...Muhammad ibn Ya'qub al-Kulayni - may God be pleased with him -from Muhammad
ibn Yahya, from Ahmad ibn Muhammad ibn 'Isa, from Ibn Mahbub, from 'Abd Allah
ibn Sinan, from Abu Hamzah al-Thumali, from Abu Ja'far (A.S.) that he said:
"It is written in the Torah that has not been altered that Moses (A.S.) asked
his Lord (saying): 'O Lord! (Tell me) art Thou near me, so that I should pray to
Thee in whispers, or art Thou far, that I should cry out. to Thee?' Thereat God
Almighty revealed to him: 'O Moses! I am the companion of one who remembers me.'
Moses said: 'Who are those that shall be in Thy refuge on the day when there
shall be no refuge except Thy refuge?' He replied: 'Those who remember Me, whom
I do remember; those who love one another for My sake, whom I love. They are
those whom I remember whenever I wish to strike the earth's people with
affliction, and consequently spare them on their account.'"1
Exposition:
It is shown by this noble tradition that the Torah current amongst the Jews is a
corrupted and an altered one. The knowledge of the true Torah was with the Ahl
al-Bayt (A.S.). From the contents of the current Torah and Gospels it appears
that they do not meet the standard of even the speech commonly acceptable of a
human being (to say nothing of the criterion of Divine speech); rather, the
delusions of some followers of carnal lust and desire have been incorporated in
them.
The researcher and traditionist al-Majlisi - may God's mercy be upon him - says:
"It appears that the intention of Hadrat Musa by this question was to inquire
about the etiquette of prayer, while he knew that God is nearer to one than his
jugular vein, with an encompassing nearness based on knowledge, power and causal
efficiency. He meant to say, `Do You like to be prayed to in whispers, like one
speaks to someone near, or should I call You like one who calls out to someone
far away?' In other words, 'When 'I look at You, I find You nearer than anything
that is near, and when I look at myself I find myself at a far distance. Thus, I
don't know whether I should take into consideration Your situation in my prayer
or my own condition:' And it is possible that this question was made on behalf
of someone else, like the question related to the possibility of Beatific
vision" (mentioned in the Qur'an, 7:148).
It is possible that Moses intended to express his feeling of loss and wonder in
respect of the manner of praying. He meant to say, "O Lord! You are too
immaculate and above everything for nearness and farness to be attributable to
You, that I may address You as one who is near or one who is far. Hence I am at
a loss in this matter, for I do not consider any manner of prayer to be suitable
for Your glorious station. So permit me to pray, and show me its manner. Teach
me that which is appropriate for Your sacred station." The answer came from the
Source of Glory and Majesty that, "I, as the Sustainer, am present in all the
manifold levels and realms of existence. All the worlds constitute My presence.
Yet, I am the companion of those who remember Me and am by the side of those who
call Me."
Of course, proximity and distance cannot be attributed to that Sacred Essence.
It possesses the encompassment of sustenance (ihateh ye qayyumi i.e. the
encompassment that God Almighty possesses over all being as its sustainer) and
existential all-inclusiveness (shumul-e wujudi) over all the domains of being
and all the streams of reality. However, that which is mentioned in the noble
verses of the Glorious Book of God regarding the attribution of nearness and
proximity to God Almighty, such as the verses,
﴾And when My servants question thee concerning Me, (tell them that) I
am near to answer the call of the caller, when he calls to Me .... (2:186)﴿
﴾...and We know what his soul whispers within him, and We are nearer to
him than the jugular vein, (50:16)﴿
and others like them, constitute a kind of metaphor and allegory. Otherwise, His
sacred being is above proximity and distance, physical or immaterial; for these
qualities entail limitation (tahdid) and likeness (tashb'ih, i.e. to creatures)
and God Almighty is beyond them. Rather, the presence of all existents in the
court of His sanctity is a relational presence, and the encompassment of that
Sacred Essence over the particles of the universe and the chains of existents is
the encompassment of sustenance, which is something other than sensible or
spiritual presence and is different from outward and inward encompassment.
