Opentopia Directory Encyclopedia Tools

Maturidi

Encyclopedia : M : MA : MAT : Maturidi


Part of a of articles on
Islam
History of Islam
Beliefs and practices
Oneness of God
Profession of Faith
PrayerFasting
PilgrimageCharity
Major figures
MuhammadAli
Abu BakrUmar
Household of Muhammad
Companions of Muhammad
Prophets of Islam
Texts & Laws
Qur'anHadith
Jurisprudence • Theology
Biographies of Muhammad
Esotericism (Sufism)Exotericism (Sharia)
Branches of Islam
SunniShi'aIbadi
Societal aspects
AcademicsTheology
PhilosophyScience
ArtArchitecture • Cities
CalendarHolidays
Women..in the Qu'ran
LeadersPolitics
IslamismLiberalism
See also
Vocabulary of Islam
This box: [ view] • [ talk] • [ edit]
In Islam, a Maturidi ( Arabic: الماتوريدي ) is one who follows Abu Mansur Al Maturidi's theology, which is a close variant of Ash'ari school of thought and the codifying of the beliefs of traditional Sunni Islam as practiced since the time of the Prophet Muhammad. The Maturidis, Asharis and Atharis are all part of the majority of Muslims, the Sunnis. They only differ on minor arbitrary points in belief. One of the earliest and most basic texts on Islamic theology, al-Aqeedah al-Tahawiyyah (The Tahawi Doctrine of Belief), is a Maturidi text.

Points which the Maturidis differ from the Ash'aris are the nature of belief and the place of human reason. The Maturidis state that belief (iman) does not increase nor decrease but remains static; it is piety (taqwa) which increases and decreases. The Ash'aris say that belief does in fact increase and decrease. The Maturidis say that the unaided human mind is able to find out that some of the more major sins such as alcohol or murder are evil without the help of revelation. The Ash'aris say that the unaided human mind is unable to know if something is good or evil, lawful or unlawful, without divine revelation.

Another point where Ash'aris and Maturidis differ is divine amnesty for certain non-Muslims in the afterlife. The Ash'ari view of Imam al-Ghazali says that a non-Muslim who was unreached by the message of Islam or was reached by it in a distorted fashion, is not responsible for this in the afterlife. The Maturidi view states that the existence of God is so obvious, that one who has intellect and time to think (not the mentally retarded etc.) and was unreached by the message of Islam and does not believe in God will end up in the hellfire, and divine amnesty is only available to those non-Muslims who believed in God and were unreached by the message.

This theology is popular where the Hanafi school of law is followed, viz. in Turkey, Central Asia, Pakistan and India.

See also

External links

 


From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.

Search Titles
0123456789
ABCDEFGHIJ
KLMNOPQRST
UVWXYZ?

E-mail this article to:

Personal Message: