#bediuzzaman
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beyzaavinur · 9 months ago
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"Öyleyse kazandıklarına karşılık az gülüp,çok ağlasınlar"
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risalefabrikasi · 2 years ago
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Sevgili Üstadım! Her bir risale aramızda pek büyük bir sevinçle karşılandığı ve hayretle okunduğu ve lâyık olduğu şekilde hürmet gördüğü için, her nasılsa vaki' olan hatam hakkındaki mektubunuzu aldığım vakit, kıymetdar Üstadım bu hali bize ihtar etmeseydiniz, biz hiçbir vakit böyle şeyle meşgul olmayacaktık ve yanlış var diyenlere karşı da hak dava edeceğimizde hiç tereddüd etmeyecektik. Barla Lâhikası - 112 #risalefabrikasi #ihlasnurneşriyat #envarneşriyat #sözlerneşriyat#Rnk #nursöz #Üstad #risalefabrikasi #Bediüzzaman #SaidNursi #Ömür #Dünya #Hayat #Kuran #RisaleiNur #Risaleinur #envarnesriyat #Bediüzzaman #Bediülbeyan #RisaleiNurdan #Risalei NurOkuyoruz #Bediuzzaman #bediüzzamansaidnursi #süleymanyasinakdeniz https://www.instagram.com/p/CneP3ZYjtBo/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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chineserisale · 2 years ago
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凭借信仰之光,人可以被擢升到最高境界,使他获得入居天园的品级;没有信仰光辉的照耀,人会被贬黜到最卑劣的境地,成为火狱的居民。 信仰是一条纽带,把人和伟大的创造者紧密地联系起来。通过信仰,人在万有中获得升华,身价倍增,既从自身彰显真主的创造之伟,又在万有的册页中映现真主的尊名。 《光明论集》,箴言二十三 #光明论集 #23.soz #箴言 #risale #risaleinurkülliyatı #bediuzzaman https://www.instagram.com/p/CpAXBiwDaLW/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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yakazakalb · 1 year ago
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Böyle sosyal medyanın olmadığı zamanlar herkesin uzaktan tanıdığı, sevdiği muhabbet beslediği zamanlar... Hani bir radyo programı dinliyorsunuz, yapımcı çok hoşunuza gidiyor, dinledikçe seviyorsunuz. Sonra bir gün onu görünce büyü bozuluyor. Ya da okuduğunuz bir kitabın yazarı...
Hayattaki bazı şeylerin de büyüsünü bozmamak lazım. Sırlamış senin için Mevla'm. Daha çok haz alasın, daha çok bağlanasın peşine düşesin, hayretin, gayretin artsın diye hayat esrarlı bazen. Bazı şeyleri o kadar çok istiyoruz ki sonra oluyor büyüsünü bozuyoruz. Eski tat ve lezzetimiz kalmıyor.
Gayp bu yüzden gayb aslında. Hikmet gizlenmiş hadiseye. Bu yüzden... Teslimiyet ve huzur için... Şüphe ve isyan için değil. Ve zaman en büyük müfessir. Huzurun kaçmadan o tılsım bozulmadan hikmet/i sana görünür bir gün, bir zaman.
Ne diyordu Bediuzzaman.
"Pencerelerden seyret, içlerine girme" ...
🌿🌿 Bir genç varmış. Karşı köyden bir kızı severmiş. İki köy arasında bir göl varmış ve aşık maşuğunu görmek için her gece o gölü geçermiş yüzerek. Bir gün yine geçmiş bir de bakmış ki sevdiğinin gözü şaşı. Demiş, senin gözlerin şaşıymış ben nasıl fark etmedim ? Sevdiği demiş geçme bu gece karşıya, burda kal. Gönle şüphe düştü kalır mı aşık, kalmamış. Geçememiş o gece gölü boğulmuş yok olmuş suda. Demesi o ki aşk şüphe götürmez. Kalpte Rabbin rızasından ötesi varsa boğulur gidersin .
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questionsonislam · 5 months ago
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What is the importance of Ahl-i Bayt affection in Islam?
Having affection to Ahl-i Bayt (Family of the Prophet) in the name of Allah is an obligation {vacip (duty secondarily incumbent on a Muslim)} in our religion. {It is farz (necessary religious duty required for all Muslims) according to Imam-i Shafee} Allah presents a decree in the Surah (Quranic Chapter) Ash-Shura,
Say: I ask of you no wage for it (for conveying Gods Religion to you which will bring you this favor), but (I ask of you for) love for my near relatives (Ahl-i Bayt) (on account of my mission). (Ash-Shura Surah, 42:23)
Our Prophet (pbuh), in one of his hadiths, announced:
Love Allah due to the blessings He has given to you; and love me because of Allah; and love my family because of me. This hadith clearly signifies the importance of Ahl-i Bayt Affection in our religion.
In another hadith, our Prophet (pbuh) announced:
I leave you two things; if you adhere to those you will find the salvation: one is Allahs Book (Quran), the other is my family (Ahl-i Bayt). In this hadith, having made mention of those all together, it has been thought us this true lesson:
Any Muslim who obeys to the commands of Allahs Book should love Ahl-i Bayt; any Muslim who loves Ahl-i Bayt should act according to Allahs Book.
As it is true for everything, Affection for the Family of Prophet (pbuh) should also be moderate. In addition, this moderation requires living our lives with sunnah (practices of our Prophet) completely. Bediuzzaman (Author of the most influential books on religion today: Risale-i Nur Collection) explains this matter as follows:
The practices of the Prophet were required from the Family of Prophet in respect of the function of prophethood. Just as someone who abandoned the Prophets Practices could not truly be a member of his Family, so too such a person could not be a true friend to them. According to this truth, a Muslim who follows these practices completely loves the Family of Prophet in true meaning.
As required by the rule: The cause is like the doer, a share of all the benefactions and the good deeds which are the results of prayers of a Muslim pass to our Prophet, to his Family and to the Sahaba (Companions). By this way there arise a functional relationship between the spirits of the Family of Prophet and the believer, moreover, it passes good works to them and they become happy and glad indeed.
We should also point out that if it is hold only an abstract form of affection to Ahl-i Bayt in that case it would reduce our Prophets (pbuh) having been sent to humanity to a simpler state which is just to teach us loving Ahl-i Bayt. Whereas our Prophet (pbuh) has been sent for humanity to introduce, to teach loving Allah, and to urge them coming before Allah with the opportunity of prayer.
This kind of understanding is to put the purpose of creation down only to affection, whereas; Ahl-i Bayt included, all of the humans were created to know and to pray to Mighty and Sublime Allah.
In a Hadith in Mashareq, Hazrath Mohammad (pbuh) addresses Hazrath Fatima: My daughter Fatima-i Zahra, try to seek refuge from the torment of the Hell-fire because Im not capable of canceling your torments and punishments which you could possibly suffer from in the Akhirat (Life after Death) for not doing your religious necessities and obligations and doing forbidden.
Our affection to Ahl-i Bayt is not just because of their distinct personalities, it is because of their distinct services for Quran, their extreme devotion for spreading the Religion of Islam and their service for science and enlightenment.
Any believer who has affection to Ahl-i Bayt, by fulfilling his/her prayers should follow their example and try to look and be like them. Loving Ahl-i Bayt in the literal sense can only become real (haqiqat) by this way.
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saidaslan1 · 2 years ago
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Ey dünya perest insan! Çok geniş tasavvur ettiğin senin dünyan, dar bir kabir hükmündedir.
Üstad Bediuzzaman
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tawakkull · 10 months ago
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ISLAM 101: Spirituality in Islam: Part 190
Another Way of Journeying and Initiation
Some make spiritual journeys by refining and developing the inner faculties, while others purify the carnal self within, causing it to take certain steps. In both these ways, suffering for certain periods is essential to reach the rank of perfection and to become a perfect human being. Yet there are other ways, different from these two ways, to reach the ranks and stations and the favors and blessings that come through spiritual journeying and suffering. Among these ways, there is one which is based on the way of the Prophet’s Companions and may be regarded as a manifestation of the truth of Messengership.
Helplessness, poverty, affection, reflection, zeal and thankfulness are the basic elements of this way. Helplessness means being aware of one’s inability to do many of the things that one wants to do, and poverty denotes the awareness of the fact that it is God Who is the real Owner and Master of everything. Embracing everybody and everything because of Him is affection, while reflection is thinking deeply, analytically and systematically about and meditating on the outer and inner world, with a new excitement everyday. Zeal is the great, ardent desire and yearning to reach God and to serve in His way. Always thanking God for His bounties and proceeding to Him in full consciousness of all His blessings during the journey is thankfulness.
According to Bediuzzaman Said Nursi,[1] this way is more direct and safer. Helplessness is a path of light leading to being loved by God that is safer and quicker than love; in it the more one perceives one’s helplessness, the more quickly one will reach one’s goal. Poverty is an inexhaustible treasure which, to the extent of one’s consciousness of it, will lead one to the protection and direction of the All-Merciful and His infinite Power much sooner and more safely than the greatest discipline, efforts and endeavors could. Affection is deeper and more sincere than love. No traveler having this feeling, which is a manifestation of Divine Compassion, has ever been left halfway. Reflection is the way of the enlightened spirits who relate everything to wisdom through study and the observation of one’s inner world and the outer world. As for zeal, it is the characteristic of those who are always conscious of the points or senses of reliance and asking for help that are innate to them. These two senses always remind of God. Those endowed with zeal never become desperate or disappointed. And finally, thankfulness is returning with gratitude all the blessings of God that we receive almost gratis.
The essence of the way can be summed up as: “I am helpless, You are the All-Powerful; I am poor, You are the All-Wealthy; I am needy and in straitened circumstances, You are the All-Compassionate; I am bewildered and seeking a way out, You are the only Goal Which is sought and to be reached.” It is not possible for those who are aware of their helplessness, poverty, neediness and bewilderment to see themselves as pure or of being of any rank, thus it is not possible for them to be heedless or forgetful of God while knowing that whoever forgets Him is forgotten and bound to forget him or herself also. Nor is it possible for them to attribute to themselves the accomplishments with which God has favored them, using the pretext of their endeavors, nor to ascribe their evil and sins to Destiny, thus regarding themselves as existing independently of God.
According to Bediuzzaman, this way can be dealt with from the viewpoint of the following four disciplines:
Making efforts to see the carnal self as not being purified and sinless, as against its innate tendency to see itself as pure and sinless. Being careful and resolved to forget oneself when and where one should forget and remember oneself when and where one should remember. Being well aware of the fact that God creates everything–good and evil–and is the only source of all good. Thus, one should attribute to oneself all one’s sins and evil as being caused by one’s own person, albeit it is God Who has created them, and all good and all accomplishments should be attributed to God, and one should be thankful. Whatever state one is in and whatever rank one reaches during one’s journey, one should know that both one’s existence and merits are but a shadow or a shadow of the shadow of the lights of Divine Existence, and that all aspects of one’s existence are a mirror of the manifestations of His Knowledge and Existence. Now let us explain these points in accordance with the approach of Bediuzzaman:
The first discipline: The carnal self in its nature is fond of itself, and only loves and has relations with others because of itself. The self-love of the carnal self is so great that its adoration of itself is like the adoration of God felt by a sincere believer devoted to the One Who absolutely deserves worship and who should be sought. It never shows inclination to acknowledge its errors and always sees itself as being pure and free of error. So, one should wage the major (greater) jihad against such an attitude, always criticizing and questioning it, softening and melting it in the blast-furnace of self-criticism and self-supervision in order to reshape it. One should never see oneself as free and absolved of errors and sins, and the acceptance of this is, in fact, the tap under which it should and can be cleaned. Only by doing so can one’s innate positive potentialities be developed.
If we continuously seek purification in seeing ourselves as prone to evils and errors, angels and other spiritual beings will greatly appreciate our decency and cleanliness, and, as stated in a Prophetic saying,[2] they will come down from all sides to shake hands with us. If, by contrast, we are so heedless that we see ourselves as clean and infallible, we will inevitably be representatives of a loathsome nature from which even devils will keep aloof in disgust. As Mawlana said, human beings are such that sometimes they become like the Devil under the influence of satanic impulses, and sometimes they are on a par with angels at the summits of spiritual life.
The second discipline: A person with an unpurified, evil-commanding carnal self may be forgetful of the most vital matters, which should never be forgotten, and such a person does not even want to recollect them, while pulling up from the heart matters that should never be remembered. Human beings should always think of serving God’s cause, of being earnest in their deeds, of their responsibilities to the people around them, and of death and what lies beyond it. They should uproot from their spirit hatred, jealousy, worldly ambitions, greed, and carnal desires. Only by doing so can human beings keep their innate tendency toward spirituality alive, and hold themselves back from rousing the satanic tendencies within them.
We, travelers on the way to God, should see belief in God and living along the line of His good pleasure as a blessing, and concentrate on how we can please Him with all our thoughts, feelings, and actions. We should also try to lead our lives in His company, and by virtue of this company, we should continually seek new means to be always in close relationship with Him. We should always be aware of what Mawlana reminds us of: “There is a hidden One here; O heart, do not see yourself as alone.” Based on our relationship with Him, we should strive to transcend our limited nature in order to advance toward infinity, developing our drop-like existence into an ocean, and seeking the mysteries of the universal in our particular existence. If we lead such a life, the things that are seen as impossible to do are done and obstacles that seem insurmountable are surmounted. Particulars become reflections of and mirrors to the universal, and what we see as non-existent takes on the color of existence, a dew-drop excels the moon in reflecting the sun, earth becomes as elevated as the heavens, and our particle-like natures expand to the extent of the universe.
