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A RETURN TO THE SPIRIT Questions and Answers Inna lillahi wa inna ilayhi raji'un Foreword
by H.R.H. The Prince of
Wales Fons Vitae NOW AVAILABLE ORDER BOOK Price:
$18.95; Pages: 200 PB;
ISBN:1887752749;
15 photographs
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Dr.Lings answers various questions posed to him relating to his life, Islam, Sufism, Religion and Spirituality.
This final work of the greatly revered
Martin Lings opens with an insightful autobiographical account of his
own interior journey, the finding of a spiritual master, and the
conclusions he ultimately reached regarding the inner life and Islam.
The 96-year-old author, a respected British scholar, recounts the
lessons learned from his life as a practicing Sufi, including the
answers to profound questions such as:
How did I come to put First things First?, What is the Spiritual Significance of Tears and
Laughter?, What is the Spiritual Significance of Civilization?, What is
the Qur'anic Doctrine of the Afterlife and How is it related to
Sufism?, and Why "With All Thy Mind"?
Prior to publication of this volume, its distinguished author, Martin
Lings, did in fact "return to the Spirit" on May 12th 2005. This has
occasioned the addition to this work of an "In Memoriam"
appendix. Readers will be treated to tributes that have arrived from
the world over written by those who simply read and loved his work to
those who knew him personally, some of whom were under his spiritual
direction. These diverse accounts of this extraordinary man round out a
profound image of his person. The book also includes a selection of
previously unpublished photographs taken throughout his life.
In Dr Lings' case, he saw beneath the surface of things and helped us
to penetrate the veil behind which lies the sacred meaning to so many
of life's mysteries. He helped us to look beyond the literal and to
comprehend that there are many layers of meaning within the hidden
universe - something which science is now at last beginning to
recognize through the acknowledgement of an inherent order and harmony
to the world about us and within us.
-from the Foreword,
H.R.H. The Prince of Wales
"Lives of great men all remind us / We can make our lives
sublime…"
"Beholding His glory, we ourselves are transformed from glory unto
glory."
Martin Lings has been a role model for me…like everyone else
who knew him intimately, I revered him for being the saint he was.
-from the Introduction,
Huston Smith, author of The World's Religions
With a poet's pen, a metaphysician's mind and a saint's concerns, Dr.
Lings has left for us a profound posthumous farewell letter, filled
with poignant insights gleaned from a lifetime of devotion,
contemplation and concern about the human condition. He did in his life
what he is urging the rest of us to do: return to the spirit.
-Sheikh Hamza
Yusuf, author and scholar, the Zaytuna Institute ( From the In
Memoriam section)
Writing with the same measured beauty that typifies all his books, and
with a fresh perspective as always on the many vestures of Truth, the
author has chosen, in this final spiritual testament, to bequeath yet
additional gifts: numerous treasured moments of insight into his own
inward life-the life, as those of us who had the privilege of knowing
him personally can well attest, of a genuine saint.
-James S. Cutsinger,
author and Professor of Theology and Religious Thought, University of
South Carolina
At the end of a long and dedicated life Martin Lings wrote this short
but remarkable book, a summation of a body of work extending over half
a century. In it he has dealt with some of the most difficult questions
dividing Christians and Muslims. He has done so convincingly and with
characteristic wisdom while offering the reader fascinating glimpses of
his own spiritual history. This is essential reading for anyone who
seeks answers to the really important questions, which trouble the
contemporary mind.
-Hassan Le Gai
Eaton
Martin Lings seems to me a man profoundly quiet. He was accomplished
and honored; he had much to teach but nothing to prove. In his
writings, which I have read fairly extensively, he neither condescends
to the reader nor appeals for the reader's indulgence, but says merely
and plainly what he knows. His aim, as he put it, was to make his work
"reliable in that it is not written any more simply than the truth
allows." I am particularly indebted to him for his book on Shakespeare,
which I think of and return to again and again.
-Wendell Berry, Kentucky
author of more than 32 books, former professor of English, and past
fellow of the Guggenheim and Rockefeller Foundations, has received
awards from the National Institute and Academy of Arts and Letters as
well as recently the T.S. Eliot award.
Read sample chapter from 'A Return to the Spirit': What is the Spiritual Significance of Civilization?