From this noble tradition, and some other traditions as well, the preference for
concealed remembrance (dhikr-e khafi) and the desirability of remembrance within
the heart and secretly can be inferred. This is also indicated by the noble
verse:
﴾Remember thy Lord in thy soul, humbly and fearfully, not loud of
voice, at morn and eventide. (7:205)﴿
In a noble tradition it is stated that the reward (thawab) of this remembrance,
on account of its greatness, is known to none except God Almighty. In some
circumstances and states the preference may lie with overt remembrance, like the
remembrance done in front of the negligent for the sake of reminding them. Hence
it is mentioned in a noble tradition of al-Kafi that one who recalls God
Almighty amongst the negligent is like one who fights against the muharibun
(i.e. those who have taken up arms against God and Islam). The following
tradition is mentioned in the `Uddat al-dai of Ibn Fahd:
...The narrator says that the Prophet (pbuh&hh) said: "One who recalls God in
the marketplace, with sincerity, in the midst of the people's obliviousness and
their engagement in its affairs, God writes for him a thousand merits and
forgives him on the Day of Resurrection with a forgiveness that has not occurred
to any human heart."2
Similarly, it is mustahabb to make the dhikr aloud in the adhan, in sermons, and
other things.
It is stated in this noble tradition that the remembrance of God and mutual love
and friendship for His sake have certain characteristics. One of them, which is
more important than the others, is that the remembrance' of God by the servant
results in God's remembering him, and this matter is also mentioned in other
traditions. This remembrance stands in opposition to the neglect (nisyan)
mentioned by God Almighty in relation to one who forgets God's ayat (signs,
verses):
﴾He shall say, `O my Lord, why hast Thou raised me blind, and I was
wont to see?' God shall say,) `Even so it is. Our ayat came unto thee, and thou
didst forget them; and so today thou art forgotten.' (20:126)﴿
In the same way as the forgetting of the ayat and inward blindness to the
manifestations of Divine glory and beauty result in blindness in the other
world, so do the remembrance of the ayat, the Names, and the Attributes and the
remembrance of God, His beauty and majesty strengthen the inward vision and
remove the obscuring screens in proportion to the strength of the dhikr and its
luminosity. When the remembrance of the ayat becomes a faculty (malakah), the
inner vision becomes so strong that it begins to see Divine beauty in the ayat.
The remembrance of the Names and the Attributes results in the vision of God in
the manifestations of the Names and the Attributes (tajalliyat-e asma'iyyah wa
sifatiyyah). The remembrance of the Essence without the veils of .the ayat,
Names and Attributes removes all the veils and affords the unobstructed vision
of the Beloved. And this is one of the interpretations of `the triple victories'
(futuhat-e thalathah) which make up the highest delight of the `urafa' and
alwliya`: fath-e qar'ib (the nearer victory), fath-e mubin (the manifest
victory), and fath-e mutlaq (the absolute victory), which is fath al-futuh, the
ultimate victory.
In the same way as the threefold remembrance removes the threefold veils, mutual
love for the sake of God also leads to God's love, and the result of this love
is also the removal of veils, as pointed out by the illustrious `urafa'.
Obviously, this love (God's love) has also various degrees, for the love for the
sake of God has also many levels in respect of sincerity and vitiation. Complete
sincerity is that which is free even from the flaw of the plurality of the Names
and Attributes (kathrat-e asma i wa sifati), and it results in complete love.
The absolute lover will not be deprived of communion in the code of love, and
there will remain no obstruction between the lover and the Beloved. With this
exposition, we may establish a relation between the two questions of Moses -
upon whom be peace. For after hearing God Almighty declare that He is the
companion (jalis) of one who remembers Him, and after hearing from the Beloved
Himself the promise which he coveted in his heart, of the union with the Beauty,
he wanted to discover the identity of those who shall achieve the union, so that
he may fulfil his duty in all its aspects. Hence he asked:
Who are they that shall be in Thy refuge on the day when there shall be no
refuge except Thy refuge?
That is, who are they who, in Thy refuge, have attained emancipation from all
attachments and freedom from obstructive barriers, attaining communion with Thy
supreme beauty? He is told: `They are the two groups: those who are in My
remembrance, and those who love one another mutually, who are also in My
remembrance in respect of the complete manifestation of My beauty, that is man.
