101 diamonds from the oral tradition of the Glorious Messenger Muhammad

by Ibn Arabi

Paperback, 2002

Publication

Imprint: New York : Pir Press, 2002. Responsibility: Muhyiddin Ibn al'Arabi's collection of hadith Mishkat al-Anwar translated and interpreted by Lex Hixon (Nur al-Jerrahi) and Fariha Fatima al-Jerrahi. Physical: Text : 1 volume : 163 pages : illustrations ; 22 cm.

Call number

GT-I-S / Hixon

Barcode

BK-05317

ISBN

9781879708174

CSS Library Notes

Description: When Shaykh Nur (Lex Hixon) encountered Mishkat al-Anwar in its French version by Muhammad Valsan, he recognized the spiritual potency of these hadiths for contempory humanity, and undertook his own inspired, interpretive translation. In his work, Nur relied both on scholarly translation and the method of inner unveiling, described in great detail by Ibn al-'Arabi as absolutely authentic and reliable. Unveiling is the divine revelation of truth within the heart which is open to God. It happens in a state of contemplative receptivity. When directed to passages of Qur'an and Hadith, the results can be quite different form a more scholarly approach, which is valid and helpful, yet remains in the realm of the rational. Nur contemplated each word of this holy text distinctly, allowing an essential meaning to come into his heart--he received a guided understanding of the essence of the hadith, and finally placed it within a beautiful, resonant form of English. -- from the introduction

Table of Contents: Introduction -- Fariha al-Jerrahi
Commentary -- Ibn 'Arabi
40 Hadith

FY2003 /

Physical description

163 p.; 22 cm

Description

In addition to the Koran, the oral traditions relating to the Prophet Muhammad are the basis for both the practice and understanding of Islam. The Koran is considered to be the direct word of God, while most of the oral traditions are not. However, some have a special status and are considered Divine utterances.In this volume are 101 of these transmissions, collected by the great Sufi mystic and metaphysician Ibn 'Arabi, who died in Damascus in 1240. Regarded by him as authentic revelations from God through His Prophet, the collection ranges from the secrets of prayer to the hypocrisy of supposed believers, from the mysteries of the last day to God's infinite compassion and forgiveness, and to the paramount topics of Divine Love and Divine Unity. For Ibn 'Arabi and Sufi mystics of the past 1,500 years, these words have been the key to the door of mystical realization.But this modern version of Ibn 'Arabi's collection of oral traditions is more than a scholarly translation. It is a contemplative expansion by two contemporary Sufi teachers, Lex Hixon (Nur al-Jerrahi) and his spiritual successor, Fariha al-Jerrahi. Ibn 'Arabi himself wrote, All that is left to us by tradition is words. It is up to us to find out what they mean. In fresh, poetic language, and with their own mystical passion, Hixon and al-Jerrahi bring these sacred diamonds of the Islamic tradition to the modern seeker on the spiritual path to enlightenment.… (more)

Language

Original language

Arabic

Rating

(1 rating; 4)
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