SUFISM
The Transformation of the Heart
by Llewellyn Vaughan-Lee
TABLE OF CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION
Chapter 1: The Longing of the Heart
Chapter 2: Sufi Practices: the Dhikr and Meditation
Chapter 3: Polishing the Mirror of the Heart
Chapter 4: Dreamwork
Chapter 5: The Relationship with the Teacher
Chapter 6: Uniting the Two Worlds
Chapter 7: Abiding in God
The following is an excerpt from the introduction of this book.
INTRODUCTION
Sufism is truth without form.
- Ibn El-Jalali
THE JOURNEY FROM SEPARATION TO UNION
Sufism is a mystical path of love in which God, or Truth, is experienced
as the Beloved. The inner relationship of lover and Beloved is the core
of theSufi path. Through love the seeker is taken to God. The mystic seeks
to realize Truth in this life and God reveals Himself within the hearts
of those who love Him.
The mystical experience of God is a state of oneness with God. This unio
mystica is the goal of the traveller, or wayfarer, on the mystical
path. Within the heart, lover and Beloved unite in love's ecstasy. The
wayfarer begins the journey with a longingfor this state of oneness. The
longing is born from the soul's memory that it has come from God. The
soul remembers that its real home is with God and awakens the seeker
with this memory. The spiritual journey is a journey that takes us back
home, from separation to union. We have come from God and we return to
God.
The mystical journey home is a journey inward, to the very center of
our being, where the Beloved is eternally present. He whom we seek is
none other than our own eternal nature. Saint Augustine said, "Return
within yourself, for in the inward man dwells Truth." The mystic
experiences that the Beloved dwells within the mystic's heart, not as
a concept but as a living reality. In the depths of the heart there is
no separation between the lover and the Beloved. Here we are eternally
united with God, and the mystical experience of union is a revelation
of what is always present.
The greatest obstacle that keeps us from experiencing this eternal state
of union is the ego, our own personal identity. In the state of union
there is no ego. In this moment the individual self ceases to exist and
only the Beloved exists. The Sufi says, "The Beloved is living, the
lover is dead." Thus the Sufi aspires to "die before death,"
to transcend the personal self and experience our transcendent divine
nature. The eleventh-century Sufi, Ansârî, expressed this
very simply:
Know that when you learn to lose yourself,
you will reach the Beloved.
There is no other secret to be learnt,
and more than that is not known to me.
The mystical journey leads us away from the ego towards the Self,from
separation back to union. Turning away from the ego and turning back to
God, we are led deep within ourself, to the inner most center of our being,
what the Sufis term the "heart of hearts." This is an individual
journey of the seeker back to the source, of the "alone to the Alone."
Yet there are stages on this journey, "valleys of the quest,"
through which each traveller passes. The Sufi masters have provided us
witha map describing these stages and also the difficulties and dangers
of the path. Having reached the goal, they are able to help other wayfarers
by recording what may be expected along the way.
Sufism also provides certain techniques to open us to the innerworld
and keep our attention focused on our invisible goal. Foremost among these
is the practice of remembrance, for the Sufi aspires to remember God in
every moment, with each and every breath. This is not a mental remembrance,
but a remembrance of the heart, for it is the heart which holds the higher
consciousness of theSelf. The Self is the part of us which is never separate
from God, and the consciousness of the Self is a quality of knowing
that we are one with God. The practice of remembrance is a way of
awakening the consciousness of the Self, and thus becoming aware of our
inner union with Him whom we love.
If you love someone you always think of them, and when the soul's love
for God is awakened within the heart, the lover's attention is turned
towards the Beloved. The moment of spiritual awakening is tauba,
"repentance," which the Sufis describe as "the turning
of the heart." The moment of tauba is always an act of grace, a gift
from the Beloved, but Sufism has developed techniques for keeping our
attention on the soul's love for God, on the heart's remembrance. One
of these techniques is the dhikr, the repetition of one of the
names of God. Through the practice of the dhikr the attentionof
the lover is turned towards God and the whole being of the lover becomes
permeated with the joy of remembering the Beloved.
The Sufi path helps to make us aware of the divine consciousness of the
Self that is found within the heart, and at the same time guides us away
from the limited consciousness of the ego. The journey from the ego to
the Self is the eternal journey of the soul, of the exile returning home.
In this world we have forgotten our real nature and identify with the
ego. The journey home frees us from the grip of the ego and the illusory
nature of its desires. We are led to the real fulfillment that can only
come from knowing what we really are, tasting the truth of our divine
essence. When one Sufi master, Dhû-l-Nûn, was asked, "What
is the end of the mystic?" he answered, "When he is as he was
where he was before he was." (1)
Every spiritual path leads the sincere seeker to the truth that can only
be found within. The Sufi says that there are as many roads to God as
there are human beings, "as many as the breaths of the children of
men." Because we are each individual and unique, the journey of discovering
our real nature will be different for each of us. At the same time different
spiritual paths are suited to different types of people. Sufism is suited
to those who need to realize their relationship with God as a love affair,
who need to be drawn by the thread of love and longing back to their Beloved.
