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Sayyid `Ali Muhamamd Shirazi
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Risāla fī'l-nubuwwa al-khaṣṣa
(The Treatise on the Specific Prophethood [of Muhammad) I NOW BEING
REVISED 2009-10 Introduction and
partial annotated translation Stephen N. Lambden 1984 The Bab's wholly Arabic Risāla
fi'l-nubuwwah al-khaṣṣah, his "Treatise on the Specific Prophethood",
of Muhammad (c. 570-632 CE) is extant in several mss. Among them INBMC
14:321; The Sitz im Leben of the Risāla
fi'l-nubuwwah al-khaṣṣah Towards the end of his
confinement in Shiraz the Bāb bequeathed his property to his wife and mother,
took up residence in the house of Hajji Mīrzā Siyyid `Alī (his uncle) and sent a
number of his disciples to Isfahan. The Bābīs in Shiraz had been the
object of increasing harassment and it appears to have been the intention of
Mīrzā Ḥusayn Khān (on the orders of Ḥajji Mīrzā Āqāsī) to secretly have the Bāb
executed. In late September 1846 however, a cholera epidemic swept Shiraz and
Mīrzā Ḥusayn Khān fled the city. In the absence of the Governor the chief
constable `Abd al-Ḥamīd Khān detained the Bāb in his own house. Here the Bāb is
said to have cured the latter's sons who had fallen sick with cholera. The
grateful father subsequently induced Mīrzā Ḥusayn Khān to allow him to release
the Bāb from house arrest. This though was on condition that the Bāb quit
Shiraz. Thus was precipitated the Bāb's six month sojurn in Isfahan (Sept 1846
-> March 1847). The Bāb spent most
of the Isfahan period as the semi-secret guest of the governor Manūchihr Khān
(d.1262/1847), Mu`tamad al-Dawla ("Chancellor of the Empire"), a Georgian eunuch
who had outwardly embraced Islam. A somewhat tyrannical though excellent
administrator, this faithful servant of Muhammad Shāh had, for reasons that are
not clear, responded favorably to a letter from the Bāb requesting asylum (Zarandī,
D-B:144f; Balyuzi, 1973:l09f; Mangol Bayat, 1982:95). For the first 40 days or
so of his residence in Isfahan, the Bāb was accommodated in the house of Mīrzā
Siyyid Muhammad Sulṭān al-`Ulamā' the Imam Jum`a of the city. For him he wrote,
in just a few hours, a day a one hundred or so page Tafsīr sūrat wa'l-`aṣr
("Commentary on the surah of `By the Afternoon!' = Q. 103; see INBMC 69:21-119).
It was in this house that Manūchihr Khān visited the Bāb and asked him to write
a treatise on nubuwwa khāṣṣa, the "specific prophethood" of Muhammad.
In compliance this request the Bāb again composed within a two hour or so
period a fifty or so page treatise which, according to Zarandī, led
Manūchihr Khān to make a sincere confession of his faith in Islam (Zarandī,
D-B:145ff). Such
demonstrations of inspired Bābiyya ("gatehood") and the increasing number
of devotees which the Bāb had managed to attract to or gain in Isfahan, served
to arouse the opposition of a number of leading Isfahani `ulamā'. Once again the
young Siyyid was condemned to death. The Imam Jum`a, however, despite an
increased openness on the part of the Bāb in asserting his claims, refused to
view the Bāb as anything but an extraordinarily pious though somewhat unbalanced
Shī`ī Muslim. Though it was
eventually decided that the Bāb should be expelled from Isfahan and conducted to
Tehran -- where grave concern about his influence had been expressed in official
circles -- Manūchihr Khān gave secret orders that this journey to the capital be
cut short and the Bāb be secretly conducted to his private residence in Isfahan.
