Rumi's critique of hollow creeds and institutional confession, emphasizing that true faith manifests through longing and love, not doctrinal compliance.
Religious institutions typically enforce orthodoxy through creeds—formalized statements of belief that members must profess. Rumi's tradition teaches that such verbal professions are spiritually hollow if they do not emerge from genuine longing for the divine. A person can perfectly recite doctrine while remaining spiritually dead; conversely, one might struggle with traditional language yet embody the devotional life. This concept liberates individuals from the bind of institutional conformity, where expressing doubt or theological disagreement risks exclusion. Rumi suggests that the true profession of faith is written in the heart through love and longing, not in liturgical formulas. For communities enforcing doctrinal uniformity, this teaching validates members' experiences of spiritual alienation when institutional language no longer rings true. It permits spiritual seeking outside the bounds of approved doctrine, making room for genuine faith that transcends institutional definitions.
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