This book offers the first extensive treatment in a European language of
tawba in Islam. Conventionally translated as ‘repentance, ‘
tawba includes the broader sense of returning to God. Khalil examines this wider notion in the early period of Sufism with a particular focus on the formative years of the tradition between Muḥāsibī and Abū Ṭālib al-Makkī. Beginning with an extensive survey of the semantic field of the term as outlined in Arabic lexicography, Khalil offers a detailed analysis of the concept in Muslim scripture. He then examines
tawba as a complex psychological process involving interior conversion and a complete, unwavering commitment to the spiritual life. The ideas of a number of prominent figures from the first few centuries of Islam are used to illuminate the historical development of
tawba and its role in early
praxis-oriented Sufism.
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Acknowledgments
Introduction
Part I. The Semantics of Tawba
1. Is Tawba ‘Repentance’? A Lexical and Semantic Survey
2. The Internal Structure and Semantic Field of Tawba in the Qur’ān
Part II. Early Sufi Approaches to Tawba
3. Tawba as Interior Conversion
4. The States, Stations and Early Sufi Apothegmata
5. Four Approaches to Tawba
6. Tawba in the Writings of al-Ḥārith al-Muḥāsibī
7. Tawba in the Nourishment of Hearts of Abū Ṭālib al-Makkī
Conclusion
Bibliography
Index
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Atif Khalil is Associate Professor of Islamic Studies at the University of Lethbridge, Canada, and the coeditor (with Mohammed Rustom and Kazuyo Murata) of
In Search of the Lost Heart: Explorations in Islamic Thought, by William C. Chittick, also published by SUNY Press.