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GULSHAN-I RÂZ
گلشن راز
The
Mystic Rose Garden
SHEIKH MAHMÛD
SHABISTARI
Edited
by: Dr. Necati Aksu
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INTRODUCTION.
THE Gulshan i Raz was composed in A.H. 717 (A.D. 1317), in
answer to fifteen questions on the doctrines of the Sufis, or Muhamrnadan
Mystics, propounded by Amir Syad Hosaini,1
a celebrated Sufi doctor of Herat. The author's name was Sa'd ud din Mahinud
Shabistari, so called from his birth-place, Shabistar,2
a village near Tabriz, in the province of Azarbaijan. From a brief notice of his
life in the Mujalis ul 'Ushshak, repeated in substance in the Haft Iklim, the
Sajina i Khushgu, and the Riaz ush Slniara, it would appear that he was bom
about the middle of the seventh century of the Hejira (A.D. 1250), and that he
died at Tabriz, where he had passed the greater part of his life, in A.H. 720.
The only particulars of his life recorded in these Tazkiras are, that he was
devotedly attached to one of his disciples named Shaikh Ibrahim, and that in
addition to the Gulshan i Raz he wrote treatises entitled Hakk ul Yakin and
Risala i Shahid. No further information as to the circumstances of his life and
times is to be found in the poem itself or in the commentary, but we know from
the Habib us Siyar and other chronicles3
that his birth was about contemporaneous with the incursion of the heathen
Moghuls under Hulaku Khan, the conquest of Persia, Syria and Mesopotamia, and
the downfall cf the Abbaside Khalifs, or " Vicars of God." And living as he did
at Tabriz, the capital of the newly established Moghul Empire, he must have
witnessed the long struggle which ensued between the Christian Missionaries and
the Muhammadan Mullas to gain the Moghul Sultans over to their respective
religions, a struggle the result of which was for a long time doubtful,4
and which was not finally decided till A.H. G96, when the Emperor Ghazan Khan,
with nearly one hundred thousand of his followers, adopted the Muhammadan faith.
During the pendency of this struggle Tabriz was visited by missions from Pope
Nicolas IV. and Pope Boniface VIII., and also by the celebrated Marco Polo ; and
possibly Mahmud's acquaintance .with Christian doctrines may have been derived
or improved from intercourse with Halton or some of the other monks attached to
these missions.
The first European authors to notice the Gulshan i Eaz were
the travellers Chardin and Bemier, circ. 1700, both of whom describe it as the "
Sumrna theologica " of the Sufis. In the course of the eighteenth century
several copies of the poem found their way to the great European libraries. In
1821 Dr. Tholuck, of Berlin, published a few extracts from it, with Latin
translations, in his " Ssufismus," and in 1825 a German translation of about
one-third of the entire poem in his " Bliithensammlung aus der Morgenlandischen
Mystik." In 1838 Von Hammer-Purgstall published the Persian text, based on the
Berlin and the Vienna MSS., along with a German verse translation and a few
notes from Lahiji's commentary.5 The text
now published is based on that of Hammer, collated with two Indian MSS. of the
poem and commentary, one the poor copy in the library of the Asiatic Society at
Calcutta, the other a very correct copy hi the possession of a Zemindar in
Midnapore. On the authority of this MS. several couplets omitted by Hammer have
been restored, several repetitions retrenched, and various erroneous readings
corrected.6 All the alterations made have
been indicated in the margin, and none have been made without MS. authority.
Hammer's readings are marked H ; those of the Midnapore MS., L. ; and others,
given in the commentary or in the Calcutta copy, MSS. The translation has been
made as close to the original as possible, Lahiji's renderings, as given in his
paraphrase, being strictly followed throughout. The translations of the Arabic
quotations in the text are printed in italics. The notes contain a brief
abstract of Lahiji's voluminous commentary, which is itself a great authority on
Sufiism, and also a few of the more striking parallelisms to Sufi ideas to be
found in the Neoplatonists, and in the mystical theologians of Europe.
It is this correspondence with European Mysticism which gives
Sufiism its chief interest for European students. Many of the Catholic
definitions of ' mystical theology ' would do for descriptions of Sufiism. 7
The ruling ideas in both systems are very similar, if not absolutely identical.
