Literally meaning growing larger and deeper, spreading and
expanding, Sufis use inbisat to signify the relaxing of one’s heart, to the
extent allowed by the Shari‘a, so that it can embrace everybody and make them
pleased or contented with one’s gentle words and pleasant manners. In the
context of one’s relationship with God Almighty, it denotes a spiritual state
that combines fear and hope. Those who have attained this state are awed by
being in the Presence of God, and feel exhilarated by the breezes of delight
and joy blowing in His Presence. They are awed while inhaling, and feel delight
when exhaling.
As pointed out in the brief description above, expansion can
be dealt with in two categories: our relationship with the created, and our
relationship with the Creator.
With respect to our relationship with the created, expansion
means that we are careful of our connection with God and the Truth; that we
live in our communities as one of its inhabitants, being open with and showing
respect to everyone; and that we treat people according to their level of
understanding.
The noble Prophet, upon him be peace and blessings, was
sincere and frank with those around him, and avoided ceremony or formality. He
spoke according to his listeners’ level of understanding, and sometimes made
wise and meaningful jokes. Although he suffered inwardly from the unbelief,
injustice, and sins he witnessed, and was anxious about everyone’s end and
afterlife, he always smiled and behaved pleasantly. As said in the Minhaj:
A heart is like a mirror: too much and too frequent solemnity may cause it to
steam up, and the only way to remove that steam is to tell pleasant jokes.
With respect to our relationship with God Almighty,
expansion signifies the simultaneous experiencing of fear and hope in our
souls. Being states of the soul, fear and hope are usually found in those who
have just started to advance on the path to God. Expansion, on the other hand,
is a state of those with knowledge of God and, moreover, is a dimension of the
heart’s life. The state resembling the expansion of those still striving to
reach this level of expansion is an exhilaration coming from knowledge of God.
This may lead them to become relaxed in their relationship with God, and thus
lose their self-control and self-possession.
Expansion appears when a traveler on the path of God is
completely freed from carnal desire and passion, and becomes a bright “mirror”
to reflect God’s Names and Attributes. This station, whether called the
Station of Combination (where the traveler experiences God’s Existence and
Unity) or Annihilation (where the traveler’s annihilation of self causes
forgetfulness of self when in the throes of ecstatic love of God and perception
of God’s Existence and Unity), is a mysterious point where the traveler
directs himself or herself according to the Divine inspira-tions received and
assumes “colors” unknown to everybody else. It is impossible for such
people to conceal their expansion, while it is insolent of those who have not
attained it to talk about it. How aptly Rumi expresses it:
If the king’s courtier behaves in an affected manner to
attract the king’s attention, you must not attempt to do so, for you do not
have the document (to justify your doing so). O one who cannot be freed from
the restrictions of this transient life, how can you know what (the stations
of) annihilation, drunkenness, and expansion mean?
Indeed, servants of the body cannot be aware of the states
of the spirit. It is impossible for those imprisoned in the body to be aware of
spirituality. We should ask those souls who have burned and been “roasted”
many times in the fire of the love of God about the pains of a heart that has
been cleft open, and their expansion and contraction.