The bhakti paradox that separation from the divine is both a real wound and a form of grace that deepens faith beyond comfort.
One of the most challenging and profound aspects of Mirabai's spirituality is her willingness to rage at Krishna for his absence. She did not maintain a serene acceptance of abandonment; she demanded, she accused, she lamented. Yet in this fierce honesty, bhakti theology reveals a paradox: the feeling of divine absence is itself a form of intimate relationship. God withholds comfort precisely to deepen love beyond need. This concept applies directly to grief and rage. When we lose someone or something precious, we may rage at the divine, at fate, at the person who left us. This rage is not lack of faith; it can be its deepest expression. The anger says: You matter to me. This loss wounds me because love was real. Mirabai teaches that we need not resolve this paradox prematurely. We can sit in the wound, rage honestly, and trust that somehow grace operates even in—especially in—abandonment. This reframes rage from evidence of spiritual failure into evidence of authentic love and deep faith.
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