23.Word 3.Point
2024-07-29
Risale-i Nur et Bediuzzaman Said Nursi
2024-07-30
23.Word 3.Point
2024-07-29
Risale-i Nur et Bediuzzaman Said Nursi
2024-07-30

Risale-i Nur & Bediuzzaman Said Nursi

Who is Bediuzzaman Said Nursi?

Said Nursi was born in 1878 in a village known as Nurs, within the borders of the town of Hizan, and the city of Bitlis in the Eastern part of Turkey. He died on 23 March 1960 in Şanlıurfa, a city in the Southeastern Turkey.

 

Said Nursi, having a keen mind, an extraordinary memory, and outstanding abilities had drawn the attentions upon himself since his childhood. He completed his education in the traditional madrasah system in a very short time about three months, which takes many years to complete under normal conditions. His youth passed with an active pursuit of education and his superiority at knowledge and science was evident in the discussions with the scholars of the time on different occasions. Said Nursi who had made himself with his capacity and abilities accepted in the scientific and intellectual circles has begun to be called Bediuzzaman, “the wonder of the age”.

 

After completing his expertise in the education of Islamic sciences at the madrasah, Said Nursi conducted research in various modern sciences; followed the newspapers of the time and concerned himself with the developments in the country and the world. On the other hand by direct experience, he observed the problems of the Eastern lands, where he was born and grew up, and came to conclusion that the education was the most necessary one. Therefore he went to Istanbul in 1907 in order to demand the establishment of a university in the East where the modern and religious sciences would be taught together. There he made himself known in the scientific circles in a very short time and by writing articles in the newspapers; he joined the discussions on freedom and constitutionalism which reverberated in Istanbul and the Ottoman lands in those days and he supported constitutionalism in the name of Islam. Although he played a soothing role in an event, which broke out on the 31st of March in 1909, he was put on trial in the Martial Court with false accusations, but after making a heroic defense he was acquitted. After that he left Istanbul and returned to the East.

 

When the First World War began Bediuzzaman was in Van and he immediately founded a What is Risale-i Nur? volunteer militia regiment made up of his students and joined the battle front in the Eastern Anatolia against the invading Russian army. He was of great help in the defense of the country against the enemy and many of his students became martyrs in the battle; finally he became wounded and fell prisoner to Russians while defending the city of Bitlis. Having lived for about three years in a Russian camp as a prisoner of war, he was able to escape and come to Istanbul by way of Warsaw, Vienne, and Sophia.

 

Upon his return he was received with great enthusiasm by the statesmen and scholarly circles and immediately appointed to the membership of Dar al Hikmah al-Islamiyyah which was formed with the aim of solving novel religious issues and developing refutations against movements which worked against Islam in the 20th century, within the framework of Islamic principles. Bediuzzaman used the income from this official duty, in printing his books and distributed them to people for free. When Istanbul was under occupation he did a great service by distributing his brochure Hutuvat-ı Sitte (Six Steps) and ruined the plans of the occupation forces of the Allied Countries. Similarly against the fatwa declaring the National Forces in Anatolia as rebels, given by the Shaykh Al-Islam under the oppression of the invaders, he announced a counter-fatwa and declared the legitimacy of the action Who is Bediuzzaman Said Nursi? 6 of the national liberation. Due to these services by Bediuzzaman, he was appreciated by the National Assembly founded in Anatolia and invited persistently to Ankara.

 

Eventually he came to Ankara towards the end of 1922 and he was welcomed with an official ceremony in the Assembly. During his stay in Ankara seeing that the approach of the dominant political administration to religion was infavorable, he wrote a 10-item declaration and delivered it to the members of the Assembly. In this declaration he calls the architects of the new reformation to protect the symbols and representative practices of Islam; after that he had several meetings with Mustafa Kemal. He was offered the positions of the Eastern Public Preacher, deputy, and the membership of the Board of the Religious Affairs; but after rejecting all these offers Bediuzzaman returned to Van.

