Tuesday, 1 November 2011

Deity

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# Deity

Muslims believe that God is one and incomparable and the purpose of existence is to know, serve, and love God. It is the Muslim belief that Islam is the complete and universal version of a primordial faith that was revealed at many times and places before, including through Abraham, Moses and Jesus, who are considered prophets. Muslims maintain that previous messages and revelations have been partially changed or corrupted over time, but consider the Qur'an to be both the unaltered and the final revelation of God.
Esoteric, and Ineffable - the Ultimate, the Absolute Infinite, the Transcendent, the One, the All, Existence, becoming or Being itself,
One Supreme Deity is a being, natural, supernatural or preternatural, with superhuman powers or qualities, and who may be thought of as holy, divine, or sacred. Believers may consider or believe that they can communicate with the deity, who can respond supernaturally to their entreaties.

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# MONISM

Monism is a point of view within metaphysics which argues that the variety of existing things in the universe are reducible to one substance or reality and therefore that the fundamental character of the universe is unity.

In Islam, according to Vincent J. Cornell, the Qur'an also provides a monist image of God by describing the reality as a unified whole, with God being a single concept that would describe or ascribe all existing things: "He is the First and the Last, the Outward and the Inward; He is the Knower of everything (Sura 57:3)".[13]

Another verse in the Quran is "To God belongs the East and the West, Wheresoever you look is the face of God.(Sura 2:115)".

Monism in philosophy can be defined according to three kinds:

1. Only mind is real.
2. That both the mental and the physical can be reduced to some sort of third substance, or energy.
3. Only the physical is real, and that the mental or spiritual can be reduced to the physical.

These positions do not define the meaning of "real".
Certain other positions are hard to pigeonhole into the above categories.

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# God

God usually refers to the single deity in monotheism or the monist deity in pantheism. God is often conceived of as the supernatural creator and overseer of humans and the universe. Theologians have ascribed a variety of attributes to the many different conceptions of God. The most common among these include omniscience (infinite knowledge), omnipotence (unlimited power), omnipresence (present everywhere), omnibenevolence (perfect goodness), divine simplicity, and eternal and necessary existence.

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See also:

# Immanence

God is part of matter and within it.
God is manifested in and fully present in the world and the things in the world

# Plane of immanence

"existing or remaining within". PLANE OF IMMANENCE as a pure immanence, an unqualified immersion or embeddedness, an immanence which denies transcendence as a REAL DISTINCTION. a pure plane, an infinite field or smooth space without substantial or constitutive division. immanence is not immanent TO substance but rather that immanence IS substance, that is, immanent to itself.
Deleuze writes: "It is only when immanence is no longer immanence to anything other than itself that we can speak of a plane of immanence."

# Transcendence (religion)

God is wholly independent and removed from matter.
See Islam section

# Transcendence (philosophy)

God is completely outside of and beyond the world.
The prime mover, a non-material self-consciousness that is outside of the world.

# Substance theory

Substance theory, or substance attribute theory, is a theory about objecthood, positing that a substance is distinct from its properties. A THING-IN-ITSELF is a property-bearer that must be distinguished from the properties it bears.
Monism: There is only one substance, often identified as God or Being.
Dualism: World is made of two fundamental substances.
Pluralism: More substances exist in a hierarchy.

Criticisms:

Hume: Since substance is not able to be perceived, it should not be assumed to exist.
Heidegger: "Substance" that by which "we can understand nothing else than an entity which is in such a way that it need no other entity in order to BE." Therefore, only God is a substance as most perfect being.

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# Agnostic atheism

Agnostic atheism, also called atheistic agnosticism, is a philosophical position that encompasses both atheism and agnosticism. Agnostic atheists are atheistic because they do not hold a belief in the existence of any deity and agnostic because they claim that the existence of a deity is either unknowable in principle or currently unknown in fact. The agnostic atheist may be contrasted with the agnostic theist, who does believe that one or more deities exist but claims that the existence or nonexistence of such is unknown or cannot be known.

In 1887, Robert Flint said:

“The atheist may however be, and not unfrequently is, an agnostic. There is an agnostic atheism or atheistic agnosticism, and the combination of atheism with agnosticism which may be so named is not an uncommon one.
If a man has failed to find any good reason for believing that there is a God, it is perfectly natural and rational that he should not believe that there is a God; and if so, he is an atheist... if he goes farther, and, after an investigation into the nature and reach of human knowledge, ending in the conclusion that the existence of God is incapable of proof, cease to believe in it on the ground that he cannot know it to be true, he is an agnostic and also an atheist – an agnostic-atheist – an atheist because an agnostic... while, then, it is erroneous to identify agnosticism and atheism, it is equally erroneous so to separate them as if the one were exclusive of the other.”

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# Agnostic theism

Agnostic theism is the philosophical view that encompasses both theism and agnosticism. An agnostic theist believes in the existence of at least one deity, but regards the truth or falsehood of this proposition as unknown or inherently unknowable. The agnostic theist may also or alternatively be agnostic regarding the properties of the God(s) they believe in.

There are numerous beliefs that can be included in agnostic theism, including fideism, however not all agnostic theists are fideists. Since agnosticism is a position on knowledge and does not forbid belief in a deity, it is compatible with most theistic positions.

The classical philosophical understanding of knowledge is that knowledge is justified true belief. By this definition, it is reasonable to assert that one may hold a belief, and that belief may be true, without asserting that one knows it.

Agnostic theism could be interpreted as an admission that it is not possible to justify one's belief in a god sufficiently for it to be considered known. This may be because they consider faith a requirement of their religion, or because of the influence of plausible-seeming scientific or philosophical criticism.

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# Deism

Deismis the belief that reason and observation of the natural world are sufficient to determine the existence of a creator, accompanied with the rejection of revelation and authority as a source of religious knowledge. Deism holds that God does not intervene with the functioning of the natural world in any way, allowing it to run according to the laws of nature that he configured when he created all things. God is thus conceived to be wholly transcendent and never immanent. For Deists, human beings can only know God via reason and the observation of nature, but not by revelation or supernatural manifestations (such as miracles) – phenomena which Deists regard with caution if not skepticism.

Deism does not ascribe any specific qualities to a deity beyond non-intervention. Deism is related to naturalism because it credits the formation of life and the universe to a higher power, using only natural processes. Deism may also include a spiritual element, involving experiences of God and nature.

Deists hold a variety of beliefs about the soul. Some are materialists and either denied or doubted the immortality of the soul. Some held that souls exist, survive death, and in the afterlife are rewarded or punished by God for their behavior in life. Some believed in reincarnation or resurrection. Others were agnostic about the immortality of the soul.

Thomas Paine said:

“I trouble not myself about the manner of future existence. I content myself with believing, even to positive conviction, that the power that gave me existence is able to continue it, in any form and manner he pleases, either with or without this body; and it appears more probable to me that I shall continue to exist hereafter than that I should have had existence, as I now have, before that existence began.” [The Age of Reason]

PROOF OF GOD

Thomas Hobbes – a 17th century deist used the cosmological argument for the existence of God at several places in his writings.

Hobbes said:

“The effects we acknowledge naturally, do include a power of their producing, before they were produced; and that power presupposeth something existent that hath such power; and the thing so existing with power to produce, if it were not eternal, must needs have been produced by somewhat before it, and that again by something else before that, till we come to an eternal, that is to say, the first power of all powers and first cause of all causes; and this is it which all men conceive by the name of God, implying eternity, incomprehensibility, and omnipotence.”

RELIGION

Most deists saw the religions of their day as corruptions of an original, pure religion that was simple and rational. They felt that this original pure religion had become corrupted by "priests" who had manipulated it for personal gain and for the class interests of the priesthood in general.

