Al-Isrâ’îliyât is the plural of Isrâ’îliyah (Israeli). This term is recognized to be derived from one of the names of the Prophet Ya’qûb(Jacob). Ibnul Jawzi has mentioned that there is no Prophet who was given two names except for Ya’qûb and our Prophet Muhammad . Rasûl ul Allâh has numerous names recorded for us in the authentic Sunnah[1]. This statement from Ibnul Jawzi is not the only one regarding the issue. There are a few people of knowledge who have stated that there were other Prophets that possessed numerous names.
Others have said that the whole word is Hebrew in origin. They state that Isrâ means a slave and therefore the word means the Slave of Allâh in Hebrew.
Atâh then said,
Here we see that the words of the priest were accepted because they agreed with that which Allâh has sent us in our Laws.
Therefore we establish that their claim is false and Bâtil.
It is narrated that there was a young man from Bani Isrâ’îl who asked sought to marry his cousin but her father, his uncle, refused him. At the same time the uncle was waiting for a group of merchants to visit their town. The young man asked his uncle if he could accompany him to the outskirts of the town to wait for the merchants. The uncle granted him permission. During the journey the young man killed his uncle and returned to the village asking if anyone had seen or heard from his uncle. He, along with a group of men, set out to search for his uncle. They came upon his murdered corpse and blamed it on the newly arrived merchants. The young man was given inheritance from his uncle and was married to his cousin. When the merchants disputed the accusation they were ordered to slaughter a cow and strike the deceased with it.
We do not deny, nor do we affirm this story since there is no evidence for or against it. The knowledge of its authenticity is with Allâh.
Footnotes
1. Translator: Bukhârî reports that Jubair bin Mutim said, I heard Allâh's Apostle saying,
2. Al-Imâm al- Irâqi quotes Imâm as-Suyûti s, Tadrîb ar-Râwi, that Imâm Abu Dawûd at-Tayalisi did not himself write the Musnad. Rather his students gathered it from that which was recorded from him by Yusuf bin Habîb.
3. This hadîth has in its chain of narration a man named Shahr bin Hûshab who used to report narrations from Ibn Abbâs . Shahr is a man whom the scholars have spoken negatively about. Some of the scholars place his narration at the level of Hasan (good and accepted but not the level of Sahîh authentic). Al-Hafidh Ibn Hajr in at-Taqrîb has judged him to be Sadûq (truthful in general) but full of errors (in his reports) and known for Irsâl (reporting directly from the Prophet and not mentioning the name of the Sahâbi whom he is reporting from). Imam Muslim said regarding him in the Introduction to his Sahîh, Shahr has been criticized.
Therefore those who deem his narration to be Hasan or Sahîh accept this hadîth through this particular transmission. Those who deem Shahr to be weak reject this particular chain of narration with regards to this particular Hadîth.
4. Translators note: This hadîth is reported also in Sahîh Muslim (Book 039, Number 6699). It is also reported on the authority of Abu Hurairah, Abdullah bin 'Umar, Abdullah bin Miqsam and many others. As Muslims it is paramount that we understand the issue of Tawhîd Al-Asmâ was-Sifât (Allâh s Names and Attributes). In this Sahîh, Agreed upon, Hadîth we find that Rasûl ul Allâh establishes for Allâh a Hand and quotes a verse from the Qur’ân to lend evidence to the statement. As Muslims we must believe in the Attribute established for Allâh without:
Some people have erred in their belief due to the fact that they find difficulty in accepting that Allâh is referred to as having a Hand, a Face, Anger, Pleasure, Eyes, etc. all of which are befitting His Majesty, different than anything that can be imagined, rationalized or witnessed in the worldly life. Allâh says, " There is nothing like unto Him " (42:11), that " There is none comparable to Him " (112:4) and that " No vision can grasp Him, but His Grasp is over all vision." (6:103).
A simple example should clarify this problem. A clock has hands and a human being has hands and the metaphorical proverbial hands of time are always ticking. There is also the eye of a needle, the eye of a Hurricane, human eyes, etc. The three have separate functions, appearance, limits and so forth. The point is that words carry a representation that is directly related to our conceptualization. Those who perform Ta'tîl, Ta'wîl, Tamthîl, Takyîf are in essence seeking to conceptualize what is not Allâh and therefore fall into an enormous error by inferring about Allâh what He is not or denying Allâh that which He has established for Himself in explicit wording. Just like we do not confuse the hands of a clock with our own hands we should not confuse the divine Hand of Allâh with our own.
Therefore Allâh has a Hand that befits His Divine Majesty. It is different from anything that is created. It cannot be seen in the worldly life. It cannot be rationalized, made similar to, interpreted or denied. It is a Hand because Allâh says so and His Messenger reports to us so.