 

Bediuzzaman had no connection with the uprising of Sheikh Said, and even he tried to dissuade Sheikh Said from his intention when he had demanded support from Bediuzzaman. Despite that after the rebellion Bediuzzaman was taken from his seclusion in Van and sent as exile first to Burdur and then to Barla, a village of Isparta. There he started the service of the “spiritual jihad” by enunciating the fundamentals of belief in his works he writes one after another. These works have seen What is Risale-i Nur? 7 the favor and approval of the people who felt their faith in danger; they spread quickly by circulating from hand to hand. The total number of books that were written by hand exceeded 600.000 in those days. As the favor and tendency of the people to this service disturbed those in power, Bediuzzaman had to stand trials in courts in Eskişehir in 1935, in Denizli in 1943, in Afyon in 1947, and in Istanbul in 1952. As these trials did not bring the desired achievement, he was not left in peace; he was compelled to live under close watch and control in Kastamonu, Emirdağ, Isparta.

Bediuzzaman who was continually subject to arbitrary treatment and persecution until the last days of his life, continued carrying out the service of belief with great determination; succeeded in completing and disseminating the collection of the Risale-i Nur, which exceeded 6000 pages. These works which are the fruits of his troublesome life have been written with the divine inspiration and guidance, prove the truths of the Qur’an and its miraculousness in accordance with the understanding of the modern age.

 

What is Risale-i Nur?

 

“Taking inspiration directly from the Qur’an, we must introduce Islam to the new age.”

 

This ideal expressed by Mehmet Akif, a poet who explored themes such as religion, motherland and freedom in the name of the Muslim World hoping a light and a good message from our holy book, the Qur’an has become realized through the collection of the Risale-i Nur, the books you hold in your hands, which have been written by Bediuzzaman Said Nursi. Thus the messages of the Qur’an to the people of this age have been announced by means of these books.

 It is possible to find in the Risale-i Nur, a wonderful exegesis of the Qur’an, for individuals living in the modern age. It is characterised as maintaining the fundamental message of the Qur’an while illuminating verses in a way that is in accordance with this century. Risale-i Nur in this context assumes the role of renewal in understanding the message of the Qur’an that is directed at this century.

Bediuzzaman who analyzed the characteristics of this age and diagnosed its spiritual diseases with a deep insight, met those spiritual needs from the treasury of belief with the books of the Risale-i Nur that he put on paper with the formula “it is time to save the belief.”

 Why is it time to save belief?

Because belief is being threatened in a way which has never taken place in previous centuries. In the past the belief had never come face to face with such great dangers. The communities predominantly accepted the tenets of the belief with submission. For that reason the sayings of the great men gained acceptance even without evidence. However with the prevailing of the materialist movements in this age, suspicions threatening the belief have reached to a level that deeply engaged the minds of many people.

Suspicions, objections and doubts have accumulated against the Qur’an for centuries using modern means received approval by many people. Thus Bediuzzaman Said Nursi seeing that these developments would endanger the belief of even the Muslims, have succeeded in building a strong fortification like writing the collection of the Risale-i Nur with a direct inspiration from the Qur’an against the indoctrination of the flooding disbelief.

These books give persuasive answers to questions like “Who am I? Where did I come from? Where do I go? What is my duty in this world?”, which engage everybody’s mind and which the modern man can not be indifferent; they explain and prove all tenets of belief beginning with the belief in Allah; answer in a convincing style all the questions asked on the part of science and philosophy; defend religion by disproving the claims about its inconsistency with science; disappoint the destructive attempts of distorting religion; treat the wounds opened by the spiritual crises of the human beings caused by the civilization based on a materialistic understanding by means of mind persuading, soul touching and heart convincing sweet explanations about the large truths of the Qur’an like the Unity and the Hereafter; remove through the messages of the Qur’an, the states like dissipation, aimless straying and disturbances brought about by the malfunctioning of mind and heart

Another important characteristic of the Risale-i Nur is its providing sound and consistent solutions to the social and political problems of our age; making mind opening and globally valid interpretations on issues like religion and democracy, religion and politics, jihad and terror; leading an exemplary and original service method based on positive action and giving priority to democracy, rights, freedoms, and civil society.

