The Flashes (Revised 2009 edition) | The Twenty-Fifth Flash | 278
(265-284)

Furthermore, if supplications are not accepted in the form we wish, it should not be said that they have not been accepted. The All-Wise Creator knows better than us; He gives whatever is in our interests. Sometimes he directs our prayers for this world towards the hereafter, and accepts them in that way. In any event, a supplication that acquires sincerity due to illness and arises from weakness, impotence, humility and need, is very close to being acceptable. Illness makes supplication sincere. Both the sick who are religious, and believers who look after the sick, should take advantage of this supplication.

 

EIGHTEENTH REMEDY

 

O sick person who gives up offering thanks and takes up complaining! Complaint arises from a right, and none of your rights have been lost that you should complain. Indeed, there are numerous thanks which are an obligation for you, a right over you, and these you have not performed. Without Almighty God giving you the right, you are complaining as though demanding rights in a manner which is not rightful. You cannot look at others superior to  you  in degree who are healthy, and complain. You are rather charged with looking at the sick who from the point of view of health are at a degree lower than yourself, and should offer thanks. If your hand is broken, look at theirs, which is severed. If you have only one eye,  look at the blind, who lack both eyes, and offer thanks to God!

For sure, no one has the right  to  look to those superior to him  in regard to

bounties and complain. Concerning tribulations, it is everyones right to look to those above themselves in that regard, so that they should offer thanks. This mystery has been explained  in  a  number  of  places  in  the  Risale-i Nur  with  a  comparison;  a summary of it is as follows:

A person takes a wretched man to the top of a minaret. On every step he gives him a  different  gift, a different bounty. Right at the top he gives him the largest present. Although he wants thanks and gratitude in return for all those various gifts, the peevish man forgets the presents he has received on each of the stairs, or considers them to be of no  importance, and offering no thanks, looks above him and starts to complain, saying, If only the minaret had been higher, I could have climbed even further. Why isnt it as tall as that mountain over there or that other minaret? What great ingratitude it would be if he begins to complain like this, what a wrong!

No Voice