Friday 20 April 2018

Between the two nights FASTING AND POWER




Between the Two Nights

The Mi’raj or ascension of the Prophet (sallalahu ta‘alah ‘alaihi wa Sallam) to the special Divine presence has historically been recognized to have taken place on Rajab 27. This date appears to be linked in the Islamic calendar to Ramadhan 27, the likely day of the night of power or the Lailatul Qadr. It seem that this period of two months is a special season in which the collective spirituality is progressively enhanced until finally the individual effort of even the average worshiper elevates him to eligibility for some form of religious experience. This, in turn, launches him on a path of spiritual growth.

The progressive enhancement begins on Rajab 27, when the worshiper refreshes his memory about the Prophet’s Mi’raj and reminds himself that the five daily prayers (Salat) which were brought down from above in the Mi’raj, is the vehicle for his personal Mi’raj. He thus pays serious attention to improving the quality of his Salat. This involves, most of all, developing a devout frame of mind.

In the month of Shaban he follows the example of the Prophet (sallalahu ta‘alah ‘alaihi wa Sallam) and fasts time and again to build the momentum with which to prepare the body and the mind for the rigors of the fast of Ramadhan. Thus the preliminary fast of Shaban is added to Salat and worship moves into a higher gear. On Ramadhan 1, not only does the compulsory fast for all adult Muslims begin but, also, there is Qiyam al-Lail or the prayers of the night-vigil, when long passages of the Qur’an are recited. Fasting, the night time prayer vigil and the recitation of the Qur’an have a dramatic impact in effecting a substantial qualitative improvement of worship.

When, on Ramadhan 21, the withdrawal from worldly affairs and seclusion in the Masjid (I’tikaf) for ten days commences, the worshipers reach a pitch or intensity of worship which makes this period most spiritually conducive for religious experience. As he withdraws from the Dunya the veils begin to fall from off his eyes and heart and as a consequence he now perceives the reality of things and of the world. 

Finally comes Ramadhan 27, the night of power (Lailatul Qadr) when Allah Most High sends down the angels and Gabriel for every errand:

“…In hosts descend in it the angels, bearing divine inspiration by their Sustainer’s leave; from all [evil] that may happen…;”  
(Qur’an, al-Qadr, 97:4)

i.e., to bestow, perhaps, the supreme gift of Mi’raj (i.e. a direct visionary experience of the unseen worlds) to all those who have deserved it or who have earned it. When the Qur’an asserts that the night of power is superior to a thousand months:

“The Night of Destiny is better than a thousand months.”
(Qur’an, al-Qadr, 97:3) 

the implication is, perhaps, that the direct visionary experience of the unseen worlds which can best be experienced on that night is better than an entire life-span (a thousand months standing for an average life-span) lived without it. 

There are profound psychological and sociological lessons to be learnt from Islam’s fast of Ramadhan. The enhanced collective spirituality of Ramadhan, for example, literally reaches down to embrace even the weakest of the believers and to assist and strengthen their resolve to observe the fast.

Secondly, with the institution of the fast of Ramadhan and its attendant charity, prayers, and the recitation of the Qur’an, Islam takes the believer to the third stage of the process of religious development, the stage of total conformity and harmony with the externally imposed sacred law.

In the first stage, we should recall, the individual was invited to enter into Islam and to submit publicly to the Truth. In the second stage, on the other hand, the process witnessed the internalization of the externally proclaimed belief. This was the stage of faith or Iman. With the achievement of stage three or al-Ihsan, and with the possible vision of the unseen worlds, the believer now acquires the capacity to see with the internal eye what previously could not be seen. Thus it is that the Fast of Ramadhan delivers the capacity for internal intuitive spiritual insight with which to penetrate the reality of things and not to be deceived by appearance. Such a capacity constitutes a vital dimension of power.

To Be Continued ....





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