 

Nursi in the Writings of Scholars

 

“I found in Bediuzzaman Said Nursi the life of someone who with his life and works implicitly challenged this modernist dogma. Not because he turned his back to the world, but because he had submitted himself to a higher discipline and because he subsisted through an order outside of man. This discipline and order are found in the Qur’an, whose eternal truths have been verified by science.”

Fred A. Reed, Journalist Writer – CANADA

 

“Said Nursi does a lot more that just note the differences between what he sees as the materialist point of view, and that of belief. He spends a great deal of time arguing against materialism, and his arguments take two forms. One is to suggest that materialism is rationally flawed because it interprets the world incorrectly. These are interesting arguments and they run right throughout the writings of the New Said.”

Prof. Dr. Oliver Leaman Kentucky University – USA

 

“Said Nursi does not respond to this critique of religion by hurling condemnations. Rather, he admits that some of the diagnosis is correct. Religious communities are themselves to blame for the malaise that afflicts them. He notes six dire illnesses that must be confronted if religious believers are to make a positive contribution to human progress in the coming decades. While noting the failures of believers, he also rejects the godless and materialist solutions proposed by the critics, which he foresees will lead to disaster, a claim which the subsequent history of the century proved to be only too accurate.”

Prof. Dr. Thomas Michel S.J. Georgetown University – USA

 

“The above characteristics of the Risale-i Nur shows that it has a true share of the Qur’an, and explains it suitable to the understanding of the age. ... In this paper we have discussed the dictionary definitions of compassion and mercy, and attempted to describe their various sorts as put forward in the Risale-i Nur. We saw that Almighty God’s mercy encompasses all beings, even the unbelievers. We saw next the mercy of God’s Messenger (pbuh) for his community, and how it is reflected in worldly life and will be shown on the Day of Resurrection. We discussed then the importance of the kind treatment of parents, especially when elderly.”

 Prof. Dr. Abd al-Qadir Muhammad, Khartoum University – SUDAN

 

“Said Nursi demonstrates that as a rational being who can comprehend the world and universe, man’s true nature can be understood only through belief. Only through belief can man traverse the stages of creation, undertake the vicegerency of the earth, ascend the steps of perfection, and reach high rank by studying and pondering over all the bounties of his Sustainer and Lord, Moreover, on attaining to perfection, all the secrets of the creation are unfolded to him.”

 Prof. Dr. Abd al-Aziz Chabbar Tatwan University – MOROCCO

 

“Looking at the contemporary discourse of Turkish Muslims in general and the followers of Said Nursi in particular, it is obvious that science and especially natural sciences take a considerable role in their religious discourse. ... In this understanding of science, one studies science as a kind of religious duty, i.e. for the sake of God. Science explains the nature surrounding man, which, from a religious point of view, means the creation. By getting knowledge of the creation man can get knowledge of the Creator, an activity which is seen as the religious duty of man. This understanding of science was formed and formulated by Bediuzzaman Said Nursi and had a great impact on the positions that pious Muslims take in the structure of Turkish society today.”

Bekim Agai B. Chum University – GERMANY

 

“Then a deep questioning came up in my heart: Why do we suffer? Why do we have emotional, mental, and material problems when we have in front of us the Qur’an and the Risale-i Nur, that have all the answers we need to make our lives (and consequently, our society) full of harmony, health and peace? ... Because the Risale is perfect and complete, but the reader is the object of transformation, the flower to burst into blossom by the exercise of his own transformation towards a higher level of his own being.”

Dr. Cecilia Moreira Psychologist – BRAZIL

 

“The Qur’anic discourse on time is characterized by the use of very diversified terminology which indicates the existence of two different kinds of time metaphysical and physical. The Qur’an emphasizes the importance of physical or this-worldly time for man. Said Nursi in the Risale-i Nur discussed both dimensions of time. In metaphysical realm, he has related time to Divine Knowledge, Power, Determining and Creation. In physical realm, he has specifically discussed the influence of time on man and the world and the importance of present time, which if lost cannot be recaptured.”

Prof. Dr. Fikret Karcic International Islamic University – MALAYSIA

 

“Nursi considers that one of the aspects of the trust or the responsibility undertaking by the man through I, the manifestation of individuality of each man is the key to the Most Beautiful Names which represent the quintessence of divinity characteristics, and finally, to the understanding of Divine Creation.”