Thus, for instance, we find the Sufis talking of ' love to God,' of ' union with
God,' of ' death to self, and life eternal in God,' of 'the indwelling in man of
the Spirit,' of 'the nullity of works and ceremonies,' of ' grace and spiritual
illumination,' and of the ' Logos.' Both systems may be characterised as
religions of the heart, as opposed to formalism and ritualism. Both exalt the '
inner light'8 at the expense of the
outward ordinance and voice of the Church. Both exhibit the same craving for
visionary raptures and supernatural exaltations, and have been productive of
similar excesses and extravagancies. If Sufiism has its Mevlavis and Eafa'is and
Beshara' fakirs, its dancing and howling, and Antinomian durveshes, so European
Mysticism has produced the Omphalopsychi or navelgazing monks of Mount Athos,
the Jansenist "Convulsionaries," the Anabaptists of Munster, and the Shakers.9
Finally, to complete the parallel, both systems have a tendency to Pantheism,
and both use similar sensuous figures to express their visions and raptures. The
Pantheism of the Gulshan i Eaz has its counterpart in that of Eckart, the
"Doctor Ecstaticus," and much of its sensuous imagery might be matched by the
erotic language of St. Bernard's sermons on the Canticles, the wonderful
effusions of St. Theresa, and the mystical hymns of St. Alphonso Liguori and
others.10
At first sight it is difficult to see how a subjective
emotional religious system like Sufiism could have originated from the rigid
formalism of the Koran, 11
and still more how orthodox Mussulmans can possibly reconcile its Pantheism, as
many of them do,12
with the uncompromising Monotheism taught by Muhammad. The answer would seem to
be that the Koran, and still more the Hadis, in one department of their
language, contain the germs of this line of religious thought. They in fact use
a double language. At one time they represent Allah as having created the world
once for all, and as now removed to His seat in the 'arsh or highest heaven,
having left His creatures to work out their own salvation or condemnation by
their own free will, according to the lights given them by His prophets ; at
another time they represent Him as the ' Subtile ' Being, immanent and ever
working in His creatures, the sum of all existence, the ' fulness of life,'
whereby all things move, act and exist, omnipresent, not only predestinating but
actually originating all action, dwelling in and directly influencing and
communing with each individual soul. The Sufis, being men of an emotional
mystical temperament, or, as they called themselves, 'men of heart,' 'men
looking behind the veil,' 'interior men,'13
naturally caught at all expressions of this kind which seemed to bring the
divine mysterious object of their religious emotion nearer to them, and, as
theologians are prone to do, dwelt on the texts that fell in with their own
view, to the exclusion of passages of the opposite tendency. This view they
developed with the aid of the Greek and especially the Neoplatonic metaphysics,
which had been popularised by the Arabian philosophers Farabi, Ghazzali, Ibn
Eoshd and Ibn Sina. Under these influences they identified the Allah of the
Koran with the Neoplatonic Being, the One, the Necessary Being, the only
Reality, "The Truth,"14
the Infinite, which includes all actual being, good and evil, the First Cause,
source of all action, good and evil alike. The world of phenomena and man every
thing else in fact but Allah they identified with Not being, absolute nonentity,
which like a mirror reflects Being, and by thus borrowing particles of Being
rises to the rank of Contingent being, a kind of being which, as Plato says, is
and is not, and partakes both of existence and nonexistence. This Not being is
a sort of Manichaean Ahriman, which solves all practical
difficulties attaching to their speculative system. According to their theory
the Infinite includes all being, evil included ; but as this is not consistent
with the goodness of the Allah of the Koran, evil is said to proceed from Not
being.15 Again,
according to their theory the spark of real being divinse particula aurse in man
is identical with the Infinite Being, and hence man would seem to be above laws
and creeds ; but as this would lead to Antinomianism, it is said that, while man
remains in the intermediate state of Contingent being, he is as it were weighed
down and held apart from Being by the element of Not being, and that in this
probationary state laws and creeds are needed to restrain his evil tendencies.
Thus, by the aid of this convenient 'Not being,' which is something while it is
wanted, and relapses into nothing directly it is no longer needed, the Sufis
avoid all the immoral and irreligious consequences of their theory.
Hence it is clear that the Pantheism of the Sufis, at any
rate as expounded in the Gulshan i Raz, must not be confounded with the European
Pantheism of the present day that Pantheism which in the words of Bossuet,
"makes every thing God except God himself." In the Guhhan i Raz we find a
different species of Pantheism one held conjointly with a theory of divine
personality, and the obligations of morality. Mahmud's Pantheism is an
amplification rather than a miniinification of the idea of the Divinity,
infinite, omnipresent and omnipotent. 16
He felt the sense of his own exist- ence and his own freedom passing away and
becoming absorbed in the sense of absolute dependence on this Infinite Being.
