The Cultivation of Spiritual
Life
Dr. Muhammad Hamidullah
ISLAM envisages for man a discipline for
his life as a whole, material as well as spiritual. But there is no
denying the fact that owing to differences of individual temperaments,
certain people would specialize in certain specialties and not in others.
Even if one were to concentrate on the spiritual side of one's existence,
he would still remain more or less attached to the other occupations of
life for his nourishment, for the sake of society of which he is a member,
and so on.
In his celebrated exposé of his teaching
on faith and submission and the best method of these two, the Prophet
Muhammad defined this last point in the following terms:
"As to the embellishment (ihsan) of conduct, so render thy service
unto God as if thou seest Him: even though thou doest not see Him, yet He
seeth thee."
This beautification, the best and most
beautiful method of devotion or service unto God, is the spiritual culture
of Islam. "Service unto God" is a most comprehensive term, and
includes not merely the cult, but also relates to human conduct throughout
life. The most cultured from the spiritual point of view, are those who
abide most closely by the will of God in all their acts, thoughts and
beliefs.
Questions concerning this discipline form
the subject matter of mysticism. The term 'mysticism' has several synonyms
in Islam: Ihsan (which we find also used in
the above-mentioned exposé of the Prophet), Qurb
(or approaching God), Tariqat (road, i.e., of the journey unto God), Suluk
(journey, i.e. unto God), Tasawwuf (which
etymologically means: to put on a woolen cloth). This last term is,
curiously enough, the most currently used.
Differences of individual temperaments have
existed in the human race at all times. It goes to the credit of Islam
that it has discovered certain things which it could impose on each and
every person, irrespective of temperament, a minimum necessary to be
shared and practised in common. This minimum necessity simultaneously not
only touches spiritual but also material needs. In order to understand it
well, it may be noted that all agree that the best Muslims are the
immediate disciples of the Prophet, namely his companions. A study of
their lives shows that from the very start they were possessed of a
variety of temperaments. There was Khalid, a warrior, an intrepid soldier,
on whom the Prophet was pleased, in admiration, to confer the title of
"the Sword of God". There were 'Uthman and Ibn 'Awf, who were
rich merchants, and the Prophet had announced the good tidings that they
too belonged to the people of the Paradise. There was also Abu Dharr who
detested all property, and preferred an ascetic life of mortification. We
may recall a Bedouin nomad, who had visited the Prophet one day, in order
to learn what were the minimum duties to merit Paradise. The Prophet had
replied: Faith in the One God, prayers five times a day, fast during the
whole month of Ramadan, and the pilgrimage and payment of zakat-tax if one
had means thereto. The Bedouin embraced Islam, and burst forth: By God! I
shall do nothing more and nothing less. When he departed, the Prophet
remarked: Whoever wishes to see a man of Paradise, let him look at him!
(cf. Bukhari and Muslim). Be it the warrior Khalid, or the wealthy 'Uthman,
they never neglected the essential duties of Islam and its spirituality.
Similarly Abu Dharr, Salman, Abu'd-Darda' and others who liked asceticism,
did not obtain permission from the Prophet to lead, for instance, lives of
recluses, to fast perpetually, to get castrated in horror of carnal
pleasures, etc. On the contrary, the Prophet enjoined them to marry, and
added: 'Thou hast obligations even with regard to thy own body.' (cf. lbn
Hanbal), According to Islam, one does not belong to one's self, but to
God; and it is not permitted to misuse the trust which God has reposed in
us in the shape of our persons.
The Suffah
In the grand mosque of Madinah, there was
in the time of the Prophet a special area called 'Suffah' somewhat away
from the prayer hall. This was a centre of training and education,
functioning under the personal supervision of the Prophet himself. A
considerable number of Muslims occupied it. They devoted part of their
time, during the day, to learn the Islamic way of life, not only in
matters of man's relation with God, but also with other members of
society. They also worked to earn their bare necessaries of life, so that
they might not become parasites and a burden on others. During the
night, they passed their time, like the best mystics, in the observance of
supererogatory (nafal) prayers and in meditation on God. Whether one
calls this institute a convent (a Tekkeh, a Khanqah) or by any other name,
there is no doubt that the inmates of the Suffah were more attached to
spiritual practices than to material avocations. Perhaps one will
not be able to know the details of the practices which the Prophet had
enjoined on these early Muslim mystics, which practices must have varied
according to the temperament and capacities of each individual. Yet the
object being determined, there was enough liberty to select lawful means
leading thereto. It may be recalled, by the way, that the Prophet once
said: "Wisdom is the lost-property of the believer; wherever he
should find it, he should recover it" (cf. Tirmidhi, lbn Majah).
