A fundamental question that separates Islam from every other major religion is this: does God need to become human to understand His creation? While other faiths answer yes through the concept of anthropomorphism, Islam provides a clear, logical answer that upholds the majesty and perfection of the Creator.
Why Would God Become Human?
The common justification is that God is too holy and too pure to understand human suffering from a distance. He needed to experience pain, hunger, and hardship to truly know what His creatures go through. On the surface, this sounds reasonable, but a simple analogy exposes the flaw.
“If I create a DVD player, do I have to become a DVD player to know what is good or bad for it? Because I am the manufacturer, the creator, I don’t have to become it. I write an instruction manual.”
God’s Perfect Method of Guidance
Rather than descending into His own creation, Allah chose a far more dignified and logical method of guiding humanity:
- He selected men from among mankind and elevated them as His messengers
- He communicated with these messengers on a higher level, revealing His guidance through them
- The final messenger was Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him), and the final instruction manual is the Quran
“Almighty God is the Creator of human beings. He does not have to become a human being to know what is good or bad for them. He chooses a man amongst men and communicates with them, and we call them the messengers of Allah.”
The belief that God became human actually diminishes God by suggesting He lacks the knowledge and power to guide His creation without becoming part of it. Islam honors God as He deserves to be honored: as the All-Knowing Creator who is above and beyond everything He has created.