Over time "priests" had succeeded in encrusting the original simple, rational religion with all kinds of superstitions and "mysteries" – irrational theological doctrines.
Laymen were told by the priests that only the priests really knew what was necessary for salvation and that laymen must accept the "mysteries" on faith and on the priests' authority. This kept the laity baffled by the nonsensical "mysteries", confused, and dependent on the priests for information about the requirements for salvation. The priests consequently enjoyed a position of considerable power over the laity, which they strove to maintain and increase. Deists referred to this kind of manipulation of religious doctrine as "priestcraft", a highly derogatory term.

Deists saw their mission as the stripping away of "priestcraft" and "mysteries" from religion, thereby restoring religion to its original, true condition – simple and rational. In many cases, they considered true, original Christianity to be the same as this original natural religion.

Matthew Tindal said:

“It can't be imputed to any defect in the light of nature that the pagan world ran into idolatry, but to their being entirely governed by priests, who pretended communication with their gods, and to have thence their revelations, which they imposed on the credulous as divine oracles. Whereas the business of the Christian dispensation was to destroy all those traditional revelations, and restore, free from all idolatry, the true primitive and natural religion implanted in mankind from the creation.” [book, Christianity as Old as the Creation]

One implication of this deist creation myth was that primitive societies, or societies that existed in the distant past, should have religious beliefs that are less encrusted with superstitions and closer to those of natural theology.

Tindal articulated a number of the basic tenets of deism:
He argued against special revelation: "God designed all Mankind should at all times know, what he wills them to know, believe, profess, and practice; and has given them no other Means for this, but the Use of Reason."

BELIEFS

Lord Edward Herbert of Cherbury (d. 1648) is generally considered the "father of English deism".

He said:

There were five common notions.
There is one Supreme God.
He ought to be worshipped.
Virtue and piety are the chief parts of divine worship.
We ought to be sorry for our sins and repent of them
Divine goodness doth dispense rewards and punishments both in this life and after it.

The following lengthy quote from Herbert can give the flavor of his writing and demonstrate the sense of the importance that Herbert attributed to innate Common Notions. He said:

“No general agreement exists concerning the Gods, but there is universal recognition of God. Every religion in the past has acknowledged, every religion in the future will acknowledge, some sovereign deity among the Gods. ...
Accordingly that which is everywhere accepted as the supreme manifestation of deity, by whatever name it may be called, I term God.
While there is no general agreement concerning the worship of Gods, sacred beings, saints, and angels, yet the Common Notion or Universal Consent tells us that adoration ought to be reserved for the one God. Hence divine religion— and no race, however savage, has existed without some expression of it— is found established among all nations. ...
The connection of Virtue with Piety, defined in this work as the right conformation of the faculties, is and always has been held to be, the most important part of religious practice. There is no general agreement concerning rites, ceremonies, traditions...; but there is the greatest possible consensus of opinion concerning the right conformation of the faculties. ... Moral virtue... is and always has been esteemed by men in every age and place and respected in every land...
There is no general agreement concerning the various rites or mysteries which the priests have devised for the expiation of sin.... General agreement among religions, the nature of divine goodness, and above all conscience, tell us that our crimes may be washed away by true penitence, and that we can be restored to new union with God. ... I do not wish to consider here whether any other more appropriate means exists by which the divine justice may be appeased, since I have undertaken in this work only to rely on truths which are not open to dispute but are derived from the evidence of immediate perception and admitted by the whole world.
The rewards that are eternal have been variously placed in heaven, in the stars, in the Elysian fields... Punishment has been thought to lie in metempsychosis, in hell,... or in temporary or everlasting death. But all religion, law, philosophy, and ... conscience, teach openly or implicitly that punishment or reward awaits us after this life. ... [T]here is no nation, however barbarous, which has not and will not recognise the existence of punishments and rewards. That reward and punishment exist is, then, a Common Notion, though there is the greatest difference of opinion as to their nature, quality, extent, and mode.
It follows from these considerations that the dogmas which recognize a sovereign Deity, enjoin us to worship Him, command us to live a holy life, lead us to repent our sins, and warn us of future recompense or punishment, proceed from God and are inscribed within us in the form of Common Notions.
Revealed truth exists; and it would be unjust to ignore it. But its nature is quite distinct from the truth [based on Common Notions] ... [T]he truth of revelation depends upon the authority of him who reveals it. We must, then, proceed with great care in discerning what actually is revealed.... [W]e must take great care to avoid deception, for men who are depressed, superstitious, or ignorant of causes are always liable to it.” [Lord Herbert of Cherbury , De Veritate]

Herbert's De Veritate, innate ideas had been the foundation of deist epistemology. John Locke's famous attack on innate ideas in the first book of the Essay effectively destroyed that foundation and replaced it with a theory of knowledge based on experience. Innatist deism was replaced by empiricist deism. Locke himself was not a deist. He believed in both miracles and revelation, and he regarded miracles as the main proof of revelation.

After Locke, constructive deism could no longer appeal to innate ideas for justification of its basic tenets such as the existence of God. Instead, under the influence of Locke and Newton, deists turned to natural theology and to arguments based on experience and Nature: the cosmological argument and the argument from design.

21st Century

A modern definition has been created and provided by the World Union of Deists (WUD) that provides a modern understanding of deism:

“Deism is the recognition of a universal creative force greater than that demonstrated by mankind, supported by personal observation of laws and designs in nature and the universe, perpetuated and validated by the innate ability of human reason coupled with the rejection of claims made by individuals and organized religions of having received special divine revelation.”

INTERNET

In 1993, Bob Johnson established the first Deist organization since the days of Thomas Paine and Elihu Palmer with the World Union of Deists. The WUD offered the monthly hardcopy publication THINK! Currently the WUD offers two online Deist publications, THINKonline! and Deistic Thought & Action! As well as using the Internet for spreading the Deist message, the WUD is also conducting a direct mail campaign.
1996 saw the first Web site dedicated to deism with the WUD site Deism.com. In 1998, Sullivan-County.com was originally the Virginia/Tennessee affiliate of WUD and the second deism site on the Web. It split from Deism.com to promote more traditional and historical Deist beliefs and history. From these effort, many other Deist sites and discussion groups have appeared on the Internet such as Positive Deism, Deist Info, Modern Deism and many others. In the last few years, the Deist Alliance was created so that many of the sites on the Internet could come together to support each other and advocate deism. The Enlightened Worldview Project, a member of the Deist Alliance, was created to explore the relationship between deism and other subjects including morality and spirituality. Another Alliance member, Unified Deism, was created as a social network that is all-inclusive to various forms of deism. This site's social network has since migrated to The Center for Reasoned Spirituality, which retains a focus on deism but is also meant to also be inclusive to members who do not necessarily identify with deism.
In 2009, the World Union of Deists published a book on deism, Deism: A Revolution in Religion, A Revolution in You written by its founder and director, Bob Johnson. This book focuses on what deism has to offer both individuals and society.
In 2010, the Church of Deism was formed in an effort to extend the legal rights and privileges of more traditional religions to Deists while maintaining an absence of established dogma and ritual.

