Sufi ascension: Stages of the self

farhan

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by Robert Frager Ph.D

The goal of all mysticism is to cleanse the heart, to educate, or transform, the self, and to find God. The lowest level of the self is dominated by pride, egotism, and totally self-centered greed and lust. This level is the part within each person that leads away from Truth. The highest level is the pure self, and at this level there is no duality, no separation from God.

The self is actually a living process rather than a static structure in the psyche. The self is not a thing. The Arabic term is related to words for "breath," "soul," "essence," "self," and "nature." It refers to a process that comes about from the interaction of body and soul. When the soul becomes embodied, it forgets its original nature and becomes enmeshed in material creation. This creates the self.

The lowest level of the self, the ego or lower personality, is made up of impulses, or drives, to satisfy desires. These drives dominate reason or judgment and are defined as the forces in one's nature that must be brought under control. The self is a product of the self-centered consciousness - the ego, the "I." The self must be transformed - this is the ideal. The self is like a wild horse; it is powerful and virtually uncontrollable. As the self becomes trained, or transformed, it becomes capable of serving the individual. Sheikh Muzaffer has written,
The self is not bad in itself. Never blame your self. Part of the work of Sufism is to change the state of your self. The lowest state is that of being completely dominated by your wants and desires. The next state is to struggle with yourself, to seek to act according to reason and higher ideals and to criticize yourself when you fail. A much higher state is to be satisfied with whatever God provides for you, whether it means comfort or discomfort, fulfillment of physical needs or not.​
According to many Sufi teachers, there are seven levels of the self. They are seven levels of development, ranging from absolutely self-centered and egotistical to purely spiritual.

The Commanding Self.

The first level has also been described as the domineering self or the self that incites to evil. The commanding self seeks to dominate and to control each individual. At this level there is unbridled selfishness and no sense of morality or compassion.

Descriptions of this level are similar to descriptions of the id in psychoanalytic theory; it is closely linked to lust and aggression. These have been called the swine and the dogs of the self - the sensual traits are like swine, the ferocious ones like fierce dogs or wolves. Wrath, greed, sensual appetites, passion, and envy are examples of traits at this level of the self. This is the realm of physical and egoistic desires.

At this level people are like addicts who are in denial. Their lives are dominated by uncontrollable addictions to negative traits and habits, yet they refuse to believe they have a problem. They have no hope of change at this level, because they do not acknowledge any need to change.

The Regretful Self.

People who have not developed beyond the first level are unaware and unconscious. As the light of faith grows, insight dawns, perhaps for the first time. The negative effects of a habitually self-centered approach to the world become apparent to the regretful self.



At this level, wants and desires still dominate, but now the person repents from time to time and tries to follow higher impulses. As Sheikh Muzaffer points out,
There is a battle between the self, the lower self, and the soul. This battle will continue through life. The question is, Who will educate whom? Who will become the master of whom? If the soul becomes the master, then you will be a believer, one who embraces Truth. If the lower self becomes master of the soul, you will be one who denies Truth.​
At this second level, people do not yet have the ability to change their way of life in a significant way. However, as they see their faults more clearly, their regret and desire for change grow. At this level, people are like addicts who are beginning to understand the pain they have caused themselves and others. The addiction is still far too strong to change. That requires far stronger medicine.

The Inspired Self.

At the next level, the seeker begins to take genuine pleasure in prayer, meditation, and other spiritual activities. Only now does the individual taste the joys of spiritual experience. Now the seeker is truly motivated by ideals such as compassion, service, and moral values. This is the beginning of the real practice of Sufism. Before this stage, the best anyone can accomplish is superficial outer understanding and mechanical outer worship.

Though one is not free from desires and ego, this new level of motivation and spiritual experience significantly reduces the power of these forces for the first time. What is essential here is to live in terms of higher values. Unless these new motivations become part of a way of life, they will wither and die away. Behaviors common to the inspired self include gentleness, compassion, creative acts, and moral action. Overall, a person who is at the stage of the inspired self seems to be emotionally mature, respectable, and respected.

The Contented Self.

The seeker is now at peace. The struggles of the earlier stages are basically over. The old desires and attachments are no longer binding. The ego-self begins to let go, allowing the individual to come more closely in contact with the Divine.

