الجمعة، 28 فبراير 2014

Islam and Jesus --35

Question: How does Islam see Jesus?
Islam sees Jesus the actual look that mind and intellect agree to, he is God’s servant, he can be alive and dies, he can be healthy and ill, he can be weak and strong, i.e. he has all things that happen to man at different stages of his life. But God chose him and purified him and gave him prophecy and mission, God says:
“He (Jesus) said: I am indeed a servant of God, He has given me revelation and made me a prophet. And He has made me blessed wherever I be, and has enjoined on me Prayer and Charity as long as I am alive. He has made me kind to my mother, and not overbearing or miserable. So peace is on me the day I was born, the day that I die, and the day that I shall be raised up to life (again).”
Surat Mariam, Verses 30, 31, 32, 33.
It was narrated that Ja’far Ibn-Abi-Taleb when he emigrated to Ethiopia with some Muslims, the people of Mecca sent Amr Ibn-Al’Aas with a delegation and gifts to the king of Ethiopia to get them Ja’far and the other Muslims back. They told the king that those Muslims say bad things about Jesus; the king called Ja’far and the other Muslims with him and called his bishops and rabbis, then he asked Ja’far what they say about Jesus the son of Mary, Ja’far recited those verses we mentioned from Surat Mariam, the king and the monks wept and the king said: By God, this (Koran) and what Jesus got come from the same source. He scolded Amr and the people with him and he announced his protection for Ja’far and the other Muslims in his kingdom.

الخميس، 27 فبراير 2014

Immortal souls


Immortal souls always preserve their vitality, and in every season, they show a different sign of life. They never wither or fade away; they never lose their vigor. Neither the setting sun or the fading moon, nor the passing days and nights, exhaust them. How can they possibly tire when the immutable source of their life and energy comes from the pot from which Khidr drank the elixir of life?[1] In this climate, for those who set sail to explore their true nature, every spring is effervescent and magnificent, and every summer peaks in delight; every fall and winter are seasons of stirring challenge that prepare them for thrilling new leaps. Even if all sorts of terror lurk around them, these souls will always be robust and vigilant, and their exhilarating ethos will always emanate sublime sensations.

These exalted souls are lovers with angels; they always stand their position, even in the case of possible devastation, collapse, or resentment. They carry out their duties only to please God. They deem themselves responsible towards the community in which they live. They are neither grieved by the disturbance of their work or the disruption of their plans, nor do they panic in the face of dangers descended over their community. Above all, they never fall into despair.

They are patient and skilled, and strong and determined in their relations with others. They prepare and build radiant kiosks, silently but vigilantly, and they wait for their guests. Whoever enters their atmosphere can feel as if they met Khidr, and whoever intermingles and sympathizes with them attains true happiness.

Brightness can be seen in their faces, wisdom in their thoughts, and truth in their speech. Those who enter their private spiritual space burdened with pessimism and hopelessness leave lightened with faith and hope, having acquired the secret to everlasting existence.

The duty of children towards parents - 34

Question: What is the duty of children towards fathers and mothers in Islam?
Islam imposes different duties upon children towards fathers and mothers, such as:
1- Respecting them, they shouldn’t utter a word that can get them angry, nor oppress them nor do anything that gets them sad, “Don’t say to them a word of contempt”
 Surat Al-Israa, Verse 23.
2- Islam prohibits talking loudly of any insult, curse, scold, rebuke, admonishment or blame in front of them, “nor repel them”Surat Al-Israa, Verse 23.

3- Islam puts the basis to deal with them by good words and honorable phrases, “but address them in terms of honor” Surat Al-Israa, Verse 23.
4- Islam urges sons to spend their money for parents, to obey their orders and to fulfill their wishes without any grumble or complaint, the prophet (Blessings and peace of Allah be upon him) said: “You and your wealth are your parents’.”
5- Islam recommends a Muslim not to take any important decision in his life such as travel, marriage or business without consulting them and getting their agreement, their agreement is essential for such deeds to be right and successful.
6- Islam makes honoring parents that means doing good to them, obeying their orders and fulfilling their wishes the first thing a Muslim should care about after doing the rights of God, God says: “Your Lord has decreed that you worship none but Him, and that you be kind to parents.”
Surat Al-Israa, Verse 23.
7- Islam warns sons from disobeying parents and makes such thing leads to bad end of one’s life, and promises someone who disobeys parents that he will be punished for this sin particularly during his life before his death, the prophet (Blessings and peace of Allah be upon him) said: “God delays what He wills from all sins to the Day of Judgment except disobeying parents, God hastens it to the doer in life before death.”
Man’s honoring and obeying parents in Islam is not only during their lifetime, but Islam makes them also have right after their death, a man asked the prophet: (Is there still anything by which I obey and honor my parents after their death?) The prophet said: “Yes, praying for them, asking forgiveness for them, fulfilling their covenant, honoring their friends and keeping in touch with 
the kinship from their sides.”

The Origins Of Sufism


     
 The prophet set these origins himself. So this way lasted until now, carried on by working scholars and Rabbis wise people all the times.
       Sufism began like this: the good man builds himself a small mosque and collects his true companions and does with them what the prophet did with the Suffa people. The same sight is repeated, some of them pronounce God’s name, others contemplate, others recite the Quran, others teach, others learn, others fast during days and others stay nights up worshipping God.
       He (the good man - the instructor – Al-Sheikh)gives each one, what matches his abilities and what his soul likes from good work which makes him nearer to God, because souls differ and each one prefers to do a certain work of worshipping. Then God gives them gifts and bounties which He previously gave to the companions of the prophet (May the blessings and peace of Allah be upon him) and the Suffa people.  
       This is the origin on which the true Sufis, pious and good people and wise rabbis followed. They followed, what the Suffa people did, with their students and lovers. So you find with them remembrance circles, knowledge circles, contemplation circles and circles for reciting the Quran. 
       Among them you can also see love, affection and harmony, because they stipulate, to be with them and share them, that the heart shouldn’t have any envy or spite and the soul shouldn’t have any desire towards this life, because they meet with God and want his face. So He gives them gifts and bounties mentioned in this verse:
       "Then We gave the Book (the Qur'an) for inheritance to such of Our slaves whom We chose." (Surat Fatir, verse 32)
       Do people of this age need this Sufism?
       Yes, they need it in this age and in all ages, for pure hearts, healthy bodies and clear life.
May the blessings and peace of Allah be upon our prophet 
Mohammed, his family and his companions.

knowledge of God



Sufism has been defined in many ways.

