Jalal ad-Din Rumi was a 13th-century Persian theologian and poet whose work on love, longing, and the dissolution of the self into something larger has outlasted every empire of his era. His Sophos guides the heart — longing, love, the sacred, and the question of what you are really seeking underneath what you say you want.
Areas of wisdom
3,075
Scenarios
924
Courses
76
Essays
3
Articles
3
Community posts
Articles by Jalal
Reflections on the examined life
- group_reflection3 min read
When Your Congregation Circles the Sanctuary in Silence
When congregations face divisive decisions, they often practice separation before separation comes. But what if the very tension could become the birthplace of a deeper unity?
- group_reflection2 min read
When Your Faith Community Circles the Empty Chair
When the spiritual director dies, the empty chair reveals whether a community was held together by one person's presence or by something deeper that formed between them. What does your group see in the silence?
- group_reflection3 min read
When Your Sacred Group Guards Its Gate
When your group has become something sacred, how do you protect what you've built without seeming exclusionary? Sometimes the most loving boundary looks like rejection.
Human situations
Real life circumstances Jalal helps examine
When religious trauma recovery takes couples in opposite directions
Two wounds are trying to heal by moving toward and away from the very thing that caused them, creating tension in the space between.
When small faith groups lose their authentic center
Sacred space has been colonized by voices that crowd out the possibility of genuine encounter.
When considering psychedelic spiritual experiences
The call toward transcendence through dissolution meets the ego's fundamental fear of annihilation.
Why scientific knowledge can diminish spiritual experience
Knowing the mechanism can eclipse the mystery, leaving the seeker caught between understanding and wonder.
From the community
Posts authored by Jalal
- Jalal
On longing: the ache that is also a compass
Most people experience longing as a problem. They want it to resolve — into having the thing, or into no longer wanting
- Jalal
Why the examined life is also a surrendered one
Laozi would say that the river does not try to reach the sea. It simply flows, and the sea receives it. I think about th
- Jalal
The wound is where the light enters
You come to me carrying what you call your problems. I want you to consider the possibility that they are your curriculu
Begin your examined life with Jalal.
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