far greater and deeper than the sum of its component parts. Individual rules need to be read in the light of
the whole. And the whole is concealed in the essence.
Instead of searching for the essence of the Qur’an and embracing it as a whole, however, the bigots
single out a specific verse or two, giving priority to the divine commands that they deem to be in tune with
their fearful minds. They keep reminding everyone that on the Day of Judgment all human beings will be
forced to walk the Bridge of Sirat, thinner than a hair, sharper than a razor. Unable to cross the bridge, the
sinful will tumble into the pits of hell underneath, where they will suffer forever. Those who have led a
virtuous life will make it to the other end of the bridge, where they will be rewarded with exotic fruits,
sweet waters, and virgins. This, in a nutshell, is their notion of afterlife. So great is their obsession with
horrors and rewards,
flames and fruits, angels and demons, that in their itch to reach a future that will
justify who they are today they forget about God! Don’t they know one of the forty rules?
Hell is in the
here and now. So is heaven. Quit worrying about hell or dreaming about heaven, as they are both
present inside this very moment. Every time we fall in love, we ascend to heaven. Every time we hate,
envy, or fight someone, we tumble straight into the fires of hell. This is what Rule Number Twenty-five
is about.
Is there a worse hell than the torment a man suffers when he knows deep down in his conscience that he
has done something wrong, awfully wrong? Ask that man. He will tell you what hell is. Is there a better
paradise than the bliss that descends upon a man at those rare moments in
life when the bolts of the
universe fly open and he feels in possession of all the secrets of eternity and fully united with God? Ask
that man. He will tell you what heaven is.
Why worry so much about the aftermath, an imaginary future, when this very moment is the only time
we can truly and fully experience both the presence and the absence of God in our lives? Motivated by
neither the fear of punishment in hell nor the desire to be rewarded in heaven, Sufis love God simply
because they love Him, pure and easy, untainted and nonnegotiable.
Love is the reason. Love is the goal.
And when you love God so much, when you love each and every one of His creations because of Him
and thanks to Him, extraneous categories melt into thin air.
From that point on, there can be no “I”
anymore. All you amount to is a zero so big it covers your whole being.
The other day Rumi and I were contemplating these issues when all of a sudden he closed his eyes and
uttered the following lines:
“Not Christian or Jew or Muslim, not Hindu, Buddhist, Sufi or zen. Not any religion or
cultural system. I am not of the East, nor of the West.…
My place is placeless, a trace of the traceless.”
Rumi thinks he can never be a poet. But there is a poet in him. And a fabulous one! Now that poet is being
revealed.
Yes, Rumi is right. He is neither of the East nor of the West. He belongs in the Kingdom of Love. He
belongs to the Beloved.