 Some see it as God's annihilating the individual's ego, will, and self-centeredness and then reviving him or her spiritually with the lights of His Essence. Such a transformation results in God's directing the individual's will in accordance with His Will. Others view it as a continuous striving to cleanse one's self of all that is bad or evil in order to acquire virtue.
Junayd al-Baghdadi, a famous Sufi master, defines Sufism as a method of recollecting "self-annihilation in God" and "permanence or subsistence with God." Shibli summarizes it as always being together with God or in His presence, so that no worldly or other-worldly aim is even entertained. Abu Muhammad Jarir describes it as resisting the temptations of the carnal self and bad qualities, and acquiring laudable moral qualities.

There are some who describe Sufism as seeing behind the "outer" or surface appearance of things and events and interpreting whatever happens in the world in relation to God. This means that a person regards every act of God as a window to "see" Him, lives his life as a continuous effort to view or "see" Him with a profound, spiritual "seeing" indescribable in physical terms, and with a profound awareness of being continually overseen by Him.

All of these definitions can be summarized as follows: Sufism is the path followed by an individual who, having been able to free himself or herself from human vices and weaknesses in order to acquire angelic qualities and conduct pleasing to God, lives in accordance with the requirements of God's knowledge and love, and in the resulting spiritual delight that ensues.

Sufism is based on observing even the most "trivial" rules of the Shari'a in order to penetrate their inner meaning. An initiate or traveler on the path (salik) never separates the outer observance of the Shari'a from its inner dimension, and therefore observes all of the requirements of both the outer and the inner dimensions of Islam. Through such observance, he or she travels toward the goal in utmost humility and submission.

Sufism, being a demanding path leading to knowledge of God, has no room for negligence or frivolity. It requires the initiate to strive continuously, like a honeybee flying from the hive to flowers and from flowers to the hive, to acquire this knowledge. The initiate should purify his or her heart from all other attachments; resist all carnal inclinations, desires, and appetites; and live in a manner reflecting the knowledge with which God has revived and illumined his or her heart, always ready to receive divine blessing and inspiration, as well as in strict observance of the Prophet Muhammad's example. Convinced that attachment and adherence to God is the greatest merit and honor, the initiate should renounce his or her own desires for the demands of God, the Truth.

After these [preliminary] definitions, we should discuss the aim, benefits, and principles of Sufism.

Sufism requires the strict observance of all religious obligations, an austere lifestyle, and the renunciation of carnal desires. Through this method of spiritual self-discipline, the individual's heart is purified and his or her senses and faculties are employed in the way of God, which means that the traveler can now begin to live on a spiritual level.

Sufism also enables individuals, through the constant worship of God, to deepen their awareness of themselves as devotees of God. Through the renunciation of this transient, material world, as well as the desires and emotions it engenders, they awaken to the reality of the other world, which is turned toward God's Divine Beautiful Names. Sufism allows individuals to develop the moral dimension of one's existence, and enables the acquisition of a strong, heartfelt, and personally experienced conviction of the articles of faith that before had only been accepted superficially.

The principles of Sufism may be listed as follows:

- Reaching true belief in God's Divine Oneness and living in accordance with its demands.

- Heeding the Divine Speech (the Qur'an), discerning and then obeying the commands of the Divine Power and Will as they relate to the universe (the laws of creation and life).

- Overflowing with Divine Love and getting along with all other beings in the realization (originating from Divine Love) that the universe is a cradle of brotherhood.

What Is Sufism?

- Giving preference or precedence to the well-being and happiness of others.

- Acting in accord with the demands of the Divine Will not with the demands of our own will and living in a manner that reflects our self-annihilation in God and subsistence with Him.

- Being open to love, spiritual yearning, delight, and ecstasy.

- Being able to discern what is in hearts or minds through facial expressions and the inner, Divine mysteries and meanings of surface events.

- Visiting spiritual places and associating with people who encourage the avoidance of sin and striving in the way of God.

- Being content with permitted pleasures, and not taking even a single step toward that which is not permitted.

- Struggling continuously against worldly ambitions and illusions, which lead us to believe that this world is eternal.

- Never forgetting that salvation is possible only through certainty or conviction of the truth of religious beliefs and conduct, sincerity or purity of intention, and the sole desire to please God.

Two other elements may be added: acquiring knowledge and understanding of the religious and gnostic sciences, and following a perfected, spiritual master's guidance. Both of these are of considerable significance in the Naqshbandiyah Sufi order.

It may be useful to discuss Sufism according to the following basic concepts, which often form the core of books written on good morals, manners, and asceticism, and which are viewed as the sites of the "Muhammadan Truth" in one's heart. They can also be considered lights by which to know and follow the spiritual path leading to God.

The first and foremost of these concepts is wakefulness (yaqaza), which is alluded to in the Prophetic saying (hadith): My eyes sleep but my heart does not, and in the saying of 'Ali, the fourth Caliph: Men are asleep. They wake up when they die. The many other stages on this path will be discussed, at some length, in this book.

