Periagoge
Concept
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Ecstatic Dance and Music as Divine Intoxication

Rumi founded the Mevlevi order around sacred dance; this illuminates Mesopotamian temple music and dance as practices inducing altered states of mystical union with the divine.

Rumi
Why It Matters

The whirling dervish tradition that Rumi founded uses movement and music to induce mystical states—ecstatic union with God. Mesopotamian temples employed musicians, singers, and dancers in religious ceremonies. The evidence suggests these were not purely aesthetic but functioned to transport consciousness. The repetitive music, rhythmic movement, and communal participation created conditions for collective spiritual experience. Rumi's innovation was to formalize ecstatic movement as a primary spiritual path. Through his framework, Mesopotamian temple music and dance were technologies for achieving fana—annihilation of ego-consciousness in union with divine presence. The drummer's beat, the lyrist's melody, the priestess's whirling—these were methods for inducing altered consciousness where the boundaries of individual self dissolved. The worshipper became one with the music, the music became the goddess, the goddess became the worshipper. This perspective elevates Mesopotamian musical and dance practice from entertainment or mere ritual accompaniment to a sophisticated mystical discipline. The temple was an early concert hall for consciousness transformation, where sound and movement became pathways to the divine.

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Faith & Meaning
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Examine Mesopotamian religion — Sumerian Babylonian Assyrian Honestly
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