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Wisdom of Ali


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HOLY WORDS

Saintly Wisdom

The sacred sayings and holy wisdom of saint Ali:


· Live amongst people in such a manner that if you die they weep over you and if you are alive they crave for your company.
· For those who refused to side with any party, they have forsaken God and are of no use to Satan either.
· He who is greedy is disgraced; he who discloses his hardship will always be humiliated; he who has no control over his tongue will often have to face discomfort.
· Avarice is disgrace; cowardice is a defect; poverty often disables an intelligent man from arguing his case; a poor man is a stranger in his own town; misfortune and helplessness are calamities; patience is a kind of bravery; to sever attachments with the wicked world is the greatest wealth; piety is the best weapon of defence.
· Surrender to God's Will is the best companion; wisdom is the noblest heritage; theoretical and practical knowledge are the best signs of distinction; deep thinking will present the clearest picture of every problem.
· The mind of a wise man is the safest custody of secrets; cheerfulness is the key to friendship; patience and forbearance will conceal many defects.
· Conceited, and self-admiring person is disliked by others; charity and alms are the best remedy for ailments and calamities; one has to account in the next world for the deeds that he has done in this world.
· Man is a wonderful creature; he sees through the layers of fat (eyes), hears through a bone (ears) and speaks through a lump of flesh (tongue).
· When this world favours somebody, it lends him the attributes, and surpassing merits of others and when it turns its face away from him it snatches away even his own excellences and fame.
· If you overpower your enemy, then pardon him by way of thankfulness to God, for being able to subdue him.
· Unfortunate is he who cannot gain a few sincere friends during his life and more unfortunate is the one who has gained them and then lost them (through his behaviour).
· When some blessings come to you, do not drive them away through thanklessness.
· He who is deserted by friends and relatives will often find help and sympathy from strangers.
· Every person who is tempted to go astray does not deserve punishment.
· Our affairs are attached to the destiny decreed by God; even our best plans may lead us to destruction.
· One who rushes madly after inordinate desire runs the risk of encountering destruction and death.
· Overlook and forgive the weaknesses of the generous people because if they fall down, God will help them.
· Failures are often the results of timidity and fears; disappointments are the results of bashfulness; hours of leisure pass away like summer-clouds, therefore, do not waste opportunity of doing good.
· If the right usurped from us is given back to us we shall take it, otherwise we shall go on claiming it.
· If someone's deeds lower his position, his pedigree cannot elevate it.
· To render relief to the distressed and to help the oppressed make amends for great sins.
· You should fear Him when you see that your Lord, the Glorified, bestows His Favours on you while you disobey Him.
· Often your utterances and expressions of your face leak out the secrets of your hidden thoughts.
· When you get ill do not get nervous about it and try as much as possible to be hopeful.
· The best form of devotion to the service of God is not to make a show of it.
· When you have to depart from this world and have to meet death, then why wish delay.
· Take warning! He has not exposed so many of your sinful activities that it appears as if He has forgiven you.

· Saint Ali was asked about faith. He said faith endurance, conviction, justice, and resistance. Endurance is composed of four attributes: eagerness, fear, piety and hope. So whoever is eager for Heaven will ignore temptations; who ever fears the fire of Hell will abstain from sins; whoever practices piety will easily bear the difficulties of life and whoever anticipates death will hasten towards good deeds. Conviction has also four aspects to guard oneself against infatuations of sin; to search for explanation of truth through knowledge; to gain lessons from instructive things and to follow the precedent of the past people, because whoever wants to guard himself against vices and sins will have to search for the true causes of infatuation and the true ways of combating them out and to find those true ways one has to search them with the help of knowledge, whoever gets fully acquainted with various branches of knowledge will take lessons from life and whoever tries to take lessons from life is actually engaged in the study of the causes of rise and fall of previous civilizations. Justice also has four aspects depth of understanding, profoundness of knowledge, fairness of judgment and dearness of mind; because whoever tries his best to understand a problem will have to study it, whoever has the practice of studying the subject he is to deal with, will develop a clear mind and will always come to correct decisions, whoever tries to achieve all this will have to develop ample patience and forbearance and whoever does this has done justice to the cause of religion and has led a life of good repute and fame. Struggle, or resistence [for peace] is divided into four branches: to persuade people to be obedient to God; to prohibit them from sin and vice; to struggle (in God’s way) sincerely and firmly on all occasions and to detest the vicious. Whoever persuades people to obey the orders of God provides strength to the believers; whoever dissuades them from vices and sins humiliates the unbelievers; whoever struggles on all occasions discharges all his obligations and whoever detests the vicious only for the sake of God, then God will take revenge on his enemies and will be pleased with Him on the Day of Judgment.

· There are four causes of infidelity and loss of belief in God: hankering after whims, a passion to dispute every argument, deviation from truth; and dissension: Because whoever hankers after whims does not incline towards truth; whoever keeps on disputing every argument on account of his ignorance, will always remain blind to truth, whoever deviates from truth because of ignorance, will always take good for evil and evil for good and he will always remain intoxicated with misguidance. And whoever abandons (God), his path becomes difficult, his affairs will become complicated and his way to salvation will be uncertain. Similarly, doubt has also four aspects absurd reasoning; fear; vacillation and hesitation; and unreasonable surrender to infidelity, because one who has accustomed himself to unreasonable and absurd discussions will never see the Light of Truth and will always live in the darkness of ignorance. One who is afraid to face facts will always turn away from ultimate reality, one who allows doubts and uncertainties to vacillate him will always be under the control of Satan and one who surrenders himself to infidelity accepts damnation in both the worlds.

· Saint Ali once said to his son, my son learn four things from me and through them you will learn four more. If you keep them in mind your actions will not bring any harm to you: The greatest wealth is Wisdom; the greatest poverty is stupidity; the worst unsocial thing is that of vanity and self-glorification; and the best nobility of descent exhibits itself in politeness and in refinement of manner. The next four things, my son, are: "Do not make friendship with a fool because when he will try to do you good he will do you harm; do not make a miser your friend because he will run away from you at the time of your dire need; do not be friendly with a vicious and wicked person because he will sell you and your friendship at the cheapest price and do not make friend of a liar because like a mirage he will make you visualize very near the things which lie at a great distance and will make you see at the great distance the things which are near to you".

· When one of his companions fell ill, Saint Ali called upon him and thus advised him: "Be thankful to God. He has made this illness a thing to atone your sins because a disease in itself has nothing to bring reward to anyone, it merely expiates one's sins and so far as reward is concerned, one has to earn it with his good words and good deeds. The Almighty Lord grants Heaven to his creatures on account of their piety and noble thoughts".

· Blessed is the man who always kept the life after death in his view, who remembered the Day of Judgment through all his deeds, who led a contented life and who was happy with the lot that God had destined for him. If I cut a faithful Devotee into pieces to make him hate me, he will not turn into my enemy and if I give all the wealth of this world to a hypocrite to make him my friend he will not befriend me. It is so because the divine messenger has said: " O Ali! No faithful Devotee will ever be your enemy and no hypocrite will ever be your friend."

