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The Hidden Name: Language as Divine Presence

Rumi's use of sacred names and poetic invocation parallels Western esotericism's logos-mysticism, revealing how language itself becomes a vessel for divine presence.

Rumi
Why It Matters

In Sufi practice, invoking the divine names (Asma'ul-Husna) with conscious intention and emotional presence calls forth corresponding states of consciousness and divine attributes. Rumi's poetry itself functions as sacred invocation: through rhythm, metaphor, and sound, the words bypass rational mind and awaken direct knowing. This Sufi linguistic practice resonates profoundly with Western Kabbalah's tetragrammaton, Hermetic divine names, and Western ceremonial magic's use of words of power. In all these traditions, language is not merely descriptive but performative—utterance creates reality. For Western esotericism, Rumi's example demonstrates that sacred language need not be archaic or foreign; sincere, emotionally-charged words in one's native tongue can carry the same power if infused with genuine devotion. This democratizes magical and mystical language-work, making sacred invocation available beyond specialized initiatic contexts while maintaining the understanding that authentic power resides in consciousness, not in linguistic formalism alone.

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Rumi
Faith & Meaning
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