How Rumi's ecstatic embrace of submission to divine will mirrors the Aztec and Maya conception of human existence as sacred service to maintain cosmic order.
Rumi teaches that true freedom paradoxically comes through surrender—becoming the Beloved's devoted slave (abd), abandoning personal will to align with divine intention. The Aztec and Maya understood human existence itself as tlacamictiliztli (human debt)—a sacred obligation to serve the gods through ritual, sacrifice, and devotion necessary for cosmic maintenance. The Nahua nobleman didn't chafe against this servitude but embraced it as the highest calling: to be a vessel for divine will. This wasn't oppressive servitude but loving devotion—the gladness of the lover who serves the Beloved precisely because devotion itself becomes ecstatic. The Maya k'inich ch'ob (sun priest) submitted his entire existence to serve the sun god's daily journey. Both traditions understood that authentic freedom emerges through conscious alignment with transcendent purpose—ego-dissolution into divine will. Rather than seeing human agency as opposed to divine service, both celebrated their merger. Surrender became not loss but transformation—the individual perfected through devoted service to forces greater than themselves, discovering that personal fulfillment and cosmic duty were ultimately the same.
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