Know that divinity has many states [maqamat], which are, according to
"Collectivity" [jam], explained in two: First: Divinity of Essence. Second:
Divinity of Action. If by testifying that divinity is confined to Allah we mean
the Divinity of Essence, its truth, with that of takbir, will come close to each
other if ilah (divinity) is derived from "aliha fish-shay'", i.e. 'He became
perplexed about it', or derived from "laha", i.e. 'He became lofty' or derived
from "laha yaluhu", i. e. 'He concealed himself. In this case its connection to
the adhan and the Salat becomes known by referring to the chapter of takbir, and
so does its discipline. But to repeat it again, though not void of some
advantage, is contrary to brevity. If we take aliha to mean: "He worshipped",
and ma'Iuh to mean: "the worshipped", then the salik must make the formal
testimony of the confinement of diety to Allah, the Most High, comply with the
inner cordial testimony, and he should know that should there be in the heart a
diety other than Allah, he would be a hypocrite in his testimony.
So, the salik is to convey to his heart, by whatever austerity, his testimony
about divinity, and to smash in his heart the big and small idols which have
been engraved by the intruding hands of Satan and the evil-commanding soul, and
to sweep them away, so that he may become fit to be in the Presence of His
Sacred Essence. As long as the idols of loving the world and mundane affairs are
still in the ka'bah of the heart, the salik will find no way to his goal. So,
testifying to divinity is to announce to the worldly and heavenly powers that
the false dieties and the crooked objectives should be trod upon so as to be
able to ascend to Allah's Proximity.
But if the confinement of divinity is intended for Divinity of Action, which is
management and effectiveness, the meaning of the testimony will be: I testify
that there is no manager and no effective influence in the world of achievement,
and in the visible and the invisible save the Sacred Essence of Allah, the Most
High. If the salik's heart cherished dependence on any being among the beings,
and trusted any individual among the individuals, his heart would be diseased
and his testimony false.
Thus, the salik must first strengthen, with judicial proof, the fact that "There
is no effecter [mu'aththir] in the (world of) existence except Allah". He must
not evade the divine knowledge, which is the objective of sending prophets, and
not turn away from remembering Allah and from the affairs of the Essence and
Attributes, for the source of all (kinds of) happiness is the remembrance of
Allah:
﴾And whoever turns away from remembering Me, his shall surely be a
straitened life﴿.1
After attaining to the truth of this divine delicacy, which is the source of the
divine knowledge and the door of the doors of the hidden facts, by way of
thinking and reasoning, he is to make his heart, through remembrance and
austerity, familiar with them until it believes in them. This would be the first
stage of the truthfulness of his words, and it is marked by complete dependence
on Allah, and by taking the eye of greed and hope away from all beings, a fact
which results in believing in Allah's Unity of Action, being one of the great
states of the people of knowledge. Having ascribed all effects to Allah, and
closed the eye of greed against all beings, save His Sacred Essence, the salik
becomes worthy attending the Sacred Presence, or rather his heart becomes, by
nature, attentive to that Presence. Repeating the testimony may be for
confirming it, and by the testimony we mean one of the two testimonies, or it
may not be a repetition, but one may refer to the Divinity of Essence and the
other to the Divinity of Action. In this instance, its repetition at the end may
be to confirm them, and that is why it is not mentioned these with the very
words: "I testify."
A Gnostic Note
Know that testimony is of many stages, of which we shall be satisfied with
referring to a few, as suits these pages.
The first is the Verbal Testimony [shahadat-i qauliyah], which is already known.
If the verbal testimony is not accompanied with cordial testimony, even in a
lower stage, it will not be a testimony, but a deception and a hypocrisy, as it
was mentioned in the hadith concerning takbir, quoted from Imam al-Sadiq (AS).
The second is the Practical Testimony [shahadat-i fi'liyah], which means that
man testifies through the practices of his organs. For example, he is, in the
type and method of his action, to apply the fact that: "There is no effecter [mu
'aththir] in the (world of) existence save Allah", and, as his verbal testimony
requires him to think that nobody is effective, he should work out the plan of
his acts accordingly. Hence, he should not extend the hand of need to anybody
except to the Sacred Presence of Allah, the Most High, nor should he open the
eye of expectation at any being. He should show himself rich and in no need,
before the weak servants, and keep aloof from weakness, humility and inability.
This is frequently referred to by noble hadiths, as is in a narrative stated in
the noble al-Kafi: "A believer's dignity is to manage without the help of the
people."2 Showing oneself well off and prosperous is one of the
religious commendable practices, while demanding things from people is
undesirable. In short, one must put to practice the divine grace: "There is no
effecter in the (world of) existence except Allah" in his external kingdom.
The third is the Cordial Testimony [shahadat-i qalbiyah], which is the source of
the practical and verbal testimonies, as without it, these would not come to
actuality. And it is that Allah's Unity of Action manifests in the heart, which
realizes, by way of its inner secret, the truth of this grace, and separates
itself from other beings. Most of the narratives quoted from the infallible
Ahlul Bayt (AS) concerning abandoning looking with greed at what is in the hands
of the people, and despairing of the servants, and trusting and confiding in
Allah, the Exalted and Most High, refer to this situation.
