A framework for making choices based on what serves the divine beloved rather than personal relationships, removing bias from judgment.
Instead of asking 'Who do I favor?' or 'Who benefits me?', Rabia reframed every decision through one question: 'What does love require?' This shifts the locus of decision-making from the self to the divine. In practical terms, this means evaluating situations through a standard that transcends personal relationship. When leaders, parents, and community members ask what the beloved (understood as truth, justice, or the highest good) requires, favoritism becomes visible as a violation. This framework exposes how we rationalize preference: we tell ourselves we're choosing the 'best person' when we're actually choosing the person closest to us. Beloved-centered decision-making requires accountability to something beyond sentiment. The cost of decision-making based on personal relationship is measurable: lost talent, broken morale, institutional decay. By contrast, this practice builds institutions where talent is recognized regardless of connection, where justice appears even-handed, and where people believe their worth depends on their contribution, not their proximity to power.
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