II. THE CHARACTER AND ATTRIBUTES OF GOD

WE must now pass on to consider what the Qur'an teaches concerning the character and attributes of God.

We have already seen that according to the Qur'an the Nature of God is incomprehensible by man, though man may know something of God because He has chosen to reveal Himself. When we come now to consider what the Qur'an has to say of the divine character and attributes we shall find that it takes up the same position. Man cannot understand these fully, but he can nevertheless know something of the divine character and attributes, because God has declared these also, in part, to mankind.

1. The first attribute which we shall consider is His Unchangeableness. All else shall pass away, but He shall remain, for He is the Steadfastly-existing (AlQayyim). God's continued existence means necessarily that He has not only unbroken and everlasting continuity of Being, but that He continues in the same condition. He remains unchangeable in His Being, He remains that which He always was. How this unchangeableness of God determines His attitude to man and to His own character in its relation to right and wrong we shall see later.

2. God is Omnipresent. He sits on His throne, it is true, in majesty above and beyond man; but He is not

THE CHARACTER AND ATTRIBUTES OF GOD 29

therefore a God afar off. While there is not a little in the Qur'an concerning the Throne of God, which leads one to think that Muhammad, at times at least, pictured God as actually seated on a Throne, and while the commentators tell us how the throne of God is one of His creations though the manner of His sitting thereon is not to be enquired into, there can be little doubt but that, for the most part, God's 'sitting on His throne' is to be regarded as a figure of speech whereby is expressed His ruling and sustaining the world which He has created. 'Your Lord is God, who in six days created the Heavens and the Earth, and then mounted the throne.' 1 The verse draws a distinction between the work of creation and the subsequent ruling by God of this world which he made. This ruling of the world is so far above the conceptions which man can have of what it is to govern a world, that the throne itself is spoken of in terms which are intended to convey to man's mind the greatness of Him who rules, and the incomprehensible manner of His government. God Himself is frequently spoken of as 'the possessor of the glorious throne' 2 'the Lord of the Throne' 3 'Lord of the stately Throne' 4 'of the Throne possessed'. 5

That by 'the Throne of God' we are to understand the divine rule and government of the world, is further borne out by the verse which speaks of the universality of God's rule, by stating that 'His Throne reacheth over the Heavens and the Earth'. 6


1 Suratu'l-A'raf (vii) 52; cf. x. 3; xiii. 2; xx. 4; xxv. 60; xxxii. 3.
2 ix. 130; cf. xxiii. 88; xxvii. 26; xliii. 82; lxxxi. 20; lxxxv. 15.
3 xxi. 22.    4 xxiii. 17.    5 xl. 15.    6 ii. 256.