Rumi's reframing of suffering as divine love's instrument, transforming pain into spiritual opening rather than punishment.
In Rumi's Sufi cosmology, suffering is not punishment for sin but rather the beloved's kiss—a necessary breaking open of the self. The theodicy question asks why a loving God permits evil; Rumi answers that pain dissolves the ego's illusions and creates capacity for union with the divine. This concept invites seekers to examine their deepest wounds as invitations to deeper faith rather than evidence of divine indifference. The "wound" becomes the doorway through which God's transformative love enters human consciousness. By recontextualizing suffering as purposeful rather than meaningless, this framework addresses the emotional core of faith crises: the feeling of abandonment becomes recognition of intimate divine attention. Rumi's poetry repeatedly celebrates those broken by longing as closest to God, suggesting that our most painful experiences contain the seeds of our most profound spiritual growth and understanding.
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