The spiritual experience of direct contact and mutual love between living practitioners and ancestors across the veil.
Rabia experienced intimate communion with the Divine, transcending normal boundaries between lover and Beloved. The Mystical Communion of Saints extends this possibility into relationship with ancestors—the direct, experiential knowledge that the boundary between living and dead is permeable to love. Across traditions, practitioners report encounters with ancestors through dreams, visions, sudden knowing, feeling of presence, or overwhelming emotional connection. These are not mere imagination but genuine mystical experiences of communion. This concept validates what many cultures maintain as obvious truth: death does not sever the bonds of love. Islamic saint veneration, Christian mystical experiences of saints, Jewish Hasidic teachings about tzaddik presence, Buddhist bodhisattva accessibility, Shinto kami connection, and African ancestor communion all testify to this permeability. The Mystical Communion of Saints suggests that deepening devotional practice—prayer, meditation, sincere love—can create channels through which ancestors become increasingly palpable, present, and real. This is not spiritualism's communication technology but mysticism's discovery that love transcends apparent categories of living and dead.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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