Just as Mohammed is the most uncompromising of monotheists, so Ibn
al-'Arabi is the most rigorous of panentheists. Everything that exists
is a part of and a manifestation of the Oneness of God. Humans are part
of God. The idea of a separate self is the result of ignorance.
Ibn al-'Arabi was born in Murcia, Spain, in AH 560 [AD 1165]. At
the age of twenty he was initiated into Sufism. From the 1190s he
engaged in three decades of travels as a wandering scholar, poet and
mystic, visiting the Maghreb, Egypt, Arabia, Syria and Asia Minor. In
1223 he finally settled in Damascus.
One source of Ibn al-'Arabi's panentheism is Sufism, which seeks
to efface the self in mystical union with God.
The other is Islamic theology. Panentheism is already strongly
present - in the Quran: "Wheresoever you turn, there is the face of
God." [Quran, II.115.] And in Islam shirk - association - is
one of the gravest sins: "God does not forgive anyone for associating
something with him." [Quran, IV.48] This bans the linking of other
divinities with God, as in polytheism and the Christian trinity.
But Ibn al-'Arabi applies it more rigorously. To associate
anything at all with God would be shirk. Therefore nothing can
exist except God.
However, Ibn al-'Arabi believed that God had a transcendental as
well as an immanent aspect. He was manifested in, but also extended
beyond the material universe. He had a hidden, veiled side.
The texts are from The Bezels of Wisdom [BW], translated by
R.W.J Austin, Paulist Press, New York 1980, and The Treatise on
Being, [TB]
translated by T. H. Weir, Beshara Publications, London 1976.
The true authorship of the Treatise on Being is not known.
It was
probably written by a disciple of Ibn Al'Arabi. It reflects his
thinking, but
perhaps in a more ecstatic, intense and uncompromising way.
Selected statements from The Bezels of Wisdom and The Treatise on
Being.
Oneness and uniqueness of God.
Praise be to God, before whose oneness there was not a before, unless
the
before were He, and after whose singleness there is not an after,
except the
after be He. He is, and there is with Him no after nor before, nor
above nor
below, nor far nor near, nor union nor division.[TB]
For He will not have anything to be other than He. Indeed, the other is
He,
and there is no otherness.[TB]
God is all things.
The Cosmos is His form. The forms of the Cosmos are the manifest
Reality, He
being the manifest. He is also their inner essence, being also the
unmanifest.
He is the first, since He was when they were not, and also the Last,
since in
their manifestation He is the Essence. [BW X]
The eye perceives naught but Him. We are in His presence at all times,
in all
states. [BW X]
God is essentially all things. He permeates through all beings created
and
originated. [BW X]
He is Being itself, the Essence of Being, He is the Preserver of all.
In
preserving all things, He is preserving His form, lest anything should
assume
a form other than His Form, which is not possible. [BW X]
The existence of all created things is His existence. Thou dost not
see, in
this world or the next, anything beside God. [TB]
God is observer and observed.
He is the observer in the observer, and the observed in the observed.
[BW X]
None sees Him, save Himself. None perceives Him, save Himself. By
Himself he
sees Himself, and by Himself he knows Himself. His Veil is part of his
Oneness; nothing veils other than he. . . His Prophet is he, and his
sending
is He, and His word is He.[TB]
The knower and that which he knows are both one, and he who unites and
that
with which he unites are one, and seer and seen are one. [TB]
Identity of self and God.
Thou art not thou: thou art He. Thou never wast nor wilt be, Thou art
neither
ceasing to be nor still existing. Thou art He. [TB]
Thou art not what is beside God. Thou art thine own end and thine own
object
in thy search after thy Lord. [TB]
He who knows himself understands that his existence is not his own
existence,
but his existence is the existence of God. [TB]
SCIENTIFIC PANTHEISM
is the belief that the universe and
nature are divine.
It fuses religion and science, and concern for humans with concern
for
nature.
It provides the most realistic concept of life after death,
and the most
solid basis for environmental ethics.
It is a religion that requires no faith other than common sense,
no revelation other than open eyes and a mind open to evidence,
no guru other than your own self.
For an outline, see
Basic principles of scientific pantheism.
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Copyright & copy: Paul Harrison 1996.