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Lesson Six
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What
is revelation?
Within the overall scheme of being, revelation is the precise, complex
and unique relationship that links the Prophets to God. It is the sole
source for the knowledge of prophethood, the basis for the cognition and
insights of the Prophets, and the vehicle for their exalted mission of
bringing about fundamental and positive change in human society. Through
their superior, clear and direct awareness of the realities of being, the
Prophets are inspired by God with heavenly teachings and laws, which they
then present to the human beings as messages from the realm of the unseen.
The process of revelation consists of an angel softly conveying certain
matters to the hearing of a Prophet. Sometimes the Prophet sees the angel
and exchanges words with him. If matters are conveyed only to the heart,
this is a question of inspiration, not of revelation.
Prophets who shone forth in the darkness at a time when discrimination,
injustice and disunion had reached their height, began their missions with
a command received through revelation. By arousing human beings' minds,
they directed their attention to the subtle perceptions latent within their
own primordial nature and attempted to cleanse them of the effects left
by the beliefs and customs they had acquired from their environment.
Thus they were able to make blossom the higher capacities and urges
of the human being and to guide them towards happiness and the good.
Of course, the ultimate nature of revelation and the type of perception
that leads to it is not known to us, because it lies beyond the categories
accessible to normal perception and the forms of awareness that are available
to the human being through the operation of his creative intellect on the
data and knowledge that he acquires. Despite the spiritual and intellectual
legacies that have been passed down to us, we are unable to perceive the
particular characteristics of this relationship with God. This has always
remained a dark corner inaccessible to our thought and imagination, and
it may always remain so.
Nonetheless, it is certain that abundant spirituality and extraordinary
inward purity in a given individual may create in him a certain receptivity
that fits him to receive God's abundant revelation and to be chosen for
undertaking the mission of a Prophet.
At the same time, being actually able to receive heavenly commands and
to be linked to the pre-eternal source of revelation depends exclusively
on the will of God. The purity and worthiness of an individual cannot be
a causative factor in the establishment of that relationship.
Since the purpose of prophethood is the comprehensive guidance of the
individual and society toward perfection and the laying down of a legal
system and a social order for mankind, the assumption of responsibility
involved is necessarily heavy and taxing. To accept bearing the burden
of prophethood requires great capacity and energy. God therefore bestows
the station of prophethood on those who have the ability and capacity to
bear the heavy responsibilities of delineating a practical course for the
human being to follow through the light of revelation.
Being appointed to this mission is like a storm that envelops the whole
being of the Prophet. It causes his mind to overflow with the light of
insight and wisdom, and by virtue of this clarity of vision, as well as
his freedom from arbitrary and selfish desires and erroneous thought, he
mobilizes all his capacities with an inexhaustible ardor to fulfill his
Divine mission.
Iqbal, the celebrated thinker of the Indian subcontinent, compares the
Prophets with other spiritual personalities whom he calls mystics. Although
what he has to say is interesting, the comparison of Prophets with mystics
is inadequate.
"The mystic does not wish to return from the repose of 'unitary experience';
and even when he does return, as he must, his return does not mean much
for mankind at large. The Prophet's return is creative. He returns to insert
himself into the sweep of time with a view to control the forces of history,
and thereby to create a fresh world of ideals. For the mystic, the repose
of 'unitary experience' is something final; for the Prophet it is the awakening,
within him, of world-shaking psychological forces, calculated to completely
transform the human world."9
The phenomenon of revelation neither contradicts the norms of creation
nor is it possible to find in philosophy or those of the natural sciences
that have not been contaminated by dogmatic prejudices masquerading as
science, any proof for the impossibility of such a relationship between
the human being and God, for the content of revelation does not constitute
a category opposed to science. It is possible that in the course of time
science will advance to a point where it can show interesting findings
in this area.
As we know, being is infinite; therefore, the possibility of knowledge
and perception also extends toward the infinite. In our judgment of matters
we should not imagine that we are able, within our own limited historical
period, to comprehend the entirety of being and its complex realities in
their majesty and infinitude.
Rather we must hope that as human knowledge expands and increases, certain
mysteries will be disclosed to us and matters of which we are now ignorant
will become clarified.
The ability of the Prophets to communicate with God, to receive and
pass on messages from the world of the unseen without any material instruments,
is in no way inferior to a radio receiver and transmitter; on the contrary,
its effectiveness is much greater and stronger than that of any instrument
manufactured by humans.
At night, ships on the ocean make use of radar in order to find out
about other ships approaching, and radar can also be used to send pilotless
planes to whatever destination may be desired. If the human mind can produce
radar waves, why cannot it not also emit and receive other waves that are
unknown to us and unrecognized by us? Is the human being less than the
instrument he has created himself?
Once we understand the truths suggested by these questions, we can no
longer assume an attitude of denial when faced with mysterious and complex
phenomena. With a profound understanding of phenomena, and with a wide
panorama open in front of him, human being's consciousness and culture
will ultimately reach a point where many truths and mysteries will be unfolded
before him.
Although the human being has sense perception in common with the animals,
some senses are far more highly developed in certain animals than in the
human being. There are mysterious forms of perception in animals that scientists
are unable to comprehend.
It is not necessary that waves should be transmitted by means of metal
instruments. Moths have something similar to radar waves, so, in principle,
we may say that waves can be produced, received and emitted by flesh, skin
and bones. Would it be correct to regard the human being as less than a
moth?
An animal can be blindfolded and transported hundreds of kilometers
away from its home, but astonishingly it is able to make its way back.
