WITNESSES OF GOD: EXHORTATORY PREACHERS IN MEDIEVAL AL-ANDALUS AND THE MAGREB

Ab Is q al-May rq ’s sermon (wa‘ ) affected a certain Ab ‘Abd All h Mu ammad b. M s al-Azk n (d. after 590) to such a degree that “he could not stop crying and wallowing his face in the dust until blood flowed from it.” 1 Immediately al-Azk n renounced his life as a musician and singer at weddings and devoted himself exclusively to God for the remaining twenty-one years of his life. This account, which is preserved in al-T dil ’s al-Tashawwuf il rij l al-ta awwuf, 2 focuses on al-Azk n , who is lauded as a pious Sufi. This article analyzes the rhetorical and ritual characteristics of pious exhortation (wa‘ ) as practiced in al-Andalus and the Maghreb, based on specimens from two homiletic sources. The texts are considered in light of hagiographical and juridical data in order to assess the social role of exhortatory preachers and to explain the extraordinary impact of their sermons. The sermon’s affective power derives from the preacher’s personal charisma, rhetorical prowess, and his active engagement of his audience in the production of their own charismatic experience. The hagiographies considered depict the w ‘i as a witness to God’s omnipotence, precipitating the religious conversion of even the socially marginalized.

Palabras clave: sermones musulmanes; exhortación piadosa; maw'iûa; malis al-wa'û; hagiografías sufies.delivery, the content of his sermons, the narrative and rhetorical devices that he employs in his discourse, audience response, and the exhortatory sermon (maw'iûa, wa'û) as a literary genre have either been ignored or relegated to a secondary plane.This article seeks to address some of these omissions by focusing on the figure of the w×'iû and the genre of the maw'iûa in medieval al-Andalus and the Magreb.The references to exhortatory and storytelling preachers and their sermons, found in a variety of literary, historical, and juridical sources, attest to the presence of wu''×û or exhortatory preachers in al-Andalus and the Maghreb. 6The aim of this article is to analyze the activities of these preachers and to discern how they were perceived firstly by the textual communities that deemed them worthy of inclusion in biographical dictionaries and hagiographies, and secondly by the Muslim community at large.Ultimately, I would like to discover what made exhortatory preachers and their sermons so appealing to their audiences -an appeal capable of producing the kind of profound, somatic, and life-changing responses depicted in the above anecdote.

The Generic and Performative Characteristics of Wa'û
In al-Andalus and the Maghreb the most common expressions for pious exhortation that appear in the literary, juridical, and biographical sources are those that derive from the Arabic root w-'-û, whose meanings include "counsel", "guidance", as well as "admonition."Pedersen points out that this verb "is often employed in the Qur'×n as characteristic of the activity of the prophets" and that the Qur'×n refers to itself, the Law of Moses, and the Gospel as wa'û. 7Another term employed is tadhkira, from the Arabic root dh-k-r "to remind."The Qur'×nic contexts in which this word and its variants appear, Q. 73:19 and Q. 74:49, for instance, indicate that this type of preaching encompasses both reminders of the punishment that befell past unbe-Al-Qan÷ara (AQ) XXVIII 1, enero-junio 2007, pp.73 lievers and warnings about the Day of Judgment. 8While the terms wa'û, maw'iûa, 'iûa, and tadhkira are virtually interchangeable, the Andalusi and Maghrebi sources most frequently employ the terms maw'iûa and wa'û, to refer to the sermon as homiletic text.One deduces from al-Wansharêshê's juridical opinions9 that kutub al-wa'û and kutub al-maw×'iû wa-l-raq×'iq were the most common denominations of the literary genre.The latter term suggests that the texts both warned the listener-reader of the eschatological punishments for sins committed, and enticed them with the heavenly rewards for piety and rectitude. 10Typical names for the preaching event are maq×mat al-wa'û, or majlis al-wa'û, which may be translated as "exhortatory preaching assemblies", although we shall see that maq×mat al-zuhd (ascetic assemblies) also feature preaching.
The close association between homiletic exhortation and asceticism is attested in the titles of several works written by Andalusian and Maghrebi ascetics and those composed by Eastern authors but diffused in the Islamic West. 11Ibn 'Abd Rabbihi's literary anthology al-'Iqd al-farêd includes a definition of the genre that must have been current in the Arab West as well the Arab East.In the prologue of his chapter, "The Book of the Emerald on the Exhortatory Sermon and Asceticism", he writes: We shall proceed, with God's help and willingness, to speak about asceticism (zuhd) and the men renowned for it.We shall record excerpts of their speeches: the exhortations that the prophets preached..., those that circulated among the wise and erudite men (al-çukam×' wa-l-udab×'), and the preaching assemblies of the ascetics (maq×mat al-zuhh×d) delivered before the caliphs.The most affective and eloquent (ablagh) exhortation of all is the word of God Almighty... God the Exalted and Sublime said, "invite to the path of your Lord with wisdom and the good lesson (al-maw'iûa al-çasana)" (Q.16: 125)...After [God's exhortations come] the exhortations of the prophets, may God bless them, then the exhortations of the wise men and the men of letters (udab×'), then the preaching as-Al-Qan÷ara (AQ) XXVIII 1, enero-junio 2007, pp.73-100 ISSN 0211-3589 76 LINDA G. JONES semblies of the ascetics before the caliphs, then their discourses on asceticism and the men known for them... 12 From the above, we may understand that homiletic exhortation characterizes the speech of ascetics who consider themselves to be emulating the speech of the divinity and the prophets.Wa'û, is thus a discourse of authority or socially recognized authoritative speech, the authority of which is ultimately traced back to God and the prophets.Viewed in this way, one can perhaps begin to comprehend the persuasive power and impact of this oratorical genre, as witnessed in the opening anecdote.
Additionally, it is telling that Sufi-ascetics appear to be the most prolific practitioners of wa'û, judging by the fact that most of the biographical information about wu''×û is located in Sufi hagiographies where there is a corresponding absence of notices about khu÷ab×'.Detailed information is found, for instance, in al-T×dilê'ó hagiography of Andalusian and Maghrebi Sufis, al-Tashawwuf il× rij×l al-taóawwuf and Í×hir al-Éadafê's Kit×b al-Sirr al-maóùn fê m× ukrima bi-hi al-mukhlióùn.Conversely, the Andalusian and Maghrebi biographical dictionaries of scholars, jurists, and other notables surveyed for this study typically exclude storytellers,13 while notices of canonical preachers (khu÷ab×') tend to outnumber those of exhortatory preachers.The choice of whom to include and exclude is driven by the respective canons of religious authority to which each category of persons -Sufi mystics, judges, and other 'ulam×' -subscribes.
