Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

The Body as Temple of Divine Encounter

The honoring of embodied experience—sensation, movement, dance, and physical presence—as valid and necessary pathways to divine love and human connection.

Mira
Why It Matters

Mirabai danced. She moved her body in ecstatic devotion, violating the cultural code that demanded women's physical stillness and modesty. In doing so, she reclaimed the body as a legitimate site of spiritual practice and divine encounter. Many traditions separate spirit from flesh; Mirabai's bhakti unifies them. In agape across traditions, this teaches that unconditional love cannot be purely intellectual or even purely emotional—it must be embodied. When we embrace another, we meet them body to body. When we move together in ritual or presence, we synchronize at a level deeper than words. Mirabai's dancing was not performance but prayer. It showed that the body is not the prison of the spirit but its instrument and expression. For agape to be real, we must honor the physical reality of the other: their presence, their touch, their needs. Love that denies the body denies the fullness of the person. Mirabai teaches us to dance our devotion into being.

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