The Role of Knowledge in the Caliphate System of al-Ghazālī: Is It an Element of Openness or Isolating Fundamentalism?
Abstract
1. Part One
1.1. True Knowledge: The Science of the Path to the Afterlife (‘ilm al-Ākhira)
The Messenger of God said: “Nothing is more felicitous for the worship of God than religious knowledge; one person with religious knowledge is more distressing to Satan than a thousand worshippers. Each thing has its own mainstay and the mainstay of this religion is knowledge.”
1.2. Yaqīn as Transformative Knowledge
When the soul is inclined to believe in a thing and this belief takes over the heart until it becomes the controller and governor of the soul in permission and inhibition, this would be called consciousness [yaqīn]. There is no doubt that people agree together on the certitude of death and the elimination of doubting in it, however, there are some of them who do not look towards it and do not prepare for it as if they are not conscious [wa ka’annahu ghayr muqin bihi]. Whereas, others who have this taking over their heart in a way it overtakes all their concern to prepare for it and does not leave any space for any other concern. This is the case that would be expressed by the strength of consciousness [yaqīn].
As for us, what we intend by our saying: “that the scholars of the Afterlife should take care of reinforcing the yaqīn” we intended it in both meanings; as to cut the doubt and then focusing the yaqīn on the soul until it becomes the one that controls and governs it.
1.3. Ways to Acquire True Knowledge
[…] the science that is oriented to the Afterlife is divided into the science of practice and the science of the unveiling. What I mean with the science of practice is the science that should be put in practice when unveiled. What I intend in this book is the science of the practice only excluding the science of the unveiling that no one is entitled to put it in books despite that it is the aim destination of the seekers and the saints. The science of the practice is a way towards it [the science of the unveiling] but the Prophets talked with the people exclusively about the science of the path and guidance towards it; they did not talk about the science of the unveiling except in symbols and signs and in parables and generalities because they knew the shortness of the people’s understanding. The scholars are the heirs of the Prophets and they should follow this same approach […].
Al-Junayd […] said: My Sheikh al-Sirrī told me once […]: May God make you knowledgeable in Sufi tradition and not a Sufi knowledgeable in tradition. What he intended was that the one who learns tradition and science and then becomes Sufi succeeds (or is saved), and the one who becomes Sufi before learning science risks his self.
2. Part Two
2.1. This World Is the Estate of the Afterlife
The most glorious and highest-ranking thing for humans is eternal life and the best things [they could do] is what is a way to it; and there is no way to it other than knowledge and rightful action. There is no way to act rightfully unless one has knowledge of how to act rightfully; therefore, the origin of happiness in the world and the Afterlife is knowledge. Therefore, it is the best kind of action. […] The actions of people are either directed toward religion or the profane world but there can be no good order in religion unless the profane world is well-ordered. The profane world is but an Estate for the Afterlife. Whoever takes it only as a tool finds that it leads to God for whoever understands it in this manner, but for whoever takes it as a residence and homeland, finds that it becomes that person’s home. The profane world, however, cannot be well-ordered in the absence of the actions of human beings. […]
If it is said “Why did you say that the good order of religion does not happen without the good order of the world, [while in reality] it requires the ruin of the profane world. [Effectively,] the good order of religion and the good order of the world are opposed and working toward the flourishing of one of them ruins the other”, we would say: “This is the position of someone who does not understand what we intend when we say ‘the good order of the profane world’, because in common parlance it is used to call for enjoyment, gratification and excess consumption beyond what is needed and necessary, while we intend another sense of the word, and that might be called all that is needed before death. The first sense of the term is contrary to religion but the second is its condition.” This is why the one who does not differentiate between the senses of the common terms falls into error. We say: The good order of religion lies in knowledge and worship, which could not be reached without preserving the body’s sanctity, preserving life and fulfilling the needs of clothing, housing and sustenance, and lastly comes the scourge of the security. […]
What we will transmit from the biography of the Predecessor Jurists is what will enable you to know that the ones who claimed to follow their schools have wronged them, and they will be their greatest adversaries on the Resurrection Day. They (the predecessors) did not mean other than knowledge for the sake of God’s favor. They are known to have been scholars of the Afterlife based on what was witnessed directly of their affairs. […] effectively they were not working exclusively for the science of jurisprudence but they were busy in the science of the heart […]
2.2. Abū Ḥāmid’s Counsel for Rulers
Know, Sultan, that you are a creature and you have a Creator and He is the Creator of the world and all what there is in the world. He is one and has no associate, unique with no similitude. He has been in perpetuity and His being has no demise. He will stay in eternity and His existence has no extinction. His being in eternity and perpetuity is necessary and the destruction has no means to Him. He exists by Himself; everyone needs Him and He has no need of anyone; His existence is in Himself and the existence of everything is in Him.
