Mysticism in Islam - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 29
About This Presentation
Title:

Mysticism in Islam

Description:

Reciting poetry or listen to music until the person is entranced. ... Most men, though free, see everything from one viewpoint, but his outlook is universal. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:321
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 30
Provided by: glennm5
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Mysticism in Islam


1
Mysticism in Islam
  • The Sufis

2
Islam as A Religion of Law, Culture and Practice
  • Islam, a faith that stresses obedience to the
    commands of God, has a rich tradition of exoteric
    religious practices
  • Prayer five times a day
  • The yearly fast or Ramadan
  • The Pilgrimage to Mecca
  • It also as a long tradition of Islamic Law that,
    although based on the Quran, has developed from
    by a long process of interpretation and
    reinterpretation.

3
SufismOrigins I
  • The word may come from the Arabic for wool.
  • This aspect of Islam developed in several
    contexts
  • The most important was the vast Islamic Empire
    that came to stretch from Spain to India
  • This empire provided Islam with many religious
    and philosophical resources apart from the Quran.

4
SufismOrigins II
  • Among these influences were
  • Christian theology and monasticism in the west
  • Hindu and Buddhist Religious Writings in the
    East
  • The rich heritage of ancient philosophy,
    especially, neo-Platonism.

5
SufismOrigins III
  • What forged these influences into a variety of
    different religious movements was the growing
    division of Muslim society into rich and poor.
  • Sufism was, in part, a religious response to this
    new world that was so different from the early
    world of the Prophet.

6
Rabiadied c. 800
  • Woman Sufi
  • One of the founders of the movement
  • Interesting enough, she sounds very much like
    Hildegard and other female religious reformers.

7
A Rabia Story
  • It is related that one day Rabia had gone up a
    mountain. Wild boars and gazelles gathered
    around, gazing upon her. Suddenly, Hasan Basri
    appeared. All the animals shied away. When
    Hasan saw that, he was perplexed and said,
    Rabia, why do they shy away from me when they
    were so intimate with you?
  • Rabia said, What did you eat today?
  • Soup
  • You ate their lard. How would they not shy away
    from you.

8
Rabia
  • O, Lord, if I worship you out of fear of hell,
    burn me in hell. If I worship you in the hope of
    paradise, forbid it to me. And if zi worship you
    for your own sake, do not deprive me of your
    eternal beauty.

9
Diversity
  • Sufism is not one thing, not even in the sense of
    Christian monasticism.
  • There are a variety of religious fraternities or
    orders that present their own versions of the
    Sufi way.
  • Each order has a line of authorized teachers who
    pass on the Tradition of that fraternity from one
    to another.

10
The Orders
  • The orders vary greatly among themselves and in
    the instruction that they provide
  • The dervishes of Turkey often stress ecstasy and
    rapture. Rumi is an excellent illustration of
    this ecstatic
  • Other schools may place almost all their emphasis
    on rational thought and the meditation on the
    words of Quran. Our reading Ibn Abbad
    illustrates this more quietist style.
  • Some schools tend towards a pantheism, others
    do not.
  • 70 orders are active today.

11
Stages
  • Sufism often involves a series of initiations
    and/or recognitions
  • The searcher, aspirant, or candidate who may be a
    wander seeking a master
  • The Novice muridor poor oneFaqir. In many
    ways, a Islamic monk.
  • 'Arif or Gnostic or knower. One who has had the
    spiritual experience.
  • Shaykh/Murshid. An experienced Sufi who can give
    instruction and receive disciples.
  • Wali or advocate. A Sufi saint with particular
    power in prayer and or spiritual advice.

12
Shiites
  • The Man of Light
  • Continues the traditions of the Imam
  • Old Gnostic image

13
Forms of Expression
  • Private oral teaching and direction
  • Letters of Spiritual Advice.
  • Very important form of passing on Sufi teaching.
  • The master/disciple relationship
  • Poetry Very Common
  • Rumi
  • Easy to remember
  • The power of poetry and music 
  •  

14
Some Methods of Devotion
  • Tasbih (subha) "rosary" used as prayer beads used
    to count repetitions (33 or 99 for Names
  • Control of breathe
  • Reciting poetry or listen to music until the
    person is entranced.

