RIGHTEOUS-RIGHT

Help one another in righteousness and pity; but do not help one another in sin and rancor (Q.5:2). The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing. (Edmond Burke). Oh! What a tangled web we weave, When first we practice to deceive! (Walter Scott, Marmion VI). If you are not part of the solution …. Then you are part of the problem. War leaves no victors, only victims. … Mankind must remember that peace is not God's gift to his creatures; it is our gift to each other.– Elie Wiesel, Nobel Peace Prize Acceptance Speech, 1986.

Sunday, September 13, 2015

ON REVELATION, INSPIRATION AND PROPHECY

Edited: Israr Hasan
13th  September, 2015

Most of the organized religions of the world believe that their prophets and holy men received Revelation, Inspiration and Prophecies direct from God.  Some religions have religious texts which they view as divinely  revealed or inspired. For instance, Orthodox Jews believe that the Torah was received from Yahweh on biblical Mount Sinai. Most Christians believe that both the "Old Testament and the New Testament were inspired by God. The revelations of Jesus Christ, which God gave him to show to His servants—things that must shortly take place.” (Revelation 1:1. Bible NKJV). Muslims believe the Qur’an was revealed by God to Muhammad, word by word, through His arch-angel Gabriel (Jibril). : “We have sent you the revelation, as We sent it to Noah, and the Messengers after him: We sent revelation to Abraham, Ismail, Isaac, Jacob and the Tribes, Job, Aaron, and Solomon and to David We gave the Psalms.” (Q. 4:163). In Hinduism, some Vedas are considered ‘apaurueya’, "not human compositions", and are supposed to have been directly revealed, and thus are called śruti, "what is heard".
Majority of today’s Buddhists, Confucianists and Taoists consider their founders’ experience to have some kind of revelation or inspiration from their Supreme Being. Almost all religious leaders and reformers believe that eternal truth exists within every soul as a part of nature. Revelation or inspiration to them is the instrument of contact with the fountainhead of this eternal truth.
Middle Ages scientists, philosophers, and social reformers of post-Hellenic Era consider the above perceptions are based on a mistaken inference. From vantage point of human mind, revelation seems to be an internal experience taking place within the sphere of the human psyche. It is not a thing received from outside. Nearly all people at one stage or another of their life have some encounter with the workings of their psyche.  The human psyche has a built-in mechanism which can create illusions and visions, sometimes so clear that they appear to be real to the person who experiences them.
We observe that many authentic cases of revelation and inspiration are reported outside the domain of religion. For instance, there are many interesting cases of highly complex information conveyed through some kind of revelation and inspiration to some scientists and social workers.
In 1865 a German chemist, Fredrich August Kekule had a dream one night in which he saw a snake with its tail held in its mouth.  This dream instantly put him on the right track leading to the solution of the perplexing problem he was working to solve since long. The secret of the molecular behavior in certain organic compounds was unraveled, a discovery which created a revolution in the understanding of organic chemistry.
Elias Howe was the first person to mechanize the process of sewing machine. He received answer to his sewing problem through a dream. The sewing problem had frustrated him for a long time.  In his dream he saw himself surrounded by savages. He was tied to a tree and the savages attacked him with arrows and spears. It surprised him to see tiny eyelets on their spearheads.  On waking from his dream, he immediately realized the solution, which led him to invent the prototype of the sewing machine that dramatically revolutionized the sewing industry.  It is not difficult to visualize the sorry state in which man would find himself today without the blessing of messages in our dreams.
