Mirabai's bhakti practice dissolved hierarchies of caste, gender, and status, modeling how agape operates as a force for radical social and spiritual equality.
Bhakti—the path of devotion—became in Mirabai's hands a practice of radical egalitarianism that challenged the caste system, patriarchal marriage, and religious orthodoxy of her time. Her refusal to be bounded by her Rajput status, her insistence on direct relationship with the divine independent of priestly mediation, and her willingness to dance publicly with lower-caste devotees embodied a lived theology of universal love. This framework illuminates how agape functions not only as individual sentiment but as a transformative social force. Unconditional love across traditions means seeing the caste, gender, and class systems we inherit as obstacles to genuine connection, not as divinely ordained hierarchies. Bhakti teaches that true devotion cannot coexist with the exploitation of others; it demands we recognize divinity in every person equally. For modern practitioners, Mirabai's bhakti offers a template for how to practice agape in solidarity with the marginalized, refusing the comfort of privilege when it depends on others' diminishment.
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