... Muhammad ibn Ya'qub (al-Kulayni) from Muhammad ibn Yahya, from Ahmad ibn
Muhammad, from Ibn Mahbub, from `Abd Allah ibn Sinan and `Abd al-Aziz al-Abdi
from `Abd Allah ibn Abi Ya`fur, who report Abu Abd Allah (al-Imam al-Sadiq) (A.S.)
to have said: "One who passes his evenings and mornings in such a way that
the world be his biggest concern, God ordains poverty between his two eyes and
causes his affairs to become disjointed and dissipated, while he does not attain
anything except what has been apportioned for him. And as for one who passes his
evenings and mornings while his biggest concern and goal be the Hereafter, God
puts contentment to his heart and gives a wholeness and unity to his affairs.1
Exposition of the Tradition:
There are various interpretations of the terms `the world' and `the Hereafter'
according to different views offered by mystics and scholars. Here, our
objective is not to plunge into any involved discussion about hair-splitting
definitions, an absorption which keeps the wayfarer from proceeding towards his
goal. What is essential here is to understand the meaning of `the disapproved
world' (i.e. `the world' in the sense in which it is necessary for the person
seeking the Hereafter to shun it) and the factors that assist man and guide him
on the path of salvation. These we shall discuss, God willing, in a few
sections, and implore His help and guidance in this regard.
Mawlana Majlisi on the Reality of the World:
The great researcher and peerless traditionist Mawlana Majlisi, upon whom be
God's mercy, states: "Let it be known to you that that which can be deduced from
all the verses of the Quran and the traditions in this regard, according to our
understanding of them, is that `the accursed world' is the sum total of all
those things that prevent man from obeying God and keep him from His love and
from seeking the Hereafter. Therefore `the world' and `the Hereafter' are
antithetical to each other: whatever causes His good pleasure and one's nearness
to Him belongs to `the Hereafter,' even though apparently it should seem to be a
matter of the world-such as the trade, the agriculture, the industry and the
crafts whose purpose is to provide subsistence for one's family for the sake of
obedience to God's command, for spending one's income for charitable purposes
and the welfare of the poor and needy, and to avoid dependence on others and
beseeching their help. All these activities are meant for the Hereafter, though
people should consider them to be for the sake of the world. On the other hand,
heretical exercises in spiritual self-discipline, sanctimonious deeds and the
like, though they might be performed with great devotion and care, are meant for
the world, as they cause alienation from God and do not bring man near to Him.
Such are the deeds and the practices of the infidels and those who oppose the
right path".2
Another researcher remarks: "Your `world' and `Hereafter' are two inner states
of your heart: that which is nearer and is concerned with the life before death
is `the world', and whatever that follows it and is concerned with the life
after death is `the Hereafter'. Therefore, everything that earns you pleasure
and joy and provokes your lust before death, it is `the world' for you."
The Author's View:
This pauper says: `the world' may sometimes be regarded as meaning the lowest
level of existence and the abode of change, transition, and annihilation. `The
Hereafter' signifies return from this lower mode of existence to the higher,
celestial plane, one's inner world, which is the abode of permanence, stability,
and eternity. These two worlds exist for every individual. The first one is the
terrestrial realm of development and emergence, which is the lower plane of
observable worldly existence. The other is the hidden, inward, and celestial
level of existence, which is the higher plane of being of the Hereafter.
Although worldly existence is a lower and defective realm of being, but since it
is a nursery for the training of lofty souls and a school for acquiring higher
spiritual stations, it is a field for cultivating the Hereafter. In this sense
it is the most sublime of the realms of being and the most profitable of worlds
for the lovers of God and the wayfarers of the path of the Hereafter. And were
it not for this terrestrial realm of matter, the domain of physical and
spiritual substantial transformation and change, and if God Almighty had not
made it a realm of transition and annihilation, not a single imperfect soul
would have attained its promised state of perfection nor would it have been able
to reach the realm of permanence and stability, nor the embodiments of
imperfection would have been able to enter the Kingdom of God.
Accordingly, that which is mentioned in the Quran and tradition regarding the
disapproval of `the world' does not actually apply to the world itself, but is
meant to refer to absorption in it and love and attachment for it. This shows
that man has two `worlds' one of them is condemned, while the other is extolled
and praised.
