Names of God in Islam
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The 99 Names of Allah, (Arabic: أسماء الله الحسنى ʾasmāʾ allāh al-ḥusnā), are the Names of God (specifically, attributes) by which Muslims regard God and which are described in the Qur'an, and Sunnah, amongst other places.[1] There is, according to hadith, a special group of 99 names but no enumeration of them. Thus the exact list is not agreed upon, and the Names of God (as adjectives, word constructs, or otherwise) exceed 99 in the Qur'an and Sunnah. According to a hadith narrated by Abd Allah ibn Mas'ud some of the names of God have been hidden from mankind,[2] therefore there are not only 99 names of God but there are more.
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[edit] Origin
According to Islamic tradition,[3] Prophet Muhammad is said to have invoked God by a number of Names. According to a Sunni hadith, Sahih Muslim:
Abu Huraira reported Allah's Messenger (may peace be upon him) as saying: There are ninety-nine names of Allah; he who commits them to memory would get into Paradise. Verily, Allah is Odd (He is one, and it is an odd number) and He loves odd number. And in the narration of Ibn 'Umar (the words are): "He who enumerated them."—Muslim ibn al-Hajjaj Nishapuri, Sahih Muslim[4]
Over time it became custom to recite a list of 99 Names, compiled by al-Walid ibn Muslim as an addendum to the hadith.
Mahmoud Abdel-Razek (2005) compiled an alternative list, endorsing only 69 from the list of al-Walid.[5]
The Qur'an refers to the Attributes of God as God's "most beautiful Names" (Arabic: al-ʾasmāʾ al-ḥusnā) (see the following sura, Al-A'raf 7:180, Al-Isra 17:110, Ta-Ha 20:8, Al-Hashr 59:24). According to Gerhard Böwering, {{Quote|They are traditionally enumerated as 99 in number to which is added as the highest Name (al-ism al-ʾaʿẓam), the Supreme Name of God, Allāh. The locus classicus for listing the Divine Names in the literature of Qurʾānic commentary is 17:110, “Call upon God, or call upon The Merciful; whichsoever you call upon, to Him belong the most beautiful Names,” and also 59:22–24 q 59:22-4, which includes a cluster of more than a dozen Divine epithets.
The Islamic list of "99 Names of God" has similarities with the Zoroastrian 101 Names of God.[6] Parsi tradition expanded this to a list of "1001 names of God".[7]
[edit] List of 99 Names of Allah, according to the Qur'an
| # | Arabic | Transliteration | Translation (can vary based on context) | Qur'anic usage |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| الرحمن | Ar-Raḥmān | The Exceedingly Compassionate, The Exceedingly Beneficent, The Exceedingly Gracious | Beginning of every chapter except one, and in numerous other places. Name frequently used in surah 55, Ar-Rahman | |
| الرحيم | Ar-Raḥīm | The Exceedingly Merciful | Beginning of every chapter except one, and in numerous other places | |
| الملك | Al-Malik | The King | 59:23, 20:114, 23:116 | |
| القدوس | Al-Quddūs | The Holy, The Pure, The Perfect | 59:23, 62:1 | |
| السلام | As-Salām | The Peace, The Source of Peace and Safety, The Savior | 59:23 | |
