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Concept
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The Night Journey Within

Drawing from Islamic tradition and Rumi's mysticism, the spiritual ascent through darkness and suffering as a model for theodicy resolution.

Rumi
Why It Matters

The Night Journey (Isra and Mi'raj) in Islamic tradition, deeply reflected in Rumi's work, describes ascent through darkness toward divine presence. This concept frames suffering not as punishment but as necessary passage through spiritual night—the dissolution of familiar landmarks that allows the soul to navigate by divine light alone. The theodicy question often arises in this darkness: if God loves me, why remove my certainties? Rumi's answer suggests that these certainties—material comfort, intellectual understanding, emotional security—are obstacles to the higher journey. The night journey requires relinquishing sight to develop inner vision, losing the familiar path to find the divine way. For those in faith crises, this framework contextualizes loss and confusion as potentially initiatory rather than merely destructive. The darkness becomes necessary because it strips away false supports and teaches reliance on divine guidance. The journey is real suffering, not metaphorical, yet it serves the soul's ultimate ascent toward mystical union. Faith endures through the night by trusting that dawn approaches.

Helpful guides
Rumi
Faith & Meaning
Peri
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