Read The Concise Oxford Dictionary of World Religions Online
Authors: John Bowker
(i)
A
l al
-
taw
d
, strict monotheism and repudiation of anthropomorphism;
(ii)
A
l al-‘adl
, the absolute justice of God, which led to emphasis on the freedom and accountability of humans, and to the reality of God's ‘promise and threat’ of heaven and hell (which, on a strong view of
qadar
, could have no effect on human decisions, because God knows and determines the outcome); hence
(iii)
A
l al-wa‘d wa’ l-wa‘
d
, the promise and the threat, which have real consequence in the forming of belief (
m
n
);
(iv)
A
l al-manzila baina ’l-manzilatain
, the state between the states (of Sunnis and Shi‘ites) in relation to the caliphate (
khal
fa
);
(v)
A
l al-amr bi ’l-ma‘r
f
, commanding the good and forbidding the evil, appropriate action in spreading the faith, and in establishing a Muslim society. The Mu‘tazilites were opposed by those who gave primacy to the Qur’
n over reason, especially
al-Ash‘ar