| المؤمن | Al-Mu'min | The Guarantor, The Affirming | 59:23 | |
| المهيمن | Al-Muhaymin | The Guardian | 59:23 | |
| العزيز | Al-‘Azīz | The Almighty, The Invulnerable, The Honorable | 3:6, 4:158, 9:40, 48:7, 59:23 | |
| الجبار | Al-Jabbār | The Irresistible, The Compeller, The Lofty | 59:23 | |
| المتكبر | Al-Mutakabbir | The Majestic, The Supreme | 59:23 | |
| الخالق | Al-Khāliq | The Creator | 6:102, 13:16, 39:62, 40:62, 59:24 | |
| البارئ | Al-Bāri' | The Evolver, The Fashioner, The Designer | 59:24 | |
| المصور | Al-Muṣawwir | The Fashioner of Forms | 59:24 | |
| الغفار | Al-Ghaffār | The Repeatedly Forgiving | 20:82, 38:66, 39:5, 40:42, 71:10 | |
| القهار | Al-Qahhār | The Subduer | 12:39, 13:16, 14:48, 38:65, 39:4, 40:16 | |
| الوهاب | Al-Wahhāb | The Bestower | 3:8, 38:9, 38:35 | |
| الرزاق | Ar-Razzāq | The Provider | 51:58 | |
| الفتاح | Al-Fattāḥ | The Opener, The Victory Giver | 34:26 | |
| العليم | Al-'Aleem | The All Knowing, The Omniscient | 2:158, 3:92, 4:35, 24:41, 33:40 | |
| القابض | Al-Qābiḍ | The Restrainer, The Straightener | 2:245 | |
| الباسط | Al-Bāsiṭ | The Extender / Expander | 2:245 | |
| الخافض | Al-Khāfiḍ | The Abaser | 95:5 | |
| الرافع | Ar-Rāfi' | The Exalter | 58:11, 6:83 | |
| المعز | Al-Mu'izz | The Giver of Honour | 3:26 | |
| المذل | Al-Mudhill | The Giver of Dishonour | 3:26 | |
| السميع | As-Samī' | The All Hearing | 2:127, 2:256, 8:17, 49:1 | |
| البصير | Al-Baṣīr | The All Seeing | 4:58, 17:1, 42:11, 42:27 | |
| الحكم | Al-Ḥakam | The Judge, The Arbitrator | 22:69 | |
| العدل | Al-'Adl | The Utterly Just | 6:115 | |
| اللطيف | Al-Laṭīf | The Gentle, The Subtly Kind | 6:103, 22:63, 31:16, 33:34 | |
| الخبير | Al-Khabeer | The All Aware | 6:18, 17:30, 49:13, 59:18 | |
| الحليم | Al Haleem | The Forbearing, The Indulgent | 2:235, 17:44, 22:59, 35:41 | |
| العظيم | Al-'Aẓeem | The Magnificent | 2:255, 42:4, 56:96 | |
| الغفور | Al Ghafūr | The Much-Forgiving | 2:173, 8:69, 16:110, 41:32 | |
| الشكور | Ash-Shakūr | The Grateful | 35:30, 35:34, 42:23, 64:17 | |
| العلي | Al-'Alīy | The Sublime | 4:34, 31:30, 42:4, 42:51 | |
| 37 | الكبير | Al-Kabīr | The Great | 13:9, 22:62, 31:30 |
| 38 | الحفيظ | Al-Ḥafeeẓ | The Preserver | 11:57, 34:21, 42:6 |
| 39 | المقيت | Al-Muqeet | The Nourisher | 4:85 |
| 40 | الحسيب | Al-Ḥaseeb | The Bringer of Judgment | 4:6, 4:86, 33:39 |
| 41 | الجليل | Al-Jalīl | The Majestic | 55:27, 39:14, 7:143 |
| 42 | الكريم | Al-Karīm | The Bountiful, The Generous | 27:40, 82:6 |
| 43 | الرقيب | Ar-Raqīb | The Watchful | 4:1, 5:117 |
| 44 | المجيب | Al-Mujīb | The Responsive, The Answer | 11:61 |
| 45 | الواسع | Al-Wāsi' | The Vast, The All-Embracing, The Omnipresent, The Boundless | 2:268, 3:73, 5:54 |
| 46 | الحكيم | Al-Ḥakīm | The Wise | 31:27, 46:2, 57:1, 66:2 |
| 47 | الودود | Al-Wadūd | The Loving | 11:90, 85:14 |
| 48 | المجيد | Al-Majīd | All-Glorious, The Majestic | 11:73 |
| 49 | الباعث | Al-Bā'ith | The Resurrecter | 22:7 |
| 50 | الشهيد | Ash-Shahīd | The Witness | 4:166, 22:17, 41:53, 48:28 |
