Intellect takes you to the door, but it doesn't take you into the house.

Shams-e-Tabrīzī (or Shams al-Din Mohammad, literally: Sun of Islam; 11851248) was an Iranian Sufi mystic born in the city of Tabriz in Iranian Azerbaijan. He introduced Mawlānā Jalāl ad-Dīn Muhammad Balkhi, usually known as Rumi in the West, to Islamic mysticism, for which he was immortalized in Rumi's poetry collection Diwan-e Shams-e Tabriz-i ("The Works of Shams of Tabriz"). Shams lived together with Rumi in Konya, in present-day Turkey, for several years, and is also known to have traveled to Damascus in present-day Syria.

Quotes

Me & Rumi (2004)

Maqalat-i Shams-i Tabrizi [Discourse of Shams-i Tabrīzī] as translated and annotated by William C. Chittick (2004)
  • There may be one fault in a man that conceals a thousand qualities, or one excellence that conceals a thousand faults. The little indicates much.
  • Intellect takes you to the door, but it doesn't take you into the house.
  • The salat can be made up for, but there is no making up for false show or outward worship without presence.
  • Whoever lives as he sees fit will not die as he sees fit.
  • Nothing kills the soul that commands to evil (Nafs al Ammarra) like seeing the beauty of the heart.
  • Alms in secret extinguish the wrath of the Lord means you are so immersed in sincerity and in preserving that sincerity that you have no pleasure in giving alms.
  • You have to live with the people in hypocrisy for them to stay happy with you.
  • He said The Sufi is the son of the moment.
  • When you oppose the shaykh, it's like the slave who kills himself over a quarrel with his master. Hey, why are you killing yourself over a quarrel?
    He says, So my master will suffer loss.
  • Being the companion of the folk of this world is fire. There must be an Abraham if the fire is not going to burn [you].
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