Understanding how both Sufi and Egyptian spiritual frameworks describe the soul's journey as remembering and returning to an original divine unity that precedes all existence.
Central to Rumi's spiritual vision is the theme of return: the soul originates in divine unity, falls into separation and forgetfulness, and through devoted longing gradually returns to its source. This journey is not progress toward something new but remembrance of something eternally true. The Egyptian spiritual worldview similarly conceived of existence as a cyclical journey: the soul originates in divine eternity, descends into temporal existence, and through proper ritual and spiritual practice achieves return to blessed union with the gods. Both traditions rejected the idea that separation and individuality are ultimately real; both understood them as temporary states from which the soul may awaken. The Sufi poet sings of the soul's homesickness for the Divine, an ache that cannot be satisfied by anything created because only the Uncreated can fill the void within the soul. The Egyptian concept of akh represents the soul's successful return to its divine nature after navigating earthly existence. This concept reveals that both traditions understood spiritual practice not as self-improvement or acquisition but as alignment with an already-existing reality—the soul's true nature as eternally rooted in divine unity. The goal is not to become something we are not, but to remember and embody what we have always been.
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