Imam al-Rida (AS) is quoted to have said: "The servant has been commanded to
perform the wudu' (ritual ablution) so as to be pure when standing before the
All-Powerful and supplicating, and by obeying Him, to be purged from filth and
impurity, beside his removing laziness, expelling sleep and purifying the heart
to stand in the Presence of the All-Powerful. Confining it (the wudu') only to
the face, the two hands, the head and the two feet, was because when the servant
stands before the All-Powerful, the parts which are exposed are those which are
ordered to be washed in the wudu': as with his face he performs the sujud
(prostration), with his hands he requests, desires, dreads and supplicates, with
his head he inclines to Him in his ruku', (bowing down) and his sujud, and with
his legs he stands and sits..."1 etc. Up to here he explained the
principal point in the wudu " informing the people of knowledge and suluk that
to stand in the holy Presence of Allah, the of worship, and of obeying the Lord.
Therefore, the purification of the outside results in the purification of the
inside, and purging the exterior leads to the purity of the interior. Generally,
the traveler to Allah must, at the time of wudu' be aware of his being about to
stand in the Presence of Allah, the Almighty, as with such states of heart as he
has, he does not Glorified and Most High, and to offer supplication to the
Provider of Needs, require certain disciplines which should be observed. One
must not appear in His Presence even with the external filths and impurities and
with a sleepy eye, let alone with a heart which is filled with dirts, and it is
afflicted with spiritual impurities, which are the origin of all impurities.
Despite the fact that a narrative says: "Allah, the Exalted, does not look at
your faces, but He looks at your hearts"2, and despite the fact that
the means with which man attends to Allah, the Exalted, and what is, in the
worlds of creation, worthy of looking at His Majesty, Greatness and Glory, is
the heart, while the other organs have no share in it, yet, they did not neglect
the outer cleanliness. So, they decided the external purification for cleaning
man's exterior, and the inner purification for cleaning his interior. In this
noble hadith, it is clear from assigning the purification of the heart to be a
result of the wudu' that the wudu' has an interior with which man's interior is
purified, and meanwhile it appears that there is a connection between the
exterior and the interior, the visible and the invisible. Similarly it becomes
clear that the outer cleanliness, the outside wudu', is of the acts deserve to
be in His Presence, or he may even be dismissed from the Presence of the Lord,
the Most High. Thus, he has to get ready to have his outer purification
transferred to his interior, and to purify his heart -which is the object of
Allah's attention, or, actually, is the lodging of His Sanctity -from all that
is other than Allah, and to take out from his head any notion of arrogance and
I-ness, which is the origin of the origins of the impurities, so as to become
worthy of His Presence. After that, Imam al-Rida (AS) explains the reason for
specifying certain organs to wud'u'. He says:
"Confining it only to the face, the two hands, the head and the two feet, was
because when the servant stands before the All-Powerful, the parts which are
exposed are those which are ordered to be washed in the wudu': as with his face
he performs the sujud (prostration), with his hands he requests, desires, dreads
and supplicates, with his head he inclines to Him in his ruku' (bowing down) and
his sujud, and with his legs he stands and sits..."
The gist of his discourse is that these organs take part in worshipping Allah,
and it is through these organs that worship is manifested. Consequently, it is
necessary to purify them. Then he refers to those acts of worship which appear
from them, opening the way of their being valid and useful to the deserving
people, and making the people of knowledge familiar with these secrets that the
organs on which servitude appears in Allah's Blessed Presence, should be clean
and purified, as the outer limbs and organs of the body, which have a deficient
share of those meanings, would not be worthy of that station without
purification. Although submission is not, actually, a character of the face, and
none of requesting, desiring, dreading, supplicating and facing the qiblah
belongs to any of the tangible organs, yet, as these organs are the
manifestations of those meanings, they must be purified. Therefore, purifying
the heart, which is the real place of servitude, and the actual centre of those
meanings, is more necessary. Without its purification, the external organs will
never be purified even if they are washed in seven seas, and it (the heart) will
not deserve being in the Presence of Allah. Actually, Satan will have a hand in
it, and it will be dismissed from His Glorious Presence.
Connection: In an authorized narrative in 'Ilalush-Shara'i' it is related that:
"A group of Jews came to the Messenger of Allah (SA) and asked him questions.
