THE THIRD PRINCIPLE: The Names of
Allaah can be Transitive or Non-Transitive.
Before we go any further, let us
understand what is ‘transitive’ and ‘non-transitive’. This is not
difficult to understand, in fact it is very easy. We know that a language consists mainly
of verbs and nouns. Nouns are objects, like a table, cat, planet, car, a person. Etc…
In school you were probably told that a noun ‘is a place, person, or thing’. As
for verbs, then they are ‘doing words’ as you were probably told in school. In
other words, verbs represent actions. It is verbs that we will discuss in a bit more
detail.
Verbs are of two types.
1. Verbs which require another
object to complete the meaning, or to give a meaningful sentence. For example, the verb
‘to meet’. If I want to use this word I must also mention that thing or object
which my action relates to. If I said ‘I met’ and then stopped my sentence
there, it does not make sense and it does not give a meaningful sentence. I must add
something to the end to complete the meaning. For example: ‘I met the Sultan of
Brunei’, or ‘I met the local postman’.
2. Verbs which give a complete
meaning in themselves. For example ‘to sleep’. If I said ‘I slept’.
That’s all I need to say, because to sleep I don’t need another object or thing
to do this action.
Can you see the difference? Lets
give plenty of examples to illustrate this.
to make - If I said ‘I
made’ would that be a complete sentence? No. Because the verb requires another object
to complete its meaning. ‘I made apple crumble.’ So in other words, my act of
making relates to something else.
to hate - If I said ‘I
hate’ would that be complete, meaningful sentence? No. Because the verb requires
another object to complete its meaning. ‘I hate that lowly and despised innovating
Jahmee, Nuh Ha Mim Keller’. So there must be something that I hate. Again my act of
hating, has to be related to something else.
to sleep - If I said ‘I
slept’ would that be a meaningful sentence? Yes, because this action does not require
another object.
to blush - If I said ‘I
blushed’, that is a complete sentence, I don’t need another object to blush.
to reject - If I said ‘I
rejected’ and stopped there, that would not be a meaningful and complete sentence. I
have to say ‘I rejected the offer’, or ‘I rejected the invitation’ or
something like that. In other words there must be something, an object or thing that I
reject.
I cried - If I said ‘I
cried’ that is a complete sentence, I don’t need another object to complete the
sentence.
So by now you should be able to work
out which verb is a ‘transitive’ one (i.e it relates to something, an object or
thing, and needs it to complete the meaning) and a ‘non-transitive’ one (it does
not need anything else and has a complete meaning in itself).
So how does this relate to
Allaah’s Names? This is because some of Allaah’s Names are from verbs which are
transitive and others which are non-transitive. So the third principle then is:
If a Name of Allaah is transitive
then we affirm three things:
1. The Name itself
2. The attribute or quality it gives
evidence to
3. How this quality or attribute
relates to the creation and its ruling and what it necessitates
And if a Name of Allaah is
non-transitive then we only affirm two things:
1. The Name itself
2. The attribute or quality it gives
evidence to