...Thiqat al-'Islam wa 'Imad at-Muslimin Muhammad ibn Ya'qub (al-Kulayni): From
a number of our companions, from Ahmad ibn Muhammad, from 'Ali ibn Hadid, from
Mansur ibn Yunus, from al-Harith ibn al-Mughirah or his father, from Abu 'Abd
Allah (A.S.) (al-'Imam al-Sadiq). Al-Harith, or his father, says: "I asked him (A.S.),
'What was (mentioned) in the testament of Luqman?' 'There were marvellous things
in it', he said, 'and the most wonderful of that which he said to his son was
this: "Have such a fear of God Almighty that were you to come to Him with the
virtues of the two worlds (thaqalan) He would still chastise you, and put such a
hope in God that were you to come to Him with the sins of the two worlds He
would still have compassion for you." Then Abu 'Abd Allah (A.S.) added: 'My
father used to say, "There is no believer who does not have two lights in his
heart: the light of fear and the light of hope. Were one of these to be measured
it would not exceed the other, and were the other one to be measured, it would
not exceed this one.""1
Exposition:
According to al-Jawhari in his al-Sihah, a'ajib is the plural of u`jubah, in the
same way as ahadith is the plural of uhduthah. Some lexicographers state that
u'jubah is something amazing, either on account of its beauty or its ugliness,
and the former (i.e. beauty) is meant in this tradition. It appears that the
word primarily has the specific sense of something of striking beauty, and is
used in a wider sense. parasitically. Birr is the opposite of `uquq,
disobedience, means so and so is obedient to his Creator, as pointed out by al-Jawhari.
`Thaqalan' means mankind and the Jinn.
This noble hadith means that the fear of God and hope in Him should be at the
highest degree. Despairing of Divine mercy and considering oneself secure from
God's devising (makr) are totally prohibited, as indicated by a great number of
traditions and explicitly stated by the Noble Qur'an. Secondly, none of these
should exceed the other. God willing, we shall elaborate upon this and other
aspects of the holy tradition in the course of a few sections.
Between Hope and Fear:
Let it be known to you that the man cognizant of the realities and the
relationship between possible existents (mumkin al-wujud) and the Necessary
Being (wajib al-wujud), exalted and sublime is He, holds a two-sided viewpoint:
The first thing he has in view is the essential defectiveness of his own, of all
possible beings, and the wretchedness of the entire universe. Through direct
experience or through indirect knowledge he discovers that the entire existence
of a possible being is immersed in lowliness and want, drowned in the dark ocean
of possibility, poverty and need, always and for ever. The possible existents
have nothing of their own: they are utterly insignificant, thoroughly devoid of
majesty, and absolutely defective. Rather, none of these expressions can
adequately express their utter neediness, and we use them for lack of proper
words. Otherwise, defectiveness, poverty and need are a part of the quality of
thingness. None of the possible beings and none of tile creatures has anything
that is its own. Accordingly, even if a man were to accomplish all the worships,
follow all the Divine teachings and obey the Holy Lord most perfectly and
meticulously, he has nothing but shame, humiliation and fear to his share. What
obedience can lie offer? what worship? from whom? and to whom? Are not all the
attributes of excellence His own, without the possible having any share
whatsoever therein? Rather when the possible being approaches the threshold of
these excellences, in order to praise God Almighty, it throws the shadow of its
defectiveness on His praise and soils the purity and infinitude of His holy
Names. It is regarding this station (of finitude and possibility vis-a-vis the
infinitude of the Necessary Being) that He declares:
﴾Whatever good visits thee, it is from God; whatever evil visits thee is of
thyself. (4:79)﴿
And it is regarding the first station (of the absolute neediness of the possible
existent) that He declares:
﴾Say (O Muhammad): 'Everything is from God'. (4:78)﴿
And it is about these stations that the poet (Hafiz) says:
Our master said, 'The pen of creation did not make any error'.