Sufi masters


The Origin of Sufism 
As the history of Islamic religious sciences tells us, religious commandments were not written down during the early days of Islam; rather, the practice and oral circulation of commandments related to belief, worship, and daily life allowed the people to memorize them.
Thus it was easy to compile them in books later on, for what had been memorized and practiced was simply written down. In addition, since religious commandments were the vital issues in a Muslim's individual and collective life, scholars gave priority to them and compiled books on them. Legal scholars collected and codified books on Islamic law and its rules and principles pertaining to all fields of life. Traditionists established the Prophetic traditions (hadiths) and way of life (Sunna), and preserved them in books. Theologians dealt with issues concerning Muslim belief. Interpreters of the Qur'an dedicated themselves to studying its meaning, including issues that would later be called "Qur'anic sciences," such as naskh (abrogation of a law), inzal (God's sending down the entire Qur'an at one time), tanzil (God's sending down the Qur'an in parts on different occasions), qira'at (Qur'anic recitation), ta'wil (exegesis), and others.

Thanks to these efforts that remain universally appreciated in the Muslim world, the truths and principles of Islam were established in such a way that their authenticity cannot be doubted.

While some scholars were engaged in these "outer" activities, Sufi masters were mostly concentrating on the Muhammadan Truth's pure spiritual dimension. They sought to reveal the essence of humanity's being, the real nature of existence, and the inner dynamics of humanity and the cosmos by calling attention to the reality of that which lies beneath and beyond their outer dimension. Adding to Qur'anic commentaries, narrations of Traditionists, and deductions of legal scholars, Sufi masters developed their ways through asceticism, spirituality, and self-purification in short, their practice and experience of religion.

Thus the Islamic spiritual life based on asceticism, regular worship, abstention from all major and minor sins, sincerity and purity of intention, love and yearning, and the individual's admission of his or her essential impotence and destitution became the subject matter of Sufism, a new science possessing its own method, principles, rules, and terms. Even if various differences gradually emerged among the orders that were established later, it can be said that the basic core of this science has always been the essence of the Muhammadan Truth.

The two aspects of the same truth the commandments of the Shari'a and Sufism have sometimes been presented as mutually exclusive. This is quite unfortunate, as Sufism is nothing more than the spirit of the Shari'a, which is made up of austerity, self-control and criticism, and the continuous struggle to resist the temptations of Satan and the carnal, evil-commanding self in order to fulfill religious obligations. While adhering to the former has been regarded as exotericism (self-restriction to Islam's outer dimension), following the latter has been seen as pure esotericism. Although this discrimination arises partly from assertions that the commandments of the Shari'a are represented by legal scholars or muftis, and the other by Sufis, it should be viewed as the result of the natural, human tendency of assigning priority to that way which is most suitable for the individual practitioner.

Many legal scholars, Traditionists, and interpreters of the Qur'an produced important books based on the Qur'an and the Sunna. The Sufis, following methods dating back to the time of the Prophet and his Companions, also compiled books on austerity and spiritual struggle against carnal desires and temptations, as well as states and stations of the spirit. They also recorded their own spiritual experiences, love, ardor, and rapture. The goal of such literature was to attract the attention of those whom they regarded as restricting their practice and reflection to the "outer" dimension of religion, and directing it to the "inner" dimension of religious life.

Both Sufis and scholars sought to reach God by observing the Divine obligations and prohibitions. Nevertheless, some extremist attitudes occasionally observed on both sides caused disagreements. Actually there was no substantial disagreement, and it should not have been viewed as a disagreement, for it only involved dealing with different aspects and elements of religion under different titles. The tendency of specialists in jurisprudence to concern themselves with the rules of worship and daily life and how to regulate and discipline individual and social life, and that of Sufis to provide a way to live at a high level of spirituality through self-purification and spiritual training, cannot be considered a disagreement.

In fact, Sufism and jurisprudence are like the two schools of a university that seeks to teach its students the two dimensions of the Shari'a so that they can practice it in their daily lives. One school cannot survive without the other, for while one teaches how to pray, be ritually pure, fast, give charity, and how to regulate all aspects of daily life, the other concentrates on what these and other actions really mean, how to make worship an inseparable part of one's existence, and how to elevate each individual to the rank of a universal, perfect being (al-insan al-kamil) a true human being. That is why neither discipline can be neglected.

Although some self-proclaimed Sufis have labeled religious scholars "scholars of ceremonies" and "exoterists," real, per-fected Sufis have always depended on the basic principles of the Shari'a and have based their thoughts on the Qur'an and the Sunna. They have derived their methods from these basic sources of Islam. Al-Wasaya wa al-Ri'aya (The Advices and Observation of Rules) by al-Muhasibi, Al-Ta'arruf li-Madhhab Ahl al-Sufi (A Description of the Way of the People of Sufism) by Kalabazi, Al-Luma' (The Gleams) by al-Tusi, Qut al-Qulub (The Food of Hearts) by Abu Talib al-Makki, and Al-Risala al-Qushayri (The Treatise) by al-Qushayri are among the precious sources that discuss Sufism according to the Qur'an and the Sunna. Some of these sources concentrate on self-control and self-purification, while others elaborate upon various topics of concern to Sufis.

After these great compilers came Hujjat al-Islam Imam al-Ghazzali, author of Ihya' al-'Ulum al-Din (Reviving the Religious Sciences), his most celebrated work. He reviewed all of Sufism's terms, principles, and rules, and, establishing those agreed upon by all Sufi masters and criticizing others, united the outer (Shari'a and jurisprudence) and inner (Sufi) dimensions of Islam. Sufi masters who came after him presented Sufism as one of the religious sciences or a dimension thereof, promoting unity or agreement among themselves and the so-called "scholars of ceremonies." In addition, the Sufi masters made several Sufi subjects, such as the states of the spirit, certainty or conviction, sincerity and morality, part of the curriculum of madrassas (institutes for the study of religious sciences).