What capacity and what type of perception is it that enables it to return
to its original location? What capacity is it that gives rise to this remarkable,
unerring sense of direction? What instrument produces these rays, and in
accordance with what frequency?
Scientists have undertaken different experiments to understand how birds
find their direction, but they have never been able to neutralize this
capacity either in a bird or in any other animal.
Numerous waves are broadcast from every corner of the globe, waves which
may be received elsewhere, yet we are totally unaware of them. We do not
yet understand the true nature of energy, of light, or of waves, so how
can we grant ourselves the right to deny revelation which arises from the
elevated nature, the pure vision, and the special relationship of Divinely
chosen personages with God? Does the fact that such a relationship is unavailable
to us constitute a proof of its impossibility for everyone?
There is no scientific proof negating the possibility of revelation.
The fact that science has been unable, down to the present, to discern
the sources of revelation does not mean that the fact of revelation should
be regarded as a scientifically unacceptable phenomenon.
When we cannot fully solve, with some scientific interpretation, the
problem of the unique and astonishing perceptions and sense that are used
by animals to guide them in their existence; when we cannot comprehend
the nature of the mysterious transmitter that is secreted in certain birds,
enabling them to communicate with the opposite sex over great distances
- given these inabilities, how can we insist on trying with the methods
of the empirical sciences to solve the problem of revelation, the unique
relationship existing between one exalted human being and the source of
all being?
If the phenomenon of revelation lies outside the scope of sense perception
and experimentation, and human knowledge has been unable, up to the present,
to clarify this kind of reality, why should the impotence of science in
this area arouse doubt and hesitation in us? The French scholar de la Mane
says concerning the impossibility of knowing the ultimate reality and essence
of God: "What a fool is the denier who says, 'since I do not understand
His true essence, therefore, He does not exist. !' If he can define a single
grain of sand, I will bring God before him!"
Revelation is a particular mode of awareness and perception that occurs
in certain rare individuals. The nature of that awareness is clear enough
to them, and if it is unknowable to others, it is because they do not find
in themselves that mysterious superawareness. However, through studying
the properties and effects of that form of awareness, they can discern
the truth or falsehood of those who lay claim to it and see whether or
not they truly possess that great and abundant source of knowledge.
Revelation in the Quran
The word revelation is used frequently in the Noble Quran, and its various
occurrences demonstrate that revelation is not confined to human beings.
However, the unfolding of revelation is connected to the general progress
of all beings toward perfection, and the highest stage of revelation, which
the human being alone is fitted to receive from the world of the unseen,
consists of that which God sends to His chosen Messengers based on the
need of them for Divine guidance.
All phenomena - whether it be the plants that raise their heads above
the soil, in the planets, the constellations, and the sun which aid us
with their heat, their light and their rotation - benefit the human being
by fulfilling their functions in accordance with a certain type of revelation.
The laws and the order which govern the whole expanse of being and on
the basis of which all things take shape, demonstrate that the whole of
being is imprinted with a certain revealed law.
The entire universe is, then, never deprived, even for an instant, of
the favor of God's law.
Once we see matters in this light, is there any phenomenon which can
be said to lie beyond the scope of God's revelation? Is not obedience to
the order of creation a form of worship, one which involves neither logic
nor knowledge? God provides for the needs of the infant even before its
birth by placing milk, the most appropriate form of sustenance for it,
in the reservoir of the mother's breast, so that the sustenance of the
child is ready for it as soon as it enters the world. Why then should it
not be possible for God as Sustainer to have prepared in advance the life-giving
food needed by human beings and societies as they evolve, thereby providing
future generations with the appropriate and necessary sustenance?
Considering the fact that revelation is not restricted to the human
being, and the will of God and His signs are at work in the ordering of
the sun and the moon and the succession of day and night, the revelation
sent to the Prophets may also be said to lie at the very heart of the mechanism
of the universe, following its general and comprehensive laws while preserving
its own distinctive features. This should not be taken to negate the role
of the human being as a free and independent being living within the world
of contingencies; the assistance rendered unilaterally by nature to the
human being does not diminish his value and standing.
Clearly, the spirit of every individual human being does not receive
revelation; not everyone can establish a direct relationship with the heavenly
realm and receive laws and ordinances from God without intermediary. One
of the reasons for this is that humans as a species are strongly subject
to instinctual desires and material causes and limitations; this constitutes
an obstacle which prevents the human being from attaining the conditions
necessary for a direct relationship with the supramaterial realm. In addition,
as was pointed out above, the receipt of commands from heaven depends entirely
on God's will. Thus the Quran says: "God knows best where to place His
message. " (6:122)
Without recourse to some instrument, we cannot hear the waves that are
broadcast by transmitters throughout the world, so we need an instrument
with two complementary capacities: on the one hand, it must receive the
waves in the air exactly as they are transmitted, and, on the other, it
must convey them to our ear. Failing this, we will be unable to benefit
from the waves that are being broadcast.
Likewise, mankind similarly needs those outstanding individuals who
have two complementary properties: on the one hand, they will be linked
to the material dimensions of human life, and, on the other hand, on account
of certain powerful spiritual capacities, they will be in simultaneous
contact with two worlds.
Those individuals are, of course, the Prophets, who on account of possessing
these two properties have been chosen by the Creator as highly evolved
beings able to receive His message. Having received from the source of
all being those positive, constructive commands of God and the elevated
principles of culture that derive from them, they then convey them to the
inhabitants of the world.
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