Organizing community around a spiritual or transcendent purpose rather than individual benefit, reflecting Rabia's orientation toward the Divine.
Rabia's entire life was oriented toward love of the Divine, not toward personal comfort, status, or security. She lived with extraordinary simplicity and gave away possessions readily because they didn't serve her primary purpose. Communities with longevity and depth share this characteristic: they're organized around something larger than members' individual interests, whether that's spiritual development, service to others, justice work, or cultural preservation. When people join for transcendent purpose, they're willing to sacrifice and persevere through difficulty because the cause matters more than personal convenience. This creates resilience and prevents the community from devolving into consumer relationships where people leave when benefits don't meet expectations. Practically, this means articulating your community's highest purpose clearly and regularly, celebrating how members embody it, and making decisions through the lens of purpose rather than comfort. Communities that successfully maintain transcendent orientation often outperform those built primarily on friendship or shared housing. Rabia's model suggests that purpose itself becomes the glue that holds people together across differences.
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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