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Kernel of the Kernel

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An English translation of a seminal book on Sufism from a Shi'i perspective by an eminent Muslim thinker.Kernel of the Kernel is an authoritative work on Sufism from a Shi'i perspective that is not...
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  • 08 May 2003
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An English translation of a seminal book on Sufism from a Shi'i perspective by an eminent Muslim thinker.

Kernel of the Kernel is an authoritative work on Sufism from a Shi'i perspective that is not only fascinating, but also contains much practical advice. In addition to providing a theoretical discussion of spiritual wayfaring, it is also the account of a personal fifty-year spiritual journey by Sayyid Muḥammad Ḥusayn Ṭabāṭabā'ī, a renowned Iranian-Shii scholar and spiritual master. In Kernel of the Kernel, Ṭabāṭabā'ī discusses the doctrinal foundations of spiritual wayfaring as well as processes and stages that an aspiring wayfarer must go through in order to attain spiritual realization. He discusses the relation between the exoteric and esoteric aspects of Islam and clearly demonstrates that these inward and outward dimensions of Islam complement each other. The book also provides information on the Quranic origins of Sufism and its special relations with Shi'ism as well as the role of Shi'i Imams in the spiritual realization of a sincere wayfarer.

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Price: £25.00
Pages: 183
Publisher: State University of New York Press
Imprint: SUNY Press
Series: SUNY series in Islam
Publication Date: 08 May 2003
ISBN: 9780791452387
Format: Paperback
BISACs:

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"Aside from its historical and theological background, the Lubb al-Lubab or Kernel of the Kernel stands by itself as a masterpiece in the field of spirituality and gnosis. While naturally couched in the language and terminology of the Quran and Hadith, it conveys a message of universal order meant for all human beings." — from the Foreword by Seyyed Hossein Nasr

Foreword by Seyyed Hossein Nasr


Translator's Introduction


Chapter One: Editor's Introduction

1. Attraction to the invisible world is in man's primordial nature


2. The Straight Path means a combination of exoterism and esoterism


3. The Holy Qur'an calls for purification along with intellection


4. Mulla Sadra's recommendation for humility of the heart and acquiring intellectual sciences


5. The chain of gnostics during the last hundred years


6. Reasons and motivations for compilation of this treatise


Chapter Two: Kernel of the Kernel

7. The human being in the darkness of materialism


8. Wayfaring and spiritual journey according to the gnostics


9. Difficulties in passing through the intermediate world and the realm of multiplicity of the soul

10. The spiritual traveler entering the realm of spirit


11. The goal of the traveler is companionship with God and His Image


12. Muraqabah, its stages, and effects


13. The meaning of wine (mey) according to gnostics


14. The traveler observes his own soul


15. The traveler observes Divine Names and Attributes


16. Immersion in the Divine Essence of the Lord and subsistence in the Worshiped


17. The station of being present in the world of multiplicity while simultaneously witnessing and experiencing the realms of Divine Lordship


18. Reasons why not everyone can reach the station of human perfection


19. The inability of words to describe the realities of the lights of catharsis and the Realms of Divine Lordship


20. The world of sincerity (khulus) and its hierarchy


21. Peculiarities and manifestations of sincerity of essence (khulus-i dhati)


22. Freedom from the world of multiplicity is one of the first and most essential necessities of spiritual journey


23. One's detachment from one's essence


24. The need for Divine Grace for total victory in the struggle against the carnal soul


25. The necessity of observing all religious duties throughout spiritual journey


26. Observing religious duties by the Perfect Man is by virtue of perfection, and not for finding proximity to God


27. Brief description of the realms preceding the realm of sincerity (khulus) according to Qur'an

Chapter Three: Description of the Realms Preceding the Realm of Khulus

28. The Greater Islam (Islam-i Akbar)

29. The Greater Faith (Iman-i Akbar)

30. The Greater Migration (Hijrat-i Kubra)

31. The Greater Spiritual Struggle (Jihad-i Akbar)

32. The Greatest Submission (Islam-i a'azam)

33. The Greatest Faith (Iman-i a'azam)

34. The Greatest Migration (Hijrat-i 'uzma) and the Greatest Spiritual Struggle (Jihad-i a'azam)


35. Choosing to Die


36. Explanation: Special privileges granted to Muslim spiritual travelers over travelers of previous religions


37. The Station of Righteousness (Suluh)

38. Different kinds of righteousness (Salah)

Chapter Four: Undifferentiated Description of the Path and Methods of Wayfaring Toward God

39. The necessity to seek reason to prove the truth of religion


40. The effects of lamentation and pleading to God with humility to find faith in the World of Meaning


41. Conversation between the prophet Hadrat-i Idris with 'Allamah Tabataba'i in a dream


42. God will guide those who search guidance from Him with sincerity and purity of heart


43. Knowledge and action complement each other


44. The necessity of having bodily organs share the joy of faith


45. The absence of sadness and fear for the selfless traveler


46. Wayfaring in the Angelical Kingdom is not in contradiction with being in this world


47. Prayers and supplications of the Shi'ite Imams were not merely for guiding and teaching purposes


Chapter 5: Differentiated Description of the Path and Methods of Wayfaring Toward God

48. The necessary conditions for spiritual journey


49. Abandoning conventionalism, habitual practices, and formalities


50. Steadfastness


51. Tolerance and forbearance


52. Loyalty


53. Stability and perseverance


54. Constant attention


55. One's accounting one's inward state


56. Self-condemnation


57. Expeditious action


58. Devotion


59. Observing proper manners


60. Intention


61. Silence


62. Abstaining from indulgence in food consumption


63. Spiritual retreat

64. Morning wakefulness


65. Perpetual ritual cleanliness


66. Constant expression of humility


67. Avoiding appetite and worldly pleasure


68. Guarding and protecting the secrets and mysteries of the path


69. Spiritual teacher and master


70. Litany and supplication


71. Control of mind, thoughts, and other mental preoccupations


72. Invocation


73. Meditation


74. Methods for control of mind and thoughts in the treatise attributed to Ayatullah Sayyid Mahdi (ibn Murtada ibn Muhammad) Bahr al-'Ulum


75. Methods used by the late Akhund Mulla Husayn-Quli Hamadani

76. Stages of muraqabah

77. On the chain of the author's spiritual teachers and masters in Divine sciences


78. The opening of the fourfold realms of tawhid before one's soul as a result of muraqabah and concentration on the soul


79. What do the gnostics mean by Griffin ('Anqa) and (Simaurgh)

80. Poems by Hafiz alluding to the station of the Essence of the Invisible of all invisibles


Index of Qur'anic Verses

Index of Ahadith

Index of Quotations of the Sayings of the Shi'ite Imams

Notes on Saints, Scholars, and Authors Cited in the Text

General Index