The highest level of fasting is to disengage
oneself from other than Allāh (SwT). Every thought, speech, action,
etc. is solely for Allāh (SwT). The fasting one in this level
ensures that not only does he observe the first two levels of fasting, but
protects his heart from other than Allāh (SwT). Perhaps this noble
dictum of Imām al-Sādiq (‘a) refers to this very station:
أَلْقَلْبُ
حَرَمُ اللٌّهِ،
فَلاََ
تُسْكِنْ فِي
حَرَمِ
اللٌّهِ
غَيْرَ
اللٌّهِ.
“The heart is
the sanctuary of Allāh; therefore do not make other than Allāh reside
in the sanctuary of Allāh.[80]”
The result of such a fast is ‘the Paradise of
Divine Encounter’[81]
(Jannat al-Liqā’). If we ponder over the supplications of the
Holy month of Ramadān and try to understand what kind of reception and
banquet we can anticipate, we would realize that it is this level of fasting
that we must struggle to attain.
Imām Khumaynī in one of his sermons
to the seminarians in Najaf al-Ashraf says:
وأَنِرْ
أَبْصَارَ قُلُوْبِنَا
بِضِيَاءِ
نَظَرِهَا
إِلَيْكَ،
حَتّى تَخْرِقَ
أَبْصَارُ
الْقُلُوبِ حُجُبَ
النُّورِ
فَتَصِلَ
إِلـى
مَعْدَنِ
الْعَظَمَة.
ضيافة اللّه
همان «معدن
عظمت» است.
خداوند تبارك
و تعالى براي
ورود به معدن
نور و عظمت از
بندگانش دعوت
فرموده است.
“And enlighten
the eyes of our hearts with the light of Your vision, until the vision of the
hearts tears through the curtains of light and reaches the Source of Greatness
(ma’din al-’azamah).’[82]
The banquet of Allāh (SwT) is that very
“source of greatness.” God, the Blessed and Exalted, has invited His
servants to enter the source of light and greatness.”[83]
He also says:
و
جزاي چنين
روزهاي خداست چنانكه
فرموده است: أَلصَّوْمُ
لِي وأَنَا
أَجْزِي
بِهِ. چيز
ديگر نمي تواند
پاداش چنين
روزهاي باشد.
جنات نعيم در
مقابل روزه او
بىارزش بوده
نمي تواند
پاداش آن به
حساب آيد. ولى
اگر بنا باشد
كه انسان به
اسم روزه دهان
را از مطعومات
ببندد و به
غيبت مردم باز
كند و شبهاي
ماه مبارک
رمضان، كه
مجالس شب نشينى
گرم و داير
بوده وقت و
فرصت بيشتری
است، با غيبت،
تهمت و اهانت
به مسلمانان
به سحر
انجامد، چيزي
عايد او نمي شود
و اثري بر آن
مترتب
نمیگردد.
“The reward
of such a fast is God, as He has stated: “The fast is for Me and I am its
reward.”[84] Nothing
else could be the reward of such a fast. The Gardens of Blessings would
not count as a worthy reward for such a fast. If a man takes fasting to
mean closing his mouth to food but opening it for backbiting, and he engages in
backbiting until sahar in the warm and friendly company in the nights when
there is opportunity and time, such fasting will be of no benefit and have no
effect…”[85]
Elsewhere he also says:
در
اين ماه شريف،
كه به
مهمانسراي
الهي دعوت
شدهايد، اگر
به حق تعالى
معرفت پيدا
نكرديد يا
معرفت شما زيادتر
نشد، بدانيد
در ضيافة
اللّه درست
وارد نشديد و
حق ضيافت را
به جا نياورديد...
“In this noble
month, in which you have been invited to the divine banquet, if you do not gain
insight (ma’rifah) about God the Almighty nor insight into yourself, it
means that you have not properly participated in the feast of Allāh and
failed to observe the etiquette of the feast...[86]”
Therefore our aspirations should be high, and
we should struggle to attain the position which would enable us enter the
Divine Feast. In the supplication of Abū Hamzah al-Thumāli,
which Imām al-Sajjād (‘a) taught to his noble companion, we are
taught to pray in the following way:
...وَلَدَيْكَ
أَرْجُوْ
ضِيَافَتِي...
