Monday, October 19, 2015

The Final Discourse Of Hazrat Khwaja Mu'inuddin Chishti To His Students, One Month Before His Death

 
​New Age Islam Selection
17 October 2015



The final discourse of Hazrat Khwaja Mu'inuddin Chishti to his students, one month before his death:



Love all and hate none.
Mere talk of peace will avail you naught.
Mere talk of God and religion will not take you far.
Bring out all the latent powers of your being
and reveal the full magnificence of your immortal self.
Be overflowing with peace and joy,
and scatter them wherever you are
and wherever you go.
Be a blazing fire of truth,
be a beauteous blossom of love
and be a soothing balm of peace.
With your spiritual light,
dispel the darkness of ignorance;
dissolve the clouds of discord and war
and spread goodwill, peace, and harmony among the people.
Never seek any help, charity, or favors
from anybody except God.
Never go the court of kings,
but never refuse to bless and help the needy and the poor,
the widow, and the orphan, if they come to your door.
This is your mission, to serve the people.....
Carry it out dutifully and courageously, so that I, as your Pir-o-Murshid,
may not be ashamed of any shortcomings on your part
before the Almighty God and our holy predecessors
in the Silsila on the Day of Judgment.
Sayings of Khwaja Mu'inuddin Chishti:
A friend of God must have affection like the Sun. When the sun rises, it is beneficial to all irrespective of whether they are Muslim, Christian, or Hindu.
A friend of God must be generous like a river. We all get water from the river to quench our thirst. It does not discriminate whether we are good or bad or whether we are a relation or a stranger.
A friend of God must display the hospitality like the earth. We are raised and cradled in its lap, and yet it is always under our feet.
The noise of the lover is only while he has not seen his Beloved. Once he sees the beloved, he becomes calm and quiet, just as the rivers are boisterous before they join the ocean, but when they do so, there are becalmed forever.
The Enlightened becomes perfect only when all else is removed from in-between him and the Friend. Either he remains or the Friend.
Whosoever received any blessings, received them due to his generosity.
The Enlightened is one who does not keep anything dear to his heart except the remembrance of God.
There are such lovers of God whom the love of God has made quiet to an extent that they do not know that there is anything else existing in the world.
When one comes on the path of love of the Friend, he becomes nonexistent (loses himself).
The heart of the Enlightened should be such that, it may efface everything, and may be exclusively devoted to the Glorious vision of the Friend.
There are four cardinal virtues of the individual self:
       (i) refraining from begging in the state of poverty;
       (ii) showing the attitude of being well-fed when feeling hungry;
       (iii) maintaining a cheerfulness in the time of sorrow; and
       (iv) befriending the enemy.
The spiritual disciple deserves to be called a Dervish only when he lives in the world with no self-interest.
The lovers of God hear the talk of the Friend directly.
A sin committed does not harm an individual so much as looking down upon one's own fellow human beings.
Khwaja Mu'inuddin Hasan Chishti was born in Persia, around 533 AH / 1138 C.E.. He was initiated into the Chishti Sufi Order by Khwaja Usman Haruni. At Baghdad, he met the great Abdu-l-Qadir Jilani, the founder of the Qadiri Sufi Order and also Abu-n-Najib Suhrawardi, the renowned Sufi of the Suhrawardi Sufi Order. During his visit to Medina, around 1187 AD, he received a mandate to proceed to Ajmer (Rajasthan, India), where he established the first presence of the Chishti order in India. His high morals, great wisdom and frugal lifestyle deeply influenced thousands of people as he carried on his work in Ajmer for more than 45 years and became known as also known as
​'​Gharib Nawaz​'​, the​'​ Patron of the Poor​'​. He passed away on the 6th of Rajab 633 AH/ 1236 C.E..
Source: http://wahiduddin.net/sufi/muinuddin_sayings.htm

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