Praised be the immaculate eye that conceals all defects!
The statement of the mystic master (pir) relates to the second station, and the
statement of the speaker himself relates to the first one. Hence, this view
fills mall with dread, grief, shame and humiliation.
In the other view, he beholds the Perfection of the Necessary Being, the expanse
of His mercy, compassion and love. Therein, he sees the unlimited vastness of
His various bounties and favours whose number is beyond limit and number and
which are bestowed without any prior capacity or deservedness (on the
recipient's part). He has opened the doors of favour and bounty on His creatures
without any deservedness. The initiative lies with His bounteousness, which
precedes request and demand. The Imam Sayyid al-Sajidin Zayn al-`Abidin (A.S.)
in the prayers of al-Sahifat al-Kamilah and his other prayers has recurringly
pointed out this matter.
This view gives strength to his hope, making him hopeful of Divine mercy. He
sees his magnanimous Lord Whose bequests are purely due to His care and
compassion, the Lord of all kings Who bestows without asking and prior to the
receiver's capacity. All the intellects fall short in knowing even an iota of
His nobility. The disobedience of the sinners cots not cause any disturbance iii
the order of Isis vast dominion, and the obedience of the obedient does not add
anything to it. Rather, the guidance of the Holiest Essence to the paths of
obedience, anti. His prohibition of disobedience, ate for the sake of the
creatures, in order that they may attain to His beneficence, His vast mercy and
bounty, that they may attain the stations of perfection and higher degrees of
freedom from defect, deformity and ugliness. Hence, should it be that when
tomorrow when we enter the court of the Almighty and stand in the presence of
His compassion and mercy, we should be able to say: "O God, Who clothed us with
the robes of existence and provided us all the means of our life and comfort,
over and above the perception of perceivers, Who showed to us all the paths of
guidance - all these of Your favours were for our own good and in order to
benefit us further from the vast store of Your love and bounty. Now that we
stand in Your glorious and magnanimous presence, we have come with the sins of
the two worlds. Yet the sins of the sinners have not created any defect in the
order of Your dominion, nor diminished the infinitude of Your mercy. What will
You have for this handful of dust, that has no significance in front of Your
greatness, except pity and compassion? Can anything except pity and compassion
be hoped from You, O Lord?"
Hence, man should always be moving back and forth between these two views:
neither should he ever close his eyes to his defects and shortcomings in
fulfilling the duties of creaturehood, nor should he ever take his eyes off the
expansive and all-encompassing mercy, love and compassion of God Almighty.
The Stages and Degrees of Fear:
My dear, know that there are various levels and degrees of fear and hope in
accordance with the condition of persons and the level of their knowledge (ma`rifah).
The fear of the common people is in regard to chastisement. The fear of the
elect is in regard to the wrath. The fear of the elect of the elect is from
concealment (ihtijab) (i.e. deprivation from beatitude). Here, it is not our
purpose to describe these stations and we will confine our discourse to certain
points pertinent to what has been said earlier.
You should know that no creature can worship God Almighty as He deserves to be
worshipped; for worship means extolling the praise of that Sacred Essence, and
the praise offered by every creature is derived from its knowledge of Him, which
in reality does not apprehend His Sacred Essence. Thus, it is not possible for
them to praise His beauty and grandeur. Hence the Noblest of creatures and the
Most knowledgeable of beings about His Lordship (i.e. the Prophet (pbuh&hh)),
confesses his inadequacy in this regard, and declares:
We did not worship You as You deserve to be worshipped. And we did not know You
as You deserve to he known.2
The second sentence is intended to explain the cause of what is stated in the
first one. And he (pbuh&hh) said:
You are as You have praised Yourself3
Therefore, imperfection is essential to possible being and Absolute Sublimity
belongs exclusively to the Sacred Essence of the Almighty. And since the
creatures are unable to attain to the praise and worship of the Sacred Essence
without the knowledge and worship of God, none of them can attain to the degrees
of perfection and the stations of the Hereafter (as has been demonstrated in its
own place for the knowers of the Hereafter, and in regard to which the common
people are oblivious, as they consider the Hereafterly stations as extravagances
and the like, and regarding their fancies it must be said, 'High indeed is He
exalted above that (they say)'!), God Almighty, with His expansive favour and
His all-inclusive compassion, opened a door of His mercy upon them, out of His
love, of the teachings regarding the hidden and of revelation and inspiration,
through His angels and prophets. That is the door of worship (`ibadah) and
knowledge (ma`rifah). He, thus, indicated the paths of worship to His servants
and threw open the road of knowledge to them, that they may, as far as is
possible, remove their shortcomings and defects and attain to the possible
degrees of perfection, that they may be guided by the light of servitude to the
world of Divine magnanimity, to the domain of the spirit and the aroma, to the
paradise of His bounties, or, rather, to the good pleasure of God, which is
greater than all that.
