|
emotional and religious life; when through the translation of the Pseudo-Dionysius by
Scotus Erigena in 850, it had begun the long contest of idealism in Europe, the dead
school of Plotinus had won the field, and its influence ruled from the Oxus to the
Atlantic.
But the roots of Sufiism struck also in another direction. We have already seen an
early tendency to regard Ali and, later, members of his house as incarnations of divinity.
In the East, where God comes near to man, the conception of God in man is not difficult.
The Semitic prophet through whom God speaks easily slips over into a divine being in whom
God exists and may be worshipped. But if with one, why not with another? May it not be
possible by purifying exercises to reach this unity? If one is a Son of God, may not all
become that if they but take the means? The half-understood pantheism which always lurks
behind oriental fervors claims its due. From his wild whirling dance, the darwish, stung
to cataleptic ecstasy by the throbbing of the drums and the lilting chant, sinks back into
the unconsciousness of the divine oneness. He has passed temporarily from this scene of
multiplicity into the sea of God's unity and, at death, if he but persevere, he will reach
that haven where he fain would be and will abide there forever. Here, we have not to do
with calm philosophers rearing their systems in labored speculations, but with men, often
untaught, seeking the salvation of their souls earnestly and with tears.
One of the earliest of the pantheistic school was
|
|
|
Abu Yazid al-Bistami (d. 261). He was of Persian parentage, and his father had been a
follower of Zarathustra. As an ascetic he was of the highest repute; be was also an author
of eminence on Sufiism (al-Ghazzah used his books) and he joined to his devout learning
and self- mortification clear miraculous gifts. But equally clear was his pantheistic
drift and his name has come down linked to the saying, "Beneath my cloak there is
naught else than God." It is worth noticing that certain other of his sayings show
that, even in his time, there were Sufi saints who boasted that they had reached such
perfection and such miraculous powers that the ordinary moral and ceremonial law no longer
applied to them. The antinomianism which haunted the later Sufiism and darwishdom had
already appeared.
But the greatest name of all among these early pantheists was that of al-Hallaj (the
cotton carder), a pupil of al-Junayd, who was put to death with great cruelty in 309. It
is almost impossible to reach any certain conclusion as to his real views and aims. In
spite of what seem to be utterances of the crassest pantheism, such as, "I am the
Truth," there have not been wanting many in later Islam who have reverenced his
memory as that of a saint and martyr. To Sufis and darwishes of his time and to this day
he has been and is a patron saint. In his life and death he represents for them the spirit
of revolt against dogmatic scholasticism and formalism. Further, even such a great doctor
of the Muslim Church as al-Ghazzali defended him and, though lamenting some incautious
phrases, upheld his orthodoxy. At his trial itself
|
|