A framework acknowledging different relationship depths and commitments within community, allowing authentic belonging at various levels of participation.
Rabia taught graduated stations of spiritual proximity to the Divine, recognizing that seekers progressed at different paces and capacities. Applying this wisdom, healthy communities honor degrees of nearness in relationship: core members, active participants, supporters, and friends of the community. Each degree carries authentic belonging without requiring identical commitment. This framework prevents two common failures: either communities demand total buy-in from everyone (exhausting members and stifling diversity) or treat all participants identically (diluting both depth and accessibility). By honoring degrees of nearness, communities become porous and sustainable. Someone might engage peripherally for years, then move toward center; another might contribute deeply in one season, then step back. This flexibility acknowledges life's rhythms and diverse capacities. Rabia's vision suggests that honoring where people authentically are strengthens community more than demanding uniform participation. Such communities attract wider diversity because people know they can belong without overextending themselves.
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