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2
767-816

  • He killed hundreds of thousands of innocent babes, in order that the ordainment and predestination of God might be averted.
  • In order that the prophet Moses might not come forth, he laid on his neck (made himself responsible for) thousands of iniquities and murders.
  • He wrought all that bloodshed, and (yet) Moses was born and was made ready for his chastisement.
  • Had he seen the workshop of the Everlasting (God), he would have ceased to move hand or foot in plotting. 770
  • Moses (lay) safe within his (Pharaoh's) house, while outside he was killing the infants in vain,
  • Even as the sensual man who pampers his body and suspects some one else of a bitter hatred (against him),
  • Saying, “This one is a foe, and that one is envious and an enemy,” (though) in truth his envier and enemy is that body (of his).
  • He is like Moses, and his body is his Pharaoh: he keeps running (to and fro) outside, asking, “Where is my enemy?”
  • His fleshly soul (is) luxuriating in the house, which is his body, (while) he gnaws his hand in rancour against some one else. 775
  • How men blamed a person who killed his mother because he suspected her (of adultery).
  • A certain man killed his mother in wrath, with blows of a dagger and also with blows of his fist.
  • Some one said to him, “From evil nature you have not borne in mind what is due to motherhood.
  • Hey, tell (me) why you killed your mother. What did she do? Pray, tell (me), O foul villain!”
  • He said, “She did a deed that is a disgrace to her; I killed her because that earth (her grave) is her coverer (hides her shame).”
  • The other said, “O honoured sir, kill that one (who was her partner in guilt).” “Then,” he replied, “I should kill a man every day. 780
  • I killed her, I was saved from shedding the blood of a multitude: ’tis better that I cut her throat than the throats of (so many) people.”
  • That mother of bad character, whose wickedness is in every quarter, is your fleshly soul.
  • Come, kill it, for on account of that vile (creature) you are every moment assailing one who is venerable.
  • Through it this fair world is narrow (distressful) to you, for its sake (you are at) war with God and man.
  • (If) you have killed the fleshly soul, you are delivered from (the necessity of) excusing yourself: nobody in the world remains your enemy. 785
  • If any one should raise a difficulty about my words in regard to the prophets and saints,
  • (And should say), “Had not the prophets a killed (mortified) fleshly soul? Why, then, had they enemies and enviers?”—
  • Give ear, O seeker of truth, and hear the answer to this difficulty and doubt.
  • Those unbelievers were (really) enemies to themselves: they were striking at themselves such blows (as they struck).
  • An enemy is one who attempts (another's) life; he that is himself destroying his own life is not an enemy (to others). 790
  • The little bat is not an enemy to the sun: it is an enemy to itself in the veil (of its own blindness).
  • The glow of the sun kills it; how should the sun ever suffer annoyance from it?
  • An enemy is one from whom torment proceeds, (one who) hinders the ruby from (receiving the rays of) the sun.
  • All the infidels hinder themselves from (receiving) the rays of the prophets' (spiritual) jewel.
  • How should (unbelieving) people veil the eyes of that peerless one (the prophet or saint)? The people have (only) blinded and distorted their own eyes. 795
  • (They are) like the Indian slave who bears a grudge and kills himself to spite his master:
  • He falls headlong from the roof of the house (in the hope) that he may have done some harm to his master.
  • If the sick man become an enemy to the physician, or if the boy show hostility to the teacher,
  • In truth they act as brigands against themselves: they themselves waylay their own mind and spirit.
  • If a fuller take offence at the sun, if a fish is taking offence at the water, 800
  • Just once consider whom that (anger) injures, and whose star is eclipsed by it in the end.
  • If God create you with ugly features, take care lest you become both ugly-featured and ugly-natured;
  • And if He take away your shoes, do not go into stony ground; and if you have two spikes, don't become four-spiked.
  • You are envious, saying, “I am inferior to so-and-so: he (by his superior position) is increasing my inferiority in fortune.”
  • (But) indeed envy is another defect and fault; nay, it is worse than all inferiorities. 805
  • That Devil (Satan), through the shame and disgrace of inferiority (to Adam), cast himself into a hundred damnations.
  • Because of envy, he wished to be at the top. At the top, forsooth! Nay, (he wished) to be a blood-shedder.
  • Abú Jahl was put to shame by Mohammed, and because of envy was raising himself to the top.
  • His name was Abu ’l-Hakam, and he became Abú Jahl: oh, many a worthy has become unworthy because of envy.
  • I have not seen in the world of search and seeking (trial and probation) any worthiness better than a good disposition. 810
  • God made the prophets the medium (between Him and His creatures) in order that feelings of envy should be displayed in the agitation (produced by something that rankles in the mind).
  • Inasmuch as no one was disgraced by (inferiority to) God, no one was (ever) envious of God;
  • (But) the person whom he deemed like himself—he would bear envy against him for that reason.
  • (Now), as the grandeur of the Prophet has become established, none feels envy (of him), since he is accepted (by all the Faithful);
  • Therefore in every epoch (after Mohammed) a saint arises (to act as his vicegerent): the probation (of the people) lasts until the Resurrection. 815
  • Whosoever has a good disposition is saved; whosoever is of frail heart is broken.