The world which is approved is that which one acquires in this earthly abode,
this school, and this marketplace, where higher stations and lasting spiritual
merits are exchanged for transitory goods and where arrangements are made for
the abiding abode. These cannot be possibly acquired without entering this
world, as has been stated by the Mawla of the Muwahhidun, Amir al-Mu'minin
al-'Imam 'Ali (A.S.), in one of his sermons delivered on hearing a person abuse
`the world':
Indeed this world is the abode of truth for him who appreciates its
truthfulness, a place of safety for him who understands it, a mine of treasures
for him who collects provisions from it [for the next world], and a house of
instructions for him who draws lessons from it. It is the shrine of worship for
those who love Allah, the house of prayer for His angels, the place where the
revelations of Allah descend, and the marketplace for those devoted to Him.
Herein they earn His mercy and herein they acquire Paradise by way of profit3
God Almighty's words, (What a good abode is the house of the pious) relate to
the world, according to the interpretation of al-'Imam al-Baqir (A.S.) reported
in a tradition by al-Ayyashi. Therefore, this world, being as it is the
manifestation of and witness to His Beauty and Majesty, is not at all
condemnable in this sense. That which is condemnable is the world of man himself
in the sense of his absorption in the world of carnal nature and his attachment
and love for it. That world is the source of all vices and all inward and
outward sins, as reported in al-Kafi from al-'Imam al-Sadiq (A.S.):
Al-'Imam al Sadiq (A.S.) said: "The love of the world is the source of all
transgressions. "4
And it has been reported from al-'Imam al-Baqir (A.S.) that he said:
"The harm done by two ferocious wolves, one attacking from the front and the
other from the rear, to a herd without a shepherd, is less rapid than the one
done by the love of the world to the faith of the faithful."5
Therefore, the attachment of the heart and the love of the world is synonymous
with the accursed world, and the greater the attachment, the thicker the veils
between man and the realms of sublimity, and denser the curtain between the
heart of the human being and its Creator. It occurs in some ahadith that there
are seventy thousand veils of light and darkness between God and His creatures.
The veils of darkness may be no other than the attachments of the heart to this
world, and the deeper they are, the greater the number of the veils and greater
the difficulty of their removal.
The Factors that Promote Worldliness:
Man is the child of this physical world, nature being his mother, and he the
offspring of water and dust. The love for this world is implanted in his heart
since the early time of his development and growth. As he grows this love also
increases. On account of the faculties of desire and the organs of deriving
pleasure that have been granted to him by God Almighty for the sake of the
preservation of individual and species, this love grows day by day. Since he
considers this world as a place of pleasure and luxury, and death as the end of
these activities, even if he is led to believe in the Hereafter, its states,
conditions, and rewards by the arguments of the hukama' or the traditions of the
prophets (A.S.), yet his heart remains unfamiliar with them and does not accept
them, let alone obtaining certainty of their reality. Due to these reasons, his
love for this world and his attachment to it increase considerably. Since man
naturally loves immortality, detests and evades decline and annihilation, and
mistakes death for annihilation, even if his reason were to confirm this world
as the house of transition and annihilation and that world as eternal and
everlasting, his heart does not accept the findings of his reason if they have
not entered the heart itself. The main thing is that the belief should have
entered the heart and the best state is that of complete certainty. It is for
this reason that Ibrahim Khalil Allah (A.S.) asked God to bestow upon him
certainty, and that was granted to him. Therefore, as the hearts do not have
faith in the Hereafter-like those of ours-though rationally we may posit its
existence, they desire to remain in this world and are averse to the thought of
dying and quitting this lower mode of existence. But if our hearts become aware
of the fact that this world is the lowest of the worlds and the house of decline
and change and the realm of imperfection and destruction, and that there are
other realms beyond death each of which is eternal and stable, perfect and
permanent, where life is bliss and beatitude, our hearts would naturally acquire
the love of that world and would abhor this world. And if one were to rise above
this world and awake to the realities of that world, and observe the real inward
form of this world and the attachment to it, this world will become unbearable
for him. He will detest it, desire to leave this abode of darkness and to get
rid of the shackles of time and transition, an attitude which is apparent in the
words of the awliya'.