THE ANCIENT WISDOM
Sufi is a name given to a band of mystics who are lovers of God. There
is an ancient story about a group of lovers who were called "Kamal
Posh" (blanket wearers), thought by some to be early Sufis. Their
only individual possessions were their single blankets, which they wore
during the day and wrapped around themselves at night. They went to every
prophet. No one could satisfy them. Every prophet told them, do this or
that, and they were not satisfied. One day Mohammed said that Kamal Posh
men were coming and that they would arrive in so many days. They came
on the day he said and, when they were with him, he only looked at them
without speaking. They were completely satisfied. Why were they completely
satisfied? Because he created love in their hearts. "When love is
created what dissatisfaction can there be?"(2)
Sufism is the ancient wisdom of the heart. It is not limited by form,
by time or place. It always was and it always will be. There will always
be those who need to realize God as the Beloved. There will always be
lovers of God. The Kamal Posh recognized that Mohammed knew the silent
mysteries of love. They stayed with him and became assimilated into Islam.
Islam literally means "surrender" and, while the esoteric side
of Islam teaches the outer religious law of surrender to God, there developed
an inner esoteric side which teaches of the lover's surrender to the Beloved.
A century after the death of the Prophet, small groups known as "Lovers
of God" began to emerge throughout the Muslim world. They were also
known as "Travellers" or "Wayfarers on the Mystical path,"
reflecting a saying ascribed to the Prophet:
Be in this world as if you are a traveller, a passerby, with your clothes and shoes full of dust. Sometimes you sit under the shade of a tree, sometimes you walk in the desert. Be always a passerby, for this is not home.
Later these "Wayfarers" became known as Sufis, possibly referring
to their white woolen garments (sûf),or as an indication
of their purity of heart (safâ).
These small groups of Sufis gathered around their teacher, or sheikh.
The inner teachings of the path are transmitted from teacher to disciple.
Each teacher guides his disciples accordingto the principles he has received
from his teacher. The essence of the teaching is not verbal, but a direct
communion from heart to heart. The Kamal Posh stayed with Mohammed
because he created love in their hearts, and it is the inner communionof
the heart that is the core of the Sufi path. The relationship of lover
and Beloved is reflected in the relationship with the teacher who guides
his disciples, or murshids, with an openness of heart and an understanding
of the mysteries of love.
At the core of all Sufi practices is the element of love and devotion.
Devotion is the inner attitude of the lover, and the nature of the Sufi
path is devotional. The Sufi aspires to give herself to God as a lover
to her Beloved. Devotion is an opening of the heart to the grace that
flows through love. It is an attitude of surrender in which the ego and
the mind are surrendered to a mystery beyond their comprehension. In giving
ourself to God we allow Him to take us Home, and the quickest way is through
the door of love. In the words of al-Qushayri, "The inner reality
of love means that you give all of yourself to the One until nothing remains
of you for you." (3)
It is said that there are two ways of attracting God's attention. Either
we make ourself perfect and then He has to love us, or we give ourself
to Him and then He cannot resist our need to be with Him. The attitude
of devotion is an offering of our whole self to Him whom we love. This
inner offering is a dynamic state of surrender which attracts the higher
energies of love. Just as in nature a vacuum is always filled, so is the
inner emptiness of surrender filled with His presence.
In the West we have tended to associate surrender with subservience and
have lost touch with its hidden power. Surrender creates an empty space
within the psyche which allows us to experience the power of the Self
without being overwhelmed or inflated. Sufi practices are designed to
help us to surrender, and to realize that we are contained by something
far beyond the limited horizons of the mind and ego. Stepping into the
inner spaces of our own being we are able to experience the potency of
His love for His servant.
Sufism has explored the ways of love and developed means to help the
seeker travel this invisible and yet powerful path. Because the purpose
of the path is to reveal the inner essence of the wayfarer, Sufism stays
attuned to humanity. The deepest nature of mankind remains the same and
yet surface changes take place. It is said that Sufism has stayed alive
and preserved its dynamism through adapting and changing with the times
and yet at the same time remaining true to the essence of the tradition.
The essence of the tradition is the inner alignment of the heart towards
God, and the surrender of the ego that allows His will to be done. But
outwardly, as society and culture develop and change, so does Sufism respond
to these changes.
Notes from Chapter One
1. Quoted by A.J. Arberry, The Doctrine of the Sufis, p. 152.
2. Told in Daughter of Fire, by Irina Tweedie, pp. 382-3
3. Quoted by al-Qushayrî, Principles of Sufism, p.330
Bibliography from Chapter One
Arberry, Arthur J. The Doctrine of the Sufis. Lahore: Sh.Muhammad Ashraf, 1966.
Al-Qushayri. Principles of Sufism. Trans. B.B. Von Schlegel.Berkley: Mizan Press, 1990.
Tweedie, Irina. Daughter of Fire, a Diary of a Spiritual Training with a
Sufi Master. Inverness: The Golden Sufi Center Publishing,1995.
Acknowledgments from Chapter One
For permission to use copyrighted material, the author gratefully wishes
to acknowledge: Mizan Press for permission to quote from Principles
of Sufism by al-Qushayri.
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