is always saying what does not agree with the truth. But, still, God may pronounce that
one lie is a sin, and one not. Muslim ethics, it is true, have never branded lying as
sinful in itself.
For the Shi'ites and their doctrine of an infallible Imam, Ibn Hazm cannot find strong
enough expressions of contempt.
In Ibn Hazm's time, and he praises God for it, there were but few Ash'arites in the
West. Theology generally did not find many students. So things went on till long after his
death. To this fiery controversialist the worst blow of all would have been if he could
have known that the men who were at last to bring his system, in part and for a time, into
public acceptance and repute, were also to complete the conquest of Islam for the
Ash'arite school. That was still far in the future, and we must return to the persecution.
The accounts of the persecution which set in are singularly conflicting. Some assign it
to Hanbalite influence; others tell of a Mu'tazilite wazir of Tughril Beg. That the
traditionalist party was the main force in it seems certain. In all probability, however,
all the other anti-Ash'arite sects, from the Mu'tazilites on, took their own parts. The
Ash'arite party represented a via media and would be set upon with zest by all the
extremes. They were solemnly cursed from the pulpits and, what added peculiar insult to
it, the Rafidites, an extreme Kharijite sect, were joined in the same anathema. Al-Juwayni,
the greatest theologian of the time, fled to the Hijaz and gained the title of Imam of the
two Harams
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