Miracles and the Holy Spirit in the Sufi Metaphysics of ʿAbd al-Karīm al-Jīlī
Abstract
1. The Miracles of the Saints in Sufism
2. Miracles in Yemeni Sufism
3. Al-Jīlī on Miracles and the Holy Spirit
3.1. Terminology
3.2. The Holy Spirit
3.2.1. The Uncreatedness of the Holy Spirit
3.2.2. The Holy Spirit as the Medium by Which God Brings Creation into Existence
3.2.3. The All-Pervasiveness of the Holy Spirit
3.2.4. The Appearance of the Holy Spirit in Man
4. Miracles and the Three Kinds of Human Beings
4.1. Those Dominated by Their Physical Form
4.2. Those Dominated by Spiritual Things
4.3. Those Dominated by Divine Things
5. Miracles, the Holy Spirit, Jesus, and Muhammad
6. Conclusions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
| 1 | Besides the contexts just mentioned, Brown observes that saintly miracles were “integral” to the spread of Islam in South Asia, and, conversely, that they “seem to have played less of a role in West Africa” (Brown 2012, pp. 129–30). |
| 2 | For al-Jīlī’s interest in saintly miracles, see, for instance, his discussion of the topic in his commentary on the penultimate chapter of Ibn ʿArabī’s al-Futūḥāt al-Makkiyyah (al-Jīlī 1999, pp. 152–53, 200). |
| 3 | Al-Jīlī’s conception of wahm, it should be noted, seems to be closer to Ibn Sīnā’s than to that of Ibn ʿArabī. As Nicholson observes, al-Jīlī sees wahm as “the faculty whereby things are judged intuitively to be what they really are” (Nicholson 1921, p. 117, n. 1). For Ibn ʿArabī and his commentators, by contrast, the term often signifies an imaginative “fantasy” or “illusion” (see e.g., Chittick 1989, pp. 122, 343; Qayṣarī 2020, p. 153). For Ibn Sīnā’s conception of the faculty of estimation, see McGinnis (2009, pp. 99–100, 110–115). |
| 4 | For Ibn ʿArabī’s notion of the “breath of the All-Merciful”, see Nettler (2003, p. 118). For Ibn ʿArabī’s theory of “ontological mercy”, see Izutsu (1983, pp. 116–40). |
| 5 | According to Nicholson (1921, p. vi), “the Mohammedan Logos doctrine … is the real subject of Insánu ‘l-Kámil”. For “Ibnul ‘Arabí’s Doctrine of the Logos”, see Affifi (1939, pp. 66–101). |
| 6 | In the chapter on the heart (chapter fifty-two), al-Jīlī says that the human heart is also described in the Qurʾan as “the spirit of God which was breathed into the spirit of Adam when He says, ‘And I breathed into him of My spirit’ (al-Jīlānī 1876, 2:15; Nicholson 1921, p. 113). |
| 7 | |
| 8 | |
| 9 | |
| 10 | For further detail, see Morrissey (forthcoming). |
| 11 | In the Fuṣūṣ, Ibn ʿArabī cites Abū Yazīd al-Bisṭāmī’s reported ability to revive a dead ant by breathing on it as testimony to Abū Yazīd’s “Jesus-like” status (Ibn ʿArabī 1946, p. 142). |
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Morrissey, F. Miracles and the Holy Spirit in the Sufi Metaphysics of ʿAbd al-Karīm al-Jīlī. Religions 2025, 16, 1423. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16111423
Morrissey F. Miracles and the Holy Spirit in the Sufi Metaphysics of ʿAbd al-Karīm al-Jīlī. Religions. 2025; 16(11):1423. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16111423
Chicago/Turabian StyleMorrissey, Fitzroy. 2025. "Miracles and the Holy Spirit in the Sufi Metaphysics of ʿAbd al-Karīm al-Jīlī" Religions 16, no. 11: 1423. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16111423
APA StyleMorrissey, F. (2025). Miracles and the Holy Spirit in the Sufi Metaphysics of ʿAbd al-Karīm al-Jīlī. Religions, 16(11), 1423. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16111423
