Foreword If one studies the literature of Islam carefully, one will immediately
encounter a vast and varied field of material. First there is the network
of laws and regulations which makes up Islamic jurisprudence (fiqh)
and which takes into consideration and regulates man's every individual
and social "movement and rest", activity and situation, at every moment
of time, in every place and under all conditions, as well as every particular
and general occurrence related to human life. Second there is a vast range
of moral and ethical expositions which weighs every sort of moral activity,
whether praiseworthy or blamable, and presents as a model for human society
that which befits the perfection of man. Finally on the level of Islam's
overall view of Reality there is the general "philosophy" of Islam, that
is, its sciences relating to cosmology, spiritual anthropology and finally
the knowledge of God, presented in the clearest possible expression and
most direct manner.On a more profound level of study and penetration it will become obvious
that the various elements of this tradition, with all their astonishing
complexity and variety, are governed by a particular kind of interrelationship;
that all of these elements are reducible in the final analysis to one truth,
the "Profession of God's Unity" (tawhid), which is the ultimate
principle of all the Islamic sciences. "A good word is as a good tree—its
roots are in heaven, it gives its produce every season by the leave of
its Lord" (Quran XIV, 24). The noble sayings and writings presented in the present work were selected
and translated from the traditions left by the foremost exponents of Islam.
They include expositions elucidating the principle of tawhid and
making clear the fundamental basis of all Islamic sciences and pursuits.
At the same time they contain excellent and subtle allusions to the manner
in which the important remaining sciences are ordered and organized around
tawhid, how the moral virtues are based upon it, and how finally
the practical aspects of Islam are founded upon and derived from these
virtues. Finally, 'Ali's "Instructions to Malik al-Ashtar" clarify the
general situation of Islamic society in relation to the practical application
of Islamic government. All the traditions translated in the present work are summarized in
the following two sentences: "Islam is the religion of seeing things as
they are" and "Islam means to submit to the Truth (al-haqq) and
to follow It in one's beliefs and actions." Allamah Sayyid Muhammad Husayn Tabataba'i
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