They are in My refuge, being My companions and I theirs.' This shows that these
two groups possess one great quality, which results in another great
characteristic. Because God Almighty remembers them and makes them His beloved
ones, the result is that they obtain His refuge on the day when there is no
refuge, their companion being God in the place of absolute seclusion. The other
characteristic is that God Almighty spares His creatures of chastisement for the
sake of their nobility. That is, as long as they are in the midst of the
creatures, He does not send chastisement and calamities upon them for the sake
of them.
The Difference between Tafakkur and Tadhakkur:
Let it be known to you that tadhakkur (remembrance) is the result of tafakkur
(contemplation). Hence the station of tafakkur has been considered to precede
that of tadhakkur. Khwajah `Abd Allah al-'Ansari says:
Tadhakkur stands above tafakkur, for verily tafakkur is the search (of the
Beloved) and tadhakkur is the attainment (of the Beloved).
As long as man is on the path of search, he is separate from the searched
object. With the finding of the searched beloved, he is relieved of the labour
of search. The strength and the perfection of tadhakkur is dependent on the
strength and perfection of tafakkur. The tafakkur whose result is complete
tadhakkur of the Worshipped One does not compare with other actions in regard to
merit. Accordingly, in the noble traditions, an hour of tafakkur is considered
to be better than the `ibadah (worship) of a year, or even that of sixty or
seventy years. It is obvious that the ultimate goal and fruit of the `ibadat is
the attainment of the knowledge and remembrance of God, and this is better
attainable through valid contemplation. Perhaps, an hour's contemplation may
open to the wayfarer the door to mystic knowledge, which may not be opened even
by seventy years of `ibadah, or it may make a human being so mindful of the
Beloved that not even the austerities of several years can be able to achieve
such a result.
And my dear, let it be known to you, the remembrance of the Beloved and keeping
the heart engaged in the memory of the Adored One have many results for all the
classes of people. As to the perfect ones, the awliya' and the `urafa', it is
the ultimate goal of their hopes, under whose shadow they receive communion with
the Beloved's splendour - may it do them much good! As to the ordinary people
and the mutawassitun, it is the noblest of the formative agents of morality and
conduct, in outward as well as inward life.
If man remain in the remembrance of God Almighty in all conditions and states,
and see himself as present in the court of that Sacred Essence, he would of
course refrain from the matters which are contrary to His good pleasure, and
check the self from rebelliousness. All the calamities and afflictions brought
about by the carnal self and the accursed Satan are due to forgetting God and
His chastisement. The forgetting of God increases the darkness of the heart and
allows the carnal self and Satan to dominate the human being, thus multiplying
his afflictions day by day. The remembrance of God gives polish and burnish to
the heart and makes it a reflector of the Beloved's beauty. It purifies the soul
and liberates the self of the human being from bondages. The love of the world,
which is the source of all error and the fountainhead of all sin, is purged from
the heart. All the anxieties and concerns are replaced by the sole concern of
purifying the dwelling of the heart for the sake of the entry of the Dweller.
Therefore, my dear, whatever pains and hardships that you bear in. the path of
the dhikr and remembrance of the Beloved are little. Accustom your heart to the
remembrance of the Beloved, so that, God willing, the heart itself takes on the
form of dhikr, so that the immaculate pronouncement la ilaha illa Allah becomes
the ultimate form and the furthest limit of perfection of the self. There is no
better provision for the wayfarer in his journey toward God, no better reformer
for the defects of the soul, and no better guide to the Divine teachings.
Hence, if you are a seeker of the formal and spiritual excellences, if you are a
wayfarer of the Hereafter's path, a traveller and emigrant towards Allah,
habituate the heart to the Beloved's dhikr and knead it with the remembrance of
God.
The Complete Dhikr:
Although the remembrance of God and the dhikr of that Sacred Essence is a
quality of the heart, and if the heart is immersed in dhikr all the benefits
that accrue from it are obtained by the heart, it is better that the remembrance
in the heart be followed by oral dhikr. The most perfect and meritorious of the
degrees of dhikr is that it should be present in all levels of a man's
existence, that its domain should extend to the outward and the inward, the
manifest and the concealed realms of his being.