Such, according to Bahā'ī sources, was the devotion of Manūchihr Khān to the Bāb,
that he offered him his considerable fortune and the resources of his army. The
motivation behind this support was doubtless related to the Governor's political
ambitions, which may have been fueled by his sharing of the Bāb's own vision of
a new religio-political order in Persia the like of which the Bab
subsequently outlined in his Persian Bayān. Whatever the case nothing concrete
came of Manūchihr Khān's patronage of the Bāb. This powerful governor of Fārs
died in the month of Rabi` al-Awwal 1263 (21st Feb 1847). The properties he had
bequeathed to the Bāb were appropriated by Gurgīn Khān the nephew of Manūchichr
Khān and his successor who hastened to inform Muhammad Shāh of the Bāb's
whereabouts. Having become
aware of the Bāb's place of residence, Muhammad Shāh instructed Gurgīn Khān to
have him escorted to Tehran. The king was apparently most desirous of meeting
the one whose charismatic charms had exercised such a remarkable influence over
the late Governor of Fārs. Ḥajji Mīrzā Āqāsī, however, his haughty and
hypnotic prime-minister, anxious of the possible consequences of such a meeting,
made sure that it never took place. After passing through Kāshān and Qum (en
route to Tehran) the Bāb was detained for 20 days at Kulayn (a village about 20
miles from Tehran) until orders were received from Ḥajji Mīrzā Āqāsī instructing
a group of Nusayrī horsemen to take him to prison in Mākū, a remote town in
Adhirbayjan near the Russian border. Here the Bāb remained, having passed
through and caused considerable excitement in (among other places) Mākū, and
Tabriz (where he was detained for 40 days) for about 9 months or from late
summer (July/August?) 1847 until early April 1848. A biographical note upon
Manūchihr Khān (? -- d. 1263 Feb 21st 1847) The Bahā'ī poet and historian Nabīl-i
Zarandī (d. 1892) reports that Manūchihr Khān (d. Rabi 1 1263/
17th Feb 1847) the crypto-Muslim governor of Isfahan (between1253-63 = 1838-47),
visited the Bāb at the house of the Imam
Jum`a of Isfahan. There he asked him to write a treatise on the al-nubuwwa
al-khāṣṣa (The specific Prophethood [of Muhammad]). In compliance with this
request the Bab, very rapidly within two hours or so, composed a
fifty or so page Arabic treatise on the specific prophethood of Muhammad (d. 632
CE). The same chronicler also has it that this led the Governor to make a
sincere confession of his faith in Islam (Zarandī, DB:145ff).
Within this complex treatise there are,
for example, acrostic type explanations of the names of Adam and Muhammad
as well as `ilm al-ḥurūf (number-letter mysticism) informed
speculations about the chronology of the latter's mission. The Bab
identifies the mashiyya ("Divine will’) as the bearer of the
nubuwwa
khāṣṣa in the being or body of the prophet Muhammad (INBMC 14:321‑333b).
Such demonstrations of inspired bābiyya ("gatehood") and the increasing
number of devotees which the Bāb had managed to attract to or gain in Isfahan,
served to arouse the opposition of a number of leading Isfahani `ulamā'. Once
again the young Siyyid was condemned to death. The Imam Jum`a, however, despite
an increased openness on the part of the Bāb in asserting his claims, refused to
view the Bāb as anything but an extraordinarily pious adherent of the Shī`ī creed.
TO BE COMPLETED Georgian/ Armenian Safawid - Georgia 4th cent CE X'n --
Georgian lang. not Semitic; not indo European -- lit. 1811> Russian Orthodox.
1st Qajar ruler 1795 Aqa Muhammad Shāh Tiflis MK castrated and sent to the court of Fath `Alī Shāh (r.
). The allegedly crypto Christian, "Muslim" status of Manūchihr Khān Bāb RNK: `
The Risāla fi'l-nubuwwa al-khāṣṣa
("Trestise on the specific prophethood
[of Muhammad]") Some introductory Notes
Now as regards the attribution of the wisdom of prophecy (nubūwiyya)
relative to the word of Jesus (kalimat `isawiyya) he [Jesus] is
a prophet (nabī) according to general prophethood
(bi‑al‑nubuwwa al‑`amma) which is eternal without beginning and
everlasting without end (azal
an abad
an ) as well as
according to the specific prophethood (bi‑al‑nubuwwa al‑khāṣṣa) which is actualized at the moment of arising with the [time of the
prophetic] commission (ḥīn al‑ba`th). Wherefore did he
[Jesus] announce his prophethood from the cradle through his saying, "He
has given me the Book and he made me a prophet (nabiyy
an)" (Q. 19:30b)
and he [also] made announcement from the womb of his mother (fī baṭn
ummuhi) on account of his eternal sovereignty (siyāda azaliyya)
by means of His saying, "Grieve not for thy Lord has made beneath you
[Mary] a rivulet" (Q.19:24), that is to say a sovereign [sayyid
an = Jesus] over
the people. Thus was he [Jesus] granted supremacy over the [other]
prophets (al‑anbiyā ’) through the instrumentality of the
spiritual ones (aḥwāl al‑ruḥāniyyīn) . His proclamation (du`a)
was thus centered upon the interior realities (al‑bāṭin) which
are supremely ascendent (aghlab)... [spefic] legalistic
prophethood (al‑nubuwwa al‑tashrī`ayya) is the
collective concern of various [specific] prophets (al‑anbiyā’) ..