The Essence of Mysticism
Through mysticism, Islam envisages a
rectitude of beliefs, embellishment or beautification of the acts of
devotion, taking the life of the Prophet as a model to be followed in all
activities of life, the amelioration of personal conduct, and the
accomplishment of duties imposed by Islam.
It has nothing to do with the power to know
invisible things, with performing miracles, or imposing one's will on
others by mysterious psychic means; not even with asceticism,
mortification, seclusion, meditation and the consequent sensations (which
may sometimes be means, yet not ends; or even with certain beliefs
regarding the person of God (pantheism, etc); much less with what the
charlatans assert, that a mystic is above the Islamic law and the
necessary minimum duties imposed by it.
For want of a better term, one might use
the word 'mysticism' which in Islam means the method of the best
individual behaviour, i.e., the means by which one acquires control over
one's own self, the sincerity, the realization of the constant presence of
God in all one's acts and thoughts, seeking to love God more and more.
In the Islamic teachings, there are certain
'external' duties, such as prayer-service, fast, charity, abstaining from
evil and wickedness, etc. There are also 'internal' duties, such as faith,
gratitude to God, sincerity, and freedom from egoism. Mysticism is a
training for this latter aspect of life. However, even the
motivation of external duties are for the purification of the spirit,
which is the only means of eternal salvation. In general, the mystic
develops by his spiritual practices certain of his faculties and talents,
which appear to the average person as miraculous; but the mystic does not
seek them - he even despises them. To know invisible things, even if that
becomes possible for certain persons by certain practices, is not
desirable for the mystic, for these constitute the secrets of God and
their premature divulgation is harmful to man in the long run. That is why
the mystic does not utilize such powers even if he comes to acquire them;
his aim remains always the purification of the spirit, in order to become
more agreeable to the Lord. The perfect man is he
who beautifies not only his outer but also his inner self, or his body and
his heart.
For the external aspect, there is the Fiqh
or body of Muslim law which consists of rules for one's entire outer life,
such as cult, contractual relations, penalties, etc. It is however the
internal aspect which is the true subject matter of mysticism. The acts of
prayer- service belong to the realm of Fiqh, but sincerity and devotion
are inner things, and belong to mysticism. Let us recall in this
connection two verses of the Qur'an:
"Successful indeed are the believers who are devout in their
prayer-service" (23 : 1-2), and "Lo the hypocrites. . . when
they stand up to worship they perform it languidly and in ostentation so
as to be observed by men" (4:142).
The good and bad services of worship, indicated therein, give us a clue to
the understanding of what Islam requires of its adherents in all
activities of life.
Islamic tradition reserves to the caliph or
the head of the Muslim State not only politics (including administration
of justice). but also cult, i.e., the outward practice of the religion,
such as service of worship, fasting, pilgrimage. All this falls under the
purview of Fiqh (Muslim law) developed by the different schools. In this
realm, monopoly of power has been jealously imposed, although this
concerns the rather less important part of our life. Sectarian differences
exist among Muslims, since the death of the Prophet, as to who had the
right to succeed to the Prophet in the exercise of the power regarding
politics and cult. Let us leave the decision to God on the Day of Judgment, and let us occupy ourselves with our future and the
defense against the enemies of God. As to the inner life, which alone determines
the salvation in the everlasting Hereafter, in this sphere there are no
jealousies - several persons could and did succeed the Prophet
simultaneously. If the Naqshbandiyah Order of mystics seeks its authority
from the Prophet through Abu Bakr, the Qadiriyah and Suhrawardiyah orders
for instance, do the same through 'Ali, and all this among the Sunnis to
whom Abu Bakr alone was the immediate successor of the Prophet in the
political field. This spiritual Realm, which unites Sunnis and Shi'as, is
no vapid abstraction - it has its own full fledged administrative organization. The existence of abdal and autad or spiritual governors and
administrators is known on the authority of the Prophet himself, as we
read by as early an author as Ibn Sa'd. A monograph of Suyuti has
collected all the traditions of the Prophet on the subject of qutb, abdal
and autad. One need not enter into details here.