Thereat God, the Supreme and the Glorious, becomes manifest in the core of his
being. The inward form of the heart and the soul take the form of the Beloved's
remembrance, and the actions of the heart and the body take on the form of
remembrance. The seven realms of corporeal being, as well as the inward domains,
are conquered by the Divine dhikr and made subject to the remembrance of the
Absolute Beauty. Rather, if the inward form of the heart assumes the reality of
dhikr, and the realm of the heart is conquered by it, its sovereignty extends to
all the other domains. The movements and pauses of the eyes, the tongue, the
hands and the feet, and the actions of all other members and faculties, are
accompanied with the remembrance of God, making no move against their duties.
Thereupon, their movements and pauses begin and end with the dhikr of God:
﴾In the Name of Allah shall be its course and its berthing. (11:41)﴿
Its influence penetrates into all the realms, which are moulded as a result in
accordance with the reality of the Names and the Attributes. Rather, they assume
the form of the Greatest of the Names of Allah (ism Allah al-'a'zam), becoming
its manifestation (mazhar). And this is the ultimate limit of human perfection
and the ultimate goal of the hopes of the elect of Allah (ahl Allah). To the
same degree that there is an inadequacy in this regard and a shortcoming in the
influence of dhikr, to the same extent does the degree of human excellence falls
short of perfection, for the inadequacies of the inward and the outward
interpenetrate each other. This is because the various spheres of human
existence are interrelated and subject to mutual influence. It is from here that
it is known that oral remembrance (dhikr-e nutqi wa zabani), which is the lowest
level of dhikr, is also beneficial. For it means, firstly, that the tongue
carries out its obligation, although its movement is only formal, devoid of
spirit. Secondly, there is the possibility that persistence in this dhikr, with
due regard to its conditions, may become a means of opening the tongue of the
heart too.
Our shaykh, the perfect `arif Shahabadi - may my soul be his ransom - would say:
"The dhakir (one who performs dhikr), during dhikr, must be like one teaching
words to a little child that has not yet learnt to speak. He repeats the word
until the child's tongue is opened and the latter utters the word. After that
the child has articulated it, the teacher follows the child and his fatigue
caused by repetition is removed, as if he has received an encouraging assistance
from the child. In the same way, one who engages in dhikr must teach dhikr to
his heart, which has not learnt to articulate. The point that is concealed in
the repetition of the adhkar is that thereby the tongue of the heart is opened,
and its sign is that thereafter the tongue follows the heart and the hardship
and strain of repetition is removed. First, it is the tongue which is dhakir and
following it the heart also becomes dhakir with the tongue's aid and
instruction. After that the heart's tongue has learnt to articulate, the tongue
follows it and becomes dhakir with the aid of the heart or God's concealed
assistance.
And it should be known that the outward and formal actions don't have the
capacity of life in the world of the ghayb or malakut except when they received
assistance from the inward realm of the spirit and the heart's core, which
bestows on them a spiritual life (hayat-e malakuti). That spiritual breath,
which is the form of the sincerity of intention and sincere intention, is like
the inward soul, following which the body too is resurrected in the realm of
malakut and permitted entry into the Divine court. Therefore, it is stated in
the noble traditions that the acceptability of (physical) deeds. is in
accordance with the measure of the heart's receptivity and responsiveness (iqbal-e
qalb). In spite of it oral dhikr is desirable, and it ultimately leads man to
reach the Truth. Accordingly, in the traditions and reports, oral dhikr has been
greatly extolled and there are few topics regarding which there is as much a
great number of traditions as the topic of dhikr. It has also been greatly
extolled in the noble verses of the Glorious Book, although most of them pertain
to inward dhikr (dhikr-e qalbi), or the dhikr possessing soul. The remembrance
of God is lovable on whatever level that it takes place. At this stage we
conclude this discourse by mentioning some noble traditions at the end for the
sake of tabarruk and tayammun.