· Recommended prayers cannot attain the pleasures of God for you when obligatory prayers are left unattended.
· A wise man first thinks and then speaks and a fool speaks first and then thinks.
· A fool's mind is at the mercy of his tongue and a wise man's tongue is under the control of his mind.
· A virtuous person is better then virtue, and a vicious person is worse than vice.
· Be generous but not extravagant, be frugal but not miserly.
· The best kind of wealth is to give up inordinate desires.
· One who says unpleasant things about others; he himself will quickly become a target of their scandal.
· One who hopes inordinately impairs his deeds.
· The sin, which makes you sad and repentant, is more liked by God than the good deed which turns you arrogant.
· Value of a man depends upon his courage; his veracity depends upon his self-respect and his chastity depends upon his sense of honour.
· Success is the result of foresight and resolution, foresight depends upon deep thinking and planning and the most important factor of planning is to keep your secrets to yourself.
· Be afraid of a gentleman when he is hungry, and of a mean person when his stomach is full.
· Hearts of people are like wild beasts. They attach themselves to those who love and train them.
· So long as fortune is favouring you, your defects will remain covered.
· Only he who has the power to punish can pardon.
· Generosity is to help a deserving person without his request, and if you help him after his request, then it is either out of self-respect or to avoid rebuke.
· There is no greater wealth than wisdom, no greater poverty than ignorance; no greater heritage than culture and no greater support than consultation.
· Patience is of two kinds: patience over what pains you, and patience against what you covet.
· Wealth converts a strange land into homeland and poverty turns a native place into a strange land.
· Contentment is the wealth, which will never diminish.
· Wealth is the fountainhead of passions.
· Whoever warns you against sins and vices is like the one who gives you good tidings.
· Tongue is a beast, if it is let loose, it devours.
· Woman is a scorpion whose grip is sweet.
· If you are greeted then return the greetings more warmly. If you are favoured, then repay the obligation manifold; but he who takes the initiative will always excel in merit.
· The source of success of a claimant is the mediator.
· People in this world are like travellers whose journey is going on though they are asleep.
· Lack of friends means, stranger in one's own country.
· Not to have a thing is less humiliating than to beg it.
· Do not feel ashamed if the amount of charity is small because to refuse the needy is an act of greater shame.
· To refrain from unlawful and impious source of pleasures is an ornament to the poor and to be thankful for the riches granted is the adornment of wealth.
· If you cannot get things as much as you desire than be contented with what you have.
· An ignorant person will always overdo a thing or neglect it totally.
· The wiser a man is, the less talkative will he be.
· Time wears out bodies, renews hopes, brings death nearer and takes away aspirations. Whoever gets anything from the world lives in anxiety for holding it and whoever loses anything passes his days grieving over the loss.
· Whoever wants to be a leader should educate himself before educating others. Before preaching to others he should first practice himself. Whoever educates himself and improves his own morals is superior to the man who tries to teach and train others.
· Every breath you take is a step towards death.
· Anything that can be counted is finite and will come to an end.
· If matters get mixed up then scrutinize the cause and you will know what the effects will be.
· Acquire wisdom and truth from whomever you can because even an apostate can have them but unless they are passed over to a faithful Devotee and become part of wisdom and truth that he possesses, they have a confused existence in the minds of apostates.
· Knowledge and wisdom are really the privilege of a faithful Devotee. If you have lost them, get them back even though you may have to get them from the apostates.
· Value of each man depends upon the art and skill, which he has attained.

· I want to teach you five of those things, which deserve your greatest anxiety to acquire them: Have hope only in God. Be afraid of nothing but sins. If you do know a thing, never feel ashamed to admit ignorance. If you do know a thing, never hesitate or feel ashamed to learn it. Acquire patience and endurance because their relation with true faith is that of a head to a body, a body is of no use without a head, similarly true faith can be of no use without attributes of resignation, endurance and patience.

· A man hypocritically started praising Saint Ali, though he had no faith in him and Saint Ali hearing these praises from him said "I am less than what you tell about me but more than what you think about me".
· Those who have come alive out of a blood bath live longer and have more children.
· One who imagines himself to be all knowing will surely suffer on account of his ignorance.
· I appreciate an old man's cautious opinion more than the valour of a young man.
· I wonder at a man who loses hope of salvation when the door of repentance is open for him.

· There were two things in this world, which softened the Wrath of God and prevented its descent upon man: One has been taken away from you; hold the other steadfastly. The one which has been taken away from men is the divine messenger and the one which is still left with them and which they must hold steadfastly is repentance and atonement for sins because God at one place in the Sacred Book addressed the divine messenger and said God would not punish them while you were among them nor while they were asking for forgiveness.

· Whoever keeps in order his affairs with God; God will also put his affairs with men in order. Whoever makes arrangement for his salvation; God will arrange his worldly affair. Whoever is a preacher, God will also protect him.
· He is the wisest and the most knowing man who advises people not to lose hope and faith in the Mercy of God and not to be too sure and over-confident of immunity from His Wrath and Punishment.
· Like your body your mind also gets tired so refresh it by wise sayings.
· That knowledge which remains only on your tongue is very superficial. The intrinsic value of knowledge is that you act upon it.

· Take care and do not pray to the Lord, saying, "Lord! I pray to You to protect and guard me from temptations and trials", for there is none who is not tempted and tried. But beseech Him to guard you against such temptation as may lead you towards wickedness and sins because God says in His Sacred Book, Know that your wealth and children are temptations. It means God tried people through wealth and children so that it may be tested as to who is content with what he gets honestly and who is thankful to God for the position he is placed in with regard to his children. Though God knows them better than even they know themselves, yet those trials and tests are for the purpose of their realizing and knowing those deeds which merit reward or which deserve punishment. There are some people who love to have male children and hate daughters and there are some who simply crave for wealth and hate poverty.

· Saint Ali was asked the meaning of being well off, or well provided for. Saint Ali replied: Your welfare does not lie in your having enormous wealth and numerous children but it rests in your being highly educated and forbearing and in your being proud of your obedience to God. If you do a good deed then thank God for it and if you commit a sin then repent and atone for it. In this world there is a real welfare for two kinds of people, one is the person who, when commits a sin, atones for it and the other is anxious to do good as much as possible.

· Importance of the deeds that you have done with fear of God cannot be minimized and how can the deeds, which are acceptable to God, be considered unimportant.
· The best friend of our Divine messenger is he who, though not related to him, obeys the orders of God and his greatest enemy is the man who though related to him, disobeys God.
· To sleep with having sincere faith in religion and God is better than to pray with wavering faith.
· Whenever a tradition of the divine messenger is related to you, scrutinize it, do not be satisfied with mere verbatim repetition of the same because there are many people who repeat the words containing knowledge but only few ponder over them and try to fully grasp the meaning they convey.
· Our declaring that we belong to God indicates that we accept Him as our Master, Owner and Lord. And when we say that our return is towards God indicates that we accept our mortality.
· Some people praised Saint Ali on his face. He replied, "God knows me very well and I also know myself more than you. Please, Lord! Make me better than what they imagine me to be and please excuse those Weaknesses of mine which they are not aware of".

· To secure for you fame, credit as well as blessings, the help that you give to men in need, should possess the following attributes: whatever its extent, it should be considered by you as trifling so that it may be granted a high status; it should be given secretly, God will manifest it; and it must be given immediately so that it becomes pleasant.

· Your society will pass through a period when cunning and crafty intriguers will be favoured by status, when profligates will be considered as well-bred, well-behaved and elegant elites of the society, when just and honest persons will be considered as weaklings, when charity will be considered as a loss to wealth and property, when support and help to each other will be considered as favour and benevolence and when prayers and love to God will be taken up for the sake of show to gain popularity and higher status, at such times regimes will be run under the advice of women and the youngsters will be the rulers and counsellors of the State.

· Saint Ali's garment was very old with patches on it. When somebody drew his attention towards it, he replied, " Such dresses, when worn by men of status make them submissive to God and kind-hearted towards others and the faithful Devotees can conveniently follow the example ".
· Vicious pleasures of this world and salvation are like two enemies or two roads running in opposite directions or towards opposite poles, one to the North and the other to the South.
· Whoever likes to gain the pleasures and pomp of this world will hate austerity in life, which is necessary to gain salvation. Reverse will be the attitude of a man desirous of achieving Eternal Bliss. One has to adopt either of the two ways of life, and as they both cannot be brought together, a man has to choose one of them.
· Those are the fortunate people who adopt piety as the principle of their lives and are fully attentive to their welfare for the Hereafter. They accept bare earth as the most comfortable bed and water as the most pleasant drink. They adopt the sacred book and prayers as their guide and protector and like Jesus they forsake the world and its vicious pleasure.

· Those who give up religion to better their lot in life seldom succeed. The Wrath of God makes them go through more calamities and losses than the gains they gather for themselves.
· There are many educated people who have ruined their future on account of their ignorance of religion. Their knowledge did not prove of any avail to them.