Mawlana, the prince of the lovers of God, advises us to transcend the corporeal dimension of our existence and discover the mysterious potentialities of our spirit, saying:
A pitcher which has found the way to the sea: Rivers prostrate themselves before it.
The third discipline: A carnal self that has not yet been able to step on the way to refinement through journeying in itself and the outer world, ascribes to itself whatever good and achievement it is favored with, while imputing evils and failures to either external factors and causes or its incorrect, stunted concept of Destiny. Instead of overflowing with thankfulness for whatever favors it receives, it inwardly collapses because of self-pride, conceit, and arrogance, and extinguishes its feelings of thankfulness to and praise for God. It contaminates its horizon with the filth of such bad morals, and ruins itself. Whereas, if the carnal self is able to attribute to God all the good and achievements and impute all evils, shortcomings and failures to itself, then it would be favored with blessing after blessing, even in the most unfavorable circumstances. What is necessary is that the carnal self should see that its perfection lies in its perception and acknowledgment of its imperfection, and that it should always be humble before and devoted to God. The carnal self should also overflow with thankfulness and zeal by perceiving and acknowledging that its power comes from its helplessness, and its richness lies in its innate poverty.
It is extremely important for us as believers to know that all our merits and accomplishments are from God, while all our imperfections and errors are from our own selves, and that we should keep our system of self-interrogation and self-control alive and active. So long as the travelers to God can do this, they will always yield fruit, even in the most unfavorable circumstances. Whereas, from the moment when aridity arises in the spiritual world of the carnal self, due to certain erosions, then only thorns will grow, even in the most favorable circumstances, and it will hoot like an owl, lamenting its loss.
If human beings were only physical beings, their concerns and worries about corporeality would be meaningful. Seeing a noble being as consisting only of a physical body means reducing it to the level of flesh, which is bound to disintegrate and rot away and be food for microorganisms. This is the most abominable form of despising the noblest and most honorable of all creation. But the actual fact of the matter is that humankind, by virtue of their creation, endowment, and potentials, are more valued and sublime than even the angels. Human beings are much more than being mere body; they are endowed with heart, spirit, and other inward spiritual faculties, with consciousness, intellect, perception, intelligence and other outer and inner senses and feelings. Human beings are an assemblage of values that transcends the physical dimension of their being. Human beings are such precious and well-endowed creatures that they can sometimes fly so high that even the angels desire to catch up with them; sometimes they can reach the peaks which separate the realm of mortal beings from eternity and infinity. Using their mental faculties to the utmost degree, they arrange travel to celestial bodies, and transfer sounds, voices and images from great distances, offering us the most beautiful melodies of time and space shrinking at great speed.
However, despite the extent of their capacity and exceptional nature, humans can fall into a net of hatred, grudges, greed, and lust, becoming the most wretched and abased of all beings. They can be wretched slaves and beggars, despite their nature and capacity to be the masterpieces of creation; they can become nothing more than worms creeping on the earth, despite their potential to be heavenly beings. But if they turn completely to God with all their inner dynamism, overflowing with thankfulness for all the good He has bestowed on them, and impute to themselves all the evils they may commit and shortcomings they may suffer, they can become perfected and be saved from those shortcomings through awareness and wakefulness, and by being cleansed under the taps of self-control and supervision. Then humankind can set up the tent of true humanity on the debris of evil feelings and passions, and express themselves through accomplishments, without ever losing their humility and feelings of nothingness before God. This also means discovering themselves anew at every attempt, being fully aware of themselves in their own depths, and experiencing a new revival at every moment. Mawlana sees this as the feet of the soul being freed from the fetters of corporeality and the spirit starting to become heavenly. A spirit which has become heavenly also attempts to arrange its own, inner world with its whole power of perception and consciousness, makes incessant efforts to repair the defects standing in the way of its perfection. Such a spirit travels sometimes in the realm that stands before the veil over existence and sometimes beyond it, and goes into ecstasies at every seeing of the depths of its heart. Every such seeing arouses in it a new desire to grow into perfection, and every desire a new zeal for self-renewal. It sees its heart as a home of God and utters:
The heart is the home of God; purify it from whatever is there other than Him, So that the All-Merciful may descend into His palace at night.
The truly and fully human beings cleanse the heart of foul concepts and images, adorn their “secret” with knowledge of God, illuminate their “private” with the torch of love and zeal, and make their “more private” utter loyalty. They are always occupied with the Beloved One, and ready to sacrifice themselves for His sake. This is their affliction, which is preferred to all cures; they are exhausted with the excitement of being on the way to Him. However, their affliction is sweeter than all cures, and their exhaustion is preferable to every rest or repose. Their affliction causes them to travel through deserts in quest of greater afflictions, saying:
I used to seek a cure for my inward affliction; They said: “Your cure is the affliction itself.” I used to seek something to sacrifice in the court of the Beloved; They said: “Your soul is the thing you seek to sacrifice.” 
The soul also utters, as many have uttered:
I used to seek a cure for my affliction; I have come to know that my affliction itself is my cure. I used to try to find that which is hidden in my origin; I have come to know that my origin is that which is hidden. 
Many have sung melodies of love about Him, and of separation from Him and yearning to meet with Him with all of their being, as if each part of their bodies were a flute.
Concerning this, Mawlana says:
O heart! You and your suffering for Him exist; ah, how nice it is always to be concerned with Him and suffering for Him! That suffering is, in fact, your cure. So, bear with all the afflictions and troubles coming from Him, without making the least complaint. So does He decree. If you have been able to trample your bodily desires, then you have killed the dog of your carnal self, which is the thing that should be killed.
The fourth discipline: The carnal self sees itself as if it were a being which exists independently. It sometimes adopts a manner so refractory and abased that every attitude and act it performs is disobedience and hostility to Him Whom it must unquestionably worship. In reality none other than Him has an independent existence of itself. Every existing being or thing, living or non-living, functions as a mirror to the Names of the Most Exalted Creator with respect to the level of life with which it is favored. Even though the human carnal self has an exceptional nature and capacity particular to itself among other beings, its existence with whatever it has is from Him, and subsists by Him alone. For this reason, with respect to itself, it is a zero in the face of Eternity, a shadow in the face of the Original Being, and is nothing in the face of the Truly Existent One. Its perception of this is the first step to the attainment of true existence, while thinking otherwise is a lethal stumbling. When one sees oneself as an independent being existing and subsisting by oneself, one rolls headlong into the dark abyss of non-existence. Yet, when one functions as a polished mirror to the Truth (having whatever is good and valuable as only a reflection from Him), one is en route to eternity. One smashes the tight frame around one and finds the light of the Existence of the True Being. Concerning this, Muhammad Iqbal[3] says:
In your essence, there is a substance from the Existence of God, and a ray from His manifestation. But for His ocean, I do not know where we would have been able to find this “pearl.”