Pleasure of God
The common folk desire that God should love
them in a sort of one way traffic without their loving Him - that He
should give them well-being without their obeying Him. The Qur'an (2:165)
teaches: ". . .those who believe are stauncher in their love for
God." Again, it indicates the traits of the best men and says (5:54):
" . . . a people whom He loves and who love Him."
Obtaining Divine pleasure is not analogous
to the enjoyment of material comforts, which God may give a man in order
to test his gratefulness. Sometimes a man remains deprived of these
comforts so that his endurance and constancy may be tested. In both cases
man must show his devotion and attachment to God. This necessitates, on
the one hand, abnegation of the ego by getting absorbed in the will of
God, and on the other, a constant feeling of the effective presence of
God.
The philosophic conception of pantheism
emanates from the necessity of "self-abnegation in God."
For a mystic, the mere affirmation of this belief has no value, he aspires
to assimilate it and feel it as a reality. Thus it is that the learned
distinctions between pantheism in the sense of the unity of existence, and
that of the unity of vision, or any other, are for a true mystic mere
logomachy, [verbal disputation] which makes the eager traveller lose his
track, and retards his arrival at his destination.
It may be recalled here that the Islamic
notion of pantheism does not lead to the reunification of man with God.
However close a man may approach God, there is still a distinction, a
separation, and a distance between the Creator and the created. One
abnegates one's ego, but not one's person. The higher the level we
attain, the more does God speak with our tongue, act with our hand, and
desire with our heart (1) (cf.
Bukhâri). There is an ascension and a journey of man towards God, but
there is never a confusion between the two. Thus it is that a Muslim does
not use the term 'communion,' which may imply a union and a confusion. The
Muslims designate the spiritual journey by the term mi'raj, which means a
ladder, an ascension, which varies according to individuals and their
capacities. The highest imaginable level a human being can attain is the
one that has been reached by the holy Prophet Muhammad. And this
experience of his is also called mi'raj. So, in a state of consciousness
and wakefulness, the Prophet had the vision (ru'ya) of being transported
to heaven and graced with the honor of the Divine Presence. Even there,
in this state beyond time and space, the Qur'an (53:9) indicates formally
that the distance between God and the Prophet, "was of two bows'
length or even nearer," and this graphic description lays emphasis
simultaneously on the closeness of proximity as well as the distinction
between the two. The Prophet himself employed the term mi'raj in
connection with the common faithful, when he indicated that "The
service of worship is the mi'raj of the believer." Evidently to each
according to his capacity and his merit.
The spiritual journey has a whole series of
stages, and it is only gradually that one traverses them. In the
life of the Prophet Muhammad, we see that he began with retreats in the
cave of Hira: then came the Meccan period, in which there was in store for
him suffering and self-abnegation for the sake of the Divine cause.
It is only after the Hijrah that he permits himself (under Divine
instructions always) to oppose injustice with force. It is quite
possible that someone, who pretends to be a dervish, should only be so in
appearance, being in reality a wolf disguised as a sheep. Similarly
it is quite possible that a king, with all the powers and treasures
accumulated in his hands, should still be in practice a saint, who does
not at all profit by these things, but makes a great self-sacrifice, in
the course of accomplishing his duties, by renouncing his personal
comforts.
To break the ego, the first requirement is
a feeling of humility, which should be developed. Pride is considered to
be a sin against God. Based on a Hadith, al-Ghazzali says,
"ostentation is the worship of self, therefore it is really a kind of
polytheism."
Temperaments differ, that is why the roads
also are numerous. One insists on the need of a guide and master. One who
has studied medicine privately, without passing through a period of
apprenticeship or even attending the courses of study with proficient
doctors, is not allowed to practice medicine. The cases are rare
where one sees all one's defects. Rarer still are instances of people who
correct themselves immediately. A master is necessary in the first
instance to indicate to us our defects and also the way in which these are
to be removed. There is a constant development and a perpetual evolution
in the individual, and the master spares us a great deal of unnecessary
effort. If one were not to profit by experiences of the past, and if each
newborn were to recommence each new task by falling back on his own
individual self, there would be no growth of culture and civilization -
which may be defined as the accumulated knowledge and practice of
generations of our ancestors. The pupil has a regard for the judgment and
counsel of his master, that he never has for his comrades and equals.
