Understanding belief and doubt as rhythmic movements in a dance with the divine rather than static positions.
Central to Rumi's cosmology is the idea that all existence participates in a divine dance—contraction and expansion, separation and union, doubt and certainty. Rather than imagining a fixed state of perfect belief, Rumi describes movement: moments of felt union (ittissal) alternate with periods of separation (firaq). This is not failure but the rhythm of the path. Belief that arises from genuine experience naturally gives way to doubt as that experience fades into memory; doubt then opens us to new experience. Many spiritual seekers become frustrated when their certainty erodes, not realizing they are simply at a different point in the dance. This framework normalizes the rhythm. It suggests that trying to hold onto a single state—permanent belief or permanent doubt—is like trying to keep a dancer in one position. For practitioners, this teaches patience with the cycles. Rather than asking 'Do I believe?' ask 'Where am I in the dance right now?' and trust the next movement.
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