Rumi's teaching that the heart is the true sanctuary where divine presence dwells, reorienting Greek and Roman temple religion toward interior spiritual architecture.
While Greco-Roman religion built magnificent temples of stone and marble as dwelling places for the gods, Rumi consistently taught that the heart of the sincere lover becomes the only temple the divine truly inhabits. This shift from external to internal sacred space transforms our understanding of Greco-Roman religious life. The elaborate temples, precious offerings, and public ceremonies need not be abandoned but reinterpreted: they externalize and legitimize what must ultimately occur within the human heart. The mystery religions, in fact, already pointed toward this interiorization—the sacred experience happened not in the public temple but in the initiates' transformed consciousness. Rumi's insistence that devotion purifies and enlarges the heart as a vessel for divine presence suggests that the Greek notion of the nous (divine mind) and the Roman concept of the divine spark within mortals pointed toward this interior sanctuary. True worship in the Greco-Roman world, rightly understood through Sufi teaching, concerned the enlargement and purification of the heart-temple where each person could become a shrine of the sacred.
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