After theoretical studies, one passes through a probationary period, for
learning their practical application. This is as true of the material
sciences as of the spiritual ones. There are many things which one can
never learn by mere reading or listening; their practical application
under the supervision of an experienced master is always useful, if not
indispensable. Furthermore, mere knowledge does not suffice, it should be
assimilated and become second nature.
Mystics recommend four practices: eat
less, sleep less, speak less and frequent people less.
"Less" does not mean complete abnegation, which is sometimes
impossible (such as is eating and sleeping), and always undesirable; there
must always be moderation.
One should eat to live, not live to eat. To eat for the purpose of
obtaining the energy to accomplish the will and the commandments of God,
is an act of devotion. And to diminish nourishment and become
weakened to the extent of diminishing spiritual productivity is a
sin.
Sleep is necessary for health, and is a duty imposed on man. But
laziness, which causes us to remain in bed too long, affects our spiritual
progress. Sleeping less does not mean spending more time attaining
material needs, but in finding more time for the practices of devotion and
piety.
Speaking less means diminishing frivolous talk, and avoidance, if
possible, of all evil talk. It is often our habit to give good counsel to
others, but to forget to practice it ourselves. Frequenting people less,
means refraining from unnecessary talk and wasting time in needless
contacts. To do a good turn to others, and to be occupied with the
realization of things which could procure the pleasure of the Lord are
rather desirable frequentations. However, it should not be forgotten that
the needs of the individuals differ according to their stage of evolution;
one does not give the same advice to an expert master as to a young
novice. Mundane frequentations often occasion temptations, wasting useful
time, and the forgetting of our more important obligations. It may be
permitted to add a fifth counsel: spend less, meaning on luxuries,
flirtation, and personal pleasures. The amount thus saved could be used
for purposes dear to us but for which we have no money (in our
spend-thrift habits) to contribute our two cents. The five counsels may
constitute five principles of economy in Islam, both spiritual and
material.
Special Practices
One has to remember God at all times. The
essential feature is remembering by the heart. But concentration not being
constant one employs physical methods for strengthening the presence of
the spirit, and focusing of thought on the Divine person.
The Qur'an (33:41-2) says: "O ye who believe! Remember God with much
remembrance. And glorify Him early and late."
Again (3:191): "such as remember God, standing, sitting and reclining
and meditate on the creation of the heavens and the earth (and say:) our
Lord, Thou created not this in vain; glory be to Thee; Preserve us from
the doom of Fire."
There are litanies, in which some formulas
are repeated a number of times; there are prayers which one pronounces
every day as a habit. This is done aloud or in a low voice, but all should
be related invariably and always to God, to His person or to His
attributes, and never to created beings. Even if the subject be the
Prophet Muhammad, for gratitude and admiration, the approach should be
always through God, and never praying to Muhammad himself independently to
do something for us. For instance "O God, incline to Muhammad and
take him into Thy protection," or "O God resuscitate Muhammad in
the glorious place which Thou hast promised him, and accept his
intercession in our favour," etc.
For developing concentration of thought,
the mystics sometimes live in seclusion, or retreat, stop respiration for
moments, close the eyes, and concentrate on the throbbing of the heart
while thinking of God, etc. They also say that there are three grades of
remembrance of God - to remember only His name, to remember His person by
means of and through His name, and to remember His person without having
the need of His name or any other means. That these practices were
recommended by the Prophet himself and that they are not of a foreign
origin, it may be recalled that Abu Hurairah had a rosary, made of a
thread, with 2,000 knots to serve as many beads, and he repeated a certain
prayer on it every night, (Ibn Fadlallah al-'Umari, Masalik al-Absar, vol.
5 MS. of Istanbul).
Among other practices, one may mention a
life of asceticism, self-mortification, and meditation particularly on
death and the final judgment. For Islam these are not ends, but only the
means, rather temporary and provisional, for the purpose of mastering and
breaking the ego. Everything that one permits to one's self in this world
is divided into two categories - necessities and luxuries. One can never
renounce the necessities, for that would be suicide. To commit suicide is
religiously forbidden in Islam, for we do not belong to ourselves, but to
God; and to destroy something before its full-fledged realization is to go
against the will of God. As for luxuries, if they are not made the aim of
our existence in this world, they are lawful. One can renounce them in
order to dominate over one's animality. One can also do so in order to
help those who do not possess even the necessities of life, or perhaps as
a penitence. But it is not permitted to act in an exaggerated manner or
out of all proportion. A virile man who makes an effort to lead a chaste
life has greater merit than the one who destroys his desires by means, for
instance, of a surgical operation. One who has no capacity for evil has no
merit in comparison with the one who has the most perfect capacity for it
and yet abstains voluntarily from it, for fear of God.