This level of self predisposes one to be liberal, grateful, trusting, and adoring. If one accepts difficulties with the same overall sense of security with which one accepts benefits, it may be said that one has attained the level of the contented self. Developmentally, this level marks a period of transition. The self can now begin to "disintegrate" and let go of all previous concern with self-boundaries and then begin to "reintegrate" as an aspect of the universal self.

The Pleased Self.

At this stage the individual is not only content with his or her lot, but pleased with even the difficulties and trials of life, realizing that these difficulties come from God. The state of the pleased self is very different from the way we usually experience the world, focused on seeking pleasure and avoiding pain. A Sufi story illustrates this:

Sultan Mahmud of Ghazna once shared a cucumber with Ayaz, his most loyal and beloved companion. Ayaz happily ate his half of the cucumber, but when the sultan bit into his half, it was so bitter he immediately spit it out.
"How could you manage to eat something so bitter? the sultan exclaimed, "it tasted like chalk or like bitter poison!"

"My beloved sultan," answered Ayaz, "I have enjoyed so many favors and bounties from your hand that whatever you give me tastes sweet."
When a person's love and gratitude to God reach this level, he or she has reached the stage of the pleased self.

The Self Pleasing to God.

Those who have reached the next stage realize that all power to act comes from God, that they can do nothing by themselves. They no longer fear anything or ask for anything.

The Sufi sage Ibn 'Arabi described this level as the inner marriage or self and soul. The self pleasing to God has achieved genuine inner unity and wholeness. At earlier stages, people struggle with the world because they experience multiplicity. A broken mirror creates a thousand different reflections of a single image. If the mirror could be made whole again, it would then reflect the single, unified image. By healing the multiplicity within, the Sufi experiences the world as whole and unified.

The Pure Self.

Those few who attain the final level have transcended the self entirely. There is no ego or separate self left, only union with God. At this stage, the individual has truly realized the truth, "There is no god but God." The Sufi now knows that there is nothing but God, that only the Divine exists, and that any sense of individuality or separateness is an illusion.

Rumi illuminates this state for us:
If you could get rid
Of yourself just once,
The secret of secrets
Would open to you.
The face of the unknown,
Hidden beyond the universe
Would appear on the
Mirror of your perception
Sufism: Transforming the self
 
The Guggenheim Museum in NY held a major exhibition called "Russia " at the latter part of 2005. There was a painting being featured I wanted to experience by Aivazovsky called the "Ninth Wave"

Russian Art

When a tour passed, I was meditating on it when two Sufi men noticed my interest. We began to share a bit on it especially on the meaning of the light in the painting and light itself. Clearly these men were highly educated and spiritually very deep. We ended up going to lunch together at the Museum Cafe. It struck me that at the same time war was going on in the world, I was involved with such a meaningful dialogue with two such extraordinary people.

Much of modern New Age thought IMO is psychologically damaging escapism. Yet what you've posted suggests the importance of consciously witnessing the human condition rather than deny it. It could be interesting to elaborate on some of the ideas suggested in the article.

For example, it is fashionable for certain New Age teachings to consider ourselves God rather than the developed self being as One with God. The former IMO is actually demonic. From the article:

The goal of all mysticism is to cleanse the heart, to educate, or transform, the self, and to find God. The lowest level of the self is dominated by pride, egotism, and totally self-centered greed and lust. This level is the part within each person that leads away from Truth. The highest level is the pure self, and at this level there is no duality, no separation from God.

Meister Eckhart describes the same IMO:

As the soul becomes more pure and bare and poor,
and possesses less of created things,
and is emptied of all things that are not God,
it receives God more purely, and is more completely in Him;
and it truly becomes one with God,
and it looks into God and God into it, face to face as it were;
two images transformed into one.
Some simple folk think that they will see God
as if He were standing there and they here.
It is not so. God and I, we are one.
I can visualize it as putting high C on the piano together with low C. They are both different and the same and connected by octaves.. They differ in scale and vibration. The soul is within God in the same way.

