Love is directed by the intelligence. Therefore each 
person chooses his object of love according to his evolution. 
That appears to him most deserving of love which is in accordance 
with the grade of his evolution. There is a saying in the 
East. 'As the soul is, so are its angels.' The donkey would 
prefer thistles to roses.
The consciousness which is awakened to the material world 
has its object of love only in earthly beauties. The consciousness 
active through the mind finds its object in thought and 
among the thoughtful. The consciousness awakened through 
the heart loves love and the loving ones. And the consciousness 
awakened in the soul loves the spirit and the spiritual.
Silent love, which is the divine essence in man, becomes 
active, living, on seeing the vision of beauty. Beauty may 
be explained as perfection, perfection in every aspect of 
beauty. Not love alone is God or the essence of God, but 
beauty also, even in its limited aspects, shows itself as 
glimpses of the perfect Being. The mineral kingdom develops 
into gold, silver, diamonds, rubies, and emeralds, showing 
perfection in it. The fruit and flower, their sweetness 
and fragrance, show perfection in the vegetable kingdom. 
Form, figure, and youth show perfection in the animal kingdom. 
And it is the beauty of personality which is significant 
of perfection in the human being. There are some people 
in this world whose life is absorbed in the pursuit of gold 
and silver, gems and jewels. They would sacrifice anything 
or anybody to acquire the object of their love. There are 
others whose life is engaged in the beautiful vision of 
fruits, flowers, flowerbeds, and gardens. Perhaps they have 
no other interest besides. There are some who are absorbed 
in the admiration of the youth and beauty of the opposite 
sex, and nothing else seems to them worth more. There are 
others who are won by the beauty of someone's personality, 
and have entirely devoted to the one they love both their 
here and their hereafter. Everyone has his object of love 
according to his standard of beauty, and at the same time 
each one loves the perfection of the divine Being in a certain 
aspect. When the seer sees this no one, wise or foolish, 
sinner or virtuous, remains blameworthy in his sight. He 
sees in every heart the needle of the compass that turns 
to one and the same Being. 'God is beautiful and He loves 
beauty,' as it is said in the Hadith.
Man is never capable of loving God in heaven when his 
sympathy has not even been awakened to the beauty of the 
earth.
A village maiden was on her way to see her beloved. She 
passed by a Mullah who was saying prayers. In her ignorance 
she walked in front of him, which is forbidden by the religious 
law. The Mullah was very angry, and when she, returning, 
again passed near him, he scolded her for her mistake. He 
said. 'How sinful, O girl, on your part to cross in front 
of me while I was offering my prayer.' She said, 'What does 
prayer mean?' He said, 'I was thinking of God, the Lord 
of the heavens and of the earth.' She said, 'I am sorry, 
I don't know yet of God and His prayers, but I was on my 
way to my beloved, and thinking of my beloved, I did not 
see you praying. I wonder how you who were in the thought 
of God could see me?' Her words so much impressed the Mullah 
that he said to her, 'From this moment, O maiden, you are 
my teacher. It is I who should learn from you.'
Someone once came to Jami and asked to be his mureed. 
Jami said, 'Have you ever loved anyone in life?' He said, 
'No.' Jami said, 'Then go, and love someone, and then come 
to me.'
It is for this reason that great teachers and masters 
have often had difficulty in awakening the love of God in 
the average man. Parents give their child a doll so that 
the child may know how to dress it, how to be kind to it, 
how to look after it, how to love and admire it, which trains 
the child to become a loving mother in the future. Without 
this training the later course would be difficult. Divine 
love would be as strange to the average person as the cares 
of motherhood to a girl who has not yet played enough with 
dolls.
A mureed had been a long time in the service of a spiritual 
guide, but he could make no progress and was not inspired. 
He went to the teacher and said, 'I have seen very many 
mureeds being inspired, but it is my misfortune that I cannot 
advance at all, and now I must give up hope and leave you.' 
The teacher advised him to spend the last days of his stay 
in a house near the Khankah, and every day he sent 
him very good food and told him to cease the spiritual practices 
and to lead a comfortable and restful life. On the last 
day he sent the mureed a basket of fruit by a fair damsel. 
She set the tray down and immediately went away, though 
he wished to detain her. Her beauty and charm were so great, 
and he was now so much disposed to admire and was so much 
won by them, that he could think of nothing else. Every 
hour and every minute he longed only to see her again. His 
longing increased every moment. He forgot to eat, he was 
full of tears and sighs, finding his heart now warmed and 
melted by the fire of love. After some time, when the teacher 
visited the disciple, with one glance he inspired him. 'Even 
steel can be molded if it be heated in the fire,' and so 
it is with the heart which is melted by the fire of love.
