Rumi's devotional yearning reframes Mesopotamian temple ritual as an expression of the soul's hunger for union with the divine rather than mere institutional obligation.
Mesopotamian temples served as cosmic centers where humans and gods met through ritual and sacrifice. Rumi's mystical framework transforms this architectural and ceremonial reality into a profound spiritual longing. The Sumerian, Babylonian, and Assyrian priesthoods performed daily rituals to maintain cosmic order (ma'at), but through Rumi's lens, these actions become expressions of the soul's desperate desire for closeness with the divine. The temple becomes not just a building but a mirror of the heart's yearning. This perspective suggests that behind every libation, every chant, every processional lay an ache—a human longing to dissolve the boundary between worshipper and worshipped. Understanding Mesopotamian religion through this Sufi devotional intensity reveals a hidden emotional and spiritual dimension often obscured by institutional analysis.
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