The self is not bad in itself. Never blame your self. Part of the work of Sufism is to change the state of your self. The lowest state is that of being completely dominated by your wants and desires. The next state is to struggle with yourself, to seek to act according to reason and higher ideals and to criticize yourself when you fail. A much higher state is to be satisfied with whatever God provides for you, whether it means comfort or discomfort, fulfillment of physical needs or not.
This is another of these conceptions very difficult to discuss. Secularism including secular religion is dominated by morals and ethics, (good and bad) People are always telling others that they are good and bad. Though we live in a secular world, how much can we allow ourselves to be dominated by this quality of reason tht blindly accepts rules without inner understanding? St. Paul alludes to this in Romans 2 and it was always the controversy between Christ and the Pharisees.

17Now you, if you call yourself a Jew; if you rely on the law and brag about your relationship to God; 18if you know his will and approve of what is superior because you are instructed by the law; 19if you are convinced that you are a guide for the blind, a light for those who are in the dark, 20an instructor of the foolish, a teacher of infants, because you have in the law the embodiment of knowledge and truth— 21you, then, who teach others, do you not teach yourself? You who preach against stealing, do you steal? 22You who say that people should not commit adultery, do you commit adultery? You who abhor idols, do you rob temples? 23You who brag about the law, do you dishonor God by breaking the law? 24As it is written: "God's name is blasphemed among the Gentiles because of you."[b]
25Circumcision has value if you observe the law, but if you break the law, you have become as though you had not been circumcised. 26If those who are not circumcised keep the law's requirements, will they not be regarded as though they were circumcised? 27The one who is not circumcised physically and yet obeys the law will condemn you who, even though you have the[c] written code and circumcision, are a lawbreaker. 28A man is not a Jew if he is only one outwardly, nor is circumcision merely outward and physical. 29No, a man is a Jew if he is one inwardly; and circumcision is circumcision of the heart, by the Spirit, not by the written code. Such a man's praise is not from men, but from God.
How many have the courage and sincerity to admit the human condition when it defies societal image to do so?

I was watching the democratic convention and saw how well everything was scripted. But what is genuine and have we become so dulled that we don't know what is genuine anymore since image dominates to the degree it does?
At this level people are like addicts who are in denial. Their lives are dominated by uncontrollable addictions to negative traits and habits, yet they refuse to believe they have a problem. They have no hope of change at this level, because they do not acknowledge any need to change.
The two Sufi men I met didn't seem to have trouble being brutally honest. Yet it was this ability that had allowed me to be secure in their objective morality. They had no need to hide behind image.
Those who have reached the next stage realize that all power to act comes from God, that they can do nothing by themselves. They no longer fear anything or ask for anything.

The Sufi sage Ibn 'Arabi described this level as the inner marriage or self and soul. The self pleasing to God has achieved genuine inner unity and wholeness. At earlier stages, people struggle with the world because they experience multiplicity. A broken mirror creates a thousand different reflections of a single image. If the mirror could be made whole again, it would then reflect the single, unified image. By healing the multiplicity within, the Sufi experiences the world as whole and unified.

This is the human condition described by St. Paul. we are fallen "broken" and the real question is how to regain inner unity rather than delight in exchanging platitudes. Unfortunately this idea has devolved into secular good and bad that assumes choice where it doesn't exist.

Simone Weil has an interesting way to look at this. All our impurity is what we refer to as "I" and is actually an aggregate of aspects of our personality.
From an essay entitled 'Human Personality'.

"So far from its being his person, what is sacred in a human being is the impersonal in him. Everything which is impersonal in man is sacred, and nothing else. ... Gregorian chant, Romanesque architecture, the Iliad, the invention of geometry were not, for the people through whom they were brought into being and made available to us, occasions for the manifestation of personality. When science, art, literature, and philosophy are simply the manifestation of personality they are on a level where glorious and dazzling achievements are possible, which can make a man's name live for thousands of years. But above this level, far above, separated by an abyss, is the level where the highest things are achieved. These things are essentially anonymous. It is pure chance whether the names of those who reach this level are preserved or lost; even when they are remembered they have become anonymous. Their personality has vanished. Truth and beauty dwell on this level of the impersonal and the anonymous. This is the realm of the sacred ... What is sacred in science is truth; what is sacred in art is beauty. Truth and beauty are impersonal. All this is too obvious."

She is referring to the developed soul which is not an attribute of the achievements of our personalities.

