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The Reflective Heart: Discovering Spiritual Intelligence in Ibn 'Arabi’s ‘Meccan Illuminations’ Fons Vitae Now Available 2005 [Order book] Price: $23.95; Pages: 424 PB |
For
centuries Ibn 'Arabi has been considered the "Greatest Master" of
Islamic spiritual teaching, but Western readers have only recently had
access to his greatest writings. This introduction to Ibn 'Arabi's
Meccan Illuminations highlights the mysticism and realization of Sufi
spiritual life, providing an intellectually penetrating look without
requiring specialized knowledge. The development of several key themes
and modes of reflection in Ibn 'Arabi's spiritual teachings are
explored as are the gradually unfolding meanings that distinguish this
important classical text of Sufi practice.
The Reflective Heart is about the ways we gradually discover the deeper
significance of all the familiar elements of our everyday life-not just
those memorable moments we ordinarily view as "spiritual". Spiritual
intelligence-the illuminating interplay of our uniquely individual
experience, reflection, and practice-is at the heart of every world
religious tradition, and Ibn 'Arabi is renowned for his ability to
communicate the unfolding dimensions of this fundamental human task.
His Meccan Illuminations provide a powerful spiritual mirror for each
reader's own experiences, while highlighting those larger perspectives
that ultimately give meaning and direction to our life.
In The Reflective Heart, James Morris provides numerous keys for those
who would like to open up their hearts to the vast panorama of
spiritual instruction provided by al-Shaykh al-Akbar, "the Greatest
Master." No other book demonstrates so clearly the universality of Ibn
Arabi's concerns and their contemporary applicability. A must-read for every serious seeker.
-William Chittick, SUNY
In this compelling and insightful book, James Morris takes us to the
spiritual core of the Islamic tradition, as we come to see the heart as
the meeting ground between the Divine and that which is most human in
all of us. Here the heart reveals itself as a dynamic and
transformative faculty, where the discovery of one's own true self is
wed to the intimate knowing of God.
-Omid Safi, Colgate University
No one surpasses James Morris in his ability to make the most sublime
and esoteric subjects intelligible and practicable. Among the many
gifts of this book is that it highlights for our own time the urgent
need for spiritual discernment.
-Kabir Helminski,
Threshold Foundation
One of the great merits of this book is the way in which this spiritual
journey, described with such compelling power through the illuminations
granted to Ibn 'Arabi, is made real for all of us. This work is the
fruit of a remarkable synthesis between scholarly erudition of the
highest caliber and a fundamental orientation towards the spiritual
import of Ibn 'Arabi's teachings, engaging both the academic and the
mystic, the scholar and the seeker.
-Reza Shah Kazemi, IIS,
London
James Morris
holds the Sharjah chair of Islamic studies in the Institute of Arab and
Islamic Studies at the University of Exeter in England. He has taught
Islamic and comparative religious studies at Princeton, Temple,
Oberlin, and the Institute of Ismaili Studies in Paris and in London.
* * *
For centuries Ibn ‘Arabî has been known as the ‘Greatest Master’ of Islamic spiritual teaching, but only recently have the treasures of his immense masterwork, the ‘Meccan Illuminations,’ begun to be accessible to Western audiences. This introductory volume, intended for readers interested in the issues of practical spiritual life and realisation (without any specialist background), follows his development of several key practical themes in his spiritual teaching, focusing on his characteristic emphasis on the necessary interplay of practice, experience, and reflection in our unfolding development of spiritual intelligence: each of those essential elements of spiritual life is included in the central Qur’anic symbol of the Heart of the ‘truly human being’ (qalb al-insân). Each thematic study combines extended translations of related passages with the necessary background and contextual explanations, in a way that is intended to recreate a sense of the gradually unfolding ‘openings’ of Ibn ‘Arabī’s meanings and spiritual understanding in the course of that great work.
Following Ibn ‘Arabî’s own account of the natural order of spiritual development, this book begins with our initial stages of the spiritual quest and ‘journeying,’ culminating in the attainment of contemplative ‘quietude.’ At that point, the purification of the Heart begins to focus on the refinement of our inner spiritual ‘listening’ and inspiration. Then that awakened love and inspired awareness of divine Beauty, the fruit of effective spiritual listening, must be transformed into our uniquely personal, creative manifestation of right and beautiful action—an activity which eventually leads on to the realisation of the beatific Vision. Finally, as always with Ibn ‘Arabī, that realised awareness of our wider spiritual responsibility, of our intrinsically human ‘servanthood,’ culminates in our recognition of the inner meanings of the eschatological symbolism of Islamic tradition: that Garden, he insists, already visibly present in each theophanic reflection of the polished Heart.