Imam 'Ali (A.S.), the Mawla of the awliya', said:
By God, the son of Abu Talib is more intimate with death than an infant with
its mother's bosom.6
That great soul had considered the reality of this world from the viewpoint of
Wilayah, and had chosen the blessed vicinity of the Most High. And were it not
for the sake of the higher goals, those pure and chaste souls would not have
tarried in this murky and gloomy gathering even for a single moment. To inhabit
this phenomenal world of plurality, to meditate upon the worldly affairs, even
with the spiritual favours, is a matter of great pain and sorrow for those
absorbed in the love of God, a sorrow which we cannot even imagine. Their
lamentations, as reflected in their prayers and supplications, were on account
of the pain of separation from the Beloved and His magnanimous vicinity,
although there were no mundane or spiritual veils for them, and they had left
behind them the subdued hell of nature and its attachments, their hearts being
free of the defilements of physical nature. Nevertheless, the very presence in
the confines of physical nature and the inevitable pleasures associated with it,
even if they be very few, acts like a veil. It is on this account that the Holy
Prophet (S) is quoted to have said:
Lest my heart should be covered by [the veils of] lust, I ask God's
forgiveness seventy times a day.
Perhaps the fault of Adam (A.S.), the father of mankind, was the result of this
innate attraction towards physical nature, symbolized by the wheat, and his
attention to the mundane aspect of life-something which is considered wrong by
the awliya' and the lovers of God. If Adam (A.S.) had remained faithful to the
divine passion and had not set foot into the domain of the mundane, this entire
toilsome tale, winding through the world to the Hereafter, would not have
assumed such proportions.
Let it be known to you that each and every pleasure that man derives from this
world leaves its trace on his heart that is indicative of its susceptibility to
the physical world and a cause of its further attachment to the world. The more
the enjoyments and the pleasures, the greater their impression upon the heart
and the more intense its attachment to the world and love for it. This process
continues until the heart completely yields to the world and its allurements.
Such a condition is the source of a great many evils. All the human
transgressions, sins, and moral vices are on account of this love and
attachment, as mentioned in the hadith quoted from al-Kafi. One of the greatest
evils of this love, according to our Shaykh-my soul be sacrificed for him - is
that if the love of the world captures the human heart and the attachments
become strong, at the time of death man finds that God Almighty is separating
him from his beloved and causing separation between him and the darling of his
desire. As a result, he leaves the world in a state of indignation and rancour
against Him. This greatly shocking warning is enough to awaken man, that he
should be extremely cautious in guarding his heart. God forbid, lest one should
be indignant with the real King of kings, the Bestower of favours and the
Nourisher, for none except God knows the ugly form of such a rancour and
resentment.
Our honoured Shaykh also related of his father that he was extremely disturbed
during the last years of his life regarding his love for one of his sons. But
after doing exercises in spiritual self-discipline for some time he was relieved
of this attachment. He was greatly satisfied on this account before he retired
to the abode of eternal bliss. May God be pleased with him.
There is a tradition in al-Kafi, reported on the authority of Talhah ibn Zayd,
from Abu `Abd Allah al-'Imam al-Sadiq (A.S.) that he said:
The example of the world is that of sea water; the more a thirsty person
drinks from it, the thirstier he becomes until it kills him. 7
The love of the world destroys man eternally, and it is the source of his
affliction with inward and outward villainies. The Holy Prophet (pbuh&hh) is
reported to have said, "The Dirham and the Dinar have destroyed many a people
before you and they will destroy you too". Even if a person is not,
supposedly, afflicted by other vices, which is improbable or rather impossible,
the sole attachment to the world is sufficient to cause many an affliction. The
criterion of the length of the period of detention in the world beyond the grave
and the Barzakh is the amount of intensity of these associations and
attachments. The lesser they are, the more spacious and brighter his place in
the grave and the Barzakh, and consequently the lesser the period of one's
detention therein. Hence the awliya', according to some traditions, do not have
to experience the conditions of the grave for more than three days, and that too
for the sake of the inherent and natural attachment that they had in the life of
this world.