Although Sufism mostly concentrates on the individual's inner world and deals with the meaning and effect of religious commandments on one's spirit and heart and is therefore abstract, it does not contradict any of the Islamic ways based on the Qur'an and the Sunna. In fact, as is the case with other religious sciences, its source is the Qur'an and the Sunna, as well as the conclusions drawn from the Qur'an and the Sunna via ijtihad (deduction) by the purified scholars of the early period of Islam. It dwells on knowledge, knowledge of God, certainty, sincerity, perfect goodness, and other similar, fundamental virtues.

Defining Sufism as the "science of esoteric truths or mysteries," or the "science of humanity's spiritual states and stations," or the "science of initiation" does not mean that it is completely different from other religious sciences. Such definitions have resulted from the Shari'a-rooted experiences of various individuals, all of whom have had different temperaments and dispositions, and who lived at different times.

It is a distortion to present the viewpoints of Sufis and the thoughts and conclusions of Shari'a scholars as essentially different from each other. Although some Sufis were fanatic adherents of their own ways, and some religious scholars (i.e., legal scholars, Traditionists, and interpreters of the Qur'an) did restrict themselves to the outer dimension of religion, those who follow and represent the middle, straight path have always formed the majority. Therefore it is wrong to conclude that there is a serious disagreement (which most likely began with some unbecoming thoughts and words uttered by some legal scholars and Sufis against each other) between the two groups.

When compared with those who spoke for tolerance and consensus, those who have started or participated in such conflicts are very few indeed. This is natural, for both groups have always depended on the Qur'an and the Sunna, the two main sources of Islam.

In addition, the priorities of Sufism have never been different from those of jurisprudence. Both disciplines stress the importance of belief and of engaging in good deeds and good conduct. The only difference is that Sufis emphasize self-purification, deepening the meaning of good deeds and multiplying them, and attaining higher standards of good morals so that one's conscience can awaken to the knowledge of God and thus embark upon a path leading to the required sincerity in living Islam and obtaining God's pleasure.

By means of these virtues, men and women can acquire another nature, "another heart" (a spiritual intellect within the heart), a deeper knowledge of God, and another "tongue" with which to mention God. All of these will help them to observe the Shari'a commandments based on a deeper awareness of, and with a disposition for, devotion to God.

An individual practitioner of Sufism can use it to deepen his or her spirituality. Through the struggle with one's self, solitude or retreat, invocation, self-control and self-criticism, the veils covering the inner dimension of existence are torn apart, enabling the individual to acquire a strong conviction of the truth of all of Islam's major and minor principles. Sep 

الأربعاء، 26 فبراير 2014

A traveler on the way to God

Sofi

Sofi is used to designate the followers of Sufism, particularly by speakers of Persian and Turkish. Others use Sufi. I think the difference arises from the different views of the word's origin. Those who claim that it is derived from sof (wool), safa (spiritual delight, exhilaration), safwat (purity), or sophos (a Greek word meaning wisdom), or who believe that it implies devotion, prefer Sufi. Those who hold that it is derived from suffa (chamber), and stress that it should not be confused with sofu (religious zealot), also use Sufi.
The word sofi has been defined in many ways, among them:

- A traveler on the way to God who has purified his or her self and thus acquired inner light or spiritual enlightenment.

- A humble soldier of God who has been chosen by the Almighty for Himself and thus freed from the influence of his or her carnal, evil-commanding self.

- A traveler on the way to the Muhammadan Truth who wears a coarse, woolen cloak as a sign of humility and nothingness, and who renounces the world as the source of vice and carnal desire. Following the example of the Prophets and their followers, as well as sincere devotees, they are called mutasawwif to emphasize their spiritual states and belief, conduct, and life-style.

- A traveler to the peak of true humanity who has been freed from carnal turbidity and all kinds of human dirt to realize his or her essential, heavenly nature and identity.

- A spiritual person who tries to be like the people of the Suffa the poor, scholarly Companions of the Prophet who lived in the chamber adjacent to the Prophet's Mosque by dedicating his or her life to earning that name.

Some say that the word sofi is derived from saf (pure). Although their praiseworthy efforts to please God by serving Him continually and keeping their hearts set on Him are enough for them to be called pure ones, such a derivation is grammatically incorrect. Some have argued that sofi is derived from sophia or sophos, Greek words meaning wisdom. I think this is a fabrication of foreign researchers who try to prove that Sufism has a foreign and therefore non-Islamic origin.

The first Muslim to be called a Sofi was the great ascetic Abu Hashim al-Kufi (d. 150 AH9). Thus, the word sofi was in use in the second Islamic century after the generation of the Companions and their blessed successors. At this point in time, Sufism was characterized by spiritual people seeking to follow the footsteps of our Prophet, upon him be peace and blessings, and his Companions by imitating their life-styles. This is why Sufism has always been known and remembered as the spiritual dimension of the Islamic way of life.

Sufism seeks to educate people so that they will set their hearts on God and burn with the love of Him. It focuses on good morals and proper conduct, as shown by the Prophets. Although some slight deviations may have appeared in Sufism over time, these should not be used to condemn that way of spiritual purity.

While describing Sufis who lead a purely spiritual life, Imam Qushayri writes:

The greatest in Islam is Companionship of the Prophet, upon him be peace and blessings. This honor or blessing is so great that it can only be acquired by an actual Companion of the Prophet. The second rank in greatness belongs to the Tabi'un, those fortunate ones who came after the Companions and saw them. This is followed by the Taba'i al-Tabi'in, those who came after the Tabi'un and saw them. Just after the closing years of this third generation and coinciding with the outbreak of internal conflict and deviation in belief, and along with the Traditionists, legal scholars, and theologians who rendered great services to Islam, Sufis had great success in reviving the spiritual aspect of Islam.

