Chapter 1: | Discourse on Motivation and Children |
‘the good-natured request of the heart for the nourishment of the soul’ and ‘the love of the soul vis-à-vis its wants, as well as the acceptance of, and being contented with, the commandments of God’.43
It is also said that irda is the complete acceptance of truth and remaining aloof; hence, Sufis state that ir
da is the starting point for the s
lik (wayfarer). It is therefore a term used for the first echelon of those solely intent in pleasing God by following a
ar
qa.44 The Sufis also provide a different meaning for mur
d. They state that a mur
d (disciple of a
ar
qa), contrary to its linguistic connotation, is one who does not possess ir
da; the one who is not free from his ir
da is not a mur
d.45
Theological Definitions
Muslim scholastic theologians (mutakallimn) have also attempted to define want. For instance, Fakhr al-D
n al-R
z
(543/1149–606/1209) wrote:

Al-Taftazn
(722/1322–792/1390) said:


Ab l-
asan al-Ash‘ar
(260/874–324/936) stated in Maq
l
t al-Isl
miyy
n that ir
da represents the will to act or not to act. He mentioned that when a person fleeing from a beast of prey is presented with