponymous figure behind the Jahmi was Jahm ibn Safwan. Jahm was born in Samarkand. He lived and taught in northeastern Iran and it is possibly that he never left the region of Greater Khorasan. The second figure most commonly associated with the Jami was the Kufan Ḍirār ibn ʻAmr. However, despite his association with the Jahmiyya, he may have never met Jahm and even criticized him in one of his works. No writings from either authors have survived, and information about their views relies on short summaries produced by other authors, primarily their opponents.[6]

Another famous preacher of Jahmitic views was Bishr al-Marisi (d. 833). At the beginning of the 9th century, Jahmites acted in Nehavend, but some of them were forced to accept the teachings of the Asharites.[7]

Beliefs

Jahm's basic physics and ontology were predicated on his distinction between the existent corporeal and incorporeal. The incorporeal refers to something that is non-body, or is non-existent. God, along with agency and causality, is among the existent incorporeal. According to Jahm, God, who is uncaused and necessarily exists, is the only immaterial existent and immaterial cause. Furthermore, composite immaterial things do not exist. Jahm and the Jahmites also argued that God was not a 'thing'; this was not to say that God did not exist but instead that God cannot be logically predicated on anything else or be described by a reference to a set of properties.[8]

Some heresiographers also described the Jahmiyya as extreme Jabriyya, meaning that they believed in predestination and rejected human free will. The Jahmiyya believed this because they thought that human free will would entail a limitation on God's power, and so must be rejected.[9]

Criticism

Since the advent of Jahmism, this tendency has been the subject of criticism by many prominent representatives of Sunni Islam. Some of the most prominent critics included Ahmad ibn Hanbal, Ibn Qutayba, Ibn Qayyim al-Jawziyya, Abu Hamid al-Ghazali, Ibn Hajar al-Asqalani and Ibn Taymiyyah. Yasir Qadhi wrote a lengthy dissertation (in Arabic) entitled "The Theological Opinions of Jahm b. Ṣafwān and Their Effects on the Other Islamic Sects."[10] Ibn Taymiyyah criticized Kalām as having adopted doctrines of Jahmism and instead advocated for a theology based on his the idea of a return to the time of Muhammad's salafs.[11]

Ibn al-Mubarak criticized the Jahmiyya rejection of free will in his poetry. In particular, he argued that this rejection would imply that evil figures could not be blamed for the actions that they performed. Therefore, the actions of Pharaoh and Haman could not really be imputed onto them. Not only this, but their moral character and actions would have to be placed alongside figures such as Moses, since all of their actions have been predetermined. In some famous lines of his poetry, Ibn al-Mubarak derived the name Jahmiyya from the word jahannam (hell). His anti-Jahmite poetry was cited by al-Bukhari.[9]

Derogatory term

The label "Jahmiyya" came to be used as an insult in later periods due to its negative connotations. For example, Ibn Taymiyya used it to describe the Ash'ari mutakallimūn (a scholar of kalam) of his time.[12] In later periods, Wahhabis also adopted the term as a derogatory reference to practitioners of kalam theology, in order to argue that they, like Jahm, denied God's attributes. In particular, this accusation was levelled by early Wahhabis against Maliki Muslims living in eastern Arabia (sometimes singled out as being located in Dubai and Abu Dhabi), who they believed to interpret the attributes of God in a purely metaphorical sense.[13]

References

Citations

References