| 51 | الحق | Al-Ḥaqq | The Truth, The Real | 6:62, 22:6, 23:116, 24:25 |
| 52 | الوكيل | Al-Wakīl | The Trustee, The Dependable, The Advocate | 3:173, 4:171, 28:28, 73:9 |
| 53 | القوي | Al-Qawwīy | The Strong | 22:40, 22:74, 42:19, 57:25 |
| 54 | المتين | Al-Matīn | The Firm, The Steadfast | 51:58 |
| 55 | الولي | Al-Walīy | The Friend, Patron and Helper | 4:45, 7:196, 42:28, 45:19 |
| 56 | الحميد | Al-Ḥamīd | The All Praiseworthy | 14:8, 31:12, 31:26, 41:42 |
| 57 | المحصي | Al-Muḥṣīy | The Accounter, The Numberer of All | 72:28, 78:29, 82:10-12 |
| 58 | المبدئ | Al-Mubdi' | The Originator, The Producer, The Initiator | 10:34, 27:64, 29:19, 85:13 |
| 59 | المعيد | Al-Mu'īd | The Restorer, The Reinstater Who Brings Back All | 10:34, 27:64, 29:19, 85:13 |
| 60 | المحيي | Al-Muḥyīy | The Giver of Life | 7:158, 15:23, 30:50, 57:2 |
| 61 | المميت | Al-Mumīt | The Destroyer, The Bringer of Death | 3:156, 7:158, 15:23, 57:2 |
| 62 | الحي | Al-Ḥayy | The Living | 2:255, 3:2, 25:58, 40:65 |
| 63 | القيوم | Al-Qayyūm | The Subsisting, The Guardian | 2:255, 3:2, 20:111 |
| 64 | الواجد | Al-Wājid | The Perceiver, The Finder, The Unfailing | 38:44 |
| 65 | الماجد | Al-Mājid | The Illustrious, The Magnificent | 85:15, 11:73, |
| 66 | الواحد | Al-Wāḥid | The One, The Unique | 2:163, 5:73, 9:31, 18:110 |
| الاحد | Al-'Aḥad | The Unity, The Indivisible | 112:1 | |
| 68 | الصمد | Aṣ-Ṣamad | The Eternal, The Absolute, The Self-Sufficient | 112:2 |
| 69 | القادر | Al-Qādir | The Omnipotent, The All Able | 6:65, 36:81, 46:33, 75:40 |
| 70 | المقتدر | Al-Muqtadir | The Determiner, The Dominant | 18:45, 54:42, 54:55 |
| 71 | المقدم | Al-Muqaddim | The Expediter, He Who Brings Forward | 16:61, 17:34, |
| 72 | المؤخر | Al-Mu'akhkhir | The Delayer, He Who Puts Far Away | 71:4 |
| 73 | الأول | Al-'Awwal | The First, The Beginning-less | 57:3 |
| الأخر | Al-'Akhir | The Last, The Endless | 57:3 | |
| 75 | الظاهر | Aẓ-Ẓāhir | The Manifest, The Evident, The Outer | 57:3 |
| 76 | الباطن | Al-Bāṭin | The Hidden, The Unmanifest, The Inner | 57:3 |
| 77 | الوالي | Al-Wālīy | The Patron, The Protecting Friend, The Friendly Lord | 13:11, 22:7 |
| 78 | المتعالي | Al-Muta'ālīy | The Supremely Exalted, The Most High | 13:9 |
| 79 | البر | Al-Barr | The Good | 52:28 |
| 80 | التواب | At-Tawwāb | The Ever Returning, Ever Relenting | 2:128, 4:64, 49:12, 110:3 |
| 81 | المنتقم | Al-Muntaqim | The Avenger | 32:22, 43:41, 44:16 |
| العفو | Al-'Afūw | The Pardoner, The Effacer, The Forgiver | 4:99, 4:149, 22:60 | |
| 83 | الرؤوف | Ar-Ra'ūf | The Kind, The Pitying | 3:30, 9:117, 57:9, 59:10 |
| 84 | مالك الملك | Mālik-ul-Mulk | The Owner of all Sovereignty | 3:26 |
| 85 | ذو الجلال والإكرام | Dhū-l-Jalāli wa-l-'ikrām |
The Lord of Majesty and Generosity | 55:27, 55:78 |
| 86 | المقسط | Al-Muqsiţ | The Equitable, The Requiter | 7:29, 3:18 |
| 87 | الجامع | Al-Jāmi' | The Gatherer, The Unifier | 3:9 |
| 88 | الغني | Al-Ghanīy | The Rich, The Independent | 3:97, 39:7, 47:38, 57:24 |
| 89 | المغني | Al-Mughnīy | The Enricher, The Emancipator | 9:28 |
| 90 | المانع | Al-Māni' | The Withholder, The Shielder, The Defender | 67:21 |