It would be misleading, however, to assume that Sufis monopolized the activity of homiletic exhortation.Jurists also engaged in this activity, as is the case of Muçammad b.Yabq× al-Amawê of Murcia, who regularly held a popular exhortatory preaching assembly,14 and Ibn Abê Zamanên (d.399/1008-9), a prominent M×likê jurist from Elvira whose works on exhortatory preaching and asceticism "circulated widely"15 .Indeed, the Almoravid muçtasib Ibn 'Abdùn of Seville urged the authorities to appoint a faqêh to serve as w×'iû in the congregational mosque.In his section on the functionaries of the congregational mosque he advises the q×Ýê to "install in the roofed galleries a pious and honorable faqêh to instruct the people in matters of religion, preach exhortations to them, and teach them what is right and good...No one is permitted to read in the lower naves [of the mosque] anything other than the Qur'×n and the çadêths of the Sunna.The other sciences should be read in the upper galleries (al-saq×'if)." 16Ibn 'Abdùn insists that religious instruction go hand-in-hand with preaching and specifies that the preacher be a faqêh as opposed to a professional w×'iû.Also noteworthy is the exigency of a spatial differentiation between the canonical and non-canonical forms of preaching.Exhortatory preaching, religious instruction, and reading extra-scriptural literature -and here we could infer the "kutub al-wa'û" and "kutub al-tadhkira" -should be not be conducted in the same space as the official cult.They should take place in other areas of the mosque, e.g., in the upper galleries (saq×'if), the naves, or in the sharê'a 17 (more widely known as the muóall× or extra-mural oratory), to distinguish them from the liturgical khu÷ba, delivered from the minbar.According to Ibn al-Qa÷÷×n, one of the chroniclers of the Almoravid and Almohad Dynasties, the Mahdê Ibn Tùmart followed this practice by preaching his exhortations while seated on a stone in front of the miçr×b of the sharê'a located outside the town of Tinmal. 18he reference to the Mahdê is one reminder of the religious and political authorities' use of the exhortatory preaching as ideological propaganda and to shape the cultural and ethical mores of the community.But Ibn al-Qa÷÷×n also depicts the Almoravid and Almohad 17 According to L. Torres Balbás, the term sharê'a was widely used in the Maghreb and al-Andalus and is synonymous with muóall×.As is well known, the prescribed functions of this ritual space include the ritual prayer for the two canonical festivals and the prayer for rainfall (óal×t al-istisq×').See Torres Balbás, L., "Crónica arqueológica de la España musulmana".'Muóall×' y 'Šarê'a' en las ciudades hispanomusulmanas", Al-Andalus, XIII (1948), 167-180.(My thanks to Manuela Marín and Maribel Fierro for bringing this article to my attention.) 18Ibn al-Qa÷÷×n al-Marr×kushê, Naûm al-jum×n li-tartêb m× salafa min akhb×r al-zam×n, ed.M. A. Makkê, Cairo, 1990, 139.Ibn al-Qa÷÷×n thus gives evidence of an additional usage of this ritual space.majlis al-wa'û as a pedagogical forum for the transmission of çadêth to the general public.He specifically mentions the "assemblies of exhortatory preaching (maj×lis al-wa'û), in which the 'ulam×' and pious men (al-óulaç×') were entrusted with the responsibility for [reciting] çadêth with which they would exhort the people and guide them spiritually." 19The historian 'Abb×s b.Ibr×hêm al-Marrakushê, a contemporary of Ibn al-Qa÷÷×n, further notes that exhortatory preachers would select a specific day of the week to hold their preaching assemblies.For example, the scholar ('×lim) Açmad b.Muçammad b. al-Lakhmê, established himself in Marrakesh and had his preaching assembly on Mondays and Thursdays of every week. 20Among the most famous of the Maghrebi exhortatory preachers appears to have been the Sufi saint Abù Madyan, "whose sermons [delivered in his private mosque] would attract people from all around." 21Nor did exhortatory preachers confine their activities to congregational or private mosques; according to H. A. Hussein, "many would select marketplaces and open roads as their preferred locales to exhort the people".He cites the example of Abù l-'Abb×s al-Sabtê al-Marr×kushê (d.601/1204), "who would hold his assembly wherever he could sit down in the marketplaces and roads and exhort the people to do good deeds." 22These notices provide evidence that exhortatory preaching was routinely practiced in al-Andalus and the Maghreb in a variety of guises and for a ranging from Sufi-ascetic assemblies, to the faqêh's regular moral instruction of the people in the congregational mosque, to itinerant preachers delivering their sermons in marketplaces and roadsides.
While there are numerous references to exhortatory preachers and the holding of preaching assemblies, information is less forthcoming about the actual content of these sermons.The preservation of a lengthy manuscript of anonymous exhortatory sermons, MS Junta C/3, is therefore significant.According to Ribera and Asín, the manuscript hails from Zaragoza and possibly dates from between the late twelfth to fourteenth century. 23It is comprised of 20 folios containing ten "moralistic sermons", the last of which is incomplete, but contains an explicit reference to "our living oppressed and captive under Christian rule", indicating that the author was a Mudejar preacher who delivered his sermons before a Mudejar community. 24The text exhibits several indicators of an ascetic and/or Sufi influence.The author of this sermon collection cites ascetics and Sufis whom we know composed similar anthologies, such as Muçammad al-Makkê (d.387/998) and Abù l-Layth al-Samarqandê (d.382/993), and he also frequently quotes al-Ghaz×lê. 25Most of the sermons are untitled except for three: "a maw'iûa to pronounce and remember that God is greatest", "a maw'iûa warning to remain steadfast in prayer", and "a maw'iûa to remain patient in adversity." A synopsis of the third sermon (ff.4l-6l), untitled, and which apparently was delivered on the occasion of '¨shùr×', 26 will suffice to analyze the general characteristics of the genre.The exhortatory preaching assembly does not appear to follow a precisely choreographed ritual order like that prescribed for the khu÷ba, 27  based on the evidence of Andalusian and Maghrebi sources.Nevertheless, the third sermon, as well as many others in the collection, begins with an invocation of God, in this case, "Praise be to God, the One" (Q.112), the utterance of which is a speech act through which God is in fact praised, 28 and which may also allude to the performance of a Qur'×nic litany prior to the commencement of the actual sermon.Several sources indicate that such performances formed part of what could be called the "ritualization" of the preaching event.Ibn Jubayr's eyewitness account of the preaching assemblies of Ibn al-Jawzê and of al-Qazwênê, the rector of the Madrasa Nizamiyya, both feature the initial recitation of Qur'×nic verses by multiple psalmists.This recitation produces an intense emotional reaction among the audience, "arousing the fear of God (taqw×) and the desire for God (shawq)" and inducing uncontrolled weeping in some cases. 29Al-Wansharêsê's juridical responses describe elaborate Sufi ceremonies that feature the collective performance of Qur'×nic recitation and dhikr or chanted ritual invocations of God and blessings on Muçammad prior to or following the sermon, and sometimes the recitation of mystical poetry accompanied by music.For instance, a case from fifteenth-century Fez mentions the gathering together of Muslims "on the occasion of the birthday (mawlid) of the Prophet in order to engage in pious exhortation (maw×'iû) and litanies and sometimes a psalmist recites poetic verses in praise of the Prophet." 30One such ceremony will be analyzed in further detail below.Here it suffices to note the close association between preaching and dhikr performance, vestiges of which survive in the written text.
