Friday, April 19, 2013
Friday, April 12, 2013
In Search of Wisdom
OUR age needs to rediscover the lost cultural resonance with the
revealed words of God, which were spoken to the human species by a series of
chosen prophets.
It has become ever more
pertinent to reconnect with this common heritage of prophetic wisdom from all
religious traditions of the world. This is a curious soul’s well-justified need
based upon the past 300 years of man’s misconstrued historical progress modelled
after a materialistic heaven on earth.
One can visibly see the social
devastation gradually unleashed by the forces of unabated materialism on human
cultures, on nature and on the earth in general.
What were the common attributes
of the great prophets of the past? Firstly, they all were deeply connected with
God. They showed a method to all human beings for an inward connectivity with
God. They taught that an inner discovery of God can be witnessed if one knows
how to invoke divine mercy.
The method these prophets
taught was prayer and hymn. They taught men and women to call out to God at
every instant of their lives, over and above the specific times of prayer and
worship. The prophets taught everyone to look into the mechanisms of one’s ego.
The application of this simple reflective technique would reveal the beauty of
God.
The Quran has testified to this
inner psychological connectivity when it states that God is nearer to man than
his jugular vein.
The second attribute common to
all the prophets and wise men was their unanimous and unequivocal refutation of
evil and a programme for a simple, moral life.
Just look at the life of
Gautama Buddha. He laid the foundations of a simple life. He advised his
disciples not to harm any living creature on earth, plants and insects
included, take care of fellow human beings and spend a life of reflection,
self-control and meditation.
Now look at the life of Prophet
Moses. He challenged the tyrannical rule of the pharaoh over Bani Israel. He
asked the pharaoh to stop his atrocities and injustices targeting the Children
of Israel otherwise he would face dire consequences. Moses was successful in
achieving liberation for his tribe, who were suffering under the slavery of an
unjust Egyptian king.
Moses always asked his people
to pray to God, eat permissible food and be kind to parents. The great prophet
would ask his tribesmen to engage in prayers at home and invoke the glorious
names of God day and night.
Now just reflect on the words
“jugular vein” employed in the Quranic verse. These are symbolic in both
meaning and context. The safety and continuity of human life depends upon the
healthy functioning of the jugular vein. Similarly, the spiritual and
psychological sustainability of a person totally depends upon inner reflection
on God.
The inner peace and harmony
which has disappeared from contemporary civilisation can be restored if mankind
could find its lost jugular vein, which is nothing else but a reflective
reunion with our inner essence.
The revealed words of the Quran
with which it opens its discourse with human beings are Bismillah ir Rahman ir
Raheem, (In the name of Allah, the Most Gracious, the Most Merciful). The Holy
Book introduces human beings to a God who is merciful and kind and closer to
his soul than his jugular vein. These are the two defining attributes of God’s
‘personality’ in the Quran. In Surah al-Anam, God says that He has “prescribed
mercy for Himself”. On the basis of the scholarly authority of Shaikh Abdul
Qadir Gilani in his book Ghuniya-tu-Talibeen (the objective of seekers), a
hadith has been narrated by him, in which the Prophet Muhammad (PBUH) has
reportedly said that this single verse of the Quran was brought to him by the
archangel Gabriel who was accompanied by a procession of 75,000 angels brightly
dressed in divine light.
Therefore, anyone hoping to
seek God inwardly must invoke His infinite mercy and boundless generosity. All
worldly mercies and generosities shown by human beings to each other are
nothing but the smallest drop taken from the boundless ocean of divine mercy.
These inspired words of the
Quran teach us a simple reflective psychological technique to uncover the
centre of our soul. Once one gets access to the centre of one’s soul, one
becomes quiet and calm and is in harmony with one’s inner world. All historical
contradictions and psychological conflicts evaporate into thin air.
The symbol of the jugular vein
tellingly uncovers our biological programming to us. It exposes the biological
necessity to connect our egos spiritually with God. The symbol of the jugular
vein tells us that God has not abandoned us. One can rely in one’s moments of
joy and crisis, in rejection, in loss and loneliness, only on God. That calling
out to Him and Him alone, incessantly, repeatedly, purifies us.
Then why run after the optical
illusion of an earthly heaven, populated with the idols of greed, vulgarity,
falsehood, lust and inequality?
Prophetic wisdom is nothing
else but a lost treasure of mankind. It has never left the human ego because of
its unique biological programming of being closest to and nearest to God.
The smoke of greed, which has
been rising from the chimneys of technological civilisation for the last 300
years, has just marred this inner mirror. The mirror is there, the light is
there. We need to take a small first step and see the difference.
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