The Sufi resolution of theodicy through recognizing that divine love itself justifies existence, including its painful dimensions.
For Rumi, the ultimate answer to the question "why does God allow suffering?" is not a logical proof but an overwhelming experience of divine love so intense that the question dissolves in the presence of it. This represents a fundamental shift in theodicy: from demanding intellectual justification to experiencing relational transformation. Love, in this framework, is not sentiment but the ground of reality—the force that creates, sustains, and redeems all existence. Suffering, when met with opening rather than resistance, becomes a catalyst for deeper communion with this love. The Sufi approach suggests that faith amid suffering is not about understanding God's reasons but about surrender to God's love. This concept applies directly to faith crises: when rational theodicy fails, the mystical path invites practitioners into direct experience of divine affection. The suffering person begins not by solving the problem logically but by allowing their pain to soften them toward greater receptivity to love's presence.
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