Prof. Dr. George Grigore, Bucharest University – ROMANIA

 

“This paper illustrates the tajdidi links between two illustrious Muslim personalities of the last and their responses on behalf of Islam of the Qur’an and Sunnah to the question, what the relationship between God and human being is. Especially, when the question came under pressure of transformation due to the emergence of new interpretations rising from both within the old of Islam as in the case of Shaikh Ahmad Sirhindi and through the emergence of modern scientific and technical age in the case of Said Nursi”

Dr. Imtiyaz Yusuf Prince of SongkJa University – THAILAND

 

“Said Nursi was a contemporary of Iqbal, but there is no reason to suggest that they met each other, or influenced each other. It seems that they have both reacted to the intellectual challenges of the twentieth century in essentially different ways. They have both attempted to reconcile the apparent contradiction between human free will and divine predestination. Unlike Iqbal, who derived inspiration from modern philosophy, Nursi seems to have been inspired by the classical tradition and used it as a point of departure for the challenges of secular modernity.”

Prof. Dr. Yasien Mohamed Western Cape University - SOUTH AFRICA

 

“Bediuzzaman Said Nursi wrote with his heart and his imagination as well as with his head and his intellect. One of the reasons that he has endured through the 20th century and into the 21st as a highly revered interpreter of Islam and the Qur’an is his ability to speak, through his writing, in words that are straightforward yet rich in interpretive symbolism.”

Prof. Dr. Jane I. Smith Hartford Seminary – USA

 

“Nursi depicts brilliantly the aims of human and explains that the effort to achieve these aims causes the model human being to reflect the manifestations of the divine names and attributes; indeed, it makes him the point of focus of dominical light. The believer who truly proceeds from the affirmation of divine unity attains eternal life and happiness in this world, employing in the best way the faculties for acquiring knowledge with which God has armed him, and the ways of guidance.”

Dr. Musa al-Bast Al-Quds University – PALESTINE

 

Nursi suggests that man should first adopt a positive attitude towards things around him and look at everything with a penetrative or internal eye (basira) and not just with the physical eyes. Only then he becomes aware of the balance of justice pervasive in all creation. For to such a spiritually powerful eye, all the creatures, he proclaims, will appear as an obvious sign of and hence a visible testimony to God’s wisdom, justice, generosity and mercy.

Prof. Dr. Bilal Kuşpınar Mc Gill University – CANADA

 

Bediuzzaman is not a utopian; he is a realist. While his heart bled for the injustices that he saw in his own society, he knew that the imposition of the shari’a in a social context where belief was lacking, or, indeed, absent, would be counter productive. His way was the way of the perfection of belief on an individual level: the way of evolution rather than revolution; the way of building Muslim society from bottom up rather than top down. Again, his was the way of “Fastaqim kama umirte (Qur’an: 11/112)”, be it on the level of man’s relationship with God or man’s relationship with his fellow men. Bediuzzaman did not make the mistake of reducing Islam to the question of governance, but rather to the question of personal responsibility before God: the responsibility of self-knowledge. God-knowledge and the love and worship of the Creator. Social justice is impossible without justice that is assimilated on a personal level. Across the whole of the Muslim world today, Muslims are ‘dreaming of Medina’, of recreating the so-called golden age of the Prophet. However, they wish to do so without having endured the hardships of Mecca, where the real lessons of justice were taught. In this sense, Bediuzzaman is calling us all back to Mecca, for once Mecca has been experienced, Medina can take care of itself.

Prof. Dr. Colin Turner University of Durham – UK

 

The majority of Christian theologians in the West tend towards universalism (i.e. the belief that ultimately all are saved) and therefore a deep suspicion of hell and judgment.The Risale-i Nur is an interesting challenge to this position. For Nursi, a sense of judgment at the end of the life is the heart of moral accountability. The fact that ‘death’ is a test, when we will be held to account, is vitally important. Justice for Bediuzzaman Said Nursi requires evil to be judged by God. Christians should take this argument more seriously. If we do so, then it will lead Christians to a more nuanced understanding of God’s action after death.