It is love's wine which is called Sharab-i Kauthar, 
the wine found in the heavens. When the intoxication of 
love increases in man, people call him blindly in love or 
madly in love, because people wide-awake to the illusion 
of the surface consider themselves to be the only ones wide-awake. 
But their wakefulness is to the delusion, not to reality. 
Although the lover is called crazy, his craze for one object 
of the world of illusion makes him gradually free from all 
delusion around him. If he succeeds in attaining to this 
he enjoys his union with the beloved in his happy vision. 
Then no time is needed to lift from his sight the veil of 
the one object which he loved. As is said in the Quran, 
'We will lift the veil from thine eyes and thy sight will 
be keen.'
It is natural for a lover to become infatuated with someone 
whom he admires, with whom he desires union. But no one 
object in the world is so perfect as fully to satisfy the 
aspiration of the loving heart. This is the stumbling-block 
that causes every beginner in love to fall. The successful 
travelers on the path of love are those whose love is so 
beautiful that it provides all the beauty that their ideal 
lacks. The lover by doing this in time rises above the changeable 
and limited beauty of the beloved, but begins to see into 
the beloved's inner being. In other words, the exterior 
of the beloved was only a means of drawing the love out 
of the heart of the lover, but the love led him from the 
external to the innermost being of the ideal of his love. 
When in the ideal the lover has realized the unlimited and 
perfect Being, whether he loves man or God, he is in fact 
in either case a blissful lover.
In this the journey through the path of idealism is ended 
and a journey through the divine ideal is begun, for the 
God-ideal is necessary for the attainment of life's perfection. 
Man then seeks for a perfect object of love, idealizing 
God, the whole Being, the Infinite, who is above all the 
world's lights and shades, good and ill, who is pure from 
all limitations, births or deaths, unchangeable, inseparable 
from us, all-pervading, present always before the vision 
of his lover.
When love is true it takes away selfishness, for this 
is the only solution to wipe off the ego. The English phrase 
'to fall in love' conveys the idea of the true nature of 
love. It is a fall indeed from the pedestal of the ego to 
the ground of nothingness, but at the same time it is this 
fall which leads to a rise, for as low as the lover falls 
so high he rises in the end. The lover falls in love as 
a seed is thrown in the ground. Both appear to be destroyed, 
but both in time spring up and flourish and bear fruit for 
the ever-hungry world.
Man's greatest enemy in the world is his ego, the thought 
of self. This is the germ from which springs all evil in 
man. Even the virtues of the egoist turn into sin, and his 
small sins into great crimes. All religions and philosophies 
teach man to crush it, and there is nothing that can crush 
it better than love. The growth of love is the decay of 
the ego. Love in its perfection entirely frees the lover 
from all selfishness, for love may be called in other words 
annihilation. 'Whoever enters the school of lovers, the 
first lesson he learns is not to be.'
Unity is impossible without love, for it is love only 
which can unite. Each expression of love signifies the attainment 
of union as its object, and two things cannot unite unless 
one of them becomes nothing. No one knows this secret of 
life except the lover. Iraqi says in his verse, 'When I, 
without having loved, went to Kaba and knocked at 
the gate, a voice came: 'What didst thou accomplish in thy 
home that thou hast come forth?' And when I went, having 
lost myself in love, and knocked at the gate of Kaba, 
a voice said: 'Come, Come, O Iraqi, thou art ours.''
If there is anything that works against the vanity of 
the ego, it is love. The nature of love is to surrender; 
there is no one in the world who does not surrender. The 
world of variety, which has divided life into limited parts, 
naturally causes every lesser one to surrender to the greater. 
And, again, for every greater one there is another still 
greater in relation to whom he is smaller, and for every 
smaller one there is another still smaller, in relation 
to whom he is greater. And as every soul is by its nature 
compelled to surrender to perfection in all its grades, 
the only thing that matters is whether it be a willing surrender 
or an unwilling surrender. The former comes by love, the 
latter is made through helplessness, which makes life wretched. 
It moves the Sufi when he reads in the Quran that 
the perfect Being asked the imperfect souls, the children 
of Adam, 'Who is thy Lord?' They, conscious of their imperfections, 
said humbly, 'Thou art our Lord.' Surrender is a curse when, 
with coldness and helplessness, one is forced to surrender. 
But the same becomes the greatest joy when it is made with 
love and all willingness.