Compared with this omnipresent, infinite, unseen Power underlying all the
phenomena of the universe,17
dominating man's will, striving in man's heart, Warming in the sun, refroshing
in the breeze, Glowing in the stars, and blossoming in the trees, all outward
existences and agencies, whether in man or in the world, seemed to sink into
utter nothingness. In point of fact Mahmud's Pantheism is only the corollary of
the Muhammadan doctrine of Jain; usually translated predestination, but, more
exactly, the compulsion to carry out the Divine will, the universal action of
Allah. The same sense and conviction of this irresistible divine impulse and
compulsion which, according to their temperaments, drives some men into furious
and fanatical action,18
and makes others sit clown and cry ' Kismat,' impels men of a logical turn of
mind to regard not only all the action but also all the existence in the
universe as the direct outcome or manifestation of the Divine energy.
The whole Sufi system follows as a logical consequence from
this fundamental assumption. Sense and reason cannot transcend phenomena, or see
the real Being which underlies them all ; so sense and reason must be ignored
and superseded in favour of the ' inner light,' the inspiration or divine
illumination in the heart, which is the only faculty whereby men perceive the
Infinite. Thus enlightened, men see that the whole external phenomenal world,
including man's ' self,' is an illusion, non-existent in itself, and, in so far
as it is non-existent, evil, because a departure from the one real Being. Man's
only duty is to shake off this illusion, this clog of Not being, to efface and
die to self, and to be united' with and live eternally in the one real Being "
The Truth." In this progress to union external observances and outward forms
profit little, because they keep alive the illusion of duality, of man's
self-righteousness, of his personal agency and personal merit, whereas the true
course is to ignore all reference to self to be passive, that God may work and
then the Divine light and grace will enter the chamber of man's heart and
operate in him without impediment, and draw him to " The Truth," and unite him
with " The One."
The manner in which these ruling ideas are worked out and
connected, by means of allegorical interpretation, with the teaching of the
Koran and the Hadis will be best explained by an outline of the poem.
After an exordium laying down the fundamental principle of
the sole existence of the one real Being, and of the illusive non-real nature of
all phenomenal being, and a short account of the composition of the poem, Mahmud
proceeds to inquire how men are to gain this essential knowledge of God. The
answer commonly given is, by thought. But thought is of two kinds, one logical
reasoning, the other spiritual illumination. The first method is inapplicable,
because sense and reason cannot transcend phenomena, and work up to the
invisible and incomprehensible Being underlying them. 19
They are powerless to shake off the illusion of the apparent reality of the
sensible world. From this original defect of mental eyesight, whatever
philosophers and theologians say of God only proves their own incapacity to
apprehend Him.20
II. Reason, looking at the Light of lights, is blinded by
excess of light, like a bat by the sun. This annihilation of the mental vision
caused by its proximity to the Light of lights this consciousness of its own
nothingness caused by its approach to Being is the highest degree of perception
which contingent being can attain. 21
When the contingent seer attains this state of annihilation of his phenomenal
self, the true light is revealed to him, as a spiritual illumination streaming
in on his soul.
The phenomenal world is in itself Not being, wherein are
reflected, as in a mirror, the various attributes of Being. By a species of
radiation or effluxion of waves of light from Being, each atom of Not being
becomes a reflection of some one divine attribute. These effluent atoms of Being
are ever striving to rejoin their source, but so long as their phenomenal
extrusion lasts they are held back from reunion with their divine source.
Passing to precept, Mahmud says, " Eest not in the illusions
of sense and reason, but abandon your ' natural realism,' as Abraham abandoned
the worship of the host of heaven. Press on till, like Moses at Mount Sinai, you
see the mount of your illusive phenomenal existence annihilated at the approach
of Divine glory. Ascend like Muhammad to heaven, and behold the mighty signs of
the Lord."
Thus illumined you will see " The Truth" to be the source of
all being, diffused and poured out into the phenomenal world by means of the
various emanations, beginning with the Logos and ending with man.
"The Truth" it is who alone is acting in the universe. All
the revolutions of the heavenly spheres, stars and planets, proceed not from
themselves, as the undevout astronomer says, but from " The Truth." He is, as it
were, the Master potter who turns the wheel. The motions of the heavens, the
coalescence of discordant elements into bodies, the obedience of plants and
animals to the laws of their kinds, are all His never ceasing handiwork.