Among the evil effects of the love of the world and attachment to it is that it
makes man afraid of death. The fear of death, being the product of the love of
the world and attachment to it, is highly objectionable; it is different from
the fear of the Day of Resurrection, which is one of the attributes of true
believers. The greater part of the sufferings and pangs experienced by a dying
man are on account of the severance of the worldly ties, not the fear of death
itself.
A brilliant researcher and a judicious analyzer of the world of Islam, Mir
Damad-karrama Allah wajhah in his al-Qabasat, a book of rare excellence, writes:
Death itself will never frighten you; its bitterness lies in being afraid of
it.8
Another great evil caused by the love of the world is that it keeps man from
religious exercises, devotional rites, and prayers, and strengthens his physical
nature. It inculcates disobedience within his physical nature to the commands of
his spirit. As a result it weakens his power of resolution and debilitates the
will, whereas one of the main secrets and aims of worship and religious
exercises is to make the body, the physical faculties, and the natural instincts
subordinate to the spirit, so that the will may control them and force the body
to act according to its wishes and prevent it from whatever the spirit wants it
to abstain from. If the spirit dominates the body, the domain of the body and
the physical faculties is brought under the control of the spirit in a way that
everything it wishes the body to perform would be performed without the
slightest hardship and hindrance. One of the virtues and secrets of austere
worships and laborious devotional exercises is that they are more conducive to
the attainment of this goal. Through them man can-acquire a strong will and
resolution, and overcome his physical nature. If the will becomes complete and
perfect and the resolution strong and powerful, the domain of the human body and
its external and internal faculties acquires angelic characteristics, and he
becomes similar to the angels of God who never transgress Divine commands, obey
readily, without any resistance or compulsion, whatever He orders them to do,
and refrain from doing whatever they are forbidden from. If the physical
faculties of man come under the domination of his spirit, all hardships and
hindrances disappear and a state of ease and tranquility prevails. When that
happens, the `seven realms' of physical nature will become subservient to the
heavenly forces, and all the faculties will act as their functionaries.
Therefore, my dear, the strength of will power and resolution is very important
and effective in that world. In fact, the strength of will is the criterion of
entry into one of the levels of Paradise which is one of the highest heavens.
Unless one possesses a strong will and powerful resolution he cannot gain that
heaven and that high station. It is reported in a tradition that when the
virtuous are stationed in Paradise, a message will be sent to them from the Holy
God, saying, "This is the message sent by the Eternal and the Immortal to the
one who is also eternal and immortal: Whatever I command to be, it comes into
existence; today I bestow on you authority to command whatever you desire to
bring into existence and it would come into existence." You can see what a
great authority and distinction that would be. What sort of power they have
whose resolution and will shall be the manifestation of the Divine Will so that
they will be able to grant the apparel of existence to non-existents. It shows
that the power of will and resolution is superior to all the physical faculties.
And it is also obvious that this message will not be sent out of extravagance
and without proper judgement. Those whose will is subordinated to their bestial
desires and whose resolution has become dead and inert, they cannot attain this
station. The Almighty's Acts are free from extravagance and vain indulgence. In
this world everything is based on a system in which all means and ends are
arranged according to an order. In that world, too, all matters will be arranged
in a similar manner, or rather that world represents the highest harmony between
causes and effects, means and ends. The power and authority of the will is to be
cultivated in this world. This world is the sowing ground of the Hereafter; it
is the substance out of which the rewards of heaven as well as the misfortunes
of hell are carved out.
Therefore, each one of the worships and the rites prescribed by the Shari'ah,
besides themselves possessing heavenly and angelic forms, are elements for
building the physical paradise and procuring all the paraphernalia of heavenly
life. This is confirmed by tradition and affirmed by reason. In the same way as
every worship produces its own specific effects on the soul, it also, little by
little, strengthens the will and perfects its strength. Therefore, the greater
the effort required for a worship, the more productive it is:
The best of deeds are those which are the most difficult.9
For instance, waking up for the sake of praying to God Almighty in the biting
cold of a wintery night and sacrificing the delights of sound sleep makes the
soul triumphant over the body and strengthens the will. Though it is a bit
difficult and unpleasant in the beginning, but after a little practice its
hardship and inconvenience becomes lesser and lesser and the subservience of the
body to the soul grows. We see the people who perform it doing all this without
any trouble, and if we are lazy and find it difficult, it is because we do not
take action. But if we force ourselves to act, gradually the difficulty turns
into ease. The people who offer the nightly prayer derive great enjoyment out of
it, even more than the pleasure we derive from carnal enjoyments. The self
becomes habituated through action, and goodness becomes enduring by becoming
habitual.