After the pronunciation of the litany, the third sermon in the Mudejar collection issues two exhortations, the Qur'×nic verse, "Hasten to the forgiveness from your Lord and a Garden of Paradise whose width is as the width of heaven and earth" (Q.57:21), followed by a saying of the Prophet, which serves as its commentary: "Whoever yearns for Paradise, let them hasten to do good deeds, and who-ever dreads the hellfire, let them renounce their lusts and desires..." (f.4l).Divine and prophetic exhortation may be categorized as "overt acts" of power31 that demand response and reaction on the part of the recipients.The Qur'×nic and çadêth exhortations complement each other and together define the theme of repentance around which the preacher will develop the rest of the sermon.The order of these recitations, beginning with sacred scripture followed by the çadêth, is not arbitrary; it corresponds to the preacher's acknowledgement of the supreme authority of God and the elect role of Muçammad as the interpreter of the divine word, through his own deeds and sayings.It is after the pronunciation of these two sublime authorities that the preacher begins to speak in his own words explaining, "All of this is divided into parts: the first is following all the commands... and the second is abandoning all that is forbidden..." (f.4l).
The preacher structures the sermon using divisions based on the principle of commanding right and forbidding wrong.In his ensuing explanations, he relies upon similitudes (amth×l, s. mathal) comparing repentance to the cure of the sick body through both medicine and proper nourishment and the avoidance of harmful substances, and cites further sayings of Muçammad and al-Ghaz×lê.The denouement of this section of the sermon issues a stern warning that those insincere in their repentance are tantamount to polytheists and will be denied any spiritual reward: "they will gain nothing from their prayers but insomnia and nothing from their fasting but hunger and thirst" (f.4l).
The second part of the sermon introduces two sayings, a prophetic çadêth followed by a Qur'×nic verse, both related to the central theme of repentance.The çadêth states that "The believer will not attain the reality of faith (çaqêqat al-êm×n) until he wants for his fellow believer that which he wants for himself" (f.5r).The preacher establishes a relation between this çadêth and the divine saying, "The Muslim is he who spares the people from his hands and tongue", by clarifying that the former saying means that the true believer spares his fellows from his own evil deeds and words.He elaborates upon the meaning of these sayings by mentioning specific vices that must be avoided so as to not injure one's fellow Muslim, for instance, "... that he not be envious of his brother..., despise him or delight in a calamity that has af-flicted him..." (f.5r).As with the previous passages on commanding right and forbidding wrong, he also cites additional Qur'×nic verses and employs similitudes.
His elucidation of the divine saying, "The Muslim is he who preserves the people from his hands and tongue", is particularly interesting since it allows him to redefine being a Muslim for his audience: "... the Muslim, that means he who is saved by his submission and his submission is his faith..., shall be spared from the punishment of God due to his separation from the polytheists... and to his sparing the people from [the harm] of his hand and tongue" (ff.5r-5l).The preacher explains the meaning of this verse by comparing the Muslim to "one who appears at the court of a judge and finds that there is no opposing party to accuse him and consequently the judge orders his release: Likewise will God release His servant from the fires of hell on the Day of Resurrection" (f.5l).He ends this section reiterating the moral command to avoid social sins such as calumny, envy, or delighting in the misery of others.
Following additional promises of the heavenly rewards, the preacher approaches what is the centerpiece of the sermon: the exhortation to perform good deeds, particularly fasting, prayer, and charity, on the day of '¨shùr×'.He cites a lengthy çadêth "on the authority of Ibn 'Abb×s", in which the Prophet urges the people to "supplicate God on the day of '¨shùr×' because it is a blessed day..." (f.5l).The remainder of the çadêth extols the talismanic effects of fasting and prayer on '¨shùr×'.The passages dealing with prayer include precise instructions for performing supererogatory rituals: ... one hundred rak'×t, reciting at each rak'a the first chapter of the Qur'×n (lit.umm al-Qur'×n) and (the verse) "Say!He is God the one..." (Q.112) ten times, then when he has finished his prayer he says, "glory be to God", "praise belongs to God", "there is no god but God...", "God is greater", "there is no power and no might other than from God Almighty" (Q.18: 37, 39) seventy times...(f.5l).
Those who perform this ritual on the night of '¨shùr×' are promised "salvation from the torments of the grave on the Day of Resurrection" (f.5l).Similar rewards accrue to those who give charity on that day.Here the preacher illustrates the promise of redemption by drawing upon Qur'×nic or perhaps "stories of the prophets" imagery or faÝ×'il literature that recount the prophets who were saved or especially blessed on the day of '¨shùr×'.Thus we read that "on the day of '¨shùr×' God Almighty rescued Abraham from the fire... and [He] granted victory to Moses and the Sons of Israel over the Pharoah and his armies" (f.5l).The implication is that if God performed these prodigies on that day, surely He would redeem repentant Muslims as well for their sincere acts of fasting, prayer, and almsgiving.
The sermon concludes with a narrative of the origins of the Prophet's observation of '¨shùr×', acknowledging at once its supererogatory status (having been replaced by the obligatory fast of Ramadan), while insisting that "the Prophet extolled it and commanded its exaltation and respect" (f.6r).Again, the preacher appeals to the Prophet Muçammad's example saying that he commanded his own family to observe it, which justifies his exhortation to the audience to seek God's forgiveness and do good deeds on that day.The final speech is an epithet reaffirming the Muslim community's self-definition in view of their observance of '¨shùr×': "God has made us the first to gain His satisfaction [and blessed us with] the virtue of this blessed day for all of Muçammad's Umma -a day endowed with spiritual merit, goodness, and blessings" (f.6r).