Some Traditions Concerning Dhikr:
In al-Kafi, it is reported with a sahih chain of transmission from al-Fudayl ibn
Yasir that al-'Imam Ja'far al-Sadiq (A.S.) said: "There is no gathering in which
the virtuous and the sinful come together and thereafter stand up to leave
without mentioning God Almighty except that it would be a cause of regret to
them on the Day of Resurrection. "3
It is obvious that when man discovers the great results of the dhikr of God on
the Day of Resurrection and finds himself deprived of them, he will realize the
irreparable loss of the bounties and delights incurred by him. As a result he
will be seized with regret and remorse. Hence, as long as there is opportunity,
a human being must take advantage of his gatherings and assemblies, letting them
not remain empty of God's remembrance.
In al-Kafi, it is reported with a muwaththaq chain of transmission from al-'Imam
al-Baqir (A.S.) that he said: "Whoever desires to receive the full measure (of
God's blessing) should say while standing up after a gathering: 'Free is thy
Lord, the Lord of Glory, from what they describe. And peace be upon the
Messengers; and praise belongs to God, the Lord of all being.' "4
And it is narrated from al-'Imam al-Sadiq that Amir al-Mu'minin (A.S.) said,
"Whoever wants to receive the full measure of recompense on the Day of
Resurrection should read these noble verses following every salat".5 Also it
is reported in a mursal tradition from al-'Imam al-Sadiq (A.S.) that recitation
of these verses at the time of the end of a gathering is an atonement for sins.6
Al-Kafi, in a marfu' hadith, narrates with its chain of transmission from Ibn
Faddal, from one of the Imams (A.S.) that he said, "God Almighty said to Jesus,
upon whom be peace, 'O Jesus, remember Me in thy self, so that I may remember
thee within My self. Mention Me in thy assembly so that I may mention thee in an
assembly better than the assembly of men. O Jesus, soften thy heart for Me and
remember Me much in thy solitude. Know that My delight lies in thy doing tabasbus toward Me. And be alive. in that and don't be dead.'7
Tabasbus means the dog's wagging of its tail, out of fear or hope, and this
alludes to the intensity of eagerness and humility. By `life' in remembrance is
meant the presence and attention of the heart.
Al-'Imam al-Sadiq (A.S.) said: "Verily God Almighty has said, 'One who is
kept by My remembrance from asking something of Me, I bestow upon him the best
of what I have bestowed upon any petitioner that has asked anything of Me. "8
...Ahmad ibn Fahd narrates in 'Uddat al-dai from the Messenger of Allah (pbuh&hh) that
he said, "The best of your acts near God and the purest and sublimest of them in
degree and the best thing upon which the sun has shone is the remembrance of God
Almighty. Verily He has informed you, saying, 'I am the companion of him who
remembers Me.' "9
The traditions concerning the excellence of dhikr, its manner, etiquette and
conditions are so many that to mention them is beyond the capacity of these
pages.
And praise is God's at the beginning and the end, inwardly and outwardly.
* Book: Forty Hadith (An Exposition on 40 ahadith narrated through the
Prophet (pbuhh&hh) and his Ahl al-Bayt (a.s.)).By Imam Ruhullah al-Musawi al-Khumayni.
Translated by: Mahliqa Qara'i (late) and Ali Quli Qara'i
1- Al-Kulayni, al-Kafi,
ii, kitab al-du'a', bab ma yajib min dhikr Allah fi kulli majlis, hadith No.4.
2- Ahmad ibn Fahd. 'Uddat al-dai, 242.
3- Al-Kafi, ii, kitab at-du'a', bab ma yajib min dhikr Allah fi kulli majlis,
hadith No. 1.
4- Ibid., hadith No. 3.
5- Jami' al-'ahadith, kitab al-salat, hadith No. 3487.
6- Wasa'il al-Shi'ah, xv, hadith No. 28901.
7- Al-Kafi, ii, kitab al-du'a', bab dhikr Allah fi al-sirr, hadith No.3.
8- Ibid., bab al-'ishtighal bi dhikr Allah, hadith No.l.
9- Uddat al-da'i, 238.