The following couplet, whose author is not known, relates the matter to the famous saying, “He who knows himself, knows his Lord:”
Know your own self, if you desire to have knowledge of God; Only he who knows his own self, is one who has knowledge of God. Mawlana sums up the matter as follows: So long as a servant is annihilated with respect to his ego and conceit, It is impossible for him to attain true belief in God and His Unity. Unity does not mean union with God; it means freedom from ego. Whoever says otherwise, speaks a lie and cannot make falsehood truth.
To sum up, it is possible to say that, other than the way composed of love, suffering and similar essentials by which one can reach God, there is another way; this is the way of one’s perception and the acknowledgment of one’s own helplessness and poverty before God, and of affection and reflection. This second way is safer and more direct than the former one.
Travelers following such a way in consciousness of their helplessness turn to the One of Infinite Power with all of their being, each saying: “Hold me by the hand, hold because I cannot manage without You.” The more aware they are of their poverty, the more sincerely they take refuge with the Divine Wealth, and attribute to Him whatever in their possession is good and praiseworthy. They are in constant thankfulness and act zealously where others stumble because of their self-pride and utterances that are incompatible with the rules of Shari’a. Those who study deeply and reflect on their inner world and the outer world do not fall into pride (by ascribing any accomplishment and the favors they have received to themselves,) nor do they fall into mental and spiritual confusions by imputing evils to external causes or Destiny. On the contrary, they attribute to God all of their accomplishments and the favors they receive, rely on Him, and enjoy the pleasure of dependence on Him. As for evils, they ascribe them to themselves and turn to God with repentance, penitence and contrition, feeling pangs of separation from Him and pleasures in the expectation of again meeting with Him. Since they regard their existence as a shadow of the light of the Divine Existence, they never consider that they have independent self-existence, nor do they need to be preoccupied with such notions as Unity of Being and Unity of the Witnessed. With the conviction that their existence, with all its attributes and potentials and whatever endowment they have been granted, are all from Him, then they live with the pleasure or the hope of His company, and act in thankfulness for being on the way to Him. They never value or esteem easy behavior or utterances that suggest self-pride and self-complacency.
The basic essentials of this way were once expressed by the present author as follows:
O friends, come and listen, O friends! Our way is the way of zeal; The comrades satisfied with belief, Thorns are roses for us.
Thanks to Him, we have seen the Face of the Truth, And found the very essence of everything; We have adopted His every word as a principle; And His Speech is evidence for us.
All strength by which we are strong is His; We are known for His Name, by Which we act, And travel, going beyond the summits; All difficulties are easy for us to surmount.
We have no wealth but are extremely wealthy; And are noble and honored by relation to Him. Reflection is our way; and everything, wet or dry, Is a source of knowledge of God for us.
Plains, residences, and deserts, All voices mention Him throughout the universe, Roses of all colors that have opened, Each is a message to us from Him.
You know us from serving God with utmost zeal; Our work is always thinking of Him, And what we will always do and declare: His Book is the guide for us.
We have found Him and submitted to Him; And been saved from grief and despair; We were sullied but have been cleaned; His Mercy is the ocean in which we were cleaned.
O Lord, accept my repentance, and clean me of the dirt, answer my prayers, secure my place in religion, guide my heart, make my voice always speak the truth, and root out all kinds of hatred and envy from my heart. And bestow Your blessings and peace on our master and support Muhammad, and his family and Companions altogether.
[1] Bediuzzaman Said Nursi (1877-1960) is the most famous and one of the greatest Muslim thinkers and scholars of the 20th century. He wrote about the truhts and essentials of the Islamic faith, the meaning and importance of worship, morality, and the meaning of existence. He is very original in his approaches.  (“The Words”), (“The Letters”),  (“The Gleams”), and  (“The Rays”) are among his famous works.  [2] Al-Muslim, “Tawba,” 12-13; Al-Tirmidhi, “Qiyama,” 59. [3] Muhammad Iqbal (1877-1938) is one of the most outstanding Muslim thinkers and activists of the 20th-century Muslim world. He studied in England and wrote many books. The Reconstruction of the Islamic Thought is the most well-known among them. 
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haldenhale · 1 year ago
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Sosyal medyanın olmadığı zamanlar herkesin uzaktan tanıdığı, sevdiği muhabbet beslediği zamanlar... Hani bir radyo programı dinliyorsunuz, yapımcı çok hoşunuza gidiyor, dinledikçe seviyorsunuz. Sonra bir gün onu görünce büyü bozuluyor. Ya da okuduğunuz bir kitabın yazarı...
Hayattaki bazı şeylerin de büyüsünü bozmamak lazım. Sırlamış senin için Mevla'm. Daha çok haz alasın, daha çok bağlanasın peşine düşesin, hayretin, gayretin artsın diye hayat esrarlı bazen. Bazı şeyleri o kadar çok istiyoruz ki sonra oluyor büyüsünü bozuyoruz. Eski tat ve lezzetimiz kalmıyor.
Gayp bu yüzden gayb aslında. Hikmet gizlenmiş hadiseye. Bu yüzden... Teslimiyet ve huzur için... Şüphe ve isyan için değil. Ve zaman en büyük müfessir. Huzurun kaçmadan o tılsım bozulmadan hikmet/i sana görünür bir gün, bir zaman.
Ne diyordu Bediuzzaman.
"Pencerelerden seyret, içlerine girme" ...
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hatiragulzaman · 2 years ago
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💫💫💫
Yıldızların Dili
sükûnet içinde bir sükût
ve hikmet içinde bir hareket
ve haşmet içinde bir zînet
ve intizam içinde bir hüsn-ü hilkat ve mevzuniyet içinde bir kemal-i san'at
Sözler - Bediuzzaman
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beyzaavinur · 6 days ago
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Sen peşinden pişmanlık gelen sevinçlerden hoşlanıyorsun,
Bittiklerinde sadece dert bırakan şeylere hevesleniyorsun!
Zevklerin,sevinçlerin hepsi sonlanır,
Geriye onların günahı ve utancı kalır.