“…And I aspire to be a guest near You…”[87]
Notice ‘to be a guest near Allāh’ is quite
different from being just an ordinary guest. In the above verse we seek
that kind of insight and knowledge that is obtained ladā Allāh
- in the neighborhood of Allāh; In simpler terms, we are not just after
any kind of knowledge, but that which is Divinely inspired, which is also known
as al-‘ilm al-ladunnī and is, according to the Qur’ān, a
product of piety; it is not a knowledge acquired from a human tutor.
It is, using the words of the Holy Prophet (s)
‘a light that Allāh infuses in the heart of whosoever He wishes to guide.’[88] This
is the kind of knowledge, say some exegetes of the Qur’ān, that the
following verse speaks about:
)وَاتَّقُوا
اللٌّهَ
وَيُعَلِّمُكُمُ
اللٌّهُ
وَاللٌّهُ
بِكُلِّ
شَيْءٍ
عَلِيمٌ (
“Be God-wary
and God shall teach you, and God has knowledge of all things.”[89]
And the path towards achieving taqwā,
as clearly specified in the Holy Qur’ān, is siyām
(fasting). The Holy Qur’ān says:
)يَا
أَيُّهَا
الَّذِينَ
آمَنُوا
كُتِبَ عَلَيْكُمُ
الصِّيَامُ
كَمَا كُتِبَ
عَلَى الَّذِينَ
مِنْ
قَبْلِكُمْ
لَعَلَّكُمْ
تَـتَّقُونَ (
“O you who have
faith! Prescribed for you is fasting as it was prescribed for those who were
before you, so that you may attain taqwā.”[90]
Hence, ‘fasting’ is a factor that can
refine the spirit of the human being so much that he can qualify to be taught
directly by Allāh (SwT).
Some supplications teach us to ask Almighty
Allāh to be hosted in ‘paradise’ in this month. In one of the
supplications recommended during sahar time of the nights of the Holy
month of Ramadān, we ask Almighty Allāh for Paradise:
وَقَدْ
أَوْجَبْتَ لِكُلِّ
ضَيْفٍ
قِرىً،
وَأَنَا
ضَيْفُكَ،
فَاجْعَلْ
قِرَايَ اللَّيْلَةَ
الْجَنَّةَ،
يَا وَهَّابَ
الْجَنَّةِ،
يَا وَهَّابَ
الْمَغْفِرَةِ،
وَ لاَ حَوْلَ
وَلاَ
قُوَّةَ
إِلاَّ بِكَ...
“…And very you have made obligatory for every
guest to be entertained; and I am Your guest; therefore make my banquet tonight
to be ‘Paradise’, O the Bestower of Paradise, O Bestower of forgiveness, and
there is no strength nor any power save by You…”[91]
It is possible that the reason why this
supplication was followed by the two sublime names of Allāh - ‘Yā
Wahhāb al-Jannah’ and ‘Yā Wahhāb al-maghfirah’ was to
ask Allāh (SwT) for Paradise, and thus, necessarily also ask Him for
relief from the Hell Fire, which enables one to enter Paradise. In other
words, we are trying to seek the same ‘qirā’ (meal served to the
guest) that we seek in holy precincts of Ka’bah during the seventh round of our
circumambulation around the Ka’bah. We are taught to say:
أَللٌّهُمَّ
الْـبَيْتُ
بَيْـتُكَ،
وَالْعَبْدُ
عَبْدُكَ،
وَهٌذَا
مَقَامُ
الْعَائِذِ
بِكَ مِنَ النَّارِ،
أَللٌّهُمَّ
اِنِّي
حَلَلْتُ
بِفِنَائِكَ،
فَاجْعَلْ
قِرَايَ مَغْفِرَتَكَ...
“O Allāh, the house is Your house; and
this servant is You servant; and this is where one who seeks Your Refuge from
Hellfire stands; O Allāh, surely I have stopped at Your courtyard;
therefore make my banquet to be Your forgiveness.”[92]
In fact there is clear mention of seeking
salvation from the Hell Fire in many supplications that we are taught to read
in the Holy month of Ramadān. In the famous du‘ā
that most of us recite after every prayer, we say:
يَا
عَلِيُّ يَا عَظِيمُ
يَا غَفُورُ
يَا
رَحِيمُ...مُنَّ
عَليَّ
بِفِكَاكِ
رَقَبَتِي
مِنَ النَّارِ...
