Rumi teaches that spiritual progress requires annihilation of the false self; Mesopotamian purification rituals become mystical practices stripping away ego to prepare for divine encounter.
Mesopotamian religion emphasized ritual purity. Before entering temples, before approaching gods, worshippers underwent ablutions, fasting, and purification rites. These were not merely hygiene but spiritual disciplines. Rumi's teaching centers on fana—the annihilation or dissolution of ego consciousness as prerequisite for union with God. Through this lens, Mesopotamian purification practices become mystical disciplines aimed at ego death. The washing away of impurity was the stripping away of the false self, the ego, the attachments to worldly concerns. Each purification ritual enacted a symbolic death: the person entering was not the same person who emerged. The old self, contaminated by worldly involvement and egoic attachments, was washed away. What remained was purified, empty, prepared—ready to be filled with divine presence. The temple, then, was not just a physical structure but a threshold requiring transformation to cross. Mesopotamian priests understood intuitively what Rumi makes explicit: that union with the divine requires the dissolution of the limited, separate self. Purification rituals were thus not superficial cleansing but mystical technologies for ego annihilation, preparing consciousness for encounters with the sacred.
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