Rabia's primary relationship was with the Divine Beloved; her teaching shows that genuine community forms when members first love something or someone beyond the group.
Rabia's devotion to God was not mediated through institutional religion or community approval—it was direct, intimate, and primary. This reveals a paradox: she belonged most deeply to community when her loyalty was not to the community itself but to her Beloved. Fitting in requires the group to be your primary concern. Belonging allows individuals to serve something larger than the group while finding authentic fellowship with others on similar paths. When a community forms around shared purpose rather than mutual validation, belonging becomes possible. People unite not through conformity but through alignment with something transcendent. This concept asks: What or whom do you love beyond your community? Does your community support that greater love, or demand you replace it with loyalty to the group? Rabia's teaching suggests that the strongest communities are made of people who belong first to their deepest truth.
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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