Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Intoxication with Divine Beauty

Cultivating children's capacity for awe, wonder, and spiritual ecstasy as central to religious formation.

Rumi
Why It Matters

Rumi writes of spiritual states where the lover becomes drunk on divine beauty, ecstatic and transported beyond ordinary consciousness. While this language might seem extreme for children's education, it points to the cultivation of genuine spiritual experience—moments of transcendence, wonder, and awe that transform understanding. In religious education, we create conditions for children to encounter the sacred directly: through nature, music, sacred spaces, contemplative practices, and story. These encounters should generate genuine emotion—joy, reverence, mystery—rather than intellectual assent alone. Children need permission to be deeply moved, even overwhelmed, by encounters with the divine. By creating spaces for such experiences and validating the emotional and spiritual intensity they generate, we help children develop living faith rather than abstract belief. Religious education becomes an initiation into sacred experience, teaching children that spirituality involves encounters that exceed rational understanding and transform the whole person through beauty and love.

Helpful guides
Rumi
Faith & Meaning
Peri
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