Why do you think these deeper ideas common to the esoteric level of the sacred traditions are so scorned by secularism? Do you think that an appreciation for the human condition without condemnation but just for the benefit of admitting reality can ever be possible in modern society so dominated by image and the fears it masks?

 
I am not on expert on European history, so I might be wrong occasionally.

There was a time in medieval Europe when it was ruled by Christian clergy. Monarchy benefited a lot from clergy-monarchy nexus. Now I am not going into if this Christianity was right or wrong, it was the Christianity that was practiced. In the middle of all that, came "new thought", as its said from Muslim Spain. The nexus tried their best to keep population away from it. Galileo is an example. Scientists were called sorcerers. But slowly the new thought got hold of the masses, & when it came in power, it kicked out both Clergy & Monarchy. Secularism although is supposed to be quite indifferent & neutral towards religion, but in its roots it always had this disdain for anything non-material. Just like clergy thought of searching material causes as devilish, similarly secularists see the search for non-material causes as the fang marks of their dead enemy.

Man is body, he needs bodily luxuries. But man is spirit & he needs spiritual luxuries too. When secularism kicked out spirit from the scene, it tried its best to substitute the vacuum with capitalism/consumerism. So now other than being a need, material luxuries also became the only reason to live. This mind set created some other gods, like progress & GDP. GDP is good, but its not the end. If now, spirit comes back, it will only create economic recession, since man focused on spirit would buy less. This is more or less equivalent of blasphemy against god. So I don't think secularism will ever accept spirit as a co-ruler. Secularists will continue to see spirituality as stupid mythology by/for weak minds. They don't care about blindness since blindness for them is the only reality.

I usually tell secularists (& they don't like it) that secular morality is a floating point bench mark. It doesn't have an inherent worth, market decides its value. So in the end, market is God. They didn't kick out God/religion, they just substituted it with a different model, an uglier one.

But spirit is slowly coming back, in both good & bad ways. lets see what happens next.
 
"So far from its being his person, what is sacred in a human being is the impersonal in him. Everything which is impersonal in man is sacred, and nothing else. ... Gregorian chant, Romanesque architecture, the Iliad, the invention of geometry were not, for the people through whom they were brought into being and made available to us, occasions for the manifestation of personality. When science, art, literature, and philosophy are simply the manifestation of personality they are on a level where glorious and dazzling achievements are possible, which can make a man's name live for thousands of years. But above this level, far above, separated by an abyss, is the level where the highest things are achieved. These things are essentially anonymous. It is pure chance whether the names of those who reach this level are preserved or lost; even when they are remembered they have become anonymous. Their personality has vanished. Truth and beauty dwell on this level of the impersonal and the anonymous. This is the realm of the sacred ... What is sacred in science is truth; what is sacred in art is beauty. Truth and beauty are impersonal. All this is too obvious."

Ofcourse, there was a time in the Islamic territories when music, poetry, paintings & architecture were loaded with spiritual concepts. "Arts" were considered to be a vehicle through which an individual travels beyond himself. Things were supposed to be holistic.

And its not just the Islamic lands. In India we have milleneums old tradition of Raga music, which is very spiritual. In the East, martial arts have more to do with spirit than warfare. Its said that Bodhidharma (a monk) brought kungfu to China. From where it migrated to Japan, Korea, & Thailand.

But now a days everything is commercial, & individualistic. People fail to realise that the whole is more than the sum of its parts.
 
The seven stages remind me of the oxherding pictures from Zen Buddhism.

I am interested to know how Sufis regard the Qur'an?

:)
 
Wonderful, Farhan. I ve always been interested in Sufism, and the purification of heart from eveything, except Allah. I hope I can reach that stage when my soul is in LASTING contact with Allah.

May Allah keep you farhan (happy) throughout all your life, Farhan.
 
Hi to All



[FONT=verdana, geneva, helvetica]The origin of the name Sufi probably goes back to the term suf, which refers to imple woolen cloaks. The original Sufi were basically mystics - people who followed a pious form of Islam and who believed that a direct, personal experience of God could be achieved through meditation and self-discipline. [/FONT]

I think this is the deviation from the real Islam ...Allah Give us the way to be close to him and this way is the only real way...which is to be faithful ...((live your life ...and worship him as he want))



The spiritual aspects of a Muslim's life should not be neglected. Still, in Islam, spiritual concerns should not eliminate material concerns. This is why we say that Islam is a religion of moderation. As it urges man to take care of his inner self, it also instructs him not to be passive. Iman (faith) never means weakness. It imbues Muslims with the strength to face life's realities. Islam does not require Muslims to follow the course of people of other faiths who tend to go to extremes, making their lives full of torture, just to reach a high state of spirituality. It does not tell Muslims to shun life, in order to come to their Lord. Rather, it tells them to strike balance between the two.


