Someone wrote to me asking a variety of questions 
concerning issues of truth, validity, and dogmatism 
in conjunction with conflicting claims that the 
Sufi Path is, or is not, integrally linked to the 
Islamic spiritual tradition. In addition, questions 
were raised about whether, or not, the newness or 
antiquity of a tradition said anything of significance 
about the validity of such a tradition.
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A given mystical path is not valid simply because 
it is based in antiquity. After all, there have 
been many theories, mythologies, philosophies, 
metaphysical belief systems and so on which have 
come to us from antiquity but which are not 
necessarily true just because of their seniority 
or longevity.
A tradition -- whether spiritual, religious, or 
mystical -- is rendered valid to the extent it is 
rooted in the truth concerning the way Reality is 
on some given level of being. If a system which is 
new, relatively speaking, reflects, to whatever 
degree, the truth, whereas another system which 
is rooted in antiquity does not do so -- or does 
so to a very small degree -- then, the newer system 
has more validity or authenticity to it than does 
the ancient system ... and vice versa.
The authenticity or validity of anything is a function 
of the extent to which something gives expression 
to, or manifests, the truth. This is true of modern 
science, and it also is true of mysticism, religion, 
and spirituality.
A mystical experience isn't valid -- or it is limited 
in its validity -- precisely to the extent to which 
it is not an expression of the Truth of things. The 
issue has nothing to do with what is, or is not, more 
rooted in antiquity.
The Sufi tradition holds (at least, my understanding 
of it does) that while each of us is Divine in essence, 
we are not -- either individually or collectively -- 
Divinity in Essence. Consequently, each of us is capable 
according to our capacity to do so, of serving as a locus 
of manifestation for certain attributive properties of 
Divinity.
Furthermore, the masters of the Sufi way maintain that 
Divinity never repeats manifested being in the same way 
twice. Necessarily, therefore, each of us has something 
which comes along only once in the history of manifested 
being.
This uniqueness which goes to the heart of who we are 
individually is very personal. It doesn't get any more 
personal than this -- indeed, this unique-never-to-be-
repeated-again quality of ours goes to the very heart 
of our ultimate identities and the purposes for which 
we have been brought into existence by, and through, 
Divinity.
However, having said the foregoing, this is not the 
same as saying that anything and everything we believe, 
value, say, or do accurately reflects, or gives expression 
to, what is most essentially, personal about us in the 
above sense. In other words, all authentic, valid mystical 
traditions make the distinction between the false self 
and the essential Self. Whenever something we think, 
feel, believe, say, or do is colored and oriented by the 
false self, this is not a valid or authentic manifestation 
of what is most essentially personal about us in the 
mystical sense of the word which has been outlined 
previously.
There are authentic modes or modalities of being, and 
there are inauthentic modes or modalities of being. When 
an individual personalizes a mystical tradition in order 
to cater to, or satisfy, the whims and delusional forces 
that are active within the false self, then, this kind 
of personalization of the mystical is problematic because 
it serves to veil and distort the truth rather than unveil 
and give accurate expression to whatever dimensions of 
the truth we have the capacity to reflect or give expression 
to.
The present moment is the only moment that matters, and 
much rides on how we engage that moment. If we engage 
it through the false self, then, all may be lost -- including 
ourselves. If, on the other hand, we engage the present moment 
through our essential Selves, then, we are realizing, God 
willing, the purpose of our lives.
With respect to the issue of dogmatism, there are several 
comments which can be made. First, one can as easily 
argue that those who insist on separating the Sufi tradition 
from Islam are as dogmatic as those who wish to claim that 
the Sufi tradition is indigenous to Islam.
Secondly, in a sense, the Truth is inherently dogmatic, 
although mystic masters certainly do not tend to be dogmatic 
about this. The Truth is what it is, or Reality is what it 
is, and no amount of sophistry or philosophical slight-of-hand 
is going to change this, no matter what our ambitions and 
hopes may be.
The challenge facing us is to attempt to determine, as best 
we can, what the nature of the Truth is. The issue is not, 
nor has it ever been, whether or not there is a Truth 
underlying, making possible, and being manifested through 
the various realms of existence.
Mysticism is not a relativistic enterprise in the sense 
that the Truth must be prepared to bow down to our 
individual agendas concerning what we are, and are not, 
prepared to recognize as true. We must accommodate 
ourselves to the Truth -- whatever that may be -- and 
Truth has no need to accommodate Itself to us.
The Truth will remain what it is whether we recognize 
it as such or not. Truth is not made more true or less 
true as a function of our beliefs, likes, dislikes, 
and so on.
It is only our varying, limited capacities to see, 
understand and give expression to the Truth which 
makes it seem as if Truth is a relative phenomenon. 
What is relative is our individual perspectives and 
not the Truth which is Absolute on every level of 
being and throughout all of created existence.
Dogma is a conceptual phenomenon. People who get 
caught up in their conceptual systems and ways of 
characterizing or representing various dimensions 
of reality tend to become dogmatic and narrow in 
their understanding of any given issue.
"Dogma' and the 'mystical' are mutually exclusive 
from one another. This is the case because the 
mystical path is not rooted in concepts, but is 
rooted, instead, in direct, unmediated (by any 
set of theories or ideational content) experiential 
engagement of some dimension of Truth or Reality.
Yaqueen, or spiritual certitude, comes from being 
tied to Truth in an essential, experiential and 
trans-rational manner. Being convinced of the 
correctness in one's conceptual position does not 
necessarily have anything to do with this 
aforementioned state of yaqueen although many, 
many people confuse the two.
When a person is in a state of yaqueen, the 
experiential insights and understandings which, 
by the Grace of God, accompany this state informs 
or directs the way such an individual uses concepts, 
and, consequently, the concepts which are chosen 
by, say, a Sufi shaykh to describe -- where possible 
-- a mystical perspective are rooted in mystical 
experiences first and foremost, and concepts only 
secondarily and derivatively. However, there 
is a limit to how far this process of description 
of a mystical understanding can be carried since 
mystical experiences tend to outstrip or transcend 
the capacity of language to accurately describe 
the content, character, richness, and dynamics 
of true mystical experiences.
Go to Part Two
Anab Whitehouse
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