These worships have several advantages, one of them is that the form that they
acquire in that world is so beautiful that its parallel cannot be found in this
world, and we are unable to visualize it. Another is that the soul acquires will
power and resolution, which by itself has numerous advantages, and we have
mentioned one of them. Yet another is that it familiarizes man with the worship
and remembrance of God, bringing the unreal to the Real, and turning the heart
towards the King of kings, stirring in it the love for the Beauty of the Real
Beloved, and diminishing the attachment to and concern for the world and the
Hereafter. Perhaps, if this divine passion is produced and a state is achieved
in which he knows the real objective of worship and the real secret of
meditation and remembrance, both the worlds would lose their significance for
him; the vision of the Beloved wipes out the dust of duality from the mirror of
the heart, and God alone knows how magnanimously He will treat such a devotee.
Therefore, the practice of the exercises prescribed by the Shari'ah, the
worships and the rites, and abstention from carnal desires and lusts, strengthen
the human will power and resolution. On the other hand, immersion in sinful
physical nature weakens human resolution and will, as mentioned earlier.
It is known to every man of conscience that man is drawn towards Absolute
Perfection in accordance with his nature and inherent disposition. The better
part of his heart is attracted towards Absolute Beauty and the Most Perfect in
all aspects. This characteristic of man is innate in his nature and ingrained in
it by God Almighty. Accordingly, the will is a means for the fulfillment of the
search of the lovers of Absolute Beauty. However, everyone, in accordance with
his own state and condition, has his own idea of perfection, and he sees
perfection in something towards which he is attracted. Those who work for the
sake of the Hereafter perceive perfection in otherworldly stages and grades and
their hearts are turned towards them. And the men of God, who, beholding
perfection in His beauty and beauty in His perfection, say:
﴾... I have turned my face towards Him no created the heavens and the
earth .... (6:79)﴿
And they say `My ecstasy lies in God'. They long for union with Him, and are in
love with His Beauty. The worldlings, since they perceive perfection in worldly
comforts and luxuries, those things having acquired beauty in their sight and
charmed them, are naturally attracted towards them. Nevertheless, since man's
natural inclination is towards absolute perfection, all the worldly attachments
are basically errors of judgement. Therefore, the greater his mastery over
worldly or otherworldly benefits, whether they are spiritual accomplishments,
authority, power, or material treasures, his longing for them increases and the
flame of love grows brighter and more ferocious. For example, the sensual
appetites of a lusty man will increase if he is given more chances of fulfilling
his sensual desires; he will desire some other fulfillment that is not available
to him, and the furnace of his lust will become hotter and wilder. In the same
way, if the man ambitious for power and authority is allowed to establish his
authority over one region, he will turn towards yet another. If the whole earth
comes under his domination, he will think of invading other spheres in order to
bring them under his dominion. He is not aware that his natural instincts crave
for something else. The instinctive love and the natural quest of man is
directed towards the Absolute Beloved. All substantial, physical, and
intentional motions, all attentions of the heart and the inclinations of the
self are directed towards the beauty of Absolute Beauty, yet human beings do not
realize it. They abuse this love, this desire, and this longing, which is meant
to be the Buraq (the mount upon which the Prophet (pbuh&hh) is said to have
performed the nocturnal journey through the universe called Mi`raj) meant for
ascension to heaven, the wings to fly to union with the Absolute, by wasting it
on unworthy ends and by confining it within absurd barriers and limits, thus
missing their goal.
