HE WHO KNOWS HIMSELF KNOWS GOD
THE KNOWLEDGE OF SELF
Knowledge of self is the key to the knowledge of God, according to the saying: "He who knows himself knows God," [hadith] and, as it is written in the Koran, "We will show them Our signs in the world and in themselves, that the truth may be manifest to them."
 Now nothing is nearer to thee than thyself, and if thou knowest not 
thyself how canst thou know anything else? If thou sayest "I know 
myself," meaning thy outward shape, body, face, limbs, and so forth, 
such knowledge can never be a key to the knowledge of God.
Nor,
 if thy knowledge as to that which is within only extends so far, that 
when thou art hungry thou eatest, and when thou art angry thou attackest
 someone, wilt thou progress any further in this path, for the beasts 
are thy partners in this? But real self-knowledge consists in knowing 
the following things:
What
 art thou in thyself, and from whence hast thou come? Whither art thou 
going, and for what purpose hast thou come to tarry here awhile, and in 
what does thy real happiness and misery consist? Some of thy attributes 
are those of animals, some of devils, and some of angels, and thou hast 
to find out to which of these attributes are accidental and which 
essential.
Till
 thou knowest this, thou canst not find out where thy real happiness 
lies. The occupation of animals is eating, sleeping, and fighting; 
therefore, if thou art an animal, busy thyself in these things. Devils 
are busy in stirring up mischief, and in guile and deceit; if thou 
belongest to them, do their work. Angels contemplate the beauty of God, 
and are entirely free from animal qualities, if thou art of angelic 
nature, then strive towards thine origin, that thou mayest know and 
contemplate the Most High, and be delivered from the thraldom of lust 
and anger. Thou shouldest also discover why thou hast been created with 
these two animal instincts: whether that they should subdue and lead 
thee captive, or whether that thou shouldest subdue them, and, in thy 
upward progress, make of one thy steed and of the other thy weapon.
The
 first step to self-knowledge is to know that thou art composed of an 
outward shape, called the body, and an inward entity called the heart, 
or soul. By "heart" I do not mean the piece of flesh situated in the 
left of our bodies, but that which uses all the other faculties as its 
instruments and servants. In truth it does not belong to the visible 
world, but to the invisible, and has come into this world as a traveller
 visits a foreign country for the sake of merchandise, and will 
presently return to its native land. It is the knowledge of this entity 
and its attributes which is the key to the knowledge of God.
Some
 idea of the reality of the heart. or spirit, may be obtained by a man 
closing his eyes and forgetting everything around except his 
individuality. He will thus also obtain a glimpse of the unending nature
 of that individuality. Too close inquiry, however, into the essence of 
spirit is forbidden by the Law.
In the Koran it is written: "They will question thee concerning the spirit. Say: 'The Spirit comes by the command of my Lord'."
 Thus much is known of it that it is an indivisible essence belonging to
 the world of decrees, and that it is not from everlasting, but created.
 An exact philosophical knowledge of the spirit is not a necessary 
preliminary to walking in the path of religion, but comes rather as the 
result of self-discipline and perseverance in that path, as it is said 
in the Koran: "Those who strive in Our way, verily We will guide them to the right paths."
For
 the carrying on of this spiritual warfare by which the knowledge of 
oneself and of God is to be obtained, the body may be figured as a 
kingdom, the soul as its king, and the different senses and faculties as
 constituting an army. Reason may be called the vizier, or prime 
minister, passion the revenue collector, and anger the police officer. 
Under the guise of collecting revenue, passion is continually prone to 
plunder on its own account, while resentment is always inclined to 
harshness and extreme severity. 
Both
 of these the revenue collector and the police officer, have to be kept 
in due subordination to the king, but not killed or excelled, as they 
have their own proper functions to fulfill. But if passion and 
resentment master reason, the ruin of the soul infallibly ensues. A soul
 which allows its lower faculties to dominate the higher is as one who 
should hand over an angel to the power of a dog or a Mussalman to the 
tyranny of an unbeliever.
The
 cultivation of demonic, animal or angelic qualities results in the 
production of corresponding characters, which in the Day of Judgement 
will be manifested in visible shapes, the sensual appearing as swine, 
the ferocious as dogs and wolves, and the pure as angels. The aim of 
moral discipline is to purify the heart from the rust of passion and 
resentment, till, like a clear mirror, it reflects the light of God.