Love is the practice of the moral of Suluk, the way of 
beneficence. The lover's pleasure is in the pleasure of 
the beloved. The lover is satisfied when the beloved is 
fed. The lover is vain when the beloved is adorned. 'Who 
in life blesses the one who curses him? Who in life admires 
the one who hates him? Who in life proves faithful to the 
one who is faithless? No other than a lover.' And in the 
end the lover's self is lost from his vision and only the 
beloved's image, the desired vision, is before him for ever.
Love is the essence of all religion, mysticism, and philosophy, 
and for the one who has learnt this love fulfills the purpose 
of religion, ethics, and philosophy, and the lover is raised 
above all diversities of faiths and beliefs.
Moses once begged the Lord God of Israel on Sinai, 'O 
Lord, Thou hast so greatly honored me in making me Thy messenger, 
if there could be any greater honor I should think it this, 
that Thou shouldest come to my humble abode and break bread 
at my table.' The answer came, 'Moses, with great pleasure 
We shall come to thy abode.' Moses prepared a great feast 
and was waiting eagerly for God to come. There happened 
to pass by his door a beggar, and he said to Moses, 'Moses, 
I am ill and weary, and I have had no food for three days 
and am at the point of death. Pray give me a slice of bread 
and save my life.'
Moses, in his eagerness, expecting every moment a visit 
from God, said to the beggar, 'Wait, O man, thou shalt have 
more than a slice, plentiful and delicious dishes. I am 
waiting for a guest who is expected this evening, when he 
is gone, then all that remains I will give to thee that 
thou mayest take it home.' The man went away, time passed 
on, God did not come, and Moses was disappointed. Moses 
went the next day to Sinai and grieved bitterly, saying, 
'My Lord, I know Thou doest not break Thy promise, but what 
sin have I, Thy slave, committed that Thou didst not come 
as Thou hadst promised?' God said to Moses, 'We came, O 
Moses, but alas, thou didst not recognize Us. Who was the 
beggar at thy door? Was he other than We? It is We who in 
all guises live and move in the world and yet are remote 
in Our eternal heavens.'
Whatever diversity may exist among religions, the motive 
of all has been one: to cultivate and prepare the human 
heart for divine love. Sometimes the spirit of guidance 
drew the attention of mankind to see and admire the beauty 
of God in the firmament, sometimes in the trees and rocks, 
making them sacred trees, holy mountains, and purifying 
streams. Sometimes it has guided men's attention to see 
the immanence of the Lord among the beasts and birds, calling 
them holy animals, sacred birds. When man realized that 
there is no one in creation higher than himself he gave 
up his worship of the lower creation, recognizing the divine 
light most manifest in man. Thus by degrees the world evolved 
to see God in man, especially in the holy man who is God-conscious.
Man, with his limited self, cannot see God, the perfect 
Being, and if he ever can picture Him, he can best picture 
Him as man. For how can he imagine what he has never known? 
'We have created man in Our own image.' Krishna to the Hindus, 
Buddha to the Buddhists, was God in man. Angels are never 
pictured in any other image than that of man. Even the worshipers 
of the formless God have idealized God with the perfection 
of human attributes, although this is only a ladder to reach 
the love of the perfect God, to which by degrees one attains.
This is explained very clearly in a story of the past. 
Moses once passed by a farm and saw a peasant boy talking 
to himself, saying, 'O Lord, Thou art so good and kind that 
I feel if Thou wert here by me I would take good care of 
Thee, more than of all my sheep, more than of all my fowls. 
In the rain I would keep Thee under the roof of my grass-shed, 
when it is cold I would cover Thee with my blanket, and 
in the heat of the sun I would take Thee to bathe in the 
brook. I would put Thee to sleep with Thy head on my lap, 
and would fan Thee with my hat, and would always watch Thee 
and guard Thee from wolves. I would give Thee bread of manna 
and would give Thee buttermilk to drink, and to entertain 
Thee I would sing and dance and play my flute. O Lord my 
God, if Thou wouldst only listen to this and come and see 
how I would tend Thee.'
Moses was amused to listen to all this, and, as the deliverer 
of the divine message, he said, 'How impertinent on thy 
part, O boy, to limit the unlimited One, God, the Lord of 
hosts, who is beyond form and color and the perception and 
comprehension of man.' The boy became disheartened and full 
of fear at what he had done. But immediately a revelation 
came to Moses: 'We are not pleased with this, O Moses, for 
We have sent thee to unite Our separated ones with Us, not 
to disunite. Speak to everyone according to his evolution.'
