Spiritual Health Learning Community Center
Exploring Life's Horizons
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And it may be that you love a thing while it is evil for you, and Allah knows, while you do
not know. - [The Qur'an 2:216]
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Gifts
People sometimes get very confused about what they suppose
is the nature and purpose of the Sufi path. For instance, some
people read a few books purported to be Sufi treatises and
often draw, or are misled into drawing, quite distorted
conclusions about the character of Sufi mystical practice.
On the basis of these readings, they may get the impression
the whole Sufi thing is nothing but a story telling tradition.
Seen from this perspective, Sufi masters are considered to be
master story tellers.
Moreover, Sufi gatherings are events in which everyone sits
around telling these neat stories with a Sufi twist and flavor.
Presumably, one becomes a Sufi when one participates in the
dissemination of these stories.
Sometimes, Sufi masters do tell stories. However, the telling
of stories plays, on the whole, a purely secondary or tertiary
role relative to the primary task of realizing the presence of
Divinity.
This occurs, God willing, when, among other things, the false
self is induced to release its strangle hold on management
rights and vacate the spiritual premises. Stories may assist in
this process, but they are merely a means to a further end
which is quite apart from stories per se.
Another confusion which seeps into people's consciousness in
relation to mysticism concerns the issue of spiritual gifts.
These gifts are loans from God.
Sometimes these gifts are in the form of various
extraordinary powers. For example, among these powers
are: healing; seeing the future; witnessing events hundreds
and thousands of miles away; reading the Tablet of Fate, as
well as writing new entries into that Tablet; breaking the
norms or laws which usually govern nature; and telepathic
communication (both sending and receiving).
There are certain people who hear about these sort of
powers, and they begin to drool with desire to possess such
abilities. They want to know where they can sign up.
What these people do not understand is the Sufi path,
ultimately, is no more about powers than it is about stories.
To be sure, God does grant, through spiritual gifts, one or
more of the foregoing capabilities to certain individuals on
the mystical path. Yet, these gifts are, in a sense, incidental to
the essence of the mystical quest.
From the perspective of Sufi masters, one could have a whole
treasure chest of extraordinary powers and be missing the
point of why one steps onto the Sufi path in the first place.
The goal is God.
Powers are not the object of the set of spiritual exercises
which constitute the Sufi discipline or methodology. The
object of these exercises is to neutralize the aspect of self
which, among other things, desires anything other than: to
know God, to love God, to worship God and to serve God.
Sometimes powers are bestowed on an individual in order to
test that person. In effect, the individual is being challenged
by Divinity. Which does the person want more: powers or the
Beloved?
When the individual gets mesmerized and intoxicated with
such powers, they lose their way on the mystical path.
Powers, then, become an impenetrable veil between the
person and her or his potential for fully realizing the
presence of Divinity.
Human beings who get seduced by spiritual powers are
cheating themselves. This is so because when the person
becomes enamored by extraordinary powers, he or she is
sacrificing intimacy with God for what amounts to very
subtle ego gratification.
According to the practitioners of the Sufi path, true
happiness, contentment, fulfillment, peace, satisfaction,
identity and love can only be realized through spiritual
intimacy with God. Powers are powerless to achieve any of
this.
Powers, in and of themselves, cannot be used to rise higher
spiritually. They have no capacity to do this. On the other
hand, refraining from becoming entangled in the seductive
allure which powers have for the ego, can help one, God
willing, to make significant spiritual progress.
There are many practitioners of the Sufi path who, by the
grace of God, have ready access to tremendous powers.
However, they often do not utilize them.
Within certain limits, they have the capacity to change things
significantly, but, for the most part, they do not. They more
or less leave things as they are.
There is something very deep here to which we ought to give
considerable reflection. Having powers, is not the panacea
we might suppose it to be. There are other principles which
constrain the use of powers and, therefore, transcend them in
the scheme of things.
The bestowing of Divine gifts in the form of extraordinary
powers is not always a spiritual trial. Some individuals are
given such gifts as a tool to be used under certain
circumstances in the service of God.
God, in a sense, delegates some degrees of discretional
authority to some of the servants of Divinity. Just as God has
granted various people different kinds of talents and
intellectual capabilities in order to fulfil certain spiritual
tasks, so, too, God gives some people special powers that
permit the fulfillment of those kinds of spiritual tasks which
require special abilities.
This means some servants of Divinity become loci of
manifestation through which powers are released in order to
permit the servant to be able to fulfil certain spiritual duties
which have been assigned to her or him. For instance, in
order for a shaykh to be able to assist a devotee, the teacher
must have considerable insight into the spiritual capacity and
circumstances of the individual's life.
Consequently, one of the powers given to the shaykh by God
is the capacity to read the life of the devotee like an open
book. Nothing the individual has done in the past, or is doing
or thinking or feeling now, can be concealed from the
shaykh's Divinely supported gaze.
On the basis of this kind of understanding, spiritual diseases
are diagnosed and appropriate spiritual remedies are
prescribed. God has given spiritual masters the special
powers which are necessary for this healing work of the soul.
In addition to the foregoing remarks involving one of the
legitimate uses of extraordinary powers, one also might
consider the following comments. More specifically,
sometimes a Sufi master will employ an aspect or dimension
of such powers to help strengthen the faith and allay some of
the doubts of an initiate of the path.
When an individual witnesses certain events which give
expression to a spiritual power, the individual tends to be
powerfully affected, if not nonplussed, by the occurrence.
The ego is in a panic because it has just gone through
something which pulls the rug out from beneath a whole set
of assumptions about how things are supposed to operate.
The heart, on the other hand, is buoyed and intrigued by such
an event. The heart has received some concrete confirmation
which can be used in the struggle with the ego's disbelief and
skepticism.
As a result, the initiate's faith becomes a little stronger. Some
of the doubts begin to dissipate.
However, from the perspective of Sufi masters, there are
many reasons a shaykh should not become indulgent in
relation to this sort of spiritual disclosure. Among the most
important of the reasons for restraint in this regard,
concerns the adverse effects on faith that would occur if the
initiate were, in the beginning, fed a steady diet of
extraordinary events.
Faith grows through struggle and conflict with, among other
things, doubt. If one takes this element of struggle away, as
would be the case were an initiate exposed to constant
spiritual disclosure, the quality of the faith is diminished and
weakened.
A spiritual guide must strike a fine balance with respect to
the extent of such spiritual disclosures, as well as their
timing. The shaykh wants to lend the kind of assistance
which will help the person through, say, some rough spots of
the path. However, too much of this sort of support at the
wrong time can prove injurious to the faith of the individual
in the long run.
One should not be concerned about gifts from God. If one
seeks God with a specificity of purpose which targets only
the fullest realization of Divine presence in our lives for
which we have the capacity, gifts will look after themselves.
A person who truly is in love does not spend time wondering
what gifts the beloved will bring. All thoughts and
anticipations concern only the presence of the beloved. To
long for anything other than the beloved, is to bring into
question the sincerity of one's love.
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