Look, Sultan, to ‘Umar, although his prudence and justice [were unsurpassed] and although no one reached his piety and prayer, he thinks of and fears the terror of the Resurrection Day. As for you, you have been sitting distracted from the state of your people, and are negligent of the people under your authority.
2.3. The Caliphate System
The term Caliphate stands for the whole of Islamic government. Although al-Ghazālī seems to follow the traditional prejudice in favor of autocracy, it is obvious that his is a multilateral conception of the Caliphate. In it there are three main elements: the Caliph, the Sultan, and the ‘Ulamā’; each corresponding to some aspect of the authority behind Islamic government, and each performing a function required by that authority. The greatest virtue of al-Ghazālī’s theory is in its political realism; and yet he has maintained the essentials of the traditional theory. Each of the parts of the Caliphate represent not only an aspect of authority and a function of Islamic government, but also one of the major elements of political power in the Sunnī community.
In short, we consider attributes and conditions in sultans with a view to (deriving) the optimum advantages. If we decreed that public functions (wilāyāt) are now invalid, the interests (of the common weal) would also be invalid. Why lose one’s capital by seeking (to gain) interest? No, indeed, sovereignty nowadays is possible only through force (shawka). The caliph is the person to whom the possessor of force (ṣāḥib al-shawka) pays allegiance. Anyone who seizes power by force (shawka) and is obedient to the caliph in respect to the khuṭba and the sikka [coinage] is a sultan wielding valid jurisdiction (ḥukm) and judgement (qaḍā’) in the (different) regions of the earth by virtue of a valid grant of jurisdiction (wilāya) whose decisions (aḥkām) are legally valid (nāfidha).
2.4. The Caliphate: Different Roles and Obligations, One Organism
3. Conclusions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
1 | Unless otherwise stated, translations from Arabic are the author’s. |
2 | Here I translate fuqahā’ as knowers and not as jurists; I believe this is what he means in this case. The jurists would be in the first group with the theologians (mutakallimūn), as we coherently understand from the rest of his writings. Not to forget that the original meaning of faqīh is rooted in cognition. |
3 | I will not enter into the debate about the authenticity of the second part of the Naṣīḥat; I will just say that I consider it unauthentic. Effectively, Patricia Crone (Crone 1987), along with WRW Gardner (Gardner 1919) and Zaki Mubarak (Mubarak 1924), believed this part has been attributed to Abū Ḥāmid erroneously. Although she actually disagreed with some of the conclusions of Mubarak and Gardner, she agreed in their assessment regarding the erroneous attribution of the second part of the book to al-Ghazālī. Crone shows that the question was not seriously posed again after Huma’i responded to Mubarak. She shows that although Huma’i might have presented a valuable response to the arguments of Mubarak, that does not mean that he was right in concluding that the second part of the book’s attribution to al-Ghazālī is authentic. Today, some scholars follow Crone, like Carole Hillenbrand and Eric Ormsby, and others still consider this part authentic, like Omid Safi and Yazeed Said. |
4 | “The Iqtiṣād is […] not a treatise on Islamic government. […] In [chapter three] al-Ghazālī emphasizes the need to create the conditions conducive to the maintenance of good religion in this world, but he is not intent on creating a blueprint for Islamic government” (Hillenbrand 1988, p. 89). |
5 | The respect of al-Ghazālī for all the schools of fiqh is clear in many of his writings, see (al-Ghazālī 1992, p. 9). |
References
- al-Ghazālī, Abū Ḥāmid. 1964. al-Mustaẓhirī, Fadā’iḥ al-Bātiniyya. Edited by ‘Abd al-Raḥmān al-Badawī. Cairo: al-Dār al-Qawmiyya li-al-Ṭibā‘a wa-al-Nashr. [Google Scholar]
