Patanjali's principle of consistent, dedicated practice applied to the Islamic scholar's commitment to repeated engagement with texts and concepts until mastery transforms understanding.
Abhyasa, meaning devoted practice over long periods, is central to Patanjali's yoga path and directly corresponds to the Islamic tradition of intensive Qur'anic study and hadith review. The Yoga Sutras emphasize that transformation requires sustained, intentional repetition—not passive exposure but active, conscious engagement. For Islamic knowledge-seekers, this framework validates the traditional approach of reading sacred texts repeatedly, memorizing (hifz), and studying commentaries across multiple iterations. Each repetition dissolves surface interpretations and reveals deeper layers of meaning. This principle elevates the Islamic duty of knowledge-seeking from obligation to spiritual technology: through disciplined repetition, the scholar progressively internalizes wisdom until it restructures consciousness itself. Abhyasa transforms external study into internal transformation, making intellectual understanding indistinguishable from spiritual growth.
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