· More wonderful than man himself is that part of his body, which is connected with his trunk with muscles. It is his brain (mind). Look what good and bad tendencies arise from it. On the one hand it holds treasures of knowledge and wisdom and on the other it is found to harbour very ugly desires. If a man sees even a tiny gleam of success, then greed forces him to humiliate himself. If he gives way to avarice, then inordinate desires ruin him, if he is disappointed, then despondency almost kills him. If he is excited, then he loses temper and gets angry. If he is pleased, then he gives up precaution. Sudden fear makes him dull and nervous, and he is unable to think and find a way out of the situation. During the times of peace and prosperity he becomes careless and unmindful of the future. If he acquires wealth, then he becomes haughty and arrogant. If he is plunged in distress, then his agitation, impatience and nervousness disgrace him. If he is overtaken by poverty, then he finds himself in a very sad plight, hunger makes him weak, and over-feeding harms him equally. In short every kind of loss and gain makes his mind unbalanced.

· During civil unrest, adopt such an attitude that people do not attach any importance to you they neither burden you with complicated affairs, nor try to derive any advantage out of you.
· Divine rule can be established only by a man who where justice and equity are required, feels neither deficient, nor weak, and who is not greedy and avaricious.
· Anyone who loves us the Sacred Family must be ready to face a life of austerity.

· No wealth is more useful than intelligence and wisdom; no solitude is more horrible than when people avoid you on account of your vanity and conceit or when you wrongly consider yourself above everybody to confide and consult; no eminence is more exalting than piety; no companion can prove more useful than politeness; no heritage is better than culture; no leader is superior to Divine Guidance; no deal is more profitable than good deeds; no profit is greater than Divine Reward; no abstinence is better than to restrain one's mind from doubts; no virtue is better than refraining from prohibited deeds; no knowledge is superior to deep thinking and prudence; no love or prayers are more sacred than fulfilment of obligations and duties, no religious faith is loftier than feeling ashamed of doing wrong and bearing calamities patiently; no eminence is greater than to adopt humbleness; no exaltation is superior to knowledge; nothing is more respectable than forgiveness and forbearance; no support and defence are stronger than consultation.

· When a community is composed of honest, sober and virtuous people, your forming a bad opinion about anyone of its members, when nothing wicked has been seen of him, is a great injustice to him. On the contrary in a corrupt society to form good opinion of anyone of them and to trust him is to harm yourself.

· When somebody asked Saint Ali as to how he was getting on, he replied: "What do you want to know about a person whose life is leading him towards ultimate death, whose health is the first stage towards illness and whom society has forced out of his retreat".

· There are many persons whom constant grants of His Bounties turn them wicked and fit for His punishment and there are many more who have become vain and self deceptive because the Merciful God has not exposed their weaknesses and vices to the world and the people speak highly about them. All this is an opportunity. No trial of the Lord is more severe than the time He allows (us to chose).

· Saint Ali said; Two kinds of people will be damned on my account. Those who exaggerate my status, and those who hate me and lower my status.
· To lose or to waste an opportunity will result in grief and sorrow.
· She world is like a serpent, so soft to touch, but so full of lethal poison. Unwise people are allured by it and drawn towards it, and wise men avoid it and keep away from its poisonous effects.
· What a difference is there between a deed whose pleasure passes away leaving behind it the pangs of pain and punishment and the deed whose oppressive harshness comes to an end leaving behind Divine blessings!

· Saint Ali was following a funeral and as it was passing along a road, somebody laughed loudly (a sign of disrespect). Hearing this laugh, Saint Ali remarked, " Some of us feel that death is meant for everybody except themselves or it is destined to others and not to themselves or those whom we see dying around us are only travellers going on a journey and will come back to us. It is a sad sight to see that in one moment we commit them to earth and in the next we take hold of the things left by them as if we are going to remain permanently in this world after them. The fact is that we forget sensible advice given to us and become victim of every calamity.

· Blessings are for the man who humbles himself before God, whose sources of income are honest, whose intentions are always honourable, whose character is noble, whose habits are sober, who gives away in the cause and in the Name of God, the wealth which is lying surplus with him, who controls his tongue from vicious and useless talk, who abstains from oppression, who faithfully follows the traditions of the divine messenger and who keeps himself away from innovation in religion.

· Jealousy in woman is unpardonable, but in man it is a sign of his faith in religion.
· I wonder at the mentality of a miser, fearing poverty he takes to stinginess and thus hastily pushes himself headlong into a state of want and destitution, he madly desires plenty and ease, but throws it away without understanding. In this world he, of his own free will, leads the life of a a beggar and in the next world he will have to submit an account like the rich.
· I wonder at the arrogance of a haughty and vain person. Yesterday he was only a drop of semen and tomorrow he will turn into a corpse. I wonder at the man who observes the Universe created by God and doubts His Being and Existence. I wonder at the man who sees people dying around him and yet he has forgotten his end. I wonder at the man who understands the marvel of genesis of creation and refuses to accept that he will be brought back to life again. I wonder at the man who takes great pains to decorate and to make comfortable this mortal habitat and totally forgets his permanent abode.
· Whoever is not diligent in his work, will suffer; whoever has no share of God in his wealth and in his life then there is no place for him in His Realm.
· Be very cautious of cold in the beginning of winter and welcome it at the close of the season because cold season effects your bodies exactly as it effects the trees; in the early season its severity makes them shrivel and shed their leaves and at the end it helps them to revive.
· If you understand God's Majesty, then you will not attach any importance to the creatures.

· Saint Ali addressing the graves said: "O you, who are lying in horrible and deserted houses. O you, who are shut up in the dark graves, who are alone in their abodes, strangers to the places assigned to them; you have gone ahead and preceded us, while we are also following your steps and shall shortly join you. Do you know what has happened after you? Others took up your houses and property, your widows have remarried, this is what we can tell you of this world. Can you give us some news about things around you?" Saying this, Saint Ali turned to his companions and said, "If they are permitted to speak they will inform you that the best provision for the next world is piety and virtue".

· Saint Ali heard someone abusing and blaming the world and said to him, "O you, who are blaming the world, who have been allured and enticed by it, and have been tempted by its false pretences. You allowed yourself to be enamoured of, to be captivated by it and then you accuse and blame it. Have you any reason or right to accuse it and to call it a sinner and seducer? Or is the world not justified in calling you a wicked knave and a sinning hypocrite? When did it make you lose your intelligence and reasoning? And how did it cheat you or snake false pretences to you? Did it conceal from you the fact of the ultimate end of everything that it holds, the fact of the sway of death, decay and destruction in its domain? Did it keep you in the dark about the fate of your forefathers and their final abode under the earth? Did it keep the resting place of your mothers a secret from you? Do you not know that they have returned to dust? Many a time you must have attended the sick persons and many of them you must have seen beyond the scope of medicine. Neither the science of healing nor could your nursing and attendance nor your prayers and weeping prolonged the span of their lives, and they died. You were anxious for them, you procured the best medical aid, and you gathered famous physicians and provided best medicines for them. Death could not be held back and life could not be prolonged. In this drama and in this tragedy did the world not present you with a lesson and a moral?

· Certainly, this world is a house of truth for those who look into it carefully, an abode of peace and rest for those who understand its ways and moods and it is the best working ground for those who want to procure rewards for life in the Hereafter. It is a place of acquiring knowledge and wisdom for those who want to acquire them, a place of love for the friends of God and for Angels. It is the place where holy messengers received revelations of God. It is the place for virtuous people and saints to do good deeds and to be assigned with rewards for the same. Only in this world they could trade with God's Favours and Blessings and only while living here they could barter their good deeds with His Blessings and Rewards. Where else could all this be done? Who are you to abuse the world when it has openly declared its mortality and mortality of everything connected with it, when it has given everyone of its inhabitants to understand that all of them are to face death, when through its ways it has given them all an idea of calamities they have to face here, and through the sight of its temporary and fading pleasures it has given them glimpses of eternal pleasures of Heaven and suggested them to wish and work for the same. If you study it properly you will find that simply to warn and frighten you of the consequences of evil deeds and to persuade you towards good actions, every night it raises new hopes of peace and prosperity in you and every morning it places new anxieties and new worries before you. Those who passed such lives are ashamed of and repent the time so passed abuse this world. But there are people who will praise this world on the Day of Judgment that it reminded them of the Hereafter and they took advantage of these reminders. It informed them of the effects of good deeds and they made correct use of the information it advised them and they were benefited by its advice".

