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Sufism, A Bridge Between Religions "In the realm of the divine, only the secret of the heart is relevant." From: Sufism - A Bridge between Religions 1 Religion began when people started to worship the powerful forces of nature, creating representations of them--- constructing idols. They forgot that a symbol is not reality. The Prophets were then sent to teach people this worship was incorrect and to tell them how to follow the path to cognition of and unity with God. The coming of the Prophets marks the advent of Sufism – for Sufism is the teaching of how to cognize and become one with the Divine Beloved. But people accepted the Prophets' teachings out of obedience, not because they knew God, and they shaped the Prophets’ instructions to their own liking, using words as symbols in place of symbols made of stone or wood, devising new idols. They created God in their own image. In order to attain this goal, to know the "I", the "Being" of our self, knowledge is required. Such knowledge in not to be found in the usual social sources, but one must move beyond these limited boundaries. This "I" is the basis of Sufism, which follows the Way of the Prophets toward the seed of Truth lying within every human heart. In this sense, Sufism is a bridge between all "religions", for it accepts all the Prophets. This emphasis and insistence on the personal experience and knowledge of God and the discipline and method of training which assists students in the path toward this goal is the structure which makes Sufism the bridge among the "religions", both in our inner being and in our world. 1.Nader Angha, Sufism; A Bridge Between Religions (Riverside, CA: M.T.O. Shahmaghsoudi Publications, 2002), 51-53.
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