Ibn Arabī'S Metaphysics of Love: Hany T.A. Ibrahim
Ibn Arabī'S Metaphysics of Love: Hany T.A. Ibrahim
Ibn Arabī'S Metaphysics of Love: Hany T.A. Ibrahim
introduction
Early Western scholars had a tendency to see Islam as a religion
of a ritual, law, works and even fear, much like Judaism. Among
the 19th-century scholars, it was often argued that because
both of these religions were Semitic, and therefore inferior to
1. This paper was first presented at the Muhyiddin Ibn ʿArabī Society
Annual Conference entitled ‘This Vast Earth: Ibn ʿArabī’s Ecology of Con-
sciousness,’ held at the UC Santa Barbara, CA, 10–11 November 2017.
2. See Atif Khalil and Shiraz Sheikh, ‘Sufism in Western Historiography:
A Brief Overview,’ Philosophy East and West, vol. 66, no. 1 (Winter 2016):
194–217; see also Carl Ernst, The Shambhala Guide To Sufism (Boston:
Shambhala Publications, 1997), 8–18.
3. Cited in Tomoko Masuzawa, ‘Islam, A Semitic Religion,’ in The Inven-
tion of World Religion: or, How European Universalism was Preserved in a Lan-
guage of Pluralism (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2005), 197.
50 Hany T.A. Ibrahim
first being the love of God for His rewards and personal desires,
which are considered to be selfish forms of love; and the second
is a selfless love, which is the love of God only for Himself.19
Rābiʿa concludes her message of Divine love by confirming
that her love and praise for God in reality is not hers, but is
God’s own love and praise for Himself. Such ideas implied to
the concept of ‘Oneness of Being’ or waḥdat al-wujūd, a concept
which Ibn ʿArabī subsequently develops and contextualizes.
31. Seyyed Hossein Nasr, Three Muslim Sages (Cambridge: Harvard Uni-
versity Press, 1964), 108.
32. Schimmel, Mystical Dimensions of Islam, 267.
33. Pablo Beneito, ‘On the Divine Love of Beauty,’ JMIAS 18 (1995), 20.
34. Concepts such as ‘Oneness of Being’ and ‘self-love’ are believed to
be misguiding, destructive and heretic by many mainstream Muslim Salafī
scholars such as Ibn Taymiyya (d.1328). This is because such concepts
according to these scholars do not distinguish or differentiate between
God the Creator and His creation, and are therefore believed to be un-
Islamic. See Alexander Knysh, Ibn ʿArabi in the Later Islamic Tradition: The
Making of a Polemical Image in Medieval Islam (Albany: State University of
New York Press, 1999).
35. Chittick, Ibn ʿArabi: Heir to the Prophets, 41.
36. Corbin, Creative Imagination in the Sufism of Ibn ʿArabī, 147.
37. Ibid.
Ibn ʿArabī’s Metaphysics of Love 55
38. Addas, ‘The Experience and Doctrine of Love in Ibn ʿArabī,’ 28.
39. Schimmel, Mystical Dimensions of Islam, 267.
40. Ibn ʿArabī, al-Futūḥāt al-Makkiyya (Cairo: Būlāq, 1911), 2:321.
41. Ibid.
42. Ibid.
43. See William Chittick, The Self-Disclosure of God: Principles of Ibn
ʿArabī’s Cosmology (Albany: State University of New York Press, 1998),
12–14.
44. Ibid.
45. Fut.2:321.
46. Ibid. 322.
47. Ibid.
56 Hany T.A. Ibrahim
polysemy
The significance and importance of developing meaningful
polysemic understandings can be established when the etymo-
logical analysis between these terms and their root is explained.
