The practice of explicitly recognizing and naming the spiritual dimensions and sacred purposes within community struggle, connecting collective work to transcendent meaning.
Rabia famously spoke of loving God not from fear of hell or hope of heaven, but from pure recognition of the Divine Beloved. For community organizers, this translates to naming what is sacred about their struggle without requiring shared religious vocabulary. Some communities frame their work explicitly as spiritual—liberation theology, indigenous sovereignty movements, or faith-based organizing. Others name the sacred more subtly through language of collective healing, ancestral wisdom, or the sacredness of human dignity. This concept invites organizers to articulate: What transcendent meaning does our work serve? Why does this struggle matter beyond material outcomes? When communities can name what is sacred in their struggle, participants experience their work as aligned with ultimate purpose. This meaning-making sustains people through setbacks and sacrifices in ways that pragmatic arguments alone cannot. Naming the sacred also honors the spiritual lineages and traditions many community members already hold, integrating rather than secularizing their deepest values.
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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