Each generation inherits the work of spiritual maturation and transformation, deepening love and wisdom across the lifespan.
Rabia's life demonstrates continuous spiritual evolution—from renunciation and asceticism toward increasing love and radiance. This concept resists the notion that wisdom is static or that elders stop growing. For African ubuntu and intergenerational responsibility, continuous spiritual becoming means: each person's lifetime is a sacred journey of deepening love and understanding; each stage of life (childhood, adulthood, elderhood) offers particular spiritual opportunities; communities support this becoming through ritual, mentorship, and reflection; people are not "finished" at any age but perpetually unfolding. This reframes intergenerational transmission not as elders pouring fixed wisdom into younger vessels, but as each generation learning to love more deeply, understand more fully, and contribute more wisely. Rabia teaches that the deepest spiritual maturity is not certainty but an ever-expanding capacity for love. For ubuntu communities, this means: creating rites of passage that mark spiritual transitions; honoring elder wisdom while encouraging their continued growth; allowing young people to teach elders what they see clearly; recognizing that community flourishes when all members are actively engaged in becoming more fully human. Growth is the intergenerational gift.
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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