A number of observations may be made about the content of the maw'iûa described above that will enhance our understanding of the potential impact of the preaching event.Allusion has already been made to the ritualizing features of the text, notably the initial litany, "Praise be to God, the One", and especially the passages specifying to the audience the supererogatory rituals to be performed on the night of '¨shùr×' and their ensuing heavenly rewards.I believe that such passages may constitute surviving vestiges of the orality of the preaching event to the extent that they harmonize with descriptions of Sufi rituals preserved in al-Wansharêsê's fat×w×.One case from Granada that arose during the qadiship of Abù Sa'êd b.Lubb (d.782/1381) meticulously describes a ritual performed by "a group of Muslims that would gather together in a rib×÷ on the seashore during the meritorious nights (al-lay×lê al-f×Ýila)."The ritual consisted of communal recitation of Qur'×nic verses, listening to readings from "the books of exhortation and delights (wa-yasma'ùna min kutub al-wa'û wa-l-raq×'iq)", repeated performances of litanies in praise of God and the Prophet (dhikr), the recitation of poetic verses in praise of Muçammad by a mystical singer (qaww×l), sharing of a communal meal, and saying prayers for the Muslim community and its ruler before dispersing.The reaction of the participants is de-scribed in the mystical language of hearts becoming "inflamed", souls "yearning with desire", and convulsed with "mystical ecstasy". 32his particular case mentions ceremonial homiletic readings rather than the live delivery of a sermon, thus revealing another modality of exhortatory preaching in al-Andalus and the Maghreb. 33evertheless, it serves to illustrate the close affiliation that could exist between dhikr and homiletic exhortation.Pious exhortation, whether in the form of live preaching or homiletic readings, often took place within the larger ritual context of the dhikr assembly, while the sermon, in turn, exhorted the performance of dhikr rituals and extolled their talismanic rewards.Indeed, the title of two of the Mudejar sermons, "maw'iûa li-dhikr All×h akbar" echoes this symbiosis.The performance of these rituals, coupled with the preacher's words, "inflames" the audience and "provokes mystical ecstasy" in them.Scholars of ritual studies 34 argue that ritualizing elements such as periodicity -holding the ceremony at a special time believed to be spiritually "meritorious" or propitious; the use of liturgical language -Qur'×nic and çadêth recitation and the dhikr litanies; and prescribed bodily practices -performing the required ablutions prior to prayer or praying a specified number of rak'×t -help to create a "controlled environment" 35 that enhances audience reception of the sermon.The Mudejar preacher engages his audience in his message of repentance and redemption through his exhortations to perform specific supererogatory rituals as an act of penitence on '¨shùr×'.The possibility of audience participation in the production of charismatic experience contrasts with the prescribed silence of the audience during the canonical khu÷ba.
Analyzing the internal structure of the sermon also provides clues to understanding its potential impact.Theorists of public discourse argue that "the way in which the structure of the information [is presented] makes its messages meaningful, delimiting and disambiguat-ing the messages it communicates". 36We have seen that the sermon began with a Qur'×nic exhortation of repentance, succeeded immediately by a prophetic çadêth, and finally by the preacher's own explanation of the same.The initial position of the scriptural verse, "Hasten to the forgiveness of your Lord and a Garden of Paradise whose width is as the width of heaven and earth" acknowledges the Qur'×n as the foremost exhortation.It is worth recalling that the ultimate aim of this sermon is to reinforce communal solidarity around the acts of repentance on the "blessed day" of '¨shùr×'.While this manuscript reveals no explicit indication of audience response, evidence elsewhere suggests that the recitation of Qur'×nic exhortations could elicit spontaneous acts of repentance from the audience. 37The subsequent prophetic warning, "whoever yearns for Paradise, let them hasten to do good deeds, and whoever dreads the hellfire, let them renounce their passions and desires", ratifies Muçammad's position as messenger of the divine word.The preacher then explains the meaning of these two sayings in terms of the familiar moral injunction of commanding right and forbidding wrongdoing.In so doing, he positions himself in a genealogy of authority that follows from God through the Prophet Muçammad to the exhortatory preacher, whom he includes in the first sermon among the "heirs of the prophets" (f.1r).Throughout the sermon, whether the divine saying precedes the prophet saying or vice-versa, the preacher's authority resides in his role as liaison, translating for his audience mythic, authoritative discourse into concrete moral and bodily acts.
Another "disambiguating" feature of this sermon is the strategic use and placement of amth×l or similitudes within the homily.More than mere aesthetic adornments, these "ornaments of speech (washy al-kal×m)" 38 operate in the sermon as didactic tools, comparable to their Christian counterparts the exemplum 39 and similitudine. 40The mathal takes the form of brief sayings, proverbs, parables, or stories whose fundamental characteristics are comparison (tashbêh) with familiar (s×'ir) 41 imagery (drawn from quotidian experience or nature).The mathal's compactness and cultural logic lead toward a predictable resolution 42 that elucidates the preceding Qur'×nic and Prophetic speech.By appealing to familiar concepts the preacher entices his audience to apply the message to their own contemporary situations. 43oreover, the underlying message of the homiletic mathal is almost invariably moral and eschatological and its comparative structure depicts a "dualistic eschatology" 44 drawing clear boundaries between faith and unbelief or heaven and hell.In this way, the mathal makes the sermon's message intelligible and applicable to audience mem-Al-Qan÷ara (AQ) XXVIII 1, enero-junio 2007, pp.73-100 ISSN 0211-3589 WITNESSES OF GOD: EXHORTATORY PREACHERS IN MEDIEVAL AL-ANDALUS AND THE MAGHREB 87 39 The scholarly literature on the exemplum is vast and thus the reader is referred to the classic study by Bremond, C., Le Goff, J. and Schmitt, J. C., L'Exemplum: typologie des sources du Moyen Âge, Turnhout, 1982, and the comprehensive bibliography contained therein on pp.16-26.See also Aerts, W. J. and Gosman, M., Exemplum et similitude: Alexander the Great and Other Heroes as Points of Reference in Medieval Literature, Groningen, 1988, 123-41.On Spain, see Sánchez, M. A., Un sermonario castellano medieval, Salamanca, 1999, 1, 95-110.While there is irrefutable evidence that some of the medieval Christian exempla collections derive from "Oriental" fables and Jewish sources, I have not encountered evidence of direct borrowing between Iberian Christian and Muslim sermon literature.Christian preachers borrow from eastern tales such as "Kalila wa Dimna", "Barlam and Josephat", and "The Book of Alexander", while Muslim exhortatory and canonical preachers tend to favour sources stemming from Scripture, çadêth, ascetic, and "stories of the prophets" literature, or the numerous collections of amth×l, e.g. the Kit×b al-Amth×l of Abù 'Ubayd (d.224/838), the Majma' al-Amth×l of al-Mayd×nê (d.518/1124) or al-Tirmidhê's Amth×l min al-Qur'×n wa-l-Sunna.Obviously these specimens have parallels in the parables attributed to Jesus and the other Biblical prophets. 40On the similitude, see Bataillon, L. J., "'Similitudines-et 'exempla' dans les sermons du XIIIe siècle", in The Bible in the Medieval World.Essays in Memory of Beryl Smalley, Oxford, 1985, 191-205; Sánchez, M., Un sermonario castellano medieval, 1, 111-119. 41On the mathal see EI 2 s.v."Mathal" (art.by R. Sellheim) and his more extensive Die klassisch-Arabischen Sprichwörtersammlungen inbesondere die des Abu 'Ubaid, The Hague, 1954.Sellheim specifies that the rhetorical device has three essential characteristics: comparison (tashbih), brevity (i'j×z), and familiarity (s×'ir). 42Witten, "The Restriction of Meaning", 23. 43 González-Casanovas, R. J., The Apostolic Hero and Community in Ramon Llull's Blanquerna, New York, 1995, 56.The author's comments on the exemplum and similitude are relevant to the present discussion. 44Ibidem, 58. 45In this sense the mathal helps realize one of the basic goals of eloquent speech according to classical Arabic rhetorical theory, that of "making the far near" and "clarifying bers 45 and renders palpable the eschatological rewards and punishments expressed in the homiletic warnings.
