Cultivating relationships within community that support each member's spiritual growth and alignment with their deepest truth.
Rabia spoke of spiritual friendship—sahaba—as a primary vehicle for growth, often more powerful than formal teaching. Spiritual friendship within intentional community means relationships explicitly dedicated to supporting one another's unfolding, asking difficult questions, celebrating growth, and witnessing struggles. Unlike casual friendship based on enjoyment, spiritual friendship holds space for transformation even when it's uncomfortable. In building community intentionally, this involves teaching members how to companion each other spiritually: how to listen without fixing, how to ask clarifying questions, how to offer perspective that honors another's sovereignty. Many communities lack language and skill for this deeper relating and default to surface-level connection. Rabia's model suggests creating structures that facilitate spiritual friendship—pairing members, training in contemplative listening, or creating small groups within the larger community dedicated to this work. Spiritual friendship also requires discernment about boundaries and healthy dynamics, as intense spiritual relationships can become enmeshed if not carefully tended. Communities where members actively support each other's spiritual alignment create resilience and meaning that ordinary social connection cannot provide, anchoring belonging in something transcendent.
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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