Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Dhikr: Invocational Practice and Repetitive Sacred Utterance

Rhythmic remembrance and vocalization of divine names that transforms consciousness and creates conditions for miraculous intervention.

Rumi
Why It Matters

Dhikr, the remembrance of God through rhythmic repetition of sacred formulas and divine names, is a practical technology of consciousness transformation in Sufism. Rather than merely intellectual meditation, dhikr engages the whole being—breath, body, heart, mind—in continuous invocation of divine presence. Rumi emphasizes that authentic dhikr is not mechanical repetition but living remembrance that dissolves separation and magnetizes divine grace. Each divine name invoked—The Healer, The Sustainer, The Merciful—attunes consciousness to that specific attribute of God, opening channels through which that power can manifest. Across traditions, this parallels Christian hesychasm's Jesus Prayer, Hindu japa meditation, and Buddhist mantra practice. The miraculous efficacy of dhikr lies in its capacity to reorient consciousness and intention toward the divine, creating resonance between human heart and divine reality. Historical accounts describe miraculous healings, protections, and transformations following intensive dhikr practice. The practice works not through magical coercion but through alignment—as consciousness tunes itself to divine frequencies through repeated invocation, it becomes transparent to divine action in the world.

Helpful guides
Rumi
Faith & Meaning
Peri
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