Patanjali's principle of consistent, dedicated practice as essential to mastering religious knowledge and spiritual transformation.
Abhyasa, the practice of steady and long-term effort, stands as one of Patanjali's two pillars for spiritual progress. In the Islamic context, this translates to the rigorous discipline of studying sacred texts, sciences, and spiritual disciplines over years and decades. The Prophet Muhammad emphasized that knowledge requires persistent seeking: 'the scholar is like a hungry person seeking food.' This mirrors Abhyasa's insistence that transformation demands unwavering commitment beyond momentary motivation. Islamic education traditionally structured itself around this principle—students spent years with masters, repeating lessons, memorizing texts, and gradually internalizing wisdom. Patanjali's framework illuminates why Islamic scholars historically pursued knowledge in concentrated periods of study, often retreating from worldly distractions. Both traditions recognize that spiritual mastery cannot be rushed; it requires the accumulation of practices, the deepening of understanding through repetition, and the gradual transformation of the seeker's consciousness. Abhyasa becomes the practical methodology through which the Islamic duty to seek knowledge manifests in daily life.
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