Altogether there are three amth×l in this sermon, corresponding to its three parts.In the first mathal the preacher compared his moral instructions to "follow all the commands and avoid all the prohibitions" to the cure of the sick body, which demands equally the ingesting of medicine and nutritional food and the avoidance of all the harmful substances that provoked the illness.This allows him to introduce a theological warning that good deeds are in vain if they do not inhibit a person from committing "the abominations".The second mathal explains the çadêth stipulating that those who wish to "attain the reality of faith" must desire for their fellow Muslims the same treatment as they desire for themselves.He compares those who fail in this regard to a tree: "if the roots are cut, it will not benefit from the sunshine and will have no use other than to kindle fire.Such is the case of the one who does a good deed without professing the oneness of God: there is nothing for him except for the fire (of hell)".The final mathal forms part of the explanation of the saying that the Muslim "is he who preserves the people from his hands and tongues".This true believer is defined as one who submits to God not only in the theological profession of the unity of God but also morally through his refusal to harm others with his hand or tongue.Such persons will be "differentiated from the polytheists"; they will be "as one who appears at the court of the judge and finds that there is no opposing party making a charge against him and that the judge orders his release".Unlike the previous two similitudes, which were followed by stern warnings about hell, the final one is bounded by a series of enticements of the heavenly rewards for those who do good deeds and avoid sin.
The warnings of hell and enticements of paradise that follow these similitudes are meant to be as self-evident as the statements about the sick man, the uprooted tree, and the exonerated person.The familiar and mundane nature of these images positively enhances audience reception, 46  46 Young Gregg, J., Devils, Women, and Jews: Reflections of the Other in Medieval Sermon Stories, Albany, 1977, 3. dise after the frightful warnings of the hellfire.Such strategies may be seen as part of the preacher's technique of "softening the hearts" 47 of his audience to achieve the desired effects of repentance and a sustained "differentiation from the polytheists".
The discussion thus far has centered upon the general characteristics of pious exhortation, from the point of view of the content of the sermon and the performative and ritual aspects of the preaching event.To complete the portrait of homiletic exhortation in al-Andalus and the Maghreb, attention must now be turned to the hagiographic sources to explore the social role of the exhortatory preacher and the response of his audience.

The Preacher as a Witness to God and Society
Ibn al-Zayy×t al-T×dilê (d.627/1230-31), the author of al-Tashawwuf, completed his hagiography of pious Sufi saints in the year 617/1221, during the reign of the Almohads.A q×Ýê and man of letters, al-T×dilê was also one of the companions of the Moroccan saint Abù l-'Abb×s al-Sabtê (d.601/1205) and a notice (akhb×r) of this saint's life is appended to many of the surviving exemplars of the al-Tashawwuf.In the beginning of his work Ibn al-Zayy×t devotes several chapters to mapping out a typology of sainthood composed mainly of çadêth anecdotes that appear to serve as criteria for inclusion in his hagiography.The entry on "the pious servant" and w×'iû Abù Waljùt Tum×rt (d.680/1281) is rich in details that stress the preacher's humble origins but is equally laconic about his background and formation.Of the latter we are told only that he was born in the town of Naffês in Marrakesh and that his Sufi master (shaykh) was Abù Muçammad 'Abd al-Kh×liq b.Yasên.The remainder of the notice merits quoting in full: In his youth Abù Waljùt was a wedding singer.He repented before Almighty God and from then on would speak with wisdom (bi l-çikma) even though he was illiterate (ummê).I stayed with him one night in Marrakesh at the house of one of the Sufi adepts (rajul min al-murêdên) and he (Abù Waljùt) spent the entire night Al-Qan÷ara (AQ) XXVIII 1, enero-junio 2007, pp.73-100 ISSN 0211-3589 WITNESSES OF GOD: EXHORTATORY PREACHERS IN MEDIEVAL AL-ANDALUS AND THE MAGHREB 89 47 The idea of using exhortation to "soften the hearts" of the people in the obedience of God is mentioned several times by Ibn al-Jawzê.See Kit×b al-quóó×ó wa-l-mudhakkirên, 97, 104.uttering all kinds of wisdom sayings (al-çikam) and parables (al-amth×l) without stuttering, faltering, or wavering.Truly, virtue is in the hands of God and comes to whom He wills.[Abù Waljùt] would speak before the Masmuda Berbers in their rib×÷s with exhortations not found [even] among the [most] eloquent preachers (kha÷êb balêgh).Whoever wanted could approach him.One night, at the rib×÷ of 'Uqba in the town of Naffês, Abù Waljùt stood up and addressed the Masmuda Berbers, preaching an eloquent sermon (maw'iûa balêgha) to them in their own language, and he exhorted them to renounce the world and adopt an ascetic way of life (wa-zahhadahum). 48ù Waljùt's social profile is similar to that of al-Azk×nê, the protagonist of the anecdote at the start of this article.He, too, was a wedding singer, the implication being, perhaps, that he was of an inferior social class and uneducated or a libertarian who squandered his time on vain and trifling activities that distract from the remembrance of God.Whatever al-T×dilê's motive for mentioning Abù Waljùt's prior profession, the biographer seems to share the M×likê disdain for singing and music, since this is the only reason that he gives to explain the preacher's repentance.Generally, al-T×dilê's biographies follow a similar pattern of revealing the sins or moral defects of the person in question before going on to describe the circumstances of his conversion.Thus we read in the notice on Abù 'Imr×n Mùs× al-Dar'ê, for instance, that "[he] led an extravagant, dissolute life and then he repented (k×na musrifan 'al× nafsi-hi thumma t×ba)." 49bù Walùt's illiteracy is further substantiated by the absence of any indication that he received formal instruction in the Islamic sciences or that he hailed from a family of learned folk.Al-T×dilê's reference to Abù Waljùt's çikma therefore merits commentary.The biographer suggests that Abù Waljùt's wisdom is of a different order and origin than that of 'ulam×', who owe their renown to their illustrious familial and intellectual genealogies, knowledge of the Qur'×n and the Traditions, rigorous adherence to the law and the duties of worship.In this al-T×dilê is perhaps following the precedent of some Muslim hagiographers and Arab and Greek philosophers for whom, as Goichon observes, 'ilm is considered a sub-category of çikma. 50Certain Qur'×nic verses also define çikma as a higher spiritual truth that God bestowed upon the purest of his prophets, such Al-Qan÷ara (AQ) XXVIII 1, enero-junio 2007, pp.73-100 ISSN 0211-3589 90 LINDA G. JONES as Jesus. 51Abù Waljùt is portrayed as the antithesis of the '×lim whose pious reputation is inextricably bound to the degree of his exoteric scholarly knowledge.
