Join Sai Baba Announcement List


DOWNLOAD SAMARPAN - Nov 2018





Author Topic: Sufism - Fana  (Read 2296 times)

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Offline sureshsarat

  • Member
  • Posts: 826
  • Blessings 8
    • Sai Baba
Sufism - Fana
« on: June 02, 2007, 11:50:57 AM »
  • Publish
  • Om Sri Sainathaya Namaha
    Om Sri Sainathaya Namaha
    Om Sri Sainathaya Namaha

    Excerpt from Saibaba of Shirdi

    Sufism, like Upanishads call for the giving up of desire as a means to attain God. This calls for the eradication of self- will. In some ways the Sufi conception of the passing away (fana) of Individual self in Universal Being is almost Upanishadic. But fana is not the same as Nirvana, though both terms imply the passing away of individuality. Fana is accompanied by Baqa - everlasting life in God. Fana involved the extinction of all passions and desires. - the holding back of the senses as it were, advocated by the Upanishads. Indeed, sufirsm has been described in such terms as: it is wholly self discipline, it is to possess nothing and to be possessed by nothing, it is the control of the faculties and observation of the breaths. To attain fana, certain steps are prescribed, even as they are in the Raja Yoga. The first step is in moral transformation of the soul through the exteinciton of all passions and desires. The second step is a mental abstraction or passing away of the mind from all objects of perception, thoughts of God (here the though God signifies contemplation of the divine attributes). The third step is cessation of all conscious thought. The highest stage of fana is reached when even the consciousness of having attained fana disappears. this is what the Sufis call "the passing away of the passing away" (fana-al-fana). The sufi mystic, like the Hindu in samadhi is now rapt in contemplation of the divine essence. The final stage of fana, the complete passing away from self, forms the prelude to baqa which is the continuance or abiding in God. The Sufi who seeks the goal of union with Ultimate Reality (fana'l-Haqq) calls himself a traveller (salik) and advances by slow stages (maqamat) along a path (tariqat) to his final goal. The stages bear a resemblance prescribed in Raja Yoga.


    There are seven stages to the ultimate goal: repentance, abstinence, renunciation, poverty, patience,trust  in God and finally satisfaction.


    Om Sai Ram
     

    Offline tana

    • Member
    • Posts: 7074
    • Blessings 139
    • ~सांई~~ੴ~~सांई~
      • Sai Baba
    Re: Sufism - Fana
    « Reply #1 on: June 03, 2007, 12:31:47 AM »
  • Publish
  • Om Sai Ram....

    VERY NICE TOPIC.....INFACT SUFISM .......
    Thank you Suresh bhai....

    Fanaa (فناء) is the Sufi term for extinction. It means to annihilate the self, while remaining physically alive. Persons having entered this state are said to have no existence outside of and unity with Allah. Fanaa is equivalent to the concept of nirvana in Buddhism,or moksha in Hinduism which also aims for annihilation of the self.

    Fana may be attained by constant meditation and by contemplation on the attributes of God, coupled with the denunciation of human attributes. It is a sort of mental, yet real, death. The man of the ‘’Way’’ experiences it freely; it is the final passage which leads to the summit of the Stages. It liberates man from all contingency outside of his spiritual quest; his ultimate aim is the Truth. Three degrees may be distinguished here: fanâ' of acts, attributes and essence.

    The Sufi fanâ' in its triple manifestation does not have an exclusively negative effect or action; it is the annihilation of everything contingent, whether this be in the form of action, attribute or essence; more precisely, it is the annihilation of everything that is not God, and God is the supreme object of all good, all beauty. Fanâ' thus conceived is an internal state which requires from the Sufi a sustained and permanent effort of concentration to break his fetters and take on the demands and calls of truth, by his acts, his moral virtues, his whole being. That implies perfect control of himself: in words, deeds and thoughts. It is at this price that he attains an interior spiritual state where he becomes the pure and clear mirror in which the lights of Truth are reflected in all their splendour.

    There are three ways in man's journey towards God. The first is the way of ignorance, through which each must travel. It is like a person walking for miles in the sun while carrying a heavy load on his shoulder, who, when fatigued, throws away the load and falls asleep under the shade of a tree. Such is the condition of the average person, who spends his life blindly under the influence of his senses and gathers the load of his evil actions; the agonies of his earthly longings creating a hell through which he must pass to reach the destination of his journey. With regard to him the Qur'an says, 'He who is blind in life, shall also be blind in the hereafter.'

    The next way is that of devotion, which is for true lovers. Rumi says, 'Man may be the lover of man or the lover of God; after his perfection in either he is taken before the King of love.' Devotion is the heavenly wine, which intoxicates the devotee until his heart becomes purified from all infirmities and there remains the happy vision of the Beloved, which lasts to the end of the journey. 'Death is a bridge, which unites friend to friend' (Sayings of Mohammed).

    The third is the way of wisdom, accomplished only by the few. The disciple disregards life's momentary comforts, unties himself from all earthly bondages and turns his eyes toward God, inspired with divine wisdom. He gains command over his body, his thoughts and feelings, and is thereby enabled to create his own heaven within himself, that he may rejoice until merged into the eternal goal. 'We have stripped the veil from thine eyes, and thy sight today is keen', says the Qur'an. All must journey along one of these three paths, but in the end they arrive at one and the same goal. As it is said in the Qur'an, 'It is He who multiplied you on the earth, and to Him you shall be gathered.'




    Jai Sai Ram...
    "लोका समस्ता सुखिनो भवन्तुः
    ॐ शन्तिः शन्तिः शन्तिः"

    " Loka Samasta Sukino Bhavantu
    Aum ShantiH ShantiH ShantiH"~~~

    May all the worlds be happy. May all the beings be happy.
    May none suffer from grief or sorrow. May peace be to all~~~

     


    Facebook Comments