İbn Hazm Güvercin gerdanlığı
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risalefabrikasi · 2 years ago
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Bediüzzaman Said Nursî'nin senelerden beri hapisten hapse, zindândan zindâna atılması ve menfâdan menfâya sürülmesi ve kendisine dâima tazyîkler ve şiddetli zulüm ve dehşetli işkenceler yapılması ve onyedi defa zehir verilmesi, bir günde bir aylık azablar çektirilmesi, kendisinin ve Risale-i Nur Külliyatının hakkâniyet ve sıdkına birer canlı mühür ve birer parlak delildir. Meselâ Hindistan'da sormuşlar: "Bediüzzaman nasıl bir kimsedir?" Cevaben denilmiş ki: "Hasta, garîb, fakir, mazlum, hediye ve sadakaları kabûl etmeyen ve hâlen de çekmekte olduğu o kadar zulümlere rağmen altmış senedir da'vâsından vazgeçmeyen bir ihtiyardır." Onlar da: "Öyleyse o hakikat söylüyor ve küfr-ü mutlaka, dinsizlere, zındıklara boyun eğmiyor, riyâkârlık etmiyor, dalkavukluk yapmıyor ve Kur'ân ve İslâmiyete te'sirli ve küllî bir hizmet yapıyor ki, onlar da Ona zulüm etmişler." demişler. Üstadımız Bediüzzaman hakkında, takdirkâr ve fazilet-perver zâtların takdirleri, bir senâdan ibaret değildir; bir vâkıadır; fiiliyât ve icraatının belki yüzden birisini k��saca âcizâne ve noksan bir tarzda nakletmektir. Tarihçe-i Hayat - 634 #risalefabrikasi #ihlasnurneşriyat #envarneşriyat #sözlerneşriyat#Rnk #nursöz #Üstad #risalefabrikasi #Bediüzzaman #SaidNursi #Ömür #Dünya #Hayat #Kuran #RisaleiNur #Risaleinur #envarnesriyat #Bediüzzaman #Bediülbeyan #RisaleiNurdan #Risalei NurOkuyoruz #Bediuzzaman #bediüzzamansaidnursi #süleymanyasinakdeniz https://www.instagram.com/p/CnJMb8hj4PZ/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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chineserisale · 2 years ago
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人生如此 我的性灵啊! 我们曾一再重申,人类是创造之树的果实,这果实距离树种最远,���全面包括了创造之树的特征,他放眼万有,胸怀全局。他承担着被造的核心,容纳了一切事物的统一性。他面向被造的万物,面向具有多重性、瞬息无常的世界。然而崇拜至仁主是一条脐带,是一个关键的接点,把起点和终点连为一线,使人从无常转向永恒,从被造万物转向造物主,从多元转向统一,从终端转向源头。 这颗内含种子的有价值的果实具有觉醒的意识,当他俯视树下的生灵,如果因自己的美貌而沾沾自喜,或落入他们手中,或在马虎大意之间,掉落摔碎,像普通的果实一样化作泥土,就会白白浪费。但是,如果这颗觉悟的果实找到支撑点,意识到他是果树生生不息的接点,他承载的种子将延续果树的生命,传承果树的特质,他就不会荒废。他承载的种子内含了果实的所有特质,将使果树持续生存,从中表现出永恒的普遍真理。 同样的道理,人如果迷失于纷繁复杂的世事,被淹没于万事万物的泥潭,陶醉于对俗世的迷恋,被短暂即逝的微笑所欺骗,投向它们的怀抱,他肯定会遭受重大的损失,陷入迷误,瞬间消逝,沦入不存在。 然而,如果他以心聆听源自《Quran》的信仰课程,抬起头来,面向独一的主宰,他就可以通过拜主功修的阶梯登霄升华,抵达完美的阿尔什御前,成为永恒的人。 我的性灵啊! 既然真相如此,既然你是易卜拉欣(愿主赐他平安)民族的成员,你就要像易卜拉欣一样宣布:“我不爱没落的”(《Quran》6:76),把你的脸转向永恒的至爱,像我一样哭泣、倾诉: …… (这里要收录的波斯语诗句已经录入《箴言》十七第二站中。) (译自努尔斯《箴言》二十四·五·四) #光明论集 #risaleinurkülliyatı #bediuzzaman #saidnursi #赛义德努尔斯 #faith #cennet #ahiret #muslimmemes #chinatown #chinese #中国語 https://www.instagram.com/p/CmyYvEgjr5C/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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maksat114 · 1 year ago
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Biri, İbn-i Haldun’a sordu: Çocuklarımızı nasıl terbiye edelim? İbn-i Haldun dedi ki: Çocuklarınızı terbiye etmeye çalışmayın. Zira zaten size benzeyeceklerdir. Kendinizi terbiye edin yeter.... İnsanın en birinci üstadı ve tesirli muallimi, onun validesidir. (Risale-i Nur) Çocuk terbiyesi çocuğun doğumundan önce başlayan, peder ve validenin ortak bir misyonuyla kendilerinin vefatlarına kadar devam eden oldukça uzun bir zaman dilimine ihtiyaç duyulan bir süreçtir. Bu konuyla ilgili Bediüzzaman Hazretleri en önce kendi anne ve babası tarafından doğumundan önce terbiye edilmeye başlanmıştır. Validesi ona hamile olduktan sonra abdestsiz yere basmamakta ve doğumundan sonra da abdestsiz onu emzirmemektedir. Pederi de aynı inceliği gösterip, geçim kaynağı olan büyükbaş hayvanlarını tarlaya götürürken, başkalarının bağ ve bahçelerinden ot yiyip rızıklarına haram bulaşmasın diye ağızlarını bağlamıştır. Bu örnekte de görüldüğü gibi doğumdan önce peder ve valide en önce kendilerini bir terbiyeye tabi tutmuşlardır. Bir peder ve valide, çocuğunun doğumundan önce kendi ibadet hayatına çeki düzen vermeli, kötü alışkanlıklarından vazgeçmeye azmetmelidir. Bir çocuk hayatı boyunca öğreneceklerinin büyük bir kısmını bir ile beş yaş arasında öğrenmektedir. Bu döneme ailenin iyi hazırlanması gerekir. Çocuk terbiyesinde diğer bir önemli hususu Bediüzzaman Hazretleri şöyle ifade etmektedir: "… bir çocuk, küçüklüğünde kuvvetli bir ders-i imanî alamazsa, sonra pek zor ve müşkül bir tarzda İslâmiyet ve imanın erkânlarını ruhuna alabilir. Âdetâ gayr-ı müslim birisinin İslâmiyeti kabul etmek derecesinde zor oluyor, yabani düşer. Bilhassa, peder ve validesini dindar görmezse ve yalnız dünyevî fenlerle zihni terbiye olsa, daha ziyade yabanilik verir. O halde o çocuk, dünyada peder ve validesine hürmet yerinde istiskal edip çabuk ölmelerini arzu ile onlara bir nevi belâ olur. Âhirette de onlara şefaatçi değil, belki dâvâcı olur: 'Neden imanımı terbiye-i İslâmiye ile kurtarmadınız?'..." #çocuk #eğitim #terbiye #namaz #anne #çocukgelişimi #ebeveyn #islam #iman #maksat114bursa #dua #imtihan #ibadet #kuran #Allah #risaleinur #risaleinurkülliyatı #bediuzzaman
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ah-val · 1 year ago
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ÖYLE ZULMETTİLER Kİ ; VEFAT ETTİĞİNDE 36 KİLOYA DÜŞMÜŞTÜ . ONA VERİLEN ZEHİRLER , VÜCUDUNDA ELMA BÜYÜKLÜĞÜNDE UR'DA BİRİKMİŞTİ...
