Periagoge
Concept
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The Turning: Spiritual Transformation Through Devotion

The whirling ceremony (Sema) represents the soul's continuous turning toward the divine; it symbolizes the spiral of faith lost and found again.

Rumi
Why It Matters

The whirling of the Mevlevi dervishes, which Rumi's tradition established, is not performance but prayer in motion. The turning represents the soul's perpetual rotation toward the divine: from multiplicity to unity, from the self to the Source, from death to rebirth. Each rotation is both a return to a point and an advance upward—the same motion on a spiral. For those who have lost faith, this image offers something crucial: the journey is not linear progress from doubt to certainty but a spiral where you may return to similar territory but at a different level of consciousness. Each turn is both repetition and transformation. The practice of turning—whether literal whirling or the metaphorical devotional practice of continuously orienting toward the sacred—becomes the recovery itself. It is not about reaching a destination of stable belief but about the discipline of perpetual return, of recommitting to the gesture toward the divine moment after moment. This transforms faith from something you have into something you do, not as achievement but as ongoing spiritual practice.

Helpful guides
Rumi
Faith & Meaning
Peri
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