|



| |
Journey
Virtues & Sins
Not till the age of forty did
he receive the Commission to stand forth and proclaim the Bounty of God, and His
gift, to lowly Man, of knowledge by Word and Pen; but all through his years of
preparation he did search the Truth: he sought it in Nature's forms and laws,
her beauty and her stern unflinching ways; he sought it in the inner world of
human lives, men's joys and sorrows; their kindly virtues and their sins of
pride, injustice, cruel wrong, and greed of gain; scarce checked by the inner
voice that spoke of duty, moral law, and higher still, the Will Supreme of God,
to which the will of man must tune itself to find its highest bliss.
Seeking the Light
But he grew steadfastly in virtue and purity; untaught by men, he learned from
them, and learned to teach them; even as a boy of nine, when he went in a trade
caravan with Abu Talib to Syria, his tender soul marked inwardly how God did
speak in the wide expanse of deserts, in the stern grandeur of rocks, in the
refreshing flow of streams, in the smiling bloom of gardens, in the art and
skill with which men and birds and all life sought for light from the Life of
Lives, even as every plant seeks through devious ways the light of the Sun.
The Heavenly Mirror
Nor less was he grieved at Man's ingratitude when he rebelled and held
as naught the Signs of God, and turned His gifts to baser uses, driving rarer
souls to hermit life, clouding the heavenly mirror of pure affections with
selfish passions, mad unseemly wrangles, and hard unhallowed loathsome tortures
of themselves.
Honesty & Integrity
He worked,
and joyed in honest labor; he traded with integrity to himself and to others; he
joined the throngs of cities and their busy life, but saw its good and evil as
types of an inner and more lasting life hereafter; people gladly sought his help
as umpire and peacemaker because they knew his soul was just and righteous: he
loved the society of old and young, but oft withdrew to solitude for Prayer and
inward spiritual strength; he despised not wealth but used it for others; he was
happy in poverty and used it as his badge and his pride when wealth was within
his reach but not within his grasp, as a man among men.
Life-long Helpmate
At twenty-five he was
united in the holy bonds of wedlock with Khadijah the Great, the noble lady
who befriended him when he had no worldly resources, trusted him when his
worth was little known, encouraged and understood in his spiritual
struggles, believed in him when with trembling steps he took up the Call and
withstood obloquy, persecution, insults, threats and tortures, and was a
life-long helpmate till she was gathered to the saints in his fifty-first
year -- a perfect woman, the mother of those that believe.
Peaceful Contemplation
There is a cave in the side of Mount Hira' some three miles north of the city of
Mecca, in a valley which turns left from the road to 'Arafat. To which Muhammad
used to retire for peaceful contemplation: often alone, but sometimes with
Khadijah. Days and nights he spent there with his Lord. Hard were the problems
he revolved in his mind -- harder and more cross-grained than the red granite of
the rock around him -- problems not his own, but his people's, yea, and of human
destiny. Of the Mercy of God, and the age-long conflict of evil and
righteousness, sin an abounding Grace.
Earthly Life
Not till forty years of earthly
life had passed that the veil was lifted from the Preserved Tablet and its
contents began to be transferred to the tablet of his mind, to be proclaimed
to the world, and read and studied for all time -- an fountain of mercy and
wisdom, a warning to the heedless, a guide to the erring, an assurance to
those in doubt, a solace to the suffering, a hope to those in despair -- to
complete the chain of Revelation through the mouths of divinely inspired
Prophets.
Sublime Knowledge
The Chosen One was in the
Cave of Hira'. For two years and more he had prayed there and adored His
Creator and wondered at the mystery of man with his corruptible flesh, just
growing out of a clot, and the soul in him reaching out to knowledge
sublime, new and ever new, taught by the bounty of God, and leading to that
which man himself knoweth not. And now, behold! a dazzling vision of beauty
and light overpowered his senses, and he heard the word "Iqra'!"
A Clear Mission
"Iqra'!" which being interpreted may mean "Read!" or
"Proclaim!" or "Recite!" The unlettered Prophet was puzzled;
he could not read. The Angel seemed to press him to his breast in a close
embrace, and the cry rang clear "Iqra!" And so it happened three
times; until the first overpowering sensations yielded to a collected grasp of
the words which made clear his Mission; its Author, God, the Creator, its
subject, Man, God's wondrous handiwork, capable, by Grace, of rising to heights
sublime; and the instruments of that mission, the sanctified Pen, and the
sanctified Book, the Gift of God, which men might read, or write, or study, or
treasure in their souls.
Lifting the Veil
The veil
was lifted from the Chosen One's eyes, and his soul for a moment was filled with
divine ecstasy... when this passed, and he returned to the world of Time and
Circumstance and this world of Sense, he felt like one whose eyes had seen a
light of dazzling beauty, and felt dazed on his return to common sights. The
darkness now seemed tenfold dark; the solitude seemed tenfold empty; the mount
of Hira', henceforth known as the Mountain of Light, the mere shell of an
intense memory. Was it a dream? Terror seized his limbs and he straightway
sought her who shared his inmost life, and told her of his sense of exaltation,
and the awful void when the curtain closed. |