Ibn ʿArabī explains that the first term, love (ḥubb), is associ-
ated with the word ḥabba, meaning a grain or a seed.54 The two
meanings ḥubb and ḥabba have similar associations. The small
53. Fut.2:323.
54. Ibid.
55. Ibid.
56. Ibid.
57. Ibid.
58. Ibid.
59. Ibid. 325.
58 Hany T.A. Ibrahim
categories of love
Ibn ʿArabī categorizes love into three divisions. The first is
Divine love (al-ḥubb al-ilāhī), the second is spiritual love (al-
ḥubb al-rūḥānī), and the third is natural love (al-ḥubb al-ṭabīʿī).61
He states:
divine love
As for Divine love, Ibn ʿArabī defines it as both God’s ‘love for
us’ and ‘our love for Him’; he states:
For God says, ‘He loves them and they love Him’ (Q.5:54) and love
attributed to us [human beings] is different than love attributed to
Him. Love attributed to us according to our realities [as humans]
is divided into two categories. A category called spiritual love and
60. Ibid.
61. Ibid. 327.
62. Ibid.
63. Ibid. 329.
Ibn ʿArabī’s Metaphysics of Love 59
the other is natural love, and our love for God is with both types
of love together.64
Thus, from his point of view, God’s ‘love for us’ has two
aspects, the first aspect is ‘His love for us for ourself,’ and the
second aspect is ‘His love for us for Himself.’ He explains that
‘His love for us for Himself’ is mentioned in both the ḥadīth,
‘I was a Hidden Treasure, and I loved to be known,’ and the
Quranic verse, ‘I created the Jinn and humankind only that
they might worship Me’ (Q.51:1), and clarifies that God created
them only for Himself so that they worship and know Him
human love
Ibn ʿArabī further sub-divides Human love for God into four
types and indicates:
There is only left for us after the categorization of ‘our love for
Him’ except four divisions and they are: either we love Him for
Himself, or we love Him for ourselves, or we love Him for both
[types], or we love for neither one. Here, another issue is raised,
which is why do we love Him if it is proven that we love Him, but
not for Himself and not for ourselves and not for both [types of
love], so what is this fourth case? …. This is a sub-division. There-
fore, there is another categorization, which is: if we love Him, do
we love Him with ourselves, or [we love Him] with Himself, or
with both, or with nothing as we previously mentioned?67
64. Ibid.
65. Ibid. 327.
66. Ibid. 329.
67. Ibid.
60 Hany T.A. Ibrahim
Ibn ʿArabī indicates that the first type is to love Him for
‘Himself,’ the second is to love Him for ‘ourselves,’ the third is
to love Him for ‘Himself and ourselves,’ and the fourth type is
to love Him for ‘none of the previous’ cases. Hence the ques-
tion of how and why can we love God, if we neither love him
for Himself and ourselves?68 Ibn ʿArabī answers that the first
type, which is to love God for ‘Himself,’ is that when the faith-
ful loves and hates for the sake of God, he/she becomes a lover
who loves God the One (al-Wāḥid) who appears from His name
the ‘Apparent’ (al-Ẓāhir) in the multiplicity (kathra) of creation.
He therefore states:
When this is realized, Ibn ʿArabī affirms that the lover praises
and worships God for the sake of praise and worship alone,
regardless of any earthly or heavenly reward.70 Here Ibn ʿArabī
is referring to the ḥadīth which says, ‘If anyone loves for God’s
sake, hates for God’s sake, gives for God’s sake and withholds
for God’s sake, he has perfected faith.’71
The second type, that is to love God for ‘ourselves,’ occurs
when people recognize God in His blessings and provisions,
hence love Him for His generosity and providence.72 Here he is
referring to the ḥadīth that says, ‘Love God for what He nour-
ishes you with of His Blessings, love me due to the love of God,
and love the people of my house due to love of me.’73 This type
of love Ibn ʿArabī considers to be a lesser form of love, because
it places the selfish desires of the soul before the love of God.74
The third type, that is to love God for ‘Himself and ourself,’
is when the lover combines worshiping God for the sake of
‘Himself’ and for desiring Divine rewards from his/her spiritual
love (al-ḥubb al-rūḥānī), and fearing God’s wrath from the his/
her natural love (al-ḥubb al-ṭabīʿī).75 Therefore, Ibn ʿArabī states
that loving God for both ‘Himself and ourself’ is the highest
form of love,76 because it emphasizes both types of existence
(real and metaphoric) namely, God and creation.
