5 Misguided Beliefs of Parwez About Allah and His Messenger

Parwez’s Misinterpretation of “Allah and His Messenger”


Deviation from the True Obedience


Ghulam Ahmad Parwez devoted his life to diverting Muslims from obedience to Allah and His Messenger ﷺ towards a new, misleading concept. He reinterpreted Qur’anic terms to fit his ideology, introducing meanings foreign to the Islamic creed.


Distorting the Qur’anic Verse


The verse:


﴿يَا أَيُّهَا الَّذِينَ آمَنُوا أَطِيعُوا اللهَ وَأَطِيعُوا الرَّسُولَ وَأُولِي الأَمْرِ مِنْكُمْ﴾


Parwez wrote:


“Here, ‘Allah and His Messenger’ means the central authority (Nizam-e-Khudawandi), and ‘ulul-amr’ means subordinate officers.”
— Ma‘raj-e-Insaniyat, pp. 322-323


Making the Government “Allah and His Messenger”


He further claimed:


“In the Qur’an, the term ‘Allah and His Messenger’ refers to the central authority.”
— Ma‘raj-e-Insaniyat, pp. 322-323


Wherever the Qur’an commands obedience to Allah and His Messenger, Parwez replaced it with obedience to the central government:


“The central authority and its officers are what the Qur’an calls ‘Allah and His Messenger’… it means the obedience to this God-ordained central government.”
— Qur’ani Qawaneen, p. 6


After the Prophet ﷺ — The Same Meaning?


Parwez stated:


“After the Messenger, the Khalifah takes the Messenger’s place, and ‘Allah and His Messenger’ means obedience to this modern central government.”
— Ma‘raj-e-Insaniyat, p. 357


Refutation and Islamic Clarification


  • Allah is the self-existent Creator, above His Throne, the source of revelation.
  • The Messenger ﷺ is the recipient of that revelation.
  • No modern government can possess any of these divine attributes.
  • To equate a human government with Allah or His Messenger is not just false, but blatant disbelief.

Parwez’s Contradictory Ideas


He alternated between calling Allah:


  • a government,
  • a society, and
  • a force.

For example:


“Here, ‘Allah’ means the society that enforces the Divine Law.”
— Nizam-e-Ruboobiyat, p. 158


This raises the absurd question: If society gives sustenance, then who provides sustenance to the society itself?


Calling Allah a “Force”


He wrote:


“The foundation of Qur’anic teaching is the oneness of God, meaning the recognition of one force with power and authority.”
— Lughat-ul-Qur’an, vol. 4, p. 1690


This denies Allah’s self-existence, reducing Him to an impersonal “force” — an idea taken from Western Orientalist Matthew Arnold:


“God is the name of the force which is the cause of all causes.”
— Insaan Ne Kya Socha, p. 387


Imam al-Raghib’s Testimony


Parwez’s own source, Imam al-Raghib’s Al-Mufradat, states:


“The name ‘Allah’ is exclusive to the Creator; it cannot be applied to anyone else.”
— Al-Mufradat, p. 21


Conclusion — Disbelief and Apostasy


Parwez’s shifting definitions — sometimes Allah as government, sometimes as society, sometimes as a force — negate the fundamental Islamic belief in Allah.


  • These concepts are rooted in the ideas of disbelieving Orientalists.
  • Such beliefs remove one from the fold of Islam.

His followers openly praised this false concept of “God” as a human-led central authority, showing they share in the same deviation.
 
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