(Qayṣarī, Sh. Fuṣuṣ, 843).
Is is
possible, if not probable that the Bāb's approach to his Risāla fī
al‑nubuwwa al‑khāṣṣa (Treatise on the Specific Prophethood [of
Muhammad]) exhibits the earlier influence of the prophetological
terminology of the school of Ibn `Arabī as this was influential upon
the Sufi and related groups (such as the Dhahabiyya) operative in and
around early Qajar Shiraz. Thus, in summary, 1) al-nubuwwa `al-amma ("general prophethood")
designates the theory of the prophetic office in general terms as it
applies to all those considered prophets; 2) al-nubuwwa al-khāṣṣa ("specific prophethood") is includes the basic historical and theological dimensions of
the concrete prophetic career of a given prophet figure (nabī) within
Islamic (= Muhammad) or pre-Islamic ( e.g. Israelite) salvation history. The
Bab's treatise was thus about the concrete figure of the prophet Muhammad (d.
632 CE) though his treatment of the Arabian Prophet is not simple concrete
history. It often brings into focus a very exalted theophanological
theory of the maẓhariyya of the Prophet. This work, which
contains interesting acrostic type explanations of the names of Adam and
Muhammad as well as `ilm al-ḥurūf (number letter) informed
speculations oriented around the chronology of the latter's mission, the Bāb
identifies the mashiyya ("divine will") as the bearer of the nubuwwa
khāṣṣa in the being or body of the prophet Muhammad (see INBMC 14:321-333b).
The Risāla fi'l-nubuwwa al-khāṣṣa
BEING REVISED 2009-10 Extracts in provisional translation Stephen N. Lambden [I]
In the name of God, the Merciful, the
Compassionate
[1] Praise be to God who made the
ornament of the [Archetypal] Tablets [of Destiny] (ṭaraz al-alwāḥ) the Book of Authorization (kitāb
al-idhn) which is the ornament of the Point (ṭaraz al-nuqṭah) singled
out after such was willed and decreed [by God]. [2] This before it was consummated and authorized, at the moment in which Thou elevated and determined that
deliverance which causes the radiant essences of existing things
(jawharāyāt
kaynūniyyāt al-mutasha`sha`āt) to sparkle in the realities of the denizens
of the divine Realm (ahl al-lāhūt). [3] This to the end that all existing
things might come to know the station of the gnosis of the Divine Attributes (maqām al-`irfān al-ṣifāt) in the light of God's Self-manifestation (tajallī) in the station of the gnosis of the theophany of the divine Essence (maqām `irfān ẓuhār al-dhāt). [4] He, verily, no God is there except Him. For an eternity of eternities there was no reality alongside Him, apart, that is, from
His Own Logos-Self. [5] And it is not possible in contingent existence to make adequate
mention of His Own Logos-Self (nafsihi) for the essential Divinity of His Pristine Essence
(al-dhātāya al-sāzijāya?), its Existent Reality
(kaynānāyatihā), is detached from created things (al-badāyāt), from the level of human
gnosis (maqām al-`irfān) and the limitations of the pathways of the
revealed verses (subul al-āyāt). It is thus detached from clear exposition. [6] This
since the Divine Essence is transcendent. None knows the extent of Its
Existent Reality (kaynānāya). The nature of Its eternality is beyond
description. [6] There can be no characterization of Its sublime Isolatedness (ṣamadāniyya) for what is other than Him is found to be in the station of contingent existence by virtue of [secondary] realities which come into being
(maqām al-imkān bi'l-ibdā`) and exist relative to the station of existent realities by virtue of their being originated
(bi'l-ikhtirā`). [7] Praised be He and exalted be He
who was Eternally described by His Own Logos-Self and whose Essential Reality (dhātihi) is the singularity of His Own Logos-Self (nafs).
And none knows how He is except He Himself. Praised and exalted be He above that which hath been
described.
