Intention, Sincerity and Truthfulness: Kitāb Al-Niyya Wa'l-Ikhlā Wa'l - Idq
Intention, Sincerity and Truthfulness: Kitāb Al-Niyya Wa'l-Ikhlā Wa'l - Idq
Intention, Sincerity and Truthfulness: Kitāb Al-Niyya Wa'l-Ikhlā Wa'l - Idq
BOOK XXXVII of
THE REVIVAL OF THE RELIGIOUS SCIENCES
Iḥyā’ ʿulūm al-dīn
O W
Al-Ghazālī on the Ninety-Nine Beautiful Names of God
Al-Ghazālī Letter to a Disciple (Ayyuhā’l-walad)
i
T H E BO O K O F I NTENTION, SINCERITY
A ND TRUTH FULNESS
[Prologue 1]
PART I: ON INTENTION
Chapter One: An Exposition of the Merit of Intention 5
Chapter Two: An Exposition of the Reality of Intention 11
Chapter Three: An Exposition of the Inner Meaning of the
Prophet’s Words: ‘The intention of the believer is better
than his deed’ 17
Chapter Four: A Classification of How Actions are Related
to Intention 24
Chapter Five: An Exposition on that Intention is Not a Matter
of Choice 37
i
Notes 99
Appendix: Persons Cited in Text 109
Bibliography 119
Index to Qur’ānic Quotations 123
General Index 000
vi
ix
A
Ghazālī, ‘The Book of Knowledge’, Iḥyā’ ʿulūm al-dīn 3-4.
B
Ibid., 4
C
Ibid., 2.
xi
A
The falāsifa inherited and strenuously studied the main works of ancient
Greece and their Hellenic commentators; most prominent among the falāsifa
were Fārābī and Ibn Sīnā.
B
The word falsafa, derived from the Greek, continued to be used into
modern times, especially in Iran, but as a distinct intellectual current it became
defunct. The fate of falsafa as a separate method of philosophical and scientific
investigation, however, says nothing about the subsequent flowering of sys-
tematic science up to at least the eighteenth century, a development without
parallel in the annals of history. In fact, this is precisely the long period that
xii
xiii
A
Ghazālī, al-Munqidh min al-ḍalāl 16.
xiv
A
Ibid., 35.
B
Cf. Ghazālī, al-Munqidh min al-ḍalāl.
xv
A
Kalābādhī, al-Taʿarruf li-madhhab ahl al-tasawwuf 116.
xvi
A
Ghazālī A, 185; B, 52.
xvii
A
The human act may be understood as an exteriorisation from the hidden
recesses of the ‘soul’. Besides the physical realm, this may include the exteriori-
sation of thought, articulation and so forth.
B
Qūt 2:154.
C
Ghazālī, A, 171; B, 26.
D
Ibid., A, 172; B, 27.
xviii
A
Ibn ʿArabī, al-Futūḥāt al-makkiyya, ii:687.
B
Ghazālī A, 174; B, 30.
xix
A
In Ibn ʿArabī’s expansive view of innate life (al-ḥayāt al-fiṭriyya), life per-
meated all existent things: man, animal, plant and even mineral (Ibn ʿArabī,
al-Futūḥāt al-makkiyya, iii, 490-1).
B
Fuṣūṣ al-ḥikam, i, 170.
C
Al-Muʿjam al- ṣūfī, 364.
D
Al-Futūḥāt al-makkiyya, iii, 324.
xx
A
Ibid.
B
Bukhārī, ‘Mā jā’a inna al-aʿmāl bil-niyya wa’l-ḥisba’ 1:37, no. 52.
C
Ibid. Instead of ‘as well as they learned to act’, Makkī wrote ‘as well as they
learned knowledge’.
D
Lisān al-ʿarab 15:348.
xxi
A
Bukhārī, Īmān , 1:2, no. 1; Muslim, Imāra, 3:33, no. 155; Ibn Ḥanbal 1:25;
Ibn Māja, K. al-zuhd, 2:1413, no. 4227. Cf. Zabīdī’s commentary on this tradi-
tion (10:67).
