The spiritual maturity to remain committed to faith and prayer while accepting that ultimate answers may not arrive in this lifetime.
Mirabai died longing for Krishna in a way that was never consummated, at least not visibly or provably. Her devotion did not depend on certainty of reciprocation or cosmic validation. She remained faithful to her practice and her heart's deepest orientation while accepting that some questions would not be answered according to her timeline. This models a profound spiritual skill for interfaith couples: the ability to remain committed to one's tradition and to one's relationship while releasing the demand for metaphysical certainty or complete logical reconciliation. The Christian partner may not convert; the Muslim partner may not become a Hindu. But they can pray together, grieve together, serve together, and trust together without achieving doctrinal unity. This requires tolerating ambiguity that our anxious minds wish to resolve. It means faith that can hold paradox: I believe this deeply, and I honor that you believe something different equally deeply.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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