Between Words and Worlds: Masters’ Sayings in Early Sufi Literature
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Notes on the Contents, Sources, and Transmission of Sufi Sayings
Al-Sarī gave me a piece of paper, saying: “This is better for you than seven hundred [pious!] stories or the choicest [prophetic!] reports”. It read: “When I said that I loved her, she told me: ‘You have lied to me! Don’t I see that the members [of your body!] are still covered [with flesh!]?’.(al-Qushayrī 2017, p. 657; Knysh 2007, p. 331)
3. Expressing the States of Grace (aḥwāl) in Early Sufism
Listen to no letter concerning Me, and receive no information of Me from any letter. Letters cannot inform of themselves, how then should they tell of Me? I am He that made the letter, and informs of it.(al-Niffarī 1935, p. 70)
4. Sufi Sayings and Speech Act Theory
5. Three Categories of Sufi Sayings That Mirror Three Historical Phases
- The first is the category of sayings that refer to the rise of Sufism during the late second/eighth and early third/ninth centuries. Sayings of this category serve as major building blocks of an intimate or even introverted form of Sufi writings that, unlike later Sufi textbooks and manuals, were addressed to a very specific group of followers. Sayings of the first category illustrate two major qualities: ambiguity in relating mystical experiences and self-defense where there have been extensive attempts to bridge the gaps between Islamic law and Sufi doctrines. The latter was an outcome of the early conflict between Sufism and its opponents. Notably, this category primarily comes in the form of the author’s own sayings rather than in a form of quotations from others. The clearest example of this category is the writings of Abū Saʿīd al-Kharrāz (d. 286/899 or a few years earlier), a contemporary of al-Junayd and an introverted Sufi master who committed himself to a very rigid life of roving and austerities. In his Letters (Rasāʾil), al-Kharrāz includes many sayings of his own to describe very enigmatically the spiritual virtues of the chosen ones and their hierarchies in the path towards God. On one occasion, he says “ahlu tajrīd bāna ʿalayhim al-kawn wa-ḥāla ʿalayhim al-ḥawl” (al-Kharrāz 1967, p. 184). The translation of such a statement is challenging. One possible translation could be as follows: “those are the people of abstraction. The universe disappears from them, and their power drains from them.” On another occasion, al-Kharrāz defines the ambiguity of the concept of rūḥ in a very ambiguous language: “baqāʾ al-rūḥ fī thalāthati ashyāʾ wa-hiya: baqāʾuhu fī al-ʿilm al-sābiq wa-baqāʾuhu fī al-ʿilm al-azal wa-baqāʾuhu fī al-ʿilm al-abad” (al-Kharrāz 1967, p. 194). The translation is not correct unless one identifies the differences between the three words conveying “eternal”, “primordial”, or “infinite”, which are challenging by themselves. “The subsistence of rūḥ is in three matters: in the primordial science, in the science of infinity, and in the science of eternity”. This writing style correlates with al-Junayd’s writing style in his Letters where he barely quotes from others while collecting his own notions on sophisticated themes. Throughout his Letters, al-Junayd attempts to put his cosmological doctrines into enigmatic formulations which are fraught with the ambiguous use of pronouns and metaphors. One example reads as follows: “afnānī bi-inshāʾī ka-mā anshānī badyan fī ḥāli fanāʾī” (He destroyed me by creating me in the same way He created me at first when I was in a state of fanāʾ) (al-Junayd al-Baghdādī 1962, Arabic, p. 32. The English translation is mine). By using paradoxes and ambiguous structures, al-Junayd establishes his elitist theoretical discourse. From another perspective, he is also eager to show how this theoretical discourse exists contemporaneously with Sufi adherence to Muslim law and uncompromising commitment to God’s rights (al-Junayd al-Baghdādī 1962, pp. 29, 47).
- The second category is that of sayings whose focus is on Sufi lexicon, ecstatic states and expressions, and distinctive Sufi rituals. This category is widespread in Sufi textbooks of the fourth/tenth and fifth/eleventh centuries and genuinely mirrors the stage of consolidating the collective Sufi identity covering different types of sayings: Sufi commentary on the Qurʾān, sayings on the virtues of the group of Sufi brothers, and didactic sayings whose focus is on the manners of behavior to which members of the Sufi community need to adhere. As previously mentioned, sayings of this category are not restricted to this historical stage; however, they are found in great numbers in the textbooks of this stage: Al-Sarrāj’s detailed chapter on the Sufi lexicon (al-Sarrāj al-Ṭūsī 1914, pp. 333–74); al-Qushayrī’s chapters on Sufi jargon (al-Qushayrī 2017, pp. 231–94); al-Qushayrī’s long chapters on the different ranks of the Sufi route of ascent (al-Qushayrī 2017, pp. 295–670); and many others. These all are remarkable in their contribution to the establishment of a collective Sufi identity.