· An Angel announces daily: "Birth of more human beings means so many more will die, collection of more wealth means of much more will be destroyed, erection of more buildings means so many more ruins will come".
· This world is not a permanent place, it is a passage, a road on which you are passing. There are two kinds of people here: One is the kind of those who have sold their souls for eternal damnation, the other is of those who have purchased their souls and freed them from damnation.
· A friend cannot be considered a friend unless he is tested on three occasions: in time of need, behind your back and after your death.
· Anyone who has been granted four attributes will not be deprived of their (four) effects; one who prays to God and implores to Him will not be deprived of granting of his prayers; one who repents for his thoughts and deeds will not be refused acceptance of the repentance; one who has atoned for his sins will not be debarred from salvation and one who thanks God for the Blessings and Bounties will not be denied the increase in them.

· The sacred book attests the truth of these facts. God says ask me and I shall accept your prayers. About repentance He says: Whoever has done a bad deed or has indulged in sin and then repents and asks for His forgiveness will find God most Forgiving and Merciful. About being thankful He says if you are thankful for what you are given, I shall increase My Bounties and Blessings. About atonement of sin He says God accepts the repentance of those who have ignorantly committed vice and then soon repent for it, God accepts such repentance's, He is Wise and Omniscient.

· Daily prayers are the best medium through which one can seek the nearness to God. Pilgrimage is sacred effort for every weak person. For everything that you own there is charity, and of body it is fasting. The sacred struggle of a woman is to afford pleasant company to her husband.
· If you want to pray to God for better means of subsistence, then first give something in charity
· When someone is sure of the returns, then he shows generosity.
· Aid (from God) is in proportion to the trouble.
· He who practices moderation and frugality will never be threatened with poverty.
· One of the conveniences in life is to have less children.
· Loving one another is half of wisdom.
· Grief is half of old age.

· Grant of patience (from God) is in proportion to the extent of calamity you are passing through. If you exhibit fretfulness, irritation, and despair in calamities, then your patience and your exertions are wasted.
· Many persons get nothing out of their fasts but hunger and thirst; many more get nothing out of their night prayers but exertions and sleepless nights. Wise and sagacious persons are praiseworthy even if they do not fast and sleep during the nights.
· Defend your faith (in God) with the help of charity. Protect your wealth with the aid of charity. Let the prayers guard you from calamities and disasters.

· Saint Ali said to Komail: “Hearts are containers of the secrets of knowledge and wisdom and the best container is the one which can hold the most and what it holds, it can preserve and protect in the best way. Therefore, remember carefully what I am telling you. Remember that there are three kinds of people: one kind is of those learned people who are highly versed in the ethics of truth and philosophy of religion, second is the kind of those who are acquiring the above knowledge and the third is that class of people who are uneducated. They follow every pretender and accept every slogan, they have neither acquired any knowledge nor have they secured any support of firm and rational convictions. Remember, knowledge is better than wealth because it protects you while you have to guard wealth. It decreases if you keep on spending it but the more you make use of knowledge the more it increases. What you get through wealth disappears as soon as wealth disappears but what you achieve through knowledge will remain even after you. Knowledge is power and it can command obedience. A man of knowledge during his lifetime can make people obey and follow him and he is praised and venerated after his death. Remember that knowledge is a ruler and wealth is its subject. Those who amass wealth, though alive, are dead to realities of life, and those who achieve knowledge, will remain alive through their knowledge and wisdom even after their death, though their faces may disappear from the community of living beings, yet their ideas, the knowledge which they had left behind and their memory, will remain in the minds of people. Here [in my heart] I hold stores and treasures of knowledge. I wish I could find somebody to share it with me. Yes, I found a few, but one of them, though quite intelligent, was untrustworthy, he would sell his salvation to get hold of the world and its pleasures, he would make religion a pretence to grasp worldly power and wealth, he would make this Blessing of God serve him to get supremacy and control over friends of God and he would through knowledge exploit and suppress other human beings. The other person was such that he apparently obeyed truth and knowledge, yet his mind had not achieved the true light of religion, at the slightest ambiguity or doubt he would get suspicious of truth, mistrust religion and would rush towards scepticism. So neither of them was capable of acquiring the superior knowledge that I can impart. Besides these two I find some other person One of them is a slave of self and greedy for inordinate desires, which can easily drag him away from the path of religion, the other is an avaricious, grasping and acquisitive miser who will risk his life to grasp and hold wealth, none of these two will be of any use to religion or man, both of them resemble beasts having appetite for food. If sensible trustees of knowledge and wisdom totally disappear from human society then both knowledge and wisdom will suffer severely, may bring harm to humanity and may even die out. But this earth will never be without those persons who will prove the universality of truth as disclosed by God, they may be well-known persons, openly and fearlessly declaring the things revealed to them or they may, under fear of harm, injury or deaths hide themselves from the public gaze and may carry on their mission privately so that the reasons proving the reality of truth as preached by religion and as demonstrated by divine messenger may not totally disappear. How many are they and where could they be found? I swear by God that they are very few in number but their worth and their ranks before God are very high. Through them God preserves His Guidance so that they, while departing, may hand over these truths to persons like themselves. The knowledge, which they have acquired has made them see the realities and visualize the truth and has instilled into them the spirit of faith and trust. The duties, which were decreed as hard and unbearable by them. They feel happy in the company and association of things, which frighten the ignorant and uneducated. They live in this world like everybody else but their souls soar to the heights of Divine Eminence. They are media of God on this earth and they invite people towards Him. How I love to meet them. I have told you all that I have to say, you can go back to your place whenever you like.”

· Somebody requested Saint Ali to advise him how to lead a useful and sober life. Saint Ali thereupon advised him thus: "Do not be among those people who want to gain good returns without working hard for them, who have long hopes and keep on postponing repentance and penance, who talk like pious persons but run after vicious pleasures. Do not be among those who are not satisfied if they get more in life and are not content if their lot in life's pleasures is less (they are never satisfied), who never thank God for what they get and keep on constantly demanding increase in what is left with them; who advise others to such good deeds that they themselves refrain from; who appreciate good people but do not follow their ways of life; who hate bad and vicious people but follow their ways of life; who, on account of their excessive sins hate death but do not give up the sinful ways of life; who, if fallen ill, repent their ways of life and on regaining their health fearlessly readopt the same frivolous ways; who get despondent and lose all hopes, but on gaining health, become arrogant and careless; who, if faced with misfortunes, dangers or afflictions, turn to God and keep on beseeching Him for relief and when relieved or favoured with comfort and ease they are deceived by the comfortable conditions they found themselves in and forget God and forsake prayers; whose minds are allured by day dreams and forlorn hopes and who abhor to face realities of life; who fear for others the enormous repercussions of vices and sins but for their own deeds expect very high rewards or very light disciplinary actions. Riches make such people arrogant, rebellious and wicked, and poverty makes them despondent and lethargic. If they have to work, they work lazily and if they put up a demand they do it stubbornly.