Among their questions they asked: "Tell us, O Muhammad why, are these four
organs given the wudu', while they are the cleanest parts of the body'?" The
Messenger of Allah (SA) said: 'When Satan whispered to Adam (AS) and he came
near the "tree" and looked at it, he lost face. He stood up and walked to it
-the first step taken towards sinning. He took with his hand some of what was of
it and ate it. Off his body flew what were on him of jewelry and apparel. He put
his hand on the top of his head and wept. Allah accepted his repentance, but
made it incumbent upon him and his offspring to purify those four organs. So,
Allah ordered the face to be washed, because it looked at the "tree". He ordered
the hands to be washed to the elbows, because he took with them (the fruit of
the tree). He ordered the head to be anointed (with the hand wet with water), as
he put his hand on the top of his head, and He ordered the feet to be anointed
because with them he walked to sin."3
Concerning the reason for imposing fasting, there is also a noble hadith to the
effect that the Jews asked him: "What caused Allah to impose on your people to
fast for thirty days?" He said: "It was Adam (AS), because that which he had
eaten from that "tree" remained in his stomach for thirty days. So Allah made it
incumbent upon him and his offspring to endure hunger and thirst for thirty
days, and He allowed them, out of His kindness, to eat and drink at the nights."5
These noble hadiths give the people of allusion and the people of heart to
understand many points: Although Adam's sin was not like the sins of the others,
as it might have been a natural one, or a sin of being inclined to multiplicity,
the tree of nature, or of attending to multiplicity of names after the
attraction [jadhibah] of self-annihilation [fana'-i dhati], yet it was not
expected from one like Adam (AS) who was Allah's chosen one [safiy] and
distinguished by proximity [qurb] and self-annihilation. Therefore, according to
the love-zeal [ghairat-i hubbi] of His Sanctified Essence, He announced his
disobedience and going astray to all the worlds and on the tongues of all the
prophets (AS). He, the Exalted, said:
﴾And Adam disobeyed his Lord, so he went astray.﴿5
Thus, so much cleaning and purification were needed for him (Adam) and his
offspring who were hidden in his loin and (so) participated in the sin, though
they did participate (in it) after coming out of the loin, too.
Therefore, the sin committed by Adam and his offspring has many degrees and
manifestations. The first of those degrees is paying attention to multiplicity
of names, and the last of those manifestations is eating from the forbidden
tree, the invisible [malakuti] form of which is a tree that carries diverse
sorts of fruits. And its visible [mulki] form is its nature and affairs, and the
love of this world and the self, as seen now in his offspring, is of the affairs
of the same inclination to that tree and eating from it. Similarly, for their
cleaning, purifying, cleansing, salat and fasting for the redemption of the
father's sin which is the origin -there are many degrees in proportion to the
degrees of the sin. From this explanation it is understood that all kinds of
disobedience of the children of Adam are related to eating from the "tree", and
are purified in a certain way. All their sins of the heart are also related to
that tree, and are purified in a certain way. Then, all kinds of spiritual sins
are related to it, too, and are purified in a certain way.
Purifying the external organs is the "shadow" [zill] of the purity of the heart
and spirit for the perfect. It is an order, and a "means" to them, for the
people of suluk. As long as man is within the veil of the individuation [ta'ayyun]
of the organs and their purification, and he lingers there, he cannot be of the
people of the suluk, and is still in the sin. But if he engaged himself in
passing through the stages of external and internal purifications, and used the
formal and outer purifications as a means of purifying the spirit and the heart,
and in all the acts of worship and rites he observed their spiritual aspects and
was benefited by them, or better, if he gave more importance to the internal
aspects and regarded them to be the most high objective, he would be admitted
through the door of the suluk along the road of humanity, as is referred to in a
noble hadith in Misbahush Shar'iah: "... And purify your heart with taqwa
(fear of Allah) and yaqin (certitude) when you cleanse your organs with water."6
So, a salik man needs first a scientific suluk so as to distinguish, with the
blessings of "the people of remembrance" [ahl-i dhikr] (SA), the stages of
servitude, and regard the formal worship inferior to the spiritual and inner
worship. Then the practical suluk, which is the reality of the suluk is started.
The aim of this suluk is to free the soul from other than Allah, and adorn it
with the manifestations of His Names and Essence. Getting to this stage, the
salik would be at the end of his journey, attaining to the goal of his progress
to perfection, and acquiring the secrets of austerity and worship, as well as
the delicacies of suluk. Those are the manifestations of Majesty which are the
secrets of purity, and the manifestations of Beauty, which are the objective of
other worships. To give the details is out of the capacity of these pages.
* Book: Adabus Salat "The Disciplines of the Prayer". By: Imam
Khomeini.
1- Uyunu Akhbarir
Rida, vol. 2, p. 104, ch. 34, hadith 1.
2- Biharul Anwar, vol. 67, p. 241, quoting Jami'ul Akhbar, p. 117 (with a slight
difference).
3- Ilalush-Sharai', vol. I, p. 280, ch. 191, hadith 1.
4- Ibid, vol. 2, p. 378, ch. 109, hadith 1.
5- Surah Ta Ha: 121.
6- Misbahush Shari'ah, ch. 10, on "Purity".