It is in al-Kafi, on the authority of Ali ibn al-Hussein (AS) that he said:
"I found that the entire goodness is gathered in cutting one's coveting what is
in the hands of others, and whoever placed no hope on the people in anything,
and entrusted himself to Allah, the Exalted, in all his affairs, Allah would
respond to him in all the things."3 Hadiths of this kind are
many.
The fourth is the Essence Testimony (Personal Testimony = shahadat-i dhatiyah),
i.e. the existential testimony, and it appears in the perfect holy men. To the
holy men, this testimony is present in all beings, in one way or another.
Perhaps the ayah:
﴾Allah bears witness that there is no god but He, and (so do) the
angels and the possessors of knowledge﴿,4
is a hint at the Essence Testimony, for Allah, the Exalted, in the state of "the
Collective Oneness" [ahadiyat-I dhatiyah] gives Personal testimony to His own
Unity [wahdaniyat] , because mere existence by itself denotes the
Essence-Oneness [ahadiyat-I dhatiyah], and in the rising of the Day of
Resurrection it appears in Complete Unity [wahdaniyat-I tammah]. This Oneness [ahadiyat]
appears first in the mirror of the Collectivity [jam], then in the mirror of
distinctness [tafsil]. For this reason He said: "...and the angels and the
possessors of knowledge". In this instance there are many states of knowledge [ma'arif]
that are out of the obligation of these pages to explain.
Connection:
In the exegesis of Muhammad ibn Mas'ud al-'Ayyashi, quoting 'Abdus Samad ibn
Bashir, it is said: "The beginning of the adhan was mentioned to Abu 'Abdullah
(Imam al-Sadiq) (AS), and he said: 'The Messenger of Allah (SA) was (once)
sleeping in the shadow of the ka'bah, when Gabriel came to him with a bowl of
water from Paradise. He woke him up and told him to wash himself with it. Then
he (the Prophet) was put in a carriage with a thousand colors of light, and he
was taken high up to the doors of the heaven. When the angels saw him, they ran
away from the doors of the heaven, exclaiming: 'Two gods, a god in the earth and
a god in the heaven!' Allah commanded Gabriel to shout: Allahu akbar! Allahu
akbar!' So the angels returned to the doors of the heaven. The door was
opened, and he proceeded until he reached the second heaven. The angels ran away
from the doors of the heaven. There he said: 'I testify that there is no god but
Allah! I testify that there is no god but Allah!' The angels returned, as they
realized that he was a creature. Then the door was opened and he went in ..." as
the hadith goes on.5
A similar concept is stated in a narrative in 'Ilalush-Shara 'i'.6
These hadiths denote that testifying to Allah's Divinity opens the doors of the
heaven and penetrates the barriers, and causes the angels of Allah to gather.
The veil which is penetrated through by testifying to His Divinity and by
confessing it to be exclusively His, is of the thick veils of darkness, and, as
long as the salik is wrapped in it, he will have no way to attend the Presence,
and unless this door opens to him, he will not be admitted. That barrier is the
veil of the multiplicity of acts, and to fall in this multiplicating veil
results in taking the created beings to be effective and influential, which
means regarding them to be independent in their action, which is admitting, the
impossible and is a great polytheism, while, on the other hand, the result of
testifying to the divinity to be exclusively Allah's, is testifying to the Unity
of Action and annihilating the multiplicities in Allah's Act, and denying anyone
else to have any effect or effectiveness, and believing that independence
belongs to Allah, the Exalted. It was by means of this testimony that the angels
of the heaven came out of the veil of the multiplicity of "A god in the earth
and a god in the heaven", and returned from fleeing away and dispersing to
familiarity and gathering, and then the doors of the heaven opened to them. So,
the salik must also penetrate through this veil of his darkness by way of this
testimony and open the doors of heaven to himself, and step out of the heavy
veil of the independence, so that the way of ascension to the mi'raj of His
Proximity becomes closer. But this cannot be brought about by mere verbal
utterances of remembering Allah, as that is why our acts of worship do not cross
the limit of the mundane formality, and, thus, no door will be opened to us and
no veil will be pushed off our faces.
* Book: Adabus Salat "The Disciplines of the Prayer". By: Imam
Khomeini.
1- Surah Ta-Ha: 124.
2- Usulul Kafi, vol. 3, p. 218, "Book of Faith and Disbelief', ch. on "Doing
Without the People" hadith 1.
3- Ibid., hadith 3.
4- Surah Al-i 'Imran: 18
5- Al-'Ayyashi's Exegesis (on the Qur'an), vol. 1, p. 157, Commenting on Surah
al-Baqarah, narrative 530.
6- Ilalush Shara'i, vol. 2, p. 312.