Long before when Communist Russia was passing through collapse, I saw a dream.  I saw the full moon in the night sky was cracking in pieces. The secret of my dream was revealed when Soviet Russia was dismembered a few months after my this dream.  Similarly I saw a dream that I was floating in sky when the moon and stars were passing with fast speed in opposite direction. Next morning I checked with one of my knowledgeable friends living in my neighbor, who suggested that I might have a long air travel.  This was revealed when I took up my migration with a long air-journey from Karachi to Miami after five-six years of my celestial dream. I had no plan of any migration to USA at the time of this dream. The most amazing dream I saw in Sylhet (then East Pakistan) in 1970. I was on a vacation trip with my family from Karachi.  Three-four days before our departure from Sylhet to Dacca to catch our scheduled flight from Dacca to Karachi, I saw a vivid dream of some sufi mausoleum. Next morning when I related my dream to my aunt, she informed me that the mausoleum belonged to Sufi Shah Jalal, and she advised, I must visit him to pay my homage before my departure. When I visited the mausoleum next day, I was surprised to see it a complete replica of my dream. (Read full story in my blog: www.Israrhasan.com; title: A Miraculous Journey to Shah Jalal).
I have no doubt that some dreams carry messages for future events in our lives. I am sure my readers will easily find some such instances of their dreams come true.
Apart from revelation, inspiration, and prophecies by the medium of dreams, there are some unexplainable instances which are hard to comprehend by any rules of human mind. We may call it day-dreaming.
On a day in June 1943, a young house-painter, Pieter Van der Hurk, slipped and fell 30 feet from a ladder.  When he woke up in a hospital in The Hague (Germany), he had a severe skull fracture and a broken shoulder. As he opened his eyes, a nurse was holding his wrist, taking his pulse. Suddenly, a clear picture came into his head.  He said painfully: ‘Be careful.  I can see you on a train.  You may lose a suitcase that belongs to a friend of yours.’ The girl said to him, amazed: ‘As a matter of fact, I have just arrived by train, and I did leave a friend’s suitcase behind in the dining car.  How did you know?’  But Pieter Hurk had no idea how he ‘knew’; the idea had simply come into his head then and there. When the nurse had gone, he turned to his fellow patient and found himself saying: ‘You are a bad man.’ ‘Why?’ asked the patient with some amusement.  ‘Because, when your father died recently, he left you a gold watch, and you sold it.’  The man gasped, ‘My God!  you’re right.  How did you know?’
Many people were to ask Pieter Hurk—soon world-famous as Peter Hurkos, who became famous as a person of exceptional insight. Science is still unable to answer it.  Hurkos can pick up some common article, a glove or an umbrella, and suddenly ‘know’ all about the owner.  In 1958 Hurkos was asked by the police of Miami, Florida, to sit in the cab of a murdered taxi driver and give his information of the killer. As he sat there, Hurkos described the murder of the driver in detail. He went on to describe the killer—a tall and thin man with a tattoo on his right arm having a rolling walk like a sailor, his name sounded like Smitty, and he was responsible for another murder in Miami, a naval man shot to death in his apartment.  The police were amazed; for there had been such a murder recently, but they had not connected it with the cab-driver killer.
Many Smiths were nicknamed Smitty in those days.  The police came up with a Rogue’s Picture Gallery of a sailor’s picture on display, called Charles Smith, and the picture was identified by a waitress, who described a conversation with the drunken sailor who had boasted of killing two men.  A ‘wanted’ notice for Charles Smith went out to police stations all over America; Smith was recognized in New Orleans after a hold-up, and sent back to Miami. He was charged only with the murder of the cab-driver and sentenced to life imprisonment.
If we hunt our daily city data, such cases are not difficult to find. I believe the episodes of personal dreams, inspirations, and psychic experiences, cited above, are not uncommon in our day to day personal life. Usually, we perceive things by our five organic senses of touch, sight, smell, taste and hearing. But we find human perception in Hurkos episodes are beyond his senses.
We draw results of our needs and problems by the help of our senses manipulated by our intellect. Beyond intellect there seems to be yet another stage, when we behold unseen with our wide-open eyes. We can name it Day-Dreaming.  However, all such mental episodes relate to para-psychology which is not our subject of discourse here. Here, I have simply given a glimpse to show how our world of so many serious concerns is so brittle like bubbles in the sea of existence.
Sources:
(i) W. Montgomery Watt’s “The Faith and Practice of Al-Ghazali.”
(ii) Colin Wilson’s “The Mammoth Book of True Crime.”
(iii) Encyclopedia Wikipedia on Revelation.
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                    Email: ihasanfaq@yahoo.com

Blog: www.Israrhasan.com 

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