Early Sofis were distinguished, saintly people who led upright, honest, austere, and simple and blemish-free lives. They did not seek bodily happiness or carnal gratification, and followed the example of the Prophet, upon him be peace and blessings. They were so balanced in their belief and thinking that they cannot be considered followers of ancient philosophers, Christian mystics, or Hindu holy men. Early Sofis considered it the science of humanity's inner world, the reality of things, and the mysteries of existence. A Sofi studied this science, one determined to reach the final rank of a universal or perfect being.

Sufism is a long journey of unceasing effort leading to the Infinite One, a marathon to be run without stopping, with unyielding resolution, and without anticipating any worldly pleasure or reward. It has nothing to do with Western or Eastern mysticism, yoga, or philosophy, for a Sofi is a hero determined to reach the Infinite One, not a mystic, a yogi, or a philosopher.

Prior to Islam, some Hindu and Greek philosophers followed various ways leading to self-purification and struggled against their carnal desires and the world's attractions. But Sufism is essentially different from these ways. For example, Sofis live their entire lives as a quest to purify their selves via invocation, regular worship, complete obedience to God, self-control, and humility, whereas ancient philosophers did not observe any of these rules or acts. Their self-purification if it really deserves to be considered as such usually caused conceit and arrogance in many of them, instead of humility and self-criticism.

Sofis can be divided into two categories: those who stress knowledge and seek to reach their destination through the knowledge of God (ma'rifa), and those who follow the path of yearning, spiritual ecstasy, and spiritual discovery.

Members of the first group spend their lives traveling toward God, progressing "in" and progressing "from" Him on the wings of knowledge and the knowledge of God. They seek to realize the meaning of: There is no power and strength save with God. Every change, alteration, transformation, and formation observed, and every event witnessed or experienced, is like a comprehensible message from the Holy Power and Will experienced in different tongues. Those in the second group also are serious in their journeying and asceticism. However, they may sometimes deviate from the main destination and fail to reach God Almighty, since they pursue hidden realities or truths, miracle-working, spiritual pleasure, and ecstasy. Although this path is grounded on the Qur'an and the Sunna, it may lead some initiates to cherish such desires and expectations as spiritual rank, working miracles, and sainthood. That is why the former path, which leads to the greatest sainthood under the guidance of the Qur'an, is safer.

Sofis divide people into three groups:

- The perfect ones who have reached the destination. This group is divided into two subgroups: the Prophets and the perfected ones who have reached the Truth by strictly following the prophetic examples. Not all perfected ones are guides; rather than guiding people to the Truth, some remain annihilated or drowned in the waves of the "ocean of meeting with God and amazement." As their relations with the visible, material world are completely severed, they cannot guide others.

- The initiates. This group also consists of two subgroups: those who completely renounce the world and, without considering the Hereafter, seek only God Almighty, and those who seek to enter Paradise but do not give up tasting some of the world's permitted pleasures. Such people are known as ascetics, worshippers, the poor, or the helpless.

- The settlers or clingers. This group consists of people who only want to live an easy, comfortable life in this world. Thus, Sofis call them "settlers" or "clingers," for they "cling heavily to the earth." They are mainly people who do not believe, who indulge in sin and therefore cannot be pardoned. According to the Qur'an, they are unfortunate beings who belong to "the group on the left," or those who are "blind" and "deaf" and "without understanding."

Some have also referred to these three groups as the foremost (or those brought near to God), the 
people on the right, and the people on the left. 

http://hassanelagouz.blogspot.com/

Islam and older people 33


Question: How does Islam see older people?
Islam exalts older people and orders to honor, respect, and venerate them, this starts by the most important ones for man, father and mother, God addresses man everywhere and at all times:
“Don’t say to them a word of contempt, nor repel them, but address them in terms of honor.” Surat Al-Israa, Verse 23.
The prophet recommended caring about all people of old age, he (Blessings and peace of Allah be upon him) said: “He is not one of us (Muslims) that who doesn’t respect the olds amongst us or have mercy upon our young.” So the prophet (Blessings and peace of Allah be upon him) called to respect and venerate the old, he addressed young people by tactful intelligent words to make them eager to exalt old people, he (Blessings and peace of Allah be upon him) said: “Whenever a young man venerates an old man for his age, God gets him someone to venerate him when he is old.”
Among the great signs of Islam as it perfectly keeps others’ rights, it orders to care about old people of all religions, once Omar Ibn-Al-Khattab saw a Jewish old man begging people, he asked him why he does this, he said: (Tax and old age), Omar got angry and called the keeper of exchequer and told him to free that man and other older people from the tax and to give them a constant salary and he said to him: *(We never be just with him if we take his tax when he is young and not care about him when he is old.) and it was the first social assurance for old people in history.

Hidden power in man- 32

Question: Is there in man powers other than the mind?
There are great hidden powers in man, no one can count or detail or explain them because this is higher than minds’ awareness, man usually believes in what his apparent senses can sense, but those are hidden and unseen powers, apparent senses never have authority over them, the mind is one of them including memory, thinking, illusion, imagination, recognition, innovation and other mental abilities and intellectual specialties the mind carries out whenever and the way we wish.
The spirit is one of those powers as we mentioned before. The secret is also one of those powers; it is a world about which God says:
“For verily He knows what is secret and what is yet more hidden.” Surat Taha, Verse 7.
And so the luminous heart in which there is belief and its opposite, love and its opposite, passions and emotions.
These are all realms in man, only prophecy, following it and doing what is revealed from Sharia of God can decode them.

