Dead Men Talking: Ibn ‘Arabī’s Interactions with Messengers and Saints
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Ibn ‘Arabī’s Audiences with Prophets and Messengers
2.1. First Milestone: Renunciation of Worldly Life and Adoption of the Spiritual Path
A Mūsawī friend of God may emphasize the Law, justice, or display a radiant countenance as did Moses, while the ‘Īsawī tends to accentuate the spiritual path of Islam or Sufism, mercy, and inwardness. The Muḥammadan saint generally combines in his or her teachings and presence an emphasis on both the Law or the outward (al-ẓāhir), and the spiritual path or the inward (al-bāṭin). (Markwith 2015, p. 90)
Whoever it would please to see someone resembling (shabīh) ‘Īsā ibn Maryam, in terms of outward form (khalqan) and disposition (khuluqan), let them see Abū Dharr [al-Ghifārī], may God be pleased with him’. (Ṭabarānī 1994, vol. 2, p. 149)
The idea that Muḥammad verifies, authenticates the messages brought by former prophets has the advantage of being attested in the Qur’ān. … The understanding which carries the most direct praise for Muḥammad, and should therefore be given closer consideration than it has hitherto received, is “the best prophet”. (Friedmann 1986, p. 214)
The [final] Hour will not be established until close to thirty lying devils (dajjālūn kadhdhābūn) emerge, each of them claiming that he is a prophet while there is no prophet after me, and I am the seal of the prophets. (Ibn Sallām 2004, vol. 2, p. 723)
If you ask: Who has the right to be the seal of the saints (khātam al-awliyā’), just as Muḥammad, peace be upon him, is the seal of the prophets? We would say in response: ‘The seal’ is actually two seals: A seal through which God seals sainthood absolutely (‘ala’l-iṭlāq), and a seal through which He seals Muḥammadan sainthood (al-wilāya al-muḥammadiyya). As for the seal of (absolute) sainthood, it is ‘Īsā, peace be upon him, for he is a saint with absolute prophethood (al-nubuwwa al-muṭlaqa) in the time of this nation, legislative prophethood (nubuwwa al-tashrī‘) and messengerhood has become inaccessible to him. He will thus descend in the end of days as an heir, a seal. There will be no saint with absolute prophethood [after him], just as Muḥammad, peace be upon him, is the seal of prophets, there is no legislative prophethood after him. (Ibn ‘Arabī n.d.a, vol. 12, pp. 119–20)
As the seal of absolute sainthood, ‘Īsā was the leader of the saints, and the Muḥammadan seal participated in his spirituality, as Ibn ‘Arabī made clear. This is the reason Ibn ‘Arabī was so profoundly influenced by ‘Īsā and why he was present at every major milestone on his spiritual journey to becoming the Muḥammadan Seal of Saints.So (‘Īsā) will descend as a saint with absolute [non-legislative] prophethood, within which the Muḥammadan saints will participate, so he is from among us, and he is our leader! … So there will be two resurrections for him on the Day of Resurrection: a resurrection with us, and a resurrection with the messengers and prophets. (Ibn ‘Arabī n.d.a, vol. 12, p. 120)
2.2. First Major Temptation: Family in Need
2.3. Most Significant Milestone: Formal Anointment as the Seal of Muḥammadan Sainthood
The reason for their meeting was naturally to confer on Ibn ‘Arabī the rank of being the seal of Muḥammadan sainthood (Addas [1989] 1993, pp. 75–76). The fact that it was Hūd who informs him of this is not incidental.Know that when God allowed me to behold and bear witness to the essences (a‘yān) of His messengers, peace be upon them, and all His prophets of humankind from Ādam to Muḥammad, peace be upon them, in a vision, I was in Cordoba in the year 586 AH. No one from among that group talked to me except Hūd, peace be upon him, who told me the reason for their gathering. (Ibn ‘Arabī 2002, p. 110)
The fact that there are two particles of comparison side by side in the part-verse (kāf and mithl) is usually chalked up to a redundancy by most linguists. However, Ibn ‘Arabī disagrees because this would mean that God is delimited by being directly contrasted to that which is delimited, i.e., the creation. His logic goes like this:His [God’s] saying, ‘There is nothing like Him’ (laysa ka mithlihī shay’) [Qur’an 42:11] is still imposing a delimitation (ḥadd) if we take ‘like’ (kāf) [the first of two participles of comparison along with mithl] as being superfluous (zā’ida) to denoting a negation of the description. [This is because] he who is contrasted to what is delimited is likewise delimited, since he is not the delimited thing. So being free from delimitation is delimitation (Ibn ‘Arabī 2002, p. 111).
- (1)
- There is no thing like Him.
