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Concept
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The Gathering as Spiritual Practice

Rabia's devotional gatherings modeled community meetings as sacred time for collective alignment and spiritual nourishment, not merely logistics.

Rabia
Why It Matters

Rabia and other early Sufis understood gatherings as opportunities for collective remembrance and spiritual elevation. Applied to contemporary community building, this suggests reimagining how groups come together. Rather than meetings focused solely on tasks and decisions, intentional communities can design gatherings that nourish the spirit while accomplishing necessary work. This might include moments of silence, poetry, shared reflection on core values, or collective acknowledgment of struggles and joys. The practice recognizes that when groups gather, they're not just exchanging information—they're creating culture and reinforcing belonging. Rabia's example suggests that the quality of presence people bring to gatherings matters as much as the agenda items covered. Communities that treat meetings as sacred space tend to have higher trust, better decision-making, and stronger retention. This doesn't require religious language; it simply means creating containers where people feel invited to show up as whole beings, not just functional roles. Such gatherings become anchors that remind members why they're part of the community and what unites them beyond practical interests. They create the emotional and spiritual glue that helps communities persist through challenges and disagreements.

Helpful guides
Rabia
Parenting & Community
Peri
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