Prof. Dr. Ian Markham

 

The teachings of Nursi readily function to explain, “in accordance with the understanding of the age, the truths of the Qur’an” (Nursi 1985). Nursi insisted that books, not people, wage a “battle against unbelief” (S. Mardin 1989: p.4). Nursi’s style is readily accessible to multiple audiences, and women are taking an increasingly active role in promoting the message. For some readers, the specifics of Turkish historical development help explain the nuances of certain passages and the context for which they were originally intended. For others, however, the rich metaphors and imagery offer a point of departure for religious understanding that requires only minimal familiarity with the specifics of the times and places in Turkey where the various elements of the Risale-i Nur first came into existence.

Prof. Dr. Dale F. Eickelman Dartmouth College – USA

 

We regard Nursi as representing one of the new human types in Muslim society. This was a type that cultivated modern knowledge while rooting it in the value system of Islam. Furthermore, this type was driven by an ideal of excellence. The examples of the ideals of excellence discussed by Alatas are derived from earlier periods of Muslim history. In Nursi, we find an historical case of an ideal of excellence from modern history.

Prof. Dr. Syed Farid Alatas National University of Singapore – SINGAPORE

 

 

 

 

Books in the Collection

 

The Words

The Words is the first and the most essential work in the Risale-i Nur Collection. In this work the relationships between Allah, universe and man are explained with the inspiration from the Qur’an and Hadiths of the Messenger Muhammad (pbuh) in a style appropriate to the understanding of our age. This work provides answers for many questions that keep the minds occupied such as, “Why were the universe and man created? How can the created things and beings be evidence to the existence of the Creator? How can it be that Allah, though being one, be present everywhere at the same time? How can we understand with our mind and logic the resurrection after death? Why does man need to worship and pray Allah? What is destiny? Is man obliged to the destiny? Why and how is the Qur’an a miracle?”

 

The Letters

The Letters is one of the most important works of the Risale-i Nur Collection that puts forth convincing explanations for various issues that concern individuals and society such as the nature of life and death, the death’s being a beauty and a blessing for a believer, the mystery behind the never ending and stunning activities in the universe, the miracles of the Prophet Muhammad (pbuh), explaining the apparently negative incidents taking place among the companions of the prophet from the destiny’s perspective, the great bonds of unity that connect the believers to one another, reform in Islam, nationalism, feasting, and sufism-tariqat.

 

The Flashes

The principles of life and belief that are necessary for the young, the old, the ill, students, scientists, and women, in other words necessary for everybody, are found this work. Other issues that are dealt with in this work are, that the nature and causes have no influence in terms of creation, the road of happiness led and experienced by the Prophet Muhammad (pbuh), the principles of happiness in family life, the fundamentals strengthening the brotherhood of belief, the reasons and benefits of calamities and disasters, the reasons behind the creation of the devil, the psychological analysis of sin and ways of salvation from the sin.

 

The Rays

An important book of the Risale-i Nur Collection that covers issues like the observations of a traveler asking his Creator from the universe, the evidences of the Unity in the languages of all beings, the purpose and reasons of man’s life on the Earth, the signs of the doomsday in the sayings of the Prophet (pbuh), explanations about the nature of the dreadful persons like Dajjal and Sufyan.

 

The Staff of Moses

This wonderful work of the Risale-i Nur Collection articulates that just like the staff of Moses which swallowed the magic objects of the sorcerers, the evidences of belief based on the Qur’anic inspiration, invalidates the ideas of disbelief and atheism. It also deals with topics like proving the existence and unity of Allah through sciences, worshipping, teenage, the relationship between the happiness in the world and the belief in the resurrection and Hereafter.

 

Comparisons of Belief and Disbelief

This work of the Risale-i Nur Collection compares through samples, the consequences of belief in Allah and His denial, reflected in the life. It is explained and proven with convincing parables that belief in Allah and worshipping Him, leads to happiness in both lives but the way of sin and denial causes troubles; that even in this world the belief enables man to taste the life of a spiritual Heaven, while the denial causes experiencing the suffering of a spiritual Hell.

