The year is
1868; the place, Damascus. A self-taught mystic calling himself Abd el Matar
left his wife, family, and home to found a group of disciples in Damascus, the
Shazlis, basing it on a Sufi brotherhood established in the middle ages. About forty or so people gathered about him
to pray and seek God. In the words of
Isabel Burton, wife of the Sir Richard Francis Burton, the consul of Damascus
at the time, these Syrian peasants were praying “for enlightenment before the
throne of God”. Finally, (to quote
Isabel again), “they became conscious of a presence amongst them that was not
theirs. At length they became assured by
a vision that it was the religion of Christ which they were seeking.” In particular, “after prolonged devotional
acts, all of them fell asleep, and our Lord was pleased to appear to all of
them separately. They awoke simultaneously, and one, taking courage, recounted
his vision to the others, when each responded, ‘I also saw Him.’ Christ had consoled and exhorted them to
follow His faith, and they were so filled with a joy that they had never known
that they were with difficulty dissuaded from running about the streets to
proclaim that Christ is God.” Others
joined their number, so that at length about 25,000 Shazlis declared themselves
ready for baptism.
This was a
problem, for in that Islamic country, conversion from Islam to the Christian
Faith brought certain death. In vain the
consul Burton offered to buy land for them outside Damascus and resettle them
there. In vain he petitioned his British
government to intercede on their behalf with the Turkish power then ascendant
in the region. Burton was recalled to
Britain, sacked without notice, honour, or severance. The Shazlis, some of whom had already been
imprisoned for their new Faith, were left to their fate.
All the
principal players in this lost drama are now dead, including the nameless and
impoverished Syrian peasants under Abd el Matar who sought the face of God and
found the Presence of Christ. The very
name “Shazlis” is lost, and a Google search, after asking if you didn’t mean
“shallis”, “shazly”, or “shezelles”, offers as its first Google submission, “WHEEEE, take a journey through the computer tubes of legend to hear
the SourceFed team sing their hearts out!”
Further Googling will turn up the reference in Burton’s memoirs cited
above. That is all. The Shazlis have vanished, forgotten by all
but the Christ whose Presence they unknowingly sought and unexpectedly found.
I
mention the Shazlis now not only because all martyrs deserve some recognition
from the Church, but also because their experience reveals that Christ loves
everyone. We give lip service to the
parable of the lost sheep, and happily read about the good shepherd leaving the
ninety-nine in the wilderness and searching for the one straying sheep until He
has found it (Lk. 15:3-6). We are more
surprised to find the good shepherd actually searching. We too often imagine that the initiative in
these things is all on our side; that Christ sits in heaven waiting for us to
find Him. For us, religion is presented
as a personal choice, as something that we
choose, like items from a menu. Will we
choose this item, or that; this religion, or that one; Christianity or
Islam? We are the ones who do the
choosing. We are not prepared when we
sometimes find that Christ is the one doing the choosing, and that He does His
choosing in what strikes us as odd places.
That
is, we often think of the world in terms of “Us” and “Them”: “Us Christians” and “Them Muslims”; “Us North
Americans” and “Them People Everywhere Else”.
We are the ones who are loved
by God, and they are the ones who
are, if not unloved by God, are at
least ignored by God. For God to really
love them, they have to become Christians and become one of “us”. Admittedly our Orthodox theology doesn’t tell
us this, but CNN and Fox Network often do.
It
is just here that the experience of the Shazlis is so instructive. Here were a group of people unlike us in
almost every conceivable way. We are
affluent; they were poor. We are North
Americans; they were Syrians. We are
educated; they were not. We are
Christians; they were Muslims. Yet,
because they genuinely and earnestly sought the face of God (they would’ve
called Him “Allah”), and because they really, really wanted to know the truth,
Christ appeared to them, and appeared to them in supernatural power. They received a revelation, a dream, a
vision. I have never received a
revelation, or a dream, or a vision, and suspect that you haven’t either. But they did.
That was not, I think, because they were more worthy than we are, but
simply because that was what they needed at the time. They needed a vision; we don’t, and because they
needed it, they got one. Their revelation,
of course, confirmed our own Faith, for they no sooner awoke from the visionary
dream than they concluded that Christ was God, and sought for baptism.
But
what I would like to focus upon is not the thought, “See? We Christians were right”, but rather
“See? Christ loves everyone and will
manifest Himself to anyone who truly seeks Him”. Christ does not simply sit in heaven and wait
for people to choose His religion. He is
not sitting idly at the right hand of the Father, patiently drumming His
fingers and hoping that we take the initiative to find Him. He searches even now for the lost sheep,
whether that sheep be a secularist, or a Jew, or a Muslim, and often the sign
that He is closing in on the lost sheep is that the sheep itself begins to seek
Him. It is as the prophet Jeremiah said
long ago: “You will seek Me and find Me,
when you seek Me with all your heart” (Jer. 29:13). That promise did not just hold good for the
children of Israel in Jeremiah’s day. It
also held good for everyone ever after.
And as history shows, it held good for the Muslim Shazlis of
Damascus. They sought for God with all
their heart, and found Him. It no doubt
surprised them quite a bit to find that the God they sought was called Jesus,
and that bore in His hands the print of the nails that He suffered when He died
for them. But find Him they did, and
they found Him not only because they sought Him with all their heart, but also
because He was seeking for them.
This is what St. Paul meant when he said that God was not the God of the
Jews only, but also the God of the Gentiles (Rom. 3:29).
This,
I suggest, is the most important fact about our non-Christian neighbour,
whether that neighbour be secular, Jewish or Muslim, whether that neighbour be
across the street, or in far-away Damascus:
God is searching for them. The
true God is their God, and Christ even now is actively seeking them. They are not so much enemies as potential
brethren and fellow-communicants. Who in
Damascus in the early 1860’s would’ve thought that the Muslim Sufi Abd el Matar
would soon be confessing Christ as God, and heading towards the crown of a
Christian martyr? With other Muslims, he
sought God with all his heart, and this crowd soon found among themselves “a presence
that was not theirs”. That presence was the
Presence of the good shepherd, searching for His lost Sufi sheep. The Shepherd continues that search for all
His lost sheep to this present hour.
An amazing story. Thank you so much for sharing!
ReplyDeleteI have found this book through google books - The inner life of Syria, Palestine, and the Holy Land: from my private journal
By Lady Isabel Burton
On page 142 she gives the name of the 14 martyrs.
You can find a link here:
http://books.google.com/books?id=DzxbAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA138&lpg=PA138&dq=Abd+el+Matar++Damascus++1868&source=bl&ots=qofTPBlb5Q&sig=TJQ0yZOrSMElFPYksAwBXT93Zts&hl=en&sa=X&ei=Lp_uUNecEInG2wXoq4GgAw&ved=0CFcQ6AEwBQ#v=onepage&q=Abd%20el%20Matar%20%20Damascus%20%201868&f=false