Someone may here object, "But
 if man has been created with animal and demonic qualities as well as 
angelic, how are we to know that the latter constitute his real essence,
 while the former are merely accidental and transitory?" To this I 
answer that the essence of each creature is to be sought in that which 
is highest in it and peculiar to it. Thus the horse and the ass are both
 burden-bearing animals, but the superiority of the horse to the ass 
consists in its being adapted for use in battle.
If
 it fails in this, it becomes degraded to the rank of burden-bearing 
animals. Similarly with man: the highest faculty in him is reason, which
 fits him for the contemplation of God. If this predominates in him, 
when he dies, he leaves behind him all tendencies to passion and 
resentment, and becomes capable of association with angels. As regards 
his mere animal qualities, man is inferior to many animals, but reason 
makes him superior to them, as it is written in the Koran: "To man We have subjected all things in the earth."
 But if his lower tendencies have triumphed, after death be will ever be
 looking towards the earth and longing for earthly delights.
Now
 the rational soul in man abounds in marvels, both of knowledge and 
power. By means of it he masters arts and sciences, can pass in a flash 
from earth to heaven and back again, can map out the skies and measure 
the distances between the stars. By it also he can draw the fish from 
the sea and the birds from the air, and can subdue to his service 
animals like the elephant, the camel, and the horse. His five senses are
 like five doors opening on the external world; but, more wonderful than
 this, his heart has a window which opens on the unseen world of 
spirits.
In
 the state of sleep, when the avenues of the senses are closed, this 
window is opened and man receives impressions from the unseen world and 
sometimes fore-shadowings of the future. His heart is then like a mirror
 which reflects what is pictured in the Tablet of Fate. But, even in 
sleep, thoughts of worldly things dull this mirror, so that the 
impression it receives are not clear. After death, however, such 
thoughts vanish and things are seen in their naked reality, and the 
saying in the Koran is fulfilled: "We have stripped the veil from off 
thee and thy sight today is keen."
This
 opening of a window in the heart towards the unseen also takes place in
 conditions approaching those of prophetic inspiration, when intuitions 
spring up in the mind unconveyed through any sense-channel. The more a 
man purifies himself from fleshly lusts and concentrates his mind on 
God, the more conscious will he be of such intuitions. Those who are not
 conscious of them have no right to deny their reality.
Nor
 are such intuitions confined only to those of prophetic rank. Just as 
iron, by sufficient polishing can be made into a mirror, so any mind by 
due discipline can be rendered receptive of such impressions. It was at 
this truth the Prophet hinted when he said, "Every child is born with
 a predisposition towards Islam; then his parents make a Jew, or a 
Christian, or a star worshipper of him." Every human being has in the depths of his consciousness heard the question "Am I not your Lord?"
 and answered "Yes" to it. But some hearts are like mirrors so befouled 
with rust and dirt that they give no clear reflections, while those of 
the prophets and saints, though they are men "of like passions with us" 
are extremely sensitive to all divine impressions.
Nor
 is it only by reason of knowledge acquired and intuitive that the soul 
of man holds the first rank among created things, but also by reason of 
power. Just as angels preside over the elements, so does the soul rule 
the members of the body. Those souls which attain a special degree of 
power not only rule their own body but those of others also. If they 
wish a sick man to recover he recovers, or a person in health to fall 
ill he becomes ill, or if they will the presence of a person he comes to
 them.
According
 as the effects produced by these powerful souls are good or bad they 
are termed miracles or sorceries. These souls differ from common folk in
 three ways: (1) What others only see in dreams they see in their waking
 moments. (2) While others' wills only affect their own bodies, these, 
by will-power, can move bodies extraneous to themselves. (3) The 
knowledge which others acquire by laborious learning comes to them by 
intuition.
These
 three, of course, are not the only marks which differentiate them from 
common people, but the only ones that come within our cognizance. Just 
as no one knows the real nature of God but God Himself, so no one knows 
the real nature of a prophet but a prophet. Nor is this to be wondered 
at, as in everyday matters we see that it is impossible to explain the 
charm of poetry to one whose ear is insusceptible of cadence and rhythm,
 or the glories of colour to one who is stone-blind. Besides mere 
incapacity, there are other hindrances to the attainment of spiritual 
truth. One of these is externally acquired knowledge. To use a figure, 
the heart may be represented as a well, and the five senses as five 
streams which are continually conveying water to it.
In
 order to find out the real contents of the heart these streams must be 
stopped for a time, at any rate, and the refuse they have brought with 
them must be cleared out of the well. In other words, if we are to 
arrive at pure spiritual truth, we must put away, for the time knowledge
 which has been acquired by external processes and which too often 
hardens into dogmatic prejudice.
