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Passages similar to: The Alchemy of Happiness — The Love of God
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Sufi
The Alchemy of Happiness
The Love of God (16)
source of peace and joy to others will be to him a source of misery. He, in whose heart the love of God has prevailed over all else, will derive more joy from this vision than he in whose heart it has not so prevailed; just as in the case of two men with equally powerful eyesight, gazing on a beautiful face, he who already loves the possessor of that face will rejoice in beholding it more than he who does not. For perfect happiness mere knowledge is not enough, unaccompanied by love, and the love of God cannot take possession of a man's heart till it be purified from love of the world, which purification can only be effected by abstinence and austerity. While he is in this world a man's condition with regard to the Vision of God is like that of a lover who should see his beloved's face in the twilight, while his clothes are infested with hornets and scorpions, which continually, torment him. But should the sun arise and reveal his beloved's face in all its beauty, and the noxious vermin leave off molesting him, then the lover's joy will be like that of God's servant, who, released from the twilight and the tormenting trials of this world, beholds Him without a veil.
Christian Mysticism
Sermon IV: True Hearing (7)
The man who abides in the will of God wills nothing else than what God is, and what He wills. If he were ill he would not wish to be well. If he...
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Christian Mysticism
Sermon VI: Sanctification (21)
Now, all thoughtful folk, mark me! no one can be truly happy, except he who abides in the strictest sanctification. No bodily and fleshly delight can...
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Neoplatonic
On the Intellectual Beauty (11)
Similarly any one, unable to see himself, but possessed by that God, has but to bring that divine- within before his consciousness and at once he...
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Christian Mysticism
Chapter XLVI (46.1)
It is said, that he who is content to find all his satisfaction in God, hath enough; and this is true. And he who findeth satisfaction in aught which...
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Christian Mysticism
Chapter XLIII (43.1)
Further mark ye; that when the True Love and True Light are in a man, the Perfect Good is known and loved for itself and as itself; and yet not so...
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Christian Mysticism
Chapter I (1.2)
ANSWER: This is why we say, “by the soul as a creature.” We mean it is impossible to the creature in virtue of its creature-nature and qualities, that by whic...
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Sufi
The Arab and his Wife (91-100)
When the light of Allah illumes his senses, When love of God kindles a flame in the inward man, He burns, and is freed from effects. He has no need...
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Neoplatonic
How the Multiplicity of the Ideal-forms Came Into Being: and Upon the Good (34)
No longer can we wonder that the principle evoking such longing should be utterly free from shape. The very soul, once it has conceived the straining...
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Sufi
The Jewish King, his Vazir, and the Christians (81-90)
That in lieu of one thou may'st see a thousand joys, For by quenching the light the soul is rejoiced, Whoso to display his devotion renounces the...
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Neoplatonic
Beauty (7)
Anyone that has seen This, knows what I intend when I say that it is beautiful. Even the desire of it is to be desired as a Good. To attain it is for ...
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Christian Mysticism
Sermon VI: Sanctification (22)
ANSWER: "No one who now lives." This has only been said to thee that thou mightest know what the highest is, and that thou mightest have desires after it. But...
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Christian Mysticism
Chapter 50: Which is chaste love; and how in some creatures such sensible comforts be but seldom, and in some right oft (1)
And in all other sweetness and comforts, bodily or ghostly, be they never so liking nor so holy, if it be courteous and seemly to say, we should have ...
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Christian Mysticism
Chapter IV (42)
Every pleasure is the consequence of an appetite, and an appetite is a certain pain and anxiety, caused by need, which requires some object.1S In my o...
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Christian Mysticism
Chapter X (10.2)
What is better and nobler than true poorness in spirit? Yet when that is held up before us, we will have none of it, but are always seeking...
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Christian Mysticism
Sermon II: The Nearness Of The Kingdom (6)
The heavens are everywhere alike remote from earth, so should the soul be remote from all earthly things alike so as not to be nearer to one than...
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Christian Mysticism
Chapter LIII (53.3)
ANSWER: whatever with justice and truth we do, or might call good. When therefore among the creatures the man cleaveth to that which is the best that he can p...
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Christian Mysticism
Chapter X (10.1)
Now let us mark: Where men are enlightened with the true light, they perceive that all which they might desire or choose, is nothing to that which...
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Christian Mysticism
Sermon VI: Sanctification (20)
Thou shouldest also know that the more a man sets himself to be receptive of divine influence, the happier he is: who most sets himself so, is the...
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Christian Mysticism
Chapter VIII (8.2)
Dionysius, that it is possible, and may happen to a man often, till he become so accustomed to it, as to be able to look into eternity whenever he wil...
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Christian Mysticism
Chapter IX: The Gnostic Free of All Perturbations of the Soul. (10)
How, then, has he any more need of fortitude, who is not in the midst of dangers, being not present, but already wholly with the object of love? And...
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