- (2)
- A thing is delimited.
- (3)
- Thus, God is delimited by being other than that thing. He is therefore a thing but just not that thing.
2.4. Ibn ‘Arabī’s Juristic and Personal Interactions with Prophet Muḥammad
I saw the Messenger of God, peace be upon him, in the year 590 AH in a dream in Tlemecen [Algeria], while it had reached me from a man that he had fallen out with others about the spiritual master Abū Madyan—and Abū Madyan was of the greatest of gnostics (‘ārifīn)—and I believed in him and I knew of his state from spiritual insight (baṣīra). So I began to dislike that man for his dislike of the spiritual master Abū Madyan.
The Messenger of God, peace be upon him, said to me ‘Why do you dislike so-and-so?’ I replied, ‘Due to his dislike of Abū Madyan’. He asked me, ‘Does he not love God, and love me?’ I answered him, ‘Yes, O Messenger of God! Surely He loves God and loves you’. So he said, ‘Why do you then dislike him for his dislike of Abū Madyan and do not love him for his love of God and His messenger?’ I replied to him, ‘O Messenger of God! I have surely made a mistake and been heedless. Now I repent, and from now on he is of those people most beloved to me. Indeed, you have cautioned me and advised me, may blessings be upon you’.
So when I woke up, I grabbed the extremely expensive clothes that I had, or items, I don’t remember which, and I rode to his house and informed him of what occurred. He wept and accepted the gift, and took the vision as admonition (tanbīh) from God, so the dislike he had for Abū Madyan disappeared, and he began to love him.
I wanted to know the reason of his dislike of Abū Madyan, despite the fact that he had acknowledged that Abū Madyan was a righteous man, so I asked him. He replied, ‘I was him in Béjaïa [Algeria] when meat came to him from the Eid sacrifices. He distributed it to his companions and did not give me any of it. That was the reason for my disliking him and disparaging him. I have now repented. Just look at how wonderful the instruction of the Prophet, peace be upon him is! (Ibn ‘Arabī n.d.a, vol. 4, pp. 498–99)
3. Ibn ‘Arabī’s Audiences with Spiritual Masters and Others
3.1. Interactions with Al-Khiḍr
3.2. Interactions with Masters for Enquiries in the Spiritual World
3.3. Interactions with Masters for Enquiries in the Sensible World
3.3.1. Interaction with Al-Sulamī
Suddenly, the shadow of a person appeared, so I got up from my bed and went to it that I may find freedom from my grief (faraj). It embraced me and I looked carefully at it (ta’ammaltuh): it was Abū ‘Abd al-Raḥmān al-Sulamī whose spirit had corporealised (tajassadat) for me. God had sent him to me as a mercy for me. I said to him, ‘I see that you are [also] in this station’. He replied, ‘In it [i.e., this place] was my soul seized, and upon it [i.e., this station] did I die, so I will continue to be in it’. I mentioned to him my loneliness (waḥsha) and lack of close friend (anīs) in it. He remarked, ‘the foreigner (gharīb) always feels lonely. After divine providence (al-‘ināya al-ilāhiyya) has already granted you this station, praise God. And who else, O brother, is granted this? Does it not please you that Al-Khiḍr is your companion in this station?’ (Ibn ‘Arabī n.d.a, vol. 2, p. 261)
3.3.2. Interaction with the Son of Hārūn al-Rashīd
4. Communication with the Dead in Pre-Modern Sunni Islam
5. Conclusions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
1 | There is a difference of opinion as to what the distinction is between prophets and messengers. While the latter are generally regarded to be of a higher rank than the former, the reasons for this vary. Some believe that while prophets only receive divine revelation, messengers have the added responsibility of propagating God’s religion as well (Marjūnī 2012, p. 310). The distinction between them lies beyond the scope of this study in which the two terms are largely used interchangeably. |
2 | On the five planes of existence according to Ibn ‘Arabī and his followers, see William Chittick, ‘The Five Divine Presences’ (Chittick 1982). |
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Lala, I. Dead Men Talking: Ibn ‘Arabī’s Interactions with Messengers and Saints. Religions 2024, 15, 504. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15040504
Lala I. Dead Men Talking: Ibn ‘Arabī’s Interactions with Messengers and Saints. Religions. 2024; 15(4):504. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15040504
Chicago/Turabian StyleLala, Ismail. 2024. "Dead Men Talking: Ibn ‘Arabī’s Interactions with Messengers and Saints" Religions 15, no. 4: 504. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15040504
APA StyleLala, I. (2024). Dead Men Talking: Ibn ‘Arabī’s Interactions with Messengers and Saints. Religions, 15(4), 504. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15040504