Ishq, the passionate longing for Divine union, is not an affliction to transcend but the essential fuel powering all spiritual practice across traditions.
Rumi celebrates longing itself as divine gift, the burning ache that propels the soul toward its source. He paradoxically teaches that the pain of separation is simultaneously proof of connection—the soul longs because it remembers the Divine. This longing is not sentimental emotion but spiritual energy, the gravity pulling consciousness toward transcendence. Across traditions, this same principle emerges: Hindu bhakti yoga's devotional passion, Christian mysticism's 'sacred desire,' Sufi ishq—all recognize longing as the engine of transformation. The perennial wisdom rejects both indulgent emotionalism and ascetic suppression, instead honoring longing as sacred. Rumi teaches that true spiritual practice sustains rather than diminishes longing; enlightenment is not the end of yearning but its eternal consummation. The lover never stops burning for the Beloved; union doesn't extinguish desire but infinitely expands it. This principle liberates seekers from the tyranny of 'getting it'—the goal is not to resolve longing but to align with it completely.
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