[II]
[1] And Praised be to
God Who originated all
that He willed by virtue of His
Logos-Command (amr) [2] And Who made existing
realities the quintessence of abstraction [from His Essence]
(mujarradāt
al-mujarratāt) to be a sign of His Eternity without
Beginning (azaliyyatihi) and of His handiwork (handasatihi),
relative, that is to the station of
[322] His Divine Intention (maqām irādatihi) and His Proof in the station of His
Mercifulness (maqām ramatihi) . [3] This in view of the reverberations of all
things
in the world of Names and Attributes
through the reverberations of the
theophanic traces of His Self-Subsisting Reality in the world of powers (`ālam al-jabarūt) and the qualities
(shu'ūnāt) of
the theophanic disclosures of divine Justice and Bounty (maẓāhir al-`adl
wa'l-faḍl) on the levels of the worldly dominion and
heavenly kingdom
(mulk wa'l-malakūt). [4] This
perchance no single being should be veiled from
the theophany disclosures of His
Countenance (ẓūhurār arat tal`atihi) and vision Him outwardly as a --------
[text unclear] Lordly Cause (mājid rābbānihi?). [5] No God is there save Him, One Living
(al-ḥayy) in the
Being of His Essence
(kaynāniyyat al-dhāt); One Self-Subsisting through the essential
reality of His Attributes (ṣifāt). [6] In view of the sublimity of His
Grandeur it cannot be proposed
that even the most elevated, abstracted mountain heights
(shawāmikh al-jardāt [mujarradāt]) in the worlds of the
mirrored reflections
(`awālim al-mārayāt) ascend up unto Him.
[7] It is not
conceivable that He should be manifested unto the holy,
sanctified atmosphere of
the bird of the human hearts
through the such manifestations as occupy
the worlds of total being(`awālim al-kulliyāt).
[III]
[1]
So praised and
elevated be He,
majestic and supreme is the sanctity of His Self-Subsistent
Being,
[IV]
[1] And praise be to
God Who produced all ? for the station (?)
of the gnosis of the appearance of
His Justice. This to the end that all of the
(pre-eternal) atoms of contingent realities
(dhārrāt
al-mumkināt) might testify from the Originator of Causes,
unto the termination of
the shadows which are
the deaf and the common
folk, the
blind and the lame (?).
[-] [1] [-] [1] And when his [religious] Cause
(amr)
rose up and ordained dictates requiring action were decreed on the level of things prohibited, this was [from?] God. [2] And
[326] he followed His command and trusted in God
relative to the appearance of what God
ordained
through the [appearance of the heavenly] star
(al-kiyān)
in existence (bi'l-wujūd) [which was visible]
through the outward vision (al-`ayān). [3] And
he [Muhammad] it is that God established
as eternally without peer
alongside
Him. And eternally was he existing in the
likeness of what cannot possibly
be regularly mentioned in the light of the
fact that [4]
[333] this Universal Soul (al-nafs al-kullāya) is the
basis (?) of the specific prophethood (al-nubuwwat al-khāṣṣa) in the temple
of the body of Muhammad, the Messenger of God for He is totally unique. [5] The
descent of the Primal Point (al-nuqṭa al-awwalāya?) and its arrival on the
bodily level (maqām al-jasadāya) is not possible except in the Bodily Temple (al-haykal) in which he was born -- may my soul be a sacrifice unto him --
since the signs of his uniqueness were apparent to all at the moment of his birth for they were not apparent save in
his being.
[-] [1] So, at the moment at which his body
was made manifest there was written upon his shoulder the signs of Prophethood (āyāt al-nubuwwat) in such wise that no one other than he [Muhammad]
could possibly estimate the magnitude of this mighty affair. [2] Then, when he was
established in the renown of absolute, universal Prophethood (fī dhikr
al-nubuwwa al-muṭlaqa al-kullāya) and the primordial, eternal wilāya
(al-wilāya al-awwāliyya al-azaliyya) [3] is was impossible that he [Muhammad] should hold back from the commencement of an action
nigh [this would precipitate] the very cessation of the world of
multiplicity (`ālam al-katharat) which is [nothing other than] the visible, world
[334] of
bodies (`ālam al-ajsād). [4] His [absolute prophetological] Being and the form
of its essence (haykal dhātāyatihi) appeared unto the onlooker in the
personalized Temple of his [Muhammad's]purified body (haykal jasadihi al-āhir). [5] It's foundation is subtle (laṭif) for God did not ordain
any origin for its [Muhammad's body's] existence since it is impossible that the
manifestation of the divine Will (ẓuhār al-mashāya) be actualized in this
world except in that form in which Muhammad the Messenger of God appeared.
