Spiritual Health Learning Community Center
Exploring Life's Horizons
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We shall show them Our signs upon the horizons and in themselves, until it is clear to them
that He is the Real - [The Qur'an 41:53]
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Awe
How is it possible to meditate on the universe within us and
beyond us and not be overcome by a deep, abiding sense of
the majesty, wonder, mystery, power, subtlety and beauty
which pervades all manner of being? In fact, this sense of
awe can be so overwhelming and touch the soul so intensely,
most of us tend to keep it at a distance.
To the extent we allow ourselves to entertain such
experiences at all, we often tend to permit them to surface
only very briefly and in an attenuated manner. After all, these
experiences tend to be counter-productive in the work-a-day
world.
Furthermore, compared to the intensity and depth of feeling
involved in the experience of awe, one has difficulty
reconciling this with the numbing way we often go about
living our lives. Indeed, for a variety of different "reasons",
we spend so much of our time living in a socially and
individually constructed cocoon from which awe has been
excluded, many of us no longer seem to be able to have any
sense of awe whatsoever. Many of us have lost contact with
this dimension of our being.
Human knowledge is said, by some, to be doubling every ten
years or less. Some say this rate of doubling is accelerating.
Yet, despite all of this accumulation of so-called knowledge,
we know next to nothing about: memory, consciousness,
intelligence, creativity, cosmic possibility, ecology, other
galaxies, the origins of life, language, human identity, death,
health or illness. The list could be extended indefinitely.
We have many, many more questions than answers.
Moreover, whatever answers we do have are being updated
all the time because we didn't get it right the first, second,
third or fourth time around.
Who are we? What are we doing here? Where do we come
from? Where are we going?
Is there any purpose to existence? What meaning do events
have? Is truth discovered or invented? Are there any
absolutes?
What should one do with one's life? Why do some people die
sooner than others? What is the nature of justice? Do we
have free will?
For every declarative statement we make, we can come up
with a multiplicity of interrogative rejoinders. We are awash
in theories of all kinds: scientific, philosophical, theological,
political, economic, artistic, historical, psychological, social
and educational. However, there is a potentially gigantic
difference between having a theory and knowing the truth of
a matter.
The lifetimes of millions of people have been consumed with
the battle to identify a few tentative conjectures before the
onslaught of a raging sea of unknowns. Perhaps, in the light
of the ephemeral nature of the rewards to be garnered from
such a titanic struggle, the tendency of most of us to retreat
into the banality of fashion, television, careers, sports,
material acquisition, hobbies, movies, parties and various
addictions becomes understandable.
To be sure, the more one understands, the greater can be
one's appreciation for the incredible richness and intricacy of
any given aspect of existence. Yet, even if we know little or
nothing about the nature of things, we seem to have an
intrinsic capacity to feel awe for the wonder and mystery and
beauty of the worlds within and without us.
We look up into the sky at night and see the stars, the moon
and some planets, and, providing we have not allowed
ourselves to become desensitized, we can become engrossed
just by witnessing these marvels, without necessarily
understanding any of it. To be thrilled by the rippling,
pulsating and cascading movements of the Northern and
Southern lights requires absolutely no knowledge or
understanding of the process of ionization.
In fact, from the perspective of Sufi masters, understanding
the process of ionization in the upper atmosphere does not
exhaust the realities which underwrite that physical
phenomenon. The physical realm is only the most apparent
realm of manifestation of a reality which goes far, far deeper
than the purely physical.
We see a sunset or sunrise (with apologies to Copernicus et.
al.), and we are transfixed. We experience the majestic,
powerful presence of lightning, or tornadoes, or floods, or
hurricanes or earthquakes, and we are humbled before them.
We are moved by compassion, or empathy, or love, or
beauty, or generosity, not because we necessarily understand
these processes, but because we have the capacity to
resonate with these forces.
We know what we know, even if we don't understand what
we know. What we know is mystery and wonder and majesty
and grandeur and beauty. What we know is what we feel
with our hearts and spirits. What we know is laughter and
tears and fear and joy. What we know are questions? What
we know is awe.
Much of the foregoing comments concern the
physical/material world or universe. Reality, however,
extends beyond the realm of the material level of
manifestation. In fact, the material world, as vast and
nuanced as it is, is only a minuscule portion of what is.
In addition to the material/physical modalities of being, there
are other levels which give expression to: the souls of things;
the angelic realm; the realities of the Names and Attributes of
God; the abode of fixed essences, and, finally, the truth and
reality of God's Essence which transcends, and is entirely
independent of, all the other realms.
Indeed, all these other realms presuppose, and are dependent
on, the Divine Essence, although the Divine Essence cannot
be reduced to or likened to any of these other realms.
The Divine Essence makes all of these other realms possible.
Nonetheless, we cannot make any inference about the nature
of the Divine Essence based on manifestations in these other
realms.
According to the realized practitioners of the Sufi sciences,
all of these realms which are a mysterious function of the
unknowable Divine Essence are far more vast than the
physical/material world. They are infinite in nature.
There are Sufi practitioners who have journeyed to, and
experienced, to varying degrees, these various realms. Some
of it has been written or spoken about. The vast majority of
such experiences, however, fall beyond language or
description and, sometimes, even understanding. They are
undergone, but, sometimes, this is about all that can be said
about them.
These experiences often are characterized by, among other
possibilities, a sense of inundation in raw, naked,
overwhelming, mesmerizing, intoxicating, stupefying,
powerfully intense awe. Such experiences of awe help color,
shape, orient and modulate how the Sufi interacts with and
perceives other human beings and, in fact, the whole
universe.
Awe generally becomes a powerful organizing force in the
life of a Sufi. The richer and more intense and subtle one's
experiences of awe, the greater is the potential for
transformation of the life, thinking, understanding, feeling
and activity of the Sufi.
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