4.1.4
The Nature of God
Test your knowledge with free interactive questions on Seneca — used by over 10 million students.
The Nature of God
For Muslims, God is the greatest possible being. Muslims acknowledge this idea in prayer and throughout the day each time they say “Allahu Akbar”, which means "God is the greatest".

Names for God
- In the Qur'an and the Hadith (the sayings of the Prophet), there are 99 names for God.
- Each name reveals something different about Allah. Muslims try and learn all these names so that they can better understand Allah.

Qualities of Allah
- Allah is:
- omnipotent (all-powerful)
- omniscient (all-knowing)
- omnipresent (everywhere at once)

Just and beneficent
- Allah is just and beneficent (Adalat).
- Allah judges all people. This judgment is given with mercy.
- In daily prayers, Muslims refer to God as merciful. God understands human suffering and knows how difficult it is to live according to God’s demands.
- God is fair and just and demands that humans emulate His qualities and treat others fairly, justly and mercifully.

Immanent and transcendent
- Allah is both immanent and transcendent.
- Although Muslims believe that God is the greatest, He is also close to his people. The way to describe this is to say that God is immanent (near) and also transcendent (beyond this world).
- Only God can be both at once. As creator, God is not restricted or limited by the physical world.
- At the same time, Allah is attentive to his people, wants people to pray, and is in control of all events in the world.
1Buddhism
1.1Key Beliefs
1.2Practices
2Christianity
2.1Key Beliefs
2.1.1The Nature of God2.1.2The Problem of Evil2.1.3Monotheism2.1.4Creation2.1.5Bible Accounts of Creation2.1.6The Trinity and Creation2.1.7Afterlife2.1.8Heaven and Hell2.1.9The Influence of Afterlife on Life2.1.10End of Topic Test - Christianity Key Beliefs2.1.11Exam-Style Questions - Christian Beliefs
2.2Jesus Christ & Salvation
2.2.1The Incarnation2.2.2Jesus - Divine & Human2.2.3The Crucifixion2.2.4Jesus' Betrayal2.2.5Resurrection & Ascension2.2.6Sin2.2.7Original Sin2.2.8Punishment2.2.9The Means of Salvation2.2.10Achieving Salvation2.2.11Disagreements About Salvation2.2.12The Role of Christ in Salvation2.2.13Theories of Salvation2.2.14End of Topic Test - Jesus Christ & Salvation
2.3Worship & Festivals
3Catholicism (Christianity)
3.1Key Beliefs
3.2The Seven Sacraments
4Islam
4.1Key Beliefs
4.2Authority
5Judaism
5.1Key Beliefs
5.2Covenant & The Mitzvot
Jump to other topics
1Buddhism
1.1Key Beliefs
1.2Practices
2Christianity
2.1Key Beliefs
2.1.1The Nature of God2.1.2The Problem of Evil2.1.3Monotheism2.1.4Creation2.1.5Bible Accounts of Creation2.1.6The Trinity and Creation2.1.7Afterlife2.1.8Heaven and Hell2.1.9The Influence of Afterlife on Life2.1.10End of Topic Test - Christianity Key Beliefs2.1.11Exam-Style Questions - Christian Beliefs
2.2Jesus Christ & Salvation
2.2.1The Incarnation2.2.2Jesus - Divine & Human2.2.3The Crucifixion2.2.4Jesus' Betrayal2.2.5Resurrection & Ascension2.2.6Sin2.2.7Original Sin2.2.8Punishment2.2.9The Means of Salvation2.2.10Achieving Salvation2.2.11Disagreements About Salvation2.2.12The Role of Christ in Salvation2.2.13Theories of Salvation2.2.14End of Topic Test - Jesus Christ & Salvation
2.3Worship & Festivals
3Catholicism (Christianity)
3.1Key Beliefs
3.2The Seven Sacraments
4Islam
4.1Key Beliefs
4.2Authority
5Judaism
5.1Key Beliefs
5.2Covenant & The Mitzvot
Practice questions on The Nature of God
Can you answer these? Test yourself with free interactive practice on Seneca — used by over 10 million students.
- 1What does the saying “Allahu Akbar” mean?Multiple choice
- 2
- 3Key features of the belief that God is just and beneficent:Fill in the list
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