 

The Biography of Bediuzzaman Said Nursi

This is a very precious and important work of the Risale-i Nur Collection that comprises his essays, letters, and defenses which were proofreaded by himself. It presents with a plain style the biography of Bediuzzaman Said Nursi from his birth to his death, his services, endeavors, efforts, and self-sacrifice.

 

The Epitomes of Light

This book which can be considered as the index and seedbed of the Risale-i Nur Collection is one of the first works of Bediuzzaman, where the ways for man to explore his Creator, the principles to follow in combatting with soul and explanations of the truths of belief take place

 

The Signs of Miraculousness

It is an extraordinary exegesis of the Qur’an (tafsir) written on the battlefield during the First World War. It is a work that contains the facts understood through the exploration of sciences, the new interpretations, delicate meanings of the Qur’an needed by the men of the present age. It is also a unique work that expounds the miraculousness of the Qur’an in many ways, especially by describing the fine and miraculous relations in the arrangement of the verses, phrases, words and even letters of the Qur’an.

 

Barla Letters

This book which contains the letters of the first students of the Risale-i Nur, which express their sincere feelings, their spiritual and sentimental benefits and the corresponding replies of Bediuzzaman that were written in Barla where the Risale-i Nur begins to spread. It determines the method and ways of serving to the task of the belief and the Qur’an by means of the Risale-i Nur.

 

Kastamonu Letters

This book which consists of the letters written by Bediuzzaman and his students while he was obliged to reside in Kastamonu, is a sort of summary of the service of belief and the Qur’an and a social lesson given in a certain period. These letters are accounts of carrying out the service of belief and its development; they throw light on the nature of the Risale-i Nur as an exegesis, the characteristics of the students of the Risale-i Nur, the styles of serving the task of the belief, and the patterns of struggling with the opponents of religion.

 

 

Emirdağ Letters

This book is composed of the letters written by Bediuzzaman during his residence in Emirdağ to university students and his followers living in Istanbul, Isparta, Kastamonu, and Ankara, sometimes as answers to their questions and their letters. These letters demonstrate various aspects of the service of the belief and the Qur’an especially regarding the social and the political life as well.

 

The Approval Seal of the Unseen (Sikke-i Tasdîk-i Gaybî)

It is a book that explains the signs by thirty three verses of the Qur’an, and of unseen references by Hazrat Ali (ra) and Abd el-Qadir Gilani (ks) to the Risale-i Nur and that mentions the samples of the divine blessings and supports granted during the service of the belief and that considers the significance and position of the Risale-i Nur Collection in the spiritual realm.

 

The Reasonings

The Reasonings is a unique work of Bediuzzaman written in his early ages as a scholar. It builds up connections among man, universe, literature and rhetoric based on belief and unity; it gives the fundamentals of speaking and writing well, efficiently and appropriately and of thinking and reasoning logically and firmly, where each statement has the value of a principle.

Some Excerpts From

Risale-i Nur Collection

  •  

For everything of yours is preserved, all your actions written down, every service you have rendered recorded. (The Letters)

  •  

Whoever relies on Allah finds Him sufficient. (Seedbed of The Light)

  •  

Sickness washes away the dirt of sins like soap, and cleanses. (The Flashes)

  •  

One who does not reform his own soul cannot reform others. (The Words)

  •  

In the same way that you are not left to your own devices, so too, these phenomena and events have a master and a purpose. (The Rays)

  •  

Were you created only for this world that you spend all your time on it? (The Words)

  •  

Life’s capital is very little and the work to be done is much. (The Rays)

  •  

You are not immortal. You have not been left to your own devices. You have a duty. Give up your pride, think of the One who created you. Know that you will enter the grave, so prepare yourself for it! (The Flashes)

 

For those who freely consent to indulge in harmful actions may not be pitied. They are not worthy of it. (The Words)

  • Man has been sent to this world as an official and guest and has been given abilities of great significance. And he has been entrusted with important duties in accordance with those abilities. In order to employ man in fulfilling those aims and duties, powerful encouragement and severe threats have been made. (The Words)
  • The world your friends have gone to is not dark. They have merely gone somewhere else; you will meet again. (The Flashes)
  • Your body is not composed of stone and iron, but of various materials which are ever disposed to parting. Leave off your pride, perceive your impotence, recognize your Owner, know your duties, learn why you came to this world. (The Flashes)
  • For the limits of the permissible are broad, and are quite adequate for man’s desire; there is no need to trespass on the forbidden. (The Words)
  • Worship is the price and the result of creation. (Signs of Miraculousness)
  • Work for beyond the grave, for it is there that true happiness and pleasure will be found! (The Letters)