In the chapter "What is the spiritual
dimension of tears and laughter?" Lings demonstrates how tears which
well up in moments where we confront Truth, Beauty, or Virtue- which
are the presence of God in the intellect, in form, and in the will- are
in fact portals to the Divine for us when that part of our being, our
Imago Dei- witnesses Itself. He explains, "In spontaneous overflowings
of the body, the material realm is transcended. But at their highest
level, which is indicated by the word "Spiritual", the psychic plane is
also largely surpassed. The body is necessarily endowed with various
means of escape from itself. Some of these are merely at its own level
not to speak of that which, by the very fact of its separation
necessarily sinks from being a living substance to a dead substance.
But at the same time the escape in itself, as such, can in varying
degrees afford access to a higher plane of existence". How important
for us to understand the deeper alchemical functions of these common
emotions and thereby hopefully make transformative use from such gained
awareness.
-R. Dumesnil Miller
A remarkable kind of last testament by an individual who successfully
bridged the gap between Christianity and Islam, His questions and
answers will be of great value to both Muslims and Christians who are
seeking the Truth. His words are a blessing for our times.
-Rama Coomaraswamy
This latest book by Martin Lings is perhaps the easiest to read of all
that he has written. The basis of sound objectivity which we have
learned to rely on is still there; but from the very start of A Return
to the Spirit that basis is overlayed with a subjectivity into which
the reader is irresistibly drawn. The opening chapter, "How did I come
to put first things first?," deeply concerns every well-intentioned
individual. So do all the other chapters, each in its own particular
way. We quickly find ourselves conscious of being very much in our
element and this consciousness lasts throughout our reading of the
highly informative "Answers"- to quote the book's subtitle- that are
given to the "Questions".
Martin Lings is a former keeper of oriental manuscripts at the British
Museum, a former professor of Shakespeare at Cairo University in Egypt,
and the author of Muhammad:
His Life Based On the Earliest Sources. He is especially
recognized for his works on Islamic Spirituality - Sufism.
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Dr. Martin Lings is the author of the
authoritative biography of the Prophet, Muhammed,
His Life Based on the Earliest Sources. He has also written What is
Sufism?, Ancient
Beliefs and Modern Superstitions, Shakespeare in
Light of Sacred Art, The Book of
Certainty, A Sufi Saint
of the Twentieth Century, The Quranic Art of Calligraphy and
Illumination and two volumes of poems, The Element and The Heralds. He
is also the author of the article on Sufism in the latest edition of
the Encyclopedia Britannica, the chapter on Sufism in the Cambridge
University Publication Religion in the Middle East, and numerous
articles for the quarterly journal Studies in Comparative Religion.
Martin Lings was born in Burnage, Lancashire, 1909. After taking an
English degree at Oxford in 1932, he was appointed Lecturer in
Anglo-Saxon at the University of Kaunas. His interest in Islam and in
Arabic took him to Egypt in 1939, and in the following year he was
given a lectureship in Cairo University. In 1952 he returned to England
and took a degree in Arabic at London University. From 1970-74 he was
Keeper of Oriental Manuscripts and Printed Books at the British Museum
(in 1973 his Department became part of the British Library) where he
had been in special charge of the Qur’an manuscripts, amongst
other treasures, since 1955. Dr. Lings passed from this world on May 12th 2005 and is survived by
his wife.
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Selected
Bibliography of Major Works:
The Book of Certainty: The Sufi Doctrine of Faith, Wisdom and Gnosis.
Abu Bakr Siraj al Din 1952, 1970, 1992
A Muslim [Sufi] Saint of the Twentieth Century. 1961,
1971,1973,1981,1982,1993
Ancient Beliefs and Modern Superstitions. 1964, 1980, 1991
Shakespeare in the Light of Sacred Art. 1966
The Elements, and other Poems. 1967
The Heralds, and other Poems. 1970
Islamic Calligraphy and Illumination. 1971
What is Sufism?. 1975,1977, 1981, 1993
The Quranic Art of Calligraphy and Illumination. 1976, 1978, 1987
Muhammad: His Life Based on the Earliest Sources. 1983,1985,1991
The Secret of Shakespeare. 1984
Collected Poems, 1987
The Eleventh Hour: The Spiritual Crisis of the Modern World in the
Light of Tradition and Prophecy. 1989
Symbol and Archetype: A Study of the Meaning of Existence. 1991, 2006
Mecca, 2004
Splendours of Quran Calligraphy and Illumination, 2005
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