Thus, the opening of the gates of worship and service is one of the greatest of
bounties, for which the creatures owe their deepest gratitude, although it is a
favour for which they can never offer adequate thanks, for each expression of
gratitude is itself the key that opens a further door to sublimity. Thus, they
are ever incapable of offering adequate thanks for His bounties.
Thus when man attains the knowledge of this fountainhead and his heart becomes
familiar with it, he confesses to his own shortcoming, and even if he is able to
enter into the court of the Almighty with a record of service and worship equal
to that of the worship and service of all mankind, Jinn, and angels near to God,
he would still be fearful and conscious of inadequacy. Also, the knowing
servants of God and His elect friends, on whom the sacred doors of Providence
have been opened and whose hearts have been illumined by the light of marifah -
their hearts are so full of dread and trembling that even if all tree
excellences were accessible to them, and were all the keys to the treasures of
Divine knowledge be given them, and should their hearts be filled with Divine
irradiation, that would not reduce their fear by an atom's weight nor diminish
the trembling of their quaking hearts. Hence- one of them says. `All are afraid
of the End, and I am dreadful of the beginning.' may glory be to God, and there
is no power or might which is not by God! I seek refuge in God Almighty! God
knows, these words tear a man's heart to pieces. They make the heart melt, and
take away his wits. But, alas! How negligent is man!
Another thing is that which we mentioned while expounding an earlier tradition,
that all our obedience and worship are for the sake of selfish aims and
motivated by self-love. In reality, it is abstinence from the world for the sake
of the rewards of the Hereafter - which, nevertheless, for free men, is
abstinence from the world for worldly rewards. Hence, were we to come to our
Lord with the worship of the two worlds, we would not deserve anything except
expulsion from the Divine proximity. This is because, God, the Blessed and the
Exalted, has invited us into His sacred proximity and love, declaring, `I have
created thee for Myself'. He has made the knowledge of Him the end of our
creation and shown to us the paths of knowledge and servitude. Despite it, all
that we are occupied with is catering to our belly and our carnal lusts, with no
purpose in view except self-seeking and self-love!
Then, O wretched man, whose worship and devotion do not entitle thee to anything
except expulsion and remoteness from His sanctified proximity and to His wrath
and chastisement! What have thee to rely upon? Why, shouldn't the fear of God's
Might unsettle you and make your heart bleed? Do you, have anything to rely
upon? Do you rely upon your works and trust your deeds? If that be so, woe to
you and your estimation of yourself! And woe to you for your estimation of the
Master of all masters! However, should your reliance and trust be upon the
bounty of your Lord, His expansive compassion and the all-inclusive love of the
Sacred Essence, your reliance is indeed well placed; you have relied upon a
truly reliable thing, and have sought a firm refuge.