B
Ibn Ḥanbal 3:311, 319, 338, 371; Qūt 2:161; cf. Irāqī 157.
C
Massignon, Essai 186.
D
Qūt 2:160.
E
Ibn Māja, K. al-zuhd, 2:1413, no. 4227.
F
Lisān al-ʿarab 15:348.
xxii
A
Ibrāhīm b. Yazīdī b. al-Ḥārith al-Taymī (d. 92/710-11), an ascetic from
Kufa who followed an austere form of spiritual discipline. Al-Ḥajjāj imprisoned
him and had him killed at forty years old. (Abū Nuʿaym 4:210-19; Dhahabī,
Tadhkīrāt 1:73, no. 69; Nabhānī 1:384-5).
B
Zabīdī, Itiḥāf 10:26.
C
Daniel Gimaret, Théorie de l’acte humain en théologie musulmane 35.
D
As Ibn Rushd notes, religious scholars agree on the requirement of inten-
tion in every act of worship (Bidāyat al-mujtahid 6).
xxiii
A
Sālim b. ʿAbd Allāh [d. 106/724] was one of the seven leading fuqahā’ in
his time. He was respected for his good judgment and religious steadfastness
(Zabīdī 10:11).
B
Cf. Ibn Ḥanbal 5:446.
C
Gimaret, Théorie de l’acte humain en théologie musulmane, 207.
D
Ibn Māja, K. al-zuhd, 2:1375, no. 4105; Qūt 2:161.
xxiv
A
Ghazālī A, 159; B, 12.
B
Ibid., A, 175; B, 31.
xxv
A
Qūt 2:159.
B
Ghazālī A, 183; B, 50.
C
Abū Yaʿqūb Isḥāq b. Muḥammad al-Sūsī al-Nahrajūrī [d. 336/947] was
a sage from Nahrajūr. He lived in Basra and Baghdad as a follower of Junayd
( Jāmī 1:129-30, no. 139).
D
Kalābādhī, The Doctrine of the Sūfīs 91.
E
Qushayrī, Risāla 164, q.v. ‘Ikhlāṣ’.
F
Zabīdī 10:65.
G
Ibid.
H
Zabīdī 10:42.
xxvi
rejects evil and believes in God hath held the firmest gasp that never
breaks.A
As a concept, truthfulness, which also figures in the title of
Ghazālī’s book, is closely allied to sincerity. Basing himself on
Qushayrī, Jurjānī held that one was truthful ‘when situations
are unblemished, beliefs have no doubt, actions have no shame.’B
Ghazālī further distinguished six senses: truthfulness in speech,
intention and will; in resolve; in the fulfilment of resolve; in
action; in the realisation of every religious station. Someone who
is ascribed all of these was ‘perfectly truthful’, or ṣiddīq, this being
the most intense form of truthfulness.C
Sources
Two manuscripts were used for this translation. The first is the
Cairo edition, which contains the notes of Zayn al-Dīn al-ʿIrāqī
(1404 ce), is referred to as Ms A in the notes. The second edition
(Ms B) is the one used in the lengthy commentary of the eru-
dite eighteenth-century scholar, Muḥammad b. Muḥammad
al-Ḥusayn al-Zabīdī, more commonly known as Murtaḍā Zabīdī
(1791 ce).
Many thanks to Dr. Eric Ormsby for suggesting, nearly fif-
teen years ago, inside his office stacked ceiling-high with books,
that I speak with the Islamic Texts Society about their ongoing
Ghazali series. I have availed myself of the Zabidi volumes he
kindly lent me for this and the two other translations in the series.
I had barely begun to hear about ITS then, and was quickly sur-
prised. I want to express my deepest gratitude to Fatima Azzam,
the Director, for her outstanding work as editor and boundless
patience. She has contributed generously in several ways to the
manuscript, including in the thankless business of annotation.
A
Q. 2.256; 31.22.
B
Jurjānī, Taʿrīfāt, 132.
C
Ghazālī, A, 197; B, 72.
xxvii
xxviii