Life on earth is full of needs, but among all the different 
needs, the need of a friend is the greatest. There is no 
greater misery than being friendless. This earth would turn 
into heaven if one had a desired friend in life, and heaven, 
with all the bliss it offers, would become hell in the absence 
of the friend one loves.
A thoughtful soul always seeks a friendship that lasts 
long. The wise prefers a friend who will go with him through 
the greater part of his life's journey. The miniature of 
our life's journey may be seen in our ordinary traveling. 
If, when we are going to Switzerland, we make friends with 
someone who is booked for Paris, his company will last only 
so far, and, after that, all the rest of the journey we 
shall have to go alone. Every friendship on earth will go 
so far and then will stop. Our journey being through death, 
if there is any friendship that will last, it is only the 
friendship with God which is unchangeable and unending. 
But if we do not see and cannot perceive His Being, it becomes 
impossible to be friends with someone of whom we are quite 
unaware. But God being the only friend and friendship with 
Him the only friendship that is worthwhile, the wise first 
seek the friendship of someone on earth who can guide them 
to the divine Beloved, just as a lover would first find 
someone belonging to the household or among the acquaintances 
of the fair one with whom he desires friendship. Among Sufis 
many attain to the God-ideal through Rasul, the ideal 
man. And one reaches the door of Rasul through 
Shaikh, the spiritual guide, whose soul owing to devotion 
is focused on the spirit of Rasul and so is impressed 
with his qualities. This graduated way becomes clear to 
the traveler on the path of the attainment of the divine 
Beloved.
The friendship with Shaikh has no other motive 
than guidance in seeking God. As long as your individuality 
lasts it will last, as long as you are seeking God it will 
last, as long as a guidance is needed it will last. The 
friendship with Shaikh is called Fana-fi-Shaikh, 
and it then merges into the friendship with Rasul. 
When the mureed realizes the existence of the spiritual 
qualities beyond the earthly being of the murshid, that 
is the time when he is ready for Fana-fi-Rasul.
The friendship with the Shaikh is friendship with 
a form, and the form may disappear. A person may say, 'I 
had a father, but now he is no more.' In fact, the impression 
of the father whom he has idealized remains in his mind. 
The devotion to Rasul is like this. His name and 
qualities remain though the earthly form is no more on earth.
Rasul is the personification of the light of guidance, 
which a mureed, according to his evolution, idealizes. Whenever 
the devotee remembers him, on the earth, in the air, at 
the bottom of the sea, he is with him. Devotion to Rasul 
is a stage that cannot be omitted in the attainment of divine 
love. This stage is called Fana-fi-Rasul.
After this comes Fana-fi-Allah, when the love 
of Rasul merges in the love of Allah. Rasul 
is the Master who is idealized for his lovable attributes, 
his kindness, goodness, holiness, mercy. His merits are 
intelligible. His form is not known, only the name which 
constitutes his qualities. But Allah is the name 
given to that ideal of perfection where all limitation ceases, 
and in Allah the ideal ends. 
A person does not lose the friendship with the Pir
nor with Rasul, but he beholds murshid in 
Rasul and Rasul in Allah. Then for guidance, 
for advice, he looks to Allah alone.
There is a story of Rabia, the great Sufi, that once 
she beheld Muhammad in a vision and he asked her, 'O Rabia, 
whom dost thou love?' She answered, 'Allah.' He said, 'Not 
His Rasul?' She said, 'O blessed Master, who in the world 
could know thee and not love thee? But now my heart is so 
occupied with Allah alone that I can see no one but Him.'
From those who see Allah, Rasul and Shaikh 
disappear. They see only Allah in the Pir 
and Rasul. They see everything as Allah and 
see nothing else.
A mureed by devotion to the murshid learns the manner 
of love, standing with childlike humility, seeing in the 
face of every being on earth his Pir's blessed image 
reflected. When Rasul is idealized he sees all that is beautiful 
reflected in the unseen ideal of Rasul. Then he becomes 
independent even of merit, which also has an opposite pole, 
and in reality does not exist, for it is comparison that 
makes one thing appear better than the other, and he loves 
only Allah, the perfect ideal, who is free from all 
comparison, beyond this ideal, then he himself becomes love, 
and the work of love has been accomplished. Then the lover 
himself becomes the source of love, the origin of love, 
and he lives the life of Allah, which is called
Baqi bi-Allah. His personality becomes divine personality. 
Then his thought is the thought of God, his word the word 
of God, his action the action of God, and he himself becomes 
love, lover, and beloved.
checked 4-Mar-2006