Description

Book Synopsis

Using the original, little-known writings of Sufis Muhammad and ''Ali Wafa'', this book explores the development of the idea of Islamic sainthood in the post-Ibn ''Arabi period.

Using the original writings of two Egyptian Sufis, Mu?ammad Wafa'' and his son ''Ali, this book shows how the Islamic idea of sainthood developed in the medieval period. Although without a church to canonize its saints, the Islamic tradition nevertheless debated and developed a variety of ideas concerning miracles, sanctity, saintly intermediaries, and pious role models. In the writings of the Wafa''s, a complete mystical worldview unfolds, one with a distinct doctrine of sainthood and a novel understanding of the apocalypse. Using almost entirely unedited manuscript sources, author Richard J. A. McGregor shows in detail how Mu?ammad and ''Ali Wafa'' drew on earlier philosophical and gnostic currents to construct their own mystical theories and notes their debt to the Sufi order of the Shadhiliyya, the mystic al-Tirmidhi, and the great Sufi thinker Ibn ?Arabi. Notably, although located firmly within the Sunni tradition, the Wafa''s felt free to draw on Shi''ite ideas for the construction of their own theory of the final great saint.

Sanctity and Mysticism in Medieval Egypt The Wafa

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    A Paperback by Richard J. A. McGregor

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      View other formats and editions of Sanctity and Mysticism in Medieval Egypt The Wafa by Richard J. A. McGregor

      Publisher: State University Press of New York (SUNY)
      Publication Date: 1/1/2006 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780791460122, 978-0791460122
      ISBN10: 0791460126

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Using the original, little-known writings of Sufis Muhammad and ''Ali Wafa'', this book explores the development of the idea of Islamic sainthood in the post-Ibn ''Arabi period.

      Using the original writings of two Egyptian Sufis, Mu?ammad Wafa'' and his son ''Ali, this book shows how the Islamic idea of sainthood developed in the medieval period. Although without a church to canonize its saints, the Islamic tradition nevertheless debated and developed a variety of ideas concerning miracles, sanctity, saintly intermediaries, and pious role models. In the writings of the Wafa''s, a complete mystical worldview unfolds, one with a distinct doctrine of sainthood and a novel understanding of the apocalypse. Using almost entirely unedited manuscript sources, author Richard J. A. McGregor shows in detail how Mu?ammad and ''Ali Wafa'' drew on earlier philosophical and gnostic currents to construct their own mystical theories and notes their debt to the Sufi order of the Shadhiliyya, the mystic al-Tirmidhi, and the great Sufi thinker Ibn ?Arabi. Notably, although located firmly within the Sunni tradition, the Wafa''s felt free to draw on Shi''ite ideas for the construction of their own theory of the final great saint.

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