The diminished importance accorded to scholarly knowledge frequently characterizes the literary genre of hagiography.Biographical dictionaries of scholars emphasize the subject's intellectual pedigree, beginning with a general description of his scholarly formation and works, and listing his teachers and those from whom he received and to whom he transmitted knowledge.In contrast, the al-Tashawwuf belongs to the category of man×qib, hagiographies that record the virtues, moral character, charisma, and praiseworthy deeds of Sufis and "saints".Accordingly, some of al-T×dilê's entries subvert the traditional categories of knowledge and knowledge acquisition in favor of charismatic gifts and moral qualities.In some cases, he directly extols the superior virtues and gnosis of a Sufi/saint over the exoteric knowledge of the 'ulam×'. 52Such competition over religious authority informs, in my opinion, al-T×dilê's qualification of Abù Waljùt's wisdom in the terms of divine dispensation -"virtue is in the hands of God" -and his comparison of the w×'iû's preaching with that of the liturgical preacher (kha÷êb).For instance, he implies that Abù Waljùt's ability to speak "with wisdom" resulted directly from his spiritual conversion: "he repented to God Almighty and then he would speak with wisdom (thumma t×ba il× All×h ta'×ll× fa-k×na yatakallamu bi-l-çikma").Yet if Abù Waljùt's wisdom is divinely inspired, so, too, is his rhetorical eloquence (bal×gha).
Eloquence is more than an aesthetic quality in the Islamic homiletic tradition; it constitutes the rhetorical and symbolic power through which an orator persuades and moves his audience and defeats his patron's enemies. 53Al-T×dilê marvels at Abù Waljùt's ability to perform all night "without stuttering, faltering, or wavering" and insists that his eloquence matches, if not surpasses that of the li-Al-Qan÷ara (AQ) XXVIII 1, enero-junio 2007, pp.73-100 ISSN 0211-3589 WITNESSES OF GOD: EXHORTATORY PREACHERS IN MEDIEVAL AL-ANDALUS AND THE MAGHREB 91 51 Ibidem. 52As a q×Ýê of the Regr×ga, al-T×dilê is obviously less caustic in his criticism of the 'ulam×' than other hagiographers, for instance, Í×hir al-Éadafê, who portrays open confrontation between Sufi saints and the 'ulam×', portraying the latter as corrupted by mundane power and worldly pursuits. 53Jones, "The Boundaries of Sin", 175-187.See also 'Abd al-Sall×m Shaqùr's discussion of al-Q×Ýê 'Iy×Ý's rhetorical techniques in Shaqùr, 'Abd al-Sall×m, al-Q×Ýê 'Iy×Ý al-adêb.Al-adab al-Maghribê fê ûill al-Mur×bi÷ên, Rabat, n.d., 199-201.turgical kha÷êb.The explicit contrast with the eloquent kha÷êb serves to highlight the extraordinary qualities of Abù Waljùt's preaching.A charismatic gift versus years of study of classical Arabic, rhetoric, and the Islamic sciences that would be required for a kha÷êb to master the art of eloquent oratory.Moreover, al-T×dilê's insistence upon Abù Waljùt's eloquence hints at a further underlying competition between the Arab and Berber sectors of society.Bal×gha or eloquence is identified in Arabic rhetorical theory as synonymous with the perfect classical Arabic of the Bedouin and the ability to speak "without hesitation, without error" or "without repetition, stammering, nor seeking help" is particularly valued. 54It would appear that Abù Waljùt knows no Arabic, since al-T×dilê only mentions that he preached to the Masmuda Berbers "in their own language".Thus the affirmation that his sermons were as eloquent as those of the educated kha÷êb coincides with the decidedly Berber character of the Almohad project, which included the vindication of Berber language and identity over and against the prominence of Arab identity in Islam 55 .
Al-T×dilê provides a brief example of one of Abù Waljùt's parables, suggesting perhaps that his eloquence was most visible in this narrative form.At any rate, it demonstrates something of how the preacher connected with his audience: Oh people!Your parable (mathal) is like that of a people for whom a bridge (qan÷ara) was built so that they might cross over it.They went up to the highest point of the bridge and asked to settle down upon it and subsequently commenced building.Someone who saw them said, "This is a foolish people!They ask to settle in a place that is not a dwelling (manzil)."Like them, you have sought to remain in the mundane world, which is not an eternal abode (d×r qar×r), but rather a passageway to the hereafter.The hereafter is the [true] homeland (al-maw÷an), so there is no need for you to settle in a home that has no permanence. 56at Ibn Zayy×t highlights Abù Waljùt's recourse to parables in order to preach asceticism and the Sufi and Qur'×nic concept of yearning for and preferring the hereafter to the mundane world is fur-Al-Qan÷ara (AQ) XXVIII 1, enero-junio 2007, pp.73-100 ISSN 0211-3589 92 LINDA G. JONES ther indication of the prominence of the mathal in homiletic exhortation.We have seen that the anonymous author of a collection of Mudejar exhortatory sermons employed numerous parables to illustrate the spiritual virtues of repentance in his sermon delivered on '¨shùr×'.In the latter case, however, the preacher also includes multiple Qur'×nic citations and çadêths of the Prophet Muçammad or his Companions.This raises the question of why al-T×dilê has chosen to single out the parable of the bridge to illustrate Abù Waljùt's rhetorical prowess.Since al-T×dilê has not reproduced the entire text of Abù Waljùt's sermon, it is dangerous to argue from silence that the preacher did not also cite from the Qur'×n and çadêth.Moreover, while not quoting scripture or çadêth explicitly, Abù Waljùt's parable echoes the imagery of Q. 40:39, which refers to the hereafter as the d×r al-qar×r.Also, the narrative style of Abù Waljùt's parable resembles many found in the Qur'×n and çadêth, enhancing its recognition and reception as authoritative speech.
Ibn al-Zayy×t's inclusion of Abù Waljùt in his hagiography confirms that he considers him to be a preacher endowed with charisma.He possesses divinely inspired wisdom and rhetorical eloquence as well as thaumaturgic powers.The end of the notice describes the account told by "a trustworthy man" who was in Naffis with Abù Waljùt and heard him say "amen" although he did not appear to be praying (al-du'×').«When he finished saying "amen" I asked him [about this] and he said, "Shayj Abù Balbujt was praying on Dimnat Mountain and I heard his prayers so I said 'amen' for him."» 57This episode shows that Abù Waljùt has the charismatic gift of clairvoyance in his ability to "hear" the prayers of his fellow saints although separated by long distance.
Admittedly, al-T×dilê provides few details about the audience's composition and reception to Abù Waljùt's preaching.Yet it is probable that the preacher delivered his sermons exclusively before Sufi audiences, given the reference to numerous preaching engagements in the rib×÷s of the Masmuda Berbers, in addition to the sermon he delivered in the "house of one of the Sufi adepts".Al-T×dilê implies that others in the Masmuda region shared his enthusiasm for Abù Waljùt's charismatic exhortatory preaching, since we are told that "whoever wanted could approach him".His popularity among his Sufi peers is reinforced by the observation that he would be invited into people's homes to preach.Lastly, one may also conjecture that at least some audience members were unlettered in Arabic or at least not immersed in the tradition of the Islamic sciences, since al-T×dilê has no need to impress his readers with Abù Waljùt's knowledge of the çadêth or the Qur'×n.As noted, the parable of the bridge, while echoing Qur'×nic parabolic discourse, cites neither the çadêth nor the Qur'×n nor any other authorities.In sum, the preacher has apparently chosen a parable that would appeal to and persuade his audience.
