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3. TEN DEGREES OF GUIDANCE (2) After mentioning the four degrees of guidance Ibn alQayyim in his ار ُج السَّالِ ِكيْن ِ ( َم َدSteps of Divine Seekers) he continues with the remaining degrees as follows: The fifth degree is ifhām (اإل ْف َهام, deep understanding, and quick thinking). It is a gift from Allah, light emanated into his heart, so that he understands what others do not, such as the one given to Prophet Sulaymān (Solomon) a.s. When a person complained to Prophet Dāwūd (David) a.s. in the case of the field in which the sheep of certain people had pastured at night (Q. 21:78). The grown grapes and bunches were spoiled by the sheep. Prophet Dāwūd ruled that the owner of the grapes should keep the sheep. But Prophet Sulaymān suggested “Give the grapes to the owner of the sheep and let him tend them until they grow back as they were, and give the sheep to the owner of the grapes and get benefit from them until the grapes had grown back as they were. Then the grapes should be given back to the owner, and the sheep should be given back to their owner.”1 This is what Allah meant when he said: 1
Muhammad Asad gives us details of this story as follows: “According to this story a flock of sheep strayed at night into a neighbouring field and destroyed its crops. The case was brought before King David for judicial decision. On finding that the incident was due to the negligence of the owner of the sheep, |David awarded the whole flock – the value of which corresponded roughly to the extent of the damage – as an indemnity to the owner of the field. David’s young son, Solomon, regarded this judgment as too severe, inasmuch as the sheep represented the defendant’s capital, whereas the damage was of a transitory nature, involving no more than the loss of one year’s crop, i.e., of income. He therefore suggested to his father that the judgment should be altered: the owner of the field should have the temporary possession and usufruct of the sheep (milk, wool, new-born lambs, etc.), while their owner should tend the damaged field until it was restored to its former productivity, whereupon both the field and the flock of sheep should revert to their erstwhile owners; in this way the plaintiff would be fully compensated for his loss without depriving the defendant of his