 

All your good deeds have been preserved and you will receive your reward. (The Rays)

  • Furthermore, with the right intention, all the other acts of someone who performs the prescribed prayers become like worship. (The Words)
  • O man! The service you have offered and the worship you have performed are not for nothing. A realm of reward, an abode of bliss, has been prepared for you. An unending Paradise is awaiting you in place of this fleeting world of yours. (The Letters)
  • The most fortunate person is he who does not forget the hereafter for this world. (The Letters)
  • Neither good nor bad will remain without recompense. (The Letters)
  • The Qur’an also says to the believer; “Since your life is brief, think of eternal life. Do not fret! There is an unending life.” (The Words)
  • Time has shown that Paradise is not cheap, and neither is Hell unnecessary. (The Letters)
  • True, painfree pleasure is found only in belief in Allah, and is possible only through belief. (The Rays)
  • Your youth will definitely leave you, and if you do not remain within the bounds of the licit, it will be lost, and rather than its pleasures, it will bring you calamities and suffering in this

world, in the grave, and in the hereafter. (The Words)

  • The Qur’an has trained men, purified their souls and cleansed their hearts. And has caused spirits to unfold and progress, given direction and light to minds, and vitality and happiness to life. (The Words)
  • Nature is an embroidery, and cannot be the Embroiderer. (The Flashes)
  • Whoever created the mosquito’s eye, created the sun. (The Letters)
  • As time grows older, the Qur’an grows younger; it signs become apparent. (The Letters)
  • Hell is not unnecessary; there are many things which cry out “Long live Hell!” with all their strength. (The Letters)
  • Through the light of belief, it shows to the heart of a believer that death is not execution, but a change of abode; that the grave is not the mouth of a dark well, but the door to light-filled worlds; and that forall its glitter, the world is like a dungeon in relation to the hereafter. (The Words)
  • If your hand is broken, look at theirs, which is severed. If you have only one eye, look at the blind, who lack both eyes, and offer thanks to Allah! (The Flashes)

 

  • A person who sees the good in things has good thoughts. And he who has good thoughts receives pleasure from life. (The Letters)
  • Friends and ranks last only till the door of the grave. (The Letters)
  • Every pleasurable thing in this world will be found in its highest form in Paradise. (The Words)
  • Man’s happiness and well-being in this world are possible only through justice. As for justice, it can be achieved only through direct application of the way shown by the Qur’an. (The Damascus Sermon)
  • Who are you? Where have you come from? Where are you going? What is your purpose? (The Words)
  • Those who search for every truth in corporeality have their intellects in their corporeal senses, but corporeal senses are blind to spiritual things. (The Reasonings)
  • For if man is not a true human being, he is transformed into a diabolical animal. (The Flashes)
  • The appointed hour of death is secret, so we could die any day. (The Letters)
  • Everything about Divine Determining is good and beautiful. Even the evil that comes from it is good, and the ugliness, beautiful. (The Words)

 

This world is a guesthouse. (The Letters)

  • The source of Islam is knowledge and its basis is reason, and that it accepts the truth and rejects sophistry and delusion. (Signs of Miraculousness)
  • If someone tells me there is a scorpion on my neck or breast or else points it out to me, I should be grateful to him, not offended. (The Letters)
  • The oppressor retains his power, and the oppressed, his humiliation, as they both depart and migrate from this realm. Their affairs are, then, left to the Supreme Tribunal (hereafter). (The Words)
  • Philosophy is a pair of dark glasses which shows everything to be ugly and frightful. While belief in Allah is a transparent, clear, luminous pair of spectacles which shows everything to be beautiful and familiar. (The Rays)
  • The pleasures and enjoyment man receives through licit striving within the sphere of what is lawful are sufficient for him. No need remains to enter the unlawful. (The Words)
  • It is not burdensome for the memory of a small and simple child; children can memorize it (the Qur’an) easily. (The Words)
  • Force should always serve right. (The Words)