15
Four Levels of Faith
  • Sharafuddin Maneri the Hundred Letters
  • Repetition of the truth without conviction
  • Belief that the message is true whether
    conventional or learned
  • Illumination or the vision that everything
    proceeds from God
  • Everything is the light of God. The You and I
    pass away

16
Master and Disciple
  • Until the Novice falls completely in love with
    the beauty and saintliness of the Shiekh, he will
    not come under the full influence of his
    guidance. The novice should follow the desires of
    the sheikh, not his own.
  • The 100 Letters

17
The Master
  • He was the sort of man who does not eat, but
    feeds others who wears little himself, but
    clothes others. Nor does he pay attention to the
    wounds inflicted by others. Where there is
    oppression, he brings trust. He opposes abuse
    with prayer to God and in praise of Him. . His
    compassion si like the sun tha, which shines
    equally on friend or foe. His humility is like
    the earth, upon the face of which all creatures
    tread. He takes in hand no lawsuit against
    another. No one could even talk of his anger
    toward his fellowman. All are his dependents,
    though he is beholden to no one. His bounty is
    like a river. He blesses his enemry,
    concentrating all his mercy upon his foe. Most
    men, though free, see everything from one
    viewpoint, but his outlook is universal. He
    accords everyone equal treatment. . . Whenever
    God almighty raises up someone, He raises him up
    completely, so that he gives him a tongue and
    hands and eyes and a pure heart.
  • Letter 24

18
Examination of Conscience
  • As the sun is setting, he should examine his soul
    with care, noting that one more day has passed
    what has been gained? Has the day been a loss? To
    what extent has he profited by it?
  • Letter 28

19
Almost Master Eckhart
  • The external, bereth of the internal, is
    hypocrisy while the internal, if it lacks
    external expression, is mere wishful thinking.
  • Letter 28

20
Creatures Within, Without
  • The starting point for those desiring to follow
    the Way is that their hearts become mirrowlike,
    so clean and shining that one see reflected in
    them an image of the world of creatures and of
    the divine order
  • Letter 30

21
Grace and Work
  • Work is . . .like this. Engage in work, but do
    not see your daily sustenance as coming from your
    efforts. You should see it as deriving from the
    grace of God. This door, like the door of
    service, has been opened for you.
  • Letter 68

22
Poetry I
  • Always eternal, in death and at birth.
  • If you want to see the beloveds facePolish
    the mirror, gaze into that spaceIn these truths,
    the secrets you weaveAre your punishments,
    yourselves deceive.
  • Divan-e Shams Rumi 81

23
Poetry IIContinued on next slide Divan-e Shams
146
  • O blaze of the world you are dear, you are dearO
    beholding the beloved, keep near, keep near
  • I am the creation, I am the houseI am the trap
    and the mouseI am wise and mad, stay here, stay
    here
  • I am the secrets you cant seeCloak and turban
    are both meI am the cloister and the monk, do
    appear, do appear
  • I am mortal, I am oldChains and shackles my feet
    holdI make plans, dont disappear, dont
    disappear

24
Poetry IIIDivan-e Shams 146
  • I am the noon, I am the eveFire of love with my
    heart receiveI am the candle giving light, stay
    clear, stay clear
  • I am the prayer and the angel in flightI am the
    fire, I am the lightI am the Promised Land, so
    dear, so dear
  • I am here, I am to beAlpha and Omega are in meI
    am aware of the others, keep near, keep near
  • I am the acquaintance and the friendThe lover
    and beloved in the endI am the flower and the
    thorn, dont fear, dont fear
  • I am the season and temporal trainI am the
    minor, I am the mainI am the mind and the story,
    be here, be here
  • Rumi 146

25
Poetry IV
  • O God
  • When I look upon you,
  • I see myself a king among kings,
  • A Crown on my head.
  • When I look upon myself,
  • I see myself among the humble,
  • Dust on my head
  • Khwaja Abdullah Ansari

26
Poetry V
  • He who knows God contemplates him in everything.
  • He who is extinguished by Him is absent from
    everything
  • He who loves Him prefers no-thing to him.
  • Ibn Ata illah

27
Poetry VI
  • I resolve daily that at dusk I shall repentFor a
    night with a cup full of wine spent.In the
    presence of flowers, my resolve simply wentIn
    such company, I only regret that I ever resolved
    to repent.
  • Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam
  •  

28
Poetry VII
  • In childhood we strove to go to school,Our turn
    to teach, joyous as a ruleThe end of the story
    is sad and cruelFrom dust we came, and gone with
    winds cool.
  • Zum Meister ging ich einst- das war die
    Jugendzeit-Dann hab ich mich der eigenen
    Meisterschaft gefreut.Und wollt ihr wissen, was
    davon das Ende ist?Den Staubgeborenen hat wie
    Staub der Wind zerstreut
  • Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam

29
Controversies
  • Al-Hallaj "Ana' al Haqq" -- "I Am The Truth"
  • Crucified and dismembered for heresy in Baghdad.
  • The phrase, Ana al Haqq is one of the names of
    God in the Quran.
  • Believed that sufism should not be for the elite.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com