Nahjul Balagha [Electronic resources] نسخه متنی

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Nahjul Balagha [Electronic resources] - نسخه متنی

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SERMON 81


About the world and its people

In what way shall I describe this world whose
beginning is grief and whose end is destruction?(1) The lawful
actions performed here have to be accounted for, while for the forbidden ones there is
punishment. Whoever is rich here faces mischief and whoever is poor gets grief. One who
hankers after it does not get it. If one keeps away from it then it advances towards him.
If one sees through it, it would bestow him sight, but if one has his eye on it then it
would blind him.

as-Sayyid ar-Radi says: If a thinker thinks over
this phrase of Amir al-mu'minin "waman absara biha bassarat'hu" ("If one
sees through it, it would bestow him sight") he would find thereunder very amazing
meaning and far-reaching sense whose purpose cannot be appreciated and whose aim cannot be
understood particularly when he joins it with Amir al-mu'minin's phrase "waman absara
ilayha amat'hu" ("If one, has his eye on it, them it would blind him) he would
find the difference between "absara biha" and "absara laha", clear,
bright, wonderful and shining.
(1).
"The beginning of the world is grief and its end is destruction." This sentence
contains the same truth which the Qur'an has presented in the verse:
Indeed We have created man (to
dwell) amidst hardship. (90:4)
It is true that right from the
narrow womb of the mother upto the vastness of the firmament the changes of human life do
not come to an end. When man first tastes life he finds himself closed in such a dark
prison where he can neither move the limbs nor change the sides. When he gets rid of this
confinement and steps in this world he has to pass through innumerable troubles. In the
beginning he can neither speak with the tongue so as to describe his difficulty or pain
nor possesses energy in the limbs so as to accomplish his needs himself. Only his
suppressed sobs and flowing tears express his needs and translate his grief and sorrow.
When after the lapse of this period he enters the stage of learning and instruction, then
on every step voices of admonition and abuse welcome him. All the time he seems frightened
and terrified. When he is relieved of this period of subjugation he finds himself
surrounded by the worries of family life and livelihood, where sometimes, there is clash
with comrades in profession, sometimes collision with enemies, sometimes confrontation
with vicissitudes of time, sometimes attack of ailments and sometimes shock of children,
till old age approaches him with the tidings of helplessness and weakness, and eventually
he bids farewell to this world with mortification and grief in the heart.
Thereafter Amir al-mu'minin says
about this world, that in its lawful actions there is the question of reckoning and in its
forbidden acts there are hardships of punishment, as a result of which even pleasant joys
also produce bitterness in his palate. If there is plenty of wealth and money in this
world then man finds himself in such a whirlpool (of worries) that he loses his joy and
peace of mind. But if there is want and poverty, he is ever crying for wealth. He who
hankers after this world there is no limit for his desires. If one wish is fulfilled the
desire for fulfilment of another wish crops up. This world is like the reflection. If you
run after it then it will itself run forward but if you leave it and run away from it then
it follows you. In the same way, if a person does not run after the world, the world runs
after him. The implication is that if a person breaks the clutches of greed and avarice
and keeps aloof from undesirable hankering after the world, he too gets (pleasures of) the
world and he does not remain deprived of it. Therefore, he who surveys this world from
above its surface and takes lesson from its chances and happenings, and through its
variation, and alterations gains knowledge about Allah's Might, Wisdom and Sagacity,
Mercy, Clemency and Sustaining power, his eyes will gain real brightness and sight. On the
other hand the person who is lost only in the colourfulness of the world and its
decorations, he loses himself in the darkness of the world that is why Allah has forbidden
to view the world thus:
And strain not thine eyes unto that
which We have provided (different) parties of them, (of) the splendour of the life of this
world, so that We may try them in it; for the provision of thy Lord is better and more
abiding. (Qur'an, 20:131)

.

Forward to Sermon 82.

Back to Sermon 80.

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