The fourth type, which is to love God for none of the previ-
ous, is when God manifests Himself on the natural and spiritual
essence of the soul, the soul then acknowledges that it did not
spiritual love
Ibn ʿArabī defines spiritual love as the love in which the lover
seeks to gratify the beloved in such a way that leaves no will or
requirement sought from the lover other than the gratification
of the beloved.78 He states, ‘spiritual love is the collective love
(al-ḥubb al-jāmiʿ) in [that it drives] the lover to love the beloved
for the [sake of the] beloved and himself.’79 He explains that
spiritual love has a collective driving force that motivates the
lover to love and gratify both his beloved and himself, unlike
natural love where the lover seeks to gratify only him/her self.80
Ibn ʿArabī concludes that in spiritual love, no lover loves the
beloved for the sake of the beloved alone, but rather loves the
beloved for both the beloved and him/her self,81 and the goal
natural love
Ibn ʿArabī outlines the first type of natural love as the common
type of love in which the lover demands the fulfillment of his/
her requirements and needs from the beloved regardless if these
needs please or displease the beloved.84 He writes:
If natural love arises in the lover, it [drives] the lover to only love
the beloved for the [lover’s] pleasure and enjoyment [received]
from the beloved. Thus [the lover] loves the beloved for himself
and not for the beloved’s self … As for the beginning of natural
love, it is not [initially] for the [acts of] sanctification and benevo-
lence… but [the lover] loves objects [in themself] for himself spe-
cially and wants to be in contact and close [to them]; this [type of
love] is prevalent in all animals and humans.85
elemental love
Ibn ʿArabī signifies the second type of natural love, which is
elemental love, and states:
The beginning of our love for Him, was due to hearing and not
sight, and this was upon His saying unto us when we were in the
substance of the cloud, ‘Be’ (kun). The cloud (al-ʿamāʾ) is from His
breath90 and the forms that are depicted as the cosmos are from
the word ‘Be.’ Thus, we are His endless words.91
As for the question regarding the goal of human love, Ibn ʿArabī
explains that the goal of human love for God is attained when
they realize that their love for God is only a quality of the soul
which exists only because of God’s real existence.95 Love, as Ibn
ʿArabī asserts, originates from the soul and essence of the lover.
Thus, the relative relationship between the lover, the beloved
and love, is nothing more than the essence of the lover, which
is God Himself.96 Thus, God for him is the condition of love,
the essence of the lover and also the beloved. In other words,
there is nothing but God in the relation of love, since He is the
lover, the beloved, and also love itself. Ibn ʿArabī indicates that
it is necessary for humans to love, but they do not know who or
what to love; they imagine that their beloved exists as an entity,
Why does love desire the non-existent and absent? And why
does the lover have opposing characteristics in his/her love?
So why does love desire the non-existent and absent? Ibn ʿArabī
answers that love has a special condition to affiliate and desire
the absent or non-existent.98 He says:
with opposing Attributes as, ‘the First and the Last, the Apparent
and the Hidden’ (Q.75:3).100
100. Fut.2:327.
101. Chittick, Sufi Path of Knowledge, 389, n.8.
102. Fut.2:327.
103. Ibid.
104. Ibid.
105. Ibid.
Ibn ʿArabī’s Metaphysics of Love 67
106. Ibid.
107. Ibid.
108. Ibid. 338.
109. Ibid.
110. Ibid.
111. Ibid.
112. Ibid.
68 Hany T.A. Ibrahim
Know that love does not consume the lover completely except if
Conclusion
In conclusion, as noted at the beginning of this article, previ-
ous generations of Western scholars often felt that as a religion,
Islam lacks a sophisticated philosophy or theory of love, and
117. Ibid.
118. Ibid. 326.
119. Ibid. 345.
120. Ibid.
121. Ibid.
122. Ibid.
70 Hany T.A. Ibrahim