· Under the influence of inordinate cravings, they commit sins in quick succession and keep on postponing repentance. Calamities and adversities make them give up the distinguished characteristics of Devotees. They advise people with narrations of events and facts but do not take any lesson from them. They are good at preaching but bad at practice, therefore they always talk of lofty deeds but their actions belie their words. They are keen to acquire temporal pleasures but are careless and slow to achieve permanent benefits. They think well for themselves the things which are actually injurious to them and regard harmful the things which really benefit them. They are afraid of death but waste their time and do not resort to good deeds before death overtakes them. The vices, which they regard as enormous sins for others, they consider as minor shortcomings for themselves. Similarly, they attach great importance to their obedience to the orders of God and belittle similar actions in others. Therefore, they often criticize others and speak very highly of their own deeds. They are happy to spend their time in society of rich persons, wasting it in luxuries and vices but are averse to employing for useful purposes in company of the poor and pious people: They are quick and free to pass verdicts against others but they never pass a verdict against their own vicious deeds. They force others to obey them but they never obey God. They collect their dues carefully but never pay the dues they owe.” They are not afraid of God but fear powerful men".

· A man can be valued through his sayings.
· One who does not realize his own value is condemned to utter failure. (Know Thy worth).
· Everyone has an end; it may be pleasant or sorrowful.
· Everyone, who is born, has to die and once dead he is as good as having not come into existence.
· One, who adopts patience, will never be deprived of success though it may take a long time to reach him.
· One who assents or subscribes to the actions of a group or a party is as good as having committed the deed himself. A man who joins a sinful deed makes himself responsible for two-fold punishments, one for doing the deed and the other for assenting and subscribing to it.
· Accept promises of only those persons who can steadfastly-adhere to their pledges.
· You are ordained to recognize the Saints (Divine Leaders) and to obey them.
· You have been shown, if you only care to see; you have been advised if you care to take advantage of advice; you have been told if you care to listen to good counsels.
· Admonish your brother by good deeds and kind regards, and ward off his evil by favouring him.
· One, who enters the places of evil repute has no right to complain against a man who speaks ill of him.
· One, who acquires power, cannot avoid favouritism.
· One, who is wilful and conceited, will suffer losses and calamities and one who seeks advice can secure advantages of many counsels.
· One, who guards his secrets has complete control over his affairs.
· Poverty is the worst form of death.
· One, who serves a person from whom he gets no reciprocal performance of duties, in fact, loves him.
· One should not obey anyone against the commands of God.
· Do not blame a man who delays in securing what are his just rights but blame lies on him who grasps the rights which do not belong to him.
· Conceit is a barrier to progress and improvement.
· Death is near and our mutual company is short.
· There is enough light for one who wants to see.
· It is wiser to abstain then to repent.
· Often inordinate desire to secure a single gain acts as a hindrance for the quest of many profitable pursuits.
· People often hate those things, which they do not know or cannot understand.
· One, who seeks advice learns to realize his mistakes.
· One who struggles for the cause of God secures victory over His enemies.
· When you feel afraid or nervous to do a thing then do it because the real harm, which you may thus receive, is less poignant than its expectation and fear.
· Your supremacy over others is in proportion to the extent of your knowledge and wisdom.
· The best way to punish an evildoer is to reward handsomely a good person for his good deeds.
· If you want to remove evil from the minds of others then first give up evil intentions yourself.
· Obstinacy will prevent you from a correct decision.
· Greed is permanent slavery.
· Deficiency will result in shame and sorrow but caution and foresight will bring peace and security.
· To keep silent when you can say something wise and useful is as bad as keeping on propagating foolish and unwise thoughts.
· If two opposite theories are propagated one will be wrong.
· When truth was revealed to me I never doubted it.
· .I never lied and the things revealed to me were not false I never misled anybody nor was I misled.
· One, who starts tyranny, will repent soon.
· Death is never very far.
· One who forsakes truth earns eternal damnation.
· One who cannot benefit by patience will die in grief.

· I define Religion of Peace for you in a way that nobody dared do it before me. Religion of Peace means obedience to God, obedience to God means having sincere faith in Him, such a faith means to believe in His Power, belief in His Power means recognizing and accepting His Majesty, acceptance of His Majesty means fulfilling the obligations laid down by Him and fulfilment of obligations means actions. (Religion of Peace is belief as well as deeds).

· In this world, man is a target of death, an easy prey to calamities, here every morsel and every draught is liable to choke one, here one never receives a favour until he loses another instead, here every additional day in one's life is a day reduced from the total span of his existence, when death is the natural outcome of life, how can we expect immortality?

· If you have collected anything in excess of your actual need, you will act only as its trustee for someone else to use it.
· Hearts have the tendency of likes and dislikes and are liable to be energetic and lethargic, therefore, make them work when they are energetic because if hearts are forced (to do a thing) they will be blinded.
· When I feel angry with a person how and when should I satisfy my anger, whether at a time when I am not in a position to retaliate and people may advise me to bear patiently or when I have power to punish and I forgive.
· Minds get tired like bodies. When you feel that your; mind is tired, then invigorate it with sober advice.
· If you find that somebody is not grateful for all that you have done for him, then do not get disappointed because often you will find that someone else feels under your obligation though you have done nothing for him and thus your good deeds will be compensated, and God will reward you for your goodness.
· The first fruit of forbearance is that people will sympathize with you and they will go against the man who offended you arrogantly.
· One who takes account of his shortcomings will always gain by it; one who is unmindful of them will always suffer. One, who is afraid of the Day of Judgment, is safe from the Wrath of God.
· One who takes lessons from the events of life, gets vision, one who acquires vision becomes wise and one who attains wisdom achieves knowledge.
· Bear sorrows and calamities patiently, otherwise you will never be happy.
· One who comes into power often oppresses.
· Adversities often bring good qualities to the front.
· If a friend envies you, then he is not a true friend.
· Avarice dulls the faculties of judgment and wisdom.
· Oppression and tyranny are the worse companions for the Hereafter.
· The best deed of a great man is to forgive and forget.
· Silence will create respect and dignity; justice and fair play will bring more friends; benevolence and charity will enhance prestige and position; courtesy will draw benevolence; service of mankind will secure leadership and good words will overcome powerful enemies.
· A greedy man will always find himself in the shackles of humility.

· There are people who love God to gain His Favours, this is the love of traders; while there are some who love Him to keep themselves free from His Wrath, this is the love of slaves; a few who obey Him out of their sense of gratitude and obligations, this is the love of free and noble men.

[Saying from “Peak of Eloquence”, collected by Razi.]

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Sacred Sayings


--

HOLY WORDS


Lady Fatima (605-632)

SAYINGS

First your neighbour, and there after your own house.”

God has required to be obeyed for the sake of protection of the community. Our Guardianship is essential to protect against disunity.”

“God has made joining and connecting with the kinship and cognation, the cause of lengthening of life.”

[Taken from the book, “Rivers of Light”.]

--

Prophet Muhammad (570-632)

Prophet of God who came to deliver the Divine Message to Humanity.

SAYINGS

Kindness is a mark of faith, and whoever has not kindness has not faith.

The ink of the scholar is holier than the blood of the martyr.
Allah will not be merciful to those who are not merciful to people.

By his good character, a believer will attain the degree of one who prays during the night and fasts during the day.

"God does not judge you according to your bodies and appearances, but He looks into your hearts and observes your deeds."

Righteousness is good morality, and wrongdoing is that which wavers in your soul and which you dislike people finding out about.

The best among you are those who are best to their wives.

The first cases to be adjudicated between people on the Day of Judgment will be those of bloodshed [killing and injuring]

The first to be summoned to Paradise on the Day of Resurrection will be those who praise God in prosperity and adversity.

What is the best type of Jihad [struggle]?" He answered: "Speaking truth before a tyrannical ruler.

None of you will have faith till he loves me more than his father, his children and all mankind.


