“This way is like handling pure fire while soaked in oil. Only the rarest souls, perhaps one in ten thousand, can traverse it without being completely consumed. Most who attempt it fall into either spiritual lawlessness or despair.”
- Al-Ghazali

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“This way is like handling pure fire while soaked in oil. Only the rarest souls, perhaps one in ten thousand, can traverse it without being completely consumed. Most who attempt it fall into either spiritual lawlessness or despair.”
- Al-Ghazali

Incurriendo en culpa
Un discípulo le preguntó a un Sufi:
“¿Por qué el derviche incurre en culpa?”
“Puede que lo haga – dijo su maestro – para revelar al público en general la disposición de la gente a culpar a otros, de manera que los observadores puedan advertir esa tendencia en sí mismos y sean menos propensos a ese defecto. Puede que él concite los reproches con el fin de revelar la vileza de ciertos culpabilizadores que disimulan sus verdaderos rasgos. Pero así como una serpiente puede parecer bella mientras se tumba al sol, y necesita al miedo o una presa atractiva para mostrar su naturaleza interna, también el envidioso y el decepcionado necesitan el estímulo de un hombre aparentemente indefenso, o de algún otro bocado incitante, para despojarse de su apacible semblante externo.
El monasterio mágico
Puedes leer el libro, gratis, aquí:
http://idriesshahfoundation.org/es/libros/el-monasterio-magico/
Incurring blame
‘WHY,’ asked a disciple of a Sufi, ‘why does the dervish incur blame?’
‘He may incur blame’, said his teacher, ‘to expose to the general audience how ready people are to blame others, so that the observers may see this in themselves and be less likely to adopt this fault. He may attract reproach in order to reveal the baseness of certain blamers who otherwise conceal their true characteristics. But, just as a snake may look beautiful when basking, and needs fear or an attractive prey before he shows his inner nature, so the envious and the disappointed needs a defenceless-seeming man, or other attractive morsel, before he will abandon his mild outer countenance.’
The Magic Monastery
You can read many more tales like this one, here, for free:
http://idriesshahfoundation.org/books/the-magic-monastery-analogical-and-action-philosophy/
Incurring blame
‘WHY,’ asked a disciple of a Sufi, ‘why does the dervish incur blame?’
‘He may incur blame’, said his teacher, ‘to expose to the general audience how ready people are to blame others, so that the observers may see this in themselves and be less likely to adopt this fault. He may attract reproach in order to reveal the baseness of certain blamers who otherwise conceal their true characteristics. But, just as a snake may look beautiful when basking, and needs fear or an attractive prey before he shows his inner nature, so the envious and the disappointed needs a defenceless-seeming man, or other attractive morsel, before he will abandon his mild outer countenance.’
The Magic Monastery
You can read many more tales like this one, here, for free:
http://idriesshahfoundation.org/books/the-magic-monastery-analogical-and-action-philosophy/
Mal(am)ati.