With regard to man, he is the soul of the world the
microcosm. While other creatures reflect only single divine attributes, man
reflects them all. He is an epitome of the universe, and so by introspection he
may see in himself reflections of all the divine attributes of the " fulness of
the Godhead." But on the other side he is black with the darkness and evil of
Not being. His object therefore should be to purge away this non-existent
corrupt side of himself, which holds him back from union. And, union once
attained, thought is no longer possible, for thought implies duality.
IV. These journeys are called the "journey up to God" and the
"journey down from God in God," and are a sort of circuit, and he who completes
the circuit is the " perfect man."
When man is born into the world evil passions spring up in
him, and if he gives way to them he is lost. But if he attends to the promptings
of Divine grace and light in his soul, he repents, and is converted, and
journeys up to God, effacing self-will, self-knowledge, and his entire
phenomenal corrupt self-existence ; and purifying his nobler part from the stain
of externality, he ascends in spirit to heaven, and is united in spirit with "
The Truth."
This stage is the holy state known as saintship, exemplified
in saints and prophets.
But the " perfect man " must not pause in this estatic union,
which is above all laws. Notwithstanding this exaltation he must journey down
again to the phenomenal world, in and along with God, and in this downward
journey he must conform to outward laws and creeds. His sanctification must
bring forth the outward fruit of good works.
The law is as a husk, and the holy state of identity with "
The Truth " the kernel; and when the kernel is ripe it bursts the husk. But the
perfect man must not rest or abide in this ecstatic state of ! union with "The
Truth," but so long as he is in this life must "return to sobriety;" and though
"The Truth" is the fixed and abiding home of his soul, he must wear the law as
an outward garment, and the Sufi ' path ' or canon as his inward garment, and
perform all external legal observances. 22
The perfection of this saintly state will be seen in Muhammad
Mehdi, ' the seal of the saints,' who by the secret of unity will perfectly
attain to "The Truth."
V. The man who knows this secret that all things are One dies
to self, and lives, with regenerate heart, in God. He sweeps away all that comes
between God and the soul, and "breaks through to the oneness," 23
as Eckart said. Good works, it is true, raise men to a 'laudable station,' but
so long as division and duality and 'self remain, true mystical union of knower
and known is not attained.
VI. But if knower and Known be one, how comes it that the
knower feels within him emotions of love and aspiration drawing him towards the
' Known ? ' In man's present phenomenal state, the mixture of Not being in him
divides him from Being; and these aspirations are the stirrings of the true
Being within him, recalling and drawing him as with a magnet to his source. If
he be not of those who are born blind to this spiritual light within, these
sparks kindle up the flame of love to God, which burns up his phenomenal self,
and shows him his real self one with " The Truth."
VII. The man who, like Mansur Hallaj, the wool-carder, has
carded away his phenomenal self, can say, " I am the Truth ; " for when man
takes his eternal side, 'other,' i.e. Not being, is annihilated, and nothing is
left but Being. When God withdraws what belongs to Him all things fall back into
their original nothingness. All phenomenal existence is merely an illusion, as
we may see from the case of echoes, reflections, past and future time, and
fleeting accidents, wherein all the externality or objectivity of substance
consists.
VIII. The creature state being thus non-existent, man cannot
of himself move, draw near to, or unite with " The Truth." Union is only a
phrase for annihilating the phenomenal element in man sweeping off the dust of
contingent being. The genesis of the creature world is an eternal process. It is
as a drop of water, raised from the sea of Being in mist, poured down in rain,
converted into plants, animals, man, and finally recalled into the bosom of the
sea. Phenomena are constantly annihilated in the universal Noumeuon, and this
annihilation is union.
IX. The illusion of free-will is Magianisin, setting up an
evil first cause, Ahriman, over against the good, Ormuzd. This illusion must be
shaken off and annihilated in the conviction that the only free agent is " The
Truth," and man a passive instrument in His hands, and absolutely dependent on
His pleasure. Man's glory lies in abandoning his self-will, and finding his true
will in God's will.
X. Going back to the relation of the law to the state of
sanctification, called in the fourth answer " The Truth," 24
' and here called " the knowledge of faith," Mahmud compares the former to the
shell, and the latter to the pearl within it. The Sufi must extract this pearl ;
but, on the other hand, he must not break the shell till the pearl within it is
fully formed. The law is a schoolmaster to bring him to " The Truth." Without
this faith, this fixed spiritual habitude, this settled internal character or '
state ' of the heart, no external legal works are virtuous in the highest sense.