| الضار | Aḍ-Ḍārr | The Distressor, The Harmer, The Afflictor | 6:17 | |
| 92 | النافع | An-Nāfi' | The Propitious, The Benefactor, The Source of Good | 30:37 |
| 93 | النور | An-Nūr | The Light | 24:35 |
| 94 | الهادي | Al-Hādīy | The Guide, The Way | 22:54 |
| 95 | البديع | Al-Badī' | The Incomparable, The Unattainable | 2:117, 6:101 |
| 96 | الباقي | Al-Bāqīy | The Immutable, The Infinite, The Everlasting | 55:27 |
| 97 | الوارث | Al-Wārith | The Heir, The Inheritor of All | 15:23 |
| 98 | الرشيد | Ar-Rashīd | The Guide to the Right Path | 2:256 |
| 99 | الصبور | Aṣ-Ṣabūr | The Timeless, The Patient | 2:153, 3:200, 103:3 |
[edit] 100th name
The 99 names point to the inherent unity of the all-embracing Greatest Name.[8] In Islamic traditions, it is stated "The Greatest Name of Allah is the one which if He [Allah] is called (prayed to) by it, He will Answer."[9]
[edit] Bábí and Bahá'í view
Bahá'í sources state that the 100th name was revealed as "Bahá’" (an Arabic word بهاء meaning "glory, splendor" etc.), which is the root word for Bahá'u'lláh and Bahá'í. They also believe that it is the 'Greatest Name'.[10][11] The Báb wrote a noted pentagram-shaped tablet with 360 derivatives of the word "Bahá'" used in it.[10]
According to Bahá'í scholar ‘Abdu’l-Hamíd Ishráq-Khávari, Baha' ad-Din al-`Amili adopted the pen name (takhallus) 'Baha' after being inspired by words of Shi'a Imam Muhammad al-Baqir (the fifth Imam) and Imam Ja'far al-Sadiq (the sixth Imam), who had stated that the Greatest Name of God was included in either Du'ay-i-Sahar or A`amaal Ummi Dawud.[10] In the first verse of the Du'ay-i-Sahar, a dawn prayer for the Ramadan, the name "Bahá" appears four times: "Allahumma inni as 'aluka min Bahá' ika bi Abháh va kulla Bahá' ika Bahí".[12]
[edit] Personal names
According to Islamic tradition,[13] a Muslim may not be given any of the 99 names of Allah in exactly the same form. For example, nobody may be named al-Malik (The King), but may be named Malik (King). This is because of the belief that Allah is almighty, and no human being is the equivalent of Allah, and no human being will ever be the equivalent of Allah. Muslims are allowed to use the 99 names of Allah for themselves but should not put 'Al' at the front of them.
However the names/attributes of Allah can be combined with the word "‘Abd -" which means "servant/Worshiper" (of Allah) and are commonly used as personal names among Muslims. For example ‘Abd ar-Raḥmān ("Servant of the Most Compassionate/the Beneficent"). The two parts of the name may be written separately (as above) or combined as one transliterated name; in such a case, the vowel transcribed after ‘Abd is often written as u when the two words are transcribed as one: e.g., Abdurrahman, Abdul'aziz, "Abdul Jabbar", or even Abdullah ("Servant of Allah"). (This has to do with Arabic case vowels, the final u vowel showing the normal "quote" nominative/vocative case form: ‘abd-u.)
Some Muslim people have names resembling those 99. Examples include:
- Salaam, such as Salam Fayyad.