Dünyada ençok zulme uğramış İslâm Alimlerinden biridir , çilekeş mazlum, vatanperver, kahraman Bediüzzaman..
Üstad vefat etmeden önce vasiyet olarak cenazesini Molla Abdulhamidin yıkamasını ister. Ancak Ramazan ayıdır ve 25. gündür, Kadir gecesidir . Molla Abdulhamid itikafa çekilmiş , dünya kelamı etmemekte , sadece ibadet ve zikirle meşgul olmaktadır..
Molla Abdulhamide üstadın vasiyeti söylenir. Hiç şaşırmaz. Haberim var der..
Haberi getirenler bu sefer şaşırır. Peygamber Efendimizin ruhaniyeti yakazaten geldi ve haber verdi , öleceğini biliyorum , cenazeyide ben yıkayacağım der .
Cenazeyi yıkayan Molla Abdulhamid 36 kiloya düşmüş bu asrın çilekeş insanının sol kolu koltuk altında elma büyüklüğünde siyah bir ur görür.21 defa zehirlenerek öldürülmek istenen üstadı Allah korumuş ve verilen zehirler bu yumruda toplanmıştır.
Ecel birdir değişmez, öldürmeyen Allah öldürtmeyecek , elbette vazifeli şahsı vakti gelene kadar koruyacaktır . Üstad ölümden korkmamıştır ve kaçmamıştır .
Afyon hpishanesinde dışarıda öldürücü kuru soğuğun olduğu gün hücresinin tüm camlarını kırarlar ve donarak ölmesini isterler . Sabaha kadar donmamak için hareket eder , esmaül hüsna , evradu zekar , zikir çeker aynı zamanda şiddetli ağrılar çeker .
Başka bir sefer Emirdağda ev hapsinde olduğu sırada ise bir fili öldürecek kadar zehri hissettirmeden yiyeceğiyoğurdun içine karıştırırlar . Fakat fark eder ve hemen kendisini kusturur , ama geç kalmıştır . Tam beş gün ölü gibi yatar , insanoğlunun dayanamıyacağı acılar çeker , garip kimsesiz mazlum bu insana kafir Rus un çektirmediğini çektirirler . Sonra tam öldü sanıldığı sırada dipdiri sevgili Rabbimizin izniyle ayağa kalkar ..
Üstadın ölmeden önce Konya'da ziyaret edip arabadan inmeden görüştüğü kardesi Abdülmecid abi ile helalleşmesinde ilginç bir keramet daha yaşanır ..
Ölmeye gittiğini biliyordur . Üstad kardeşine son sözleri şöyle olur : Benim yüzümden sana eziyet edecekler , hapsedecekler. Sakın üzülme orada sana eşinden daha iyi bakarlar ..
Üstad kardeşinin üzülmemesi için o nu teselli eder , hemde ölüme giderken ..
Abdülmecid abi ceberut zalimler tarafından 111 gün sonra gözaltına alınır ve hapsedilir .
Üstad Bediuzzaman Said Nursi'yi rahmet ve minnetle anıyoruz.
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saidaslan1 · 2 years ago
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Eğer başımdaki saçların sayısı kadar başım olsa da her gün bu başlardan biri kesilse, Kur'an hakikatlerine feda ettiğim bu başı küfre eğmem ve bu iman ve nur hizmetinden çevirmem!”
Üstad Bediuzzaman
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tawakkull · 1 year ago
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ISLAM 101: Spirituality in Islam: Part 74
Another Way of Journeying and Initiation
Some make spiritual journeys by refining and developing the inner faculties, while others purify the carnal self within, causing it to take certain steps. In both these ways, suffering for certain periods is essential to reach the rank of perfection and to become a perfect human being. Yet there are other ways, different from these two ways, to reach the ranks and stations and the favors and blessings that come through spiritual journeying and suffering. Among these ways, there is one which is based on the way of the Prophet’s Companions and may be regarded as a manifestation of the truth of Messengership.
Helplessness, poverty, affection, reflection, zeal and thankfulness are the basic elements of this way. Helplessness means being aware of one’s inability to do many of the things that one wants to do, and poverty denotes the awareness of the fact that it is God Who is the real Owner and Master of everything. Embracing everybody and everything because of Him is affection, while reflection is thinking deeply, analytically and systematically about and meditating on the outer and inner world, with a new excitement everyday. Zeal is the great, ardent desire and yearning to reach God and to serve in His way. Always thanking God for His bounties and proceeding to Him in full consciousness of all His blessings during the journey is thankfulness.
According to Bediuzzaman Said Nursi,[1] this way is more direct and safer. Helplessness is a path of light leading to being loved by God that is safer and quicker than love; in it the more one perceives one’s helplessness, the more quickly one will reach one’s goal. Poverty is an inexhaustible treasure which, to the extent of one’s consciousness of it, will lead one to the protection and direction of the All-Merciful and His infinite Power much sooner and more safely than the greatest discipline, efforts and endeavors could. Affection is deeper and more sincere than love. No traveler having this feeling, which is a manifestation of Divine Compassion, has ever been left halfway. Reflection is the way of the enlightened spirits who relate everything to wisdom through study and the observation of one’s inner world and the outer world. As for zeal, it is the characteristic of those who are always conscious of the points or senses of reliance and asking for help that are innate to them. These two senses always remind of God. Those endowed with zeal never become desperate or disappointed. And finally, thankfulness is returning with gratitude all the blessings of God that we receive almost gratis.
The essence of the way can be summed up as: “I am helpless, You are the All-Powerful; I am poor, You are the All-Wealthy; I am needy and in straitened circumstances, You are the All-Compassionate; I am bewildered and seeking a way out, You are the only Goal Which is sought and to be reached.” It is not possible for those who are aware of their helplessness, poverty, neediness and bewilderment to see themselves as pure or of being of any rank, thus it is not possible for them to be heedless or forgetful of God while knowing that whoever forgets Him is forgotten and bound to forget him or herself also. Nor is it possible for them to attribute to themselves the accomplishments with which God has favored them, using the pretext of their endeavors, nor to ascribe their evil and sins to Destiny, thus regarding themselves as existing independently of God.
According to Bediuzzaman, this way can be dealt with from the viewpoint of the following four disciplines:
Making efforts to see the carnal self as not being purified and sinless, as against its innate tendency to see itself as pure and sinless. Being careful and resolved to forget oneself when and where one should forget and remember oneself when and where one should remember. Being well aware of the fact that God creates everything–good and evil–and is the only source of all good. Thus, one should attribute to oneself all one’s sins and evil as being caused by one’s own person, albeit it is God Who has created them, and all good and all accomplishments should be attributed to God, and one should be thankful. Whatever state one is in and whatever rank one reaches during one’s journey, one should know that both one’s existence and merits are but a shadow or a shadow of the shadow of the lights of Divine Existence, and that all aspects of one’s existence are a mirror of the manifestations of His Knowledge and Existence. Now let us explain these points in accordance with the approach of Bediuzzaman:
The first discipline: The carnal self in its nature is fond of itself, and only loves and has relations with others because of itself. The self-love of the carnal self is so great that its adoration of itself is like the adoration of God felt by a sincere believer devoted to the One Who absolutely deserves worship and who should be sought. It never shows inclination to acknowledge its errors and always sees itself as being pure and free of error. So, one should wage the major (greater) jihad against such an attitude, always criticizing and questioning it, softening and melting it in the blast-furnace of self-criticism and self-supervision in order to reshape it. One should never see oneself as free and absolved of errors and sins, and the acceptance of this is, in fact, the tap under which it should and can be cleaned. Only by doing so can one’s innate positive potentialities be developed.
