Rumi's view that prayer works not through external intervention but through inner transformation of the one who prays.
For Rumi, prayer's efficacy lies not in divine manipulation of external events but in the alchemical transformation of the heart. When we pray with genuine longing and devotion, we undergo internal restructuring—our desires align with reality, our resistance dissolves, and we become capable of receiving what we need. This reframes prayer's "evidence of working" not as coincidence or answered wishes, but as the measurable psychological and spiritual growth that emerges from sincere practice. Rumi suggests that the most profound answer to prayer is the prayer itself becoming real in us—our consciousness expanding, our love deepening, our union with the divine actualizing. This explains why prayer often doesn't grant us what we asked for, but grants us what transforms us. The evidence isn't external miracles but internal metamorphosis: we become the answer.
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