Legal and formal works cannot sanctify man;25
it is the saintly disposition which sanctifies works. From this disposition all
the virtues flow spontaneously. All the virtues lie in the mean, in equipoise
and harmony, and this harmony of the soul calls down and attracts the Spirit
from above. This heavenly spirit operates in man like the sun's beams on the
earth. As it were enamoured of the harmonious soul, the Spirit enters into a
mystical marriage union with it, the issue of which is gracefulness, virtue and
the beauty of holiness. But all these are not of man that worketh, but of God
that giveth grace.
XI. Absolute Being is the sumrnum genus embracing all being;
but in one sense actual phenomenal being is wider, because it is absolute plus
phenomenal limited being. This phenomenal side is renewed every moment, as
indicated by the texts about ' the new creation.' Similarly the texts about '
the resurrection and world to come ' indicate that the dispositions acquired by
men in this life will then be manifested in ' spiritual bodies,' i.e. forms
appropriate to them. The perfect will then drink the ' pure wine ' of union with
God. There will remain no duality or distinction of persons. Hence faith,
reason, devotion, paradise and houris will then become an empty tale. 26
Such will be the perfect ' union ' in the world to come, but in this world all
ecstatic union is followed by sobriety and separation.
XII. Mahmud concludes this part of the discussion by
reiterating his main thesis that all things are One. The Eternal and the
temporal ' are not two distinct entities, since the temporal is merely a
subjective j illusion, like the circle of fire seen when a single spark of fire
is i whirled quickly round.
XIII. to XV. These last three sections are devoted to an
explanation of the figurative language whereby the Sufis express their
conceptions of God and the universe, and their ecstatic experiences. And of this
language it may be said that though it seems irreverent and unseemly to us, it
did not seem so to them. As Xenophanes 27
saw, men's conceptions of the Deity bear a constant relation to their own moral
and intellectual stature. Symbols that we see to be inadequate and misleading,
were not improbably the highest attainable by the untutored minds of other ages
and countries, and thus possessed, perhaps, a relative goodness of their own.
Answer XV. shows us that one of the main characteristics of the Sufis was their
readiness to recognise and appreciate whatever seemed to them to be good and
true in other religions, such as Christianity, Magianism, and even Idolatry;28
and there is high authority29 (if
authority be needed) for thinking it not inconsistent with our loyalty to our
own religion to mete out similar tolerant measure to them.
1 His life is given in
the Nafliat ul Uns of Jami.
2 This name is
sometimes written Jabistar or Chabistar. The Persian cliim is usually expressed
by the Arabic shin. Ouseley, Ibn Haukal, 156.
3 See Malcolm, History
of Persia, ii. 252.
4 One of the Moghul
Emperors was actually baptised, and, according to the chronicler, " true
believers trembled lest the sacred temple at Mecca might be con- verted into a
Christian cathedral." Malcolm, ii. 268.
5 The full title of
this commentary is, " Jifufatih ul a'jazji sJiarh i GulsJian i Raz." It was
composed in A.H. 879.
6
The poem is written in the metre called Hazaj i musaddas i maksur, viz.
mafd'ilun mafd'ilun mqfd'il (twice).
7 E.g. That of
Corderius, " Sapientiaexperimentalis, divinitus infusa, quse mentem ab omni
inordinatione puram cum Deo intime conjungit." That of John a Jesu Maria, "
Calestis qusedam Dei notitia, per unionem voluntatis Deo adhserentifi, elicita,
vel lumine cselitus immisso producta." That of Gerson, " Est motio anagogica in
Deum secretissima mentis cum Deo locutio." Vaughan, i. 288.
8 The Quaker Barclay,
in his " Apology," supports his doctrine of " illumination " by reference to a
Sufi book (the history of Hai Ibu Yokhdau) translated by Ockley.
9 See an account of the
curious phenomena which sometimes followed the preaching of Wesley, Whitfield,
and Newton. Leslie Stephen's English Thought, ii. 417. And a missionary account
of the " gracious visitations of the Holy Spirit at Vewa," one of the Fiji
Islands. H. Spencer, Essays, i. 444.
10 See Vaughan, "
Hours with the Mystics," i. 119, ii. 125 ; and "Hymns and Verses of St.
Alphonso," translated by Coffin, pp. 80 to 11G.
11 " Earn enim
doctrinam ex arido atque exili Muhammadanismi solo tarn cito esse enatam, res
est per se admiratione digua, qua3que desiderium illud menti humane ingenitum
diserte attestatur, quo extra se proripitur et cum Deo rursus conjungi
necessitate quadam naturse vehementer eupit." Dr. Pusey, in Nicoll's Catalogue
of Bodleian MSS.