- al-Ghazālī, Abū Ḥāmid. 1988a. al-Munqidh min al-Ḍalāl. Edited by Aḥmad Shams al-Dīn. Beirut: Dār al-Kutub al-‘Ilmiyya. [Google Scholar]
- al-Ghazālī, Abū Ḥāmid. 1988b. al-Tibr al-Masbūk fī Naṣiḥat al-Mulūk. Edited by Aḥmad Shams al-Dīn. Beirut: Dār al-Kutub al-‘Ilmiyya. [Google Scholar]
- al-Ghazālī, Abū Ḥāmid. 1992. al-Mustaṣfā fī ‘Ilm al-Uṣūl. Edited by Ḥamza b. Zuhayr Ḥāfiẓ. al-Madīna al-Munawwara: al-Jāmi‘a al-Islāmiyya. [Google Scholar]
- al-Ghazālī, Abū Ḥāmid. 2005. Iḥyā’ ‘Ulūm al-Dīn. Beirut: Dār Ibn Ḥazm. [Google Scholar]
- al-Ghazālī, Abū Ḥāmid. 2012. al-Iqtiṣād fī al- I‘tiqād. Edited by Anas Muḥammad ‘Adnān Al-Sharfāwī. Jadda: Dār al-Minhāj. [Google Scholar]
- Binder, Leonard. 1955. Al-Ghazālī’s Theory of Islamic Government. Muslim World 45: 229–41. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Campanini, Massimo. 2019. Al-Ghazālī and the Divine. Oxon: Routledge. [Google Scholar]
- Crone, Patricia. 1987. Did al-Ghazālī Write a Mirror for Princes? On the Authorship of Naṣīḥat al-Mulūk. Jerusalem Studies in Arabic and Islam 10: 167–91. [Google Scholar]
- Francis, Pope. 2020. Fratelli Tutti: On Fraternity and Social Friendship. Vatican City: Libreria Editrice Vaticana. [Google Scholar]
- Francis, Pope, and Grand Imam Ahmad al-Tayyeb. 2019. Document on Human Fraternity for World Peace and Living Together. Abu Dhabi: Dicastero per la Comunicazione-Libreria Editrice Vaticana. [Google Scholar]
- Gardner, W. R. W. 1919. al-Ghazālī. Madras: Christian Litterature Society for India. [Google Scholar]
- Heck, Paul. 2017. Adab in the Thought of Ghazālῑ (d. 505/1111): In the Service of Mystical Insight. In Ethics and Spirituality in Islam. Sufi Adab. Edited by Francesco Chiabotti. Leiden: Brill, pp. 298–324. [Google Scholar]
- Hillenbrand, Carole. 1988. Islamic Orthodoxy or Realpolitik? Al-Ghazālī’s Views on Government. Iran 26: 81–94. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Laoust, Henri. 1970. La Politique de Ghazālī. Paris: Librairie Orientaliste Paul Geuthner. [Google Scholar]
- Mitha, Farouk. 2001. Al-Ghazālī and the Ismailis, a Debate on Reason and Authority in Medieval Islam. London: I.B. Tauris Publishers and The Institute of Ismaili Studies. [Google Scholar]
- Mubarak, Zaki. 1924. al-Akhlāq ‘ind al-Ghazālī. Cairo: Dār al-Sha‘b. [Google Scholar]
- Rawls, John. 1971. A Theory of Justice. Cambridge: Harvard University Press. [Google Scholar]
- Said, Yazeed. 2013. Ghazālī’s Politics in Context, in Culture and Civilization in the Middle East. Oxford: Routledge. [Google Scholar]
- Treiger, Alexander. 2012. Inspired Knowledge in Islamic Thought. Al-Ghazālī’s Theory of Mystical Cognition and Its Avicennian Foundation. Oxford: Routledge. [Google Scholar]
Disclaimer/Publisher’s Note: The statements, opinions and data contained in all publications are solely those of the individual author(s) and contributor(s) and not of MDPI and/or the editor(s). MDPI and/or the editor(s) disclaim responsibility for any injury to people or property resulting from any ideas, methods, instructions or products referred to in the content. |
© 2025 by the author. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
Share and Cite
Breidy, V. The Role of Knowledge in the Caliphate System of al-Ghazālī: Is It an Element of Openness or Isolating Fundamentalism? Religions 2025, 16, 765. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16060765
Breidy V. The Role of Knowledge in the Caliphate System of al-Ghazālī: Is It an Element of Openness or Isolating Fundamentalism? Religions. 2025; 16(6):765. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16060765
Chicago/Turabian StyleBreidy, Vanessa. 2025. "The Role of Knowledge in the Caliphate System of al-Ghazālī: Is It an Element of Openness or Isolating Fundamentalism?" Religions 16, no. 6: 765. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16060765
APA StyleBreidy, V. (2025). The Role of Knowledge in the Caliphate System of al-Ghazālī: Is It an Element of Openness or Isolating Fundamentalism? Religions, 16(6), 765. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16060765