الثلاثاء، 25 فبراير 2014

Recognizing the unseen -31


31- Recognizing the unseen

Question: How can man recognize the unseen?
God grants man means to achieve available knowledge and sciences, as there are apparent tangible types of knowledge and hidden types of knowledge that can’t be recognized by senses, so God made a certain suitable means for every type of knowledge, God says about them all:
“For every act of hearing, or of seeing or of (feeling in) the heart will be enquired into (on the Day of Reckoning).” Surat Al-Israa’, Verse 36.
Understanding tangible natural phenomena and collecting knowledge and sciences of this life is by watching, seeing, reading or perusing and this can be got by sight, or by receiving knowledge from scientists, experience from experts and wisdom from wise men and this can be got by hearing. These two senses, sight and hearing, are the basis of getting all types of knowledge of this life, but the unseen is what we can’t see by the naked eye or hear by the ear or touch as all the senses are unable to recognize it but the heart, only the heart by God’s support can realize such divine invisible secrets, the heart has an eye sees the divine unseen secrets, it also has an ear that can hear the sounds of spiritual meanings, it has a tongue by which it talks to the divine highest facts. If man responds to the apostle sent by God, chastens his soul and purifies his heart by remembrance of God, the mist is removed away from the eye of his heart then he can see by the light of God what we can’t see. God says about this:
“Truly it is not their eyes that are blind, but their hearts which are in their breasts.”
Surat Al-Hajj, Verse 46.
God also can remove the cloudiness away from his inner ear so that it becomes an aware ear that listens to the sounds of superior facts, God says about such people:
“In the case of those who say, "Our Lord is Allah,” and, further, stand straight and steadfast, the angels descend on them (from time to time): "Fear you not!" (They suggest), "Nor grieve! But receive the Glad Tidings of the Garden (of Bliss), which you were promised! "We are your protectors in this life and in the Hereafter: therein shall you have all that your souls shall desire; therein shall you have all that you ask for! “A hospitable gift prepared by (God) The Most-Forgiving The Most Merciful!” Surat Fosselat, Verses 30, 31, 32.
Seeing the unseen starts by the good vision during sleep then followed by inspiration from God (Glory to Him), then the light of insight, then revealing secrets, watching and others.

الاثنين، 24 فبراير 2014

What is the relation between man and the universe?- 30-

30- Relation between man and the universe

Question: What is the relation between man and the universe?
God created the universe and made it all employed to man and He made man employed to obey God The Most Gracious. As the creator knows His manufacture so a wise man should follow the instructions and guidance set by the maker. What if the maker sent a book with these instructions and sent an engineer with it, he is the prophet or the apostle who explains, demonstrates and details these instructions.
Man should inhabit the universe, work, make things, grow plants, eat, drink and enjoy with other people by grants and favors of God in life on condition that he accurately and properly follows the instructions and guidance showed by God the Creator of the universe.
So if God tells us that He made day as a means of subsistence and night as a covering, so in order to succeed in his life and be happy at the hereafter he should follow this as possible except if there is a necessity, because necessities make banned things legal.
If he eats or drinks intending to be able to work in life, enjoy the taste and help him in his life, he should leave the foods and drinks God banned in the verses of the Koran. If he wants to fulfill his sexual desire and have good descendants, he should follow the divine legal way which is marriage by legal conditions and be far from satanic inclined ways, and so with everything, God says about that who follows His orders and deals with the universe by the orders of Sharia:
“Whoever works righteousness, man or woman, and has Faith, verily, to him will We give a new Life, a life that is good and pure and We will bestow on such their reward according to the best 
of their actions.” Surat Annahl, Verse 97.

الأحد، 23 فبراير 2014

Asceticism


       The Mohammedan University started with asceticism in desires, wishes, money and this life seeking God’s satisfaction. The one who set the curriculum is the dean of the university. Al-Hassan narrated that the prophet (May the blessings and peace of Allah be upon him) came to the Suffa people and asked:
- "How are you this morning?" 
- "Fine," they said.
- "Today you are fine, but what if your meals contains different dishes and you use curtains in your houses as it is for the Ka’ba?" He said.
- "Oh, messenger of God, is this going to happen while we are Muslims?" They asked.
- "Yes," he said.
- "Then we are better than now, we will give charity and free slaves," they said.
- "No, you are now better, because when this happens, you will envy each other, break ties with kith and kin and hate each other," he said.
       This is true, because hatred and envy result from desires wishes, and loving this life which people adored.
               
       So the companions began their faithful life and the base of their meeting and their entry to the prophetical university was asceticism.
       Asceticism doesn’t mean: not having anything in one’s hand      (possession), but the fact of asceticism is: the heart shouldn’t rely on anything. A man may not have anything in his hand, but his heart is looking forward to it, this is not ascetic, because if he possessed it, he would be changed. The true ascetic is someone whose God gave him his bounties in his hand, but his heart isn’t affected by them, so he spends them for God’s satisfaction as we saw the prophet’s companions. One of them brought all his possessions to the prophet. The prophet asked him: "What did you leave for your family, Abu Bakr?" He said: I left them, God and his messenger. The prophet didn’t deny or opposed but agreed to this, because the condition 
(faith) of Abu Bakr required this. 

       Another man once said: O messenger of God, I want to make my will and give all my wealth to charity. The prophet said: "No, only one third and this is much, it’s better to leave your heirs rich than leaving them poor asking people for charity." So we know that abilities, intensions, grades and positions differ from one person to another:
     "There is not one of us (angels) but has his known place (or position)" (Surat Al-Safaat, verse 164)
       What was the schedule of the Suffa people?
       There were circles (sessions) for reciting the Quran, remembrance of God, knowledge and training for good works. They were soldiers and servants of the prophet (May the blessings and peace of Allah be upon him) and they were also his guests. 