A
 mistake of an opposite kind is made by shallow people who, echoing some
 phrases which they have caught from Sufi teachers, go about decrying 
all knowledge. This is as if a person who was not an adept in alchemy 
were to go about saying, "Alchemy is better than gold," and were 
to refuse gold when it was offered to him. Alchemy is better than gold, 
but real alchemists are very rare, and so are real Sufis. He who has a 
mere smattering of Sufism is not superior to a learned man, any more 
than he who has tried a few experiments in alchemy has ground for 
despising a rich man.
Anyone
 who will look into the matter will see that happiness is necessarily 
linked with the knowledge of God. Each faculty of ours delights in that 
for which it was created: lust delights in accomplishing desire, anger 
in taking vengeance, the eye in seeing beautiful objects, and the ear in
 hearing harmonious sounds. The highest function of the soul of man is 
the perception of truth; in this accordingly it finds its special 
delight. Even in trifling matters, such as learning chess, this holds 
good, and the higher the subject matter of the knowledge obtained the 
greater the delight. 
A
 man would be pleased at being admitted into the confidence of a prime 
minister, but how much more if the king makes an intimate of him and 
discloses state secrets to him!An
 astronomer who, by his knowledge, can map the stars and describe their 
courses, derives more pleasure from his knowledge than the chess player 
from his. Seeing, then, that nothing is higher than God, how great must 
be the delight which springs from the true knowledge of Him!
A
 person in whom the desire for this knowledge has disappeared is like 
one who has lost his appetite for healthy food, or who prefers feeding 
on clay to eating bread. All bodily appetites perish at death with the 
organs they use, but the soul dies not, and retains whatever knowledge 
of God it possesses; nay increases it.
An
 important part of our knowledge of God arises from the study and 
contemplation of our own bodies, which reveal to us the power, wisdom, 
and love of the Creator. His power, in that from a mere drop He has 
built up the wonderful frame of man; His wisdom is revealed in its 
intricacies and the mutual adaptability of its parts; and His love is 
shown by His not only supplying such organs as are absolutely necessary 
for existence, as the liver, the heart, and the brain, but those which 
are not absolutely necessary, as the hand, the foot, the tongue, and the
 eye. To these He has added, as ornaments, the blackness of the hair, 
the redness of lips, and the curve of the eyebrows.
Man
 has been truly termed a "microcosm," or little world in himself and the
 structure of his body should be studied not only by those who wish to 
become doctors, but by those who wish to attain to a more intimate 
knowledge of God, just as close study of the niceties and shades of 
language in a great poem reveals to us more and more of the genius of 
its author.
But,
 when all is said, the knowledge of the soul plays a more important part
 in leading to the knowledge of God than the knowledge of our body and 
the functions. The body may be compared to a steed and the soul to its 
rider; the body was created for the soul, the soul for the body. If a 
man knows not his own soul, which is the nearest thing to him, what is 
the use of his claiming to know others? It is as if a beggar who has not
 the wherewithal for a meal should claim to be able to feed a town.
In
 this chapter we have attempted, in some degree, to expound the 
greatness of man's soul. He who neglects it and suffers its capacities 
to rust or to degenerate must necessarily be the loser in this world and
 the next. The true greatness of man lies in his capacity for eternal 
progress, otherwise in this temporal sphere he is the weakest of all 
things, being subject to hunger, thirst, heat, cold, and sorrow.
Those
 things he takes most delight in are often the most injurious to him, 
and those things which benefit him are not to be obtained without toil 
and trouble. As to his intellect, a slight disarrangement of matter in 
his brain is sufficient to destroy or madden him; as to his power, the 
sting of a wasp is sufficient to rob him of ease and sleep; as to his 
temper, he is upset by the loss of a sixpence; as to his beauty, he is 
little more than nauseous matter covered with a fair skin. Without 
frequent washing he becomes utterly repulsive and disgraceful.
In
 truth, man in this world is extremely weak and contemptible; it is only
 in the next that he will be of value, if by means of the "alchemy of 
happiness" he rises from the rank of beasts to that of angels. Otherwise
 his condition will be worse than the brutes, which perish and turn to 
dust. It is necessary for him, at the same time that he is conscious of 
his superiority as the climax of created things, to learn to know also 
his helplessness, as that too is one of the keys to the knowledge of 
God.
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