Rabia's pure devotion offers Montessori and Waldorf educators a model for intrinsic motivation that transcends external rewards and taps into children's deepest purposes.
Rabia's love of God was utterly pure—not motivated by reward, punishment, or even salvation, but by devotion itself as the highest good. This points to intrinsic motivation in its deepest form: the human heart naturally yearns to give itself to something worthy. Modern education often settles for lower motivations—grades, praise, competition, fear of failure. Both Montessori and Waldorf intuitively understand deeper motivation, yet Rabia's example clarifies it fully. When children engage in work they love—whether mastering a skill, creating beauty, solving a meaningful problem—they experience devotion: the absorbed, joyful giving of themselves. This is the motivation that sustains learning throughout life. Educators cultivating Rabia-like understanding create conditions where this natural motivation can emerge: meaningful work, freedom to choose, time for deep engagement, beauty in the environment, genuine purposes within community. A child devoted to learning reads voraciously, practices persistently, and finds joy in growth itself. Such motivation is resilient—it survives failure and difficulty because it flows from love rather than external contingencies. As children experience this devotional quality, they develop inner motivation that will sustain them long after teachers and rewards disappear.
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