Rumi teaches that the human heart is the divine beloved's mirror, capable of reflecting infinite presence even when obscured by crisis, doubt, and spiritual desolation.
At the core of Rumi's wisdom is the assertion that the heart—not the mind, not the body—is the seat of direct knowledge of the beloved. More radically, the heart is the mirror in which the divine sees itself. This mirror does not create the light it reflects; it only becomes visible or invisible based on its cleanliness and clarity. During spiritual crisis, the seeker believes the mirror is broken, the light extinguished. Rumi teaches otherwise: the heart's capacity to reflect infinite reality persists even in the darkest night. Crisis clouds the mirror with fear, doubt, and contraction, but these clouds are temporary. The beloved continues shining; the seeker simply cannot perceive it. This knowledge offers profound solace: the dark night is not evidence of lost connection but of perception clouded. The heart remains eternally the divine's mirror. Practices that polish the mirror—prayer, service, surrender—gradually restore clarity.
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