[6] This
inasmuch as the genesis [of Muhammad's body] was not made manifest except on the
level of the seal (rutbat al-khatm). [7] And the Intellect (al-`aql)
was assuredly made manifest in that he who is the genesis of the divine Bounty
(mabdā'
al-fayḍ) on the primordial level (fā maqām al-rutbat al-awwalā)
[= Muhammad] could not possibly complete his manifestation save through the seal (al-khatm). [8] Never did anyone appear like unto him. Wherefore was Muhammad the Messenger of God, who is the
Opener (al-fātiḥ) when he goes before and the Seal (al-khātam) when
he moves foreword, and the Help in Peril... [x]
.. inasmuch as the name of his father is `Abd Allāh ibn `Abd
al-Muṭālib ibn Hāshim ibn `Abd al-Manāf since he was made manifest on account of
the origin of the Cause [matter] (mubādā
al-amr). He is naught except the manifestation of his servitude before God,
praised be He, in the worlds of command and creation (al-amr wa'l-khalq)
[x] .. the [locus of ] specific prophethood (nubuwwa al-khaṣṣa) in
his [Muhammad's]
pure body (jasad al-ṭāhir) the like of which was alluded to by Imam
Abu Ja`far [al-Ṣādiq] in his speech [delivered] when he was asked about the [physical] appearance of the Prophet of God. He said, `The Prophet of God was ---- white, reddish, black-eyed, having conjoined eyebrows
( al-ājibān)...
[336] in this world, thus, in the likeness of Muhammad, the Messenger of God,
[338]
"There is no difference between him and between Me [God] except that he [Muhammad] is His servant and His creation".
Thus there is not in the created realms anything
comparable to the name Muhammad since the letter
م
"M" (mīm) is the first of the
letters of the divine Will (
[x] And that letter
For the letter "D" (dāl) is among the darkened letters (al-hurūf al-`alamāniyya). It is a letter indicative of self identity, I-ness (al-ḥarf al-aniyya) and a sign of limitation (al-ḥaddiyya) on the Muhammadan level
INBMC 134: 344
And as for zamān ("time"). This is that which is realized through the rising and setting of the spheres [planets]
(aflak) It has a beginning and an end Thus when man testifies unto the reality of this explanation he estimates that he is aware of the moment when the body (jism) of Muhammad has appeared in the world of time (`ālam al-zamān) which is [in fact] the appearance al-mashiyya (the Divine Will) in the Primal Creation (al-khalq
al-awwāl). [345] And after that explanation is the existence of the
manifestation of the Prophet established through the soul-oriented proofs (bi-dālālāt
al-nafsāniyya) in the year which is one hundred and three [years from] from the [commencement of the] seventh millennium (fā sana al-thālith wa'l-māta min al-alf al-sābi`). And it was necessary that his name his attributes be such as God had written
down [especially] for him and selected for him aside from [the generality of] His
creation;including such matters as : the assumption of the evening prayer (ṣalāt al-layl); the
stipulation of nine women (ḥukm al-nisā' fī al-tis`a); [as welll as] what God
selected for him [Muhammad] of the levels of his prophethood (aḥkām nubuwwatihi) and the circumstances of his mission.
This since it is impossible that He
should verify the foregoing in the station (maqām) which God intimated with respect
to him [Muhammad] in His Book [the Qur'ān]. Through divine inspiration (al-waḥy) [in the
Qur'an] there is reference to the station where God says with respect to his [Muhammad's]
truth,
"And when he [Muhammad?] was on the Supreme Horizon
(al-ufq al-a`lā). Then he drew nigh and came down until he was but two bows
length or even nearer and he revealed unto his slave what he revealed. The
heart lied not when it saw. Will ye then dispute with him concerning what he
did see? And verily he saw him yet another time. By the Lote Tree beyond which
there is no passing [Lote-Tree the Extremity], nigh unto which is the garden of the
Abode. When that which enshroudeth did enshroud the Lote-Tree. The eye
turned not aside nor yet was overbold. Verily he saw one of the greater
revelations of his Lord." (Q. 53:7-18)
And since it is impossible to
estimate that knowledge of descents and geometries (CORRECT ?`ilm al-hadārāt wa
handasāyāt) should encompasses him and that beyond these allusions he
established the Cause which is the Path which is other than that which hath been
manifested in the Bayān, ..... everything which hath been singled out in the Bayān is
pertinent to the establishment of prophethood (al-nubuwwat), for the
realization of the Aḥmadī Temple. He is upon the Inner Path (sabīl al-bāṭin) and the completion of
the exposition (al-bayān) upon the outer Path (sabīl al-ẓāhir).. the station of..
the forty so there appeared the ten after the thirty [=40] in the level of the
conjunction. And thus did God make the name of the First Dhikr (dhikr al-awwāl)
which is Adam in accordance with what was manifested in this world .