       These were their deeds and the prophet used to observe them. One of them, Abu Said Al-Khudry said: "The prophet came to us and we are weak Muslims, while someone was reciting the Quran and supplicating for us, I don’t think the prophet knew anyone of them and they were hiding from each other because of bareness. The prophet signaled to us to make a circle, and then he asked:
- "What were you repeating?" 
- "This is a man recites the Quran and supplicates for us," they said.
- "Do it again," he said. Then he said: "Praise be to God who made people in my nation and asked me to stay patiently with them." He meant:
      "And keep yourself (O Muhammad) patiently with those who call on their Lord (i.e. your companions who remember their Lord with glorification, praising in prayers, etc., and other righteous deeds, etc.) morning and afternoon, seeking His Face, and let not your eyes overlook them, desiring the pomp and glitter of the life of the world; and obey not him whose heart We have made heedless of Our Remembrance, one who follows his own lusts and whose affair (deeds) has been lost." (Surat Al-Kahf, verse 28)
       Then he spoke to delight the poor and said that at the Day of Judgment, they will enter the heavens 500 years before the rich, while the rich are asked and called to account.
       Another time, Thabet Al-Banany narrated that Salman Al-Faresy was in a group pronouncing God’s name when the prophet passed, they stopped. The prophet asked:
- "What were you saying?" 
-"Pronouncing God’s name," they said.
- "Go on," he said, "I saw God’s mercy falls on you, so I wanted to share you." Then he said: "Praise be to God who made men in my nation and asked me to stay patiently with them."

       Sometimes they were two groups one of them pronounces God’s name and the other teach and learn. Their scholars were from among them. The prophet prepared scholars to teach them. Abdullah Ibn Rawaha sometimes said: Come to believe in God and he taught them how to believe.
       The prophet appointed professors for this school in all branches of knowledge. He said: "The most merciful man in my nation is Abu Bakr, the strongest in religion is Omar, the most shamefaced is Othman, the best one to answer you is Ali, the best one who knows the lawful and unlawful is Mo’az Ibn Gabal, the most truthful one on earth is Abu Zar, the best reciter is Oba’y Ibn Ka’b and the best one who knows the shares of inheritance is Zayd Ibn Thabet."  
       The prophet appointed a professor for each subject to teach in the university and every professor, his students circled around him
       The prophet was observing the university. He once entered the mosque and saw a group pronouncing God’s name and another group studying knowledge, he said: "Both of them are good, but I was sent as an instructor" (a teacher) and he sat with the circle of the group studying knowledge, but he praised both of them. 

الجمعة، 21 فبراير 2014

The Fact Of Sufism

The Fact Of Sufism

       Sufism means, in short:
       To act according to what you learn from the religion of Allah, i.e, the practical translation and practical life of the Quranic verses and the prophetic orders. The verses of the Quran call and lead the Quran people to high stations and well-pleasing conditions. The Sufis live this life with all their bodies, souls, hearts and spirits, until they find the happiness of connection and reach the perfect grades mentioned by Allah in the Quran.
       Sufism is not a sophistry, a philosophy, theories or sayings, but it is:
Behaviors, deeds and statuses.
After that, Allah sees the servant and grants him, from his bounty, from the light of his connection or from the sources of his wisdom: types from his favors and bounties, what no-one in mankind can limit or recognize, all of this is from God’s bounty. 
     "And if you would count the graces of Allah, never could you be able to count them. Truly! Allah is Oft-Forgiving, Most Merciful." (Surat Al-Nahl, verse 18)


The beginning of life and its aim - 29-


Question:
?How did life begin on earth and what’s its aim
Life started on the earth when Allah first created the earth and filled it with water, air, different types of food, and what its inhabitants need from clothing, residence, medicine and other things, i.e. He prepared everything man needs, then God created the first man who is Adam from the elements of the earth, then He breathed in him from His spirit and created Eve from him. After He lodged them in paradise to see different types of favor and bounties God prepared for righteous people from his offspring, He willed that they come down to the earth to inhabit it.
So the aim of their life on the earth was to dwell it by what Allah likes of useful deeds, good morals and good dealings, they also breed and propagate and teach their children and grandchildren to keep and fulfill their covenant to God by obeying Him, remembering Him, being thankful to Him and worshiping Him properly. Whoever keeps to this, he is the guided and the happy one, God makes his life a good one and makes him happy in the hereafter by His favor in paradise. And whoever disobeys Him and follows his desires and wishes spoiling and corrupting in life and destroying crops and cattle though he knows that God doesn’t like mischief, such man is a disbeliever in God’s bounties and not keeping his covenant to God, so God despises him, scorns him and gets him in Hell on the Day of Judgment to face torture as he is a disbeliever and ungrateful.

story of every child comes to this life



A Wiseman narrated that a man once sailed with a group of people. While they were at open sea, a strong wind blew them up. The ship sank with everything except one board floated on water, the man attached to it, and waves kept throwing him till he reached a shore of an island where he saw a crowd of people. They were waiting for him with the king's crown. When he arrived, they yelled happily and put the crown on his head, they made him their king and started to walk with him to the royal palace chanting livelong the king. After the crowds had left, the man brought his assistants and asked them about that. They told him that every year they receive a survivor from the sea; they declare him as their king for a year. Then, they threw him in the middle of a forest full of ferocious monsters and then start looking for another and so on. The man asked about his conferred powers, they told him that he has ultimate authority through his year of reign. He assigned one of them as a minister and ordered him to carry out immediately his following orders:
1- Removing the forest entirely.
2- Building a splendid palace suitable for the king.
3- Planting a garden around the palace with all the bounties of earth.
At the end of the year, he asked them to do their habit. They told 
him that they were overcome by his wisdom and good action.