In short, since man's inclination towards absolute perfection is innate, the
greater his greed for worldly allurements the more he accumulates them and the
more is his heart attracted towards them. Since he mistakenly believes the world
and worldly fascinations to be the desired ultimate goal his greed grows day by
day and his desire for them multiplies. His need for the world increases and
poverty and deprivation becomes his fate. On the contrary, those who work for
the Hereafter, their attention towards the world diminishes, their attention
towards the Hereafter increases with their interest therein, and the love for
this world and the interest therein diminishes in their hearts till they care no
more about the world and its allurements. A sense of richness and plentitude is
lodged within their hearts and the treasures of this world lose their value in
their sight. Therefore, the men of God are oblivious of both the worlds and free
of care for both of them. Their only need is related to Absolute Plentitude.
Absence of need and presence of plentitude are infused in their hearts by the
light of the Needless-in-Itself.
In the light of the above exposition, the tradition means to say that whosoever
makes the world his biggest concern from morning till night, God Almighty puts
poverty into his eyes. And whosoever spends his morning and evening making the
Hereafter his biggest concern, God Almighty puts plentitude into his heart. It
is obvious that the one whose heart attends to the, Hereafter, for him all the
worldly matters become insignificant, trivial, and easy. ' He views the world as
temporary, transitory; and short-lived, a place where he is for the sole purpose
of educating and training himself. He is indifferent to its sufferings and joys.
His needs become few, and his dependence on the matters of the world and its
inhabitants becomes lesser, and reaches a point where he has no need of them at
all. His affairs become integrated and organized, and an inalienable sense of
contentment enters his heart. Therefore, the more you look at this world with
wonder and love, the more your heart will be attached to it, and your need for
it will also increase proportionally to your love. A sense of poverty and
privation will appear on the surface of your personality, your affairs will
become disjointed and dissipated. Your heart will become anxious, melancholic,
and fearful, and your affairs will not be carried out according to your wishes.
Your hope and greed will increase day by day. Grief and regret will seize you;
bewilderment and despair will invade your heart. Some of these points have been
alluded to in the following traditions from al-Kafi:
On the authority of Hafs ibn Qurt, Abu `Abd Allah (A.S.) is reported to have
said: "The greater one's involvement with the world, the greater shall be his
regret at the time of parting from it"9
...Ibn Abi Ya`fur says, "I heard Abu 'Abd Allah as saying, `Whoever has a
heart attached to the world, has three things attached to his heart: unremitting
sadness, unfulfilled desire, and unachievable hope.'"10
But the otherworldly, the nearer they come to the Court of the Beneficent, the
more joyful and tranquil their hearts become; they become oblivious, nay
disgusted, of this world and whatever is in it. If the Almighty had not decreed
their terms of life, they would not have tarried for a single moment in this
world. The Mawla of the Muwahhidun, Imam `Ali (A.S.), says about them: "They
are not sad and dejected here like the people of this world, and in the
Hereafter they will be immersed in the oceans of His Mercy." May God include
you and us with them, God willing.
So, my dear, now you know about the evils of this love and attachment, and have
learnt how this love can destroy a human being. It deprives the human being of
his' faith, and makes a mess of his life in the Hereafter as well as in this
world. Make up your mind, and try to curtail your love and loosen the bondage to
this world as far as possible. Eradicate its roots, and consider this short life
in this world as insignificant. Do not attach any value to its pleasures, mixed
as they are with punishment, sorrow, and pain. Seek help from God, so that He
may succor you in relieving your self from its scourge and suffering, and
familiarize your heart with the noble abode that lies with Him. And whatever
lies with God is better and lasting.
* 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, Usul al-Kafi
(Tehran), Vol. IV (Arabic text with Persian translation by Sayyid Hashim Rasuli),
p. 8.
2- Al-Majlisi, Bihar al- anwar.
3- Nahj al-balaghah (e.d. Subhi al-Salih), Hikam, No. 131.
4- Usul al-Kafi, vol. iv, p. 2.
5- Ibid., vol. iv, p.3.
6- Nahj al- balaghah, Khutab, No. 5.
7- Usul al-Kafi, vol. iii, p. 205.
8- Mir Damad, al-Qabasat, p. 72.
9- Usul al-Kafi, vol. iv, p. 9.
10- ibid., vol. iv, p. 9.