[351]
his mission in Mecca thirteen years for the manifestation
of the sanctified Temples in the precinct of God (ḥaram Allāh) from His Self and
in order that he might teach all its sanctified environment /habitation
(sukunat) upon this earth
[352]
the number of years were established. It verily is the
totality. And the ten is the upon [371] all Names and Attributes.
And he who [Manuchihr
Khān] desired that he would prove that the specific prophethood (al-nubuwwat al-khaṣṣa)
was in the clay of `aliyyiīn ("transcendence") and not a man previously of the religion of Islam.
[x] And when he heard a verse of the Qur'ān he believed
at that very moment in Him since aside from that Book there is no befitting proclamation of His mystery.. And in every letter of it there is treasured a mighty sign from One Powerful,
Forgiving as if it is in the station of the theophany [manifestation] (maqām al-ẓuhār) of
that blessed sign. If We sent down this Qur'ān upon a mountain you would assuredly see it humbled
(khāshi`atan). He proclaims (?) the
fear of God (khashiyat Allāh?); and these parables (al-imthāl) he
expoundeth for the people perchance they might understand. RETRANSLATE THIS And today all who
desire to enter into the religion of Muhammad, the Apostle of God and the wilāya
("Guidance") of his chosen saints (awliyā') according to insight such that the
reality be realized and they enter the gnosis of the Qur'ān (`irfān al-qur'ān)
since it is a sign of the bosom/heart from the All-Merciful (jaybat min al-raman)
. It cannot reckoned that there should come anyone among humanity (al-insān)
like unto him to succeed him being established in miracles (al-mu`jizāt) through
soul-like signs (bi-'l-āyāt al-anfusā ya) and the horizon-like proofs (wa'l-dalālāt
al-ufqāāya) [see Q. ] in the establishment of prophethood (nubuwwat) for all
such as are before him (?) breeze of the musk from the justice (al-ināf). And
all of that is the source of their gnosis which culminateth unto the gnosis of
the soul (`irfān al-nafs) and its consent (qubāl) though in the Qur'ān is the
bosom (al-fu`ād) made firm, the spirit (al-rā) made tranquil and the soul (al-nafs)
contented and the body (al-jasad) refreshed. And for it [them] is a trace in
existence (āthar fā'l-wujād) that God did not make for other than Him (?). And
he/it at the assembling is the greatest of the signs of God (āyāt Allāh) in the
station of inner significance (maqām al-ma`ānā) and of the letters (al-urāf).
And not a thing returns unto him of the bodily miracles (al-mu`jizāt al-jismāya)
[372] since there is nothing in existence more noble than speech (al-kalām). And
thus did God make articulate speech (al-bayān) between Him and between His pure
ones (afiyā'ihi). And He was eternally nigh unto such as are stretched out
between the True One (al-aqq) [God] and the creation (al-khalq). Thus was He the
greatest of the signs/miracles (al-āyāt) in view of the fact that in the Qur'ān
all miracles are evident (āhirat)..
Now as for the grades of the
[385]
Thus it was from the proof of the
gnosis of the Essence (ḥujjat `irfān al-dhāt) for the gnosis is in
accordance with the direction of Reality and the Perfection (al-aqāqat
wa'l-kamāl) just as is alluded to by the Imam in most of the stations of gnosis
(maqāmāt al-`irfān). Wherefore did `Alā say in the
Du`a al-sabah
("Dawn Supplication"),
"O Thou Whose proof is by virtue of Thine Essence,
through Thine Essence (dhātihi bi-dhātihi)." And further when `Alī the
son of Ḥusayn (= the 4th Imām, Zayn al-`Abidān) stated in his supplication for
Abu Hamzah al-Thamxlx, "Through Thee doth I know Thee and Thou art my proof
of Thee and thou do supplicate Me with respect to thee (?) and if it were not for
Thee I would not [realize] Thee."
And there is also what He, exalted be He, hath said in
terms of what was revealed in the Gospel (nuzul fī al-injīl),
"Know thyself! and
thou shalt know Thy Lord. Thine exterior being is for annihilation (li'l-fanā')
while thine interior being is I, Myself". And the gnosis (al-irfān) accords with
the proofs (al-dalāla) ...
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