
by AJS1496
When the Great Sage Sun Wukong, restless even after centuries of immortality, stumbles into the world of scholars and minarets, he finds himself face to face with Shaykh al-Islam Ibn Taymiyyah—a man whose presence is quiet yet unyielding. At first, Wukong is amused: this human has no staff, no transformations, no visible magic. Yet the Monkey King quickly senses something unfamiliar and unsettling—an intellect anchored not in heaven, spirits, or celestial bureaucracy, but in an uncompromising vision of divine unity. Ibn Taymiyyah does not recoil from the immortal trickster; instead, he challenges Wukong’s defiance itself, questioning whether rebellion against corrupt heavens is still rebellion when it becomes pride rather than justice. Their encounter becomes a clash not of fists but of worldviews. Wukong boasts of overthrowing false gods and breaking heavenly hierarchies, while Ibn Taymiyyah responds that false authority is not defeated by chaos, but by returning all power to the One beyond creation. The Monkey King, for the first time in ages, is forced to listen rather than fight, realizing that this scholar’s strength lies in refusal—refusal to deify intermediaries, spirits, or even rebellion itself. When they part, Wukong leaves unsettled, not defeated but sobered, wondering whether true freedom lies not in mocking Heaven, but in standing before God without masks, myths, or idols.
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