A counterintuitive idea that true devotion requires impartiality—giving without calculating who deserves our attention based on what they can offer.
Rabia's famous declaration—loving God without hope for paradise or fear of hell—reveals a principle: devotion uncalculated. She didn't perform spiritual practice to gain reward or maintain status; she loved because love itself was the point. This principle directly contradicts the calculus underlying favoritism: we favor people from whom we expect return, validation, or benefit. True devotion, in Rabia's tradition, breaks this calculation. Applied to community, "devoted impartiality" means showing up for people without asking what's in it for us. It means a parent giving attention to the difficult child with the same presence given to the easy one. It means a leader advocating equally for the voiceless person as for the connected one. It means a friend staying present to someone who can't reciprocate help. This practice feels risky because it releases the security of knowing people will return our investment. But Rabia teaches that this risk opens us to genuine freedom and real love. The cost of devoted impartiality is the loss of transactional certainty. The gain is the peace of a unified heart and the depth of love that doesn't depend on performance or approval.
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