Table of Contents
· Discovering the ‘Meccan Illuminations’: From Reading to Realization
· Traveling:
· Listening:
· Looking:
· Discerning:
· Returning:
"The title chosen by Professor
Morris for his remarkable book on Ibn ‘Arabī’s
teachings,
The Reflective Heart, very well evokes the nature
of the spiritual work that Ibn ‘Arabī calls upon us to
accomplish. One of the great merits of this book is the way in which it
brings this ‘work’ within the reach of those who
may not have had any previous knowledge of the writings of this
incomparable master of Islamic gnosis, showing how many apparently
abstruse mystical ‘openings’ are of direct
relevance to the concrete, lived concerns of the individual seeker, of
whatever faith or creed.
Far from popularizing Ibn ‘Arabī’s complex
perspectives, reducing them for the sake of bringing them within the
purview of ‘ordinary’ everyday experience,
Professor Morris on the contrary reveals the subtle ramifications of
what is all too often dismissed as ‘ordinary’
experience; through the vision afforded by ‘the reflective
heart’, the journey through life, upon which we have all
embarked, is grasped as a return to one’s true
origin.
This work focuses on the essence of that spiritual journey, bringing
together and commenting upon certain passages of Ibn
‘Arabī’s magnum opus, “The Meccan
Illuminations”, those pertaining specifically to the
different stages of the spiritual path. At no point does the reader
feel that these are the abstract musings of an academic; rather, the
work pulsates with the heartfelt affinity of the author with the ideals
presented. The work is the fruit of a remarkable synthesis between
scholarly erudition of the highest calibre and a fundamental
orientation towards the spiritual import of Ibn
‘Arabī’s teachings: it is thus itself the
expression of a ‘reflective heart’, engaging both
the academic and the mystic, the scholar and the seeker."
This forthcoming volume published in fully revised
book form by Fons Vitae is the first in a planned series of thematic
explorations of Ibn 'Arabi's al-Futûhât
al-Makkîya combining extended translations of thematically
related passages with the necessary background and contextual
explanations, designed to re-create the originally intended experience
of the reader's gradual 'unfolding' of Ibn 'Arabi's meanings and
spiritual understanding through the spiraling interaction (mi'raj)
between each reader's cumulative experience, discerning reflection, and
right action. The essential subject, at every stage, is the ongoing
transformation and perfection of the theomorphic 'Heart' (qalb) of the
truly human being.
After introducing Ibn 'Arabi's own distinctive rhetoric in the
Futûhât and its multi-leveled intentions, we begin
with the initial stages of the spiritual (and physical) quest and
'journeying', culminating in the attainment of contemplative 'quietude'
(sukûn). At that point, the ongoing process of contemplation
and purification of the Heart focuses on the refinement of spiritual
'Listening' (samâ'). And that awareness of divine beauty and
inspiration which is the fruit of effective listening, transformed into
our creative manifestation of right and beautiful action
(ihsân) leads to the realisation of the beatific Vision.
Finally, as always in Ibn Arabi, that realised awareness of our
unavoidable responsibilities in this truly 'divine Comedy' opens up the
inner meanings of the complex eschatological symbolism of the Qur'an
and hadith, already — and always — visibly present
here and now, in each reflection of the polished Heart.
Other books by or about Ibn 'Arabi from Fons Vitae books:
Mystical Astrology According to Ibn 'Arabi, Titus Burckhardt
Divine Governance of the Human Kingdom, by Ibn ‘Arabi, Interpreted by Tosun Bayrak
Sufi Metaphysics and Qur’anic Prophets - Ibn Arabi’s Thought and Method in the Fusus al-Hikam
The Meccan Revelations - Translated by William C. Chittick and James W. Morris
The Tree of Being by Ibn 'Arabi Interpreted by Tosun Bayrak
Quest for the Red Sulphur: The Life of Ibn ‘Arabi, Claude Addas
The Seal of the Saints: Prophethood and Sainthood in the Doctrine of Ibn ‘Arabi, Michel Chodkiewicz
The Unlimited Mercifier Stephen Hirtenstein[Return to Catalog] - [Fons Vitae titles] - [Sufism] - [Order books]