- The third category covers sayings that appeared and were extensively transmitted from the sixth/twelfth century onwards. These are sayings that pay less attention to ecstatic states, expressions, and Sufi jargon in general. Instead, they primarily celebrate the communal–institutional aspects of Sufi activities including Sufi rituals, the hierarchies of initiation to the Sufi path, and the polar opposite opinions that existed between masters. Two sample works are mentioned here: ʿAwārif al-maʿārif (Beneficences of Knowledge(s)), the magnum opus of Abū Ḥafṣ ʿUmar al-Suhrawardī (d. 632/1234), the influential master of Baghdad, and Kitāb al-Ḥikam (The Book of Aphorisms), the most widely known work of the seventh/thirteenth century Sufi master, Ibn ʿAṭāʾ Allāh al-Iskandarī (d. 709/1310). This was a time when many Sufi fraternities flourished. Al-Suhrawardī was the eponym of the Suhrawardiyya that flourished after his death, while Ibn ʿAṭāʾ was the son of a student of the Sheikh Abū al-Ḥasan al-Shādhilī, the founder of the Shadhiliyya ṭarīqa. Both works had a great impact on Sufi followers in different territories and periods of the Islamic world. The focus of al-Suhrawardī’s work is on life within the boundaries of Sufi communities, their ethical system, functions, and relationships. This is why he gathers a large number of sayings from throughout the centuries that focus on ethics and relationships with masters and fellows. The chapter on Sufi jargon appears only at the end of al-Suharawardī’s work. As for Ibn ʿAṭāʾ’s work, it is a collection of 262 incisive aphorisms written in a form of terse maxims in Arabic prose which is often rhymed and designed to instruct the wayfarer through the path of knowledge and purification. The impact of this work was immense, and many commentaries on it were published throughout the centuries. The following quotation illustrates how he could connect emotional themes and gracious language and have it successfully reach all kinds of people regardless their level of education: “lā tarḥal min kawn ilā kawn fa-takūn ka-ḥimār al-raḥā yasīr, wa-lladhī irtaḥala ilayhi huwa alladhī irtaḥala ʿanhu, wa-lākin irḥal min al-akwān ilā al-mukawwin” (“Travel not from creature to creature, otherwise you will be like a donkey at the mill: roundabout he turns, his goal the same as his departure. Rather, go from creatures to the Creator”) (Ibn ʿAṭāʾ 1969, pp. 132–33; for the English translation, Ibn ʿAṭāʾ 1984, p. 31). On another occasion, Ibn ʿAṭāʾ writes the following: “It is better for you to keep company with an ignorant man dissatisfied with himself than to keep company with a learned man satisfied with himself. For what knowledge is there in a self-satisfied scholar? And what ignorance is there in an unlearned man dissatisfied with himself?” (Ibn ʿAṭāʾ 1984, pp. 29–30). In this statement, Ibn ʿAṭāʾ uses contrariness to severely criticize hypocritical religious scholars whose ostentation contradicts the sincerity and modesty expected from them.
6. Ecstatic Expressions (shaṭaḥāt)
7. Elaborating on the Didactic Outlines of Sufi Sayings
- Sayings that take the form of terse definitions of certain mystical terms that have nothing to do with Sufi practices. “Love is pleasure (ladhdha) and the site of the [divine] reality (ḥaqīqa) is bewilderment (dahsh)”. This saying is attributed by al-Qushayrī to Abū ʿAlī al-Daqqāq (d. ca. 405/1015) (al-Qushayrī 2017, p. 653; Knysh 2007, p. 328). Such sayings were the building blocks of Sufi dictionaries that were included in early textbooks on Sufism written in the fourth/tenth and fifth/eleventh centuries. Later on, they circulated as separate books whose language and formal characteristics have been thoroughly examined by Carl Ernst (Ernst 1992, pp. 181–201). In such Sufi dictionaries, definitions of Sufi terms were not designed to facilitate their understanding for outsiders but rather to conceal it from outsiders and restrict it to those who had already had mystical experiences.