Hope and Prayer:
O God! O Lord! Our hands are empty, and we know that we are imperfect and
insignificant. We have nothing that is worthy of Thy sacred court. We are
faulty, head to foot, and full of defects. Our inward and outward being is
soaked in mortal sins, deserving eternal damnation. What are we that we should
be worthy of praising Thee, when Thy friends (awliya') declare:
How shall I thank Thee with this dumb tongue of mine?
and confess to their incapacity, weakness and shortcoming? What can we,
blindfolded sinners that we are, have to say about His Majesty, except declaring
with the inconsequent oscillations of our tongue: "Our hope lies with Your mercy
and our reliance in Your favour and forgiveness, and our trust in the generosity
and magnanimity of Your Holy Essence, as expressed in the prayers of Your
friends:
Al-Kulayni, in al-Kafi, reports with his chain of narrators from al-'Imam al
Baqir (A.S.) that he said, "The Messenger of Allah (pbuh&hh) said: ' God, the
Sublime and the Blessed, said: "The workers (of deeds) for My sake should
not, for My reward, trust the works they have done: for, verily, should they
labour and toil for all their lives in My service and worship, they would fall
short in their worship and will not attain to the reality of My service in what
they seek with Me of My magnanimity and bounty, My paradise and the high
stations in My proximity. Rather, they should rely upon My mercy and put hope in
My favour and be contented of their good opinion (husn al-zann) of Me; for,
verily, therein My mercy will reach them, My good pleasure will go forth to
them, and My forgiveness shall envelop them. For, indeed, I am Allah, the
Beneficent and the Merciful, and I have been named so on that account "."'4
Contemplation, Fear and Hope:
Of things that cause fear of God, is contemplation of the extremeness of Divine
Might, the precision and sharpness of the path (sirat) of the Hereafter and the
perils that man has to face during the days of his life and at death, as well as
the hardships of the Purgatory (barzakh) and the Resurrection and the scrutinies
of the Reckoning (hisab) and the Balance (mizan). In the same way, reflection
over the verses and traditions about the promises of God Almighty can bring
about complete and perfect hope. It is reported in traditions that on the Day of
Resurrection God Almighty's mercy shall be so abundant that even Satan will
aspire for God's pardon. In this world, at which God has never looked with
favour, and on which since its creation His mercy has not descended (in
comparison to the other worlds) except for a droplet of it, we encounter so much
of the abundance of God's mercy, bounty and care, which has enveloped
everything, apparent and the invisible, that the world is a vast table of the
bounties and gifts of the Almighty, so widespread that were all the world's
intellects attempt to encompass even a fragment of it, they would be unable to
do so. If this is so, then what would be a world which is the house of the
hospitality of the generous Lord and the abode of the expansive mercy and
compassion of the All-merciful and the Compassionate? Of course, Satan would be
justified in his aspiring for His pity and his hoping from God's generosity.
Hence, make perfect your good opinion of Him and rely upon His grace, as He has
declared:
﴾Verily, God shall forgive all the sins. (39:53)﴿
and immerse all in the ocean of His mercy and beneficence. It is impossible that
God should break His promise, although it is possible that He may withdraw His
threats, and how often He does that! So gladden your heart with the hope of His
mercy, for had it not enveloped you, you would not be a creature; every creature
is the recipient of His mercy, for He has said:
﴾...My mercy embraces all things. (7:156)﴿
The Difference Between Hope and Delusion:
However, my dear, you should be careful of distinguishing between hope and
delusion, for it may be that you be a deluded man, but imagine yourself to be a
man of hope. Yet it is easy to distinguish between them on the basis of their
grounds. You should reflect over the state of yours that makes you regard it as
hope, to see whether that state of yours has come into being as a result of your
belittling of Divine commands or as a result of conviction in the all-embracing
character of Divine mercy and the greatness of the Holy Essence. Should that
prove to be difficult, the distinction can be made on the basis of their
effects. Should the greatness of God be imprinted on the believer's heart and
should it be content in the expansive mercy and bounty of His Holy Essence, he
would be committed to His obedience and service, for esteem for someone great
and gratitude and willingness to serve one's benefactor are inviolable features
of human nature. Hence, should you be committed to the duties of slavehood and
unsparing in your efforts to obey and worship; should you not rely on your works
and consider them insignificant; should your hope rest on God's mercy, grace and
bounty; should you consider yourself entitled to every kind of blame, disfavour,
reproof and wrath on account of your deeds; and should your sole reliance be the
mercy and generosity of the Absolutely Magnanimous - should you be such, then
you are indeed in possession of the state of hope. Then, thank God Almighty for
that, and implore His Holy Essence to establish it firmly in your heart and to
elevate you to a higher degree of it. But if, God forbid, should you be one who
belittles and takes lightly the commands of God, one who considers unimportant
and insignificant the Words of the Holiest Essence, then rest assured that it is
delusion that has appeared in your heart as a result of the guiles of Satan and
your carnal self. Had you any faith in God's greatness and His expansive mercy,
its effects would have been obvious in you. A claimant whose acts are contrary
to his claims is one who falsifies himself, and there are many traditions to
this effect.