If we continuously seek purification in seeing ourselves as prone to evils and errors, angels and other spiritual beings will greatly appreciate our decency and cleanliness, and, as stated in a Prophetic saying,[2] they will come down from all sides to shake hands with us. If, by contrast, we are so heedless that we see ourselves as clean and infallible, we will inevitably be representatives of a loathsome nature from which even devils will keep aloof in disgust. As Mawlana said, human beings are such that sometimes they become like the Devil under the influence of satanic impulses, and sometimes they are on a par with angels at the summits of spiritual life.
The second discipline: A person with an unpurified, evil-commanding carnal self may be forgetful of the most vital matters, which should never be forgotten, and such a person does not even want to recollect them, while pulling up from the heart matters that should never be remembered. Human beings should always think of serving God’s cause, of being earnest in their deeds, of their responsibilities to the people around them, and of death and what lies beyond it. They should uproot from their spirit hatred, jealousy, worldly ambitions, greed, and carnal desires. Only by doing so can human beings keep their innate tendency toward spirituality alive, and hold themselves back from rousing the satanic tendencies within them.
We, travelers on the way to God, should see belief in God and living along the line of His good pleasure as a blessing, and concentrate on how we can please Him with all our thoughts, feelings, and actions. We should also try to lead our lives in His company, and by virtue of this company, we should continually seek new means to be always in close relationship with Him. We should always be aware of what Mawlana reminds us of: “There is a hidden One here; O heart, do not see yourself as alone.” Based on our relationship with Him, we should strive to transcend our limited nature in order to advance toward infinity, developing our drop-like existence into an ocean, and seeking the mysteries of the universal in our particular existence. If we lead such a life, the things that are seen as impossible to do are done and obstacles that seem insurmountable are surmounted. Particulars become reflections of and mirrors to the universal, and what we see as non-existent takes on the color of existence, a dew-drop excels the moon in reflecting the sun, earth becomes as elevated as the heavens, and our particle-like natures expand to the extent of the universe.
Mawlana, the prince of the lovers of God, advises us to transcend the corporeal dimension of our existence and discover the mysterious potentialities of our spirit, saying:
A pitcher which has found the way to the sea: Rivers prostrate themselves before it.
The third discipline: A carnal self that has not yet been able to step on the way to refinement through journeying in itself and the outer world, ascribes to itself whatever good and achievement it is favored with, while imputing evils and failures to either external factors and causes or its incorrect, stunted concept of Destiny. Instead of overflowing with thankfulness for whatever favors it receives, it inwardly collapses because of self-pride, conceit, and arrogance, and extinguishes its feelings of thankfulness to and praise for God. It contaminates its horizon with the filth of such bad morals, and ruins itself. Whereas, if the carnal self is able to attribute to God all the good and achievements and impute all evils, shortcomings and failures to itself, then it would be favored with blessing after blessing, even in the most unfavorable circumstances. What is necessary is that the carnal self should see that its perfection lies in its perception and acknowledgment of its imperfection, and that it should always be humble before and devoted to God. The carnal self should also overflow with thankfulness and zeal by perceiving and acknowledging that its power comes from its helplessness, and its richness lies in its innate poverty.
It is extremely important for us as believers to know that all our merits and accomplishments are from God, while all our imperfections and errors are from our own selves, and that we should keep our system of self-interrogation and self-control alive and active. So long as the travelers to God can do this, they will always yield fruit, even in the most unfavorable circumstances. Whereas, from the moment when aridity arises in the spiritual world of the carnal self, due to certain erosions, then only thorns will grow, even in the most favorable circumstances, and it will hoot like an owl, lamenting its loss.
If human beings were only physical beings, their concerns and worries about corporeality would be meaningful. Seeing a noble being as consisting only of a physical body means reducing it to the level of flesh, which is bound to disintegrate and rot away and be food for microorganisms. This is the most abominable form of despising the noblest and most honorable of all creation. But the actual fact of the matter is that humankind, by virtue of their creation, endowment, and potentials, are more valued and sublime than even the angels. Human beings are much more than being mere body; they are endowed with heart, spirit, and other inward spiritual faculties, with consciousness, intellect, perception, intelligence and other outer and inner senses and feelings. Human beings are an assemblage of values that transcends the physical dimension of their being. Human beings are such precious and well-endowed creatures that they can sometimes fly so high that even the angels desire to catch up with them; sometimes they can reach the peaks which separate the realm of mortal beings from eternity and infinity. Using their mental faculties to the utmost degree, they arrange travel to celestial bodies, and transfer sounds, voices and images from great distances, offering us the most beautiful melodies of time and space shrinking at great speed.
However, despite the extent of their capacity and exceptional nature, humans can fall into a net of hatred, grudges, greed, and lust, becoming the most wretched and abased of all beings. They can be wretched slaves and beggars, despite their nature and capacity to be the masterpieces of creation; they can become nothing more than worms creeping on the earth, despite their potential to be heavenly beings. But if they turn completely to God with all their inner dynamism, overflowing with thankfulness for all the good He has bestowed on them, and impute to themselves all the evils they may commit and shortcomings they may suffer, they can become perfected and be saved from those shortcomings through awareness and wakefulness, and by being cleansed under the taps of self-control and supervision. Then humankind can set up the tent of true humanity on the debris of evil feelings and passions, and express themselves through accomplishments, without ever losing their humility and feelings of nothingness before God. This also means discovering themselves anew at every attempt, being fully aware of themselves in their own depths, and experiencing a new revival at every moment. Mawlana sees this as the feet of the soul being freed from the fetters of corporeality and the spirit starting to become heavenly. A spirit which has become heavenly also attempts to arrange its own, inner world with its whole power of perception and consciousness, makes incessant efforts to repair the defects standing in the way of its perfection. Such a spirit travels sometimes in the realm that stands before the veil over existence and sometimes beyond it, and goes into ecstasies at every seeing of the depths of its heart. Every such seeing arouses in it a new desire to grow into perfection, and every desire a new zeal for self-renewal. It sees its heart as a home of God and utters:
The heart is the home of God; purify it from whatever is there other than Him, So that the All-Merciful may descend into His palace at night.