The second biographical notice is preserved in Í×hir al-Éadafê's Sirr al-maóùn fê m× ukrima bihi l-mukhlióùn, which, according to the editor, was compiled sometime before the death of Abù Ya'zz× in 572/1177. 58Al-Éadafê describes Abù l-'Abb×s Açmad b. 'Ubayd All×h al-F×'ida as "an admonitory preacher [and] ascetic [who] uttered many religious wise sayings, preached in a mosque which belonged to him, was open, simple, trustworthy, unpretentious and irrefutable." 59The hagiographer relates an anecdote in which a beggar interrupts al-F×'ida's sermon to ask him to take up a collection from the audience to gain enough money to purchase a garment to protect him from the cold weather.Al-F×'ida does not wish to do so, it would seem, out of fear that his preaching activities would be linked to charlatanism. 60Eventually, he relents to the poor man's pleas and exhorts a member of the audience to "Give him a garment!In return God will give you another one in Paradise."The audience member refuses, however, and rebukes him for asking him saying, "your kind normally only asks God." Al-Éadafê goes on to depict the preacher's humiliation.He relates that al-F×'ida instructed the beggar to come to his house the following day, hurriedly ended his sermon, and once at home he prayed to God to "clothe so-and-so and do not humiliate me in his eyes but show him Your omnipotence!"Instantly his prayer is answered, for some-Al-Qan÷ara (AQ) XXVIII 1, enero-junio 2007, pp.73-100 ISSN 0211-3589 94 LINDA G. JONES 58 Meier, F., "Í×hir al-Éadafê's Forgotten Work on Western Saints of the 6th/12th Century", in Essays on Islamic Piety and Mysticism, Fritz Meier (ed.), Leiden, 1999, 427. 59Meier, "Í×hir al-Éadafê's Forgotten Work", 464. 60One is reminded of al-•arêrê's lampoon of an exhortatory preacher who is often seen using his oratory skills to gain money.See, for instance, the eleventh assembly in al-•arêrê, The Assemblies of Al Hariri, transl.and notes Thomas Chenery, London, 1867, I, 163-164.one knocks on his door delivering money to be used to aid a poor person whom "you think is worthy!"The next day, the beggar arrives, receives the garment, and al-F×'ida instructs him to go to the man who had reproached him during the sermon the previous day and tell him, "I now have a garment thanks to God, not thanks to you."The man "nearly died out of regret" over losing the heavenly reward for giving charity to the poor. 61his notice focuses less attention on al-F×'ida's prowess as an exhortatory preacher than on his charismatic gift as one whose prayers are immediately answered.Indeed, on the surface, al-F×'ida appears to be unsuccessful as a preacher since his sermon is interrupted by the beggar and, moreover, his exhortation to the man in the audience to give the beggar money to buy a garment is met with reproach.It is important to note the competing audience expectations portrayed in this anecdote.The beggar fully expects the preacher to use his authority to secure alms on his behalf and determines that the preaching event is the appropriate venue for charity to be received.One may even conjecture that he approached al-F×'ida in the first place due to his reputation as one whose prayers are answered.The man in the audience, however, evidently believes otherwise and reproaches the preacher for an apparent abuse of his vocation by exhorting him in an inappropriate manner.The fact that al-F×'ida instructs the beggar to taunt the man with the garment that he has received "thanks to God and not to you" vindicates the reputation of the preacher and reinforces the exigency to acquiesce to the authority of exhortatory preachers.The man's lament over having lost an opportunity to gain the heavenly recompense for almsgiving had he unhesitatingly obeyed al-F×'ida's exhortation positions the w×'iû as an intermediary between the ultimate divine authority and the members of the Muslim community.Thus, al-Éadafê affirms the authority of the popular preacher al-F×'ida by portraying him as a witness to the omnipotence of God.
To understand properly the notices on Abù Waljùt and al-F×'ida, the exhortatory preacher's biography must be located within the larger social contexts of hagiography as a product of a specific textual community and of the contest between Sufi/ascetic and non-ascetic forms of religious authority.In other words, how are we to interpret the portraits of Abù Waljùt, al-F×'ida, and other wu''×z within the genres of hagiographic and biographic writing?What are authorial intent and agenda of al-T×dilê and al-Éadafê?I will suggest that part of the answer lies in his notion of witness.
Al-Tashawwuf begins with a lengthy prologue that, among other things, provides what al-T×dilê describes as a typology of sainthood (óifat al-awliy×').Most relevant to the present discussion is the fifth chapter, "On the Goodness of their Praise and the Situation of their Acceptance on Earth", which begins with a quote from a khu÷ba of the Prophet, as recorded in Ibn M×ja's Kit×b al-zuhd.The Prophet preached, "'Hasten to distinguish between the people of paradise and the people of the hellfire, the best of you from the worst of you.'They said, 'By what, Oh Prophet of God?' 'By their good repute and their ill repute.You are witnesses of God, each of you to the other.'" 62uçammad explained further: "There is no servant of God without reputation in heaven; if his reputation in heaven is good, his reputation on earth will be good.And if his reputation in heaven is bad, his reputation on earth will be bad." 63Al-T×dilê's inclusion of these sayings seems to me of singular importance in understanding the social function of sainthood.At the meta-level, like all hagiography, the al-Tashawwuf is propagandistic and thus participates in this process of witnessing by calling attention to the "good reputation" of the saints al-T×dilê has included in his biography.Regrettably, the introductory prologue of al-Éadafê's al-Sirr al-maóùn has been lost. 64Yet the anecdote analyzed above also conforms to the motif of the exhortatory preacher fulfilling the social roles of witnessing to God before one's peers and exposing the good or bad reputation of the persons depicted.
A close reading of Abù Waljùt's hagiographic notice suggests that for al-T×dilê, preachers operate as witnesses in two modalities: as witnesses of the unlimited power of God and as catalysts for the conversion of others to the path toward God.We have already seen that al-T×dilê affirms the divinely inspired origins of Abù Waljùt's wisdom and homiletic eloquence.That an illiterate wedding singer should speak with a quasi-prophetic wisdom, rhetorical eloquence, and charismatic authority that exceeds those of the kha÷êb witnesses to the power of God to work wonders.