“O Exalted One,
O All-Great, O All Forgiving, O All-Merciful….bless me with freedom from the
Hell Fire.”[93]
And during the ā‘māl of laylat
al-qadr we are taught to open the Holy Qur’ān and say:
...وَفِيهِ
اسْمُكَ
الأَكْبَرُ،
وَأَسْمَآؤُكَ
الْحُسْنَى،
وَمَا يُخَافُ
وَيُرْجَى،
أَنْ
تَجْعَلَنِي
مِنْ عُتَقَائِكَ
مِنَ
النَّارِ...
“…and in it is
Your Great Name and Your Most Beautiful Names and that which should be feared
and hoped for, that you make me from those whom you have freed from Hell Fire…”[94]
Another very important point to bear in
mind is that since these supplications were from infallible masters, the
Paradise sought is not that which the laity like the author aspire, but levels
beyond.
The mystics have classified Paradise into
different levels, the highest of which is Jannat al-liqā’ (Paradise
of meeting the Lord). And this is what a true believer’s delight is
in. The following prophetic tradition alludes to this verity:
لِلصَّائِمِ
فَرْحَتَانِ؛
فَرْحَةٌ
عِنْدَ
إِفْطَارِهِ،
وَ فَرْحَةٌ
عِنْدَ
لِقَاءِ رَبِّهِ.
“For the one fasting there are two joys: joy
when breaking his fast, and joy when he meets His Lord.”[95]
Notes:
[80] Bihā
r al-Anwār, vol. 70, pg. 25.
[81] Some scholastic theologians being
ignorant of the truth of meeting Allāh have resorted to different
fruitless interpretations. Ayatullāh Maliki Tabrīzī in his
treatise on Meeting Allāh (Risāleye Liqā’ullāh)
criticizes them, saying: “One who tries to understand with a mind free from
foreign ambiguities that penetrate the heart, and looks at these different
expressions would be convinced that the meaning of meeting God is not
encountering His reward, examples of which are ‘entering Paradise’, ‘eating
apples’, ‘sharing the company of heavenly damsels’, etc. How is this
meaning related to such expressions? If one can attribute the word liqā’
to a meaning of remote relevance, what should he do with regard to the
other words [used to indicate the encounter of God]? For example, how should he
translate the phrase ‘looking at God’s countenance’? How should we interpret
the statement ‘wa alhiqnī binūrika’l abhaj’ (and attach me to
your most delightful light)? Can we say that the statement ‘And enlighten the
eyes of our hearts with the light of their looking at You’ means ‘to eat pears?
[82] This is a reference to a part of
the well-known whispered supplication of Sha‘bān called Munājāt
Sha‘bāniyyah. See Mafātīh al-Jinān, pg. 158.
[83] Jihād-e-Akbar, pg. 45.
[84] It should be noted that this dictum
is translated in two different ways. From the context of Imām’s
speech, it is apparent that he reads the dictum as ‘wa ana ujzā bihi’
(I am its reward) unlike when it is read as ‘wa anā ajzī bihi’
(and I grant its reward). Other divine scholars such as Mullā Hādī
Sabzawārī in his Asrār al-Hikam and Ustād Shujā’ī
in his Maqālāt [vol. 3, pg. 127] have translated this dictum
is a similar manner. Nevertheless, both the meanings are correct.
[85] Jihād-e-Akbar, pg. 44.
[86] Jihād-e-Akbar, pg. 39.
[87] Mafātīh al-Jinān, pg. 194.
[88] al-Mahajjat
al-Baydā’, vol. 5, pg. 45.
[89] Holy Qur’ān,
2:282.
[90] Holy Qur’ān,
2:283.
[91] Mafātīh
al-Jinān, pg. 201.
[92] al-Mahajjat
al-Baydā’, vol. 2, pg. 171.
[93] Mafātīh
al-Jinān, pg. 176.
[94] Mafātīh
al-Jinān, pg. 225.
[95] al-Mahajjat
al-Baydā’, vol. 2, pg. 122.
Taken from the book A Short Treatise on the Divine Invitation by Muhammad M. Khalfan
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