Dear, this story indicates the story of every child comes to this life. The child in the womb of his mother is like a drowning man in the middle of the sea, at his birth, an Angel comes down to push him out on a feather of his wing in tenderness and love. The baby is like a drowning man stuck to a wooden slab. Allah surrounds the baby in his mother's belly by water to keep him from her movements and shakes. Allah, The Sustainer, provides him with air, water medicine and food through the umbilical cord and out of it wastes also pass. After coming out to earth, family and lovers surround him with decorations and celebrations. The baby has the upper hand over all surroundings and his organs all over his life in this world.
If a man behaves badly, he will be thrown in hell, if he does well for himself, and replaces his seat in hell with a palace in paradise which is built by his good deeds, righteousness and piety, then he gets rewarded by good eternal life in the vicinity of Allah.
Someone said about this: Man inhabits in the hereafter only the house he built before death, if he builds it by his good deeds, he will enjoy his residence, and if he builds it by bad deeds, he will be disappointed.



الخميس، 20 فبراير 2014

What is after death? 28

28- What after death

Question: What is after death?
Question: Is death extinction or there is another life? How is that life?
When man dies, his soul vanishes and then his body is perished and decayed because it is from physical elements so when the abstract facts which is the spirit and what its attaches leave it, its physical elements soon decay and return again to its origin which is dust, as God says:
“From the (earth) did We create you, and into it shall We return you, and from it shall We bring you out once again.” Surat Taha, Verse 55.
But the spirit never dies or gets extinct but it goes to a spiritual world called the interval world, God says about this:
“Before them is a Partition till the Day they are raised up.” Surat Al-Mo’menoon, Verse 100.
The interval is the partition between two things, so the partition world is the abstract spiritual world between this life and the hereafter. Spirits meet there and live an interval abstract life because after spirits get rid of the body which is intense and thick because it is from the elements of the earth, now there is only the spirit and its attachments which are from the world of light which is mild. Everything in the world of partition is mild and can see us but we can’t see them, we can only realize facts about this world by revelation and prophecy or by the science of vision or apocalypse or by truthful dreams of righteous people.
This world continues until this life gets to an end and no creatures will be there, then everything starts to get ready for resurrection and questioning at the hereafter.
The hereafter, the interval and the Day of Judgment are all unseen and hidden worlds that believers who follow prophets and apostles must believe in them, God says about them:
“This is the Book; in it is guidance sure, without doubt, to those who fear Allah. Who believe in the 
Unseen,” Surat Al-Baharah, Verses 2, 3.


Where is the spirit in man’s body? 27

27- The spirit

Question: Where is the spirit in man’s body?
The spirit is the secret, by which man is alive, acts, sees, hears, moves, learns and works, if the soul leaves the body partially, most human body’s systems stop and only few ones continue working to keep his life like the heart and respiratory system, this happens when man is asleep, but if the soul leaves the body totally, all human body’s systems stop and man dies.
In spite of this great importance of the spirit, modern technology, scientists, wise people, philosophers and others are unable to realize the fact of the spirit and even its place in the human body.
We can say that the spirit is from abstract divine facts that we can realize its effects but we can’t realize its real being. As man is alive and can move then this is the evidence that the soul is inside him, when his systems and organs stop working and he can’t move then this means that his spirit left, but what does it look like? What is its nature? And where is it in the human body? This is only known by its creator, so the Koran says:
“They ask you concerning the Spirit (of inspiration). Say: "The Spirit (comes) by command of my Lord: of knowledge it is only a little that is communicated to you, (O men!)"
Surat Al-Israa’, Verse 85.
We can see examples of the spirit from tangible life and our invisible world too. In tangible life we see the effect of electricity when we run machines or light the bulbs but no one can see electricity itself. In invisible or abstract world we see the effect of love and hatred in people’s behaviors but we can’t see them actually.
Then the spirit is a hidden secret that means life to man as this secret is from God, He says:
“And breathed into him of My spirit,” Surat Saad, Verse 72.
So it is a luminous fact not seen by apparent organs or tangible machines, imam Abul-Aza’em says about this: (The spirit is the picture of its Lord and its innovator, how can my body recognize it? If higher angels see its lights, they will fall prostrating for it longing for my grants. If the spirit appears when it is clear to the universe for a breath, it can hide it by its luminosity.)

 Islam is religion of peace 

How did God create man? 26

26- God creating man
Question:
?How did God create man
God created man from the elements of the earth, different substances found in the earth. According to modern discoveries they are more than one hundred elements and science still searching for more. Those elements get to man through plants, animals, fruits, vegetables and food, they are the medium or the carrier of those elements to man after changing them to delicious food eaten by man. God made all those facts of man get out their charity which is extra things to the blood and the blood collects all this to the spinal cord in the backbone of man to form a very tiny man having all the features of man, his genes, his height, his picture and his color, but he is only seen by electronic microscopes, and so the blood takes these facts to the ribs of the woman to form the ovum that carries all her genes, God says about this:
“Now let man but think from what he is created. He is created from a drop emitted. Proceeding from between the backbone and the ribs.”
 Surat Attarek, Verses 5, 6, 7.
If Allah wills to create a man, of course He has the ability, He paved the way for the man to meet the woman, then he sends an emission containing millions of sperms into the semen, we can say about each one of them that he is a very tiny man, and in the other side an ovum comes into the uterus of the female. The sperms find their way and only one of them wins and penetrates (pollinates) the ovum, then they start to form man in his mother uterus in a very accurate stages, the Koran mentioned this and modern technology stood powerless in front of this accuracy. A great scientist in embryology in Canada, Kent Moore said when he listened to this description By a Muslim scientist at one scientific conference: This description of the Koran to the stages of embryo formation in mother’s uterus, modern technology can only confess that it is true without any doubt, it can’t even exchange a word of this description as it is so accurate as Allah says:
“Man We did create from a quintessence (of clay); Then We placed him as (a drop of) sperm in a place of rest, firmly fixed; Then We made the sperm into a clot of congealed blood; then of that clot We made a (fetus) lump; then we made out of that lump bones and clothed the bones with flesh; then we developed out of it another creature. So blessed be Allah, the best to create.” 

Surat Al-Mo’menoon, Verses 12, 
13, 14.