Sayings in Shia Books

The best of those amongst you is the one who learns the Qur’an and then teaches it to others.

Everything in existence prays for the forgiveness of the person who teaches the Qur’an - even the fish in the sea.

The prayer of a person is (in reality) a light in his heart, so whoever desires, can illuminate his heart (by means of prayers).

A person seeing (visiting) my grave deserves my intercession. And a person who visits me after my death is like a person who visited me during my lifetime.

-- 

Ali (600-661)

Ali was the Fourth Caliph, according to Sunnis.
He was the First Divine Imam, according to Shias.

SAYINGS:

“Fear only the will of God and you will have no cause to fear anyone else.”

“There is no capital more useful than intellect and wisdom, and there is no indigence more injurious than ignorance and unawareness.”

“There is no knowledge and science like pondering and thought; and there is no prosperity and advancement like knowledge and science.”

[Book, “Rivers of Light”, volume 1, page 179.]

--

Hasan ibn Ali (d.669 AD)

SAYINGS:

“The heart that is empty of doubt is the cleanest of hearts.”

“I wonder at those who think about their body's food, but do not think about their soul's food. They keep away disturbing food from their belly, but fill up their hearts with destructive subjects.”

“Am I not the Proof of the Almighty, being His remembrance upon his creatures? ”

--

Husayn ibn Ali ‎(626-680 AD)

Famous Martyr of Karbala.

SAYINGS:

Yazid is a transgressor, a drunkard, killer of innocent people and an open sinner, we will never give our allegiances to the likes of him.

Never will be salvaged the people who win the consent of the creature, at the cost of the dissatisfaction of the creator.

Wisdom will not be complete except by following the truth.

Among the signs of a learned man is criticising his own words and being informed of various viewpoints.

Rivers of Light, vol.78, p.119

People are slaves to the world, and as long as they live favourable and comfortable lives, they are loyal to moral principles. However, at hard times, the times of trials, true pious people are scarce.

One who reveals your faults to you like a mirror is your true friend, and one who flatters you and hides from you your faults is your enemy.

Death with honor is better than a life of degradation.

The most generous person is the one who offers help to those who do not expect him to help.

Tolerance is man’s ornament, keeping promises is a sign of nobility, and bonding with others is a grace.

When you are frustrated and do not know a way out, only flexibility and moderation towards difficulties will save you.

Anybody who would like to have a long life and make his sustenance increased, should pay visits to his own relatives.

Honor and dignity of man is only in virtue and piety.

If one does not have these five things there is no good in him: intellect, religion, etiquette, shame and good manners.

Whoever seeks the satisfaction of people through disobedience of God, then God chains him to the people.

Those who worship God for the hope of gaining, they’re not real worshippers, they’re merchants. Those who worship God out of fear (of punishment), they’re slaves. And those who worship God to be grateful towards their creator, they are the free people, and their worship is a real one.

[Source: “Rivers of Light”.]

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SAYINGS:

If people realize the value of science and knowledge, they will sacrifice themselves for earning it.

I wonder at him who shows arrogance and vanity, while he was as a sperm yesterday and will be carrion tomorrow.

The dearest among you to God (the High), is the one whose deeds and behaviour are better than others.

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Muhammad Al Baqir (676-743 AD) 

SAYINGS:

The parable of a man greedy of this world is the parable of the silk worm: the more it winds the thread round itself the farther it becomes from salvation, until it dies of grief.

There is no strength higher than overcoming carnal desire.

Learn knowledge and science from him who teaches it, even if he doesn't practice what he preaches.

There is no pain worse than not knowing and lack of intelligence.

Opposition of one's harmful desires is the sign of the highest level of wisdom in a human being.

On the Day of Judgement, God will interrogate people according to the wisdom he has granted them.

Consider the world as an abode where in you have dropped down for an hour, then you have got to leave it and go ahead.

He whose tongue utters the truth, his practise becomes purified; and the one whose intention is decent and good, his sustenance increases; and whoever adopts good attitude and decent behaviour with his family, his life span lengthens.

Three things destroy a man: considering his own deeds to be really great, forgetting the sins that have been committed, considering his own opinion to be the highest.

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Jafar Al Sadiq (702 – 765 AD)

SAYINGS:

One who does not use his intelligence will not succeed and one who does not use his knowledge will have no intellect.

A learned person among ignorant people, is like a live person among the dead.

To acquire knowledge is necessary at all times.

Write knowledge since you can’t memorize unless with writing. Heart confides to the written.

Everything has its tax, and the tax of knowledge is to teach the people.

Precision, accuracy and pondering in wisdom and sciences, will nourish and develop a person's brain.

The Foundation of Divine Law is Loving God’s Holy Family.

God has appionted to the grave of Husayn, four thousand anguished and grief-stricken angels, who weep over him (and shall continue to do so) up until the Day of Judgment.

Seventy thousand Angels worship near the grave of Husayn. God rewards prayers of the visitors to his grave.

A pilgrim to the grave of Husayn is like him who has visited God on His Throne.

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Musa Al Kazim (746 - 799 AD) 

SAYINGS:

The likeness of this world is as the water of the sea - however much a thirsty person drinks from it, his thirst increases so much so that the water kills him.

Human beings have not been given anything higher than wisdom and intellect.

Association with a learned one in the slums, is by far better than sitting with an ignorant person on sumptuous and luxurious carpets.

--

Ali Al Reza (765 - 818 AD)

SAYINGS:

Time will come when one's safety lies in ten things: nine of which are in staying aloof from men, and the tenth in staying silent.

The best wealth is the one by which the honour of man is protected.

The miserly one is never restful; the envious is never pleased; the grumbler is never loyal; the liar has no conscience.

A trustworthy person does not betray you, yet you consider the betrayer to be trustworthy.

Rivers of Light, vol.78, p.335

Wisdom and intellect is every man's friend, ignorance and illiteracy are his enemies.

Silence is one of the gates to wisdom.

Assisting the weak is better for you than your act of charity.

Worship is not the abundance of prayer and fasting; rather it is the abundance of reflecting on the affairs of God, the Great and Almighty.

The one for whom the day of Ashura is a day of tragedy, grief and weeping, God The Mighty, The Glorious, shall make the Day of Judgment, a day of joy and happiness for him.

--

Muhammad Al Taqi (811 - 835 AD) 


SAYINGS:

The honour of a person lies in his independence from the people.

The one who commits aggression and injustice, and the one who helps him in it, and the one who is pleased over it - all are party to it and participants in it.

--

Ali Al Naqi (828 - 868 AD) 


SAYINGS:

Poverty is the self's greed and increased despair.

Compensate for the regret and negligence in previous mistakes by working hard in the future.

Wisdom doesn't affect corrupt hearts.

Both professor and student share in the pursuit of excellence and perfection.

Indeed, both the scholar and the student share the prosperity.

The ignorant man is prisoner of his tongue.

The value and rank of a learned man is more than his knowledge.

A parents' dissatisfaction causes poverty and leads to humiliation.

Beware of the time when you would be lying before your family members, and there would be no physician to stop it (death), and no friend to benefit you.

The person who obeys the Unique God, will not fear the anger of the creatures of God.

God has some Areas where He likes to be supplicated in, and the prayer of the supplicator is accepted there. The Shrine of Husayn is one of these.

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Hasan Al Askari (846 - 874 AD) 

SAYINGS:

It is sufficient for your morality to not be involve yourself with the things you do not approve of in others.

Beauty of the face is the outward charm of a human being, and the beauty of soul is his inner charm.

Everyone reaps what he sows.

Whoever sows good shall harvest happiness, and whoever sows evil shall harvest regret.

God has imposed fasting so that the wealthy might suffer hunger and be kind to the poor.

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