In al-Kafi, al-Kulayni, with his chain of narrators, reports from al-'Imam al
Sadiq (A.S.) on the authority of an unnamed narrator who narrated it to Ibn Abi
Najran, that he said to the Imam (A.S.): "There are some people who commit
sins and say we are hopeful. They remain in this condition until death comes to
them." The Imam said: "They are a people who have been swept away by
false hopes. They lie, they are not the hopeful; for verily, one who has hope of
something pursues it, and one who fears something flees from it."5
Close to this in meaning is another tradition of the noble al-Kafi:
(Al-Kulayni), with his chain of narrators reports from al-Husayn ibn Abi Sarah
that he said: "I heard Abu 'Abd Allah (A.S.) say: `A believer is not but
fearful and hopeful, and he is not (truly) fearful and hopeful unless he
responds in action in regard to that which he fears and hopes.'"6
Some have said that the person who is hopeful without doing anything is like the
one who awaits the result without preparing its needed means, like the farmer
who awaits a ready harvest without sowing the seeds, without tilling and
watering his land and without removing the hindrances in the way of a sufficient
produce. Such a man cannot be said to have hope. What characterizes him is
stupidity and folly. The similitude of the person who does not reform his morals
and acts without refraining from sins, is the farmer who sows his seeds in
barren, saline soil: of course, such farming does not yield any produce.
Therefore, the genuine kind of hope is that man should first prepare all the
means that are available to him and have been provided to him by the grace of
God Almighty, Who has also guided him regarding the paths of right and corrupt
conduct and commanded him to make ready those means, and only then he should
wait and hope that God, with His favour, will provide the remaining means over
which he has no power, and remove the hindrances and perils from his path.
Hence, when the devotee has cleared the field of his heart of the thorns of
moral vices and of the stones, rocks and salinity of sins, sowing therein the
seeds of good works and watering it with the clear waters of beneficial
knowledge and sincere faith and guarded his field against the pests of pride (`ujb)
and ostentation (riya'), which like weeds hinder the wholesome growth of the
harvest, then he may sit and wait for God's grace, hoping that the Almighty may
keep him firm and on the straight path until the last moment of his life. This
is the desired and genuine kind of hope, as declared by God Almighty:
﴾But the believers, and those who migrate and struggle in the way of
God -those have hope of God's compassion; and God is All-forgiving,
All-compassionate. (2:213)﴿
The noble tradition at its end mentions that neither fear nor hope should exceed
one another, and the same thing is stated in the mursal hadith of Ibn Abi `Umayr
from al-'Imam al-Sadiq (A.S.). When man observes his extreme shortcoming in
fulfilling the demands of servitude and creaturehood and when he contemplates
the narrowness of the path of the Hereafter, a high degree of fear seizes him.
