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In an age of
bewildering spiritual and intellectual confusion, creed has never been more
important. Every Muslim is obliged to learn it and is promised protection from
deviant beliefs by following the unassailable texts of the scholastic community
of Islam. Of them all, The Creed of Imam al-Tahawi is the simplest, the most
effective, and the least controversial. It serves as a sound basis for Islamic
faith and is the most reliable of the early articulations of Muslim belief.
Because Imam al-Tahawi avoided involuted theological issues and systematically
presented the most fundamental aspects of dogmatic theology, his creed has
achieved an unusual degree of acceptance in the Muslim milieu. In the thousand
years since it was written, many great Muslim scholars have penned commentaries
on it. It is still studied throughout the Muslim world and increasingly in the
West.
About the Author:
Born in Taha in Upper Egypt in 239 AH/853 CE, Imam Abu Ja’far
al-Tahawi lived until 321/933. He came from a family where intellectualism and
aristocracy, as well as piety and passion were the hallmarks. He mastered both
the primary sources of Islam and the ancillary sciences necessary for
independent reasoning. A first-rate jurist, a brilliant grammarian and
philologist, and an erudite man of letters, Imam al-Tahawi is best known for his
eponymous creed. Imam al-Tahawi is called “al-Azdi,” in reference to the Yemeni
clan known as “Azd al-Hajar”; thus he was a descendent of a people about whom
the Prophet Muhammad, peace be upon him, said, “Faith is Yemeni.” It is
altogether fitting that the man who penned such a unifying creed, free of
controversy, descended from the land of which faith itself is a descendant. His
creed is a beacon of certainty in the darkness of doubt and ambiguity, and it
provides seekers of knowledge with a luminous set of simple yet sound creedal
statements.
Appreciation for The Creed of Imam
al-Tahawi
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Out of several translations of Imam al-Tahawi's
creed available in the market, Shaykh Hamza Yusuf's is, in my opinion, by far
the best rendition to date of this famous and very important treatise. We can
expect no less of a scholar of the caliber of Shaykh Hamza Yusuf due to his
command over his native tongue, English, as well as his acquired and
well-learned Arabic. - Dr. Nizam Yaquby, Mufti of Bahrain
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Shaykh Hamza Yusuf has rendered a
service not only to Muslims, but also to a wider audience by his new
translation of the Creed of Imam al Tahawi accompanied by an illuminating
historical introduction and by helpful biographies and extensive notes. His
translation is formal without being archaic and is written in a style that
Christians can recognize from their own credal formulations. The work is of
value to others than Muslims, for two reasons: first, it provides in 130 short
paragraphs a clear presentation of core Muslim belief in a way that is not
easily available by other means, thereby providing a very positive instrument
for the essential work of dialogue. Secondly, it provides Christians, who have
also developed and continue to use credal formulations, with the opportunity
to see just where the Islamic understanding of God comes close to the
Christian understanding of God. This does much to reduce the credibility of
approaches which insist on a thoroughgoing bipolar understanding of
Christianity and Islam. Muslims and Christians should welcome this
publication. - Dr. Rowan Williams, Archbishop of
Canterbury, UK
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Hamza Yusuf's Creed of Imam al-Tahawi is
an important contribution to scholarship and to Muslim self-understanding.
This fluid and accurate translation provides access and insight into a major
scholastic work that sets out core Islamic beliefs/doctrines. It will be
welcomed by Muslim and non-Muslim readers alike. - Dr.
John L. Esposito, Director, Prince Alwaleed Bin Talal Center for
Muslim-Christian Understanding, Georgetown University, Washington, DC.
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Students of Islam often have little
exposure to the basic theological creeds around which communal and sectarian
boundaries were formed for many centuries. Ordinary Muslims did not study
advanced theological treatises, but memorized and defined themselves by the
pithy dogmas advanced in texts like al-Tahawi's creed. These creeds address
universal questions, as well as issues particularly relevant to the political
and social context of their formulation. Imam al-Tahawi's creed is therefore
useful both as a record of core and enduring principles of Sunni theology, as
well as a glimpse into some of the dynamics of the early formative period of
Islamic thought. Hamza Yusuf's eloquent and accurate translation is especially
helpful as it is accompanied by the well-edited original Arabic text. -
Dr. Ingrid Mattson, President, Islamic Society of North America and
Professor of Islamic Studies, Hartford Seminary, Connecticut.
ISBN: 9780970284396 or 0970284396
Author: Imam Abu Ja'far Ahmad bin Muhammad bin Salamah al-Tahawi; Shaykh
Hamza Yusuf (translator, introduction, notes); Shaykh Abdullah Bin Bayyah
(foreword)
Publisher: Zaytuna Institute (June 2007)
Format: Hardcover w/ Dust Jacket, 167 pages
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