Sufism may incorporating alien things into Islam. It is a deviation away from the path of the Prophet (pbuh).Innovations have reached a peak to the extent that some have even claimed the exalted status of divinity, prophethood or messengership, turning upside down the concept of halal(allowed) and haram(prohibited) in Islam.

This point is further clarified by Sheikh Yusuf Al-Qaradawi, the renowned scholar and eminent caller to Islam, as follows:

‘We reject all the fallacies of philosophical Sufism (including such tenets as: hulul "divine incarnation" and ittihad "mystic communion with God"), ecstatic utterances of heretic Sufists and the deviations of money-oriented Sufism.
 
This point is further clarified by Sheikh Yusuf Al-Qaradawi, the renowned scholar and eminent caller to Islam, as follows:

‘We reject all the fallacies of philosophical Sufism (including such tenets as: hulul "divine incarnation" and ittihad "mystic communion with God"), ecstatic utterances of heretic Sufists and the deviations of money-oriented Sufism.

Comeon Friend, it isnt that bad ;)


The Necessity of a Measure of Proper Sufi education:

A measure of proper Sufi education based on the Quran and Sunna is in order here, as it would help in shaping a religious character whose owner would put Allah before Allah's creation, the Hereafter before earthly life and the motives of religion before the motives of desire. Not all Sufism is evil as some would imagine. Neither are all Sufists misled as claimed by those who lack in knowledge or fairness. Sufists are like other groups, as Sheikh Al-Islam Ibn Taymiyya said in his treatise entitled [the Poor]. He said about them, "Among them you find the straightforward the deviant; the one who wrongs his own soul, the one who follows a middle course, and the one who is, by Allah's leave. foremost in good deeds". Of course, we reject all the fallacies of philosophical Sufism (including such tenets as: hulul "divine incarnation" and ittihad "mystic communion with God"), ecstatic utterances of heretic Sufists and the deviations of money-oriented Sufism. What we really seek is the pure, quintessential Sufism of the pioneer Sufists, such as Al Hassan Al Basri, Al Fudayl Ibn lyad, Ibrahim Ibn Adham, Abu Sulayman Al Darani, Abul Qasim Al Junayd and others like them. We seek the Sunnite Sufism that follows a balanced line of Quran and Sunna, the Sufism that cares about the "piety of hearts" before it concerns itself with the "acts of the organs of the body". It is said in the sound hadith that "Allah shall not look at your bodies or your faces, but rather into your hearts." [Muslim]. We seek the Sufism that addresses the ailments of the heart, plugs the holes through which Satan can steal into hearts, and resists the desires of the human soul, so that it may have proper morals and virtues and abandon sins. Someone described Sufism in a nutshell, saying, "Sufism is being true to Allah and good to mankind". This is what Allah the Almighty means by saying, "For Allah is with those who restrain themselves and those who do good" [Surat Al Nahl: 128]. The Sufists are with Allah by being pious, and with people by doing good. Allama Ibn Al Qayyim quoted the early Sufists as saying, "Sufism is good manners, an anyone who surpasses you in manners should be better than you in Sufism". Ibn Al Qayyim comments on that by saying, "No, religion is good manners, and anyone who surpasses you in good manners should be better than you in religion". True ! And we need only to quote the Prophet's hadith, "I have been sent [with the Message] to make manners perfect." [Bukhari].
 
This point is further clarified by Sheikh Yusuf Al-Qaradawi, the renowned scholar and eminent caller to Islam, as follows:

‘We reject all the fallacies of philosophical Sufism (including such tenets as: hulul "divine incarnation" and ittihad "mystic communion with God"), ecstatic utterances of heretic Sufists and the deviations of money-oriented Sufism.

Our dear Sheikh Yusuf Al-Qaradawi meant the philosophical sufism, what about the Sunni Sufism???
 
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