- Jabbaar, such as Kareem Abdul-Jabbar.
- Shakoor, such as Tupac Shakur.
- Kareem, such as Kareem Abdul-Jabbar.
- Hakeem, such as Sherman "Abdul Hakim" Jackson.
- Ra'oof, such as Ra'ouf Mus'ad.
[edit] See also
- List of Arabic theophoric names
- Basmala
- Names of God in Judaism
- Sahasranama, names of god in Hinduism
- Vishnu sahasranama
- The Nine Billion Names of God, a short story by Arthur C. Clarke
- The 99, a comic book based on the 99 names of God
[edit] Notes
- ^ Fleming, Marrianne; Worden, David (2004). Religious Studies for AQA; Thinking About God and Morality. Oxford: Heinemann Educational Publishers. ISBN 0-435-30713-4.
- ^ Taymiyya, Ibn. The Goodly Word: al-Kalim al-Ṭayyib. Islamic Texts Society. p. 72. ISBN 1903682150.
- ^ Ibn Majah, Book of Du`a;[citation needed] and by Imam Malik in his Muwatta', Kitab al-Shi`r[citation needed]
- ^ Sahih Muslim, 35:6475
- ^ Mahmoud Abdul Razek Al Radwany, “Of the 99 Names Of Allah That We Repeat: Only 69 Are Authentic” published in the Egyptian daily, Al Ahram, on Nov 18, 2005. His objections are mostly grammatical in that a ‘name’ in Arabic must be a noun: “only 69 of those Names are authenticated from the Quran and Sunnah, while 29 are not authentic in that 22 are verbs or adjectives, and 7 are 'modafa' or ‘added to.’” Islamic Forum
- ^ Edalji Kersâspji Antiâ, Pazend texts, Bombay 1909, pp. 335-337
- ^ Antonio Panainom, The lists of names of Ahura Mazdā (Yašt I) and Vayu (Yašt XV), 2002, p. 20.
- ^ Schimmel, Annemarie (1993). The Mystery of Numbers. New York, USA: Oxford University Press. p. 271. ISBN 0195089197. http://books.google.com/?id=lBIZ9PRZvPIC&pg=PA271.
- ^ Momen, Moojan (2000). Islam and the Bahá'í Faith. Oxford, UK: George Ronald. pp. 241. ISBN 0853984468. The endnote states: "Ibn Májah, Sunan, 34. (Kitáb ad-Du'á), ch. 9, no. 3856, vol. 2, p. 1267. See also: Ad-Dárimí, Sunan, 23 (Fada'il al-Qur'án), ch. 15, no. 3296, vol. 2, pp. 324-5. Similar statements in Shi'i Traditions include: Majlisí, Bihár al-Anwár, vol. 26. p. 7."
- ^ a b c Lambden, Stephen (1993). "The Word Bahá': Quintessence of the Greatest Name". Bahá'í Studies Review 3 (1). http://bahai-library.com/lambden_quintessence_greatest_name.
- ^ Smith, Peter (2000). "greatest name". A concise encyclopedia of the Bahá'í Faith. Oxford: Oneworld Publications. pp. 167–8. ISBN 1-85168-184-1.
- ^ Khadem, Dhikru'llah (March 1976). "Bahá'u'lláh and His Most Holy Shrine". Bahá'í News (540): pp. 4–5. http://www.teachingandprojects.com/meansandmaterials.htm.
- ^ Are there any names which it is forbidden to use? If so, what are they?
[edit] External links
- http://www.99namesallah.org A Site containing 99 names of Allah with complete reference in the Holy Quran with pdf , powerpoint format also.
- The Beautiful Names of Allah A site containing the derivation and meanings of the 99 names. Also has audio of someone saying each one.
- 99 Names of Allah a more concise account on the attributes of Allah
- The Most Beautiful Names of Allah Gives a list of the names in English and Arabic as well as the verses in which they are found in the Qur'an.
- Oil paintings of all the 99 names of Allah Also you can view 99 names of Muhammad.
- 319 Attributes of Allah Download Link of Allah's Attributes with English and Urdu translations.