12 The Musnavi is
commonly said to be the Koran of Persia (Hughes, "Notes on Muhammadanism," p.
231) ; Khaja 'Ayni, an orthodox Sunni doctor, in a work published at
Constantinople in 1834, warmly commends both the Musnaoi and the Gulshan i Rax.
Hammer. Imam Shafei and Hanbal, two of the great jurisconsults, speak in the
highest terms of the Sufis' " knowledge of God." Tholuck, Ssufismus, 58.
13 " While some (men
of externals) believe that there is nothing iu existence hut what is visible to
sight and reason, others (interior men) hold that much is veiled from sight
which can only be seen through a nearer approach to the Divine Creator and a
close spiritual communion with His omnipresent spirit." Fasus ul Hakim.
14 Al Hakk, das
Seiende, the Sat of the Upanishads. M. Miiller, Upanishads, I., xxxii.
15 Similarly St.
Augustine said evil was a negation. The fact that he could find no better way of
reconciling these " antinomies of religious thought," ought to make us lenient
critics of the Sufis.
16 The same feeling
is expressed by many Christian poets, e.g. Dante, Paradise, iii. 86 :
" In la Sua volonta e nostra pace :
Ella e quel
mare, al qual tutto si muove,
Cio, ch' Ella
cria, o che natura face."
17 Mr. Herbert
Spencer, " First Principles," p. 99, says : " We are obliged to regar every
phenomenon as a manifestation of some power by which we are acted on, and though
omnipresence is unthinkable, yet, as experience discloses no bounds to the
diffusion of phenomena, we are unable to think of any limits to the diffusion of
this power, while the criticisms of science teach us that this power is
incomprehensible." Mahmud would agree that it is incomprehensible by reason, but
would add that it is cognisable by spiritual illumination the clairvoyance of
the heart.
18 Thus with us, the
same theory of divine action upon the world which led the Puritans to action,
led the Quakers to resignation, and 'quietism.' In popular parlance, "Quaker"
signifies just the same sort of mild non-resisting character that "Sirft Sahib"
does in India.
19 Here is the germ
of the modern doctrine of the Relativity of knowledge, and consequent limits of
thought.
20 Cognoscitur non
secundum sui vim sed secundum coguoscentium facultatem. Boethius. Hamilton,
Metaphysics, i. 61.
21 Compare St.
Augustine : " Deum potius ignorantia quam scientia attingi."
22 Another caution,
insisted on as well by the Sufis as by European mystics, is that the vagaries of
the " inner light " must be checked by recourse to the advice of the Pir, or "
Spiritual Director."
23
Similarly Tauler preached the necessity of " fathomless annihilation of self,"
and a " transformed condition of the soul," and " rest in the divine centre or
ground of the soul." Vaughan, i. 192.
24 Kashifi's abstract
of the Jlfasnavi, calk'd Lab ul labab, arranges the matter of that poem under
the three heads of the law, the path, and the truth.
25 In the Nafliat ul
tins, the Shaikh of Islam is quoted as saying, " God is veiled from the heart of
the man who relies on his own good works." Compare Luther's doctrine of
justification by faith.
26 Law, author of the
" Serious Call," got rid of gross material conceptions of heaven much in the
same way. L. Stephen, English Thought, ii. 407.
27 Lewes, Hist, of
Philosophy, i. 40.
28 Dr. Wolff says of
the Sufis of Bokhara, " They are people who really try, as they express
themselves, to ' come nearer to God ' by a moral life, separation from the
world, meditation, prayer, and reading the books of other religious sects."
Missionary Tour, p. 205.
29 E. g. The passage
from St. Augustine quoted by Sale as the motto to his translation of the Koran
" Nulla falsa doctrina est qua non aliquid veri permisceat ; " and those from
St. Augustine, St. Clement and others, quoted by Max Muller in the Preface to
his " Chips."
ERRATA.
Page 26, note
5, line 3, for soul, read reason.
Page 31, note 2, line 5, for or, read and.
Page 40, note 3, line 1,/or beholds, read beholda.
Page 41, couplet 409, read " The fourth is the
purification of the secret from ' other.' ,,
Page 58, couplet 588, erase of. ,,
Page 58, note 4, line 1, erase " or of the faith."
,,
Page 58, note 4,line 3, insert " or of the faith "
after " knowledge of heart." Page 62-3, note 8, for everything, read every
action.
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