Rumi's use of the beloved (often portrayed as female) as a metaphor for God, disrupting religious hierarchies that typically masculinize the divine.
In Rumi's poetry, the beloved embodies divine presence, challenging patriarchal religious structures that reserve God-language for masculine forms. This framework allows devotees—regardless of gender—to access the sacred through intimate, erotic longing traditionally coded as feminine. The Sufi practice transforms gender from a fixed theological category into a dynamic expression of spiritual yearning. Within contested religious terrain, this concept offers liberation from binary gender assignments in faith, permitting women mystics and queer seekers to claim authorized spiritual authority through devotional intensity rather than institutional hierarchy. Rumi's work demonstrates how mystical traditions can circumvent orthodox restrictions on gender roles, creating alternative pathways where feminine energy and emotional expressivity become vehicles for encountering the divine rather than markers of inferiority or exclusion.
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