The truly and fully human beings cleanse the heart of foul concepts and images, adorn their “secret” with knowledge of God, illuminate their “private” with the torch of love and zeal, and make their “more private” utter loyalty. They are always occupied with the Beloved One, and ready to sacrifice themselves for His sake. This is their affliction, which is preferred to all cures; they are exhausted with the excitement of being on the way to Him. However, their affliction is sweeter than all cures, and their exhaustion is preferable to every rest or repose. Their affliction causes them to travel through deserts in quest of greater afflictions, saying:
I used to seek a cure for my inward affliction; They said: “Your cure is the affliction itself.” I used to seek something to sacrifice in the court of the Beloved; They said: “Your soul is the thing you seek to sacrifice.” (M. Lutfi)
The soul also utters, as many have uttered:
I used to seek a cure for my affliction; I have come to know that my affliction itself is my cure. I used to try to find that which is hidden in my origin; I have come to know that my origin is that which is hidden. (Niyazi Misri)
Many have sung melodies of love about Him, and of separation from Him and yearning to meet with Him with all of their being, as if each part of their bodies were a flute.
Concerning this, Mawlana says:
O heart! You and your suffering for Him exist; ah, how nice it is always to be concerned with Him and suffering for Him! That suffering is, in fact, your cure. So, bear with all the afflictions and troubles coming from Him, without making the least complaint. So does He decree. If you have been able to trample your bodily desires, then you have killed the dog of your carnal self, which is the thing that should be killed.
The fourth discipline: The carnal self sees itself as if it were a being which exists independently. It sometimes adopts a manner so refractory and abased that every attitude and act it performs is disobedience and hostility to Him Whom it must unquestionably worship. In reality none other than Him has an independent existence of itself. Every existing being or thing, living or non-living, functions as a mirror to the Names of the Most Exalted Creator with respect to the level of life with which it is favored. Even though the human carnal self has an exceptional nature and capacity particular to itself among other beings, its existence with whatever it has is from Him, and subsists by Him alone. For this reason, with respect to itself, it is a zero in the face of Eternity, a shadow in the face of the Original Being, and is nothing in the face of the Truly Existent One. Its perception of this is the first step to the attainment of true existence, while thinking otherwise is a lethal stumbling. When one sees oneself as an independent being existing and subsisting by oneself, one rolls headlong into the dark abyss of non-existence. Yet, when one functions as a polished mirror to the Truth (having whatever is good and valuable as only a reflection from Him), one is en route to eternity. One smashes the tight frame around one and finds the light of the Existence of the True Being. Concerning this, Muhammad Iqbal[3] says:
In your essence, there is a substance from the Existence of God, and a ray from His manifestation. But for His ocean, I do not know where we would have been able to find this “pearl.”
The following couplet, whose author is not known, relates the matter to the famous saying, “He who knows himself, knows his Lord:”
Know your own self, if you desire to have knowledge of God; Only he who knows his own self, is one who has knowledge of God. Mawlana sums up the matter as follows: So long as a servant is annihilated with respect to his ego and conceit, It is impossible for him to attain true belief in God and His Unity. Unity does not mean union with God; it means freedom from ego. Whoever says otherwise, speaks a lie and cannot make falsehood truth.
To sum up, it is possible to say that, other than the way composed of love, suffering and similar essentials by which one can reach God, there is another way; this is the way of one’s perception and the acknowledgment of one’s own helplessness and poverty before God, and of affection and reflection. This second way is safer and more direct than the former one.
Travelers following such a way in consciousness of their helplessness turn to the One of Infinite Power with all of their being, each saying: “Hold me by the hand, hold because I cannot manage without You.” The more aware they are of their poverty, the more sincerely they take refuge with the Divine Wealth, and attribute to Him whatever in their possession is good and praiseworthy. They are in constant thankfulness and act zealously where others stumble because of their self-pride and utterances that are incompatible with the rules of Shari’a. Those who study deeply and reflect on their inner world and the outer world do not fall into pride (by ascribing any accomplishment and the favors they have received to themselves,) nor do they fall into mental and spiritual confusions by imputing evils to external causes or Destiny. On the contrary, they attribute to God all of their accomplishments and the favors they receive, rely on Him, and enjoy the pleasure of dependence on Him. As for evils, they ascribe them to themselves and turn to God with repentance, penitence and contrition, feeling pangs of separation from Him and pleasures in the expectation of again meeting with Him. Since they regard their existence as a shadow of the light of the Divine Existence, they never consider that they have independent self-existence, nor do they need to be preoccupied with such notions as Unity of Being and Unity of the Witnessed. With the conviction that their existence, with all its attributes and potentials and whatever endowment they have been granted, are all from Him, then they live with the pleasure or the hope of His company, and act in thankfulness for being on the way to Him. They never value or esteem easy behavior or utterances that suggest self-pride and self-complacency.
The basic essentials of this way were once expressed by the present author as follows:
O friends, come and listen, O friends! Our way is the way of zeal; The comrades satisfied with belief, Thorns are roses for us.
Thanks to Him, we have seen the Face of the Truth, And found the very essence of everything; We have adopted His every word as a principle; And His Speech is evidence for us.
All strength by which we are strong is His; We are known for His Name, by Which we act, And travel, going beyond the summits; All difficulties are easy for us to surmount.
We have no wealth but are extremely wealthy; And are noble and honored by relation to Him. Reflection is our way; and everything, wet or dry, Is a source of knowledge of God for us.
Plains, residences, and deserts, All voices mention Him throughout the universe, Roses of all colors that have opened, Each is a message to us from Him.
You know us from serving God with utmost zeal; Our work is always thinking of Him, And what we will always do and declare: His Book is the guide for us.
We have found Him and submitted to Him; And been saved from grief and despair; We were sullied but have been cleaned; His Mercy is the ocean in which we were cleaned.
O Lord, accept my repentance, and clean me of the dirt, answer my prayers, secure my place in religion, guide my heart, make my voice always speak the truth, and root out all kinds of hatred and envy from my heart. And bestow Your blessings and peace on our master and support Muhammad, and his family and Companions altogether.
[1] Bediuzzaman Said Nursi (1877-1960) is the most famous and one of the greatest Muslim thinkers and scholars of the 20th century. He wrote about the truhts and essentials of the Islamic faith, the meaning and importance of worship, morality, and the meaning of existence. He is very original in his approaches. Sozler (“The Words”), Mektubat (“The Letters”), Lem’alar (“The Gleams”), and Sualar (“The Rays”) are among his famous works. (Trans.) [2] Al-Muslim, “Tawba,” 12-13; Al-Tirmidhi, “Qiyama,” 59. [3] Muhammad Iqbal (1877-1938) is one of the most outstanding Muslim thinkers and activists of the 20th-century Muslim world. He studied in England and wrote many books. The Reconstruction of the Islamic Thought is the most well-known among them.
2 notes · View notes