Self-mortification, abstinence and other
spiritual practices enhance certain faculties, yet the acquisition of such
faculties, however miraculous they might be, is not the aim of one who
travels toward God. One seeks to realize acts, but not the sensations
which are produced thereby automatically. Even an infidel may acquire
certain of the faculties of saints, yet without the ultimate salvation.
The mystic is continually directed towards his destination, and does not
think of, much less profit by, these incidents of the saintly journey.
The life of a Sufi, dervish or mystic
begins with repentance for past sins and the reparation, as far as
possible, of harms done to other people. God pardons harms done to His own
rights, but not those to the rights of other creatures; it is these latter
who alone can pardon. It is only then that one can march on the path
leading to the Lord. It is not the monopoly of any person or class or
caste. It is within the reach of everybody, and it is the duty of each and
everyone to take this road. The provisions for this journey are two-fold
-- obedience to God and constantly remembering Him. Obedience is easier in
the sense that one knows what one has to do and what the will of the Lord
is. He has revealed His will and His prescriptions through His chosen
prophets, in order that they communicate them to the common folk.
God has sent innumerable prophets. If their
teachings differ in detail, it is not because God has changed His opinion,
but only because, in His mercy and wisdom, the evolution or deterioration
of the human capacities necessitated a change in the rules of conduct and
in the details. Although in the essentials of their teachings,
particularly in those which concern the relation of man with God, prophets
do not differ, (and the Qur'an lays a strong emphasis on it) it is part of
the obedience of man to God's orders to abide by the latest disposition of
His will. If God taught men something through the prophet Abraham, for
instance, it will not be disobedience to abandon it for abiding by the
teachings of the prophet Moses, because he brought in his time the latest
disposition of the orders of the same Law-giver. What is more, to neglect
the directions of Moses and continue to practice the teachings of Abraham
would be flagrant disobedience to God. It is thus that man should practise,
turn by turn, the messages of God brought by successive prophets, the
latest of whom being Muhammad. It is thus that with all his respect for
the previous prophets, a Muslim cannot abide except by the latest
disposition of the will of God communicated to man. A Muslim venerates the
Torah, the Psalter and the Gospel as the word of God, yet he abides by the
latest and the most recent of the words of God, namely the Qur'an. Whoever
remains attached to the preceding laws, cannot be considered, by the
Legislator, as law-abiding and obedient.
Conclusion
Man being composed simultaneously of body
and soul, of an outer and an inner existence, the harmonious progress and
balanced evolution towards perfection require that attention should be
paid to both these aspects of man. Mysticism or spiritual culture in Islam
envisages the diminution of the Ego and the ever increasing realization of
the presence of God. To be absorbed in the will of God does not at all
mean an immobility; far from that. In innumerable verses, the Qur'an urges
man to action and even to compete in the search for the Divine pleasure by
means of good actions. Not to follow one's own evil desires, but to abide
by the will of God alone, does not lead to inaction. Only that happens
which God wills. Yet not knowing the will of God, which remains concealed
from men, man must always continue his effort, even though failure follows
failure, when trying to attain the goal which he conscientiously believes
to be good and in conformity with the revealed commandments of God. This
notion of a dynamic predestination, which urges one to action and
resignation to the will of God, is well explained in the following verses
of the Qur'an (57: 22-2?): "Naught of disaster befalleth on the earth
or in your souls but it is in a Book (Prescription) before We bring in
into being - lo! that is easy for God - that ye grieve not for the sake of
that which hath escaped you, nor ye exult because of that which ye had
been given; God loveth not prideful boasters." Man should always
think of the grandeur of God, and vis-à-vis this, of his own humility, as
well as of the day of the Resurrection when the Lord will demand
individual accounts. The Qur'an says (29:69): "As for those who
strive in Us, We surely guide them to Our paths, and lo! God is with the
good."
Notes
1. Literally: "I become his ear with
which he hears, his eye with which he sees, his hand with which he seizes,
and his feet with which he walks."
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