 

Politics based on self-interest is savagery. (The Words)

  • If mankind wants life, it must put to death usury of every sort. (The Words)
  • The All-Wise Qur’an is wise. It affords everything a position in relation to its value. (The Words)
  • Allah willing, through the strength of Islam in the future, the virtues of civilization will prevail, the face of the earth cleansed of filth, and universal peace be secured. (The Damascus Sermon)
  • The purpose for the sending of man to this world and the wisdom implicit in it, consists of recognizing the Creator of all beings and believing in Him and worshipping Him. (The Rays)
  • If a person’s good points are greater in regard to quality or quantity than his bad points, he is deserving of love and respect. (The Flashes)
  • Man possesses vast capital, and he came here to work and do trade for an eternal, everlasting life. The capital given to man is his lifetime. (The Flashes)
  • The Qur’an, revealed as a mercy for mankind, only accepts civilization of this kind; happiness for all, or at least for the majority. (The Letters)
  • Justice without equality is not justice. (The Letters)

 

So long as man’s dirty hand does not interfere, there is no true uncleanliness or ugliness in anything. (The Flashes)

  • As far as days yet to come are concerned, since they have not yet come, to think now of the illness or misfortune to be borne during them and display impatience, is also foolishness. (The Flashes)
  • Every supplication is answered, but its being accepted and exactly what was sought being given is dependent on Almighty Allah’s wisdom. (The Words)
  • The Qur’an has imitated nothing and no one. And no one has been able to imitate it. (The Words)
  • The Qur’an does not weary even if repeated thousands of times; indeed, it gives pleasure. (The Words)
  • The Qur’an preserves its freshness and youth every age as though newly revealed. (The Words)
  • For those who believe, the grave is the door to a world far better than this world. (The Words)
  • Indeed, Paradise is the means both to all spiritual and non-physical pleasures, and to all physical pleasures. (The Words)
  • Every village must have its headman; every needle must have its manufacturer and craftsman. And, as you know, every letter

must be written by someone. How, then, can it be that so extremely well-ordered a kingdom should have no ruler? (The Words)

  • Everyday our Creator bestows on us the capital of twenty-four hours of life so that with it we may obtain all the things necessary for our two lives. (The Rays)
  • The person who makes it his habit to follow the Prophet’s (pbuh) practices transforms all his acts into worship, and may make his whole life fruitful and yielding of reward. (The Flashes)
  • The creation of Satan, even, since he is the cause of striving and competition, the springs of man’s spiritual progress, is also good, as is the creation of his species; their creation is beautiful in that respect. (The Rays)
  • The evil spirits and those who follow them take the path of misguidance, they can cause great destruction with a small act, and they can violate the rights of many creatures and cause much harm with a small deed. (The Flashes)
  • You should know that value and importance do not lie in quantity and number. (The Flashes)
  • For genuine sincerity, even for the sake of evil, cannot fail to yield results, and whatever man seeks with sincerity, Allah will grant him it. (The Flashes)

 

Civilization, however, has drawn women out of their homes, rent their veils, and corrupted mankind. (The Words)

  • Islamic dress is natural for women, andto cast it aside is contrary to women’s nature. (The Words)
  • Allah Almighty has no need of your worship, nor indeed of anything else. It is you who needs to worship, for in truth you are sick. Worship is a sort of remedy for your spiritual wounds. (The Flashes)
  • The sole means of saving women’s happiness in the hereafter, and their happiness in this world, as well as saving their elevated innate qualities from corruption, is the training given by the religion of Islam; there is no other means. (The Flashes)
  • Since the hereafter exists and it is everlasting, and it is a better world than this; and since the One who created us is both All-Wise and All-Compassionate; we should not complain and regret our old age. (The Flashes)
  • If you wish to defeat your enemy, then respond to his evil with good. For if you respond with evil, enmity will increase, and even though he will be outwardly defeated, he will nurture hatred in his heart, and hostility will persist. But if you respond to him with good, he will repent and become your friend. (The Letters)