Understanding how Rumi's metaphor of intoxication by Divine Love illuminates the Egyptian use of sacred substances, music, and states of consciousness in temple ritual.
Rumi frequently employed the metaphor of intoxication to describe the soul's overwhelming encounter with Divine Love—a drunkenness that dissolves rational thought and unleashes devotional passion. Ancient Egyptian temples incorporated sacred substances, aromatic incenses, and fermented beverages within rituals designed to alter consciousness and facilitate communion with the divine. Both traditions understood that ordinary rational mind could become an obstacle to direct spiritual experience, and that deliberate alteration of consciousness through sacred means served sacred purposes. The Egyptian priest inhaling myrrh and frankincense in the inner sanctum and the Sufi intoxicated by divine presence both experienced dissolution of the discriminating mind's boundaries. This intoxication represented not mere escape or indulgence, but a methodical approach to encountering realities beyond ordinary perception. The concept reveals sophisticated ancient and medieval understandings that consciousness itself is malleable, that certain states grant access to truths unavailable to the rational mind, and that cultivating these states through sacred practice is essential to spiritual development and transformation.
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