The exhortatory preacher and sermon are also depicted as precipitating a climax or turning point in the life of an ascetic.This article began with the notice of al-Azk×nê's conversion from professional wedding singer to Sufi devout -a conversion that was prompted by listening to a sermon of the preacher Abù Isç×q al-Mayùrqê.Brief allusion was also made to Abù 'Imr×n b.Dar'ê whom al-T×dilê described as a "dissolute libertine until he repented sincerely to God".Al-T×dilê says that he "learned the entire Qur'×n by heart in a short time and devoted himself to fasting, prayer, and spiritual exertion (ijtih×d)" ... Whenever I looked at him his mystical state (ç×lu-hu) reminded me of the hereafter.The reason for his death was that he had attended a preaching assembly (majlis wa'û) one Friday and he was suddenly struck with a state of rapture (aó×bahu ç×l).He left the mosque, went home, and woke up the next day in the same condition.He lost consciousness and collapsed on the road and was carried back to his home.After two or three days he died, may God rest his soul. 65 this anecdote the preaching assembly acts as a catalyst for Abù 'Imr×n's "illumination by divine light", which precipitates his final union with God.66 Sufi theosophy distinguishes between the state of rapture or enlightenment (ç×l), which is a "free gift from God"67 and the stages (maq×m×t) through which the soul progresses on its mystical journey toward God and which are the product of human effort.Al-T×dilê's association of Abù 'Imr×n's attendance of a preaching assembly with his subsequent rapture further supports the prominence given to the role of pious exhortation as a catalyst or harbinger of charismatic experience.

Concluding Remarks
From the previous discussion of hagiographic representations of exhortatory preachers and audience response the preacher emerges as a charismatic witness to God, playing the role of conduit of the audience member's experience of the divine.It is interesting to note that al-T×dilê's typology of sainthood included visits to rib×÷s 68 and the regular attendance of the assemblies of "remembering God... and mentioning the Hereafter", 69 in both of which, as we have seen, preaching formed an integral part.The preaching assembly thus offered a public venue where Muslims could display their piety in the form of supererogatory ritual performance, weeping copious tears, fits of ecstasy, and other somatic experiences as part of the participation in and the acquisition of charisma.The hagiographic notices imply that life-changing conversion to the Sufi path, mystical illumination, or even union with the divine (death) could result from attending preaching maj×lis.Al-T×dilê and al-Éadafê also transmit the compelling message that the socially marginalized -the illiterate, those unschooled in the Islamic sciences, popular musicians, even beggars, far removed from the prestigious social milieu of the 'ulam×' or elite Sufi circles -can access "the sacred" by attending preaching assemblies.In one sense, the analysis of the hagiographic texts reconfirms previous scholarly assessments (Swartz, Berkey, et.al) of popular preachers as posing a challenge to the prestige and authority of Sunni 'ulam×' -recall al-T×dilê's insistence that Abù Waljùt's preaching was as eloquent as "the most eloquent kha÷êb".Yet the consideration of the homiletic samples in view of the biographical and juridical evidence allows us to go further and draw some tentative conclusions about why these sermons were potentially so powerful.
We have seen that the preaching event is composed of a range of devices -ritual, structural, rhetorical, and scriptural-narrative -that together have tremendous affective capacity to evoke or engender religious ecstasy and other religious experiences in the audience. 70To the well-known emotional and somatic responses induced by listening Al-Qan÷ara (AQ) XXVIII 1, enero-junio 2007, pp.73-100 ISSN 0211-3589 98 LINDA G. JONES 68 Al-T×dilê, al-Tashawwuf, 51.He mentions in particular visiting the "rib×÷ of Sh×kir", located in the Sahl in the village of Sêdê Sh×kir, where the devout would gather during Ramadan to recite the Qur'×n.The editor points out the rib×÷ of Sh×kir was only one of "numerous rib×÷s" in which exhortatory preaching (wa'û) was employed to spread Islam among the Masmuda Berbers. 69Al-T×dilê, al-Tashawwuf, 48. 70On the shared or interactive component of emotional experience produced in qaww×lê and other performance genres, see Brenneis, D., "Shared and Solitary Sentiments: the Discourse of Friendship, Play, and Anger in Bhatgaon", in Language and the Politics of Emotion, C. A. Lutz and L. Abu-Lughod (eds.),Cambridge, 1990, 114.     to or performing the Qur'×nic recitation and adhk×r that immediately precede the sermon one must add the expectation of a positive response to divine and prophetic exhortation, especially when framed within the language of talismanic rewards for obedience and dire castigations for wilful disobedience or negligence.If the commonsensical examples and predictability of the amth×l entice listeners to apply the homiletic message to their own lives, the preacher's instructions to carry out specific rituals, fasts or acts of charity, coupled with detailed descriptions of the divine recompense for each act enhances and indeed, partially determines, audience reception to exhortations of repentance.Al-Wansharêsê's records of Sufi ceremonies featuring maw'iûa and dhikr suggest how the audience actively participates in the production of its own ecstatic religious experience.
Lastly, the personal charisma of the preacher is fundamental in determining the affective capacity of homiletic exhortation.Al-Éadafê's and al-T×dilê's vignettes show that such preachers were enthusiastically pursued for their powers of intercession and the baraka received from listening to their sermons.But the anonymous Mudejar preacher provides elegant testimony of a self-awareness of his charisma and his duty as one of the "heirs of the prophets" to assume the role of divine and social witness.He began his first sermon with the Qur'×nic exhortation, "God All-powerful and Exalted said, 'And remember!Verily, the remembrance [of God] benefits the believers'" (Q.51:55).To explain the verse, he narrated an account of the origins of Muçammad's preaching mission, in which he also cites Q. 74:2-7: "[God] said, 'Oh Muçammad, arise and deliver thy warning!And thy Lord do thou magnify!...'" The narration of this event constitutes a mimetic representation of the prophetic mission of warning and reminding the people of God.The overarching theme of this series of sermons is that dhikr "benefits the believers" in two ways, "one for the elites and the other for the masses."As he goes on to explain, the religious duties of the elites "are warning and reminding (al-indh×r wa-l-tadhkira) and these are the special domain of the prophets and after them the 'ulam×' because they are "the heirs of the prophets (w×rithat al-anbiy×')" (f.1r).In other words, the Mudejar preacher represented himself to his audience as continuing the genealogy of charismatic authority that conjoins the 'ulam×' to this prophetic legacy and privileges exhortatory preachers, since they embody the functions of "warning and reminding" "the masses" to fulfil their duties Al-Qan÷ara (AQ) XXVIII 1, enero-junio 2007, pp.73-100 ISSN 0211-3589 WITNESSES OF GOD: EXHORTATORY PREACHERS IN MEDIEVAL AL-ANDALUS AND THE MAGHREB 83 as does the strategic placement of the enticements of para-Al-Qan÷ara (AQ) XXVIII 1, enero-junio 2007, pp.73-100 ISSN 0211-3589 88 LINDA G. JONES the hidden truth".See Alhelwah, K, "The Emergence and Development of Arabic Rhetorical Theory", Doctoral Thesis, The Ohio State University, 1998, 146-147 and 160-161 in reference to al-Mubarrad's treatise al-K×mil fê l-lugha wa-l-adab and Ibn 'Abd Rabbihi's al-'Iqd al-farêd.
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