Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

The Economy of Spiritual Grace

How favoritism treats love and belonging as scarce resources to be rationed, contradicting the Sufi vision of infinite divine abundance.

Rabia
Why It Matters

In Rabia's theology, divine love is infinite and universally available—it is not diminished when shared widely but amplified. Favoritism operates from a scarcity mindset: if I give attention to this person, I have less for another. If I help this friend, I cannot help that one. If I belong deeply to this community, I cannot belong to that one. This scarcity consciousness treats love and belonging as limited goods to be strategically distributed to maximize personal gain. The cost of this economy is that it shrinks the soul. When we hoard belonging for our inner circle, we become smaller, more fearful, more controlling. We exhaust ourselves protecting and maintaining our favored relationships. Rabia's tradition invites us into a different economy: one where love overflows naturally, where genuine belonging expands as we extend it, where community strengthens through inclusion rather than exclusive loyalty. By shifting from an economy of scarcity to one of grace, we transform our relationship to favoritism from inevitable to optional.

Helpful guides
Rabia
Parenting & Community
Peri
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