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(d. A.D. 1204) in his Moreh Nebuchim takes essentially the same position.
Of his views on dogmatic theology little need be said. Among modern theologians he
stands nearest to Ritschl. Like Ritschl, he rejects metaphysics and opposes the influence
of any philosophical system on his theology. The basis must be religious phenomena, simply
accepted and correlated. Like Ritschl, too, he was emphatically ethical in his attitude;
he lays stress on the value for us of a doctrine or a piece of knowledge. Our
source of religious knowledge is revelation, and beyond a certain point we must not
inquire as to the how and why of that knowledge. To do so would be to enter metaphysics
and the danger-zone where we lose touch with vital realities and begin to use mere words.
On one point he goes beyond Ritschl, and, on another, Ritschl goes beyond him. In his
devotion to the facts of the religious consciousness Ritschl did not go so far as to
become a mystic, indeed rejected mysticism with a conscious indignation; al-Ghazzali did
become a mystic. But, on the other hand, Ritschl refused absolutely to enter upon the
nature of God or upon the divine attributesall that was mere metaphysics and
heathenism; al-Ghazzali did not so far emancipate himself, and his only advance was to
keep the doctrine on a strictly Qur'anic basis. So it stands written; not, so man is
compelled by the nature of things to think.
His work and influence in Islam may be summed up briefly as follows: First, he
led men back from scholastic labors upon theological dogmas to living contact with, study
and exegesis of, the Word and the
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traditions. What happened in Europe when the yoke of medieval scholasticism was broken,
what is happening with us now, happened in Islam under his leadership. He could be a
scholastic with scholastics, but to state and develop theological doctrine on a Scriptural
basis was emphatically his method. We should now call him a Biblical theologian.
Second, in his teaching and moral exhortations he reintroduced the element of fear.
In the Munqidh and elsewhere he lays stress on the need of such a striking of
terror into the minds of the people. His was no time, he held, for smooth, hopeful
preaching; no time for optimism either as to this world or the next. The horrors of hell
must be kept before men; he had felt them himself. We have seen how otherworldly was his
own attitude, and how the fear of the Fire had been the supreme motive in his conversion;
and so he treated others.
Third, it was by his influence that Sufiism attained a firm and assured position in
the Church of Islam.
Fourth, he brought philosophy and philosophical theology within the range of the
ordinary mind. Before his time they had been surrounded, more or less, with mystery. The
language used was strange; its vocabulary and terms of art had to be specially learned. No
mere reader of the Arabic of the street or the mosque or the school could understand at
once a philosophical tractate. Greek ideas and expressions, passing through a Syriac
version into Arabic, had strained to the uttermost the resources of even that most
flexible tongue. A long training had
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