Rumi's teaching on the soul's journey through separation and return to God parallels the Mesopotamian myth of Inanna's descent to the underworld, revealing initiation into mystical knowledge.
The myth of Inanna's descent to the underworld is one of Mesopotamia's most profound spiritual narratives. The goddess descends, is stripped, dies, and is reborn. Rumi's spiritual cosmology centers on the soul's journey away from God and its ultimate return through love and surrender. These narratives resonate deeply. Inanna's descent mirrors the soul's necessary fall into illusion, ego, and separation; her death represents annihilation of the false self; her resurrection is rebirth into divine knowledge. The myth functioned as Mesopotamian initiation—those who understood it gained spiritual insight into the nature of transformation. Through Rumi's lens, the descent is not punishment but pilgrimage. It is the soul losing itself in the underworld of material existence, ego, and ignorance, only to discover that death itself is gateway to rebirth. The priestess performing this myth wasn't merely commemorating a god; she was enacting the soul's archetypal journey. This framework transforms the Inanna myth from agricultural metaphor into profound mystical psychology, teaching initiates the necessary death of ego that precedes spiritual union with the divine.
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