- Sayings that take the form of comparisons or categorizations of degrees and stages. The most common are threefold categorizations, but twofold ones are also present in Sufi textbooks. As an example, one can quote Sahl al-Tustarī (d. ca. 283/896), who said the following: “Unveiling is the beginning of certainty (yaqīn) […] then comes direct witnessing and contemplation [of God] (muʿāyana wa-mushāhada)” (al-Qushayrī 2017, p. 432; Knysh 2007, p. 193). Sayings that differentiate between two levels of the same state are very frequent; the first level is the domain of the “ordinary folk” (al-ʿāmma, or al-ʿawāmm), whereas the second, more advanced and preferable state belongs to the spiritual elite (al-khāṣṣa, or al-khawāṣṣ) (al-Qushayrī 2017, p. 478; Knysh 2007, p. 221). This two-level understanding can also refer to the different levels between renunciants (zuhhād) and mystics or between beginner Sufis (murīdūn) and those who obtained the sublime degree of divine knowledge (gnostics, ʿārifūn) (al-Qushayrī 2017, p. 479; Knysh 2007, p. 221).
- Sayings that quote Qurʾānic verses. They are used to describe certain Sufi conditions and states. On one occasion of Kitāb al-Lumaʿ, al-Sarrāj quotes al-Nūrī’s definition of the term maḥw (effacement; loss of the human volition) (Renard 2005, p. 268) in which the latter relies on one part of Q. 13:39 (al-Sarrāj al-Ṭūsī 1914, p. 355).
- Sayings that focus on Sufi praxis. In these sayings, a master, usually responding to a question, recounts how he succeeded in mastering a particular Sufi state. State (ḥāl) is a spiritual experience usually characterized as fleeting and irretrievable (Renard 2005, pp. 227–28). Commonly based on autobiographical accounts, these sayings provide practical tips for Sufi training; for example, “When Ḥātim al-Aṣamm (d. 237/852) was asked how he had obtained wisdom, he answered: ‘through minimizing food intake, sleeping and speaking’” (al-Sīrjānī 2019, p. 8).
- Sayings that include dreams and visions. These can be both autobiographical and biographical (al-Sīrjānī 2019, p. 7; Abū Nuʿaym 1974, vol. 10, p. 347: the biography of Abū Muḥammad al-Jurayrī).
- Sayings that include autobiographical anecdotes, generally implying renunciatory customs. Thus, we hear Abū Yazīd say the following: “I did not eat anything people eat for forty years” (al-Sīrjānī 2019, p. 13) or the famous anecdote about Ibrāhīm al-Ḫawwāṣ (d. ca. 291/904) whose constant diarrhea did not prevent him from regularly performing the ritual ablution until he drowned in an ablution pool (al-Qushayrī 2017, p. 631).
- Sayings that focus on ethical behavior and take the form of a positive command or negative prohibition. Sometimes, these sayings come in the form of advice or counsel (waṣiyya). Al-Junayd was reported to have said the following: “O’ young man! commit yourself to religious science even when you are granted the mystical states” (al-Sīrjānī 2019, p. 29).
- Sayings that celebrate Sufi piety and Sufis, sometimes at the expense of other groups: “No group is more honorable than this one [the Sufis!] whose science is the most honorable of all sciences” (al-Sīrjānī 2019, p. 32).
- Sayings that relate to cosmological themes such as the creation of the world, the cosmic aspects of the intellect (ʿaql), the Prophet Muḥammad, the human being, spirit (rūḥ), and the lower soul (nafs).
- Sayings focusing on theological issues such as to what part of the human being will be rewarded or punished on the day or resurrection: body, spirit, or both? (al-Sīrjānī 2019, p. 392).
8. Conclusions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Salamah-Qudsi, A. Between Words and Worlds: Masters’ Sayings in Early Sufi Literature. Religions 2024, 15, 933. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15080933
Salamah-Qudsi A. Between Words and Worlds: Masters’ Sayings in Early Sufi Literature. Religions. 2024; 15(8):933. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15080933
Chicago/Turabian StyleSalamah-Qudsi, Arin. 2024. "Between Words and Worlds: Masters’ Sayings in Early Sufi Literature" Religions 15, no. 8: 933. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15080933
APA StyleSalamah-Qudsi, A. (2024). Between Words and Worlds: Masters’ Sayings in Early Sufi Literature. Religions, 15(8), 933. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15080933