And when he observes his own sins and reflects over the condition of those
persons who were righteous at the start but fell into wretchedness and departed
from the world in a state of unbelief and without good works, ultimately meeting
an evil goal, his fear is intensified. And in a noble tradition of al-Kafi,
al-'Imam al-Sadiq (A.S.) is reported to have said:
...The believer stands between two dreadful things: the past sins, regarding
which he does not know what God will do (with him), and the remainder of his
life, regarding which he does not know what mortal sins he will commit therein.
So he does not wake up except in a state of dread, and nothing keeps him
righteous except fear.7
The same thing is stated in the sermon of the Noble Messenger (pbuh&hh) reported
in a hadith of al-'Imam al-Sadiq (A.S.) in al-Kafi.8 The gist of the
matter is that the self is in a state of utter imperfection and shortcoming, and
God at the height of greatness, glory, all-embracing mercifulness and grace, and
the devotee is always in a median state of fear and hope between these two
views. And since the Divine attributes of glory and perfection cast their light
simultaneously on the wayfarer's heart, none of the two, fear or hope, exceeds
the other.
Some have said that sometimes fear is more beneficial for man -as in the state
of health and robustness - in order that he may endeavour in attaining
perfection and performing good works, and that hope is better in some conditions
- as when the signs of approaching death appear - so that man may meet God in a
state which He loves more. But this opinion does not agree with the above
discussion and the traditions mentioned, for the genuine and lovable hope also
induces one to good works and hereafterly conduct. Fear of God is also always
desirable and is not contrary to confirmed hope in Him.
And some have said that fear is not a moral or intellectual merit in the
Hereafter, and that its benefit is limited to the world, which is the abode of
works and; deeds, for inducing obedience and service and for restraining men
from sin. It is of no use after this world is left behind. On the other hand,
hope rill never end and shall endure in the Hereafter, for the more of God's
beneficence man receives, the more does he aspire to 'His grace and bounty,
because the stores of God's mercy axe inexhaustible. Hence, fear comes to an
end, while hope continues.
The Opinion of Al-Majlisi:
The great muhaddith al-'Allamah al-Majlisi, upon whom be God's mercy, says:
"The truth is that as long as the devotee is in the abode of duty (i.e. this
world), he is bound to have both fear and hope. However, after his witnessing of
the matters of the Hereafter, one of them, of necessity, must surpass the
other."
This writer says: That which has been said regarding the dominance of fear or
hope in the Hereafter does not agree with the above discussion about the meaning
of hope and fear. Even if supposedly true, it would apply only to those of
middle stations, for the state of the elect and the awliya' is different from
that; for their witnessing of the Divine majesty and glory and the irradiations
(tajilliyat) of the Names of love and beauty, which are attained in the heart,
are not effaced by the witnessing of the matters of the Hereafter; as a result
their fear and hope do not surpass each other. Rather, the effects of Divine
majesty and glory and the irradiations of His beauty and love are greater in the
world of the Hereafter, and the awe resulting from God's majesty is one of the
spiritual pleasures, which on reflection will not be found to be contrary to the
noble verse:
﴾Surely God's friends - no fear shall be on them, neither shall they
sorrow. (10:62)﴿
And that which has been said regarding fear, that it is not a spiritual merit --
it is not true of the awe in front of God's greatness and glory, for it is an
excellence and is more intense in those of perfect and complete character (kamilun,
mukammalun) than others. And praise belongs to Allah, for His majesty and His
beauty, and may His benedictions be upon Muhammad and his Family.
* 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,
ed. 'Ali Akbar al-Ghifari, 4th edition, Dar Mus'ab Dar al-Ta'aruf, Beirut, 1401
H., II, 67, hadith 1.
2- Safinat al-Bihar, II, 180.
3- Ibid., p. 181.
4- Al-Kafi, II, 71, hadith 1.
5- Ibid., II, 68, hadith 5.
6- Ibid., II, 71, hadith 11, from al-Hasan ibn Sarah.
7- Ibid., hadith 12.
8- Ibid., hadith 2.